Developed Countries
Highlights One of Europe's major success stories is the structural and broad-based increase in female labour participation rates. The trend is set to continue for the next decade. Stay overweight the Personal Products sector as a long-term position. Italy's decade-long stagnation is not a deep-seated structural malaise. It is a protracted cyclical downturn resulting from a banking system that was never repaired after the 2008 financial crisis combined with wholly inappropriate fiscal austerity. We expect Italy's new government to push back against the EU's misguided fiscal rules and correct this decade-long error. Buy exposure to Italian real estate as a new long-term position either directly or through Italy's small real estate equity sector. Feature Some analysts persist on comparing economic performances on the basis of real GDP per head of total population. But the total population includes children and the elderly who cannot contribute to economic output. Therefore, a correct assessment of economic performance should look at real GDP per head of working-age population. Chart I-1AWomen Are Powering The European Economy... Chart I-1B ...Less So In The U.S. Admittedly, as the retirement age rises, the definition of 'working-age' will gradually change, but the general principle still holds: only count in the denominator those who can contribute to economic output. GDP per head of working-age population can grow in several ways. One way is to get more output or better output from each hour worked through improvements in efficiency and/or quality. As this improvement is theoretically limitless, it is the main source of productivity gains in the long run. A second way is for each worker to work more hours. But given the physical and legal constraints on productive working time, there is only limited scope to increase output in this way. How Women Are Powering The European Economy There is one other way to increase GDP per head of working-age population: increase the percentage of the working age population that is in the labour force.1 In other words, structurally increase the labour participation rate. If this participation rate is already high - as it is for men - then there is little scope to increase it much further. But if the participation rate is low - as it is for European women - then there is considerable scope to increase it. This brings us to one of Europe's major, and largely untold, success stories - the structural and broad-based increase in female participation rates (Chart I-1-Chart I-5). Over the past twenty years, the EU28 female participation rate has risen from 57% to 68%, with an especially large contribution from the socially conservative southern countries. In Spain, female participation has surged from 47% to 70%. In Italy, it has shot up from 42% to 56% and has clear scope to rise much further. Chart I-2Italy: Labour Force Participation Rate Chart I-3Spain: Labour Force Participation Rate Chart I-4Germany: Labour Force Participation Rate Chart I-5France: Labour Force Participation Rate What is driving this structural trend? Two things. First, the employment sectors that are growing structurally - healthcare, social care, and education - tend to employ more women than men. Second, European countries have legislated a raft of policies encouraging women to join and remain in the labour force: generous paid maternity leave and subsidised childcare. The trend is for further improvements, with the focus now on improving paternity leave. Sharing parental and family responsibilities between mothers and fathers allows more women to enter and stay in the labour force.2 For the ultimate end-point in the trend, look to the Scandinavian countries which started such policies in the early 1970s. In Sweden, labour force participation for women and men is almost identical: 81% versus 84%. If the EU eventually adopts the Scandinavian model, it would mean another 20 million European women in employment and contributing to economic output (Chart I-6). Chart I-6Another 20 Million European Women ##br##Could Join The Labour Force Dispelling Two Myths: The Euro Area And Italy Having established that economic performances should be compared on the basis of GDP per head of working age population, we can now dispel two common myths. The first myth is that the U.S. generates superior productivity growth than the euro area. It is true that the U.S. has been better at getting more output from each hour worked, so on this measure, the U.S. does win. Against this, the euro area has been much better at getting more of its working-age population - albeit mostly women - into employment. So on this measure, the euro area wins (Chart of the Week). The net result is that, over the past twenty years, the U.S and the euro area have generated exactly the same growth in real GDP per working-age population (Chart I-7). Of course, the euro area's structural improvement in female participation rates cannot continue forever, but it can certainly continue for another decade or so, and this is generally the longest time horizon that most investors care about. Chart I-7The Euro Area And The U.S.: Identical Growth In Real GDP Per Head Of Working-Age Population The second myth concerns the subject du jour: Italy. Many people claim that Italy's economic stagnation is due to deep-seated structural problems which differentiate it from other major economies. The problem with this narrative is that from the mid-1990s until 2008 the growth in Italy's real GDP per head of working age population was little different to that in Germany, France or the U.S. (Chart I-8). Chart I-8Italy Performed In Line With Other Major Economies Until 2008 Italy's economic stagnation only started after the 2008 global financial crisis. After a financial crisis which cripples the banking system, there are two golden rules: unleash fiscal stimulus; and repair the banking system as quickly as possible. The U.S. and U.K. followed the golden rules perfectly and immediately; Ireland followed a couple of years later; Spain waited until 2013. But in each case, the economies rebounded very strongly as the fiscal stimulus kicked in and the banks recuperated. Italy neither unleashed fiscal stimulus, nor repaired its banks - so its economy has stagnated for a decade. Moreover, if output stagnates for a decade, it follows arithmetically that productivity growth will also look poor. In a back-to-front argument, critics have pounced on this as evidence of excessive 'red tape' and 'structural problems'. But this is a misdiagnosis of the malaise. To reiterate, Italy's real GDP per working-age population was growing very respectably before 2008. Italy's misfortune is that its indebtedness has an unusual profile: more public debt than private debt. France and Spain (and other major euro area economies) have the usual profile: less public debt than private debt. So the EU's fiscal rules - which can see only public debt and are blind to private debt - have severely and unfairly constrained Italy's ability to respond to financial crises. While every other major economy followed the golden rules to recover from the 2008 crisis, Italy could neither unleash fiscal stimulus to kick start the economy nor recapitalise its dysfunctional banking system. We expect Italy's new government to push back against the EU's misguided fiscal rules and correct this decade-long error. Two Structural Investment Conclusions This week's two investment conclusions are both long term, and require a buy and hold mentality. The first conclusion reiterates a structural position: overweight the Personal Products sector. This is based on our expectation that, in Europe, female participation rates will continue their structural uptrend; while in the U.S. we expect female participation rates to continue outperforming male participation rates. Therefore the sales and profits of the Personal Products sector, in which female spending dominates, will benefit from a multi-year tailwind, at least relative to other sectors. And the extent of this tailwind is not fully discounted in valuations. The second conclusion is a new long-term recommendation: buy exposure to Italian real estate. This is based on our assessment that Italy's decade-long stagnation is not a deep-seated structural malaise. Instead, it is a protracted cyclical downturn resulting from a banking system that was never repaired after the 2008 financial crisis combined with wholly inappropriate fiscal austerity. Removing these shackles will allow a long-term recovery, just as it did for Spain in 2013. If we are right, the best multi-year buy and hold play is Italian real estate which has been in a decade-long bear market (Chart I-9). For those that cannot directly invest in property, Italy has a small real estate equity sector which faithfully tracks the long term profile of real estate prices (Chart I-10), and whose main component is Beni Stabili. The caveat is that the stock has a market cap of just €2 billion; the appeal is that it offers a juicy dividend yield of 4.5%. Chart I-9Italian Real Estate Has Suffered ##br##A Decade-Long Bear Market Chart I-10Italian Real Estate Equities##br## Track Real Estate Prices Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 And in employment. 2 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Female Participation: Another Mega-Trend" published on April 6, 2017 and available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model* This week, we note that the 130-day fractal dimension for platinum versus nickel is close to its lower bound, a level which has consistently predicted a tradeable countertrend move over the following 130 days. Hence, this week's trade is long platinum/short nickel on a 130 horizon before expiry. The profit target is 14% with a symmetric stop-loss. Our two other open trades, long SEK/GBP and long PLN/USD, are both in profit. 