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Highlights Heightening geopolitical tensions between the U.S. and China, higher U.S. bond yields, tightening U.S. dollar liquidity and weakening EM/China growth - all combined - constitute a bitter cocktail for EM. Barring a meaningful improvement in Chinese growth, higher U.S. bond yields will be overwhelming for EM financial markets. U.S. banks are not creating new dollars sufficiently. In addition, they are shrinking their claims on EM. The U.S. dollar is primed for another upleg. Downgrade Indian stocks from overweight to underweight within a dedicated EM equity portfolio. Feature As China becomes more assertive and slightly hostile toward the U.S., this will likely mark a paradigm shift in the macro landscape and asset valuations and, hence, could become a grey swan1 event for emerging markets (EM). Investors remain complacent about the ongoing geopolitical confrontation between these two economic giants as well as other headwinds that China and EM are facing. The decision by the Trump administration to raise import tariffs to 25% on $200 billion of China's exports to the U.S. as of January 1, 2019 is an unambiguous signal that U.S. trade confrontation with China is not a pre-mid-term election political plot. Instead, it is the beginning of a long-term geopolitical battle between an existing and rising superpower. Remarkably, the just-concluded trade deal between the U.S., Mexico and Canada (USMCA) includes language that requires signatories to give notice if they plan to negotiate a free trade deal with a "non-market" economy.2 Provided "non-market" country is for now implied to be China, this corroborates that confrontation with the latter is a new long-term strategy for the U.S. In addition, investors should not expect China to be constantly on the defensive. Both the political leadership and people in China have realized that trade is not the only aspect where the U.S. is likely to challenge the Middle Kingdom, and they recognize it will be a long-term battle. Therefore, the communist party and President Xi will counter the U.S. with reasonably tough actions. Quite simply, failure to do so will place the political leadership's credibility in question. President Xi understands this well, and will not allow it to happen. It is hard to forecast the avenues and approaches that Chinese leadership will explore to confront the U.S. Yet the recent navy incident in the South China Sea exemplifies that China will not be silent in this row.3 More generally, EM financial markets are not ready for such negative surprises. For example, there has been little capitulation on the part of asset managers with respect to EM equities. In fact, they have lately been buying EM ETF futures (Chart I-1). Global financial market volatility calculated as an equally weighted average of volatility in U.S. and EM equities, U.S. bonds, various currencies, oil and gold are near its historic lows (Chart I-2). Chart I-1Asset Managers Have Been Buying EM Equity Futures Chart I-2Financial Markets Volatility Is Very Low Remarkably, the U.S. bond market volatility is at an all-time low while bond yields are breaking out (Chart I-3). Odds are the U.S. yields will move up considerably. The basis is that strong growth and rising inflation in the U.S. warrant considerably higher bond yields and more Fed rate hikes than are currently priced in. Barring a meaningful improvement in Chinese growth and global trade, higher U.S. bond yields will be overwhelming for EM financial markets. In particular, higher U.S interest rates could trigger another downleg in the value of Chinese yuan. Chart I-4 illustrates that the China-U.S. interest rate differential has been instrumental to moves in the RMB/USD exchange rate. Chart I-3A Breakout In U.S. Bond Yields Chart I-4China Vs. U.S.: Does Interest Rate ##br##Differential Explain Exchange Rate? Apart from the heightening geopolitical tensions between the U.S. and China and higher U.S. bond yields, weakening EM/China growth, tightening global U.S. dollar liquidity and a strong U.S. dollar all combined will constitute a bitter cocktail for EM. We discuss some of these negatives below. All in all, financial markets could be on the cusp of a volatility outbreak, and EM will still be at the epicenter of the storm. BCA's Emerging Markets Strategy service continues to recommend short positions in EM risk assets and an underweight allocation versus DM. A Dead Cat Bounce... Emerging markets share prices have attempted to stage a rebound lately, but so far it appears to be nothing more than a dead cat bounce. Even thought the aggregate EM equity index managed a 5% bounce in recent weeks, both the EM equally weighted equity and small-cap indexes have failed to rebound at all (Chart I-5, top and middle panels). Similarly, EM bank stocks - which make up 17% of the MSCI market cap and are the key to the benchmark's performance - have not rallied (Chart I-5, bottom panel). This is occurring at a time when the S&P 500 is at all-time highs. These are very unhealthy signs for EM risk assets. ...As China/EM Growth Continues To Downshift The premise behind the lack of meaningful rebound in EM equities in our view is that both global manufacturing and world trade growth continue to downshift (Chart I-6, top panel). The epicenters of the slowdown are China and other emerging economies (Chart I-6, middle and bottom panels). Chart I-5No Confirmation Of EM Rebound Chart I-6EM/China Growth Is Decelerating Importantly, the Markit PMI manufacturing surveys suggest export orders contracted in September in the world's important manufacturing hubs, including China, Japan, Taiwan and Germany. The last time such poor export performance was registered was more than two years ago. The slump in the aggregate EM manufacturing PMI explains not only the EM equity selloff but also EM credit spreads widening and EM currency depreciation since the beginning of this year (Chart I-7). So long as the weakening trend in EM/China and global trade growth persist, EM risk assets and currencies will continue to sell off. Regarding China, growth deceleration was already occurring before the initial import tariffs took hold. Specifically, not only are overseas orders weak, but also domestic orders have rolled over decisively, as indicated by the People's Bank of China's (PBoC) 5000 industrial enterprise survey (Chart I-8). Chart I-7Weakening Growth Explains Selloff In ##br##EM Credit And Currencies Chart I-8China: Domestic And Overseas Orders In the mainland, the boost to infrastructure spending in the coming months will likely be offset by a slump in property construction and other segments of the economy. We discussed this angle in our recent report,4 but in recent days there has been more real estate market tightening. Specifically, the authorities are considering the cancellation of the housing pre-sale system in Guangdong province - a policy that could be applied to other geographies. The motive of this tightening is to curb both the land-buying frenzy and Ponzi financing schemes that many developers are involved in. This fits the policy script of dealing with and purging speculation and excesses early to prevent a bust later. These policy measures will cut off property developers from their primary source of funding - presales - and force them to reduce their construction volumes. As an unintended consequence of this announcement, some developers have already begun cutting house prices to accelerate pre-sales and raise funds. Given already bubbly property valuations and the existence of substantial speculative buying, house price deflation could set off a domino chain effect of lower prices, reduced speculative investment purchases and financial strains on developers, leading them in turn to offer even larger price discounts to generate funds faster, and so on. Forecasting the exact trajectory of a downturn and the speed of its adjustment is impossible. This is why we focus on the presence of major imbalances/excesses and policy tightening that could cause disentangling of these excesses. Given the still-considerable property market excesses5 prevalent in China and the money/credit tightening that has already occurred in the past two years, we reckon the odds of a material property market downtrend are substantial. On the whole, our main theme for China and EM remains that mainland construction activity will continue to downshift, with negative implications for countries that supply construction goods, materials and equipment. U.S. Dollars Shortages? The U.S. economy is firing on all cylinders and inflationary pressures continue to rise. Barring a deflationary shock from China/EM, the Federal Reserve has little reason to halt its rate hikes or abandon its policy of shrinking its balance sheet. Not only are U.S. interest rates rising, but there are also budding U.S. dollar shortages that will get worse: The U.S. banking system's excess reserves at the Fed are dwindling, as the latter continues to shrink its balance sheet (Chart I-9). U.S. banks' dollar-denominated claims on foreign entities in general and emerging markets in particular are shrinking (Chart I-10). Thus, EM debtors in particular have found themselves short of dollars. Chart I-9The U.S. Dollar Is Primed For Another Upleg Chart I-10U.S. Dollar Shortages In Rest Of World Finally, U.S. banks are not creating enough dollars - their total assets are growing at a paltry rate of 1%, and U.S. broad money (M2) growth is expanding at 4% annually - the slowest pace in the past 14 years excluding the aftermath of the 2008 credit crisis (Chart I-11). Bottom Line: The Fed is shrinking its balance sheet, and high-powered money/liquidity in the banking system is falling. This and other factors are discouraging U.S. banks from creating new U.S. dollars. Along with rising U.S. interest rates, this will propel the greenback higher, which will be detrimental for EM risk assets. Equity Portfolio Rotation Amid High Oil Prices Given the recent breakout in oil prices, we make the following changes to our country equity allocation: Upgrade Russia from neutral to overweight.4 October 2018 Orthodox macro policy and high oil prices will help this bourse to outperform the EM benchmark (Chart I-12, top panel). We have already been overweight Russia within EM local bonds, currency and credit portfolios.6 Chart I-11U.S. Banks Are Not Creating Sufficient Amount Of Dollars Chart I-12Upgrade Russian And Colombian Equities ##br##From Neutral To Overweight Upgrade Colombian equities from neutral to overweight. Like Russia, high oil prices and orthodox macro policies justify an upgrade (Chart I-12, bottom panel). Upgrade Malaysia from underweight to neutral.4 October 2018 High energy prices, hope for structural changes and low inflation do not justify an underweight stance. Still, Malaysia is vulnerable to slowdown in global trade and credit excesses of the past years that have not yet been worked out. This prevents us from upgrading this bourse to overweight. Downgrade Philippines equities from neutral to underweight.4 October 2018 Inflation is breaking out and the central bank is behind the curve.7 Downgrade India from overweight to underweight. More detailed analysis on India starts on the following page. Our equity overweights are Taiwan, Korea, Thailand, Chile, Mexico, Colombia, Russia and central Europe. Our underweights are Brazil, South Africa, India, the Philippines, Indonesia and Peru. The complete list of our equity, fixed-income, credit and currency allocations are always presented at the end of our Weekly Reports, please refer to page 16. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com Downgrade Indian Equities 4 October 2018 We are downgrading our allocation to Indian stocks from overweight to underweight within an EM-dedicated equity portfolio (Chart II-1). Rising stress in the country's non-bank finance companies - the recent default of finance company Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services Limited and the fire-sale of Dewan Housing Finance bonds by a mutual fund - has been responsible for escalating financial risks, and will have ramifications for overall macro stability and growth. Stress Among Finance Companies: Liquidity Or Solvency? Finance companies account for about 12% of the MSCI India Stock Index. Further, there are deep interlinkages between them and mutual funds. Chart II-2 shows that mutual funds have exponentially increased their claims on non-bank finance companies by purchasing commercial paper (short-term debt obligations) issued by the latter. Chart II-1Failure To Break Out Is A Bad Omen Chart II-2Mutual Funds' Exposure To Finance Companies Further signs that the non-bank finance sector is having difficulties rolling over or repaying their debt obligations will hurt mutual funds. This might trigger redemptions from the latter by their own investors. Importantly, mutual funds' net purchases of equities as well as bonds has been very strong in recent years, often outpacing that of foreigners (Chart II-3). Given the former's large holdings of various securities, forced selling by mutual funds can often create an air pocket for Indian financial markets: local investors will be selling at a time when foreign investors are not yet ready to buy. Odds are considerable that stress will continue to escalate in the non-bank financial sector. Short-term interest rates and corporate bond yields are rising (Chart II-4). This is occurring at a time when non-bank finance companies are very vulnerable because of their liquidity mismanagement. Chart II-3Indian Mutual Funds Are Large Investors In Stocks And Bonds Chart II-4Rising Borrowing Costs Financial data from six non-bank finance companies included in the MSCI India Equity Index reveals that short-term debt levels for these companies are extremely elevated (Chart II-5, top panel) and their liquidity situation is grim. A measure of liquidity risk, calculated as short-term investments (including cash) minus short-term borrowing, has plummeted and is in deep negative territory (Chart II-5, bottom panel). In short, these finance companies have been borrowing short term and lending long term. Additionally, these entities will soon have to deal with surging non-performing assets (NPAs). Total assets for large finance companies - including the six companies included in the MSCI Equity Index - have grown at an annual average of around 20% since 2010. It is difficult to lend or invest at such a rapid pace while avoiding capital misallocation and the accumulation of bad assets. Crucially, the current level for NPAs for these six finance companies is 2.3% of risk-weighted assets, but could rise much further. Their provisions stand 2.1%, which barely covers existing NPAs. Hence, provisions have to rise multi-fold. For example, if NPAs rise to 12%, that would wipe out 32% of these companies' equity. We assume a recovery ratio of 30% on these bad assets. For comparison, the NPA ratio for overall the banking system has already surged to about 12%. Finally, commercial banks' lending to finance companies has been excessive in recent years (Chart II-6). Commercial banks are already swamped with rising non-performing loans, and any additional stress among finance companies will damage investor sentiment and negatively impact banks' share prices. Chart II-5Finance Companies: Liquidity Strains Are ##br##Rooted In Maturity Mismatches Chart II-6Banks' Exposure To Finance Companies Bottom Line: Odds are that the liquidity stress among finance companies will escalate and turn into a solvency problem. This will harm mutual funds in particular and cause them to liquidate their equity and bond holdings. Indian financial markets will selloff further. Limited Maneuvering Room For Central Bank High crude prices, rising inflation and mounting financial stress are placing the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in an extremely precarious position: If the central bank provides sufficient liquidity or reduces interest rates to deal with budding stress in the financial system, the currency will plunge further; If the RBI does not provide sufficient liquidity or hikes rates to put a floor under the rupee, the stress in the financial system will worsen. It seems the central bank is currently biased to providing liquidity to contain financial system stress. In fact, the central bank has already injected bank reserves through the liquidity adjustment facility. In addition, it announced upcoming purchases of government securities in October in the order of Rs. 360 billion and has stressed its willingness to provide more injections if the need arises. This is negative for the currency which will continue to tumble, especially at a time when the U.S. dollar is well-bid worldwide. In turn, continued currency depreciation will make foreign investors net sellers of stocks and bonds. Bottom Line: We recommend investors downgrade India from overweight to underweight. We are also closing our long Indian banks / short Chinese banks at a 2% loss. Concerning equity sectors, we are reiterating our long Indian software companies' stocks / short EM overall equity benchmark. This trade is up 22%, and a cheaper rupee and strong DM growth herald further gains. Ayman Kawtharani, Associate Editor ayman@bcaresearch.com 1 A grey swan is an event that can be anticipated to a certain degree but is considered unlikely to occur and would have a sizable impact on financial markets if it were to occur. 