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In fact, looking through the minutes our U.S. Bond Strategy team could only locate the following relevant passage: “A few participants observed that the appropriate path for policy, insofar as it implied lower interest rates for longer periods of time,…
In the Fed’s thinking, it must ensure that policy is accommodative enough to re-anchor inflation expectations. Otherwise, a Japanese-style scenario of permanent deflation could unfold. From the minutes: “Several participants observed that limited…
Overweight This week and last have witnessed the cavalcade of U.S. banks reporting earnings. A headwind in this earnings season has been the transitory impacts of volatility, which was suppressed in Q1, on fixed income and equity trading earnings that have torqued earnings up and down. While each firm has its own idiosyncrasies and exposure to trading gains or losses, a common theme has been the expansion of net interest margins (NIMs), the measure of profit from the core lending activity, despite the 10-year yield falling throughout the first quarter. In fact, this theme is not new as NIMs have been expanding since bottoming in early-2015, regardless of the ebbs and flows of rates. One key reason for wide NIMs is that banks have not been passing higher rates on to the consumer, despite the Fed’s tightening cycle, thus cementing cheap deposit funding. In the past, NIMs have been reliable indicators of banks’ relative performance but the GFC changed that. The radioactive nature of the sector post-GFC meant that banks did not respond to the recovery of NIMs to pre-crisis levels. However, times have changed; U.S. banks are exceptionally well capitalized and the current divergence between resilient and rising NIMs and flat bank relative performance has opened an exceptional buying opportunity. Bottom Line: Stay overweight banks (and remove the downgrade alert) and stay tuned for our April 22nd Weekly Report where we will be offering a more fulsome update on the sector.
Overweight A little over a year ago we moved to the sidelines in the S&P managed health care index, crystalizing significant relative profits of 28% for our U.S. equity portfolio.  Now the time has come anew to explore this niche health care index from the long side and yesterday we moved to an overweight position. Leading indicators of health care insurance profit margins are currently flashing green. Not only are medical costs melting including drug price inflation (second & bottom panels), but also industry cost structures are kept at bay with wages climbing below a 2%/annum rate growth and trailing overall wage inflation (third panel). On the demand front, as the economy is running at full employment, with unemployment insurance claims probing 60-year lows and with wages representing a headache for small and medium business owners, enrollment should stay healthy. Most importantly, the combination of decreasing medical cost inflation and a healthy overall labor market heralds a steep decline in the industry’s medical loss ratio. While risks of a potential “Medicare For All” plan remain nebulous and have clearly weighed on industry stock prices, melting medical cost inflation, BCA’s rising interest rate expectations along with an economy running at full steam, all suggest that managed health care margins and profits will overwhelm in the coming quarters. Bottom Line: We boosted the S&P managed health care index to overweight yesterday; please see Monday’s Weekly Report for more details. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5MANH - UNH, ANTH, HUM, CNC, WCG.    
