Developed Countries
Highlights The call on EM local bonds boils down to the outlook for EM exchange rates. Forthcoming EM currency depreciation will halt the rally in local bonds. EM currencies positively correlate with commodities prices but not with domestic real interest rates. Widening U.S. twin deficits are not a reason to be long EM currencies. There has historically been no consistent relationship between the U.S. exchange rate and America's twin deficits in general, or its fiscal balance, in particular. For investors who have to be invested in EM domestic bonds, our recommended overweights are Russia, Argentina, Poland, the Czech Republic, Korea, India and Thailand. Feature The stampede into EM local currency bonds has persisted even amid recent jitters in global equity markets. Notably, surging U.S./DM bond yields have failed to cause a spike in EM local yields, despite past positive correlations (Chart I-1). Chart I-1Will EM Domestic Bond Yields Continue Defying Rising U.S. Treasury Yields? The main reason is the resilience of EM currencies. The latter have not sold off even during the recent correction in global share prices. In high-yielding EM domestic bond markets, total returns are substantially affected by exchange rates. Not only do U.S. dollar total returns on local bonds suffer when EM currencies depreciate, but also weaker EM exchange rates cause spikes in domestic bond yields (Chart I-2). Consequently, the call on EM local bonds, especially in high-yielding markets, boils down to the outlook for EM exchange rates. Chart I-2EM Currencies Drive EM Local Yields We are negative on EM currencies versus the U.S. dollar and the euro. The basis for our view is two-fold: Strong growth in the U.S. and higher U.S. bond yields should be supportive of the greenback vis-à-vis EM currencies; the same applies to euro area growth and the euro against EM exchange rates; Weaker growth in China should weigh on commodities prices and, in turn, on EM currencies. So far, this view has not played out. In fact, negative sentiment on the U.S. dollar has recently been amplified by concerns about America's widening fiscal and current account deficits. In fact, one might argue that EM local bonds stand to benefit from the potential widening in U.S. twin deficits and the flight out of the U.S. dollar. We address the issue of U.S. twin deficits first. Twin Deficits And The U.S. Dollar... The recent narrative that the dollar typically depreciates during periods of widening twin deficits is not supported by historical evidence. We are not suggesting that twin deficits lead to currency appreciation. Our argument is that twin deficits have historically coincided with both appreciation and depreciation of the U.S. dollar. Chart I-3 exhibits the relationship between the U.S. dollar and the fiscal and current account balances. It appears that there is no consistent relationship between the fiscal and current account balances and the exchange rate. Chart I-3No Stable Relationship Between U.S. Twin Deficits And Dollar To produce a quantitative measure of the twin deficits, we sum up both the fiscal and current account balances. Chart I-4 demonstrates the relationship between the latter measure and the trade-weighted U.S. dollar. This analysis encompasses the entire history of the floating U.S. dollar since 1971. Chart I-4Combination Of U.S. Twin Deficits And Real Bond Yields Better Explain Dollar The vertical lines denote the tax cuts under former U.S. President Ronald Reagan in 1981 and 1986, and under former U.S. President George W. Bush in 2001 and 2003. As can be seen from Chart I-4, there is no stable relationship between the twin deficits and the greenback. In the 1970s, there was no consistent relationship at all; In the first half of the 1980s, the twin deficits widened substantially, but the dollar rallied dramatically. The tailwind behind the rally was tightening monetary policy and rising/high real U.S. interest rates; From 1985 through 1993, there was no consistent relationship between America's twin deficits and the currency; From 1994 until 2001, the greenback appreciated as the twin deficits narrowed, particularly the fiscal deficit; From 2001 through 2011, the dollar was in a bear market as the twin deficits expanded; From 2011 until 2016, the shrinking-to-stable twin deficits were accompanied by a U.S. dollar rally. Bottom Line: We infer from these charts that there has historically been no stable relationship between the U.S. exchange rate and America's twin deficits in general, or its fiscal balance, in particular. ... And A Missing Variable: Interest Rates Twin deficits are often associated with rising inflation. In fact, a widening current account deficit can mask hidden price pressures. In particular, an economy that over-consumes - consumes more than it produces - can satisfy its demand via imports without exerting pressure on the economy's domestic productive capacity. Booming imports will lead to a widening trade deficit rather than higher consumer price inflation. Hence, in an open economy, over-consumption can lead to a widening current account deficit, rather than rising inflation. A currency is likely to plunge amid widening twin deficits if the central bank is behind the inflation curve. In such a case, the low real interest rates would undermine the value of the exchange rate. If the central bank, however, embarks on monetary tightening that is adequate, the currency can in fact strengthen amid growing twin deficits. In this scenario, rising real interest rates would support the currency. With respect to the U.S. dollar today, its future trajectory depends on the Fed, and the market's perception of its policy stance. If the market discerns that the Fed is behind the curve, the greenback will plummet. By contrast, if the market reckons that the Fed policy response is appropriate, and U.S. real interest rates are sufficiently high/rising, the dollar could in fact appreciate amid widening twin deficits. Specifically, the U.S. dollar was in a major bull market in the early 1980s, with Reagan's tax cuts in 1981 and the ensuing widening of the country's twin deficits doing little to thwart the dollar bull market (Chart I-4). In turn, the Bush tax cuts in 2001 and 2003 were followed by a major dollar bear market. The main culprit between these two and other episodes was probably real interest rates. U.S. real interest rates/bond yields rose between 1981 and 1985, generating an enormous dollar rally. In the decade of the 2000s, by contrast, U.S. real interest rates fell and that coincided with a major bear market in the greenback (Chart I-4). Overall, the combination of U.S. twin deficits and real bond yields together, help better explain U.S. dollar dynamics than twin deficits alone. We agree that America's twin deficits will widen materially. That said, odds are that the Fed commits to further rate hikes and that U.S. bond yields continue to rise. In fact, not only are U.S. inflation breakeven yields climbing, but TIPS (real) yields have also spiked significantly. Rising real yields, which in our opinion have more upside, should support the U.S. dollar. As a final point, if the Fed falls behind the curve and the dollar continues to tumble, the markets could begin to fear a material rise in U.S. inflationary pressures. That scenario would actually resemble market dynamics that prevailed before the 1987 stock market crash. Although this is a negative scenario for the U.S. currency and is, by default, bullish for EM exchange rates and their local bonds, this is not ultimately an optimistic scenario for global risk assets. Bottom Line: Twin deficits are not solely sufficient to produce a currency bear market. Twin deficits accompanied by a central bank that is behind the inflation curve - i.e., combined with low/falling real interest rates - are what generate sufficient conditions for currency depreciation. EM Currencies And Commodities Many EM exchange rates - such as those in Latin America, as well as South African, Russian, Malaysian and Indonesian currencies - are primarily driven by commodities prices. Not surprisingly, the underlying currency index of the EM local bond benchmark index (the JPM GBI index) - which excludes China, India, Korea and Taiwan - positively correlates with commodities prices (Chart I-5). Hence, getting commodities prices right is of paramount importance to the majority of high-yielding EM local bonds. We have the following observations: First, investors' net long positions in both oil and copper are extremely elevated (Chart I-6). The last datapoint is as of February 16. Any rebound in the U.S. dollar or mounting concerns about China's growth could produce a meaningful drop in commodities prices as investors rush to close their long positions. Second, we maintain that China's intake of commodities is bound to decelerate, as decelerating credit growth and local governments' budget constraints lead to curtailment of infrastructure and property investment (Chart I-7). Chart I-5EM Currencies Positively Correlate ##br##With Commodities Prices Chart I-6Investors Are Very Long##br## Copper And Oil Chart I-7Slowdown In ##br##China's Capex Strong growth in the U.S. and EU will not offset the decline in China's intake of raw materials (excluding oil). China accounts for 50% of global demand for industrial metals. America's consumption of industrial metals is about 6-7 times smaller. For crude oil, China's share of global consumption is 14% compared with 20% and 15% for the U.S. and EU, respectively. We do not expect outright contraction in China's crude imports or consumption. The point is that when financial markets begin to price in weaker mainland growth or the U.S. dollar rebounds, oil prices will retreat as investors reduce their record high net long positions. Finally, even though EM twin deficits have ameliorated in recent years, they remain wide (Chart I-8). In turn, the majority of these countries have been financing their deficits by volatile foreign portfolio flows, as FDIs into EM remain largely depressed. If commodities prices relapse and EM currencies depreciate, there will be a period of reversal in foreign portfolio inflows into EM. While EM real local bonds yields are reasonably high, they are unlikely to prevent outflows if the U.S. dollar rallies. In the past, neither high absolute EM real yields nor their wide spreads over U.S. TIPS prevented EM currency depreciation (Chart I-9). Chart I-8AEM Twin Deficits Have Ameliorated ##br##But Are Still Wide Chart I-8BEM Twin Deficits Have Ameliorated ##br##But Are Still Wide Chart I-9EM Local Real Yields Do Not ##br##Drive Their Currencies EM Local Bonds: Country Allocation Strategy Chart I-10 attempts to identify pockets of value in EM domestic bonds. It exhibits the sum of current account and fiscal balances on the X axis, and domestic bond yields deflated by headline inflation on the Y axis. Chart I-10Identifying Pockets Of Value In EM Domestic Bonds Markets in the upper-right corner should be favored as they offer high real yields and maintain healthy fiscal and current account balances. Bond markets in the lower-left corner should be underweighted. They have low inflation-adjusted yields and large current account and fiscal deficits. Based on these metrics as well as fundamental analysis, our recommended country allocation for EM domestic bond portfolios has been and remains: Overweights: Russia, Argentina, Poland, the Czech Republic, Korea, India and Thailand. Neutral: Brazil, Mexico, Indonesia, Hungary, Chile and Colombia. Underweights: Turkey, South Africa and Malaysia. The below elaborates on Brazil, Russia and South Africa. Russia Fiscal and monetary policies are extremely tight. While they are curtailing the economic recovery, they are very friendly for creditors. Interest rates deflated by both headline and core consumer price inflation are at their highest on record, government spending is lackluster, and the new fiscal rule has replenished the country's foreign currency reserves (Chart I-11). Besides, the government's budget assumption for oil prices is very conservative - in the low-$40s per barrel for this year and 2019. Commercial banks have been increasing provisions, even though the NPL ratio is falling. In fact, Russia is well advanced in terms of both corporate and household deleveraging as well as banking system adjustment. On the whole, having experienced two large recessions in the past 10 years and having pursued extremely orthodox fiscal and monetary policies, Russian markets have become much more insulated from negative external shocks than many of their peers. In brief, Russian financial markets have become low-beta markets,1 and they will outperform their EM peers in a selloff even if oil prices slide. Brazil Brazilian local bonds offer the highest inflation-adjusted yields. However, unlike Russia, Brazil has untenable public debt dynamics, and its politics remain a wild card. The public debt-to-GDP ratio is 16% in Russia and 80% in Brazil. The fiscal deficit in Brazil stands at a whopping 8% of GDP, and interest payments on public debt are equal to 6% of GDP. Without major fiscal reforms, Brazil's public debt will continue to surge and will likely reach almost 100% of GDP by the end of 2020. High real interest rates are not only holding back the recovery but are also making public debt dynamics unsustainable. Chart I-12 illustrates that nominal GDP growth is well below local government bond yields. Chart I-11Continue Favoring ##br##Russian Local Bonds Chart I-12Brazil: Borrowing Costs Are Dreadful ##br##For Public Debt Dynamics Brazil needs either much higher nominal growth or major fiscal tightening to stem the surge in the public debt-to-GDP ratio. The necessary fiscal reforms - social security restructuring or primary budget surpluses - are not politically feasible right now. Meanwhile, materially higher nominal growth can be achieved only if interest rates are brought down quickly and drastically and the currency is devalued meaningfully. Hence, the primary risk to Brazilian local bonds is the exchange rate. The currency is at risk from potentially lower commodities prices on the external side, and continuous public debt deterioration, debt monetization or drastic interest rate cuts on the domestic side. Remarkably, Chart I-13 demonstrates that historically real interest rates