2https://ustr.gov/trade-agreements/free-trade-agreements/united-states-mexico-canada-agreement/united-states-mexico# 3https://www-m.cnn.com/2018/10/01/politics/china-us-warship-unsafe-encounter/index.html?r=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.cnn.com%2F 4 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report "Desynchronization Compels Currency Adjustments," dated September 20, 2018, a link available on page 16. 5 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report "China Real Estate: A Never-Bursting Bubble?," dated April 6, 2018, available on ems.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report "Vladimir Putin, Act IV," dated March 7, 2018, link available on ems.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report "The Philippines: Duterte's Money Illusion," dated April 25, 2018, link available on ems.bcaresearch.com. Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Corporates remain expensive with 12-month breakeven spreads for both A and Baa-rated bonds standing below the 25th percentiles of their distribution that has prevailed since 1989. Furthermore, with inflation now at the Fed's target, monetary policy will…
Highlights Chart of the WeekIncreasing Gas-On-Gas Pricing Will Disrupt Global LNG Markets Growth in the global Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) market will be fuelled by surging U.S. natural gas production, which will allow consumers in Asian and European markets to diversify away from oil-indexed pricing - with its attendant geopolitical risks - and falling European gas production. As a result, markets will move toward short- and long-term contracts priced in USD/MMBtu (Chart of the Week). This will favor gas producers and LNG merchants with access to U.S. shale-gas supplies, where production is growing at double-digit p.a. rates (Chart 2). Well-developed trading and risk-management markets in the U.S. - centered on Henry Hub, LA - will incentivize consumers to shorten the tenor of oil-indexed contracts, replacing them with hedgeable futures-based contracts. These markets allow producers and merchants to offer short- and long-term contracts that meet consumer preferences. As the global LNG market grows, shipping companies, along with producers and merchants with worldwide trading and transport capabilities - or access to such capabilities - will grow market share at the expense of exporters tied to the more rigid oil-indexing regime (Chart 3). Energy: Overweight. We remain long call spreads along the Brent forward curve over February - August; these positions are up an average 88.4% since inception, basis Tuesday's close. The long S&P GSCI position we recommended in December is up 21.8%, on the back of higher oil prices and backwardated crude-oil forward curves. Base Metals: Neutral. Copper is holding on to recent gains - up ~ 11% from its mid-August trough, following oil higher. Precious Metals: Neutral. Gold hovers around $1,200/oz, following the Fed's meeting last week, which resulted in a 25bp increase in fed funds to 2.25%. Ags/Softs: Underweight. The trade agreement to be signed by U.S. officials at the end of November with their counterparts in Mexico and Canada removes some of the uncertainty weighing on ag markets. Upward revisions to 2017 carry-out estimates by the USDA continue to pressure corn and beans. Chart 2Surging Production, Market Depth Favor U.S. Gas Producers And Merchants Chart 3Growing LNG Imports Will Favor Shippers, Producers And Merchants Feature Surging U.S. natural gas production will continue to find its way to global LNG markets over the next decade. The persistence of oil-indexing in Asian LNG contracts will fuel the growth of U.S. exports, given the arbitrage between cheaper natural gas - priced basis supply-demand fundamentals for gas - and more expensive oil-indexed contracts.1 Added to this cost advantage, U.S. exports can be linked to hedgeable futures prices, using NYMEX Henry Hub, LA, contracts. These stability-of-supply and pricing advantages also allow LNG buyers in Asia and Europe to diversify away from oil-production disruption risks, which can send prices sharply higher, and being overly reliant on Russian imports. Chart 4U.S. LNG Exports Will Surge This will give global consumers an incentive to continue shortening the tenor of more rigid oil-indexed LNG contracts, and to replace them with hedgeable contracts referencing Henry Hub, LA, futures contracts priced in USD/MMBtu. While a fairly stout increase of U.S. LNG exports already is expected by the EIA and IEA, we believe this dynamic likely results in export volumes that are higher than the ~ 10 Bcf/d expected by 2023, and close to 15 Bcf/d toward the end of the 2020s (Chart 4).2 Increasing volumes of associated natural gas production in the Permian Basin in west Texas, which will have to be transported from the basin so that it does not curtail oil production, will drive a large part of this growth. We expect a significant LNG export center to be developed in South Texas in Corpus Christi over the next five years or so, just as the U.S. surpasses 10 Bcf/d of exports in the middle of the next decade.3 Flexible pricing of LNG contracts basis Henry Hub already is supporting the buildout of Gulf Coast exports via take-or-cancel contracts. These contracts are replacing the more restrictive take-or-pay contracts still used in Asia.4 This will continue to evolve, allowing supply development to be hedged via Henry Hub natgas futures. Consumers ultimately benefit from cheaper supplies and hedgeable risks. This is not to say other benchmarks will fall away. There is always room for regional benchmarks - even oil-based benchmarks such as the Japan Crude Cocktail (JCC), or the spot- and swaps-market reference Japan/Korea Marker (JKM).5 The global crude oil market accommodates such regional benchmarks: WTI crude oil futures are the benchmark for oil markets in the Americas, while Brent crude oil futures serve as the benchmark for global markets. Crude oils with different chemical properties can be priced relative to these benchmarks for delivery anywhere in the world. The global LNG market could retain an Asian benchmark, but a lot of work needs to be done in terms of building the supporting infrastructure - pipelines, regasification facilities, deep futures markets, etc. - to make that happen.6 We are inclined to believe the build-out of U.S. LNG export capacity will occur before these pieces fall into place: Scale has never been an issue in the U.S. oil and gas patch. Global Supply - Demand Overview Chart 5Global LNG Demand Growth Likely Outpaces Current Expectations Global LNG demand is expected to rise at an impressive 1.7% p.a. out to 2040 (Chart 5). However, local supply and demand levels are increasingly unbalanced, implying that cross-border pipeline and LNG imports will need to increase as gas demand rises.7 A few key markets lead this trend, as seen in Chart 6, which illustrates the supply-gap in major consuming countries. Supply gaps are poised to grow in Emerging Asia and Europe, due to elevated demand growth in the former and lack of supply growth in the latter. World LNG demand grew by 10% last year, with Europe and Emerging Asia accounting for more than 95% of this increase. However, last year's stellar growth numbers should not be considered as the baseline growth forecast.8 The latest projections show demand increasing by 21 Bcf/d by 2025 - taking LNG imports from 38 Bcf/d at present to 58 Bcf/d by then. This implies a lower annualized growth rate of 5.5%. Chart 6Supply - Demand Imbalances Will Fuel LNG Demand Globally LNG Supply On Growth Trajectory World LNG export capacity is expected to go from 48 Bcf/d in 2017 to 61 Bcf/d by 2022 (Chart 7), with 53% of the additional capacity coming from the U.S., 18% from Australia, and 15% from Russia.9 Chart 7LNG Export Capacity Growth Our baseline forecast for the LNG market foresees a short-term supply surplus in 2020 (Chart 8), followed by a catch-up in demand and new waves of projects between 2024 and 2030. Among the supply-side developments we are following: Chart 8New LNG Projects In The Pipeline The Australian LNG market has undergone massive change in the last five years. While being a relatively small natural gas producer (8th largest producer, accounting for ~ 3% of world output), in 2015, the country became the second largest LNG exporting country in the world with now over 7.5 Bcf/d of exports. The bulk of new liquefaction facilities will be operational in 2019 with the completion of new trains at the Wheatstone, Prelude Floating and Ichthys LNG facilities.10 This will bring Australian total LNG export capacity to over 10 Bcf/d. Importantly, most of Australia's LNG trade is with Emerging Asian countries. This region still relies mostly on oil-linked, long-term, and fixed-destination contracts. Absent the OPEC market-share war of 2014 - 2016, when oil prices collapsed, Australia's LNG prices are subject to oil price risks and volatility (Chart 9). Chart 9Asian Oil-Indexed Contracts Trade Above Spot LNG The U.S. currently has ~ 3 Bcf/d liquefaction capacity and is increasingly exporting to Asian countries (Table 1). The present wave of projects under-construction will push capacity to ~ 9 Bcf/d in 2020. Following a two year pause in project Final Investment Decisions (FIDs) from 2016 to 2017, potential FIDs in 2018 and 2019 could increase the U.S. capacity to ~ 14 Bcf/d by 2025. This will make the U.S. the second-largest exporter of LNG in the world, surpassing Australia. This new wave of investment is yet to be finalized; therefore, final investment decisions in 2H18 and 2019 will be crucial to determine the medium-term potential of U.S. LNG. If a majority of these projects goes through, U.S. capacity risks being overbuilt for the next decade (Chart 10). Table 1U.S. LNG Exports By Country Chart 10U.S. LNG Capacity Risks Becoming Overbuilt Importantly, U.S. LNG exports already have had a massive impact on the global LNG market. The totality of U.S. export prices are determined by gas-on-gas pricing - i.e., gas priced in USD/MMBtu as a function of gas supply-demand fundamentals. Just as importantly, these contracts are without destination restrictions found in many oil-indexed contacts. In the U.S., the presence of a deep futures market allows flexible long-term contracting.11 According to Royal Dutch Shell, the spot LNG market doubled from 2010 to 2017, accounting for ~ 25% of all transactions, most of it due to the prodigious increase in U.S. LNG supply.12 An overbuilt U.S. market would increase spot LNG trading. Our own calculations based on EIA data indicate the U.S. could have too much capacity relative to demand in 2018 - 19, but goes into balance in 2020 - 2022.13 Russia's natural gas production is projected to increase from 66.7 Bcf/d in 2017 to 70.1 Bcf/d in 2023. However, the bulk of this increase will cover new pipeline exports. The country's LNG capacity is expected to grow by ~ 2.5 Bcf/d with the completion of trains at the Yamal, Vysotsk and Portovaya export facilities. Despite its low LNG capacity, Russia remains a key player in the LNG market. Its rising pipeline capacity connected to China - the fastest growing market in the world - competes directly with global LNG supplies. For Russia, the rise of natural gas availability on a global basis - in the form of LNG - shakes its foreign relationships and policies to the core. In loosening the once-tight relationship between buyers and sellers, the rise of spot LNG supplies will favor consumers and energy security, and foster the development of longer-term contracting.14 Global LNG Demand Could Outpace Supply By our reckoning, some 62% of additional global gas demand of 160 Bcf/d will be covered by rising domestic production, 12% by rising trans-national pipeline capacity, and the remaining 26% by LNG imports.15 Longer-term, we expect LNG and natural gas demand to keep rising as industry demand expands and major coal consumers build up their natural gas and renewables usage. As a result, LNG consumption will increase at a rate of ~ 3% p.a. until 2040, as overall gas demand grows ~ 1.7%.16 Key demand-side developments: Table 2Natgas Emits Less CO2 China's environmental reforms, supply-side industrial policies and continued economic growth will be the engine of global natural gas and LNG growth in the next decade. The Middle Kingdom's natural gas demand grew 15% to 23 Bcf/d in 2017, of which 54% came from additional LNG. This short-term growth surge required spot and short-term LNG imports, which pushed up North Asian LNG spot prices. Despite our expectation that China will continue leading global LNG growth, we believe 2017 to be an outlier. Two factors contributed to the rise in spot prices: To tackle its massive pollution without significantly altering economic development and growth, China's environmental policies favor natural gas as a bridge to a low-carbon economy, since natgas contains half the carbon content of coal (Table 2). China's supply-side reforms and winter capacity cut led to a spike in spot LNG demand, which had to be covered in global LNG markets. China has an extremely low level of storage to deal with seasonal natgas consumption fluctuations; this forces the country to rely on spot LNG to meet short-term peaks in gas demand (Chart 11). Chart 11China's Minimal Natgas Storage Forces It To Rely On Spot Markets While these factors still dominate Chinese markets, new Russian pipeline capacity is expected to start delivering gas in 2019, the ~ 247 bcf of additional domestic storage capacity and the rise in spot LNG supply will mitigate