The inter- and intra-industry M&A fever has died down from mid-2018 and the rising momentum of a “Medicare For All” bill has weighed negatively on HMO sentiment. With regard to the latter, our geopolitical strategists believe that a passage is possible. …
Already, year-to-date the S&P energy sector is the third best performing sector, besting the SPX by over 200bps. More gains are in store, especially given the large dichotomy between the oil price recovery and the relative share price ratio. What is…
The corporate profit outlook is getting less ambitious by the day. Over the last three months, consensus expectations for first quarter S&P 500 share-weighted earnings have fallen by 6.5%, as analysts downwardly revised their year-over-year growth…
From a data perspective, it seems the Fed is mostly holding off to see how the outlook for the rest of the world evolves. The minutes of the March meeting, released last week, suggested that there may be more nuance to the Fed’s embrace of patience than…
Highlights Monetary Policy: The Fed is in no rush to tighten, and will remain on hold until inflation expectations or financial conditions give them a reason to resume hikes. Investors should take advantage by overweighting spread product while keeping portfolio duration low. Municipal Bonds: The best value in municipal bonds is found at the long-end of the Aaa-rated municipal bond curve. Lower-rated and shorter maturity munis are much less appealing. Investors should focus their municipal bond exposure on Aaa-rated debt with 20-year and 30-year maturities. Fed Balance Sheet: The Fed has now announced almost all the details of its balance sheet normalization plan. The Fed’s asset holdings will stop falling at the end of September, and we project that it will start buying securities again in 2020. Feature The minutes from the March FOMC meeting, released last week, were about as bullish for risk assets as anyone could have hoped. Not only did we learn that the Fed’s consensus forecast calls for economic growth to trough in Q1: Underlying economic fundamentals continued to support sustained expansion, and most participants indicated that they did not expect the recent weakness in spending to persist beyond the first quarter.1 But we also learned that, despite its economic optimism, the FOMC sees no reason to telegraph another rate hike any time soon: Chart 1Stay Overweight Corporate Bonds [A] majority of participants expected that the evolution of the economic outlook and risks to the outlook would likely warrant leaving the target range unchanged for the remainder of the year. The overall message couldn’t be clearer. The Fed is inclined to let the economy run for a while before it steps in to spoil the party. This supportive policy backdrop, coupled with our positive view of global growth,2 argues for investors to be overweight risk assets. Fortunately, even those who have so far been reluctant to add credit risk probably still have time to get in on the action. High-yield excess returns have only just made up the ground they lost near the end of last year, and investment grade corporates have another 46 bps to go (Chart 1). Further, only spreads from the highest rated credit tiers have tightened back to the target levels we set in February.3 Baa and junk-rated spreads still have ample room to tighten (Charts 2A & 2B). Specifically, The average Aaa-rated spread is currently 59 bps, 19 bps below our target. The average Aa-rated spread is currently 57 bps, exactly equal to our target. The average A-rated spread is currently 85 bps, 2 bps below our target. The average Baa-rated spread is currently 140 bps, 9 bps above our target. The average Ba-rated spread is currently 205 bps, 27 bps above our target. The average B-rated spread is currently 348 bps, 72 bps above our target. The average Caa-rated spread is currently 714 bps, 145 bps above our target. Chart 2AInvestment Grade Spread Targets Chart 2BHigh-Yield Spread Targets As a result, we recommend that investors avoid Aaa-, Aa- and A-rated credits, but overweight the remaining corporate credit tiers. Who’s Watching The Punch Bowl? Even though a hike is not imminent, at some point the Fed will lift rates again. For this reason, and because the market is currently priced for 20 bps of rate cuts over the next 12 months, we recommend that investors maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration. Investors should avoid Aaa-, Aa- and A-rated credits, but overweight the remaining corporate credit tiers. But how will the Fed decide when to take away the punch bowl? In a recent report we made the case that the two most important factors to monitor will be (i) inflation expectations and (ii) financial conditions.4 Last week’s FOMC minutes only strengthened our conviction in that view. The Fed On Inflation Expectations The March FOMC minutes showed that participants are concerned that inflation expectations have become un-anchored to the downside. In the Fed’s thinking, it must ensure that policy is accommodative enough to re-anchor