in Brazil do not explain fluctuations in the real. The currency, rather, positively correlates with commodities prices (Chart I-14). Chart I-13Brazil: No Relationship Between##br## Real Yields And Currency Chart I-14The Brazilian Real And ##br##Commodities Prices It is possible that policymakers find an optimal balance between these adjustment paths, and financial markets continue to rally. However, with the current government lacking any political capital and great uncertainty surrounding the October presidential elections; the outlook is very risky, We recommend a neutral allocation to Brazilian local bonds for EM domestic bond portfolios. South Africa The South African rand and fixed-income markets have surged in the wake of Cyril Ramaphosa's win of the ANC leadership elections and his taking over of the presidency from Jacob Zuma. This has been devastating to our short rand and underweight local bonds positions. Chart I-15The South African Rand And Metals Prices There is no doubt that President Ramaphosa will adopt some market-friendly policies. This will constitute a major change from Zuma's handling of the economy in the past nine years. Yet the outlook for the rand is also contingent on global markets. If commodities prices do not relapse and EM risk assets generally perform well, the rand will continue strengthening, and local bond yields will decline further. However, if metals prices begin to drop and EM currencies sell off, it will be hard for the South African currency to rally further (Chart I-15). While we acknowledge the potential for positive political announcements and actions from the new political leadership, the main drivers of the rand, in our opinion, remain the trends in the U.S. dollar and commodities prices. Some investors might be tempted to compare South Africa to Brazil in terms of political headwinds turning into tailwinds. From a political vantage point, it is a fair comparison. Nevertheless, investors should put Brazil's rally into perspective. If commodities prices did not rise in 2016-2017, the Brazilian real would not have rallied. In brief, external tailwinds are as - if not more - important for EM high-yielding currencies than domestic political developments. Positive political developments are magnified amid a benign external backdrop. Conversely, in a negative external environment, positive political transformations can have limited impact on the direction of financial markets. To reflect the potential for a positive political change and forthcoming orthodox macro policies, we are closing our bet on yield curve steepening in South Africa. This position was stipulated by unorthodox macro policies of the previous government. This trade has been flat since its initiation on June 28, 2017. Weighing pros and cons, we are reluctant to upgrade the South African rand and its fixed-income market at the moment because of our negative view on metals prices and EM currencies versus the U.S. dollar. Investment Conclusions The broad trade-weighted U.S. dollar is at record oversold levels (Chart I-16). Given the forthcoming U.S. fiscal stimulus, the Fed will likely lift its dots and the greenback will rebound. This is bearish for EM currencies, especially if China's growth slows and commodities prices roll over, as we expect. EM exchange rate depreciation will halt the rally in local bonds, especially in high-yielding markets. Foreign holdings of EM local bonds are elevated (Table I-1). Hence, risks of unwinding of some positions are not trivial. Chart I-16The U.S. Dollar Is Due For A Rally Table I-1Foreign Ownership Of EM Local Bonds Is High Nevertheless, as we have argued in the past, EM local bonds offer great diversification benefits to all type of portfolios, as their correlations with many asset classes are low. For domestic bond investors who have to be invested, our recommended overweights are Russia, Argentina, Poland, the Czech Republic, Korea, India and Thailand. As to the sovereign and corporate credit markets, asset allocators should compare these with U.S. corporate credit. Consistent with our negative view on EM currencies and equities vis-à-vis their U.S. counterparts, we recommend favoring U.S. corporates versus EM sovereign and corporate credit. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report, titled "Russia: Entering A Lower-Beta Paradigm," dated March 8, 2017, available at ems.bcaresearch.com Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Overweight – High Conviction Last autumn, we started to articulate the synchronized global capital spending macro theme that, despite still flying under the radar, will likely dominate this year. This capex upcycle is underpinning the S&P construction machinery & heavy truck (CMHT) index, which has already staged a healthy recovery. Not only are expectations for overall capital outlays as good as they get (second panel), but there are also tentative signs that even the previously moribund mining and oil & gas complexes will be capex upcycle participants. Our machinery EPS model is firing on all cylinders, underscoring that the earnings-led recovery has more running room (third panel). This machinery end-demand improvement is not only a U.S. phenomenon, but also a global one. While most of the countries we track enjoy a sizable rebound in machinery orders, Japan's machine tools orders have surged to an all-time high confirming that machinery global end demand is brisk (bottom panel). Reinstate the S&P CMHT index to the high-conviction overweight list. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5CSTF - CAT, CMI, PCAR. Please see yesterday's Weekly Report for more details.
Highlights Stage 1: The first stage of the bond bear market is being driven by a re-anchoring of inflation expectations. This stage will be complete when both the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates reach our target range of 2.3% to 2.5%. Stage 2: How high Treasury yields rise in Stage 2 of the bond bear market will be determined by expectations for the terminal fed funds rate. Assuming a 3% terminal rate, we would expect the 10-year Treasury yield to peak somewhere between 3.08% and 3.59%. Risks: If our model suggests that economic surprises are likely to turn negative at a time when we also see extended net short bond positioning, then that would likely present an opportunity to tactically increase portfolio duration even though the cyclical bond bear market would remain intact. The risk of a growth slowdown emanating from China or other emerging markets also bears monitoring. Feature Some degree of calm returned to financial markets last week. The S&P 500 bounced back above 2700 and the VIX fell back below 20. Corporate bond spreads also tightened somewhat - the average High-Yield index spread tightened from 369 bps to 341 bps and the investment grade spread tightened from 95 bps to 93 bps - but the factors we are monitoring to determine the end of the credit cycle continue to send warning signs (Chart 1). We view the recent turmoil as markets adjusting to a Fed that must now become less responsive to financial conditions because inflationary pressures are mounting. As we discussed in last week's report, this dynamic is best explained using our Fed Policy Loop.1 It follows from our Fed Policy Loop analysis that we should track measures of inflation and inflation expectations and start taking credit risk off the table as these indicators rise. In that regard, neither TIPS breakeven inflation rates nor commodity prices - an indicator of pipeline inflation pressure - corrected much in the past few weeks (Chart 1, bottom panel). This suggests that the end of the credit cycle is approaching. We reiterate our view that it will soon be time to scale back the credit risk in our recommended portfolio. We will likely begin this process once both the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates reach a range between 2.3% and 2.5%. We discuss the intuition behind this target range in the section titled "A Fair Value For TIPS Breakevens" below. Currently, the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate sits at 2.09% and the 5-year/5-year forward rate is 2.18%. Unlike credit spreads, the sell-off in Treasuries did not abate at all last week. Volatility also returned to the rates market, coinciding with a steeper yield curve (Chart 2). We are not nearly as anxious to increase the duration of our recommended portfolio as we are to scale back on credit risk, and believe that Treasury yields still have considerable cyclical upside. Chart 1No Correction In Breakevens Chart 2No Correction In Bond Yields In this week's report we discuss how we see the Treasury bear market proceeding in two stages, and also start the process of thinking about how high the 10-year Treasury yield can get before the next recession hits. We also highlight several near-term risks that could temporarily derail the cyclical bond bear market. The Two-Stage Treasury Bear Market. Stage 1: Re-Anchoring Of Inflation Expectations For some time it has been our view that the economic recovery is unlikely to end before inflation returns to the Fed's 2% target. This is simply because when inflation is very low the Fed has an incentive to keep policy accommodative, and restrictive monetary policy is typically a pre-condition for recession. It therefore struck us as odd that as recently as June 2017 the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate was only 1.66%, well below levels consistent with the Fed's target. It was as though the market expected that inflation would never move higher no matter how long the Fed maintained an easy policy stance. That notion always seemed far-fetched, and this is why the first stage of the cyclical bond bear market was always likely to be driven by the re-anchoring of inflation expectations. This is the stage we are in currently, and indeed it is almost complete. We will deem that inflation expectations have become re-anchored (and the first stage of the cyclical bond bear market is complete) when both the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates reach our target range of 2.3% to 2.5%. This means that, assuming unchanged real yields, the nominal 10-year Treasury yield has another 21 bps to 41 bps of upside in Stage 1. A Fair Value For TIPS Breakevens To arrive at our fair value target for the inflation compensation embedded in the 10-year Treasury yield, we looked back to the last period when inflation was well-anchored around the Fed's 2% target. This occurred between July 2004 and June 2008. We note that during this timeframe the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate spent 56% of its time between 2.3% and 2.5%. The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven rate spent 73% of its time in that range (Chart 3).2 The 2.3% to 2.5% range therefore seems like a good starting point, but we must also consider whether something has changed since the mid-2000s that might lead to a different fair value range today. One possible difference would be if the spread between CPI and PCE inflation changed significantly. The Fed targets 2% PCE inflation, but TIPS are linked to CPI inflation. CPI inflation was somewhat higher than PCE inflation in the mid-2000s, and this is one reason why TIPS breakevens were somewhat higher than 2% throughout that period. At present, we observe that the spread between CPI and PCE inflation is only slightly above where it was in the mid-2000s (Chart 4), and note that it will probably trend lower in the coming months. Chart 3TIPS Breakevens When Inflation Is ##br##Anchored (July 2004 to June 2008) Chart 4CPI Versus ##br##PCE The two biggest reasons for divergences between PCE and CPI inflation are: The different treatment of medical care inflation in the two indexes. CPI includes only out-of-pocket medical care expenses. PCE includes spending by the government on a person's behalf. The greater weight of shelter in CPI. Lately, the difference in medical care inflation between the two indexes has narrowed considerably and our models suggest that shelter inflation will continue to moderate in the months ahead (Chart 4, bottom 2 panels). This suggests that the spread between CPI and PCE inflation will continue to tighten. If the spread were to fall much below its average level from the mid-2000s, then we would revise our target range for TIPS breakevens down accordingly. The second reason why the fair value range for TIPS breakevens might be different than it was in the mid-2000s is if the inflation risk premium has undergone a structural shift. The compensation for inflation priced into bond yields can be split into (i) an expectation for future inflation and (ii) a risk premium to compensate investors for the uncertainty in that expectation. Other factors, such as changes in the post-crisis regulatory environment that impact the attractiveness of TIPS as an investment vehicle, could also potentially cause a structural shift in the inflation risk premium. We addressed this possibility in a report last year, but so far we see no conclusive evidence that such a structural shift has occurred.3 Indeed, the fact that breakevens have risen back close to their pre-crisis range in recent months suggests that the inflation risk premium is probably not structurally lower. Bottom Line: The first stage of the bond bear market is being driven by a re-anchoring of inflation expectations. This stage will be complete when both the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates reach our target range of 2.3% to 2.5%. The nominal 10-year Treasury yield has another 21 bps to 41 bps of upside before this phase of the bear market is complete. The Two-Stage Treasury Bear Market. Stage 2: Fed Rate Hikes & The Terminal Rate Debate Once inflation expectations are re-anchored the cyclical bond bear market will shift into Stage 2. With no further upside in the cost of inflation protection the emphasis in this stage will be on the path of real yields. The main question will be: How high will the Fed have to lift the real interest rate to contain inflationary pressures? Or alternatively: What is the terminal fed funds rate in this cycle? The answers to the above questions will ultimately determine how high the real 10-year Treasury yield can rise, and provide us with an end-of-cycle target for the nominal 10-year yield. Anchoring Around The Fed's