the effect. In addition, China is limited in its regasification capacity. Data re projects under construction and demand forecasts indicate the average utilization would rise to ~ 90% in 2020. Winter usage would push this to ~ 100% rapidly, constraining its ability to meet winter demand with spot LNG. As a result, we expect Asian spot LNG prices to rise above contracted oil-indexed prices next winter, but less so in 2020 and 2021. Longer term, China's gas consumption is expected to grow 4.6% p.a., outpacing the 4.0% p.a. domestic production growth. Some 23% of the gap will come from Russian and Turkmenistan pipeline imports. Europe's supply-gap rose in the past 3 years, and is expected to continue to widen. Unlike the rest of the world, this gap is growing because of supply depletion instead of strong demand growth. In fact, demand is expected to remain flat, based on the IEA's forecast of Europe's long-term growth. On the other hand, total European gas supply has decreased by 16% since 2010, and is expected to continue decreasing at a similar pace, reaching 21 Bcf/d in 2023 from 25 Bcf/d in 2017. These declines in European natgas supply are due to: The phase-out by 2030 of Netherlands' Groningen field. Continued concerns about the impact of natural gas production on earthquakes in nearby communities pushed the Dutch government to adopt, in March 2018, a plan to gradually stop gas extraction at the Groningen field. Production has been decreasing since 2013 and is expected to decrease by around three quarters between now and end-2023. U.K. natural gas production will decrease by 5% p.a. due to the lack of capex and the large number of fields reaching a mature state. Stagnation in Norway's gas production following its record production level in 2017. Europe's regasification capacity has considerable slack, which will allow it to expand its import volumes. Europe currently has 23 Bcf/d regas capacity, with a very low 27% utilization in 2017. This means it has ~16 Bcf/d capacity available. With the U.S. is expected to raise its exports by ~ 6 - 7 Bcf/d in the next couple of years, Europe could potentially absorb the entire U.S. LNG exports if it desires to diversify its source of energy supply. Pressure Builds For Competitive LNG Markets Chart 12Expect More LNG Spot Trading The movement toward an integrated global market - similar in structure to current oil markets - will be driven by sharply increased U.S. LNG exports, and more competitive pricing of LNG as a function of gas supply-demand fundamentals. This latter effort likely will find support from Japanese and EU regulators. In addition, U.S. exporters already are using futures-based pricing - using Henry Hub contracts - which provide greater flexibility for producers, consumers and merchants to hedge their risk. Either Asian markets will develop viable regional benchmarks, or the global market will increasingly adopt Henry Hub indexing. Again, this is a typical commodity-market evolution: wheat can be priced for delivery anywhere on the planet using Chicago Board of Trade indexing. Asia lacks an integrated pipeline network. Market-based pricing of gas as gas - i.e., based on regional supply-demand gas fundamentals - also has not fully developed. LNG-on-LNG competition is considered a way to promote market-based pricing. Thus, the rise in spot and short-term contracts priced on the basis of natural gas fundamentals in the region already visible in the data likely will continue (Chart 12). In addition, if we see the oil price spike we expect in 1Q19 - driven by the loss of Iranian exports due to U.S. sanctions, continuing losses in Venezuelan exports due to economic collapse, and still-strong global oil demand - LNG priced on gas fundamentals will become even more attractive.17 LNG consumers' exposure to oil prices - via oil-indexed supply contracts - is a disadvantage to consumers with super-abundant natural gas supplies (Chart 13).18 That said, the U.S. export capacity remains limited, thus it cannot completely substitute for the global trade being done basis oil-indexed LNG contracts. Still, higher oil prices will incentivize a shift to contracts with prices determined by natgas fundamentals, which favors continued growth in U.S. exports. If anything, it will push for a faster-than-expected expansion of U.S. LNG export capacity. Chart 13LNG Buyers Will Resist Oil-Indexed Exposure Bottom Line: Growth in global LNG markets likely will be faster than expected, as the U.S. develops its export capacity and continues to offer futures-based pricing. This will further reduce the attractiveness of rigid oil-indexed contracts. Gas producers and LNG merchants with access to U.S. shale-gas supplies, possessing trading and risk-management capabilities that allow them to offer flexible contracts globally, are favored in this quickly evolving market. Hugo Bélanger, Senior Analyst HugoB@bcaresearch.com Pavel Bilyk, Research Associate pavelb@bcaresearch.com Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com 1 The LNG cost structure is complex. A recent paper from the Oxford Institute For Energy Studies estimates U.S. breakeven costs for new LNG projects are roughly $7/MMBtu delivered, or ~ $4/MMBtu over current Henry Hub, LA, spot prices. This includes liquefaction costs, and transportation costs from the U.S. Gulf to Asia of ~ $1.50/MMBtu, and ~ $0.70/MMBtu from the U.S. Gulf to northwest Europe. Regasification charges and entry fees likely add ~ $0.70 to $1/MMBtu. Please see "The LNG Shipping Forecast: costs rebounding, outlook uncertain," published by the Oxford Institute For Energy Studies, March 2018. Transport costs are variable, and are only one part of the LNG pricing equation. The benefits of diversifying supplies cannot be overlooked, nor can the benefit of gas-on-gas pricing in a high-priced crude oil market. See also see "US powerhouse in the making," published June 14, 2018, by petroleum-economist.com. 2 Please see the International Energy Agency's Gas 2018 report published in March, particularly the discussion of supply beginning on p. 67. 3 Please see "The Price of Permian gas Pipeline Limits," by Stephen Rassenfoss, in the Journal of Petroleum Technology, published July 19, 2018. 4 Take-or-cancel contracts employ option-like features - e.g., cancelation payments that function as an option premium - that give buyer and seller flexibility in cancelling a contract or delivery in a manner that allows the seller to cover fixed costs, not unlike a tolling contact. This is possible because of the hedging latitude provided by the NYMEX natural gas futures market, which has Henry Hub, LA, as its delivery point. Please see "The Shift Away from Take-or-Pay Contracts in LNG," published by the Atlanta-based law firm King & Spalding on its Energy Law Exchange blog September 13, 2017. 5 Platts' JKM spot assessment for November was $11.35/MMBtu, which was down 6% from October assessments. Please see "Platts JKM: Asia November LNG spot prices fall on thin demand," published by S&P Global Platts September 21, 2018. The NYMEX JKM forward curve peaks at $13.50/MMBtu for January 2019 deliveries, and backwardates thereafter. 6 Big LNG consumers' antitrust regulators are increasing pressure on overly restrictive contracts, which could open these markets to further competition over the next three years. Japan's Fair Trade Commission (JFTC) in 2017 concluded a review of term LNG contracts, which raised the possibility heretofore standard term contract features - e.g., limits on destinations and diversions, and take-or-pay provisions - could run counter to its antimonopoly laws. Japan is the largest importer of LNG in the world, taking ~ 11 Bcf/d. Meanwhile, in June of this year, the European Commission opened an investigation into long-term LNG contracts between its member states and Qatar Petroleum. Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld, the Washington, D.C., law firm, expects a ruling on destination and profit-sharing clauses that severely limit re-trading of LNG by purchasers. Akin Gump expects a ruling in the course of the next 3 years. While Japan's FTC did not specify remedies, it is possible buyers gain rights to re-sell and re-direct cargoes, following these reviews. This would make markets more competitive, although indexing the price of LNG to oil-based formulas likely will hinder this process. Please see "Revisiting LNG Resale Restrictions - Implications of Recent EU Decisions," published on the firm's website August 2, 2018. 7 Natural gas demand grew by 16% since 2010, according to the BP 2018 Statistical Review of World Energy, and is expected to grow by a cumulative 47% (1.6% p.a.) by 2040. 8 Many idiosyncratic factors helped Chinese LNG imports reach such an exceptional growth rate, mostly weather-related: China's environmental policy is resulting in widespread substitution of coal for natural gas for space-heating purposes, which, in colder-than-expected winters, results in surging demand. We do not believe this will be a long-term seasonal influence: Physical facilities are being built out to accommodate higher supply and demand. 9 World liquefaction capacity will rise to ~ 61 Bcf/d in 2022, based on our calculations of projects under construction. The bulk of additional capacity will come from the U.S., Australia and Russia. 10 Capacity of 0.6, 0.5 and 1.2 Bcf/d, respectively. 11 Please see U.S. Department of Energy, office of Oil & Natural Gas, LNG Monthly. 12 Like most globally traded commodities, LNG can be traded in USD/MMBtu. The global financial and clearing system already is set up to accommodate commodity transactions denominated in USD, therefore we do not see any impediments to extending it further into the LNG market. 13 Please see Chart 10 footnote for details. 14 We will be exploring the geopolitical dimension of LNG next week in a Special Report written with our colleagues in BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy. Please see Meghan L. O'Sullivan, Windfall: How the new energy abundance upends global politics and Strengthens America's Power (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2012). 15 From 2017 to 2040, based on BP projections. The bulk of additional pipeline capacity will come from Russia with 12 Bcf/d destined to China and Europe expected to come on line in 2019. 16 Please see the International Energy Agency's GAS 2018 report published in March, BP's BP Statistical Review Of World Energy 2018 report published in June, Shell's Shell LNG Outlook 2018 report published in February, and U.S. the Energy Information Administration's International Energy Outlook 2017 report published in September. 17 Please see our most recent assessment of global oil fundamentals, published September 27, 2018, entitled "Risks From Unplanned Oil-Outage Rising; OPEC 2.0's Spare Capacity Is Suspect," and our updated forecast, "Odds Of Oil-Price Spike In 1h19 rise; 2019 Brent Forecast Lifted $15 To $95/bbl," published September 20, 2018. 18 Asia LNG prices are usually linked to the JCC according to predetermined formulae. However, the exact formula remains opaque and varies with each contract. Based on our calculations, we concluded that since 2010, the average formula uses a slope of ~14% on JCC prices lagged 4 months, with very low s-curve components and a constant. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2018 Summary of Trades Closed in 2017
Highlights Set your overall investment strategy with two 'rules of 4' based on 10-year bond yields: If either the Italian BTP or the sum of the U.S. T-bond, German bund and JGB stays above 4 percent, then sell equities and buy bonds. If both the Italian BTP and the sum of the U.S. T-bond, German bund and JGB are in the 3-4 percent range, then remain broadly neutral. If both the Italian BTP and the sum of the U.S. T-bond, German bund and JGB fall below 3 percent, then buy equities and sell bonds. Stay neutral to Italy's MIB and Italian banks for the time being. Among the mainstream European equity markets our top pick remains France's CAC. Feature Many people believe that Italy has one of the world's most indebted economies, but this widely-held belief is wrong. Although Italy's public indebtedness is high, Italy's private indebtedness is one of the lowest in the world (Chart of the Week). This means that Italy's total indebtedness is less than that of France and the U.K., and broadly similar to that of the U.S. (Chart I-2 - Chart 1-5).1 Chart of the WeekItaly's Private Sector Indebtedness Is One Of The Lowest In The World Chart I-2Italy: Total Indebtedness = 260% Of GDP Chart I-3France: Total Indebtedness = 305% Of GDP Chart I-4U.K.: Total Indebtedness = 280% Of GDP Chart I-5U.S.: Total Indebtedness = 250% Of GDP The Myth Of Italian Indebtedness An economy's debt sustainability depends on its total indebtedness, and not on its public indebtedness or its private indebtedness in isolation. Debt becomes unsustainable when the marginal extra euro of debt results in misallocation of resources and mal-investment. At this point, the extra debt adds nothing to growth or, worse, it subtracts from growth. Therefore, debt reaches its sustainable limit when the economy has exhausted all productive uses for it. But it does not matter whether these productive uses are funded with private debt or with public debt. For example, successful economies require investment in high-quality healthcare and education. Some economies fund this with private debt, while others fund it with public debt. This means that if productive private indebtedness is low, there is more scope for productive public indebtedness. The crucial point is that Italy has extremely low private indebtedness, which means that it can afford relatively high public indebtedness before reaching the limit of debt sustainability. Right now, this is especially true because the Italian banking system remains dysfunctional, preventing the private sector from borrowing (Chart I-6). Under these circumstances, the Italian government can borrow the private sector's excess savings and debt repayments and put them to highly productive use - which will paradoxically reduce the deficit in the long term. Chart I-6Italy's Private Sector Is Not Borrowing Hence, the M5S/Lega government is following excellent economic policy in proposing a modest increase in the fiscal deficit in 2019. An appropriately sized and targeted fiscal stimulus is exactly what Italy needs right now. But this excellent economic policy will take time to bear fruit and show up in Italy's growth and deficit data. Italy's big problem is that bond vigilantes do not wait, they shoot first and ask questions later. Italy Is Especially Vulnerable To Bond Vigilantes Italy is also a world leader in running primary surpluses (Chart I-7 and Table I-1). In plain English, this means that the Italian government spends considerably less than it receives, if interest payments are excluded. Chart I-7Italy Is A World Leader In Running Primary Surpluses Table I-1Italy Has Consistently Run Primary Surpluses Put differently, Italy's government deficit results not from its operational spending relative to its income, but from the interest payments on its debt. This makes Italy especially vulnerable to the bond vigilantes. If the bond vigilantes distort Italy's interest rate, they can tip the Italian government into financial distress, even if that distress is not justified by the economic fundamentals. Is this a real risk? Sadly, yes. The euro debt crisis was essentially a liquidity crisis which resulted from bond vigilantes running amok. When irrational markets refuse to lend to sovereigns at a fair interest rate, maturing debt has to be refinanced at a penalising interest rate, causing an undeserved deterioration in the government's finances. Thereby, the irrational fear of insolvency becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. Italy has an additional problem. When Italian bond prices decline, it erodes the value of the banking system's euro 350 billion portfolio of BTPs and weakens the banks' fragile balance sheets. If a bank's equity capital no longer covers its net non-performing loans (NPLs), investors get nervous. In this regard, the largest Italian banks now have euro 160 billion of equity capital against euro 130 billion of net NPLs, implying a cushion of euro 30 billion (Chart I-8). Chart I-8Italian Banks' Equity Capital Exceeds ##br##Net NPLs By Euro 30 Bn... So the markets would start to worry about Italian banks' mark-to-market solvency if their bond portfolios sustained a loss of €30 billion. We estimate this equates to the 10-year BTP yield breaching and remaining above 4 percent (Chart I-9).2 Chart I-9...The Excess Would Disappear If The 10-Year BTP Yield Stayed Above 4% The ECB solved the euro debt crisis at a stroke by committing to act as lender of last resort to distressed sovereigns at an 'undistorted' interest rate. Indeed, the commitment alone was enough to defeat the bond vigilantes without the ECB spending a single cent from its Outright Monetary Transaction (OMT) program.3 But recall that the ECB only threatened its firepower when the 2-year Spanish Bono yield had breached 6.5 percent and the 10-year yield had breached 7.5 percent. It follows that if the 10-year Italian BTP yield breached 4 percent, the yield would be high enough to hurt the Italian banks, but not nearly high enough for any powerful intervention from the ECB. Hence, the 10-year BTP yield at 4 percent is the level at which we would return to a pro-defensive strategy. Conversely, a level below 3 percent would create some margin of safety providing one precondition for a more pro-cyclical investment stance. In the meantime, the current level at 3.3 percent justifies a neutral cyclical stance to Italy's MIB and Italian banks. Among the mainstream European equity markets our top pick remains France's CAC. The Connection Between Bubbles And Liquidity Crises Bubble formation may seem to have no connection with a liquidity crisis but the two phenomena are closely related. Bubble formation is simply a brewing liquidity crisis resulting from irrational euphoria rather than irrational fear. A bubble forms when value investors stop investing on the basis of a valuation framework. Instead, they get lured into the momentum herd that is participating in a strong rally, and the additional buy orders fuel the euphoria. However, once all of the value investors have joined the momentum herd, and a value investor then suddenly reverts to type and puts in a sell order, the market will suffer a liquidity crisis. There are no buyers left! And finding one might require a substantial reversal in the price to attract an ultra-long-term deep value investor. As regular readers know, fractal analysis measures whether the herding behaviour in any financial instrument is becoming excessive. The analysis suggests that developed market equities are not yet at the tipping point of excessive euphoria that signalled the last two trend exhaustions in May 2017 and January 2018 (Chart I-10). But this does not mean that there are clear blue skies ahead. Chart I-10Developed Market Equities Are Not Yet At A Trend Exhaustion The danger is not that the rich valuation is irrationally excessive, but that it is hyper-sensitive to bond yields. At low bond yields, bonds offer no price upside but substantial price downside. Confronted with this increased riskiness of bonds, equity returns justifiably collapse to the feeble returns offered by bonds with no additional 'risk premium', giving equity valuations an exponential uplift. But if bond yields normalise, the process goes into vicious reverse - the rich valuation of equities must decline as exponentially as it rose. We have defined the danger point as when the sum of the 10-year yields on the U.S. T-bond, German bund, and JGB breaches and stays above 4 percent. In summary, set your overall investment strategy with two 'rules of 4' based on 10-year bond yields: If either the Italian BTP or the sum of the U.S. T-bond, German bund and JGB stays above 4 percent, then sell equities and buy bonds. If both the Italian BTP and the sum of the U.S. T-bond, German bund and JGB are in the 3-4 percent range, then remain broadly neutral. If both the Italian BTP and the sum of the U.S. T-bond, German bund and JGB fall below 3 percent, then buy equities and sell bonds. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 Indebtedness defined as a share of GDP. 2 Assuming that the average maturity of Italian banks' BTPs is around 5 years. 3 The ECB's Outright Monetary Transaction (OMT) program was created in 2012 in response to the euro debt crisis and facilitates the ECB's lender of last resort function to solvent but illiquid sovereign borrowers. Fractal Trading Model* We are pleased to report that our long China/short India trade achieved its 9% profit target and is now closed. This week, we note that the underperformance of the Eurostoxx50 versus the Nikkei225 is technically stretched, with a 65-day fractal dimension approaching the limit which signaled a very recent trend reversal. Hence, this week's recommended trade is long Eurostoxx50 versus Nikkei225. The profit target is 3.5% with a symmetrical stop-loss. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-11 The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Investors who are betting on a quick resolution to the U.S./China trade war following the "new NAFTA" deal and the U.S. midterm elections have likely been taken in by false hope. Stay neutral China relative to global stocks, and overweight low-beta sectors within the investable equity universe. The relative performance of Chinese industry groups since mid-June has been almost entirely determined by their beta characteristic, with almost all low-beta industry groups outperforming. Energy stocks have been among the top outperformers within the Chinese equity universe, and several factors support our recommendation that investors initiate an outright long position. While it is likely paused rather than stalled, broad "reform" as an investment theme will be less relevant over the coming 6-12 months. Consequently, we are closing our long ESG leaders / short benchmark trade. Feature September's PMI releases, both official and private, confirm that China's export outlook is deteriorating rapidly. Chart 1 highlights that the Caixin PMI is about to fall below the boom/bust line, and the new export orders component of the official PMI has sunk to a 2 ½ year low. Somewhat oddly, investors do not seem to be responding negatively to the de-facto announcement of a 25% rate on the second round of U.S. import tariffs against China. Chart 2 shows that domestic infrastructure stocks have actually been rising relative to global stocks since mid-September, and our BCA China Play Index appears to have entered a (so far very modest) uptrend. Chart 1The Export Shock Is Coming... Chart 2...But Investors Have Been Incrementally Upbeat One possible explanation for this is that investors are doubling down on the idea that China will have to aggressively stimulate in response to the shock. We have leaned against this narrative, by arguing in past reports that China's policy response to the upcoming export shock is not likely to be heavily credit-based, and that increases in fiscal spending today will involve more "soft infrastructure" than in the past.1 Chart 3 certainly shows no evidence of a spike in broad money or total credit; adjusted total social financing growth barely accelerated in August, against the backdrop of promises to front-run planned fiscal spending over the coming year. Chart 3No Major Acceleration In Credit Growth Evident Yet Chart 4Americans Support A Tough Stance Against China But a second explanation of recent investor behavior, one that we have been hearing more loudly from some market participants, is that China is waiting until after the midterm elections in the U.S. to make a deal, in anticipation that Republican losses in Congress will weaken Trump and change the political reality in terms of trade policy towards China. There are three reasons why investors holding this view are likely mistaken, and have been taken in by false hope: In the U.S., the actual implementation of tariffs lies within the control of the Presidency. Congress has delegated substantial authority to the president that would take time to be clawed back. Moreover, the president controls the execution of tariffs, and has a general prerogative over national security issues, which certainly includes the trade war with China. Democratic control of the House or Senate may cause President Trump to act even more forcefully against China, as trade will be among the few relatively unfettered policy options left to him. Chart 4 highlights that a sizeable majority of the American public views Chinese trade policy towards the U.S. as unfair, unlike the U.S.' other major trade partners. Reflecting this point, Democrats themselves maintain a hawkish stance on trade with China. This suggests that Trump will have a strong mandate to continue to demand major concessions from China even after the elections. We agree that Chinese stocks have already priced in a sizeable earnings decline, but we would still characterize buying now as an ill-advised case of trying to catch a falling knife. We highlighted in our September 19 Weekly Report that during the 2014-2016 episode Chinese stocks bottomed several months after stimulus began to take effect,2 because of a delayed decline in forward earnings. A similar situation would appear to be developing this time around: the third round of tariffs against China will likely soon be announced, the shock to Chinese export growth will soon manifest itself in the data, and yet Chinese forward earnings have only fallen 5-6% from their June peak. Bottom Line:Investors who are betting on a resolution to the U.S./China trade war following the U.S. midterm elections have likely been taken in by false hope. Stay neutral China relative to global stocks, and overweight low-beta sectors within the investable equity universe. Recent Sector Performance: A Beta Story, And A New Trade Idea Chart 5Last Week We Closed One Of Our Most Successful Calls We recommended closing one of our most successful trades of the past year in a brief Special Report last week.3 The report outlined major changes to the global industry classification standard (GICS) that took effect this week, as well as the implications for China's stock market. One key change is that Alibaba, one of the "BATs", is now part of the consumer discretionary sector and makes up roughly 60% of its market capitalization. Given this fundamental shift in the risk/reward profile of the position, we recommended closing our long MSCI China Consumer Staples / short MSCI China Consumer Discretionary trade for a profit of 47% (Chart 5). With the goal of identifying new trade ideas that are likely to outperform within the context of a trade war, Chart 6 presents the alpha and beta characteristics of 23 industry groups in the MSCI China index (the investable benchmark) from mid-June to the end of September. The x-axis of the chart represents the group's beta versus the benchmark, whereas the y-axis shows standardized alpha over the period. The chart also distinguishes between out/underperforming sectors. Chart 6Since Mid-June, Sector Performance Has Largely Been Beta-Driven Several points are notable: Largely speaking, the relative performance of Chinese industry groups since mid-June has been determined by their beta characteristic (with almost all low-beta industry groups outperforming). This supports our existing position of favoring low-beta sectors within the MSCI China index, a trade that we initiated on June 27.4 Four industry groups that belong to traditionally cyclical sectors have outperformed since mid-June and have had a beta less than 1: energy, capital goods, banks, and consumer durables and apparel. Energy and capital goods have been particularly notable, having outperformed by 24% and 15%, respectively. Technology-related industry groups have underperformed, including the pharma, biotech, and life sciences industry group within health care. Consumer services and retailers have significantly underperformed, due to the heavy influence of travel-related businesses in both indexes. Among the top performing industry groups over the past three months, Chinese energy stocks look like the most compelling trade in absolute terms. While we are normally reluctant to chase performance, several factors support an outright long position: BCA's Commodity & Energy Strategy service is bullish on oil prices, and recently increased their 2019 Brent price forecast to $95/bbl based on both supply and demand factors.5 Despite the recent outperformance of Chinese energy companies within the investable universe, they remain cheap versus global energy companies based on cash flow-based valuation metrics (Chart 7). This is true even after accounting for the fact that they are typically discounted relative to their global peers due to heavy state ownership. Chinese energy companies look reasonably priced relative to the value of global oil production (Chart 8). Chinese energy companies largely receive their revenue in U.S. dollars, which is an attractive hedge in an environment where CNY-USD may decline further. Chart 7Chinese Energy Stocks Are Cheap Versus Their Global Peers... Chart 8...And Versus The Value Of Global Oil Production Given this, we are updating our trade book and recommend that investors initiate an outright long position in Chinese energy stocks as of today. Chart 9Despite Outperforming, Absolute Capital Goods Performance Has Been Lackluster What about Chinese capital goods companies? For now, we are content with relative rather than absolute exposure, which (surprisingly) exists in our low-beta sectors trade. Capital goods companies account for almost 70% of the Chinese industrial sector, and industrial stocks have been less volatile than the broad market over the past year, in large part because they underperformed so significantly in 2017. Given this, they have been included in our low-beta sectors portfolio, despite being typically pro-cyclical. In absolute terms, though, it is far from clear that Chinese capital goods stocks will trend higher (Chart 9). Some investors are hopeful that capital goods producers will benefit from a significant acceleration in infrastructure spending but, as we noted above, the bar is high for the type of stimulus that investors have come to expect. In addition, potential weakness in property construction could be a drag, and could offset gains from a pickup in infrastructure investment.6 We recommend that investors stick with a relative position, until compelling signs of a stimulus overshoot emerge. Bottom Line: The relative performance of Chinese industry groups since mid-June has been almost entirely determined by their beta characteristic, with almost all low-beta industry groups outperforming. Energy stocks have been among the top outperformers within the Chinese equity universe, and several factors support our recommendation that