inflation expectations. Otherwise, a Japanese-style scenario of permanent deflation could unfold. From the minutes:     Several participants observed that limited inflationary pressures during a period of historically low unemployment could be a sign that low inflation expectations were exerting downward pressure on inflation relative to the Committee’s 2 percent inflation target; Consistent with these observations, several participants noted that various indicators of inflation expectations had remained at the lower end of their historical range… In light of these considerations, some participants noted that the appropriate response of the federal funds rate to signs of labor market tightening could be modest provided that signs of inflation pressures continued to be limited. These concerns about low inflation expectations are not unfounded. Long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates are well below the 2.3% - 2.5% range that has historically been consistent with “well anchored” expectations (Chart 3). The University of Michigan Survey of household inflation expectations is also well below pre-crisis levels (Chart 3, bottom panel). We expect monthly core CPI will print above 1.8% more often than not going forward. Our sense is that expectations are depressed because many years of low inflation have convinced markets that the Fed cannot sustainably hit its 2% target. In fact, our Adaptive Expectations Model – a model driven purely by measures of actual inflation – does a good job explaining movements in the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate (Chart 4).5 At present, our model shows that the 10-year breakeven is close to fair value. Although we expect the fair value reading from our model to creep slowly higher over time. Chart 3First Battleground: Inflation Expectations Chart 4Adaptive Expectations Model The most important independent variable in our model is trailing 10-year core CPI inflation, which is currently running at an annualized 1.8% clip. This means that as long as monthly core CPI prints above 1.8% (annualized), it will send our model’s fair value reading higher over time. While core CPI has printed below that threshold in each of the past two months, we expect it will more often than not exceed it going forward. Notice that while year-over-year core CPI has rolled over, trimmed mean CPI has increased and median CPI just made a new cycle high (Chart 5). Meanwhile, small businesses continue to report an elevated rate of price increases and ISM prices paid surveys recently ticked up, after having fallen sharply earlier this year (Chart 6). Chart 5Encouraging Inflation Readings... Chart 6...Alongside Continued Price Pressures The Fed On Financial Conditions The Fed didn’t have much to say about financial conditions at the March 2019 meeting. In fact, looking through the minutes we could only locate the following relevant passage: A few participants observed that the appropriate path for policy, insofar as it implied lower interest rates for longer periods of time, could lead to greater financial stability risks. The lack of references to financial conditions shouldn’t be too surprising. Financial conditions aren’t nearly as accommodative as they were last autumn, and hence are currently much less of a policy concern (Chart 7): Chart 7Second Battleground: Financial Conditions The financial conditions component of our Fed Monitor is at 0.5. It was more than one standard deviation easier than average only a few months ago (Chart 7, top panel). The average junk index spread is still 46 bps above its 2018 low (Chart 7, panel 2). The GZ Excess Corporate Bond Risk Premium, an estimate of the excess spread in corporate bonds after accounting for expected default risk, still hasn’t recovered after widening sharply near the end of last year (Chart 7, panel 3).6 At 16.8, the S&P 500 Forward P/E ratio is almost back to its October level of 17 (Chart 7, bottom panel). Now consider that last year, when financial conditions were much more accommodative, the Fed was much more concerned. Fed Governor Lael Brainard and Chairman Jerome Powell both warned that signs of economic overheating could show up in financial markets before they show up in price inflation. Also, the minutes from the September 2018 FOMC meeting reveal that participants were willing to use the risk of “financial imbalances” as justification for tighter policy. A few participants expected that policy would need to become modestly restrictive for a time and a number judged that it would be necessary to temporarily raise the federal funds rate above their assessments of its longer-run level in order to reduce the risk of sustained overshooting of the Committee’s 2 percent inflation objective or the risk posed by significant financial imbalances.7 Bottom Line: The Fed is in no rush to tighten, and will remain on hold until inflation expectations or financial conditions give them a reason to resume hikes. Investors should take advantage by overweighting spread product while