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##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Underweight (Upgrade Alert) It is a well-established rule that where jet fuel prices go, airline stock prices will go the opposite direction. Thus, it is no surprise that the most recent peak in the S&P airlines index coincided with the most recent trough in jet fuel prices in early 2017; the former has since fallen steeply as the latter has soared (fuel prices shown inverted in top panel). Easing oil prices are a likely catalyst for a significant rerating in depressed relative valuations. Fuel hedges no longer play a significant role in earnings and lower fuel costs would translate directly to the bottom line. As a reminder, nearly all major players reiterated their pledge to avoid kerosene hedging earlier this year. Adding it up, we think downside risks to airlines have abated considerably and are well reflected in beaten down valuations (bottom panel). We are therefore compelled to add this transportation sub-index to our upgrade watch list. If there is any letup in jet fuel prices, we would not hesitate to crystallize relative profits north of 21% since our underweight inception. Bottom Line: Stay underweight the S&P airlines index for now, but put in on upgrade alert; please see Monday's Weekly Report for more details. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5AIRL - DAL, LUV, AAL, UAL, ALK.
Overweight (High Conviction) The S&P software index is on the cusp of breaching the 2000 relative performance all-time peak, and we reiterate the high-conviction overweight status of this key tech sub-index, that is up over 11% versus the SPX since the late-November inception.1 BCA's synchronized global capex upcycle theme is the fundamental driver of our sanguine software industry view. Currently, software investment is outpacing overall capital outlays (second panel). These software capex market share gains on the back of a growing overall capex pie bode well for relative profit growth. Our S&P software EPS growth model corroborates this encouraging news (third panel), pointing to ongoing exceptionally strong earnings growth. Meanwhile, the S&P software index has a pristine balance sheet with virtually no net debt (bottom panel); if our virtuous capex upcycle thesis further bolsters software sales/profits in the coming months, then more gains are in store for the S&P software index that will likely grow into its pricey valuations. Bottom Line: We reiterate our high-conviction overweight status in the S&P software index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5SOFT - MSFT, ORCL, ADBE, CRM, ATVI, INTU, EA, RHT, ADSK, CTXS, ANSS, SNPS, SYMC, TTWO, CDNS, CA. 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "2018 High-Conviction Calls," dated November 27, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights Chart 1Risks To The Bond Bear Market Two weeks ago we flagged that large net short positioning and elevated growth expectations left the Treasury market primed to benefit from any disturbance in the economic outlook. Since then the 10-year yield fell from a peak of 3.06% to 2.77%, before climbing back to 2.92%. With positioning still deeply net short and strong odds of a further decline in the economic surprise index (Chart 1), we continue to see an elevated risk that yields move lower on a 0-3 month horizon. But beyond that, less nimble investors should remain positioned for higher yields on a 6-12 month timeframe. The major risks in the global economy - Eurozone sovereign credit concerns and a strong dollar weighing on emerging market demand - are unlikely to put the Fed off its "gradual" pace of one rate hike per quarter unless they lead to a significant risk-off event in U.S. financial markets. Absent that sort of shock, the Fed will continue to lift rates "gradually" toward a neutral level near 3%, and eventually into restrictive territory. This rate hike path is consistent with a cyclical peak in the 10-year Treasury yield between 3.30% and 3.80%, well above current levels. Feature Investment Grade: Overweight Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview Investment grade corporate bonds underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 45 basis points in May, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -122 bps. Value has improved considerably since the start of the year. The 12-month breakeven spread for a Baa-rated corporate bond is back up to its 29th percentile relative to history (Chart 2). Market-derived inflation expectations also ebbed during the past month, with the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates now at 2.09% and 2.12% respectively. This is below the target range of 2.3% to 2.5% that would trigger a downgrade to our corporate bond allocation. The combination of more attractive value and a somewhat more supportive monetary environment (as evidenced by the decline in TIPS breakeven rates) increases the odds of near-term corporate bond outperformance, and we would not be surprised to see spreads tighten during the next few months. However, the longer run outlook for corporates remains negative. First quarter data showed a 5.7% annualized decline in pre-tax corporate profits, dragging the year-over-year growth rate down to 5.8% (bottom panel). As employee compensation costs accelerate in the second half of the year, we expect that corporate profit growth will fall sustainably below the pace of corporate debt growth leading to rising leverage (panel 4). Strong oil prices have caused the energy sector to outperform the overall index considerably since the middle of last year. Now, many energy sub-sectors no longer appear cheap on our model. We take this opportunity to downgrade a few energy sub-sectors from overweight to neutral, and adjust some other sector recommendations as well (Table 3). Table 3ACorporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation* Table 3BCorporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward* High-Yield: Overweight Chart 3High-Yield Market Overview High-Yield underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 65 basis points in May, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +36 bps. The average index option-adjusted spread widened 24 bps on the month, and currently sits at 356 bps. High-yield spreads are increasingly at odds with Moody's default rate projections. The latter call for the 12-month speculative grade default rate to fall to 1.5% by next April. The current 12-month trailing default rate is 3.7% (Chart 3). Using the Moody's default rate projection, and our own forecast for the recovery rate, we calculate the excess spread available in the Bloomberg Barclays High-Yield index to be 284 bps (after accounting for expected default losses). This is somewhat higher than the historical average of 248 bps. The current excess spread means that in an unchanged spread environment we would expect a High-Yield excess return (relative to duration-matched Treasuries) of +278 bps during the next 12 months. If the index spread were to tighten by 100 bps, we would expect an excess return of +675 bps. If the index spread were to widen by 100 bps we would expect an excess return of -120 bps (panel 3). If the excess spread were to simply revert to its historical average, then it would imply an excess High-Yield return of +427 bps. At the sector level, Moody's expects that most defaults during the next 12 months will come from the Media: Advertising, Printing & Publishing sector, followed closely by the Durable Consumer Goods and Retail sectors. Much of the projected improvement in the overall default rate results from a continued decline in Oil & Gas sector defaults compared to the past few years. MBS: Neutral Chart 4MBS Market Overview Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 5 basis points in May, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -27 bps. The conventional 30-year zero-volatility MBS spread widened 4 bps on the month, driven entirely by a 4 bps increase in the compensation for prepayment risk (option cost). The option-adjusted spread held flat at 32 bps. Value in the MBS sector is by no means exciting. The nominal spread on a conventional 30-year MBS is near its all-time low, the option-adjusted spread is close to one standard deviation below its pre-crisis mean (Chart 4) and MBS no longer look very attractive compared to investment grade corporate credit (panel 3). The most compelling reason to hold agency-backed MBS is that mortgage refinancings are likely to remain very low, owing both to rising interest rates and the large number of homeowners that have already refinanced. Depressed refi activity should keep MBS spreads near historically low levels (bottom panel), even as stresses emerge in other spread product sectors, notably corporate bonds. We recently presented a method for calculating expected total returns for all different bond sectors, only using assumptions for the number of Fed rate hikes during the next 12 months and the expected change in spreads.1 Our results showed an expected total return of 2.9% for conventional 30-year MBS in a scenario where the Fed lifts rates by 100 bps and where spreads remain flat. The same scenario corresponds to 3.4% total return for the investment grade corporate index. Government-Related: Underweight Chart 5Government-Related Market Overview The Government-Related index underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 33 basis points in May, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -40 bps. Sovereign debt underperformed the Treasury benchmark by 158 bps on the month, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -242 bps. Foreign Agencies underperformed by 37 bps on the month, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -56 bps. Local Authorities underperformed by 22 bps on the month, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +37 bps. Supranationals underperformed by 2 bps on the month, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +2 bps. Domestic Agency bonds outperformed by 7 bps, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +7 bps. Global growth divergences and a stronger U.S. dollar weighed on Sovereign bond returns in May (Chart 5). While value in the sector improved somewhat as a result, it remains expensive relative to investment grade corporate credit (panel 2). With dollar strength likely to persist in the near-term, we remain underweight Sovereign bonds. Conversely, we reiterate our overweight recommendations on Foreign Agency and Local Authority bonds. Those sectors still offer compelling valuations and are less sensitive to a strong U.S. dollar than the lower-rated Sovereign sector. Supranationals and Domestic Agency bonds are low risk but do not offer sufficient spread to warrant much attention. Better low-risk spread product opportunities are available in the Agency CMBS and Consumer ABS sectors. Municipal Bonds: Underweight Chart 6Municipal Market Overview Municipal bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 15 basis points in May, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +110 bps (before adjusting for the tax advantage). The average Aaa-rated Municipal/Treasury yield ratio declined 2% on the month and, at 86%, it is very close to its post-crisis low (Chart 6). It remains somewhat elevated compared to the average level of 81% that was observed in the late stages of the previous cycle, between mid-2006 and mid-2007. Technically, yield ratios have been supported by robust fund flows and subdued issuance (panels 2 & 3), while fundamentally our Municipal Health Monitor suggests that ratings upgrades will continue to outpace downgrades for the time being (not shown). The message from our Health Monitor is confirmed by the trend in state & local government net borrowing (bottom panel). First quarter data, released last week, showed a sizeable drop in net borrowing as state & local governments managed to grow revenues by $46 billion while growing expenditures by only $25 billion. This is consistent with governments working hard to repair their budgets, raising taxes and slowing spending growth, as we showed in a recent report.2 Given tight municipal valuations, we continue to see better opportunities in the corporate bond space than in municipal bonds. But we will look to upgrade munis at the expense of corporates as we approach the end of the credit cycle. Hopefully, from a more attractive entry point. Treasury Curve: Favor 7-Year Bullet Over 1/20 Barbell Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview The Treasury curve bull-flattened in May. The 2/10 Treasury slope flattened 3 bps to end the month at 43 bps. The 5/30 slope held steady at 32 bps. The short-end of the Treasury curve is still not adequately priced for the Fed's likely pace of one 25 basis point rate hike per quarter. Such a pace translates to a level of 100 bps on our 12-month discounter, which currently sits at only 73 bps (Chart 7). Similarly, the long-end of the Treasury curve is not adequately priced for the likely trend in inflation. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate is at only 2.09%, below the range of 2.3% to 2.5% that is consistent with well-anchored inflation expectations. We anticipate that higher TIPS breakevens at the long end of the curve will be roughly offset by loftier rate expectations at the short end of the curve, leaving the slope of the Treasury curve close to current levels during the next few months. In a recent report we introduced a framework for identifying the most attractively valued butterfly trades across the entire yield curve.3 The results, shown in Table 4, identify the 7-year bullet over the 1-year/20-year barbell as the most attractively valued butterfly trade that is geared toward curve steepening. According to our model, that trade is priced for 56 bps of 1/20 flattening during the next six months (panel 4). That seems excessive given the low level of long-maturity TIPS breakevens. Table 4Butterfly Strategy Valuation (As Of June 4, 2018) TIPS: Overweight Chart 8Inflation Compensation TIPS underperformed the duration-equivalent nominal Treasury index by 65 basis points in May, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +95 bps. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate fell 10 bps on the month and currently sits at 2.09%. The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate fell 13 bps and currently sits at 2.12%. As we explained in a recent report, we view the first stage of the bond bear market as being driven by the re-anchoring of inflation expectations.4 We will consider inflation expectations well anchored when both the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates are in a range between 2.3% and 2.5%, where they were the last time that inflation was well anchored around the Fed's target. Recent trends show that inflation is steadily making progress toward the Fed's 2% goal. The 12-month rate of change in the core PCE deflator is back up to 1.8%, from 1.5% in February. However, the core PCE deflator has only increased by 0.15% in each of the past two months. Consistent monthly prints above 0.165% are required to reach the Fed's 2% target (Chart 8). We expect tight labor markets and strong pipeline pressures (panel 3) to drive inflation higher in the months ahead. Although, as we discussed last week, the risk of a significant overshoot of the Fed's inflation target during the next 6-12 months is low.5 ABS: Neutral Chart 9ABS Market Overview Asset-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 3 basis points in May, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to -3 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for Aaa-rated ABS widened 1 bp on the month and now stands at 41 bps, 7 bps above its pre-crisis low. While consumer ABS offer reasonably attractive expected returns relative to other low-risk spread product (Agency CMBS, Domestic Agency bonds and Supranationals), credit risk is slowly starting to build in the sector. The New York Fed's Household Debt and Credit report showed that the 90+ day credit card delinquency rate rose above 8% in Q1 for the first time since 2015. Meanwhile, the overall consumer credit delinquency rate continues to increase alongside a rising debt service ratio (Chart 9). On the supply side, banks reported tightening credit card lending standards for the fourth consecutive quarter in Q1, while auto loan lending standards were tightened for the eighth consecutive quarter. Periods of tightening lending standards tend to coincide with rising delinquencies and wider spreads (bottom panel). In a recent report we forecasted 12-month total returns for each U.S. fixed income sector using inputs only for the path of spreads and the number of Fed rate hikes during the next year. In a scenario where spreads remain flat and the Fed lifts rates four times next year, we would expect Aaa-rated credit card ABS to return 2.3% and Aaa-rated auto loan ABS to return 2.4%.6 Non-Agency CMBS: Underweight Chart 10CMBS Market Overview Non-Agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 1 basis point in May, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +71 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for non-agency Aaa-rated CMBS widened 2 bps on the month and currently sits at 70 bps, close to one standard deviation below its pre-crisis mean. Banks eased lending standard on nonfarm nonresidential loans in Q1 for the first time since 2015, and continued easing could signal lower delinquencies in the future (Chart 10). Easier lending standards could also support commercial real estate prices, which have decelerated recently and currently pose a risk for spreads (panel 3). Agency CMBS: Overweight Agency CMBS outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 1 basis point in May, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +13 bps. The index option-adjusted spread widened 1 bp on the month and currently sits at 48 bps. In a recent report we forecasted 12-month total returns for each U.S. fixed income sector using inputs only for the path of spreads and the number of Fed rate hikes during the next year. In a scenario where spreads remain flat and the Fed lifts rates four times next year, we would expect non-agency Aaa-rated CMBS to return 2.8% and Agency CMBS to return 2.6%.7 Treasury Valuation Chart 11Treasury Fair Value Models The current reading from our 2-factor Treasury model (based on Global PMI and dollar sentiment) pegs fair value for the 10-year Treasury yield at 2.54%. The drop in the model's fair value compared to last month stems from a decline in the global PMI from 53.5 to 53.1, and a rise in dollar bullish sentiment from 60% to 67%. While global growth has undoubtedly lost momentum in recent months, we also suspect that our 2-factor model is finally breaking down. The 2-factor model does not contain a variable to capture the degree of resource utilization in the economy. As resource slack dissipates, inflationary pressures mount and the same pace of global growth should be associated with a higher Treasury yield. This means that as we approach the end of the cycle, the 2-factor model will start producing fair value readings that are consistently too low. We can attempt to correct for this by incorporating a measure of resource slack into our model, in this case the employment-to-population ratio. A model for the 10-year Treasury yield based on the employment-to-population ratio and the Global PMI produces a fair value of 3.29% (Chart 11). As we move further toward the end of the cycle, and away from the zero-lower bound on the fed funds rate, we expect the regression coefficients shown in the bottom three panels will revert to their pre-crisis levels and Treasury fair value will revert closer to the one shown in the second panel. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com Jeremie Peloso, Research Analyst jeremiep@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Pulling Back And Looking Ahead", dated May 22, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Profiting From A Higher LIBOR", dated March 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "More Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies", dated May 15, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "A Signal From Gold?", dated May 1, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Breaking Points", dated May 29, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Pulling Back and Looking Ahead", dated May 22, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Pulling Back and Looking Ahead", dated May 22, 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)