investors initiate an outright long position. A Pause In Broad "Reform" As An Investment Theme Following last November's Communist Party Congress, we noted that China was likely to step up its reform efforts in 2018, and would take meaningful steps to: Pare back heavy-polluting industry Hasten the transition of China's economy to "consumer-led" growth Slow or halt leveraging in the corporate/financial sector Eliminate corruption and graft We argued that Chinese policymakers would have to set the pace of reforms to avoid a significant slowdown in the economy, but we noted that a policy mistake (moving too aggressively) could not be ruled out. We introduced the BCA China Reform Monitor as a way of tracking the intensity of the reforms, which was calculated as an equally-weighted average of the four "winner" sectors that emerged in the month following the Party Congress (energy, consumer staples, health care, and technology) relative to an equally-weighted average of the remaining seven sectors (Chart 10). In particular, we argued that a rise in the monitor that was driven by the underperformance of the denominator would be a warning sign that reforms had become too aggressive for the economy to withstand. Chart 10Reform, As A Broad Theme, Will Be Less Relevant In The Year Ahead Chart 10 highlights that the reform monitor rose for the first half of the year, driven by the gains of the numerator rather than losses in the denominator. The message of a sustainable pace of reforms, even against the backdrop of brewing trade tension, was consistent with the relative performance of Chinese stocks and was part of the reason we recommended staying overweight versus the global benchmark in Q1 and the majority of Q2.7 Since mid-June, however, the reform theme has been thrown into reverse: our reform monitor has declined, alongside absolute declines in both "winner" and "loser" sectors. The timing of this inflection point is clearly aligned with President Trump's announcement of the second round of tariffs. Given this, and our view that the U.S./China trade war is likely to get worse over the coming 6-12 months, it is likely that broad "reform" as an investment theme will be less relevant for the foreseeable future, at least relative to policymaker efforts to stabilize the economy. However, for several reasons, we view this as a pause in the theme, rather than an end: On the environmental front, Chart 11 highlights that China continues to pursue a clean air policy, at least in large population centers. Anti-pollution efforts are a signature policy of President Xi Jinping. They affect quality of life and ultimately the legitimacy of the regime, so they cannot be postponed entirely or indefinitely. Chart 11China Continues To Clamp Down On Air Quality Shifting China's growth model away from primary and secondary industry remains a long-term goal of policymakers. Chart 12 highlights that tertiary industry has already risen non-trivially as a share of GDP. This trend is also clearly visible in the electricity consumption data, which shows that residential and tertiary industry consumption has risen quite materially over the past several years. Chinese policymakers will clearly ease up on the brake over the coming year in terms of deleveraging, but it is far from clear that they will aim for another wave of aggressive private sector debt growth. We highlighted one key reason for this in a recent Special Report: comparing adjusted state-owned enterprise (SOE) return on assets to borrowing costs suggests that the marginal operating gain from debt has become negative for these firms (Chart 13). This implies that further aggressive leveraging of SOEs could push them into a debt trap. In fact, if policymakers do refrain from promoting a major private sector credit expansion over the coming year, that restraint will directly reflect the reform agenda. Chart 12Policymakers Continue To Emphasize A Transition Towards Services Chart 13SOEs Now Appear To Have A Negative Financial Gain From Debt Chart 14 highlights that while anti-corruption cases involving gifts and the improper use of public funds are off of their high from early this year, they remain elevated and are not trending lower. As a final point, Chart 15 shows that our long MSCI China environmental, social, and governance (ESG) leaders / short MSCI China trade has been negatively impacted by the pause in reform as an investment theme. While MSCI's ESG indexes aim to generate low tracking error relative to the underlying equity market of each country, technology companies are typically overrepresented in ESG indexes because of the low emissions nature of their business model. In China's case, we noted above that technology industry groups have fared poorly since mid-June, and panel 2 of Chart 15 shows that the underperformance of Chinese investable technology companies since mid-June lines up with the latest leg of ESG underperformance. Chart 14China's Anti-Corruption Drive Is Still In Effect Chart 15Favor ESG Leaders Again When The Reform Theme Reasserts Itself It remains unclear how much of tech's underperformance has been due to rich multiples versus concerns that the U.S. crackdown on Chinese technology transfer and intellectual property theft will negatively impact the market share of China's tech companies (via an opening of the market and a rise in the market share of foreign competitors). But we believe that the latter is a factor, and we recommend closing our long ESG leaders / short benchmark trade until "reform", both environmental and otherwise, reasserts itself as a driving factor for the Chinese equity market. Bottom Line: While it is likely paused rather than stalled, broad "reform" as an investment theme will be less relevant over the coming 6-12 months relative to policymaker efforts to stabilize the economy. We are closing our long ESG leaders / short benchmark trade at a loss of 5.5%. Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com 1 Pease see China Investment Strategy Special Report "China: How Stimulating Is The Stimulus?" dated August 8, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Pease see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Investing In The Middle Of A Trade War", dated September 19, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Pease see China Investment Strategy Special Report "GICS Sector Changes: The Implications For China", dated September 26, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Pease see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Now What?", dated June 27, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Pease see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report "Odds Of Oil-Price Spike In 1H19 Rise; 2019 Brent Forecast Lifted $15 To $95/bbl", dated September 20, 2018, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 6 Pease see China Investment Strategy Special Report "China's Property Market: Where Will It Go From Here?", dated September 13, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 7 The rapidly escalating trade war between China and the U.S. caused us to recommended putting Chinese stocks on downgrade watch at the end of March, and we recommended that investors cut their exposure to neutral on June 20. Pease see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Chinese Stocks: Trade Frictions Make For A Tenuous Overweight", dated March 28, 2018, and China Investment Strategy Special Report "Downgrade Chinese Stocks To Neutral", dated June 20, 2018, both available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Neutral As part of this week's Special Report analyzing the rebadging of the S&P communication services index, we initiated coverage on the new S&P interactive media & services sector. Not doing so would leave a significant gap as the new index (comprised almost entirely of Alphabet & Facebook) makes up half of the market cap weight of the renamed GICS1 sector. We have not overcomplicated our thesis on interactive media & services: we expect that as long as everyone who wants a job has a job, consumer confidence will remain at record highs. This should ensure the flow of advertising dollars that dominate the revenues of the constituent firms, meaning profit growth, and hence stock performance, outpaces the broad market. Still, three risks keep us on the fence: a renewed regulatory focus, rapid unpredictable changes in tastes & technology and the threat of an appreciating U.S. dollar that threatens to sap growth in the key foreign segments. Bottom Line: We are initiating coverage with a neutral rating; please see Monday's Special Report for more details. The tickers in this index are BLBG: S5INMS - GOOG, GOOGL, FB, TWTR, TRIP.
Special Report Highlights So What? Go long Brent / short S&P 500. The risk of a recession in 2019 is underappreciated. Why? The likelihood is increasing of a geopolitically-induced supply-side shock that pushes crude prices above $100 per barrel in the coming 6-12 months. Oil supply disruptions in Iran, Iraq, and Venezuela represent the primary source of risk. Historically, the combination of Fed rates hike and an oil price spike has preceded 8 out of the last 9 recessions. Also... A recession in 2019, ahead of the 2020 election, would set the stage for a confrontation between Trump and the Fed, adding fuel to market volatility. Feature Geopolitical tensions are brewing from the Strait of Hormuz to the Strait of Malacca. As we go to press, news is breaking that a Chinese naval vessel almost collided with the USS Decatur as the latter conducted "freedom of navigation" operations within 12 nautical miles of Gaven and Johnson reefs in the Spratly Islands. Given the trade tensions between China and the U.S., this alleged maneuver by the Chinese vessel suggests that Beijing is not backing off from a confrontation. Our view remains that Sino-American trade tensions can get a lot worse before they get better. The latest incident, which builds on a series of negative gestures recently in the South China Sea, suggests that both sides are combining longstanding geopolitical tensions with the trade war. This will likely encourage brinkmanship and further degrade U.S.-China relations. Yet China-U.S. tensions are not the only concern for investors in 2019. Another crisis is brewing in the Middle East, with the potential to significantly increase oil prices over the next 12 months. U.S. households may have to deal with a double-whammy next year: higher costs of imported goods as the U.S.-China trade war rages on and a significant increase in gasoline prices. In this report, we discuss this dire outlook. The Folly Of Recession Forecasting In mid-2017, BCA Research published two reports, one titled "Beware The 2019 Trump Recession" and another titled "The Timing Of The Next Recession."1 Both argued that if the Federal Reserve kept raising rates in line with the FOMC dots, then monetary policy would move into restrictive territory by early 2019 and increase the likelihood of recession thereafter. We subsequently adjusted the timing of our recession forecast to 2020 or beyond, based on a more positive assessment of the U.S. economy. In this report, we explore a risk to the BCA House View on the timing of the next recession. As BCA's long-time Chief Economist Martin Barnes has said, predicting recessions is a mug's game. There have been eight recessions in the past 60 years (excluding the brief 1980-81 downturn) and the Fed failed to forecast all of them (Table 1). Table 1Fed Economic Forecasts Versus Outcomes The Atlanta Fed produces a recession indicator index which is designed to highlight the odds of recession based on trends in recent GDP data. At the moment, the indicator is at a historically sanguine 2.4%. Unfortunately, low readings are not a reliable cause for optimism. The 1974-75, 1981-82, and 2007-09 recessions were all severe and the Atlanta Fed's recession indicator had a low reading of 10%, 1.6%, and 7.7%, respectively - just as the recession was about to begin (Chart 1). Chart 1The Market Is Not Expecting A Recession The 1974-75 recession is instructive, given the numerous parallels with the current environment: Energy Geopolitics: The 1973 oil crisis caused a massive spike in crude prices. This point is especially pertinent since the 1973 oil embargo is widely viewed as an important contributor to the 1974-75 recession. Real short rates had risen and the yield curve had inverted long before oil prices spiked, so recession was almost inevitable even without the oil price move. But the oil spike made the recession much deeper than otherwise. Protectionism: President Nixon imposed a 10% across-the-board tariff on all imports into the U.S. in 1971 to try to force trade partners to devalue the U.S. dollar. Dislocation: Competition from newly industrialized countries - Japan and the East Asian tigers in particular - laid waste to the steel industry in the developed world. Polarization: President Nixon polarized the nation with both his policies and behavior, leading to his resignation in 1974. Given the exogenous and geopolitical nature of oil supply shocks, today's recession indicators are missing a critical potential headwind to the economy. A geopolitically induced oil-price shock could create more pain than the economy is able to handle. Why An Oil Price Shock? America's renewed foray into the politics of the Middle East will unravel the tenuous equilibrium that was just recently established between Iran and its regional rivals. The U.S.-Iran détente that produced the signing of the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPA) created conditions for a precarious balance of power between Israel and Saudi Arabia on one side, and Iran and its allies on the other side. This equilibrium led to a meaningful change in Tehran's behavior, particularly on the following fronts: The Strait of Hormuz: Tehran ceased to rhetorically threaten the Strait as soon as negotiations began with the U.S. (Chart 2). Since then, Iran's capabilities to threaten the Strait have grown, while the West's anti-mine capabilities remain unchanged.2 Iraq: Iran directly participated in the anti-U.S. insurgency in Iraq. Tehran changed tack after 2013 and cooperated closely with the U.S. in the fight against the Islamic State. In 2014, Iran acquiesced to the removal of the deeply sectarian, and pro-Iranian, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Bahrain and the Saudi Eastern Province: Iran's material and rhetorical support was instrumental in the Shia uprisings in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province in 2011 (Map 1). Saudi Arabia had to resort to military force to quell both. Since the détente with the U.S. in 2015, Iranian support for Shia uprisings in these critical areas of the Persian Gulf has stopped. Chart 2Geopolitical Crises And Global Peak Supply Losses Map 1Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province Is A Crucial Piece Of Real Estate Put simply, the 2015 nuclear deal traded American acquiescence toward Iranian nuclear development in exchange for Iran's cooperation on a number of strategically vital regional issues. By unraveling that détente, President Trump is upending the balance of power in the Middle East and increasing the probability that Iran retaliates. Since penning our latest net assessment of the U.S.