keeping portfolio duration low. Extend Maturity In Municipal Bonds Chart 8Municipal / Treasury Yield Ratios We continue to recommend that investors hold an overweight allocation to tax-exempt municipal bonds. Not only does the sector tend to outperform during the mid-to-late innings of the cycle,8 but value also remains attractive, with one key caveat: The best value in the municipal bond space is found at the long-end of the Aaa curve. The Value In Aaa Munis Chart 8 shows yield ratios for different maturities of Aaa-rated municipal debt relative to Treasuries. Notice that the 2-year and 5-year yield ratios, at 65% and 70% respectively, are close to one standard deviation below average pre-crisis levels. In fact, the all-time low for the 2-year Muni / Treasury yield ratio is 61%, only 4% below the current level. The all-time low for the 5-year yield ratio is 66%, also only 4% below the current level. The 10-year yield ratio looks almost as expensive as the 2-year and 5-year. At 76%, it is also close to one standard deviation below its average pre-crisis level. It is also only 6% above its all-time low. The real value in Aaa municipal bonds is found at the very long-end of the curve, in the 20-year and 30-year maturities where yield ratios, at 92% and 94% respectively, remain well above average pre-crisis levels (Chart 8, bottom two panels). While yield ratios out to the 10-year maturity point likely don’t have much room to compress, they could still look enticing depending on an investor’s tax situation. For example, a 76% 10-year Muni / Treasury yield ratio means that an investor facing an effective tax rate above 24% would still earn a positive after-tax yield pick-up in the municipal bond relative to the 10-year Treasury. The Value In Lower-Rated Munis Table 1Municipal Revenue Bonds / U.S. Credit Index Yield Ratios When we move outside the Aaa-rated municipal bond space we find that relative value starts to evaporate. Table 1 shows yield ratios between different municipal revenue bonds and the U.S. Credit index. We did our best to match the duration and credit rating of the different muni sectors as closely as possible. The table shows that the highest available Muni / Credit yield ratio is for 20-year A-rated munis, and even that yield ratio is only 73%. This means that an investor would need an effective tax rate above 27% to earn a positive after-tax yield pick-up relative to the U.S. Credit index. In other words, investors can add a fair amount of value by swapping Aaa-rated munis into their portfolios in place of Treasuries, especially at the long-end of the curve. There is much less incremental value to be gained from replacing corporate credit with lower-rated municipal debt. The Yield Ratio Curve Chart 9A Supportive Environment For Munis Our research shows that the yield ratio advantage at the long-end of the Aaa-rated muni curve tends to be greatest when the fundamental credit back-drop is supportive and municipal ratings upgrades are far outpacing downgrades (Chart 9). Conversely, when downgrades increase, yield ratios usually widen at the short-end of the curve relative to the long-end. At present, the muni ratings back-drop looks fairly supportive. While state & local government interest coverage dipped in Q4 (Chart 9, panel 2), it remains positive and should rebound as tax receipts move back to levels that are more consistent with the trend in nominal income growth (Chart 9, bottom panel). Periods of negative interest coverage tend to precede downgrade spikes. Under normal circumstances, a positive ratings outlook would suggest that yield ratios should fall more at the short-end of the curve than at the long-end, but there is very little chance that short-maturity yield ratios can compress further from current levels. Instead, it makes sense for investors to camp out at the long-end of the Aaa muni curve. Not only is the yield pick-up greater, but long-maturity yield ratios should better weather the storm when the cycle eventually turns. Bottom Line: The best value in municipal bonds is found at the long-end of the Aaa-rated municipal bond curve. Lower-rated and shorter maturity munis are much less appealing. Investors should focus their municipal bond exposure on Aaa-rated debt with 20-year and 30-year maturities. Fed Balance Sheet Normalization Almost Complete The Fed also presented a much more detailed plan for balance sheet normalization at the March FOMC meeting. To summarize the details: The Fed will continue to allow assets to passively run off its balance sheet until the end of September. Beginning in May, the Fed will reduce the monthly cap on Treasury redemptions from $30 billion to $15 billion. This means that if $16 billion of the Fed’s Treasury holdings mature in May, $15 billion will be allowed to run off and $1 billion will be reinvested. The current monthly cap of $20 billion for MBS remains unchanged. After September, the Fed will keep its overall assets constant but will continue to allow its MBS holdings to run down. It will reinvest the