Developed Countries
Caterpillar and, by virtue of its dominance of its subsector, the S&P CMHT index was at the front of the news cycle this week as an analyst downgraded CAT based on a belief that global growth had collapsed. The market largely ignored the report and both…
For starters, over the past five years or so, whenever this cross has broken below the 1.04 support level, going long proved to be a profitable strategy over the ensuing 6-to-12 months. Meanwhile, over the last 35 years, the cross has spent more than 95% of…
Our Foreign Exchange Strategy team’s simple observation is that while the pound is sitting exactly where it was after the 2016 referendum results, the odds of a hard Brexit have significantly fallen since then. We are opening a buy-stop on GBP/USD at 1.30…
Highlights We remain constructive on the U.S. economy, …: It was another uneven week, but conditions remain broadly favorable for the U.S., and the expansion is intact. … and things seem to be perking up in the rest of the world, in line with BCA’s house view, …: China’s PMI data gave global markets a boost and European PMIs hinted at the potential for green shoots on the continent. … but money managers get paid to worry for their clients, and we get paid to worry for the managers, …: We would be remiss if we didn’t explore alternative scenarios, especially around an unobservable variable like the equilibrium fed funds rate. … so we’re always looking for the ways that we could be getting it wrong: This week’s report explores how the landscape would look from the perspective of consumption, investment, and government spending if a recession were at hand. Feature Chart 1Selloff, What Selloff? Last week’s data were mixed, but there is no doubt, as we’ve acknowledged throughout 2019, that the U.S. economy is decelerating. The deceleration has fanned recession fears, and the yield curve’s fleeting inversion two weeks ago added fuel to the fire.1 The sell-off in financial markets in the fourth quarter seemed largely to have been animated by concerns that the Fed was pushing the fed funds rate into restrictive territory. The sharp decline in equities, and the sharp rise in corporate bond yields, amounted to a material tightening in financial conditions that threatened to become a self-fulfilling prophecy. What a difference a quarter makes. The potent first-quarter rally has reversed much of the fourth quarter’s tightening of financial conditions (Chart 1), while the FOMC’s March meeting indicated that the Fed has pivoted from defending against inflation overshoots to trying to correct its extended post-crisis undershoot. The threat that the Fed would follow the typical path of tightening into a recession has now receded, at least for the rest of 2019. As long as inflation doesn’t suddenly flare up, the expansion should remain intact, provided that the Fed hasn’t already lifted short rates into restrictive territory. We have contended that it hasn’t, as the fed funds rate is comfortably below our current estimate of the equilibrium rate, and is even further below our year-end equilibrium projection. We are well aware that the equilibrium rate cannot be directly observed, and that our estimate may be off the mark. We therefore devote this week’s report to considering what the building blocks of GDP might look like if a recession were about to begin. We particularly focus on consumption, which accounts for the lion’s share of U.S. activity, and indirectly affects both investment and government spending.2 Is Consumption On A Recession Path? Retail sales contracted month-over-month in February, though upward revisions to the January data made the release something of a wash. Year to date, though, retail sales growth has not been strong enough to erase the disappointment from December’s lousy print. From a longer-term perspective, real retail sales don’t suggest anything definitive about the business cycle: although they’re in a mini downtrend, previous pre-recession slides have been steeper and/or longer (Chart 2, top panel). Growth in real personal consumption expenditures (PCE), the consumption input to GDP, has been trendless for the last three years, but is not in the extended slide that preceded other recessions, nor has it yet become stretched in this cycle (Chart 2, bottom panel). Chart 2Neither Here Nor There Chart 3Steady As She Goes We find that consumption fundamentals are sending a clearer message than the retail sales or PCE series themselves. We segment the fundamentals into three components: ongoing demand for workers, the prospects for wage increases, and households’ capacity to borrow to support spending. The labor market is currently quite strong and net payroll growth has been remarkably steady for the last four years (Chart 3). Our payrolls model, which incorporates initial unemployment