-Iran tensions in May, Iran has already retaliated.3 Our checklist for "kinetic" conflict has now risen from zero to at least 15%, if not higher (Table 2). We expect the probability to rise once the U.S. starts implementing the oil embargo in November. This will dovetail our Iran-U.S. decision tree, which sets the subjective probability of kinetic action by the U.S. against Iran at a baseline of 20% (Diagram 1). Table 2Will The U.S. Attack Iran? Diagram 1Iran-U.S. Tensions Decision Tree Bottom Line: The premier geopolitical risk to investors in 2019 is that President Trump's maximum pressure tactic on Iran spills over into Iraq, causing a loss of supply from the world's fifth-largest crude producer.4 We expect the U.S. oil embargo against Iran to remove between 1 million and 1.5 million barrels per day from the market. In addition, the loss of Iraqi production due to sabotage could be anywhere between 500,000 and 3.5 million barrels per day. Added to this total is the potential loss of Venezuelan exports due to the deteriorating situation there. When our commodity team combines all of these factors, they generate a worst-case scenario where the price of crude rises to $110 per barrel in 2019 or higher (Chart 3). And this scenario assumes that EMs do not reinstitute energy subsidies (and therefore their consumption falls faster than if they do reinstitute them). Chart 3Worst-Case Scenario Propels Oil Price Toward 0/Barrel The Ayatollah Recession We believe that the midterm election is a dud from an investment perspective, no matter the outcome. However, the election does matter as a hurdle that, once cleared, will allow President Trump to renew his "maximum pressure" tactic against China, Iran, and perhaps domestic tech corporations.5 Iran is a critical risk in this strategy. If President Trump applies maximum pressure on Iran, then a reduction in crude exports from Iran, Iranian retaliation in Iraq, and the simultaneous loss of Venezuelan supplies could combine to increase the likelihood of U.S. recession in 2019. Readers might recall that no sitting president has gotten re-elected during a recession. Why would Trump pursue a policy that risks his re-election chances in 2020? Surely he would deviate from his maximum pressure tactic if faced with the prospect of a recession. However, it is folly to assume that policymakers are perfectly rational, or fully informed. American presidents are some of the most unconstrained policymakers in the world, given both the hard power of the United States and the constitutional lack of constraints on the president when it comes to national security. Trump may believe, for instance, that the 660 million barrels of crude in America's Strategic Petroleum Reserve can offset the impact of sanctions against Iran.6 Or he may believe that he can force OPEC to supply enough oil to offset the Iranian losses. The problem for President Trump is that Iran is not led by idiots. Iranian policymakers understand that the best way to reduce American pressure is to induce an oil price spike in the summer of 2019 that hurts President Trump's re-election chances, forcing him to back off. As such, sabotaging Iraqi oil exports, which mainly transit through the port of Basra - a city highly vulnerable to Shia-on-Shia violence that is already a risk to the country's stability - would be an obvious target. An oil price spike would serve as a negotiating tool against the U.S., and the additional revenue would help replace what Iran loses due to the embargo. Tehran and Washington will therefore play a game of chicken throughout 2019, and there is a fair probability that neither side will swerve. President Trump may be making the same mistake as many predecessors have made, assuming that the Iranian regime is teetering at a precipice and that a mere nudge will force the leadership to negotiate. Oil price shocks and recessions have a historical connection. In a recent report, our commodity strategists highlighted that a spike in oil prices preceded 10 out of the past 11 recessions in the U.S. since 1945 (Table 3). Admittedly, not all spikes were followed by recession. The combination of an oil price spike and Fed rate hikes has produced a recession 8 out of 9 times.7 If oil prices rose to $100 per barrel in the coming 6-12 months, there will be several negative macro consequences. In particular, gasoline prices will rise back toward $4 per gallon (Chart 4). Retail gasoline prices have already increased by more than 50% since they bottomed in February 2016. So how much more upside can the U.S. private sector take? Table 3History Of Oil Supply Shocks Chart 4A Source Of Pressure For Consumers The Household Sector Consumer confidence is currently near all-time highs, which tends to signal that the path of least resistance is flat or down (Chart 5). Household gasoline consumption has already declined in response to higher oil prices since the middle of 2017. Given that gasoline demand is relatively inelastic, consumers may already be near their minimum consumption level. Chart 5Nearing All-Time Highs Instead, households will experience a decline in their disposable income. This will come on the back of both higher gasoline prices and an increase in the prices of other goods and services, as the oil spike spills across sectors. U.S. households - and most likely those in other markets - are stretched to the limit already. A recent Fed survey found that 40% of U.S. households do not have the funds needed to meet an unexpected $400 cost in any given month.8 Such an unexpected expense would require them to either sell possessions, borrow, or cut back on other purchases. Chart 6Most Americans Cannot Cut Saving To Spend Left with few other options, households would react to their lower disposable income by reducing demand for other goods and services. This dent in consumer spending would bring down aggregate demand, leading to slower employment growth and even less income and spending. Households could save less to maintain their current purchasing levels, given the recent rise in the savings rate (Chart 6). But this is unlikely. Although the household savings rate has increased in recent years, we have previously argued that a material part of the increase was driven by small business-owner profits. These owners have much higher levels of income than the median consumer. For Americans living paycheck-to-paycheck, it would be difficult to reduce a savings rate that is already close to, or below, zero. Higher oil prices will also hurt growth in Europe and Japan, economies that are already struggling to gain economic momentum after grappling with a weaker growth impulse from China. In addition, EM economies that took the opportunity to reform their oil subsidies amid lower oil prices post-2014 will have to grapple with a much larger shock to consumers than usual. The Corporate Sector In theory, what consumers lose from rising oil prices, producers of crude can gain in stronger revenue. This is especially important in the U.S. as domestic energy production has increased significantly over the past 10 years. Nonetheless, the oil and gas extraction sector accounts for just 1.1% of GDP and 0.1% of total employment. The marginal propensity to spend out of every dollar of income is lower for producers than consumers. Moreover, if consumer confidence fell and consumer spending weakened, non-energy capex would decline as businesses reassessed household demand and held off from making investment decisions. Small business confidence is at record highs, and as with consumer confidence, vulnerable to downward revisions (Chart 7). Chart 7Dizzying Heights Chart 8Only One Way To Go (Down) Profit margins remain at a highly elevated level and also have only one way to go (Chart 8). If high oil prices should combine with rising borrowing costs and upward pressure on wages (which could develop in this macro environment) the result would be a triple hit to margins (Chart 9). Of course, rising wages would give consumers some offset to higher oil prices, so the question will be the net effect of all variables. And if the dollar bull market continues, as our FX team believes it will, the combination of higher oil prices and a strong USD would hurt U.S. companies with international exposure. The debt load held by the U.S. corporate sector would turn this bad dream into a nightmare. Many American companies have spent the past 10 years increasing leverage to buy back equity (Chart 10). Companies with high debt would need to revise down their profit expectations, with potentially devastating consequences. Elevated debt levels also increase the likelihood of financial market stress if bond investors get worried and spreads begin to widen significantly. Chart 9Rising Pressures On Earnings? Chart 10Large Corporate Debts According to all measures, U.S. stocks are at or near their all-time valuation peaks. Investors have also priced in a significant amount of optimism for profit growth (Chart 11). These expectations would be subject to quick revision if our oil shock scenario plays out. In other words, investor expectations for profit margins are not sufficiently factoring the triple hit of higher oil prices, higher interest rates, and higher wages. Chart 11The Market Has High Hopes An additional geopolitical risk on the horizon for 2019 is the creeping "stroke of pen" risk from potential regulation of technology enterprises. This is unrelated to an oil price spike (other than that it would be an effect of U.S. policy) but could nonetheless combine with rising energy prices to sour investors' mood.9 Bottom Line: An oil price spike above $100 would produce negative consequences for the U.S. household and corporate sectors. Given the supply-side nature of the price shock, it would not be accompanied by the usual decline in USD, and could therefore hurt the foreign profits of U.S. corporations as well. If investors must also deal with mounting regulatory pressures on FAANG stocks, they could face a perfect storm. Given the high probability of such an oil price shock, why isn't a 2019 recession BCA's House View, rather than merely a risk to it? Because it is difficult to say how high oil prices need to rise to cause a recession. For example, 1973 both marked a permanent move up in oil prices and saw oil prices triple. In 2019 terms, that would mean an oil price above $200, a far less probable scenario than $100-$110. Nevertheless, the combination of elevated oil prices and the price impact on consumer goods of the U.S.-China trade war could combine to create a nightmare scenario for consumers. But it is impossible to gauge the level of both required to push the U.S. into a recession. Second, there are many ways in which today's macro environment is different from that in 1974. In the 1970s the inventory cycle was a key factor in the business cycle, with excesses building up ahead of recessions, forcing output cutbacks as demand weakened. That is no longer the case in today's world of just-in-time inventory management. Also, inflation was a much bigger problem back then, requiring tougher Fed action. On the other hand, debt burdens were much lower. Investment Implications To be clear, none of the usual recession indicators that BCA Research uses are flashing red at this time. The point of this analysis is to illustrate a credible, exogenous scenario that cannot be revealed through the usual data-driven recession forecasting methods. What happens if a recession does occur ahead of the 2020 election? How would President Trump react to a recession induced by his foreign policy adventurism in the Middle East? By doing what every other president would do: finding someone else to blame. In this case, we would put high odds on the Federal Reserve becoming the target of President Trump's fury. Ahead of 2020, the Fed and its independence may very well become an election issue.10 This could spell serious trouble for the Fed, which is at a massive disadvantage when it comes to explaining to voters why central bank independence is so important. The Fed had great difficulty managing public opinion regarding its extraordinary measures to combat the Great Recession - its attempts at public outreach largely failed. Compare the number of Trump's Twitter followers to that of the Fed's (Chart 12). Chart 12The Fed's PR Abilities Are Limited Though most of our clients and colleagues will probably disagree, we do not see central bank independence as a static quality. It was bestowed upon central banks by politicians following widespread inflation fears throughout the 1970s and 1980s, although in the U.S. the current tradition goes back to the 1951 Treasury Accord that restored the independence of the Fed. Our colleague Martin Barnes penned a report on the politicization of monetary policy in 2013.11 His conclusion is that political meddling in monetary affairs is less pernicious than economic performance. The Fed will incur Trump's ire, in other words, but it will be its failure to generate economic growth that causes a break in independence. We are not so sure. The next recession is likely to be a mild one for Main Street given the lack of real economic bubbles. But given the slow recovery in real wages over the past decade and the general angst of the populace towards governing elites, even a mild recession that merely reminds voters of 2008-2009 could produce deep anxiety and significant public reactions. Further, the idea of "independent," non-politically accountable institutions is going out of style. President Trump - and other policymakers in the developed world - have specifically targeted the "so-called experts" and "institutions." President Trump has attacked America's foreign policy architecture, NATO, the WTO, and a slew of supposedly outdated norms and practices for being "out of touch" with the electorate. This policy has served him well thus far. If our nightmare scenario of an oil price-induced recession plays out, the immediate implication for investors will be a sharp downturn in risk assets. As such, we are recommending that investors hedge their portfolios with a long Brent / short S&P 500 trade. Alternatively we would recommend going long U.S. energy / short technology stocks. A longer-term, and perhaps even more pernicious implication, would be the end of the era of central bank independence and a full politicization of the economy. Laissez-faire capitalist system would give way to dirigisme. In the process, the U.S. dollar and Treasuries would be doomed. Jim Mylonas, Global Strategist Daily Insights & BCA Academy jim@bcaresearch.com Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Research Special Report, "Beware The 2019 Trump Recession," dated March 7, 2017, and Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Timing Of The Next Recession," dated June 16, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research Geopolitical Strategy and Commodity & Energy Strategy Special Report, "U.S., OPEC Talk Oil Prices Down; Gulf Tensions Could Become Kinetic," dated July 19, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Research Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Why Conflict With Iran Is A Big Deal - And Why Iraq Is The Prize," dated May 30, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Fade The Midterms, Not Iraq Or Brexit," dated September 12, 2018 and "Iraq: The Fulcrum Of Middle East Geopolitics And Global Oil Supply," dated September 5, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Research Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "A Story Told Through Charts: The U.S. Midterm Election," dated September 19, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 6 The Strategic Petroleum Reserve currently covers 100 days of net crude imports, or 200 days of net petroleum imports, and can be tapped for reasons of political timing as well as international emergencies. 7 Please see BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Oil-Supply Shock, Rising U.S. Rates Favor Gold As A Portfolio Hedge," dated September 13, 2018, available at bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see the U.S. Federal Reserve, "Report on the Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households in 2017," May 2018, available at federalreserve.gov. 9 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, "Is The Stock Rally Long In The FAANG?" dated August 1, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 10 Please see BCA Daily Insights, "Politics And Monetary Policy," dated August 22, 2018, and "The Battle Of The Press Conferences: Trump Versus Powell," dated September 27, 2018, available at dailyinsights.bcaresearch.com. 11 Please see BCA Special Report, "The Politicization Of Monetary Policy: Should We Care?" dated April 15, 2013, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. Geopolitical Calendar
Special Report Highlights Value is the most storied of all the factors discovered by academicians, and some of the most revered investors of all time have been those most closely associated with value investing. Over the nearly 92 years covered by Fama and French's data set, stocks with the highest book-to-price multiples have outperformed the overall market by three percentage points annually, but they have underperformed by two percentage points a year since their pre-financial-crisis peak. Fama and French's top value cohort has spent much of the post-crisis period mired at relative levels it first surpassed in early 2001, leading to whispers that value might be finished. It may take another year or two, but nothing ails value that a good bear market couldn't cure. The most popular value indexes are poor proxies for the value factor identified by Fama and French. We turn to our proprietary Equity Trading Strategy service's model for better insight into the metrics that separate value stocks from the rest of the field. Feature Macro students and investors are captivated by "factors," independent variables that are widely recognized as persistent drivers of equity returns, and BCA researchers are no exception. Although we have little time for the new factor "discoveries" that are accumulating at a rate that might make a bitcoin miner jealous, the established factors - Value, Size, and Momentum - have earned their stripes. We are card-carrying members of Professor Fama and French's fan club, and well-thought-out strategies attempting to harness their insights merit serious consideration. This Special Report updates a Special Report published jointly by our Global ETF Strategy and Equity Trading Strategy (ETS) services in May with insights from a custom value index just created by The Bank Credit Analyst and ETS teams.1 It compares today's popular conceptions of value to the principles of Benjamin Graham, the "father of value investing," and finds that off-the-shelf value indexes fall far short of the value ideal. We seek to answer two questions with far-reaching investment implications: Is value dead? If not, how will investors know when it's about to reclaim its former glory? In our view, value is not dead, it's only sleeping, even if its hibernation is starting to feel like Rip van Winkle's. Although it is not yet time to tilt a portfolio in its direction, the Value factor is alive and well, and simply biding its time until the next bear market and recession. Decomposing value investing's performance across market and policy cycles shows that it edges out the equity universe when policy is easy and bull markets are in force, but crushes it when policy is tight and stocks are in a bear market. The investment strategy conclusion is one with the empirical record: non-dedicated investors should look to value stocks when the weather turns rough. What Is Value? As our ETF and ETS teams lamented in their initial smart-beta ETF selection Special Report,2 the principles established by Benjamin Graham and Fama and French have faded with the passage of time. The essential notion that value is a by-product of temporary dislocations has slipped from popular understanding, making room for a simplistic, one-size-fits-all index-construction method that grants bank stocks lifetime membership. Those who bothered to read Fama and French's paper quickly forgot step one of its methodology, which stated, "We exclude financial firms." Financials' higher debt loads depress their price-to-book multiples relative to their nonfinancial counterparts', making direct comparisons dubious. The result has been to tether off-the-shelf value indexes' relative performance to the relative performance of the Financials sector (Chart 1). Since Tech stocks account for a similarly outsized proportion of the market cap of most growth indexes, value vs. growth boils down to a binary choice between Financials and Tech (Chart 2). Style investing is presumably meant to be something larger than a head-to-head battle between Financials' and Tech's prospective returns. It is certainly a long way away from the margin-of-safety concept that Graham applied to every investment. Chart 1Value Indexes' Permanent Residents Chart 2In A Standard Index, Value Is To Growth ##br##As Financials Are To Tech What's The Big Deal? Shorn of the margin-of-safety concept, value investing ceases to provide investors with downside protection. Regardless of the metric(s) used to measure an investor's margin of safety (Graham preferred a multiple of future earnings, conservatively estimated; Fama and French found that trailing book-to-price in isolation best explained subsequent returns), securities bought with a large one provide investors with a cushion against untoward future developments. That cushion is readily apparent in Fama and French's high book-to-price portfolios' performance relative to low book-to-price portfolios', and to the overall equity market (Chart 3): they outperform in bull markets, albeit at a modest pace, but they blast ahead during bear markets and recessions (Table 1). Long bull markets, like the one that was mainly in force from 1982 to 2000, and the current one, which just established a postwar record of over nine-and-a-half years, are a drag on rolling (Chart 3, middle panel) and cumulative returns (Chart 3, bottom panel). Chart 3Making Hay While The Rain Falls Table 1Value Portfolio Returns, July 1967 - July 2018 By contrast, the S&P 500 Value Index offers very little protection in times of stress, nosing out the broad S&P 500 in the one-seventh of the time a bear market has been in force since its 1975 launch, while lagging the broad index over the other six-sevenths (Table 2). The result is steady underperformance that adds up over time (Chart 4), and mirrors the relative performance of the S&P 500 Financials (Chart 4, bottom panel). Since value investors are conceding performance to growth investors in boom times, they really need to make hay during slumps, which the S&P 500 Value Index has failed to do, outside of the bursting of the dot-com bubble. The empirical record suggests that the main off-the-shelf value index's construction methodology leaves a lot to be desired (Chart 5). Table 2S&P 500 Value Index Returns, ##br##February 1975 - July 2018 Chart 4A Simplistic Proxy ... Chart 5... That Can't Hold A Candle To The Real Factor Building A Better Value Index The standard value indexes have several shortcomings. They are backward-looking, overly reliant on earnings as a cash-flow metric, blind to serial acquirers' accumulation of book-to-market-flattering intangible assets, and oblivious to sector-neutrality's charms. The value metrics in our Equity Trading Strategy (ETS) model correct for all but sector biases. They incorporate forward P/E multiples alongside trailing multiples; they consider cash-flow multiples; and their use of price-to-tangible-book, in place of simple price-to-book, partially corrects for acquirers' cosmetic advantage. Our Bank Credit Analyst colleagues turned to the ETS software to screen for candidates that more fully live up to Graham's value ideal. To combat sector biases, they grouped large- and mid-cap U.S. stocks3 by sector and evaluated their value characteristics only against each other, identifying the top three (value) and bottom three (growth) deciles within individual sector silos. Then and only then did they bring the value and growth pools together into market-wide baskets. Every sector is equally represented in its value and growth indexes, which bring together the best- and worst-value stocks from every sector. The ETS approach, which may do a better job of screening out value traps than simple book-to-price multiples alone, shows promise. The ETS value: growth index has outperformed Fama and French's high-minus-low index by an annualized 4 percentage points over its 22-year life (Chart 6). The ETS index rebalances monthly, making it more costly to track than Fama and French's high-minus-low (HML) index, but does not ride the same Size factor tailwind.4 We estimate that the Size factor contributes more to Fama and French's HML than ignoring commissions contributes to the ETS index. Chart 6Standing On The Shoulders Of Giants When Will Value Regain Its Footing? The Value factor has underperformed the broad market before, but its rolling 10-year returns have never been underwater for so long. Relative to the bottom three deciles of stocks on a book-to-price basis, the top three deciles have spent much of the post-crisis period bumping along a level they first reached in February 2001, when the stock market was in the midst of furiously unwinding the excesses of the dot-com era (Chart 7). Seventeen years of sideways action have emboldened skeptics to suggest that Value might have met its end at the hands of overexposure and increased short-term pressure on professional investors. Chart 7A Historically Long Value Slump Count us among those who believe Value's demise has been greatly exaggerated. We've seen this movie before - the Value factor posts its strongest relative gains during bear markets and/or recessions - and the last 17 years have been market-friendly away from the crisis, when high book-to-price stocks uncharacteristically underperformed. Consistent with its comfort in adverse conditions, Value has performed best when monetary policy settings are restrictive (Table 3). Policy has now been accommodative for a record 10 consecutive years and counting (Chart 8), subjecting the high book-to-price stocks to a persistent relative headwind. Table 3High-Minus-Low* Annualized Returns By Fed Funds Cycle Phase, August 1961-July 2018 Chart 8Easier For Lo-o-o-onger The policy backdrop may provide the surest route back to Value outperformance. Based on the tight-as-a-drum labor market and budding inflation pressures, we expect the FOMC to maintain its 25-basis-points-a-quarter pace throughout 2019, putting the target fed funds rate on a path to cross our estimate of equilibrium sometime around the middle of next year. Tight policy would be conducive for Value outperformance and potentially plant the seeds for a recession and equity bear market at some point in 2020. As our ETF and ETS teams showed in their review of equity factors and the fed funds rate cycle, countercyclical Value naturally diversifies a portfolio with pro-cyclical Size and Momentum exposures,5 suggesting that Value exposure could be a welcome input to a recession portfolio. Investment Implications Prime time for the Value factor still appears to be a year off, but the time for considering new, or increasing existing, exposures is approaching, and another year of Fed hikes will bring it squarely into view. Value investing will never die as long as significant segments of the investing public pursue instant gratification, or are drawn in by the siren song of potentially supercharged growth opportunities.6 The current cycle is simply extended, and just as it remains appropriate to stick with equities overall, it remains appropriate from a factor perspective to de-emphasize Value in the near term. We remain on the style-investing sidelines, waiting for the next policy-cycle phase. Once it arrives, investors would be well-advised to apply the ETS approach to uncovering the best value candidates for an equity portfolio. Doug Peta, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy dougp@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see the May 16, 2018 Global ETF Strategy/Equity Trading Strategy Special Report, "Smart-Beta ETF Selection Update - Is Value Still Worth It?" available at etf.bcaresearch.com, and the October 2018 Bank Credit Analyst Special Report, "Is It Time To Buy Value Stocks?," available at www.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see the February 15, 2017 Global ETF Strategy Special Report, "Smart-Beta ETF Selection, Part I - Value Funds," available at etf.bcaresearch.com. 3 The ETS model draws its index members from the top three deciles of U.S. stocks by market cap. 4 Fama and French's HML index is equally composed of the top three book-to-price (B/P) deciles less the bottom three B/P deciles of the stocks above the median market cap and the top three B/P deciles less the bottom three B/P deciles of stocks below the median market cap. The ETS index is drawn from the largest three deciles of all stocks by market cap. The net effect is for the HML index to include stocks with much smaller market caps than the ETS index, allowing it to derive an added benefit from the Size factor (smaller stocks outperform larger stocks over time). 5 Please see the May 17, 2017 Global ETF Strategy Special Report, "Equity Factors And The Fed Funds Rate Cycle," available at etf.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see the June 20, 2018 Global ETF Strategy/Equity Trading Strategy Special Report, "Why Anomalies Persist," available at etf.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights Chart 1Second Half Rebound The leveling-off of bullish sentiment toward the dollar and the perception of fading political risk have caused spread product to rally hard since the end of June. Indeed, corporate bonds are almost back into the black versus Treasuries for the year (Chart 1). We caution against buying into either of these trends. We have demonstrated that divergences between the U.S. and the rest of the world usually end with weaker U.S. growth,1 and our geopolitical strategists warn that American tensions with both Iran and China are poised to ramp up after the November midterms.2 Add in persistent monetary tightening and corporate profit growth that is barely keeping pace with debt growth, and it becomes clear that the corporate spread environment is turning more negative. Investors should maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration and only a neutral allocation to spread product versus Treasuries. Evidence of deteriorating profit growth is required before turning more negative on spread product. Feature Investment Grade: Neutral Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview Investment grade corporate bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 78 basis points in September, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to -16 bps. The index option-adjusted spread tightened 8 bps on the month, and currently sits at 114 bps. Corporate bonds remain expensive with 12-month breakeven spreads for both A and Baa-rated credit tiers below their 25th percentiles since 1989 (Chart 2). Further, with inflation now at the Fed's target, monetary policy will provide less and less support for corporate bond returns going forward. These are the two main reasons we downgraded our cyclical corporate bond exposure to neutral in June.3 Gross leverage for the nonfinancial corporate sector declined in Q2, for the third consecutive quarter (panel 4), though the declines have been quite modest. Dollar strength and accelerating wage growth will weigh on corporate profits in the second half of the year, and with corporate profit growth just barely keeping pace with debt growth (bottom panel), odds are that leverage will start to rise. Midstream and Independent Energy companies remain attractively valued after adjusting for duration and credit rating (Table 3). These two sectors stand to benefit from rising oil prices into next year, as is expected by our commodity strategists.4 Table 3ACorporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation* Table 3BCorporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward* High-Yield: Neutral Chart 3High-Yield Market Overview High-Yield outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 104 basis points in September, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +326 bps. The average index option-adjusted spread tightened 22 bps on the month, and currently sits at 316 bps. Our measure of the excess spread available in the High-Yield index after accounting for default losses is currently 209 bps, below the long-run mean of 247 bps (Chart 3). This tells us that if default losses are in line with our expectations during the next 12 months, we should expect high-yield returns of 209 bps in excess of duration-matched Treasuries, assuming also no capital gains/losses from spread tightening/widening. But the default loss expectations embedded in our calculation are also extremely low relative to history (panel 4). Our assumption, derived from the Moody's baseline default rate forecast and our own forecast of the recovery rate, calls for default losses of 1.07% during the next 12 months. Default losses have rarely come in below that level. While most indicators suggest that default losses will remain low for the next 12 months, historical context clearly demonstrates that the risks are to the upside. Meanwhile, with gross corporate leverage likely to rise in the second half of the year,5 and job cut announcements already trending higher (bottom panel), current default loss forecasts appear overly optimistic. MBS: Neutral Chart 4MBS Market Overview Mortgage-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 11 basis points in September, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to -7 bps. The conventional 30-year zero-volatility MBS spread tightened 5 bps on the month, driven by a 4 bps decline in the compensation for prepayment risk (option cost) and a 1 bp tightening in the option-adjusted spread. The excess return Bond Map on page 15 shows that MBS offer a relatively poor risk/reward trade-off, particularly compared to Aaa-rated non-Agency CMBS, High-Yield and Sovereigns. However, our Bond Map does not account for the macro environment, which remains favorable for the sector. Refi activity is tepid, and continued Fed rate hikes will ensure that it stays that way (Chart 4). Meanwhile, lending standards have been slowly easing since 2014 (bottom panel). Despite the steady easing, the Fed's most recent Senior Loan Officer Survey reports that mortgage lending standards remain at the tighter end of the range since 2005. This suggests that further easing is likely going forward. In a recent report we noted that residential investment has decelerated in recent months, with the weakness mostly stemming from multi-family construction.6 Demand for single-family housing remains robust, and we see no potential negative impact on MBS spreads during the next 6-12 months. Government-Related: Underweight Chart 5Government-Related Market Overview The Government-Related index outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 48 basis points in September, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +38 bps. Sovereign debt outperformed the Treasury benchmark by 151 bps, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +67 bps. Foreign Agencies outperformed by 70 bps on the month, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +34 bps. Local Authorities outperformed by 50 bps, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +91 bps. Supranationals outperformed Treasuries by 4 bps, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +16 bps. Domestic Agency bonds outperformed by 6 bps, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +10 bps. After adjusting for differences in credit rating and duration, the average spread available from the USD-denominated Sovereign index is unattractive compared to the U.S. corporate bond space (Chart 5). Dollar strength should also cause Sovereign debt to underperform U.S. corporates in the coming months (panel 3). But the outlook could be worse for the Sovereign index. Mexico, Colombia and the Philippines make up approximately 50% of the index's market cap, and our Emerging Markets Strategy team has found that none of those countries are particularly vulnerable to a slowdown in Chinese aggregate demand.7 Mexico and Columbia are particularly insulated. Municipal Bonds: Overweight Chart 6Municipal Market Overview Municipal bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 36 basis points in September, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +153 bps (before adjusting for the tax advantage). The average Aaa-rated Municipal / Treasury (M/T) yield ratio rose 2% in September, and currently sits at 87% (Chart 6). This is about one standard deviation below its post-crisis mean and only slightly above the average of 81% that was observed in the late stages of the previous cycle, between mid-2006 and mid-2007. In a recent report we demonstrated that while M/T yield ratios are low, municipal bonds offer attractive yields compared to corporate bonds.8 For example, we observe that a 5-year Aa-rated municipal bond carries a yield of 2.40% versus a yield of 3.42% for a comparable corporate bond index. This implies that an investor with an effective tax rate of 30% should be indifferent between the two bonds. Moving further out the curve, the breakeven tax rate falls to 23% at the 10-year maturity point and is even lower at the 20-year maturity point. The greater attractiveness of long-maturity munis is consistent across credit tiers, and investors should favor long-dated over short-dated municipal debt (bottom panel). Treasury Curve: Favor The 7-Year Bullet Over The 1/20 Barbell Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview The Treasury curve underwent a roughly parallel upward shift in September. While the 10-year Treasury yield rose 19 bps, the 2/10 slope was unchanged at 24 bps and the 5/30 slope flattened 3 bps to reach 25 bps. The yield curve is already quite flat, and our models suggest that a lot more flattening is discounted. For example, our 1/7/20 butterfly spread model shows that 32 bps of 1/20 flattening is priced into the 1/7/20 butterfly spread for the next six months (Chart 7).9 With the U.S. economy growing strongly and the Fed moving at a gradual +25 bps per quarter pace, the curve is likely to flatten by less than is currently discounted on a cyclical (6-12 month) horizon. This argues for positioning in curve steepeners. In a recent report we also made the case for owning steepeners as a hedge against the risk that weak foreign growth infiltrates the U.S. via a stronger dollar.10 We found that the yield pick-up is similar for the different steepener trades we considered, and also that the 7-year yield has the most downside in the event of a pause in the Fed's tightening cycle. This argues for maintaining our position long the 7-year bullet and short the 1/20 barbell, a position that has earned +37 bps since it was initiated in May. TIPS: Overweight Chart 8Inflation Compensation TIPS outperformed the duration-equivalent nominal Treasury index by 16 basis points in September, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +138 bps. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate rose 6 bps on the month and currently sits at 2.14%. The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate rose 7 bps and currently sits at 2.25%. Both the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates remain below the 2.3% to 2.5% range that has historically been consistent with inflation expectations that are well-anchored around the Fed's 2% target. TIPS breakeven rates have held firm in recent months, despite the sharp drop in commodity prices (Chart 8). This suggests that investors' inflation expectations are increasingly being swayed by U.S. core inflation, which is now more or less consistent with the Fed's target (bottom panel). In recent reports we showed that year-over-year core inflation (both CPI and PCE) is likely to flatten-off during the next six months.11 But continued inflation prints near the Fed's target should be sufficient to drive long-dated breakevens higher, into our target range. This will occur as persistent prints near target cause investors' fears of deflation to gradually ebb. ABS: Neutral Chart 9ABS Market Overview Asset-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 11 basis points in September, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +29 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for Aaa-rated ABS narrowed 4 bps on the month and now stands at 33 bps, just below its pre-crisis minimum. The excess return Bond Map on page 15 shows that consumer ABS offer attractive return potential compared to other high-rated spread products - such as Agency CMBS and Domestic Agencies - but also carry a greater risk of losses. The Bond Map also reveals that Aaa-rated credit card ABS offer a more attractive risk/reward trade-off than Aaa-rated auto loan ABS. We continue to recommend favoring the former over the latter. Credit quality trends have been slowly moving against the ABS sector and we think caution is warranted. The consumer credit delinquency rate bottomed in 2015, albeit from a very low level, and it should continue to head higher based on the trend in household interest coverage (Chart 9). Average consumer credit bank lending standards have also been tightening for nine consecutive quarters (bottom panel). Non-Agency CMBS: Underweight Chart 10CMBS Market Overview Non-Agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 41 basis points in September, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +167 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for non-agency Aaa-rated CMBS tightened 6 bps on the month and currently sits at 83 bps (Chart 10). In a recent report we showed that the macro picture for CMBS is decidedly mixed.12 A typical negative environment for CMBS is characterized by tightening bank lending standards for commercial real estate loans and falling demand. At present, both lending standards and demand for nonresidential real estate loans are close to unchanged (bottom two panels). Agency CMBS: Overweight Agency CMBS outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 13 basis points in September, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +54 bps. The index option-adjusted spread tightened 1 bp on the month and currently sits at 44 bps. The Bond Maps on page 15 show that Agency CMBS offer high potential return compared to other low risk spread products. An overweight allocation to this defensive sector continues to make sense. The BCA Bond Maps The following page presents excess return and total return Bond Maps that we use to assess the relative risk/reward trade-off between different sectors of the U.S. fixed income market. The Maps employ volatility-adjusted breakeven spread/yield analysis to show how likely it is that a given sector will earn/lose money during the subsequent 12 months. The Maps do not impose any macroeconomic view. The Excess Return Bond Map The horizontal axis of the excess return Bond Map shows the number of days of average spread widening required for each sector to lose 100 bps versus a position in duration-matched Treasuries. Sectors plotting further to the left require more days of average spread widening and are therefore less likely to see losses. The vertical axis shows the number of days of average spread tightening required for each sector to earn 100 bps in excess of duration-matched Treasuries. Sectors plotting further toward the top require fewer days of spread tightening and are therefore more likely to earn 100 bps in excess of Treasuries. The Total Return Bond Map The horizontal axis of the total return Bond Map shows the number of days of average yield increase required for each sector to lose 5% in total return terms. Sectors plotting further to the left require more days of yield increases and are therefore less likely to lose 5%. The vertical axis shows the number of days of average yield decline required for each sector to earn 5% in total return terms. Sectors plotting further toward the top require fewer days of yield decline and are therefore more likely to earn 5%. Chart 11Excess Return Bond Map (As Of September 28, 2018) Chart 12Total Return Bond Map (As Of September 28, 2018) Table 4Butterfly Strategy Valuation (As Of September 28, 2018) Table 5Discounted Slope Change During Next 6 Months (BPs) Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "An Oasis Of Prosperity?", dated August 21, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "A Story Told Through Charts: The U.S. Midterm Election", dated September 19, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Go To Neutral On Spread Product", dated June 26, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Odds Of Oil-Price Spike In 1H19 Rise; 2019 Brent Forecast Lifted $15 To $95/bbl", dated September 20, 2018, available at ces.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "More Than One Reason To Own Steepeners", dated September 25, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "More Than One Reason To Own Steepeners", dated September 25, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report, "Deciphering Global Trade Linkages", dated September 27, 2018, available at ems.bcaresearch.com 8 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "An Oasis Of Prosperity?", dated August 21, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 9 For further details on our yield curve models please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "More Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies", dated May 15, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 10 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "More Than One Reason To Own Steepeners", dated September 25, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 11 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "No Excuses", dated September 18, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 12 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Fed's Balance Sheet Problem", dated July 17, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification Corporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation Total Return Comparison: 7-Year Bullet Versus 2-20 Barbell (6-Month Investment Horizon)
It comes as no shock to market observers that the internet services & software index has been representing a growing share of the S&P 500 as its components have been roaring ahead. The usual conclusion is that this mirrors a dramatic surge in the…