proceeds from MBS run-off into Treasuries. After September, even though the Fed will keep the asset side of its balance sheet constant, the supply of bank reserves will continue to shrink because the Fed’s other non-reserve liabilities – mostly currency in circulation – will continue to grow. Eventually, reserves will shrink to a level that the Fed deems optimal for the future implementation of monetary policy. It will then start to increase its asset holdings by purchasing Treasury securities. To implement this policy the Fed will likely announce a “minimum operating level” of desired reserve supply and then buy enough Treasuries to ensure that reserves stay above that level. The Fed has not announced which maturities it will target when it re-starts Treasury purchases. In our view, there are only two remaining questions when it comes to the Fed’s balance sheet policy. What Treasury maturities will it purchase going forward? And, when will it start buying Treasuries again? The Treasury’s cash holdings will continue to decline until the fall, putting upward pressure on the supply of bank reserves. On the first question, we will have to wait for an official announcement. Though in our view the Fed will choose a policy that reduces the risk that it will be perceived to be easing or tightening monetary policy through its purchases. This could be achieved by either concentrating its purchases in T-bills, or by targeting maturities in proportion to the Treasury department’s issuance schedule. The second question comes down to estimating the minimum reserve supply that will ensure banks are fully satiated, so that they don’t start competing for scarce reserve balances, driving up overnight rates in the process. While that equilibrium reserve number is unknown, the New York Fed’s most recent Survey of Primary Dealers shows that the 25th and 75th percentile of dealer estimates range from $1.1 trillion to $1.3 trillion. With those figures in mind, we can turn to the simplified Fed balance sheet shown in Table 2. The current balance sheet is shown along with what the balance sheet will look like when run off stops at the end of September. Table 2Simplified Fed Balance Sheet Projections To forecast the Fed’s balance sheet we assume that MBS runs off at a pace of $15 billion per month and that currency-in-circulation grows at an annual rate of 5%. We also estimate a range of possible values for the Treasury department’s General Account. This is the account where the Treasury keeps its cash holdings, which currently total $246 billion. Because the Treasury is currently engaged in extraordinary measures to prevent the U.S. from breaching the debt ceiling, this cash balance will almost certainly decline between now and when the debt ceiling is raised in the fall. After the debt ceiling is raised, the Treasury will probably start to re-build its cash balance. All else equal, a decline in the Treasury’s cash holdings puts upward pressure on the supply of bank reserves, while an increase in the Treasury’s cash holdings causes the supply of bank reserves to fall. According to Table 2, the supply of bank reserves will be between $1.42 trillion and $1.66 trillion by the end of September, still above most estimates of its equilibrium level. The table also shows that reserves will then shrink to between $1.35 trillion and $1.60 trillion by June 2020 and to between $1.31 trillion and $1.55 trillion by the end of 2020. Based on those figures and the dealer estimates, the Fed can probably keep its asset holdings constant through the end of 2020 without losing control of the policy rate or causing a disruption in money markets. However, we expect the Fed will err on the side of caution and start purchasing Treasuries again much earlier, possibly in the first half of 2020. The reason for the Fed to act quickly is that it faces asymmetric risks. The Fed risks losing control of the policy rate if it allows reserves to fall too far, but there is no real downside to keeping the balance sheet “too large”. In any event, the Fed has already demonstrated that it has the tools to conduct monetary policy with a large balance sheet. Bottom Line: The Fed has now announced almost all the details of its balance sheet normalization policy. The Fed’s asset holdings will stop falling at the end of September, and we project that it will start buying securities again in 2020. Ryan Swift, U.S. Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomcminutes20190320.pdf 2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Bond Kitchen”, dated April 9, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 We moved to overweight corporate bonds (both investment grade and high-yield) in in the U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Buy Corporate Credit”, dated January 15, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. The rationale for our spread targets is found in U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Value In Corporate Bonds”, dated February 19 , 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The New Battleground For Monetary Policy”, dated March 26, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 For further details on our Adaptive Expectations Model please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Adaptive Expectations In The TIPS Market”, dated November 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 The Gilchrist and Zakrajsek (GZ) Excess Bond Premium is a measure of the excess spread available in a sample of nonfinancial corporate bonds after removing a bottom-up estimate of expected default losses for each security. Default losses are estimated based on the Merton Default model using each firm’s market value of equity and face value of debt. https://www.federalreserve.gov/econresdata/notes/feds-notes/2016/files/…; 7  https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomcminutes20180926.pdf 8 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, “2019 Key Views: Implications For U.S. Fixed Income”, dated December 11, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Yield curve dynamics, higher oil prices, recovering balance sheets, and compelling valuations and technicals all suggest that energy stocks will burst higher in the coming months.  Melting medical cost inflation, BCA’s rising interest rate expectations along with an economy running at full steam, all suggest that managed health care margins and profits will overwhelm in the coming quarters. Recent Changes Upgrade the S&P managed health care index to overweight today. Add the S&P energy index to the high-conviction overweight list today. Table 1 Feature On the eve of earnings season, the SPX ended last week higher as bank profits delivered and allayed fears of recession. All-time absolute highs in the S&P tech sector and in the Philly SOX index suggest that global growth will likely reaccelerate in the back half of the year, vaulting the broad market to new highs. In addition, the suppressed Treasury term premium1 signals that the path of least resistance for equities is higher on a cyclical time horizon (term premium shown inverted, Chart 1). Chart 1All Clear... Nevertheless, some caution is still warranted from a tactical perspective. Since March 4 when we first turned short-term cautious on the broad equity market,2 the SPX has moved roughly 100 points both ways. Internal market moves, financial conditions, fund flows, complacency and the current economic backdrop all signal that stocks are not out of the woods yet. Namely, the S&P high beta versus the S&P low volatility tilt has failed to confirm the slingshot in the SPX (Chart 2). Similar to the small cap underperformance, mega cap tech is trouncing small cap tech stocks (Chart 3). Not only do large cap technology stocks have pristine balance sheets, but they also have earnings. In contrast, from the 89 S&P 600 tech constituents 54 have no forward profits. The weak over strong balance sheet underperformance is emitting the same signal (top panel, Chart 3). Chart 2...But Some... Chart 3...Caution... The bond market is also sending a warning shot. High yield corporate bonds are underperforming long-dated Treasurys (middle panel, Chart 2). And, the junk bond option adjusted spread has not fallen to the 2018 lows, let alone all-time lows (not shown). While a lot has been said on easier financial conditions, they have yet to return to the early-2018 lows. In fact, similar to the non-confirmation of the all-time SPX highs in late-September, the GS financial conditions index (FCI) is tracing a higher low, warning that equities have room to fall (FCI shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 2). Mutual fund flows on all equity related products are contracting on a net sales basis. Historically, fund flows and equity returns are joined at the hip and the current divergence suggests that equity prices will likely succumb to deficient demand (top panel, Chart 4). Chart 4...Is Warranted On the economic front, last Wednesday we highlighted in an Insight Report, that lumber – a hyper sensitive economic indicator – failed to corroborate the recent equity market euphoria. The weak Citi Economic Surprise Index, also warns that the economic data has yet to turn the corner and should weigh on equities (bottom panel, Chart 4). What ties everything together is SPX profits. The news on this front is mixed, at least for the next little while: EPS will most likely contract in the first half of the year, but equity investors are looking through this earnings recession. Last year’s U.S. dollar appreciation will dent both revenues and EPS, and Q1/2019 is the first quarter where such greenback strength will subtract from corporate P&Ls (Chart 5). Chart 5Dollar Trouble? What worries us most is the sectorial concentration of 2019 profit growth in one sector, financials. Another source of concern is the heavyweight tech sector’s negative profit path for calendar 2019. Such sudden internal profit moves both in magnitude and in a short time frame are far from reassuring, especially given that overall profit estimates are