Highlights Will A Rising U.S. Dollar Alter The Fed's Tightening Plans? U.S. economic growth appears to be accelerating, the labor market continues to tighten, core inflation is approaching the Fed's target and wage growth is grinding higher. A much higher dollar is needed to seriously derail any of those trends. Will The Italian Turmoil Alter The ECB's Tapering Plans? The ECB has been vocal about separating a decision to taper its asset purchases from any subsequent decision to hike interest rates. Delaying the taper would not have a meaningful impact on boosting euro area economic growth, but keeping policy rates stable for longer would help support the recovery at a time of increasing divergence of inflation rates within the euro area. Feature Chart of the WeekThe Year Of Living Dangerously The latter half of May was a wild wide for global financial markets, which had finally shown signs of healing after the VIX shock from earlier in the year. The cause this time was Italian political turmoil as the populist 5-Star Movement/League coalition attempted to form a government full of fiscal largesse, sprinkled with a hint of euroskepticism. Investors got spooked into thinking that a 2011-style euro "redenomination" (i.e. breakup) risk premium might once again need to be priced into Peripheral government bond yields. The rout in Italian BTPs felt like a classic sovereign debt crisis, emerging markets style. There were even reports of Italian banks providing no price quotes for Italian debt on electronic trading platforms - the 21st Century version of dealers "not answering their phones" during a crisis. All that was missing was an IMF delegation heading to Rome with checkbook in hand. The announcement late last week that the coalition would get another shot at forming a government, rather than throwing Italy into fresh elections that could turn into a referendum on euro membership, restored order to Italian financial markets. The meltdown in Italian yields was almost as rapid as the melt-up, with the 2-year BTP yield ending last week around 1%, almost two full percentage points lower than the peak in yields seen just a few days earlier, but still much higher than the sub-zero yields seen as recently as May 15th. We made a timely decision to cut our recommended stance on Italian debt to underweight two weeks and we are maintaining that call despite the respite from the political turmoil.1 (NOTE: we are putting out a joint Special Report next week with our colleagues at BCA Geopolitical Strategy on June 13th, a day later than our usual Tuesday publishing slot, which will discuss the political outlook for Peripheral Europe and what it potentially means for their bond markets). Our more pessimistic view on Italian bonds was based on our assessment that Italian growth was slowing and would continue to do so. For a country like Italy with a large debt stock and structurally low growth, cyclical downturns always lead to increased worries about debt sustainability. Coming at a time when the ECB is looking to begin the long process of exiting its hyper-easy policies, the growth and monetary backdrop was also becoming more challenging for Italian government bonds. The same thing can be said for the rest of the world. The rapid coordinated acceleration in global growth seen in 2017 has clearly peaked, as has the pace of central bank asset purchases that helped support that recovery through low bond yields (Chart of the Week). The growth convergence has turned into a divergence between growth in the still-strong U.S. and most other major economies. This poses a new threat to financial markets - a rising U.S. dollar - which, combined with some cooling of global growth, is already triggering underperformance of emerging market assets. So after the tumultuous market price action of the past few weeks, we think the most critical potential impact on the direction of bond yields, and our recommended below-benchmark overall portfolio duration stance, can be boiled down to two big questions. Will A Rising U.S. Dollar Alter The Fed's Tightening Plans? NO. The U.S. economy continues to exhibit impressive resilience of late, even as the rest of the world has seen some softening in growth. The Payrolls report for May released last Friday showed another sturdy gain of 223,000 jobs, with upward revisions of 15,000 to the prior two months. This pushed the unemployment rate to 3.8% - the lowest level since April 2000 - while boosting the annual growth in Average Hourly Earnings up to 2.7% (Chart 2). The overall employment/population ratio also inched higher. Both wage growth and the employment/population ratio are well below the peaks seen in the past two business cycles, even with similarly low levels of unemployment. During those cycles, the Fed was forced to raise the funds rate to restrictive levels to cool growth to rein in overshooting inflation. The real fed funds rate was consistently above equilibrium measures like the Williams-Laubach "r-star" (bottom panel), which eventually crimped growth and led to a recession in both cases. In the current cycle, wage inflation is struggling to reach 3% and core PCE inflation at 1.8% has still not returned back to the Fed's 2% target. There is no need for the Fed to push harder on the brakes by raising rates faster than inflation is accelerating and pushing the real rate above r-star. If a growing economy continues to absorb labor market slack, however, the Fed could be chasing a higher level of r-star to prevent inflation from continuing to accelerate (bottom panel). Looking ahead, it does look like the Fed will continue to play a bit of catch-up to an accelerating U.S. economy. Leading economic indicators (both from the OECD and Conference Board), as well as our forward-looking models for employment and capital spending, all point to faster growth in the next couple of quarters (Chart 3). This will only support the case for the Fed to continue with its current rate "measured" pace of one rate hike per quarter over the next year. Chart 2Labor Market Tightening##BR##Leads To Fed Tightening Chart 3U.S. Growth Still##BR##In Good Shape With the U.S. dollar now reconnecting to the widening interest rate differentials between the U.S. and other major economies, there is a risk that the implied tightening of monetary conditions from a higher greenback could limit the need for the Fed to continue with its rate hike plans. Yet at the moment, the trade-weighted dollar is still not accelerating on a year-over-year basis, in contrast to the +15% appreciation seen during the 2014/15 dollar bull run (Chart 4). At the peak of that episode, net exports were a drag on real GDP growth of -1% and headline CPI inflation hit 0% (aided by collapsing oil prices). While an appreciation of that magnitude is unlikely, it would still take a much larger increase in the dollar to meaningfully dent growth in a way that could cause the Fed to pause on the rate hikes. A bigger dollar rally could also raise financial instability, primarily by hitting emerging markets where currency weakness versus the dollar would trigger tighter monetary policy and slower growth. That is certainly a risk for the Fed to consider. Yet given the underlying strength of the U.S. economy today, the Fed would only react to any turmoil in emerging markets if it meaningfully impacted U.S. financial markets, but not before then. While the Fed is still likely to continue on its rate hike path over the rest of 2018, the market has largely discounted that outcome - even after the late May decline in U.S. interest rates on the back of Italy-fueled risk-aversion (Chart 5). The market is still not completely priced to the Fed's interest rate projections over the next year, however, which does raise the potential for a return to the +3% level on the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield that was seen before the Italy crisis flared up. However, our colleagues at our sister publication, BCA U.S. Bond Strategy, continue to point out the risks to a continued near-term period of declining (or at least, consolidating) Treasury yields given persistent short positioning in the Treasury market at a time of slowing data surprises (Chart 6). We remain bearish on Treasuries over a strategic horizon, however. Chart 4USD Rally Not Yet##BR##Enough To Impact The U.S. Chart 5Market Still Priced Close To##BR##The Fed's Interest Rate Projections Chart 6UST Yields Likely To##BR##Consolidate In The Near-Term Bottom Line: U.S. economic growth appears to be accelerating, the labor market continues to tighten, core inflation is approaching the Fed's target and wage growth is grinding higher. A much higher dollar is needed to seriously derail any of those trends. Will The Italian Turmoil Alter The ECB's Tapering Plans? PROBABLY NOT. The latest volatility in European financial markets stemming from the Italy crisis came at a difficult time for the ECB. The central bank has been incrementally preparing the market for an eventual tapering of its asset purchase program after it expires in September. Yet the slowdown in euro area growth in the first quarter of the year, amid sluggish readings on inflation, has raised some doubt that the ECB would even be able to announce any sort of withdrawal of monetary stimulus. Chart 7Market Buying Into The ECB's##BR##'Low Rates For Longer' Message It is now a consensus expectation that the ECB will taper its net new asset purchases fully to zero by the end of 2018. What has moved, however, is the market's expectation for the timing of the first rate hike by the ECB. That has now been pushed out to April 2020 after the Italy turbulence (Chart 7). The ECB has been consistently signaling to the markets that it views the two decisions - tapering and rate hikes - as separate choices to make. In other words, tapering does not mean that rate hikes will come soon afterward. So far, the market appears to be listening to the ECB's signals by moving out the timing of any rate hike to nearly two full years from today. Given the magnitude of the slide in euro area growth seen in the first few months of 2018 (2nd panel), that may be taken as a sign that the market thinks the slump can continue. This also is consistent with the market believing the ECB's views on seeing through any impact on euro area inflation from changes in oil prices and the euro. The annual growth of the Brent oil price, in euro terms, has climbed to nearly 50% over the past few months (3rd panel). There has always been a strong correlation of that growth rate to overall headline euro area inflation, as evidenced by the early read on May CPI inflation released last week that came in at 1.9%. Yet core CPI inflation in the euro area is still only 1.1%, well below the ECB's inflation target of "just below" 2%. Market-based inflation expectations are still below the level as well, with the 5-year euro CPI swap, 5-years forward now sitting at 1.7%. So the market pricing is consistent with an ECB that will be very slow to begin raising interest rates. That would also be consistent with the behavior of the ECB when it comes to its past tightening cycles. In Chart 8, we show diffusion indices at a country level for euro area industrial production growth (as a proxy for economic growth), headline inflation and core inflation. These show the percentage of all euro area countries that are seeing accelerating growth or inflation versus those countries seeing slowing growth and inflation. A higher diffusion index means that any acceleration in growth or inflation is broad-based, and vice versa. Chart 8ECB Rate Hikes Happen During Broad-Based Inflation Upturns As can be seen in the chart, the ECB's past tightening cycles since the beginning of the euro in 1998 have all occurred when the diffusion indices for inflation have risen into the 60-80% zone. In other words, the ECB is more aggressive on lifting rates when a large majority of countries in the euro zone is seeing accelerating inflation. During those same tightening cycles, however, the diffusion indices for growth have been decelerating, suggesting less broad-based economic strength. The implication from this analysis is that the ECB cares more about inflation than growth when making its monetary policy decisions. The ECB's reputation for sometimes making overly hawkish policy mistakes, like in 2010-11, is well deserved. Looking ahead, the current readings on the diffusion indices for both growth and, more importantly, inflation are all quite depressed. This suggest that the slowing growth seen in the overall euro area data so far in 2018 has been broad-based, while the increase in the overall euro area inflation data has not been broad-based. This can be seen when looking at the some of the individual country data for the major core euro area countries (Chart 9) and Peripheral countries (Chart 10). For example, Netherlands and Portugal stand out as having inflation trends that are much weaker than the other countries. Yet the more divergent trends in euro area inflation does not mean that the ECB will decide to defer any decision to taper, however. The ECB will have to make that decision at either the June or July meetings, with the current program set to end in September. Absent a significant drop in euro area inflation, the ECB is still likely to signal a full taper by the end of the year. Yet even if they did extend the current program into 2019, at the same pace of 30 billion euros per month, this would likely not have a meaningful impact on the level of euro area bond yields. We have found that is the growth rate of those purchases, and not the absolute level, that is most correlated to the level of euro area bond yields (Chart 11). Even if the current program were to be extended to March 2019, to be followed by a tapering of net purchases to zero by September 2019, then the annual growth rate of the ECB's balance sheet (driven by the asset purchases) would remain mired below 10% - a far slower pace compared to the peak years of ECB bond buying. Chart 9Growth Convergence,##BR##Inflation Divergence In Core Europe... Chart 10And In##BR##Peripheral Europe Chart 11Extending ECB Bond Purchases##BR##Into 2019 Would Have Limited Impact In other words, an extension of the asset purchases would not drive euro area bond yields any lower, and would entail operational constraints on country sizes, etc. The ECB will have better success at driving down yields by keeping policy rates lower for longer, as it is signaling it will do. Bottom Line: The ECB has been vocal about separating a decision to taper its asset purchases from any subsequent decision to hike interest rates. Delaying the taper would not have a meaningful impact on boosting euro area economic growth, but keeping policy rates stable for longer would help support the recovery at a time of increasing divergence of inflation rates within the euro area. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Is It Partly Sunny Or Mostly Cloudy?", dated May 22nd 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
The GAA DM Equity Country Allocation model is updated as of May 31, 2018. No significant changes in the model's allocation this month, as shown in Table 1. Table 1Model Allocation Vs. Benchmark Weights As shown in Table 2 and Charts 1, 2 and 3, the overall model underperformed its benchmark by 111 bps in May, largely driven by Level 2 model which underperformed by 300 bps. The model's largest overweight, Italy, turned out to be the worst performer in May as a result of Italian politics, an event that is difficult for a quantitative model to capture. Level 1 model outperformed by only 7 bps in May. Consequently, since going live, the outperformance of the Level 2 model, which allocates funds among 11 non-U.S. countries, has reduced to 52 bps, while the overall model has performed in line with the MSCI World benchmark. Chart 1GAA DM Model Vs. MSCI World Chart 2GAA U.S. Vs. Non U.S. Model (Level 1) Chart 3GAA Non U.S. Model (Level 2) Please see also the website http://gaa.bcaresearch.com/trades/allocation_performance. For more details on the models, please see Special Report, "Global Equity Allocation: Introducing The Developed Markets Country Allocation Model," dated January 29, 2016, available at https://gaa.bcaresearch.com. Please note that the overall country and sector recommendations published in our Monthly Portfolio Update and Quarterly Portfolio Outlook use the results of these quantitative models as one input, but do not stick slavishly to them. We believe that models are a useful check, but structural changes and unquantifiable factors need to be considered too in making overall recommendations. GAA Equity Sector Selection Model The GAA Equity Sector Selection Model (Chart 4) is updated as of May 31, 2018. Chart 4Overall Model Performance Table 3Allocations Table 4Performance Since Going Live The largest shift was a move from underweight to overweight in the materials sector, driven by improving momentum. On the other hand, the overweight in energy was reduced by 1.7 percentage points. The aggregate model now has a small overweight on cyclicals versus defensives, although this is entirely in commodity-related cyclicals. The only other overweight sector is utilities, which saw a small decrease in its weight in the model. For more details on the model, please see the Special Report "Introducing The GAA Equity Sector Selection Model," dated July 27, 2016, available at https://gaa.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights Portfolio Strategy A virtuous software capex upcycle will continue to bolster industry sales/profits in the coming months. We reiterate our high-conviction overweight recommendation on the S&P software index. Depressed relative valuations signal that the weak airline profit margin backdrop is baked in the cake. Rising load factors and the possibility of an easing in jet fuel prices compel us to put this transportation sub-index on our upgrade watch list. Recent Changes Put the S&P Airlines Index on upgrade alert. Table 1 Feature Stocks took it on the chin early last week as geopolitical risks resurfaced in a big way, but managed to bounce smartly and end the week on a high note. Not only did Trump slap new tariffs reigniting trade war fears, but Italian political instability rocked global bond and stock markets. While this mini 'risk-off' phase has rattled investors, the key question hanging over markets is: will the current global growth soft patch prove transitory or morph into a severe global growth deceleration? We side with the former. While it is too early to call the end of the global growth lull, there are high odds that the U.S. will lift the world out of its year-to-date mini-slump in the back half of the year. The third panel of Chart 1 shows that the IHS Markit U.S. manufacturing PMI has been steeply diverging from the J.P. Morgan-calculated global manufacturing PMI. The latter has ticked up recently, and given recent U.S. economic greenshoots and America's heavy weighting in global output, it should pull global growth higher. Chart 1Too Soon To Bail Chart 2Monitor The Greenback's Impact On Profits Importantly, this leading U.S. economic growth indicator is also signaling that SPX momentum will resume its ascent in the coming months, a message corroborated by the latest ISM manufacturing survey print (second panel, Chart 1). What could push our still constructive cyclical 9-12 month equity view offside is a surge in the U.S. dollar. The greenback's trough coincided with last year's peak in global growth (bottom panel Chart 1), and further dollar appreciation - resulting from either stress in emerging markets or a further flare-up of Eurozone breakup risk - would necessitate downward revisions to calendar 2019 sell-side earnings forecasts (Chart 2). We are closely monitoring Eurozone geopolitical risks, and are also awaiting the ECB's response. If persistent turmoil causes the ECB to stay easier for longer than the market expects, then the euro will come under downward pressure against the dollar, especially if the Fed continues to hike as we expect. Last week alone BCA's months-to-hike gauge for the ECB jumped by five months, implying the first hike moved to mid-year 2020 (second panel, Chart 3). We recently showed the U.S. tech sector's hefty foreign sales exposure of roughly 60% of total revenues, greater than for any other GICS1 sector by a wide margin (please refer to Chart 8 from the April 9, 2018 Weekly Report titled "Buying Opportunity?"). As such the technology sector's profits serve as a great leading indicator of any U.S. dollar appreciation related blues. Up to now, tech net EPS revisions have not been sniffing out any currency related earnings trouble that could infiltrate overall SPX EPS (U.S. trade-weighted dollar shown inverted, third panel, Chart 4). Similarly, relative tech sector stock momentum and our tech sector EPS growth model are not waving any yellow flags (Chart 4). Chart 3Steadfast ##br##SPX Chart 4Tech Stocks Will Be The First To Sniff ##br##Out U.S. Dollar Profit Woes Netting it all out, there are high odds that the U.S. will lead global growth higher in the coming quarters and result in a recoupling higher of global growth, assuming the greenback stops appreciating. This would support low double digit calendar 2019 SPX profit growth. Under such a macro backdrop, it still pays to maintain a cyclicals over defensives portfolio bent. This week we are revisiting one tech sector high-conviction overweight and putting a transport sub-index on upgrade watch. Stick With Software Stocks The S&P software index is on the cusp of breaching the 2000 relative performance all-time peak, and we reiterate the high-conviction overweight status of this key tech sub-index, that is up over 11% versus the SPX since the late-November inception.1 Although this may appear exuberant, from a longer-term perspective, relative share prices only recently reclaimed the upward sloping historical time trend mean (top panel, Chart 5). The implication is that more gains are in store prior to the end of the business cycle. BCA's synchronized global capex upcycle theme is the fundamental driver of our sanguine software industry view. In the aftermath of the dotcom bust, tech investment in general and software in particular, went into hibernation for a whole decade. Currently, software investment is outpacing overall capital outlays (middle panel, Chart 5). These software capex market share gains on the back of a growing overall capex pie bode well for relative profit growth. Animal spirits remain upbeat with both consumer and most importantly CEO confidence probing multi-year highs. Tack on the still buoyant message from our capex indicator and software spending has more room to grow (second & third panels, Chart 6). In addition, the government sector may also increase spending on IT/software services on the back of easing fiscal policy and beefing up on cybersecurity (Chart 7). Chart 5Buy The Breakout Chart 6Even Uncle Sam Is Buying Software Chart 7Margin Expansion Phase Has Legs While our S&P software EPS growth model corroborates this encouraging news (bottom panel, Chart 5), sell side analysts do not share our optimism. In fact, software profits are forecast to trail the broad market by 500bps, a rather low hurdle. On the operating front, sales are accelerating at a time when labor costs remain contained. Importantly, software prices are on the verge of exiting deflation, underscoring that software demand is robust. Moreover, the secular advance in cloud computing and SaaS represent a long-term positive demand backdrop. The upshot is that the mini margin expansion phase in place since early-2016 has more legs (Chart 7). Meanwhile, the S&P software index has a pristine balance sheet with virtually no net debt, a high interest coverage ratio and galloping higher free cash flow (Chart 8). Unsurprisingly, this cash rich tech subsector has also been in the middle of an M&A frenzy. This supply reduction is not only bullish for industry pricing power, and thus profit growth, but it has also led to hefty M&A premia and a significant valuation rerating (bottom panel, Chart 9). Chart 8Pristine Balance Sheet Chart 9Software Will Grow Into Pricey Valuations If our virtuous capex upcycle thesis further bolsters software sales/profits in the coming months, then more gains are in store for the S&P software index that will likely grow into its pricey valuations. Bottom Line: We reiterate our high-conviction overweight status in the S&P software index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5SOFT - MSFT, ORCL, ADBE, CRM, ATVI, INTU, EA, RHT, ADSK, CTXS, ANSS, SNPS, SYMC, TTWO, CDNS, CA. Could Jet Fuel Be The Tailwind Airlines Need? It is a well-established rule that where jet fuel prices go, airline stock prices will go the opposite direction. Thus it is no surprise that the most recent peak in the S&P airlines index coincided with the most recent trough in jet fuel prices in early 2017; the former has since fallen steeply as the latter has soared (top panel, Chart 10). This relationship has grown more acute as the industry, having been burned when fuel prices collapsed in 2014, has all but abandoned fuel hedging. The timing for rising jet fuel prices could scarcely be less opportune; historically, airlines have been able to pass through rising fuel costs. Now, in the midst of an industry price war, pricing power and fuel costs are diverging (second panel, Chart 10). The impact is apparent on industry margins, which have been in decline for nearly two years and more pain likely lies ahead (second panel, Chart 11). The head of airline industry group International Air Transport Association (IATA), recently noted that rising oil prices would significantly bite into airline profitability next year; IATA is widely expected to lower its industry benchmark profit forecast this week. Chart 10Mind The Gap Chart 11Acute Margin Trouble... The source of industry conflict has been an uptick in capacity growth. Airlines are adding capacity faster than the economy is growing (third and fourth panels, Chart 11) and the only relief valve to preserve market share is to cut prices. In this context, it is difficult to understand analysts' 20%+ EPS growth forecast for next year, significantly outpacing the S&P 500 (bottom panel, Chart 11). However, the news is not all bad. Despite the competitive headwinds, the industry has been successful at moving unit revenues higher and airlines have been doing so at an aggressive pace in 2018 (second panel, Chart 12). Further, industry load factors (in essence, the percentage of filled seats) are near their highest level ever, indicating capacity growth is being met with lower price-induced demand growth (bottom panel, Chart 12). Rising load factors are typically a precursor to price (and profit) increases. Investors appear to have capitulated. Airlines trade at roughly half the market multiple on an EV/EBITDA basis and a substantial discount on a price/book basis (second & third panels, Chart 13). From a valuation perspective, airlines look set to take off. Chart 12...But Demand is Firming... Chart 13...And Most Bad News Is Likely Priced In Easing oil prices are a likely catalyst for a significant rerating in depressed relative valuations. Fuel hedges no longer play a significant role in earnings and lower fuel costs would translate directly to the bottom line. As a reminder, nearly all major players reiterated their pledge to avoid kerosene hedging earlier this year. Adding it up, we think downside risks to airlines have abated considerably and are well reflected in beaten down valuations. We are therefore compelled to add this transportation sub-index to our upgrade watch list. If there is any letup in jet fuel prices, we would not hesitate to crystallize relative profits north of 21% since our underweight inception. Bottom Line: Stay underweight the S&P airlines index for now, but put in on upgrade alert. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5AIRL - DAL, LUV, AAL, UAL, ALK. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "2018 High-Conviction Calls," dated November 27, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps
Highlights The recent weakness in emerging markets (EM) has not yet altered the Fed's view of the U.S. economy. Capital spending in the U.S. remains upbeat despite a slowdown in economic momentum outside the country. May's Beige Book continued to highlight labor shortages, especially among skilled workers in key areas of the economy. Feature Chart 1The Labor Market Continues To Tighten U.S. risk assets dipped along with Treasury yields last week as investor worry about Italy, emerging markets and global trade mounted. BCA's stance is that despite the increase in financial market and economic stress overseas, the Federal Reserve will stick to its gradual pace of rate hikes for now. Policymakers at the central bank would need to see a direct and prolonged impact on U.S. financial conditions before adjusting the path of rate hikes. Data released last week on housing, capital spending and the labor market confirmed that the U.S. economy is growing well above its long-term potential in 1H 2018 and that inflation remains at the Fed's 2% target (see section below). The U.S. added 223,000 jobs in May. The 3-month average, at almost 180,000, is well above the expansion in the labor force. Thus, the unemployment rate ticked down to 3.8%, matching the low seen during the height of the tech bubble in 2000 (Chart 1). For the FOMC, the unemployment rate has already reached the level policymakers had projected for the end of the year (3.8%). Indeed, by later this year unemployment is likely to drop below the FOMC's projection for the end of 2019 (3.6%). The Fed has signaled that it is comfortable with an overshoot of the 2% inflation target, but it will likely be forced by early 2019 to transition from simply normalizing monetary policy at a "gradual" pace to targeting slower growth. This would set the stage for a recession in 2020. Julia Coronado, a panelist at BCA's upcoming 2018 Investment Conference in Toronto, noted recently that inflation may fall short of the Fed's target and cause the Fed to scale back its planned hikes.1 Italy remains a key source of concern for markets. BCA's Geopolitical Strategy service notes that a new election is likely in Italy after August, prolonging the political uncertainty there. BCA's stance is that while Italian policymakers' fight with Brussels, Berlin, and the ECB will last throughout 2018, they are not looking to exit the euro area yet. Over the next ten years, however, BCA's Geopolitical Strategy service expects Italy to test the markets with a euro area exit attempt. We are sticking to our view that such an event is far more likely to occur following a recession than it is today.2 The Trump Administration re-ignited the trade war last week. We discuss below, in the context of the Fed's Beige Book, which noted an uptick in uncertainty surrounding trade. Is EM Weakness A Risk? The recent weakness in emerging markets has not altered the Fed's view of the U.S. economy. Chart 2, Chart 3 and Chart 4 show the performance of key U.S and EM financial market earnings and economic metrics indexed to the peak of MSCI's Emerging Market Index in mid-1997, late 2014 and early 2018. Chart 2 (panel 1) shows that the dollar's strength since the EM markets peaked last year is modest compared with prior cycles. Moreover, oil prices are rising today; in 1997-98 and 2014-15 prices collapsed. The implication is that rising oil prices suggest that global economic activity is in an uptrend. Last week, BCA's Commodity and Energy Service team revised their forecasts for oil prices in 2018 and 2019 warning investors to expect more volatility in oil markets.3 U.S. financial conditions (panel 3) have eased since the EM peak in early 2018. This contrasts with 1997-98 and in 2014-2016 when financial conditions tightened considerably. S&P 500 forward EPS estimates (panel 4) have climbed since the top in EM equities, but the rise is related to the 2017 tax bill. Analysts' estimates for U.S. large cap earnings also rose during the EM crisis in the late 1990s, but then fell in 2014 and 2015 as oil prices dropped. U.S. real final demand climbed after EM equities peaked in 1997 and 2014. BCA's view is that the U.S. economy will accelerate in the final three quarters of 2018 and run well above its long-term potential of 1.8%. Chart 2U.S. Financial Conditions, ##br##Oil And EPS During EM Stress Chart 3EM Assets 1997-98, ##br##2014-15 And Today Chart 4U.S. Stocks, Treasuries, ##br##Spread Product And EM Stress The rise in the dollar and Fed rate hike expectations have pressured some EM currencies, financial markets and economies. That said, the response is muted relative to previous cycles. A Boston Fed paper4 found that during recent bouts of international financial market turmoil, EM economies with fewer economic vulnerabilities performed better than economies that were more exposed. However, the paper also noted that during crises in the late 1990s and early 2000s, there was little differentiation in EM market performance. Chart 3 shows that in the late 1990s and between 2014 and 2016, EM currencies declined about 8.2% in the first few months after EM equity prices peaked. Today, EM currencies are down just 3.8% versus the dollar since the EM equity peak (panel 1). Panel 2 shows EM stocks relative to U.S. stocks since the EM summit and panel 3 shows the global LEI (ex the U.S.) is tracking the mid-1990s episode, but not the 2014-2016 experience. China's Li Keqiang Index (LKI) is also following the late 1990s episode. BCA's China Investment Strategy service states that China's economy will continue to weaken, but that the deceleration will not be as severe as the 2014-2016 slowdown (panel 4).5 U.S. Treasury yields are on the rise; in the late 1990s and 2014-2016 (Chart 4, panel 1) they headed downhill. That said, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note has dipped 3 bps in the past week as investor worry about EM, global trade and Italy more than offset a strong batch of U.S. economic data. Panels 2 and 3 show that the S&P 500 and the U.S. stock-to-bond ratio dipped after the peak in EM stocks this year and in the earlier episodes. We note that at this point in the previous two instances, both U.S. equity prices and the stock-to-bond ratio began to climb and soon surpassed their prior heights. BCA's view is that some caution is warranted on U.S. stocks in the next few months. However, in the next 12 months, the U.S. stock-to-bond ratio will move higher. Investment-grade (panel 4) and high-yield spreads (panel 5) climbed this year after the top in EM stock prices. Moreover, the escalation in high-yield spreads is muted relative to the increase in 2014 as oil prices peaked. We also note that current spread levels are well above those in the late 1990s. BCA's U.S. Bond Strategy service recommends investors overweight high-yield bonds relative to Treasuries.6 Previous periods of EM-related stress in the financial markets led to shifts in the relationship between the dollar and certain U.S. asset classes. The top panel of Chart 5 shows that the correlation between changes in U.S. stock prices and the dollar tends to increase during these episodes. The relationship is more consistent prior to 2000. Since that time, the dollar and U.S. equities have moved in opposite directions during intervals of EM stress. There is no clear pattern in the relationship between the stock-to-bond ratio and the dollar when EM stress intensifies (panel 2). There is a very choppy correlation between S&P operating earnings and the dollar (panel 3). Chart 5U.S. Financial Markets' Correlation With The Dollar During EM Stress Likewise, there is no consistent interconnection between bond yields and the dollar (Chart 5, panel 4) as EM stress increases. However, as the pressure mounts, we note that the correlation between the dollar and the 10-year begins to shift. Oil and gold prices and the dollar tend to move in opposite directions during times of EM stress (not shown). Moreover, since the early 2000s, there is a consistently negative relationship between the dollar, gold and oil. In recent years, an escalating dollar has been aligned with small cap stocks outperforming large caps. Larger companies have more exposure to overseas sales than small cap firms in the S&P 500.7 Bottom Line: Dollar strength and rising U.S. bond yields are a classic late-cycle combination that often spells trouble for emerging market assets. Escalating turmoil in EM financial markets could potentially lead the Federal Reserve to put the rate hike campaign on hold. However, that would require some signs of either domestic financial stress or slowing growth. Stay short duration over a 12 month horizon. BCA's U.S. Bond Strategy service is looking for a trough in economic surprise and a capitulation in speculative positioning in the Treasury market to signal the end to the recent pullback in yields.8 Dollar Impact Capital spending in the U.S. remains upbeat despite a slowdown in economic momentum outside the country. BCA's view is that global growth will cool for the next few months and then reaccelerate. Chart 6 shows that global capital goods imports have rolled over (panel 1), but that new capital goods orders in the G3 remain in an upward trend (panel 2). Nonetheless, most of the strength in the G3 is from the U.S. BCA's model for nominal and real business investment (panel 3) suggests that capex is poised to rocket in the coming quarters. Moreover, CEO confidence measured by Duke and the Business Roundtable remain at cycle highs (Chart 7, panel 1) while business spending plans in the regional Fed surveys are still elevated (panels 2 and 3). Higher oil prices are not the only story behind the boom in U.S. business spending. Chart 8 shows that energy capex troughed (panel 3) a few months after oil prices (panel 1) in early 2016. Business spending outside the oil patch never turned negative on a year-over-year basis (panel 2) and it is still on the upswing. The 2017 tax bill and corporations' search for labor-saving machinery as wage and compensation metrics rise are behind the surge in spending. Robust corporate earnings also provide a tailwind for capex (panel 4). Chart 6Global Growth Is Rolling Over... Chart 7..But U.S. Growth Is Poised To Lift Off Chart 8Oil Is A Tailwind For Capes, ##br##But Not The Whole Story Last week's report on corporate profits allows us to compare the trajectory of the S&P 500's profits and margins to the NIPA measures (Chart 9). Both metrics indicate that earnings jumped in recent quarters (panel 1) to record heights (panel 2). Any disconnect between the two indicators has disappeared.9 Chart 10 shows that S&P 500 revenues dipped in Q1 (panel 1), but NIPA-based sales measures continued to climb (panel 2). However, panel 2 shows a divergence in margins. The BEA sounding leaped ahead in Q1 while the S&P 500 version levelled off. BCA's view is that S&P 500 earnings growth on a trailing four-quarter basis will peak later this year (Chart 11). Moreover, we anticipate the secular mean reversion of margins to re-assert itself in the S&P data, perhaps beginning later in 2018. Chart 9S&P And NIPA Profit Measures Are Aligned Chart 10NIPA And S&P Sales And Profit Margins The dollar's recent strength is not yet a threat to U.S. corporate profits nor the U.S. equity market. BCA's view is that the dollar will advance by 5% in the next 12 months. The appreciation would trim EPS growth by roughly 1 to 2 percentage points, although most of this would occur in 2019 due to lagged effects. Indeed, the dollar would only climb in the context of robust U.S. economic growth and an expanding corporate top line. Nonetheless, the stronger greenback is not yet evident in forward EPS estimates for 2018 or 2019. (Chart 12). Chart 11Strong S&P 500 EPS Growth Ahead, ##br##Will Start To Slow Soon Chart 12Is the Stronger Dollar Starting To Impact 2019 EPS Estimates? Bottom Line: BCA's view is that the slowdown in growth outside the U.S. is not the start of a more significant downturn. Monetary policy is still accommodative worldwide, U.S. fiscal policy is loose and governments outside the U.S. are no longer tightening policy. The implication is that a big slide in global growth is not likely and that by the end of the summer, global growth will probably reaccelerate. Therefore, risks to the dollar are much more balanced and we do not foresee much more upside in the greenback. Stay long stocks versus bonds. However, investors with longer horizons should begin to prepare for lower real returns in the 2020s after a recession early in that decade. Beige Book Update The Beige Book released last week ahead of the FOMC's June 12-13 meeting suggested that uncertainty surrounding U.S. trade policy remained an important headwind in April and May. The Fed's business and banking contacts mentioned either tariffs or trade policy 34 times in the Beige Book. This was below 44 mentions in the April edition, but well above the 3 mentions in March. Moreover, uncertainty came up 13 times in May (Chart 13, panel 5); 10 were related to trade policy. There were nine mentions of trade in April and only two in March. Chart 13Rise Of Inflation Words ##br##And Uncertainty Stand Out BCA's view is that trade-related uncertainty will persist at least until the midterm elections in November.10 The Trump administration announced a new round of tariffs on Chinese products last week. Moreover, the U.S. plans to end the exemptions it provided to E.U. steelmakers on the tariffs that the U.S. imposed earlier this year. BCA's Geopolitical Strategy service notes that the U.S.-China trade war is back on. The significance of the administration's about-face on trade is that it invalidates the conventional view that President Xi and Trump would promptly make a deal to ease tensions. President Trump's election, however, has revealed the preference of the median voter in the U.S. on trade. That preference is far less committed to free trade than previously assumed. Despite the headwind from trade, BCA's quantitative approach to the Beige Book's qualitative data continues to point to underlying strength in the U.S. economy, a tighter labor market and higher inflation. Moreover, references to a stronger dollar have disappeared from the Beige Book. Chart 13, panel 1 shows that at 67% in May, BCA's Beige Book Monitor ticked up from April's 55% reading, which was the lowest level since November 2017 when doubts over the tax bill weighed on business sentiment. The number of weak words in the Beige Book remained near four-year lows. On the other hand, the number of strong words climbed in May, but remains below last fall's post-hurricane highs. The tax bill was noted 3 times in the latest Beige Book, down from 12 in April and 15 in March. The legislation was cast in a positive light in two of the three mentions. BCA's stance is that the dollar will move modestly higher in 2018. The trade-weighted dollar is up 4.1% since mid-April, but the elevated value of the greenback is not yet a concern for Beige Book respondents. Furthermore, based on the minimal references to a robust dollar (only eight in the past eight Beige Books), the dollar should not be an issue for corporate profits in Q2 2018. The handful of recent references sharply contrasts with the surge in comments during 2015 and early 2016 (Chart 13, panel 4). The last time that eight consecutive Beige Books had so few remarks about a strong dollar was in late 2014. Table 1Labor 'Shortages' Identified In The Beige Book The disagreement on inflation between the Beige Book and the Fed's preferred price metric narrowed in May (Chart 13, panel 3). The number of inflation words rose to a fresh cycle zenith, surpassing the July 2017 peak. Core PCE also increased in early 2018. However, in the past year, inflation measured by the PCE deflator, failed to match the escalation in inflation references. In the past, increased remarks about inflation have led measured inflation by a few months, suggesting that the CPI and core PCE may still climb. May's Beige Book continued to highlight labor shortages, especially among skilled workers in key areas of the economy. Shortages of qualified workers were reported in various specialized trades and occupations, including truck drivers, sales personnel, carpenters, electricians, painters and information technology professionals. The Beige Book noted that many firms responded to the lack of qualified workers by increasing wages and compensation packages. Moreover, the word "widespread", which is part of BCA's inflation words count, was used 11 times in May, to describe both labor shortages and rising input costs. Table 1 shows industries with labor shortages. In the year ended April 2018, the gain in average hourly earnings in most of the industries was faster than average. Moreover, in nearly all these categories, labor market conditions are the tightest since before the onset of the 2007-2009 recession. More details can be found in a recent Fed study on labor shortages in the manufacturing sector.11 BCA's Beige Book Commercial Real Estate (CRE) Monitor12 remains in a downtrend (Chart 14). The Fed has highlighted valuation concerns in CRE and BCA's Global Investment Strategy service recently stated that the sector is increasingly vulnerable.13 Chart 14Beige Book Commercial Real Estate Monitor Bottom Line: May's Beige Book supports our stance that inflation will lead to at least three more Fed rate hikes by the end of the year. Moreover, labor shortages may be spreading from highly skilled to moderately skilled workers, and rising input costs are widespread. The nation's tax policy still gets high marks from the business community, but ongoing concerns over trade policy will restrain growth. The Fed may back off from this gradual path if stress in the emerging markets leads to tighter U.S. financial conditions. Still, it will take more than the recent spate of EM turmoil to deter the Fed. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com 1 https://www.rutgersrealestate.com/blog-re/low-inflation-the-good-and-the-bad/ 2 Please see BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy "Italy, Spain, Trade Wars... Oh My!", published May 30, 2018. Available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Research's Commodity And Energy Strategy "OPEC 2.0 Guiding To Higher Output; Volatility Set To Rise ... Again", published May 31,2018. Available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 4 https://www.bostonfed.org/-/media/Documents/Workingpapers/PDF/rpa1702.pdf 5 Please see BCA Research's China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "11 Charts to Watch", published May 30, 2018. Available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Bond Strategy Portfolio Allocation Summary, "Coming To Grips With Gradualism", published May 8, 2018. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Too Good To Be True", published January 22, 2018. Available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Pulling Back And Looking Ahead", published May 22, 2018. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Summer Stress Out", July 3, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 10 Please see BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Trump's Demands On China," April 4, 2018. Available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 11 https://www.federalreserve.gov/econres/notes/feds-notes/evaluating-labor-shortages-in-manufacturing-20180309.htm 12 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Summer Stress Out", dated July 3, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 13 Please see BCA Research's Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Three Tantalizing Trades - Four Months On", dated January 19, 2018. Available at gis.bcaresearch.com.