claims, temporary workers and NFIB small business hiring plans, projects no more than modest slowing (Chart 4). Chart 4No More Than Mild Deceleration Ahead Prices rise when demand outpaces supply, and the excess of job openings over unemployed workers (Chart 5) bodes well for wage growth. The elevated rate of employees quitting their jobs is also a positive sign (Chart 6). A worker doesn’t quit one job unless s/he has a higher-paying one lined up. We therefore read the elevated quits rate as an indication that the competition to attract employees is fierce, and that workers have regained some measure of bargaining power. Chart 5More Jobs Than Candidates ... Chart 6... Makes For A Johnny Paycheck Labor Market ... The combination of rising household income and a light debt-servicing burden augurs well for consumption. A negative unemployment gap (an unemployment rate below the estimated natural rate of unemployment) also tends to be good for compensation growth. Over the last 30 years, annualized average hourly earnings (AHE) have grown one-and-a-half times faster when the unemployment gap is negative than when it is positive, and the earnings growth rates have been remarkably consistent (Chart 7). Household income will have a solid tailwind behind it if AHE gains can catch up to the nearly 4% level consistent with negative gaps in the late ‘80s, late ‘90s and mid-aughts. Chart 7... Where Employers Have To Keep Employees Happy Employment and wage gains suggest that rising household incomes will support spending, but the support would be undermined if households chose to use the income gains to pay down debt. Households have been shoring up their balance sheets ever since the crisis, more than tripling the savings rate from its summer 2005 low (Chart 8, top panel), and have now unwound nearly all of the debt (as a share of GDP) they took on in the ’01-’07 expansion (Chart 8, second panel). They may not yet be done, but the pace at which they’ve been deleveraging has slowed considerably over the last few years. With today’s still-low interest rates, servicing households’ debt burden is easier than it has been at any time in the last 40 years (Chart 8, bottom panel). Households are positioned to take on more debt if they so choose. Chart 8Low Rates Make For A Light Burden Bottom Line: Prospects for continued payroll expansion and wage gains are good, and households have the capacity to borrow to augment spending. We therefore expect that consumption is not on a recessionary path. The fundamentals underlying the U.S. economy’s largest pillar are solid. Could Investment Tip The Economy Into A Recession? Consumption is clearly the 800-pound gorilla of the U.S. economy. It accounted for close to 70% of GDP in the fourth quarter, and when it sneezes, the overall economy catches a cold. It has been a relatively stable series over time, however, and its infrequent contractions tend to be pretty modest. The story is quite different for private domestic investment, which routinely makes wild swings, and tends to seize up during recessions (Chart 9). Even though investment and government spending each account for just a quarter of consumption’s weight, it’s statistically easiest for investment to negate 2% growth in the rest of the economy (Table 1). Chart 9Consumption May Be Larger, But Investment Punches Harder Table 1The Road To Recession We have previously demonstrated that consumption leads capex. It turns out that fixed investment is the opposite of the if-you-build-it-they-will-come “Field of Dreams” mantra; corporations will only build if the customers have already come (Chart 10). Consumption is gently slowing right now, which suggests that corporate investment is not about to boom. To induce a recession, though, fixed private investment would have to crater, and nothing in consumption’s current trend, the employment outlook, the compensation outlook, or households’ borrowing capacity suggests that consumption is at risk of plunging. Chart 10Consumption Drives Capex Surveys asking corporations about their investment plans have been decent coincident indicators of corporate fixed investment. The dip in capital spending plans from the NFIB survey suggests that demand for non-defense capital goods is headed lower (Chart 11, top panel), as does the decline in capex plans in the regional Fed surveys (Chart 11, bottom panel). Neither implies the sharp decline that would be required to offset trend growth in the rest of the economy, however. The corporate tax cut does not appear to have inflated 2018 capex, so 2019 investment should not be at risk of suddenly unwinding. Chart 11Capex May Soften, But It's Not About To Melt Residential investment accounts for around a fifth of private domestic investment. We have written about housing at length over the last several months and will not rehash the discussion here, other than to note that permits and starts remain in a broad uptrend (Chart 12, top panel), as do new and existing home sales (Chart 12, middle panel). Affordability has revived with the decline in mortgage rates, and is once again above its pre-crisis peaks. The inventory of homes for sale is also at multi-year lows (Chart 12, bottom panel). With the Fed sidelined for an extended period, housing demand appears as if it will hold up, and there’s nothing to worry about from a supply perspective. Chart 12The Housing Market Is Fine Bottom Line: The investment component of GDP does not appear as if it is about to contract in a significant way. It is unlikely to be the source of a cyclical inflection. Government Spending By virtue of its modest size and muted volatility relative to consumption and investment, government spending is the least likely component of GDP to extinguish the expansion. The prospects for a negative-two-standard-deviation event that could trigger a recession look especially slim. With employment and household incomes rising, and home values still appreciating, state and local tax receipts should be well supported. Pro-cyclical federal fiscal policy is an anomaly (Chart 13), but we see no signs that the current administration will reverse course with a presidential election on the horizon. Although defense has accounted for a shrinking share of federal spending ever since the end of the Cold War, it still accounts for 60% of federal spending (Chart 14, bottom panel), and a quarter of aggregate government spending. Consistent with CBO projections, we expect defense spending will continue to expand through 2020, as it remains a Republican priority. Federal entitlements were a sacred cow in the 2016 Trump campaign and will remain so in the 2020 campaign, given their importance to the administration’s aging rural base. Chart 13Fiscal Policy Has Turned Pro-Cyclical State and local spending account for the majority of aggregate government spending (Chart 14, top panel). Healthcare and education are the biggest line items in state budgets, and healthcare reforms have the potential to alter budget composition, but aggregate spending moves in lockstep with aggregate revenues, as many states are constitutionally mandated to maintain balanced budgets. The main sources of state revenues are income taxes and sales taxes. Municipalities rely heavily on property taxes. Chart 14State Spending Matters ... State income tax receipts are clearly a function of employment, though the link has come and gone this cycle as the expansion has matured (Chart 15, top panel). Sales tax receipts move with employment as well, because consumption is tied to income (Chart 15, second panel). Property taxes are a function of appraised property values, for which home prices are a solid proxy (Chart 15, third panel). If demand for labor remains robust, wages face upward pressure, and home prices don’t contract, state and local government spending is unlikely to dry up anytime soon. Chart 15... And It's Tied To Income, Consumption, And Property Prices As long as the expansion remains intact (and valuations don’t get silly), risk-friendly positioning remains appropriate. Bottom Line: Nothing points to a sudden decline in government expenditures on the order of the negative-two-standard-deviation move which would be required to induce a recession. Weakness in employment and wage growth would hurt state tax revenues, reinforcing a slowdown in consumption, but that is not our base-case scenario for 2019. Investment Implications Investors should stay the course and remain overweight equities, given that a recession is not imminent. Although we think the Fed’s largesse will ultimately be reversed in potentially heavy-handed fashion, its implicit pledge to remain on the sidelines into the second half of this year extends the runway for risk asset outperformance. We are not in love with the S&P 500 at current levels, and will be surprised if it continues to appreciate at its current pace, but the policy climate – monetary and fiscal – is conducive to outperforming cash and high-quality fixed income. We would hold some capital in reserve to deploy in the event of a pullback, but continue to advocate a risk-friendly portfolio tilt. Doug Peta, CFA Chief U.S. Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Jennifer Lacombe Senior Analyst, Global ETF Strategy jenniferl@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 With the yield curve clawing its way back to positive territory by March 29’s close, it actually has yet to invert on a monthly basis. We have heard its downbeat growth message loud and clear, however, and are on alert for further potential weakness. 2 We leave net exports out of our analysis, as they’re not consequential to the comparatively closed U.S. economy.
Yesterday, the German factory orders sent a chill down the spine of anyone with a positive disposition toward European growth, as they fell 8.4% on an annual basis in February. However, foreign orders drove this meltdown, contracting 12.6% on an annual basis,…
U.S. payrolls rebounded from February’s very weak number. For March, expectations stood at 177 thousand new jobs, however, 196 thousand positions were created. February was also upgraded from 20 thousand to 33 thousand. This was a relief, confirming…
Understand that the all-important impulses to an economy do not come from the level of the bond yield, oil price, net exports, inventories, and so on. The impulse always comes from the change in these metrics. And as the metrics cannot decline (or rise)…
Highlights Most currency pairs continue to trade toward the apex of tight wedge formations. History suggests major breakouts could be imminent. While the trade-weighted dollar has historically tended to be the best performing currency over a six-month period following a U.S. yield curve inversion, this window is rapidly closing. As the tug of war between data disappointments and easier financial conditions plays out, we intend to selectively add to more USD short positions. The pound is sitting exactly where it was after the 2016 U.K. referendum results, but the odds of a hard Brexit have significantly fallen since then. Place a limit buy on GBP/USD at 1.30. The RBA’s dovish shift was widely expected, while the RBNZ’s was not. Meanwhile, the Aussie dollar is sitting close to the epicenter of any Chinese stimulus. Buy AUD/NZD for a trade. Feature Markets have taken a risk-on tone this week. On the data front, there was strong improvement in the Chinese composite PMI, as well as broad increases in the services component of the PMIs across Europe and the U.S. Retail sales data out of Europe and Asia were above expectations and U.S. housing data is beginning to benefit from the fall in interest rates. Case in point, mortgage applications jumped almost 20% week-on-week, nudging the mortgage purchase index towards new highs. On the political front, China and the U.S. appear to be approaching a trade deal, and the U.K. has reached across the aisle to forge a Brexit deal that will potentially include stronger support from the Labor party. Despite these positives, there remain some dislocations in financial markets as investors digest whether financial conditions have eased enough globally to lift us out of the growth slowdown. Since 2015, both the Japanese Nikkei 225 index and the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield have moved in lockstep (Chart I-1). Right now, these two global growth barometers are sending opposing signals. The Nikkei index bottomed in December 2018 and is 13% off its lows, while at 2.5%, U.S. bond yields are not far off the trough made last week. Back in 2016, both indicators bottomed together in a unified response to the Federal Reserve’s dovish shift as well as Chinese stimulus. Every time the U.S. 10-year versus three-month spread has inverted, pro-cyclical currencies have gotten clobbered. The important message is that monetary policy affects the economy with a lag, and over the last year, more central banks have tightened policy than at any time since 2011 (Chart I-2). Our central bank monitors are still falling, suggesting easy monetary policy is still required. It wasn’t so long ago that dismal manufacturing PMI readings from Europe and Japan sent equity markets into a tailspin, with the U.S. 10-year versus three-month spread inverting. At a minimum, this warns against betting the farm too early on pro-cyclical currencies. Chart I-1Who Is Right? Chart I-2Monetary Policy Still relatively Tight Bottom Line: Every time the U.S. 10-year versus three-month spread has inverted, the U.S. trade-weighted dollar has tended to be the best performing currency over the next six months, while other pro-cyclical currencies have gotten clobbered. This occurred whether or not the inversion was a head-fake (Chart I-3). Our bias is that this time is different, but we will await further confirmation from higher-frequency indicators before building aggressive USD short positions. Chart I-3ABeware Of Curve Inversions (1) Chart I-3BBeware Of Curve Inversions (2) What To Watch In our March 8th bulletin,1 we detailed the case for fading U.S. dollar tailwinds and what to watch for in order to adopt a more pro-cyclical stance. These included PMI differentials between the U.S. and the rest of the world, copper- and oil-to-gold ratios, Chinese M2 relative-to-GDP, emerging market currencies, and China-sensitive industrial commodities. The message from these indicators remains broadly consistent with what was observed a month ago, so we will not reprint them here. That said, there are a few additional indicators to consider. AUD/JPY: This cross has broadly tracked swings in the global manufacturing pulse, given the Australian dollar benefits from improving global growth, while the yen benefits from flights to safety and deteriorating liquidity (Chart I-4). The cross has been dead flat around 79 for three months, suggesting these two forces are largely in a stalemate. A break higher in the cross towards the 82-83 zone would be encouraging. EUR/USD: For the U.S. dollar to weaken significantly, the euro will have to strengthen meaningfully, given the large share of euros in global reserves. Following dismal manufacturing PMI numbers out of Europe, the more domestic service-oriented PMIs have proven more resilient. Yet they still point to GDP growth between 1%-1.5% (Chart I-5). The external sector will have to participate to finally put a floor under the euro. It is encouraging that the euro has weakened significantly relative to the Chinese RMB, which should help European exports to China. Chart I-4Bottoming Processes Could Last A While Chart I-5Dollar Weakness Needs A Strong Euro Chinese Bond Yields: A larger share of financial intermediation is now being done through the Chinese bond market, meaning it has the power to ease financial conditions. There is significant debate as to whether Chinese credit stimulus has been sufficient, but bond yields suggest this has been the case (Chart I-6). We will be watching the Chinese aggregate money data for further confirmation that it is time to put on reflation trades. Chart I-6All Confirmatory Signs From China Count Bottom Line: We noted last week that exports to China from Singapore jumped by 34% year-on-year and those to emerging markets by 22% year-on-year. Recent data from Taiwan corroborate the improvement in the Chinese manufacturing PMI for the month of March. With many currency pairs trading toward the apex of tight wedge formations, history suggests breakouts are imminent. Given that currency crosses can themselves be indicators, we will wait for confirmation of a breakout before putting on fresh pro-cyclical positions. Westminster Unifies It has been almost three years since the British voted to leave the European Union (EU). The original deadline of March 29th has been extended to April 12th. As the new deadline approaches, the odds are that a new one will be negotiated, probably by the May 23rd EU elections or even later. The imbroglio has been highly complex, even for the most astute of political analysts. However, our simple observation is that while the pound is sitting exactly where it was after the 2016 referendum results, the odds of a hard Brexit have significantly fallen since then. We are opening a buy-stop on GBP/USD at 1.30 today for a trade (Chart I-7). A very detailed scenario analysis for Brexit was discussed in this month’s Bank Credit Analyst publication.2 The historical context is that while complete sovereignty of a nation is and always has been a desirable fundamental right, a hard Brexit will do little to alleviate the British voters’ angst. Globalization, decades of supply-side reforms and competition from emerging markets have lifted income inequality in the U.K. to the detriment of the average U.K. voter. However, this is hardly due to European integration, given that this same sentiment afflicts many other independent nations. Economic surprises in the U.K. relative to both the U.S. and euro area are soaring. Back when the referendum was held in June 2016, even the pro-Brexit Tories, a minority in the party, promised continued access to the Common Market. Fast forward to today and there are simply not enough committed Brexiters in Westminster to deliver a hard Brexit. Meanwhile, there is scant evidence the general populace wanted a hard Brexit, given the very slim margin of victory for the Leave vote. It is also possible that absent the prominence of migration issues and terrorist attacks that were afflicting Europe at the time, we would not be having this debate today. Chart I-7Changing Landscape For The Pound Chart I-8What Brexit? As we publish this week, British Prime Minister Theresa May has kicked off negotiations with opposition party leader Jeremy Corbyn in a plan to muster a deal before the April 12th deadline. This falls into the first camp of our three scenarios, which are: 1) a softer Brexit deal; 2) a general election to break the impasse; or 3) another referendum. In the case of a general election, unless a hard Tory replaces Ms. May, chances are a softer Brexit will prevail. Meanwhile, our geopolitical strategists have ventured to say that Brexit is unsustainable over the secular horizon, and that the U.K. will remain in the EU. Bottom Line: While the political battle unfolds in the U.K., the reality is that the pound and U.K. gilt yields should be much higher solely on the basis of hard incoming data. Employment growth has been holding up very well, wages are inflecting higher, and the average U.K. consumer appears in decent shape (Chart I-8). Economic surprises in the U.K. relative to both the U.S. and euro area are soaring. With the benefit of hindsight, it is possible cable made its lows in mid-2016-early 2017 as it became clearer that the probability of a hard Brexit was waning. We are placing a limit buy on the pound today at 1.30, with a wide stop at 1.22. Buy AUD/NZD Chart I-9AUD Is On Sale There are few times in markets and trading when you get a semblance of a free lunch. But one such opportunity may be on the table for the Aussie versus the Kiwi. For starters, over the past five years or so, whenever this cross has broken below the 1.04 support level, going long proved to be a profitable strategy over the ensuing 6-to-12 months. Meanwhile, over the last 35 years, the cross has spent more than 95% of the time over 1.06, with the low in 2015 close to parity. Finally, the cross is very cheap on a real effective exchange rate basis, which means that relative prices in Australia are at a discount to those in New Zealand (Chart I-9). The confluence of monetary policy shifts over the last few months may be blurring the direction of relative interest rate trends, but on the simple basis of real three-month interest rate differentials, the Aussie should be 15% higher relative to the Kiwi (Chart I-10). Ever since 2015, the market has been significantly more dovish on Australia relative to New Zealand, in part due to a more accelerated downturn in house prices and a significant slowdown in China. The reality is that the downturn in Australia has allowed some cleansing of sorts, and brought it far along the adjustment path relative to New Zealand. We may now be entering a window where economic data in New Zealand converges to the downside relative to Australia, the catalyst being a foreign ban on domestic house purchases (Chart I-11). Chart I-10Divergences Are Very Rare Chart I-11Australia Is Well Along The Adjustment Path Chart I-12Domestic Demand Pressures In New Zealand A study by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand shows that on average, the elasticity of consumption growth to house price changes is 0.22%.3 However, the housing wealth effect is asymmetric with negative housing shocks, hurting consumption by more than the boost received from positive shocks. According to their calculations, the housing wealth elasticity for consumption is 0.23 for negative shocks, as compared to 0.13 for positive changes in housing wealth. This asymmetry may be due to the fact that, at very elevated debt levels, leveraged gains are used to pay down debt aggressively, whereas leveraged losses hit bottom lines directly. The study proves timely, since the RBNZ began a new mandate on April 1st to now include full employment in addition to inflation targeting. But given that the RBNZ has been unable to fulfill its price stability mandate over the last several years, it is hard to argue it will find a dual mandate any easier. Falling consumption will depress aggregate demand which, in turn, will depress consumption further. Falling inbound migration levels at a time of rapidly dwindling labor supply everywhere means the goldilocks scenario of non-inflationary growth may be behind us (Chart I-12). And for an economy driven by agricultural exports, productivity gains will be hard to come by. The final catalyst for the AUD/NZD cross will be a terms-of-trade shock, and evidence is rising that this is turning in favor of the Aussie (Chart I-13). China’s clear environmental push has lifted the share of liquefied natural gas in Australia’s export mix (Chart I-14). Given that eliminating pollution is a strategic goal in China, this will be a multi-year tailwind. Australia overtook Qatar last year as the world’s biggest exporter of liquefied natural gas. As the market becomes more liberalized and long-term contracts are revised to reflect surging spot prices, the Aussie dollar will get a boost. Chart I-13A Positive Shift Chart I-14A Shifting Export Landscape Bottom Line: Go long AUD/NZD as a strategic position. Place stops at parity. Chester Ntonifor, Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, titled “Into A Transition Phase,”dated March 8, 2019, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Special Report, titled “The State Of Brexit,” dated March 28, 2019, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 3 Mairead de Roiste, Apostolos Fasianos, Robert Kirkby, and Fang Yao, “Household Leverage and Asymmetric Housing Wealth Effects - Evidence from New Zealand,” Reserve Bank of New Zealand, Discussion Paper Series, (April 2019). Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.S. have been weak compared to the rest of the world: Retail sales in February contracted by 0.2% month-on-month, shy of consensus of 0.3%. The March Markit manufacturing PMI fell to 52.4 while ISM manufacturing PMI rose to 55.3. However, the ISM non-manufacturing PMI also decreased to 56.1. The February durable goods orders contracted by 1.6% while still better than expected. Initial jobless claims fell to 202k this week. DXY index initially fell by 0.3% before rebounding to end the week flat. The upbeat Chinese data earlier this week was the strongest in the manufacturing sector for the past 8 months. Easing financial conditions worldwide and progress on trade talks have brought back investors’ risk appetite, which is a headwind for the counter-cyclical dollar. Report Links: Tug OF War, With Gold As Umpire - March 29, 2019 Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Recent data in the euro area have shown tentative signs of a recovery: The Markit manufacturing PMI fell to 47.5 in March, the weakest number since 2013. However, the Markit composite PMI and services PMI increased to 51.6 and 53.3 respectively, both higher than expected. The unemployment rate stayed unchanged at 7.8% in February. Consumer price inflation in March fell slightly to 1.4%. Retail sales grew at 2.8% year-on-year in February, outperforming expectations of 2.3% growth. In Germany, retail sales surged by 4.7% year-on-year. EUR/USD depreciated by 0.2% this week. While the manufacturing data remains weak, the services PMI and retail sales in the euro area all show signs of an imminent pickup. During a speech last Wednesday, Mario Draghi highlighted that policy will continue to remain accommodative which should help financial conditions. Moreover, good news from U.K. and China could improve the trade outlook in the euro area. Report Links: Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 A Contrarian Bet On The Euro - March 1, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan have been positive: Housing starts in February grew by 4.2% year-on-year. Nikkei manufacturing PMI in March came in at 49.2, surprising to the upside, while the services PMI fell slightly to 52. Foreign investment in Japanese stocks increased to 438.7 billion yen. USD/JPY appreciated by 0.5% this week. The Tankan survey for Q1 was a bit disappointing, but nascent green shoots in the global economic recovery are providing support for Japanese shares. On the flip side, the higher risk appetite will likely decrease the demand for the safe-haven Japanese yen. Report Links: Tug OF War, With Gold As Umpire - March 29, 2019 A Trader’s Guide To The Yen - March 15, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. have been mostly positive: The Q4 GDP surprised to the upside, coming in at 1.4% year-on-year. The Markit manufacturing PMI jumped to 55.1 in March, the strongest within the past year. The Markit construction PMI came in slightly below expectation at 49.7, while still above the last reading of 49.5. The services PMI fell to 48.9. GBP/USD appreciated by 0.7% this week. GBP/USD has been very volatile over the past weeks amid ongoing Brexit uncertainties. Despite this, the U.K. economy has been very healthy and cable is still trading at a discount to its fair value. Report Links: A Trader’s Guide To The Yen - March 15, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Recent data in Australia have been improving: The NAB business confidence fell to 0 in March, but the business conditions component increased to 7. The February HIA new home sales increased by 1% month-on-month. Building permits in February increased by 19.1% month-on-month. Retail sales increased by 0.8% month-on-month in February. Trade balance came in at 4.8 million AUD in February. Legacy LNG projects almost guarantee trade surpluses for years to come. AUD/USD has been flat this week. On Tuesday, the RBA kept the interest rate unchanged at 1.5%, as was widely expected. AUD/USD is likely to form a floor if Chinese economic activity continues to improve and global industrial production picks up. Report Links: Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Recent data in New Zealand have been positive: The global dairy trade price index increased by 0.8% in April. ANZ commodity prices increased by 1.4% in March. NZD/USD fell by 1% this week. Despite positive terms of trade, NZD/USD is still trading at a 10%-15% premium above its fair value. New Zealand will be held hostage to the downturn in the Aussie economy. Meanwhile, a new dual mandate for the RBNZ makes it difficult to gauge whether its recent dovish shift is a one-off or more perpetual. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Recent data in Canada have been mostly positive: GDP grew by 0.3% month-on-month in January, surprising to the upside. However, the Markit manufacturing PMI fell to 50.5 in March, from a previous reading of 52.8. USD/CAD rebounded after the plunge on positive Canadian GDP data, returning flat this week. On Monday, Governor Poloz gave a speech in Nunavut, highlighting slowing trade growth and the downside risks from trade wars. He stated that the economic outlook continues to warrant a policy rate that is well below the neutral range, and trade among provinces and territories should be promoted. Report Links: A Shifting Landscape For Petrocurrencies - March 22, 2019 Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland have been strong: The KOF leading indicator increased to 97.4 in March. The February retail sales growth came in at -0.2% year-on-year, above the estimated -0.8%. Consumer price index came in higher than expected at 0.7% year-on-year. USD/CHF increased by 0.47% this week. While the inflation rate took a step closer towards the target rate, the uptick in investment sentiment and rising appetite for risk assets could be a headwind for the safe-haven franc. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Waiting For A Real Deal - December 7, 2018 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Recent data in Norway have been improving: Retail sales contracted by 1.3% month-on-month in February. However, the registered unemployment fell to 78.32k in March. The unemployment rate decreased to 2.4% accordingly. House prices increased by 3.2% year-on-year in March. The manufacturing PMI rose from 56.3 to 56.8 in March. USD/NOK fell by 0.3% this week. The Norwegian krone has been one of our favorite currencies, as it remains most responsive to crude oil prices. Our BCA house view is in favor of rising oil prices amid Iran and Venezuela sanctions and production cuts. Report Links: A Shifting Landscape For Petrocurrencies - March 22, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Recent data in Sweden have been better than expected: The manufacturing PMI came in at 52.8 in March, slightly higher than 52.7 in February. USD/SEK has been flat this week. The Swedish krona is still trading below its one sigma band of fair value. A brighter picture for the euro area could improve trade conditions for Sweden. Our short USD/SEK position is now 1.84% in the money since initiated. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Global Liquidity Trends Support The Dollar, But... - January 25, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Overweight Caterpillar and, by virtue of its relative dominance, the S&P construction machinery & heavy truck (CMHT) index were at the front of the news cycle this week as an analyst downgraded CAT based on a belief that global growth had collapsed. The market largely ignored the report and both CAT and the S&P CMHT index have continued their outperformance since the late-October trough, when we reiterated our overweight recommendation in our Daily Sector Insight report titled “A Buying Opportunity In Construction Machinery”. The signals from the indicators we track imply that the “global growth collapse” is both late and overstated. The CRB raw industrials index, which moves in lockstep with the S&P CMHT index’s relative performance, unsurprisingly showed weakness at the end of 2018 but has since recovered (second panel). Further, the global credit impulse, an excellent leading indicator of relative profitability, has ticked up into positive territory after sending a weakening signal in 2018 and implies a resumption of profit outperformance (third panel). The combination of positive relative sales growth and still-tepid share price action has taken the relative valuation to levels not seen since the 2015-16 manufacturing recession (bottom panel), which marks an exceptionally affordable entry point, particularly for investors seeking to gain exposure to a China/U.S. trade tussle resolution. We continue to think such buying opportunities are rare and reiterate our overweight recommendation. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5CSTF - CAT, CMI, PCAR.