still trimmed. Chart 6A depicts the current sector profit contribution to 2019 growth, and compares it with the January 22nd iteration (Chart 6B). What a difference three months make. In sum, internal equity and bond market dynamics, financial conditions, the economic soft-patch and the looming profit recession all signal that short-term equity market caution is still warranted. This week we upgrade a health care subsector and reiterate our bullish stance on a deep cyclical sector. Catch Up Phase Looms For Energy Stocks Last week we broadened out our research on the yield curve (YC) inversion beyond the S&P 500 to the GICS1 sectors.3 As a reminder, the SPX peaks following the yield curve inversion and on average the S&P energy sector performs the best from the time the YC inverts until the S&P 500 peters out (please refer to Table 3 from the April 8, Special Report). While every cycle is different, if history at least rhymes, deep cyclical energy stocks will likely outperform as the SPX eventually breaks out to fresh all-time highs. Already, year-to-date the S&P energy sector is the third best performing sector, besting the SPX by over 200bps. More gains are in store, especially given the big dichotomy between the oil price recovery and the relative share price ratio (Chart 7). What is perplexing is the ingrained sell-side analyst pessimism (Chart 6A) and lack of belief that oil prices will remain near current levels or even continue their ascent as our sister Commodity & Energy Strategy (CES) service publication predicts. Not only are EPS forecast to contract in every quarter this year, or 10% year-over-year according to IBES, but also revenues are slated to fall in every quarter in 2019. We would lean against this extreme analyst bearishness. While the $3.5/bbl backwardation in WTI oil futures prices one year out, and more than twice that 24-months out, underpins Wall Street’s gloomy energy sector outlook, U.S. oil extraction productivity reinforces sector profits. As U.S. crude oil production hits new all-time highs this is extracted by fewer oil rigs (bottom panel, Chart 7). If BCA’s CES constructive oil price expectation pans out, then energy stocks will easily surpass the profit and revenue bar that analysts have set extremely low for the sector. Delivering on the profit front will likely serve as a catalyst to rerate these deep cyclical stocks higher (Chart 8) and thus a catch up phase looms for energy stocks, at least up to the current level of WTI crude oil prices (top panel, Chart 7). Chart 7Catch Up Chart 8Bombed Out Valuation Granted, the U.S. dollar is a key determinant of oil prices and if BCA’s view proves accurate that global growth will return in the back half of the year (second panel, Chart 9), that is synonymous with a depreciating greenback, which in turn is bullish the broad commodity complex in general and oil prices (and thus energy stocks) in particular (middle panel, Chart 7). As a reminder, oil prices are an excellent global growth barometer, similar to their sibling Dr. Copper. Recovering global growth will boost energy stocks in an additional way: via a favorable supply/demand crude oil balance. Not only is OPEC rebalancing the global oil market through a reduction on the supply front, but a trio of potential supply shocks from Iranian sanctions, Venezuelan infrastructure and Libyan conflict are providing price support. Further, global growth has historically been tightly correlated with rising non-OECD oil demand (Chart 10). Chart 9Global Growth Beneficiary Chart 10Favorable Supply/Demand Dynamics Meanwhile, the broad energy sector is still licking its wounds from the late-2015/early-2016 manufacturing recession and is stabilizing debt and increasing EBITDA (fifth panel, Chart 11), thus the net debt/EBITDA ratio for the index has collapsed from over 11 to around 2, a level similar to the broad market (second panel, Chart 11). Interest coverage (EBIT/interest expense) is also renormalizing higher and is no longer sending a default warning for the energy space as a whole (third panel, Chart 11). The junk energy bond market corroborates/reflects this balance sheet improvement and is no longer flashing red (bottom panel, Chart 9). Finally, bombed out technical conditions are contrarily positive, and such extreme negative readings have marked the start of playable and sizable relative outperformance periods (Chart 12). Chart 11No Red Flags Chart 12Contrary Alert: Depressed Technicals Netting it all out, YC dynamics, higher oil prices on the back of rising global growth and a favorable supply/demand crude oil backdrop, recovering balance sheets, and compelling valuations and technicals suggest that energy stocks will burst higher in the coming months. Bottom Line: We reiterate our above benchmark recommendation in the S&P energy sector and today we are adding it to our high-conviction overweight list. Buy Into Managed Health Care Weakness A little over a year ago we moved to the sidelines in the S&P managed health care index, crystalizing significant