Projections Chart 5Stage 2 Is All About The Terminal Rate At the moment, most FOMC participants estimate the terminal fed funds rate to be in the range of 2.75% to 3%. This may or may not be proven correct, but at least for now the market is likely to anchor around that expectation. In other words, the only way we will find out if that projection is too low is if the fed funds rate is lifted close to the 2.75% to 3% range but inflation continues to rise and economic growth shows no signs of slowing. With the fed funds rate still at 1.42%, we are at least four rate hikes away from that range. This means that any potential upward revisions to the Fed's terminal rate projections are more likely a story for late-2018 or early-2019. Notice in Chart 5 that the Fed has responded to falling inflation by lowering its median projected terminal fed funds rate, but has been more hesitant to increase its projection in response to rising inflation. This means the Fed could wait until inflation is much closer to its target before making any significant upward revisions to its terminal rate projection. The market would likely react more quickly than the Fed, but not by much. Notice that the decline in the 5-year/5-year forward overnight index swap rate was more or less coincident with the downward revisions to the Fed's projected terminal rate between 2014 and 2016 (Chart 5, bottom panel). Our view is that the market will anchor around the Fed's terminal rate projections for at least the next six months. With that in mind, we can make some back-of-the-envelope calculations for how high the 10-year Treasury yield will get before the end of the cycle. To do this we consider that the nominal 10-year yield consists of four components: Inflation expectations Inflation risk premium Real rate expectations Real risk premium Our target range of 2.3% to 2.5% for the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate encompasses both the inflation expectations and inflation risk premium components. If we then assume a terminal fed funds rate of 3%, we get a real rate expectation of 1% (we subtract the Fed's 2% inflation target). This means that even if we assume no real risk premium, we get a conservative estimate for the end-of-cycle level of the nominal 10-year Treasury yield of 3.3% to 3.5%. Turning To The Models As a check on our back-of-the-envelope calculations we created simple fair value models for both the 2-year and 10-year Treasury yields (Chart 6). Both models have three independent variables: The fed funds rate Our 12-month fed funds discounter (to capture expectations for future changes in the fed funds rate) The MOVE index of implied interest rate volatility (as a proxy for the term premium) These models allow us to input various scenarios for the expected path of rate hikes and implied volatility, and then come up with appropriate fair value targets for the 10-year and 2-year Treasury yields. The results from various scenarios are shown in Table 1. Chart 6Treasury Yield Models Table 1End-Of-Cycle Treasury Yield Projections Under Different Scenarios For example, let's assume that the terminal fed funds rate is 3%. Let's also assume that the Fed delivers four rate hikes this year and the market moves to expect another two rate hikes in 2019. That would mean the market is pricing-in a fed funds rate of 2.92% by the end of 2019 - very close to a 3% terminal rate assumption. If we further assume that implied rate volatility stays flat at its current level, then our model gives us a target of 3.59% for the 10-year Treasury yield. This would seem like a reasonable end-of-cycle target for the 10-year Treasury yield in an environment with a 3% terminal fed funds rate. Table 1 also demonstrates the importance of interest rate volatility. If we assume the exact same scenario for rate hikes but also allow the MOVE index to return to its recent lows, then our end-of-cycle target for the 10-year Treasury yield falls to 3.08%. Conversely, if we allow the MOVE index to rise to its historical average, the target for the 10-year yield rises to 4.25%. As we discussed in last week's report, interest rate volatility is more likely to fall than rise between now and the end of the cycle.4 This is due to the strong correlation between interest rate volatility and the slope of the yield curve. As the Fed tightens and the curve flattens, implied volatility tends to decline. In fact, because of its strong correlation with the slope of the yield curve, any scenario where implied rate volatility increases significantly would coincide with an environment where the terminal fed funds rate is being revised higher. If 3% turns out to be a reasonable estimate for the terminal fed funds rate, then implied rate volatility is much more likely to fall than rise. All in all, if we assume that the fed funds rate will only return to 3% before the next recession, then we should expect the 10-year Treasury yield to eventually settle into a range between 3.08% and 3.59% by the end of the second stage of the cyclical bond bear market. We plan to explore whether 3% is a reasonable expectation for the terminal fed funds rate in future reports. Bottom Line: How high Treasury yields rise in Stage 2 of the bond bear market will be determined by how expectations for the terminal fed funds rate evolve. If, for now, we assume that the Fed's 3% terminal rate projection is roughly correct, then the 10-year Treasury yield will peak somewhere between 3.08% and 3.59%. Three Risks To The Bond Bear Market It is important to point out that the two-stage cyclical bond bear market described above may not play out un-interrupted. In this section we highlight three potential risks that could cause us to, at least temporarily, increase the duration of our recommended portfolio. Risk 1: Positioning One risk that could flare up in the near-term is that short positioning in the Treasury market has ramped up significantly in recent weeks. Since the financial crisis, net short positions in 10-year Treasury futures have often coincided with a lower 10-year Treasury yield three months later (Chart 7). Similarly, we have also seen positioning in oil futures become extremely net long (Chart 7, bottom panel). In a recent report we analyzed the strong correlation between oil prices and TIPS breakeven inflation rates and concluded that the correlation would likely persist throughout Stage 1 of the bond bear market.5 A significant relapse in oil prices would very likely filter through to lower bond yields. Chart 7Risk 1 = Positioning Risk 2: Unrealistic Expectations Much like how consensus is forming around short bond positions, consensus economic expectations are also being revised higher. This is what happens when the economic data surprise positively for a significant period of time. Expectations eventually ratchet up and then become too optimistic for the data to surpass. It is this dynamic that causes the Economic Surprise Index to be mean reverting (Chart 8). In previous reports we have shown that months with negative data surprises tend to coincide with falling Treasury yields, and vice-versa.6 While negative data surprises are not an imminent risk - a simple auto-regressive model of the Economic Surprise Index shows we should expect an index reading of +15 in one month's time - the surprise index will eventually move below zero and this will likely coincide with at least some pull-back in bond yields. Risk 3: Global Growth Slowdown A third risk to the cyclical bond bear market is that we see a relapse in global growth that derails the economic recovery before Treasury yields reach our target range. At the moment our 2-factor Treasury model - based on Global Manufacturing PMI and bullish sentiment toward the dollar - still posits a fair value 10-year Treasury yield of 3.01% (Chart 9), but a significant growth scare emanating from outside the U.S. would cause both the Global PMI to fall and bullish sentiment toward the dollar to rise. Both of those factors are bullish for U.S. bonds. Chart 8Risk 2 = Economic Surprises Chart 9Risk 3 = China/EM Slowdown For now there is no strong signal that global growth is about to slow, but some trends in China and other emerging markets bear monitoring. Our Foreign Exchange strategists' Carry Canary Indicator tracks the performance of EM / JPY carry trades.7 These trades go short the Japanese Yen and long an emerging market currency with a high interest rate (Brazilian Real, Russian Ruble or South African Rand), and as such they are highly geared to a positive global growth back-drop. Historically, a deterioration in the performance of these carry trades has often coincided with a slowdown in global growth and we notice that the outperformance of these trades has moderated in recent weeks (Chart 9, panel 2). Further, we have also seen some coincident and leading indicators of Chinese economic activity start to roll over (Chart 9, bottom 2 panels). The slowdown appears relatively benign for now but could eventually morph into a significant global event. This could occur if the growth deterioration accelerates and infects the Global PMI, or if Chinese policymakers react too strongly to slowing growth and engineer a sharp depreciation of the currency (as in August 2015). The latter scenario would impart increased bullish sentiment to the U.S. dollar and cause U.S. bond yields to fall. Both risks seem low at the moment, but are still worth monitoring during the next few months. Bottom Line: If our model suggests that economic surprises are likely to turn negative at a time when we also see extended net short bond positioning, then that would likely present an opportunity to tactically increase portfolio duration even though the cyclical bond bear market would remain intact. The risk of a growth slowdown emanating from China or other emerging markets also bears monitoring. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "On The MOVE", dated February 13, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Percentages calculated using daily values. 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Will Breakevens Ever Recover?", dated April 25, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "On The MOVE", dated February 13, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "It's Still All About Inflation", dated January 16, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "How Much Higher For Yields?", dated October 31, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Canaries In The Coal Mine Alert: EM/JPY Carry Trades", dated December 1, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Synchronized global capex growth and higher interest rates are two key themes that will continue to dominate this year. Three high-conviction calls are levered to the former theme and two to the latter. A special situation completes our sextet. Reinstate the S&P construction machinery & heavy truck index to the high-conviction overweight list. We also reiterate our high-conviction underweight call in the newcomer S&P telecom services sector. Recent Changes S&P Construction Machinery & Heavy Truck - Add back to high-conviction overweight list. Table 1 Feature Chart 1Market Bounced Smartly Equities regained their footing last week, as volatility took a breather. There are high odds that the technical, mostly-sentiment driven, pullback that we have been flagging since January 22nd is nearly over, as the market smartly bounced off the 200-day moving average (top panel, Chart 1).1 A consolidation/absorption phase is looming and, according to our "buy the dip" cycle-on-cycle analysis, a retest of the recent lows is likely before the market gets out of the woods (please refer to Chart 1 from last week's publication). While inflation expectations, crude oil prices and financial conditions are all tightly linked with and weighing on the S&P 500 (second and third panels, Chart 1), a number of tactical high-frequency financial market indicators suggest that the cyclical SPX bull market remains intact. First, SPX e-mini futures positioning is an excellent leading indicator of market momentum, and the current message is positive (net speculative positions are advanced by 40 weeks, Chart 2). Second, bond market internal dynamics suggest that this mini "risk off" episode is an isolated one and not a precursor to a real tremor. The high yield bond ETF outperformed the long dated Treasury bond ETF (bottom panel, Chart 3). It would be unprecedented for an equity market downdraft to morph into a fully blown bear market without junk bonds sinking compared with the ultimate risk free asset. Even when adjusted for its lower duration, the high yield bond ETF remained resilient versus the 3-7 year Treasury bond ETF (top panel, Chart 3). Chart 2Futures Positioning... Chart 3...Junk Bonds... Third, the calmness in the TED spread corroborates the message from the bond market. Were a systemic risk to materialize, the TED spread should have widened and not come in as it did in the past two weeks (Chart 4). Put differently, quiet interbank markets are a healthy sign. Chart 4...And TED Spread All Flashing Green Finally, relative valuations have corrected not only on an absolute basis (please refer to the bottom panel of Chart 2A from last week's Report), but also controlled for equity market volatility. In fact, Chart 5 shows that both the VIX-adjusted Shiller P/E and the 12-month forward P/E have returned to the neutral zone. Meanwhile, two key macro indicators we track are also flashing green. Chart 6 shows momentum in money velocity or how fast "one unit of currency is used to purchase domestically-produced goods and services".2 Historically, velocity of M2 money stock has been positively correlated with stock market momentum. The recent spike in this indicator suggests that the longevity of the business cycle remains intact, and investors with a cyclical (9-12 month) investment horizon should start "buying the dip", as we suggested on February 8th.3 Another yield curve-type macro indicator confirms this buoyant business cycle message: real GDP growth is easily outpacing real interest rates, as per the 10-year TIPS market (Chart 7). In other words, real rates are not yet restrictive enough to choke off GDP growth, despite the recent 35bps increase. Were this spread to plunge below the zero line, it would predict recession. Thus, the recent widening underscores that recession is not imminent. Chart 5Valuations Return To Earth Chart 6Money Velocity... Chart 7...And Yield Curve Emit Bullish Signal Under such a backdrop, the upshot is that earnings will remain upbeat in 2018 and continue to underpin equity prices. This week we revisit our 2018 high-conviction call list and reinstate one sector to the overweight column. Chart 8Both Themes Remains Intact The Themes Two key BCA themes formed the cornerstone of our 2018 high conviction call list: Synchronized global capex upcycle Higher interest rates Last autumn, we started to articulate the synchronized global capital spending macro theme4 that, despite still flying under the radar, will likely dominate this year. Both advanced and emerging economies are simultaneously expanding gross fixed capital formation (middle panel, Chart 8). As a result, we reiterate our cyclical over defensive portfolio bent,5 and continue to tie three high-conviction overweight calls to this theme. Similarly, late last year we started to highlight BCA's U.S. Bond Strategy view of a higher 10-year yield on the back of rising inflation expectations for 2018 (bottom panel, Chart 8). Back in late-November we posited that if BCA's constructive crude oil view pans out then inflation and rates may get an added boost. Two high-conviction calls remain levered to this theme. Finally, a special situation rounds up our call this year. But before we update the call list and make a small tweak, a quick housekeeping note is in order. Taking The Tally Early this year, we added trailing stops to our high-conviction call list as a risk management tool. The goal was to help protect profits as a number of our calls were showing outsized gains for such a short time span. Our tactically souring view of the overall market also compelled us to introduce this risk management metric. As a result of the recent careening in the SPX, half of our calls got stopped out with lofty double digit gains since inception a mere two and a half months ago. Namely, our speculative underweights in the S&P semi equipment and S&P homebuilders registered gains of 20% and 10%, respectively. The high-conviction underweight in the S&P utilities sector got called at an 18% gain, and our high-conviction overweight call in the S&P construction machinery & heavy truck (CMHT) index got stopped out at the 10% mark. (Please refer to page 15 for the closed trades table). Last week we added the S&P telecom services sector as a high-conviction underweight replacing the S&P utilities sector, and now that the worst is likely behind us, we are reinstating the S&P CMHT index to the high-conviction overweight list. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com Construction Machinery & Heavy Truck (Overweight, Capex Theme) The capex upcycle is underpinning machinery stocks. Not only are expectations for overall capital outlays as good as they get (Chart 9), but there are also tentative signs that even the previously moribund mining and oil & gas complexes will be capex upcycle participants. While we are not calling for a return to the previous cycle's peak, even a modest renormalization of capital spending plans in these two key machinery client segments would rekindle industry sales growth. Recent news of oil majors accelerating their capex plans is a step in the right direction. This machinery end-demand improvement is not only a U.S. phenomenon, but also a global one. The middle panel of Chart 9 shows Caterpillar's global machinery sales to dealers hitting a decade high. Tack on the drubbing in the U.S. dollar and related commodity price inflation and the ingredients are in place for a global machinery export boom. While most of the countries we track enjoy a sizable rebound in machinery orders, Japan's machine tools orders have surged to an all-time high confirming that machinery global end demand is brisk (bottom panel, Chart 9). Finally, our machinery EPS model is firing on all cylinders, underscoring that the earnings-led recovery has more running room (fourth panel, Chart 9). Reinstate the S&P CMHT index to the high-conviction overweight list. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5CSTF - CAT, CMI, PCAR. Energy (Overweight, Capex Theme) The S&P energy sector is a key beneficiary of our synchronized global capex theme. The Dallas Fed manufacturing outlook survey is firing on all cylinders and, given the importance of oil to the state of Texas, it serves as an excellent gauge for oil activity. Importantly, the capital expenditures part of the survey hit its highest level in a decade, and capex intentions in the coming six months are also probing multi-year highs. The overall message is that the budding recovery in energy capital budgets will likely gain steam (second panel, Chart 10). Following the late-2015/early-2016 drubbing in oil prices, energy projects ground to a halt and only now are green shoots appearing (middle panel, Chart 10). Recent news that Exxon Mobil would bump domestic capital spending up to $50bn over the next five years is encouraging. New projects/investments comprise 70% of this figure. OECD oil stocks are receding steadily and so are U.S. crude oil inventories. OPEC 2.0 remains in place and will likely balance the oil market by continuing to constrain supply. Our Commodity & Energy Strategy service is still penciling in higher oil prices for 2018. On the demand side, emerging markets/Chinese demand is the key determinant of overall oil demand, and the news on this front is encouraging and consistent with BCA's synchronized global growth theme: following the recent lull, non-OECD demand is growing anew by roughly 1.5mn bbl/day. The upshot is that S&P energy relative revenues will climb out of the recent trough (bottom panel, Chart 10). The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5ENRS - XLE: US. Chart 9Construction Machinery & Heavy Truck ##br##(Overweight, Capex Theme) Chart 10Energy (Overweight, Capex Theme) Software (Overweight, Capex Theme) The S&P software index is another clear capex upcycle beneficiary. If software commands a larger slice of the overall capital spending pie as we expect, then industry profits should enjoy a healthy rebound (second panel, Chart 11). Small business sector plans to expand keep on hitting fresh recovery highs, underscoring that software related outlays will likely follow them higher. Rebounding bank loan growth also corroborates the upbeat spending message and signals that businesses are beginning to loosen their purse strings (Chart 11). Reviving animal spirits suggest that demand for software upgrades will stay elevated. CEO confidence is pushing decade highs (middle panel, Chart 11). Such ebullience is positive for a pickup in software outlays. It has also rekindled software M&A activity, and pushed take out premia higher. Meanwhile, the structural pull from the proliferation of cloud computing and software-as-a-service has served as a catalyst to raise the profile of this more defensive and mature tech sub-sector. Tax reform is another bonus for this group that benefits from cash repatriation, which will likely result in increased shareholder friendly activities. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5SOFT-MSFT, ORCL, ADBE, CRM, ATVI, INTU, EA, ADSK, RHT, SYMC, SNPS, ANSS, CDNS, CTXS, CA. Banks (Overweight, Higher Interest Rates Theme) The S&P banks index remains a core overweight portfolio holding and there are high odds of additional relative gains in the coming quarters beyond the current 10% relative return mark since the November 27th, 2017 inception. All three key drivers of bank profits, namely price of credit, loan growth and credit quality, are simultaneously moving in the right direction. On the price front, BCA expects the 10-year yield will continue to rise more quickly than is discounted in the forward curve. Our U.S. bond strategists think that inflation expectations have more room to run, likely pushing the 10-year Treasury yield close to 3.25% (top panel, Chart 12). C&I and consumer loans, two large credit categories, are both forecast to reaccelerate in the coming months. The ISM remains squarely above the 50 boom/bust line and consumer confidence is still buoyant. Our credit growth model captures these positive forces and is sending an unambiguously positive message for loan reacceleration in the coming months (third panel, Chart 12). Finally, credit quality remains pristine despite some pockets of weakness in auto loans (especially subprime) and credit card debt. At this stage of the cycle, with a closed unemployment gap, NPLs will remain muted. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5BANKX - WFC, JPM, BAC, C, USB, PNC, BBT, STI, MTB, FITB, CFG, RF, KEY, HBAN, CMA, ZION, PBCT. Chart 11Software (Overweight, Capex Theme) Chart 12Banks (Overweight, Higher Interest Rates Theme) Telecom Services (Underweight, Higher Interest Rates Theme) We downgraded the S&P telecom services index to underweight and added it to the high-conviction underweight list last week, filling the void left by the S&P utilities sector.6 Three main reasons are behind our dislike for this fixed income proxy sector: BCA's 2018 rising interest rate theme, both our Cyclical Macro Indicator (CMI) and our sales model send a distress signal, and a profit margin squeeze is looming. The top panel of Chart 13 shows that high dividend yielding telecom services stocks and the 10-year yield are nearly perfectly inversely correlated. In fact, telecom services stocks are prime beneficiaries of disinflation/deflation and vice versa. BCA's bond market view remains that the 10-year yield will continue to rise likely piercing through 3% and weigh heavily on this fixed income proxied sector. Our CMI has melted and relative consumer outlays on telecom services have also taken a nosedive (second & third panels, Chart 13), warning that revenue growth will be hard to come by for telecom carriers. In fact, while nearly all of the GICS1 sectors have come out of the top line growth lull of late-2015/early-2016, telecom services sales growth has relapsed. Worrisomely, our S&P telecom services revenue growth model remains deep in contractionary territory, waving a red flag (bottom panel, Chart 13). Finally, still steeply deflating selling prices are a major headwind for the sector's top and bottom line growth prospects and coupled with a still expanding wage bill, suggest that a profit margin squeeze is looming. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: VZ, T, CTL. Pharmaceuticals (Underweight, Special Situation) Weak pricing power fundamentals, a soft spending backdrop, a depreciating U.S. dollar and deteriorating industry operating metrics will sustain downward pressure on pharma stocks. Industry selling prices remain soft (Chart 14). In the context of a bloated industry workforce, the profit margin outlook darkens significantly. If the Trump administration also manages to clamp down on the secular growth of pharma selling price inflation, as we expect, then industry margins will remain under chronic downward pressure. Our dual synchronized global economic and capex growth themes bode ill for this safe haven index. Nondiscretionary health care outlays jump in times of duress and underwhelm during expansions. Currently, the elevated ISM manufacturing index is signaling that pharma profits will underwhelm in the coming months as the most cyclical parts of the economy flex their muscles (the ISM survey is shown inverted, second panel, Chart 14). A depreciating currency is also synonymous with pharma profit sickness (bottom panel, Chart 14). While pharma exports should at least provide some top line growth relief during depreciating U.S. dollar phases, they are still contracting (middle panel, Chart 14), warning that global pharma demand is ill. Finally, even on the operating metric front, the outlook is dark. Pharma industrial production is nil and our productivity proxy remains muted, warning that the valuation derating phase is far from over. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5PHAR - JNJ, PFE, MRK, BMY, AGN, LLY, ZTS, MYL, PRGO. Chart 13Telecom Services ##br##(Underweight, Higher Interest Rates Theme) Chart 14Pharmaceuticals ##br##(Underweight, Special Situation) 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Too Good To Be True?" dated January 22, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/M2V 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Insight, "Buy The Dip," dated February 8, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Invincible," dated November 6, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, "Top 5 Reasons To Favor Cyclicals Over Defensives," dated October 16, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Manic Depressive?" dated February 12, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth. Stay neutral small over large caps (downgrade alert).
Highlights Managements continue to guide higher for 2018 as the Q4 earnings season draws to a close. It is too soon for investors to be concerned about higher inflation. Investors are still uneasy that either the age of the current expansion or a bubble will trigger the next recession. Feature U.S. equity prices rallied last week as 10-year Treasury yields stabilized near 2.90%, just shy of BCA's U.S. Bond Strategy service's fair value of 3.02%.1 Our Global Investment Strategy service notes that the ascent in Treasury yields is likely to flatten out over the coming months, now that rate expectations have almost converged to the Fed dots. This should provide some near-term support for stocks. However, the structural outlook for bonds remains quite bearish.2 Credit spreads narrowed and the VIX settled back down below 20, but volatility remains elevated versus the start of 2018. BCA's U.S. Bond strategists remain overweight investment-grade and high-yield credit, but note that both municipal bonds and Agency MBS are starting to look attractive relative to investment-grade corporate bonds.3 The dollar caught a bid late in the week, but closed the week lower and has lost 4% this year. Gold rallied last week, aided by the weaker dollar and another stronger than expected reading on inflation. In this case, the January core CPI ticked up to +1.8% year-over-year versus expectations of a 1.7% reading. The Q4 earnings reporting season is nearly over, and both the results and guidance for 2018 have been spectacular, thanks to surging global growth and share buybacks related to the Tax Cut and Jobs Act of 2017. Realized inflation is moving higher, but it is too soon for investors to worry about an aggressive Fed. Moreover, the latest Household Debt and Credit Report from the New York Fed suggests that the odds of a consumer debt led recession remain low. A Higher Bar The Q4 earnings reporting season is nearly over and it shows that EPS and sales growth are well ahead of consensus expectations at the start of January. Moreover, the counter-trend rally in margins remains in place. We previewed the Q4 2017 S&P 500 earnings season earlier this year.4 Nearly 80% of companies have reported results so far, with 76% beating consensus EPS projections, slightly above the long-term average of 69%. Furthermore, 78% have posted Q4 revenues that topped expectations, which exceeded the long-term average of 56%. The surprise factor for year-over-year numbers in Q4 stands at 4.6% for EPS and 1.2% for sales. Both readings are right at the average surprise in the past five years. The surprise figures are even more impressive given that the analysts' views of Q4 results increased between the start of Q4 2017 and the actual Q4 reporting season. Analysts' estimates typically move lower as a quarter unfolds, in effect lowering the bar for results. Table 1S&P 500: Q4 2017 Results We anticipate the secular mean-reversion of margins to re-assert itself in the S&P data, perhaps beginning in late 2018. Nonetheless, the results to date suggest that Q4 will be another quarter of margin expansion. Average earnings growth (Q4 2017 versus Q4 2016) is outstanding at 15% with revenue growth at 8%. However, on a four-quarter moving total basis, U.S. margins dipped in the fourth quarter, but are still high on the back of decent corporate pricing power. An improvement in productivity growth into year-end also helped. Strength in earnings and revenues is broadly based (Table 1). Earnings per share increased in Q4 2017 versus Q4 2016 in 10 of the 11 sectors. EPS results are particularly outstanding in energy (119%), and strong in materials (35%), technology (20%) and financials (15%). Energy-sector sales climbed by 20% in Q4 2017 versus Q4 2016. The 12% revenue gains in the materials and technology sectors were impressive. Excluding energy, S&P 500 profits in Q4 2017 versus Q4 2016 are a robust 13%. In the past few months, upbeat managements have raised the bar significantly for 2018 results (Chart 1). On October 1, 2017, before the GOP introduced the Tax Cut and Jobs Act bill, the bottom-up estimate for 2018 S&P 500 EPS growth stood at 11%. As of February 16, 2018, the estimate is 19%. Moreover, the upward revisions are widespread. 2018 EPS growth rate estimates are higher today than at the start of October in every sector, with the exception of real estate (Table 2). 2018 consensus projections increased the most for telecom, financials, energy and consumer discretionary. Chart 1Buybacks, Surging Capex And Stout Global Growth Raising The Bar For 2018 EPS Growth Our U.S. Equity Strategy service introduced profit models for all 11 S&P 500 sectors in January.5 Encouragingly, an equal weight of the 10 GICS sector model outputs (we are excluding real estate due to lack of history), accurately forecasts the S&P 500's profit growth, and currently also confirms our U.S. Equity Strategy service's upbeat four factor macro EPS model. Our U.S. Equity Strategy team's model for the U.S. financials sector is expanding at twice the current profit growth rate and 10 percentage points above the Street's 12-month forward estimates. The S&P financials sector remains a core portfolio overweight and we reiterate our high-conviction overweight status in the heavyweight S&P banks index. Moreover, BCA's industrials sector EPS model suggests that industrials profits will easily surpass the low (and below the overall market) analysts' EPS growth. The late-cyclical S&P industrials sector remains an overweight. Chart 2Profit Growth Will Peak In Late 2018 The Tax Cut and Jobs Act of 2017 is behind most of this ebullience, but improving global growth, a steeper yield curve and higher energy prices are also responsible. The legislation lowered the corporate tax rate for 2018 and the repatriation holiday provides firms with excess cash. Companies will likely return almost all of that cash to shareholders via increased buybacks.6 Moreover, a few firms are marking up their 2018 estimates in anticipation of a surge in capital spending, as managements move up planned investments into 2018 to benefit from the bill's provisions. Analysts expect EPS growth to slow significantly in 2019 (10%) from the anticipated 2018 clip, which matches BCA's view. However, unlike estimates for 2017 and 2018, we believe that EPS forecasts for 2019 will move lower through 2018 and into 2019, ahead of a recession in late 2019/early 2020. Bottom Line: The BCA earnings model shows that S&P 500 EPS growth is peaking on a four-quarter, moving total basis, and should begin to decelerate in late 2018/early 2019 to a level commensurate with 3½-4% nominal GDP growth (Chart 2). However, after-tax earnings growth will be higher than that due to the recently passed tax cuts. Margins will crest in late 2018, but BCA believes that the earnings backdrop will continue to be a tailwind for the equity market. The Tax Cut and Job Act raised expectations for 2018 in most sectors; it is yet to be seen whether managements can match the lofty projections. BCA expects expansion outside the U.S. to remain robust, an additional support for EPS growth in the coming quarters. Further weakness in the dollar, counter to our call for a 5% gain in the DXY, would provide a modest lift to this year's S&P 500 figures. Strong domestic economic activity will also boost the 2018 top-line results. The Inflation Situation BCA expects inflation to hit the Fed's 2% target by year-end and then exceed the goal in 2019. That said, the 2.9% year-over-year reading on January's headline average hourly earnings overstates wage inflation and overall inflationary pressures. Consumers' inflation expectations ticked down in early 2018, and are still well anchored. The implication for investors is that it is too soon to be concerned that the Fed is behind the curve on inflation. Nonetheless, with elevated valuations on both U.S. equities and credit, market participants should not be complacent either. Average hourly earnings for all employees accelerated to +2.9% in January, a 9-year high (Chart 3, panel 1). However, the New York Fed notes that a drop in hours worked in January may have influenced the wage figure. The FOMC will focus on the trend in wages and employee compensation rather than on one data point. Committee members will want to see a sustained pickup in wages before they change their view on inflation and the path for this year's rate hikes. Nonetheless, hawkish FOMC voters will note that both the ECI and average hourly earnings have trended higher since 2012 (Chart 4). The most strident hawks could make a case that the 3-month change in AHE for all workers hit a 10-year high at 4% in January (Chart 3, panel 2). Doves, on the other hand, will state that at only 2.65% in Q4, the rise in ECI is still below the lows seen from the 1980s to the early 2000s. Chart 3Average Hourly Earnings Has Something For Both Hawks And Doves Chart 4Labor Costs Remain Subdued Survey-based inflation expectations are contained as indicated in Chart 5, showing the outlook of professional forecasters, consumers and primary dealers in the U.S. The implication for investors is that the center of gravity of inflation expectations is well anchored. That said, New York Fed President Bill Dudley's preferred measure of inflation expectations climbed in 2H 2017 (Chart 6). However, this metric remains far below the highs seen earlier in the business cycle. Market based inflation expectations may provide guidance to investors worried that the Fed is behind the curve on inflation. At 2.08% on February 16, the 10-year TIPS breakeven spread was still below the key 2.4% to 2.5% range (Chart 7). Ominously, the recent equity market correction did not alter investors' assessment of inflationary pressures. Long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates eased only modestly during the recent selloff in stocks and moved up again following last week's January CPI report. Chart 5Inflation Expectations##BR##Still Well Contained Chart 6Market And Consumer##BR##Inflation Expectations Chart 7Watch The 2.4 To 2.5% Level##BR##On TIPS Breakevens This market action is worrying for risk assets because it could signal an end to the 'Fed put'. When inflation was low and stable, and economic slack was abundant, disappointing economic data or equity market setbacks were followed by an easing in the expectations for Fed rate hikes, which helped to stabilize risk assets. However, with some nascent inflation emerging, the Fed may not be quick to deviate from its 'dot plot' path for rates. In other words, the recent equity correction did not give our overweight spread product and equity market positions any further room to run. Bottom Line: Our sense is that the market and the Fed will hash out a new equilibrium in the near term and that the true bear market in risk assets will not occur until inflationary pressures are more developed. We will continue to look for a range of 2.4% to 2.5% on long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates before we scale back our cyclical overweight exposure to spread product. The Next Recession Revisited Chart 8Odds Of A Recession Remain Low BCA's stance is that the next recession will be sparked by the Fed overtightening in 2019 as it finds itself behind the curve on inflation. Chart 8 shows that the odds of a recession in the next 12 months are low. The fiscal impulse provided by the tax legislation and the lifting of spending caps imposed by the 2013 fiscal cliff will lift growth this year.7 Still, investors are uneasy that either the age of the current expansion or a bubble will trigger then next recession. A study8 released last week by the St. Louis Fed notes that there are several instances in the past 40 years where expansions in developed market economies have lasted 15 years or more. Canada's economy avoided recession between 1992 and 2007. Japan's economy expanded for 17 years between 1975 and 1992 and Australia has not had an economic downturn since the early 1990s. Moreover, the New York Fed's Q4 report on Household Debt and Credit9 supports BCA's stance that there were few signs of froth at the end of 2017 in the housing, consumer debt or auto sectors. Banks remain prudent with mortgage lending. The share of mortgages issued to subprime borrows is far below the mid-2000s level (Chart 9, panel 1). Moreover, the share of mortgages originated by borrowers with a credit score over 780 soared in recent years and has nearly tripled since 2004-2006 when the seeds of the housing bubble were sown. Furthermore, at 755, the median credit score at origination for all mortgages in Q4 was more than 48 points higher than the lows reached in the mid-2000s (panel 2). Prudent lending in the auto sector suggests there are low odds of a bubble forming in subprime auto lending. At 19%, the share of auto loans made to borrowers with credit scores of 620 or less is well below the 32% of loans made to that cohort of borrowers in the mid-2000s (Chart 10, panel 1). Furthermore, the median credit score of auto loans has moved steadily higher in the past few years; this metric deteriorated between the early- and mid-2000s (panel 2). Chart 9Credit Standards For Mortgages... Chart 10...And Autos Is Improving As The Cycle Ages Student loan delinquency rates are stable, although they are elevated relative to other types of consumer debt (Chart 11). The student loan delinquency rate ticked down from 11.17 in Q3 2017 to 10.96 in Q4. A stronger labor market and accelerating wage growth provide stability to this market, but high debt levels affect the ability of these borrowers to access credit in other areas (e.g. auto, home, credit card) and may become a bigger issue for consumer spending when the labor market deteriorates. Chart 11Consumer Loan Metrics Bottom Line: The Fed, not a bubble nor the advanced age of the current expansion, will cause the next recession. The added support to the economy from the tax bill makes it more likely that the economy will overheat, and lead to higher inflation and faster rate hikes than expected by either the market or the Fed, especially in 2019. Stay underweight duration and overweight stocks versus bonds for now, although we will take some risk off the table later this year. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Bond Strategy Portfolio Allocation Summary, "Warning Signs", February 6, 2018. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research's Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "A Structural Bear Market In Bonds" , February 16, 2018. Available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "One The MOVE" February 13, 2018. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report "A Smooth Transition," published January 15, 2018. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, "White Paper: Introducing Our U.S. Equity Sector Earnings Models," published January 16, 2018. Available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Variations On A Theme," published January 22, 2018. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report "Bear Hunting And Brexit Update", published February 14, 2018. Available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 8 https://www.stlouisfed.org/on-the-economy/2018/february/us-due-recessions 9 https://www.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/interactives/householdcredit/data/pdf/HHDC_2017Q4.pdf
Highlights The ascent in Treasury yields is likely to flatten out over the coming months, now that rate expectations have almost converged to the Fed dots. This should provide some near-term support for stocks. The structural outlook for bonds remains quite bearish, however. Exploding budget deficits, a retreat from globalization, and the withdrawal of well-paid baby boomers from the labor force will all combine to push up inflation. As inflation increases, the positive correlation between bond yields and stock prices will break down. This will cause bond term premia to rise, pushing yields even higher. Investors should use any bond rally as an opportunity to reduce duration risk. They should also look to scale back exposure to equities later this year in advance of a recession starting in late-2019 or 2020. Feature More Than A Technical Correction Global equities moved higher this week following last week's drubbing. We noted in our February 6th report that the correction was amplified by technical factors.1 Rising volatility led to a wave of forced selling in so-called risk parity funds. These funds automatically adjust their exposure to stocks based on how volatile they are. When volatility spiked, the funds started selling stocks. This pushed down equity prices, causing volatility to rise further, which led to even more forced selling. The good news is that the losses suffered by investors in these funds have had little effect on the underlying health of the financial system. This is a major difference from 2008, when delinquent mortgages led to huge losses for banks and other highly levered institutions. The equity selloff has also made stocks more attractive. Even after this week's rebound, the S&P 500 trades at a forward P/E of 18 - roughly where it stood in early 2017 and not much higher than it was in 2015 (Chart 1). Chart 1A Healthy Valuation Reset If that were all there was to the story, one could breathe a sigh of relief. Unfortunately, there is more to it than that. When a building collapses during an earthquake, does one blame mother nature or the company that built it? Sometimes the answer is both. The stock market had been ripe for a correction for a long time. Why did it happen last week? The answer, at least in part, is that the foundation on which the equity bull market was built - the presumption that monetary policy would stay easy for as far as the eye could see - began to crumble. The timing is too conspicuous to ignore. Stocks began to swoon just as the payrolls report revealed that average hourly earnings had surprised on the upside. Investors began to fret that the remaining runway for low inflation was not as long as they had supposed. Bond Yields Should Level Off In The Near Term... Are investors correct to be concerned? As we argue in detail below, over the long term, the answer is definitely yes. Over the next 12 months, however, the picture is much more nuanced. Actual inflation remains fairly tame. Even after this week's higher-than-expected CPI print, core CPI excluding shelter is up by only 0.8% year-over-year. Moreover, despite their recent climb, global bond yields are still quite low in absolute terms. The yield on the JP Morgan global bond index stands at 1.7%, close to half of what it was in 2011 (Chart 2). Chart 2AYields Are Still Low By Historic Standards (I) Chart 2BYields Are Still Low By Historic Standards (II) Chart 3Market Pricing Has Almost ##br##Caught Up To The Fed's Dots Market expectations now place the fed funds rate at the level implied by the dots for end-2018 and only slightly below the dots for end-2019 (Chart 3). Expectations for the first ECB rate hike in the second half of 2019 have also converged with what the central bank is targeting. The nearly two rate hikes for the Bank of England that are priced in this year may, if anything, be too aggressive. The latest Bank of America Merrill Lynch Global Fund Manager Survey revealed that investors cut bond allocations to the lowest level in the 20-year history of the report. All of this raises the odds that the rise in global bond yields will level off, and perhaps even temporarily reverse. This should give some support to stocks. ... But The Long-Term Direction For Yields Is Up While bond yields are due for a pause, the long-term trend remains firmly to the upside. BCA declared "The End Of The 35-Year Bond Bull Market" on July 5, 2016.2 As luck would have it, this was the same day that the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield hit a record closing low of 1.37%. We argued at the time that both cyclical and structural forces would conspire to put in a bottom for yields. Since then, the global economy has continued to grow at an above-trend pace. This has caused output gaps to shrink in every major economy (Chart 4). The U.S. has now reached full employment. Wage growth tends to accelerate once the unemployment rate falls below NAIRU (Chart 5). Faster wage growth will give households the wherewithal to spend more. With little spare capacity left, this will fuel inflation. Chart 4Output Gaps Have##br## Shrunk In Advanced Economies Chart 5U.S. Wage Growth Set##br## To Accelerate Further The shift from fiscal austerity to largesse across much of the world is adding to the inflationary pressures. The Trump tax cuts are starting to look like chump change compared to the massive amount of spending coming down the pike. The Senate agreed last week to raise the caps on spending by $153 billion in FY2018 and an additional $143 billion in FY2019. This does not even include the $80 billion that has already been allocated to disaster relief, the still-to-be-negotiated sum for infrastructure spending, or up to $25 billion in additional annual spending that our Geopolitical Strategy team estimates would result if "earmarks" are reinstated (Chart 6).3 Chart 6Let The Good Times Roll Meanwhile, Japan is on track to ease fiscal policy this year.4 In Germany, the Grand Coalition deal was only concluded after Chancellor Angela Merkel conceded to demands for more spending on everything from education to public investment on technology and defense. Globalization, which historically has been a highly deflationary force, is on the back foot. Global trade nearly doubled as a share of GDP from the early 1980s to 2008, but has been stagnant ever since (Chart 7). Donald Trump pulled the U.S. out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership and he may very well pull it out of NAFTA. Opposition towards open-border immigration policies is rising. More Mexicans left the U.S. over the past eight years than entered it. On the demographic front, the three decade-long increase in the global ratio of workers-to-consumers has finally reversed (Chart 8). As baby boomers leave the labor force, the amount of GDP they produce will plummet. However, their spending on goods and services will continue to rise once health care expenditures are included in the tally. The combination of more consumption and less production is inflationary. Against a backdrop of slow potential GDP growth, policymakers will welcome rising inflation as the only viable tool left to deflate away high debt levels. Chart 7Global Trade Has Crested Chart 8Peak In The Ratio Of Workers-To-Consumers Productivity Stuck In The Slow Lane Faster productivity growth could help stave off this outcome. Unfortunately, so far, a sustained productivity revival is more of a dream than a reality. Chart 9 shows that G7 productivity has been rising at a disappointingly slow pace since the mid-2000s. Optimists like to tout the impact of robotics and the "Amazon effect". However, as my colleague Mark McClellan discussed in a series of reports, neither factor is quantitatively all that important.5 In the case of the Amazon effect, profit margins in the retail sector are close to record highs (Chart 10). This calls into doubt claims that online shopping has undermined businesses' pricing power. Recent productivity growth in the U.S. distribution sector has actually been slower than in the 1990s, a decade that produced large productivity gains from the displacement of "mom and pop" stores with "big box" retailers such as Walmart and Costco. Chart 9G7 Productivity: Not What It Used To Be Chart 10Retail Sector Profit Margins Near Record Highs Meanwhile, student test scores across the OECD have declined over the past decade (Chart 11). The accumulation of human capital has been the single most important driver of rising living standards over the past few centuries.6 This tailwind is now dissipating at an alarmingly fast pace. Chart 11AThe Contribution To Growth From ##br##Rising Human Capital Is Falling Chart 11BStudent Test Scores Are ##br##Declining In Many Countries Will The Stock-Bond Correlation Flip? As inflation becomes a greater concern over the coming years, the bond term premium will rise. Chart 12 shows that the term premium has often been negative in the recent past. This means that investors have been willing to accept a discount on holding long-term bonds relative to what they would get by rolling over short-term bills. Chart 12The Term Premium Has Been Negative Over The Past Three Years It is not surprising that this has been the case. Since the late 1990s, Treasury prices have tended to go up when the stock market sells off (Chart 13). This has made owning bonds a good hedge against bad economic news. Chart 13Bond Prices Have Tended To Rise When Equity Prices Fall Since The Late 1990s The last few weeks have seen a reversal of this pattern. Since January 26, the 10-year yield has risen by 25 basis points while the S&P 500 has fallen by 4.9%. When economies are operating at full capacity, anything that adds to aggregate demand will lead to higher inflation rather than faster growth. The latter is good for stocks because it means stronger earnings. The former is bad for stocks if it leads to a more rapid pace of rate hikes. As bond yields temporarily level off, the positive correlation between yields and equity prices should return. However, this may simply prove to be the last hurrah for this relationship. Over the long haul, bonds and equities will become more alike in the sense that they will prosper or suffer at the same time. The equity risk premium will shrink not because equities will be revalued upwards but because bonds will be revalued downwards. The runoff of the Fed's balance sheet and a slower pace of central bank bond purchases elsewhere will only compound the damage to bonds. Investment Conclusions Global bond yields are on a structural upward trajectory, however the progression will be a choppy one. The rapid rise in bond yields will flatten out, but the 10-year Treasury yield will nevertheless finish the year at about 3.25% - around 25 basis points above the forwards. Yields will continue to rise into next year. The resulting tightening in financial conditions will cause the U.S. economy to slow, ultimately setting the stage for a recession in late-2019 or 2020. The next downturn will see inflation and bond yields dip again. However, they will do so from higher levels than today. As in the 1970s, bond yields and inflation will trend higher over the coming years, reaching "higher highs" and "higher lows" with every passing business cycle (Chart 14). Investors should use any bond rally as an opportunity to reduce duration risk. They should also look to scale back exposure to equities later this year. A structurally high path for inflation is not good for the dollar. However, the coming stagflationary era will not be unique to the U.S. Many other countries actually have higher debt levels and weaker growth prospects than the U.S. More relevant to the current environment, the increasingly popular narrative that attributes the dollar's ongoing decline in 2018 to heightened fears of large budget deficits does not really mesh with what is happening to real rates. Real yields have actually surged since the start of the year (Chart 15). In this respect, today's landscape looks a bit like the early 1980s, a period when massive tax cuts and increased defense expenditures led to rising real yields and a stronger dollar. Chart 14A Template For The Next Decade? Chart 15Real Yields Have Surged Since The Start Of The Year Momentum is a powerful force in currency markets. This is particularly true for the dollar, which scores higher than all other currencies on our Foreign Exchange Strategy team's "momentum factor"7 (Chart 16). Today, the trend is definitely not the dollar's friend. Nevertheless, the fundamentals may be shifting in favor of the greenback. EUR/USD has decisively decoupled from the 30-year Treasury/bund spread (Chart 17). If the relationship had held, the cross would be trading at 1.12, rather than today's level of 1.25. The latest BofA Merrill Lynch survey reported "short USD" as one of the most crowded trades among fund managers. Going long the dollar could be a successful non-consensus trade for the next few months. Chart 16USD Is A ##br##Momentum Winner Chart 17EUR/USD Has Diverged From##br## Interest Rate Spreads This Year Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "The Return Of Vol," dated February 6, 2018. 2 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "End Of The 35-Year Bond Bull Market," dated July 5, 2016; and Strategy Outlook, "Third Quarter 2016: End Of The 35-Year Bond Bull Market," dated July 9, 2016. 3 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Upside Risks In U.S., Downside Risks In China," dated January 17, 2018. 4 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Japan: Kuroda Or No Kuroda, Reflation Ahead," dated February 7, 2018. 5 Please see BCA The Bank Credit Analyst Special Report, "Did Amazon Kill The Phillips Curve?" dated August 31, 2017; and Special Report, "The Impact Of Robots On Inflation," dated January 25, 2018. 6 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "Is Slow Productivity Growth Good Or Bad For Bonds?" dated May 31, 2017; and BCA The Bank Credit Analyst Special Report, "Taking Off The Rose-Colored Glasses: Education And Growth In The 21st Century," dated February 24, 2011. 7 Please see BCA Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "Riding The Wave: Momentum Strategies In Foreign Exchange Markets," dated December 8, 2017. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Underweight The S&P hotels, resorts and cruise lines index had a remarkable run between 2016 and 2017, handily outperforming the S&P 500 (top panel). We downgraded the index to underperform in September of last year as the resulting valuation multiple spike (second panel) was unjustified in the context of weakening pricing, higher capital outlays and soaring input costs (third and fourth panels). Our sector EPS model captures these (and other) variables, pointing to the steepest downturn in profitability since the Great Recession (bottom panel). This stands in marked contrast to the overall market that is slated to grow EPS by roughly 20% according to our SPX EPS growth model. Accordingly, we reiterate our underweight recommendation for the S&P hotels, resorts and cruise lines index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HOTL - MAR, CCL, RCL, HLT, WYN, NCLH.
Highlights Expectations that the BoJ's yield curve control strategy is toward its tail end, general USD weakness, and brewing EM troubles are conspiring to push the yen higher. Tactically, the yen has more upside. Global financial markets are set to remain volatile and softness in China point to a tougher environment for EM bonds and commodity prices. In the coming months, USD/JPY will fall to the 104 to 102 range, and maybe even test 100. Beyond this point, the outlook remains negative for the yen. It is too early for investors to bet on the end of YCC, especially as the current yen strength hurts Japan's inflation outlook. While EUR/JPY and USD/JPY still have tactical downside, AUD/JPY and NZD/JPY are much more vulnerable. Feature No matter what happens to U.S. asset prices, bond yields, or inflation, the yen continues to rally unabashedly. A month ago, we argued that a countertrend bounce in the yen was likely as the Bank of Japan was tweaking its bond purchases. We also thought this rally would have a limited shelf life as the BoJ's yield curve control strategy is still firmly in place.1 Considering the yen's recent strength, it is an opportune time to revisit this theme. We do believe that the yen still has room to rally on a three- to six-month basis. However, a move beyond USD/JPY 100 is unlikely as the BoJ's YCC program remains firmly entrenched, only more so now that the yen is appreciating once again. Why Is The Yen Strong? We think the yen's strength can be attributed to three factors: domestic economic conditions, the dollar's weakness, and brewing EM trouble. Domestic Conditions The strength of the Japanese economy has played an important role in the yen's appreciation. Japanese industrial production is growing at an impressive 4.4% annual pace. Also, the labor market is tight: Japan's unemployment rate is 0.8% below equilibrium, the active job openings-to-applicant ratio is at a 44-year high and job creation remains decent at 1% per annum. The output gap corroborates this picture, with GDP standing 1.1% above the OECD's estimate of potential GDP. The economic wellbeing seems generalized. Exports are growing at a brisk pace, and are strong across the board. This is a consequence of perky global growth, which always tends to help export-oriented nations. Moreover, this export boom is filtering through to the domestic economy. The share of corporate profit stands near record levels at 15% of GDP. This is incentivizing firms to invest, which should push capex higher (Chart I-1). Chart I-1Japanese Capex Is Set To Rise Chart I-2Japan Needs Tighter Policy? Investors are beginning to replay the story of the euro in 2017 in their minds. As the narrative goes, a booming economy is giving monetary authorities a chance to move away from extraordinarily accommodative conditions. Therefore, investors are lifting their estimates of where Japanese policy will stand in three or five years. This could be even truer in Japan than in the euro area last year: unlike Europe, Japan is at full employment and the BoJ has not achieved its bond purchase objective of JPY80 trillion per year since mid-2016. However, the BoJ is keeping a firm lid on interest rates up to 10 years ahead, making it harder to observe in interest rate derivatives whether or not investors are lifting their estimates of the Japanese terminal rate. Yet a few signs exist. For one, our Bank of Japan Monitor has moved into "tighter policy territory" (Chart I-2). While this does not guarantee that Japanese rates will rise, this indicator is comprised of variables2 that most investors follow to form their expectations of the path of Japanese monetary policy. Thus, it suggests that based on historical experience, investors are potentially in the process of re-assessing the future of Japanese monetary policy. Moreover, while interest rate markets may be artificially congealed by the BoJ, other asset prices are not. If the BoJ were indeed to lift interest rates earlier than had been previously anticipated, Japanese financials should outperform the market as a more rapid and sharper lift-off would boost Japanese banks' net interest margins. Indeed, Japanese financials experienced an expansion of their multiples relative to the broader market at the onset of the yen's most recent rally (Chart I-3). Additional fuel comes from credit conditions. Over long periods of time, easy lending standards support the yen: an improving outlook for credit growth prompt investors to expect a less accommodative BoJ stance. Today, private-sector deleveraging is over and Japanese credit standards are very loose, suggesting the yen is somewhat of a coiled spring that could easily be shocked higher. It is the dovish policy of the BoJ that has made the yen softer than normally implied by credit standards. However, any hint that easy policy could be nearing an end would once again cause investors to push the yen higher. A stronger economy is currently giving traders the justification to do exactly that (Chart I-4). Chart I-3Symptoms That Investors ##br##See Higher Rates Ahead Chart I-4Orders Are Lifting The Yen Because They ##br##Point Toward Tighter Policy Bottom Line: Not only is the Japanese labor market very tight, the economy is growing strongly. As a result, investors seem to be anticipating an earlier hawkish shift by the BoJ, which is lifting the yen. Dollar Weakness Another factor that has pushed the yen sharply higher has been the weakness in the U.S. dollar. As have other currency pairs, USD/JPY has decoupled from interest rate differentials. This weakness in the dollar can be understood under many lights. First, since the end of the Bretton Woods system, the dollar has been following an interesting pattern of 10 down years followed by five to six up years. The dollar rally from 2011 to 2016 seemed to fit this mold, suggesting we have entered a protracted period of dollar weakness (Chart I-5). Second, the dollar tends to fare poorly in the last years of an economic expansion. This is because the global economy tends to outperform the U.S. during this time frame. Today, the U.S. business cycle looks long in the tooth. Companies are reporting increasing difficulty finding qualified labor, very few are worried about the outlook for demand, and the yield curve is flattening. These developments are historically associated with the last innings of a business expansion (Chart I-6). Chart I-5USD Entering The Negative Part Of Its Cycle Chart I-6Late Cycle Dynamics In The U.S. Finally, the global economy is experiencing a synchronized boom. As we have previously highlighted, when global economic strength is robust and felt around the world, the dollar performs poorly.3 Bottom Line: The yen's strength not only reflects domestic considerations, it is also a reflection of the dollar's own weakness. The yen is feeding on this dollar depreciation. Emerging EM Strains EM economic activity seems to be ebbing at the margin. As we showed two weeks ago, EM manufacturing production has been weakening. Additionally, EM economies, which normally magnify booms in advanced economies, are currently experiencing a relative contraction in their PMIs (Chart I-7). China probably explains this strange softness. We have long argued that Chinese monetary conditions have been tightening, which has caused a sharp deceleration in the Keqiang index, a measure of industrial activity based on credit growth, electricity production and freight volumes. We are now seeing additional signs of this mini-malaise. China's orders-to-inventories ratio has begun to contract, import volumes are weak, export price growth is slowing sharply and the volume of cargo handled at seaports is decelerating (Chart I-8). This is because the tightening in Chinese monetary conditions is beginning to affect the channels through which China impacts the rest of the world. EM tends to be at the forefront of such waves; weakness in the highly sensitive Swedish PMI supports this interpretation. This development has visible market implications. EM stocks are rebounding in unison with DM equities, but EM bonds are not. This suggests that while higher U.S. bond yields are not yet causing much pain in advanced economies, EM economies, already facing headwinds from China, are more vulnerable to the tightening in financial conditions caused by higher Treasury rates. Yield-starved Japanese investors have been heavy buyers of EM bonds. Hence, the weakness in EM bonds could be prompting a closing of EM carry trades. This favors the yen; under these circumstances, Japanese investors repatriate their money home. These dynamics can become vicious. The more Japanese investors suffer losses on their EM holdings, the more they repatriate funds at home, which lifts the yen further, pushes bond prices lower and also tightens liquidity conditions in EM economies. As a result, EM/JPY carry trades tend to lead global industrial activity (Chart I-9). These dynamics seem to be playing a role in the current phase of yen strength. Chart I-7EM Growth Is Underperforming Chart I-8Chinese Slowdown Is Becoming Impactful Chart I-9EM Carry Trades Flashing A Slowdown Bottom Line: Not only domestic conditions in Japan and the generalized weakness in the dollar are helping the yen, but strains in EM economies are also aiding. EM manufacturing activity is slowing and EM bond prices are falling, creating an environment normally associated with a strong yen. Outlook For The Yen Tactical Outlook Over the next three to six months, we do see further upside for the yen. To begin with, the yen can get more overbought than it currently is. Peaks in the yen have historically materialized at higher levels in our capitulation index, especially as the yen tends to display strong momentum (Chart I-10).4 Moreover, the weakness of the dollar in the face of a strong CPI report and a steepening yield curve suggests that the dollar is under immense selling pressure. Additionally, even if the yen trades at a large discount of 12% relative to purchasing power parity, speculator are short a near-record 50% of the open interest. This means that as the yen strengthens, it could become very vulnerable to a short covering rally that would mechanically push the JPY significantly higher. The growing international impact of the policy induced Chinese soft patch could also gather further momentum, and support the yen in the process. As Chart I-11 illustrates, when Chinese imports of copper concentrates slow, it often leads to substantial depreciation in USD/JPY. These copper imports are currently decelerating sharply. Chart I-10More Upside For The Yen Chart I-11Chinese Dynamics Favor The Yen The large amount of complacency still present in the market further suggests that risks remain skewed to the upside for the yen. Not only could potential EM weakness weigh on commodity prices - a crucial component of our Complacency Index - but also volatility clustering suggests it is likely to spike again repeatedly in the coming months, despite having fallen precipitously after last week's surge. This combination would cause our Complacency Index to fall, a climate historically associated with a strong yen, unless the BoJ eases aggressively (Chart I-12). This picture is corroborated by the general positioning in the FX market. Speculators are massively long risky currencies versus safer ones. Historically, such skewed positioning tends to be followed by rallies in the yen, unless the BoJ eases aggressively (Chart I-13). Looking outside the FX market, investors still hate bonds. Sentiment toward Treasurys is very depressed, speculators are very short 10-year bonds and portfolio managers are massively underweight duration (Chart I-14). This makes bond yields vulnerable to a pullback. For this to materialize, Ryan Swift, who writes BCA's U.S. Bond Strategy service, argues that the U.S. surprise index has to fall back below zero.5 The more than 90-basis-point rise in U.S. bond yields since September will clip some momentum from U.S. growth - not enough to cause a large slowdown, but potentially enough to generate a patch of negative surprises. Chart I-12Less Complacency Equals Stronger Yen Chart I-13More Signs Of Complacency Chart I-14Duration Positioning Points To Upside Risk For The Yen Bottom Line: The international factors that have helped the yen over the past two months will be driving the tactical strength in the JPY. The BoJ is already trying to lean against the yen's strength, as it has recently increased its JGB purchases. While we do not think it is has done enough to weaken the yen in the short term, in our view, the BoJ will remain the biggest headwind for the yen beyond the next six months. Cyclical Outlook This naturally brings us to the cyclical outlook for the yen. We believe that USD/JPY is most likely to settle in the 104 to 102 range, and maybe even test 100. At these levels, we would buy this pair. Why? Simply, for the yen to rally durably, it will require an end to YCC. While markets are probably pricing this outcome right now, we think it is too early to do so. The rhetoric of the BoJ remains very clear: The central bank is committed to maintaining YCC until inflation overshoots its 2% target. Not only are we not there yet, but there are still many obstacles to beat in order to achieve this objective. Moreover, some of these hurdles are becoming more potent. First, while Japan's labor market seems at full employment, industrial capacity is still replete with excess slack. As Chart I-15 shows, Japanese capacity utilization may be near cycle highs, but it remains well below the levels that prevailed before the Great Financial Crisis. Moreover, since Japanese growth has been lifted by the recent EM boom, the country's own mini-boom will suffer from the EM slowdown. As the bottom panel of Chart I-15 illustrates, like China's, Japan's shipments-to-inventories ratio is falling. This is a reliable leading indicator of industrial production. So not only is Japan growth set to slow in the second half of 2018, but low capacity utilization will still be muting inflationary pressures. Second, as we highlighted one month ago, Japan's inflation is hyper sensitive to Japanese financial conditions. The recent improvement in Japan's consumer prices excluding food and energy reflects the lag impact of the previous easing in financial conditions (Chart I-16), which itself is courtesy of the prior weakness in the trade-weighted yen. However, this positive inflationary impulse is set to fade, and the stronger the yen gets, the more likely that inflation slows. The fall in money supply resulting from a strong yen only adds credence to this assertion (Chart I-17). This will reinforce the BoJ's willingness to keep YCC in place and could even incentivize the central bank to increase its asset purchases closer to target in order to clearly communicate its intentions to the market. Chart I-15Will The BoJ Stand##br## Idly By? Chart I-16Inflation Is Picking Up Because ##br##Financial Conditions Eased Third, the yen's strength could hurt Japan's competitiveness and increase domestic deflationary pressures. As the top panel of Chart I-18 illustrates, CNY/JPY has broken down through a key trend line, heralding additional weaknesses. Moreover, the yen has begun to appreciate against other Asian currencies (Chart 18, bottom panel). Our Emerging Markets Strategy service is initiating a long JPY/KRW trade this week, betting on further strength in the yen against other Asian currencies. The BoJ will pay attention to these matters. This combination suggests it is premature for investors to begin betting on an end to YCC in Japan. Thus, the domestic underpinning of the yen's rally seems flawed right now. Only once inflation is more clearly vanquished, or the yen falls substantially in value - enough to generate another outsized gain in Japanese inflation - will this bet become more justified. Chart I-17The Yen Is Already Hurting Money Supply Chart I-18The Yen Hurts Japan Competitiveness Bottom Line: While we do continue to see room for the yen to strengthen over the course of the next three to six months, we think such a move will not be durable. We will look to buy USD/JPY once it falls below 104. We believe the yen's short-term strength is more likely to be powered by external factors, as it is still too early to bet on the end of YCC. The yen will be able to embark on a clear cyclical bull market once conditions fall into place for the BoJ to abandon this policy. We are not there yet. Implementation Considerations We have recommended investors sell EUR/JPY for safety reasons. From a contrarian perspective, positioning in EUR/JPY is even more skewed than positioning in USD/JPY (Chart I-19, left panel). Moreover, EUR/JPY trades at a significant premium to our short-term fair value model, adding a significant margin of safety (Chart 19, right panel). While we still like this position, the dismal trading in the USD this week underscores that USD/JPY still offers plenty of downside as well. Chart I-19ARisks To EUR/JPY (I) Chart I-19BRisks To EUR/JPY (II) We are also very negative on commodity currencies versus the yen. Weakness in EM growth and in EM bonds should be particularly unkind to AUD/JPY and NZD/JPY. Additionally, from a valuation perspective, these two crosses represent attractive shorting opportunities (Chart I-20). Of the two, shorting AUD/JPY should be the most profitable bet. As we wrote three weeks ago, the Australian dollar seems especially vulnerable right now because nominal growth is set to fall and the labor market continues to be weak. Moreover, Australia's terms of trade is more exposed to a fall in the share of capex in China than in New Zealand.6 Chart I-20ACommodity Currencies Look Especially ##br##Vulnerable Against The Yen (I) Chart I-20BCommodity Currencies Look Especially##br## Vulnerable Against The Yen (II) Bottom Line: While shorting EUR/JPY remains a safe way to play a continuation of the tactical rebound in the yen, shorting USD/JPY may offer a potential higher reward, but at higher risk. Shorting commodity currencies versus the yen, especially the AUD, still remain the vehicles with the highest potential payoffs. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC!", dated January 12, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 2 Based on output prices, overall business conditions, and consumer confidence. 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled "A Cold Snap Doesn't Make A Winter", dated January 5, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, titled "Riding The Wave: Momentum Strategies In Foreign Exchange Markets", dated December 8, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, titled "How Much Higher For Yields?", dated October 31, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled "From Davos To Sydney, With a Pit Stop In Frankfurt", dated January 26, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 U.S. data was mixed: Inflation beat expectations, coming in at 2.1% for the headline measure and 1.8% for the core measure; Retail sales contracted by 0.3% on a monthly rate, with the core measure experiencing no growth; In line with expectations, initial jobless claims increased to 230,000; Capacity utilization came down a little at 77.5%;as Industrial production contracted by 0.1% on a monthly pace; Not even a strong inflation report was able to lift the greenback, which is a very negative sign. This could indicate that the dollar is experiencing a capitulation. A rebound in the USD is likely in the coming quarter, but this is likely to require a slowdown in global growth. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 A Cold Snap Doesn't Make A Winter - January 5, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 European data was mixed: German 2017 Q4 GDP growth mixed expectations of 3%, coming in at 2.9%; German CPI was in line with expectations at 1.6%; European GDP in Q4 of 2017 grew by 2.7% annually, as expected; Industrial production increased by 5.2%, beating expectations; While the euro had a strong week, the long euro trade is very overcrowded. Early signs of weakening in various indicators reflect signs that tightening financial conditions could start hurting growth. The most recent selloff in risky assets further proves this point. A short-term correction is likely to come in the following months, but the euro's cyclical bull market remains intact. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 The Euro's Tricky Spot - February 2, 2018 From Davos To Sydney, With a Pit Stop In Frankfurt - January 26, 2018 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan has been negative: The leading economic indicator surprised to the downside, coming in at 107.9. This measure also declined from the previous month. Moreover, annualized gross domestic product growth also underperformed expectations coming in at 0.5%. Finally, machinery orders yearly growth underperformed expectations substantially, coming in at -5%. This growth rate declined from 4% in the previous month. USD/JPY has depreciated by more than 2.5% this past week. This cross is now at its lowest point since Trump's election in late 2016. Overall we think that USD/JPY has more downside, as the rise in yields, coupled with a potential slowdown in global trade, and reduced industrial activity in China should continue to weigh on EM assets. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC! - January 12, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. has been mixed: Both core and headline inflation surprised to the upside, coming in at 2.7% and 3% respectively. However, the retail price index yearly growth underperformed expectations, coming in at 4%. This measure also declined from last month's number. Moreover, industrial production yearly growth also underperformed expectations, coming in at 0%. This measure also declined from 2.6% the previous month. GBP/USD has rallied by nearly 1% this week. This has been mostly due to the weakness in the dollar as the trade-weighted pound continued to depreciate since it texting the upper-bound of its range on tk. Overall, we expect that inflation should ease from here on out, as the pound strength should start to translate into lower prices from imported goods, this will limit the number of hikes currently priced into the SONIA curve. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 The Euro's Tricky Spot - February 2, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Data out of Australia was mixed: NAB Business Confidence and Business Conditions both outperformed expectations, coming in at 12 and 19, respectively; The Westpac Consumer Confidence declined to -2.3% from 1.8%. The unemployment rate declined to 5.5%, in line with expectations; Part-time employment increased by 65,900, while full-time employment declined by 49,800. At a speech on Monday, RBA Assistant Governor Luci Ellis brought forward important arguments regarding the macroeconomic situation of Australia. She highlighted the lack of wage growth and high household debt, and pointed specifically to the low household consumption growth which stand in sharp contrast to the experience of other developed countries. Recent data continues to highlight the slack in the Australian labor market, and the AUD is likely to suffer this year due to these factors and its large overvaluation. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 From Davos To Sydney, With a Pit Stop In Frankfurt - January 26, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Recent data in New Zealand has been positive: The participation rate outperformed expectations, coming in at 71%. Moreover, the unemployment came below expectations, coming in at 4.5%. It also declined from last quarter number. Finally, RBNZ inflation expectations also increased from 2% in Q3 to 2.1% in Q4. On February 8th, the RBNZ elected to keep the policy rate unchanged. In its projections, the RBNZ expects that the trade weighted exchange rate will ease over the projection period. Overall, we expect that the New Zealand dollar will outperform the Australian dollar, given that New Zealand's economy is in a much better footing to sustain rate hikes than Australia. Moreover, a slowdown in the Chinese industrial sector would affect Australia much more than New Zealand, given that New Zealand exports are geared more towards the Chinese consumer. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 The CAD strengthened against the greenback by almost 1% this week. This was largely a result of the setback in the USD, and we remain neutral on the CAD for the year. That being said, Canada's superior growth position relative to most other DM commodity producers mean that the CAD is set to appreciate against the AUD. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC! - January 12, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland has been mixed: Producer and import price yearly growth outperformed expectations, coming in at 1.8%. Moreover, the unemployment rate came in line with expectations at 3%. However, headline inflation underperformed expectations, coming in at 0.7%. EUR/CHF has been relatively flat this past week. The recent negative inflation release is a prime example of the entrenched deflationary pressures in Switzerland in spite of a weak franc. Overall, we believe that the SNB will be maintain their ultra-dovish monetary policy as well as their currency interventions, as long as prices remain contained. This means that while bouts of risk-off sentiment will cause temporary corrections in EUR/CHF, the primary trend for this cross still points upward. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Recent data in Norway has been mixed: Core inflation underperformed expectations substantially, coming in at 1.1% against anticipations of 1.5%. It also declined from 1.4% on the previous month. However, manufacturing production outperformed expectations After rallying by more than 5% in the first week of February, USD/NOK has given up some of those gains, falling by nearly 3% last week. Overall we expect that the Norwegian krone should outperform other commodity currencies, given that a slowdown in industrial activity in China will cause oil to outperform metals. Moreover, the market is only expecting roughly one rate hike in the next year by the Norges Bank, while anticipating nearly three hikes in Canada. We expect this spread in expectations to converge, putting downward pressure on CAD/NOK. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC! - January 12, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 The Riksbank's monetary policy meeting on Wednesday contradicted remarks by officials earlier this year regarding a possible policy move in early 2018. In a mild volte face, Riksbank deputy governor Per Jansson pointed to Sweden's "problem with underlying price" pressures to argue in favor of a summer hike. Riksbank officials fear that tightening ahead of the ECB may lead to too strong a currency and depress prices. They also pointed to falling wage growth despite the increasingly tightening labor market. While we are optimistic on Sweden's growth prospects, this development was highlight that Ingves' dovish inclinations still linger within the walls of this central bank. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Canaries In The Coal Mine Alert 2: More On EM Carry Trades And Global Growth - December 15, 2017 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
In early September, we opportunistically upgraded the niche S&P oil & gas refining & marketing index to capture the earnings upside from hurricane-related capacity constraints. Such constraints have since normalized and, with some clouds on the horizon, last week we reversed our recommendation to a benchmark allocation, locking in profits of 9%. Refining margins have tightened considerably, as has the Brent-WTI crude oil spread (second panel); both signal that refiner profits will be challenged in the year to come. Analyst estimates have not yet incorporated the darker outlook, projecting lights-out earnings growth (third panel) with momentum to the upside (bottom panel). These elevated expectations introduce considerable forecast risk, offsetting the still-firm demand for refined products, underscoring our neutral recommendation. Please see our Feb 5, 2018 Weekly Report for more details. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5OILR- PSX, VLO, MPC and ANDV.