relative profits of 28% for our U.S. equity portfolio.4 Now the time has come anew to explore this niche health care index from the long side. While we left some money on the table since our late-May 2018 move, relative share prices have come full circle, valuations have fallen roughly 18% from the late-2018 peak and analysts’ euphoria has been reined in (Chart 13). Chart 13Reset The inter- and intra-industry M&A fever has died down from mid-2018 and the rising momentum of a “Medicare For All” bill has weighed negatively on HMO sentiment. With regard to the latter, our geopolitical strategists believe that passage is possible. If the Democrats can unseat an incumbent president in 2020, they will also likely take the Senate and keep the House. This means they will be in the position to pass a major piece of legislation. While Trump is favored to win, barring a recession, the risk of both a Democratic sweep and a push for “Medicare for All” could be as high as 27%, and this would have a dramatic impact on the health care sector.5 Tack on the near 90bps drop in the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield since the November 2018 peak, and factors have fallen into place for a bearish raid in this pure play health insurance index. Thin managed health care margins and profits move in close lockstep with interest rates as roughly 10% of the industry’s operating income is tied to “investment income”. In other words, as insurers receive the premia they typically invest it in Treasurys and that explains the high EPS and margin sensitivity on interest rate moves (Chart 14). While at first sight, the outlook for profits appears grim, BCA’s bond strategists expect a selloff in the bond market to materialize in the back half of the year simultaneously with a pick-up in global growth which will prove a tonic to both margins and EPS. In addition, leading indicators of heath care insurance profit margins are flashing green. Not only are medical costs melting including drug price inflation (second & bottom panels, Chart 15), but also industry cost structures are kept at bay with wages climbing below a 2%/annum rate growth and trailing overall wage inflation (third panel, Chart 15). Chart 14Overdone Chart 15Melting Cost Inflation On the demand front, as the economy is running at full employment, with unemployment insurance claims probing 60-year lows and with wages representing a headache for small and medium business owners, enrollment should stay healthy (Chart 16). Most importantly, the combination of decreasing medical cost inflation and a healthy overall labor market herald a steep decline in the industry’s medical loss ratio. All of this is unambiguously bullish for margins and profits. Finally, relative valuations and technicals have both corrected from previously stretched levels and offer a compelling entry point for fresh capital (Chart 17). Chart 16Full Employment Is Bullish Chart 17Unloved And Under-Owned Netting it all out, despite the risks that “Medicare For All” pose, melting medical cost inflation, BCA’s rising interest rate expectations along with an economy running at full steam, all suggest that managed health care margins and profits will overwhelm in the coming quarters. Bottom Line: Boost the S&P managed health care index to overweight today. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5MANH - UNH, ANTH, HUM, CNC, WCG.   Anastasios Avgeriou, U.S. Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1      According to the NY Fed: “Treasury yields can be decomposed into two components: expectations of the future path of short-term Treasury yields and the Treasury term premium. The term premium is the compensation that investors require for bearing the risk that short-term Treasury yields do not evolve as they expected.” https://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed.org/2014/05/treasury-term-premia-1961-present.html 2      Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “The Good, The Bad And The Ugly” dated March 4, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3      Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, “10 Most FAQs From The Road” dated April 8, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4      Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Report, “Seeing The Light” dated May 29, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 5      If there is a 60% chance the Democrats nominate a left-wing candidate, and a 45% chance they win the election, then there is a 27% chance that they are in a position to push for “Medicare for All” with fair odds of passage. Everything will depend on the specific outcomes of the Democratic primary, presidential campaign, general election, post-election government policy priorities, and congressional passage. Stay tuned as in the coming months we will be publishing a Special Report on “Medicare For All” and health care sector implications co-authored with our sister Geopolitical Strategy service. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps