Developed Countries
Highlights As the Fed proceeds with its policy tightening this year, higher real rates and a stronger USD will weigh on silver and platinum prices, and, to a lesser extent, palladium prices. Offsetting these downward pressures, silver, and to a lesser extent platinum, could take their lead from the gold market, and outperform on the back of increased equity volatility and understated geopolitical risks this year.1 Palladium, as always, will march to its own drummer, as this market's defining feature remains chronic physical deficits and depleted inventories, which will prevent prices from reacting too severely to tighter Fed policy this year. Energy: Overweight. Supply-demand fundamentals still are supportive of crude oil prices overall, and continued backwardation in forward curves. Our long Jul/18 WTI vs. short Dec/18 WTI calendar spread, which gains as backwardation becomes more pronounced, is up 47.4% since inception on November 2, 2017. Base Metals: Neutral. Base metals remain well supported by still-strong global growth, estimates of which were revised higher by the IMF in its most recent World Economic Outlook. Precious Metals: Neutral. Fed tightening this year will weigh on silver and platinum, less so palladium (see below). Our long gold portfolio hedge is up 7.9%. Ags/Softs: Underweight. The USDA revised down its forecast of U.S. corn ending stocks in the latest WASDE on the back of an upwards revision to U.S. corn exports. Feature The term "precious metals" is something of a misnomer: Gold, silver, and platinum-group metals (PGMs) - chiefly platinum and palladium - do not constitute a single asset class, and should not be treated as such (Chart of the Week). Nevertheless, as with most commodity markets we cover, the evolution of these markets is highly sensitive to U.S. financial variables, particularly as regards monetary policy. Palladium is something of an outlier: It behaves more like an industrial metal, while silver, and to a lesser extent platinum, are more sensitive to the fundamental drivers of gold prices - i.e., the evolution of the USD's broad trade-weighted index (USD TWIB), and real U.S. interest rates. Palladium's demand is dominated by its use in catalytic converters in gasoline-powered cars, whereas industrial applications form a more limited source of demand for platinum and silver (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekA Schism In Precious Metals Chart 2Industrial Uses Dominate Palladium Gold, silver, and, to a more limited extent platinum are cointegrated in the long run, meaning their prices follow their own random walks, even though they share a long-term trend. Palladium, on the other hand, is more responsive to the physical realities of the automobile market - chiefly, demand for gasoline-powered cars. In our econometric analysis of the behavior of PGMs and silver, we use the CRB Metals Index as a proxy for industrial activity. We find that while all three are sensitive to changes in the CRB Metals Index, palladium prices are significantly more responsive (i.e., elastic) to industrial activity than platinum and silver (Table 1). Table 1Palladium Behaves Like An Industrial Metal Furthermore, while gold prices impact both silver, and, to a lesser extent platinum, they are not significant when it comes to the palladium market. Bullish Fundamentals Tightened Palladium Market Palladium registered a 60% gain in 2017. Its forward curve has been backwardated since June (Chart 3). This backwardation - i.e., spot prices trade higher than deferred prices - is a symptom of a tight market. In fact, according to Thomson Reuters GFMS data, the palladium market has been in a chronic deficit since 2007, with the 2017 deficit the largest since 2000. The culprit in this case has been strong demand and stagnant supply. While supply has been growing ~ 1% year-over-year (yoy) over the past 5 years, demand growth has averaged 1.7% yoy over the same period. Palladium demand over this period has been driven by its growing use in automobile catalytic converters, most notably in China, where sales of gasoline-powered cars exceed those of diesel-powered cars, which typically use platinum in their catalytic converters (Chart 4). Chart 3Tight Fundamentals In##BR##The Palladium Market Chart 4Growing Demand For##BR##Autocatalysts Dominated In The Past... Growth in global demand for palladium-based autocatalysts averaged 4.8% yoy in the past 5 years. The use of palladium for autocatalysts now makes up more than 75% of global palladium demand, up from 56% 10 years ago. Chinese demand for palladium used in autocatalysts grew from 10% of global demand in 2007 to more than a quarter of global demand last year. Given autocatalysts' oversized contribution to demand growth, the palladium market is highly dependent on car sales. Our modelling highlights global car production as a significant explanatory variable when it comes to palladium prices. Most significant are the U.S. and Chinese markets, which are the largest markets for gasoline-powered cars. While vehicle sales in China were strong in 2016, they have slowed considerably and recorded yoy declines in the most recent November and December data (Chart 5). Slowing demand growth for cars in China likely comes on the back of the phasing out of tax cuts on small vehicles. This will limit the upside for palladium prices from China's industrial demand. Growth in car sales in the U.S. has been even more muted, contracting in 2017 for the first time since 2009. However, a more concerted adoption of gasoline-powered cars in Europe - largely in response to efforts by cities to reduce emissions of particulate matter from diesel engines, and the highly publicized emissions-testing scandals involving European carmakers - will, at least partially, mitigate the negative impact of slowing demand from the top two gasoline-powered markets. On the supply side, global mine supply has been relatively stagnant over the past 5 years, expanding an average 1.2% yoy during this period. Russia, South Africa and Canada account for almost 90% of total palladium mine supply. And while Russian and South African supplies have been relatively flat over the years, Canadian palladium has grown to account for ~11% of global supply in 2017, up from 4% in 2010. Global palladium supply has been supported by metal recovered from autocatalyst scrap, which has been averaging 4.8% yoy growth in supply over the past 5 years. In fact, the share of palladium recovered from autocatalyst scrap has almost doubled in the past 10 years, and now makes up almost 20% of total supply. Growth in this source of supply has come down significantly (Chart 6). However, we expect palladium's exorbitant price and elevated steel prices to incentivize an increase in the metal's recovery from scrap. Indeed, GFMS expects recycled palladium to pave record highs this year and to surpass 2 million ounces next year. Chart 5...But Beware Of Slowing Gasoline Car Sales Chart 6Palladium Needs Restocking Strong demand, combined with limited supply growth, has weighed on palladium inventories. Furthermore, ETF holdings of palladium have come down sharply while net speculative long positions have skyrocketed. Given that stocks are so low, we do not expect a severe fall in prices. Bottom Line: Palladium behaves like an industrial metal and is especially sensitive to changes in demand for automobiles. While the stars were aligned for palladium last year - a weak USD, low real interest rates, and bullish fundamentals - car sales in the U.S. and China have been slow recently. Even so, a physical deficit will prevent a crash in the palladium market this year. Platinum Trading At A Discount To Palladium In contrast with palladium's remarkable performance last year, platinum was up a mere 3.4% in 2017. In fact palladium, which usually trades at a discount to platinum, has been more expensive since October (Chart 7). This can be attributed to differences in fundamentals. Palladium's market conditions have been significantly tighter than platinum. Greater demand for the physical metal than supply put the market in deficit last year, which supported platinum prices. As with palladium, catalytic converters are a major demand source for platinum; however, they account for ~ 40% of platinum demand - considerably less than the roughly 80% share of palladium demand accounted for by catalytic converter demand. Europe is the largest market for diesel cars, and, while total vehicle sales in Europe have remained healthy, diesel-powered cars have been losing market share since the Volkswagen emissions-rigging scandal came to light in 2015 (Chart 8). This hit platinum use in autocatalysts particularly hard. In addition, weaker demand from its second use - jewelry - is keeping a lid on platinum prices (Chart 9). In fact, Chinese demand for the white metal, which accounts for more than 50% of global platinum jewelry demand, has been falling. Despite weakening demand, global balances remained in deficit on the back of muted supply. Chart 7Platinum Now Cheaper Than Palladium Chart 8EU Diesel Car Market Losing Momentum Chart 9Platinum Jewelry Losing Its Appeal Platinum's market balance could be at risk if carmakers start using more of it in catalytic converters, now that it trades at a discount to palladium. Platinum is a superior material for autocatalysts, but palladium has been traditionally favored on a cost basis. Platinum's lower price incentivizes carmakers to switch to this metal. According to Johnson Matthey, it will be two years before the impact of such substitution begins to affect the palladium market. Bottom Line: Subdued demand for platinum jewelry combined with the loss of market share for diesel-powered cars in Europe will keep a lid on the platinum market this year. However, platinum follows gold, and this could support prices if equity investors hedge market volatility and future corrections by purchasing the metal. Silver Follows Gold Silver, and, to a lesser extent, platinum are not as exposed to the industrial business cycle as palladium. These metals' prices instead move in line with gold (Chart 10). Our modeling reveals that a 1% increase in gold prices is associated with a 0.76 pp increase in silver prices. Thus gold's spillovers to the silver market are significant. Even so, there are periods when this relationship disconnects. This is because, although industrial uses do not account for as large a share of silver demand as they do for palladium, such fundamentals do account for a significant source of demand. Thus, in addition to the financial factors which drive gold, silver's industrial applications give it some exposure to economic activity. In fact, a 1% increase in the CRB Metals Index is associated with a 0.17pp increase in silver prices. This explains why, in some instances, silver's cointegration with gold weakens. As a practical matter, gold is a superior hedge against equity downfalls than silver (Chart 11). While gold month-on-month (mom) returns outperform S&P 500 mom returns almost 80% of the time in periods of decreasing equity returns, the ratio for silver comes in at a lower 67%. On the other hand, gold mom returns outperform S&P 500 returns less than 30% of the time during periods when equities are increasing, while silver outperforms the stock market almost 40% of the time. Chart 10Silver And Gold##BR##Move In Tandem Chart 11Gold Outperforms Amid Equity Downfalls,##BR##Not During Rising Stocks In addition, although both gold's and silver's correlations with the S&P 500 become large and negative when the S&P 500 decreases in yoy terms, this negative correlation in the case of gold is significantly larger than for silver (Chart 12). In fact, along with silver's relatively weaker negative correlation with the S&P 500 during periods of negative equity returns, silver also exhibits a relatively stronger positive correlation with equities during periods of positive returns. While silver is an effective hedge against geopolitical and economic crises, gold's hedging ability remains superior (Chart 13). Silver and gold post similar returns during geopolitical crises; however, gold returns are significantly higher during economic crisis. Chart 12Negative Correlations More##BR##Pronounced During Equity Downfalls Chart 13Gold Is A##BR##Superior Protection This supports the finding that silver's hedging ability is hampered by its use in industrial applications, which make it more responsive to the business cycle than gold. Bottom Line: Gold and silver prices are cointegrated. However, given silver's industrial applications, it is more sensitive to business activity. This explains the periods of divergence in the two precious metals, and limits silver's ability to hedge against economic crises and falling equities. Roukaya Ibrahim, Associate Editor Commodity & Energy Strategy RoukayaI@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger, Research Analyst HugoB@bcaresearch.com 1 For a discussion of the gold market fundamentals, please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report titled "Gold Still Shines Despite Threat Of Higher Rates," dated February 1, 2018. Available at ces.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2018 Summary of Trades Closed in 2017
Highlights The best recession indicators are not flashing red, but volatility is rising as the end of the cycle approaches; U.S. fiscal policy is surprising to the upside, as we expected; The next recession will usher in an inflationary political paradigm shift, with wealth transferred from Baby Boomers to Millennials; Expect a new U.K. election ahead of March 2019, but do not expect a second referendum unless popular opinion swings decisively against Brexit; Stay short U.S. 10-year Treasuries versus German bunds; short Fed Funds Dec 2018 futures; and initiate a short GBP/USD trade. Feature February has been tough for global markets, with the S&P 500 falling by 5.9% since the beginning of the month. Several clients have pointed out that the market may be sniffing out a recession and that the "buy the dip" strategy is therefore no longer applicable. It is true that markets and recessions go together (Chart 1), but it is not clear from the data that the equity market alone predicts recessions correctly. Chart 1Bear Markets & Recessions: Unclear Which One Leads The Other BCA's House View is that a recession is likely at the end of 2019.1 This view is in no small part based on our political analysis.2 President Trump ran on a populist electoral platform and populist policymakers globally have a successful track record of delivering higher nominal GDP growth than their non-populist counterparts (Chart 2). We assume that the Powell Fed will respond to such higher growth and inflation prospects no differently from the Yellen Fed and that it will restrict monetary policy to an extent that will usher in a mild recession by the end of next year. Chart 2Populists Deliver (Nominal) GDP Growth Of course, predicting recessions is extraordinarily difficult. Being six months early or late would still be an achievement, but the implications for the equity market would likely be considerably different. If our "late 2019" call is actually an "early 2019" recession, then equity markets may indeed be at or near their cyclical peaks. A "buy on dips" strategy may work for the next quarter or so, but superior returns over the course of the year may be achieved with a bearish strategy. To help guide clients through the uncertainty, our colleague Doug Peta, chief strategist of BCA's Global ETF Strategy, has recently updated BCA's methodology for identifying the inflection points that usher in a recession.3 In our 70-year history as an investment research house, we have picked up two definitive truths: valuation and technical indicators cannot call a recession. So what can? We encourage clients to pick up a copy of Doug's analysis.4 The report highlights the three BCA Research recession indicators: the orientation of the yield curve, the year-over-year change in the leading economic indicator (LEI),5 and the monetary policy backdrop. Charts 3, 4, and 5 show how successful the three indicators are in calling recessions. In our 50-year sample period, the yield curve has successfully called all seven recessions with just one false positive. However, it tends to be overly eager, preceding the onset of a recession by an average of nearly twelve months. When we combine the yield curve indicator with the LEI, the false positives go away. Chart 3The Yield Curve Has Called Seven Of The Last Eight Recessions... Chart 4... And So Has The Leading Economic Indicator To confirm the recession signal and make it more robust, we also consider the monetary policy backdrop. Over the nearly 60 years for which BCA's equilibrium fed funds rate model has calculated an estimate of the equilibrium policy rate, every recession has occurred when the fed funds rate exceeded our estimate of equilibrium. In other words, recessions only occur when monetary policy settings are restrictive. Today, none of the indicators are even close to pointing to a recession, with the LEI at a cyclical peak. However, the yield curve and monetary policy are directionally moving towards the end of the cycle. Taken together, they suggest that the only controversy about our late 2019 recession call is that it is so early. So why the market volatility? Because wage growth in the U.S. has begun to pick up in earnest (Chart 6), revealing that BCA's concerns about inflation may at last be coming true. Investors, after more than a year of rationalizing weak inflation by means of dubious concepts (Amazon, AI, robots, etc.), may be reassessing their forecasts in real time, causing market turbulence. Chart 5Tight Policy Is A Necessary,##br## If Not Sufficient, Recession Ingredient Chart 6Wages Picking##br## Up In Earnest There is of course a political explanation as well. Our colleague Peter Berezin correctly called the end of the 35-year bond bull market on July 5, 2016.6 The timing of the call - mere days after the U.K. EU membership referendum - was not a coincidence. As Peter mused at the time, "the post-Brexit shock running through policy circles leads to a further easing in fiscal and monetary policy." He was not speaking about the U.K. alone, but in global terms. Indeed, the populists have begun to deliver. Ever since President Trump's election, we have cautioned clients not to doubt the White House's populist credentials.7 After a surge in bond bearishness immediately following the election, investors lost faith in the populist narrative due to the failure of Congress to pass any significant legislation, as if Congress has ever been a nimble institution under previous presidents. But investors are beginning to realize that their collective political analysis was extremely wrong. Not only have profligate tax cuts been passed, as we controversially expected throughout 2017, but Congress is now on the brink of a monumental two-year appropriations bill that will add nearly 1% of GDP worth of fiscal thrust in 2018 higher than what the IMF expected for the U.S. (Chart 7). In addition, Congress has set in motion the process to re-authorize the use of "earmarks" - i.e. legislative tags that direct funding to special interests in representatives' home districts (Chart 8).8 Chart 72018 Fiscal Thrust Was Unexpected Chart 8Here Comes Pork! By our back-of-the-envelope accounting, Congress is about to authorize just shy of $400bn in extra spending over the next two years.9 If earmarks are allowed back into the legislative process, we could see up to another $50bn in spending. An infrastructure deal, which now also looks likely given that the Democrats have realized that their "resistance"/ "outrage" strategy does not work against the Trump White House, could add significantly to that total. We are already positioned for these political developments through two fixed-income recommendations. We are short U.S. 10-year Treasuries vs. German Bunds, a recommendation that has returned 27.7 bps since September 2017. In addition, we are short the Fed Funds December 2018 futures, a recommendation that has returned 43.17 bps since the same initiation date. In addition, we went long the U.S. dollar index (DXY) on January 31, right before the stock market correction and precisely when the greenback appeared to bottom. Should investors prepare for runaway inflation this cycle? Is it time to load up on gold? We do not think so. The fiscal impulse from the two-year budget deal will become negative in 2020. The capex incentives from the tax cut plan are also front-loaded. The paradigm-shifting impact on inflation will require a policy paradigm shift. And we expect such a shift only after the next recession. To put it bluntly, U.S. voters elected a TV game show host due to angst at a time when unemployment stood at 4.6% (the rate on November 2016). Who will they elect with unemployment rising to 6% in the aftermath of the next recession, or God forbid if that next recession is worse than we think it will be? Policymakers are unlikely to sit around and wait for an answer to that question. Extraordinary measures will be taken to prevent the median voter from lashing out against the system when the next recession hits. Inflation, which is a redistributive mechanism, will be employed to transfer wealth from savers (mainly well-to-do retirees) to consumers (their children). In large part, this will be a generational wealth transfer between Baby Boomers (or at least those with some savings) and their Millennial children. Given that Millennials have become the largest voting bloc in the U.S. as of the 2016 election, this will be a populist policy with firm backing in the electorate. The next recession will therefore usher in the inflationary era of the next decade, regardless of how painful the actual recession is. In the meantime, we recommend that clients with a 9-to-12 month horizon continue to "buy on dips," given that a recession is not on the horizon. However, with the U.S. 10-year yield approaching 3%, China moderately slowing down (with considerable risk to the downside), and the U.S. dollar slide arrested, we think that the outperformance of EM equities is over. Brexit: We Can't Work It Out10 The EU agreed on January 29 to its negotiation guidelines for the temporary transition period after the U.K. officially leaves the bloc in March 2019.11 The British press predictably balked at the conditions - the term "vassal state" has been liberally bandied about - which in our view included absolutely nothing out of the expected. The EU conditions for the transition period are not the fundamental problem. Rather, the problem is that the "Vote Leave" campaign was never honest with its promises. Boris Johnson, the most prominent supporter of Brexit ahead of the vote and now the foreign minister in Prime Minister Theresa May's cabinet, famously quipped after the referendum that "there will continue to be free trade and access to the single market."12 The problem with that promise, however, was that it was predicated on using London's "superior negotiating position" vis-à -vis the EU in order to force the Europeans to redefine what membership in the Common Market means. As we pointed out in our net assessment ahead of the Brexit referendum, the problem with exiting the EU but remaining in the Common Market is that the issue of sovereignty is not resolved (Diagram 1).13 As such, Johnson and other Brexit supporters argued that they could change the relationship by forcing the EU to change how the Common Market works. Diagram 1Common Market Membership Is Illogical Except for one problem: the U.K.'s negotiating position is not, never was, nor ever will be, superior. Anyone with a rudimentary understanding of how trade works can understand this. For example, the U.K. is a significant market for Germany, at 6% of German exports (right in line with the 6% of total EU exports that go to the U.K.). However, the EU is a far greater destination for British exports, with 47% of all exports going to the bloc.14 As we expected, the EU has surprised the conventional wisdom by remaining united in the face of negotiations. And as we also predicted, the Tories are now completely divided.15 PM May will attempt to hammer out an internal deal on how to approach the transition deal. But her political capital is so drained by the disastrous early election results that there is practically no way that she can produce a set of negotiating guidelines that will not be pilloried in the press. As such, we expect a new election to take place in the U.K. ahead of March 2019, perhaps sooner. We do not see how May's negotiating position will satisfy all wings of the Conservative Party. In addition, we see no scenario by which the ultimate exit deal with the EU gets enough votes in Westminster. Investors betting on that election replacing a second Brexit referendum would be wrong. A Jeremy Corbyn-led, Labour government will only turn against Brexit once the polls definitively turn against it. This has not yet happened, as the gap between supporters and opponents of Brexit in the polls, while widening in favor of opponents, remains within a margin of error (Chart 9). As such, Corbyn would scrap the Tory-led negotiations with the EU and ask Brussels for even more time - and thus more market uncertainty! - in order to produce a Labour-led Brexit deal.16 In order for the probability of Brexit to definitively decline, the polls have to show that "Bregret" or "Bremorse" is setting in. Without a move in the polls, U.K. politicians will continue to pursue Brexit, no matter how flawed their tactics may be. Policymakers are ultimately not the price makers but the price takers. On the issue of Brexit, the U.K. median voter is only slightly miffed regarding the outcome. Current polls suggest that Labour could win the next election, albeit needing to rule with a coalition (Chart 10). This would prolong the uncertainty facing the economy. Not only is Corbyn the most left-leaning politician in a major European economy since François Mitterand, but also his coalition would likely include the Scottish National Party and potentially the Liberal Democrats. Keeping all their priorities aligned could be even more difficult than the balancing act PM May is performing between soft-Brexiters, hard-Brexiters, and the Democratic Unionist Party. Chart 9Bremorse: Rising, But Not Definitive Chart 10Anti-Brexit Forces On The Rise Meanwhile, on the economic front, the situation is not much better. Our colleague Rob Robis, BCA's chief bond strategist, recently penned a critical assessment of the U.K. economy.17 As Rob pointed out, the OECD leading economic indicator is decelerating steadily and pointing to a real GDP growth rate below 2% in 2018 (Chart 11). The biggest factors that will weigh on growth will be a sluggish consumer and softer capex. Household consumer growth has been slowing since early 2017, driven by diminishing consumer confidence (Chart 12, top panel). High realized inflation, which has sapped the purchasing power of U.K. workers who have not seen matching increases in wages, is weighing on confidence (third panel). Consumers were able to maintain a decent pace of spending during a period of stagnant real income growth by drawing on savings, but that looks to be tapped out now with the saving rate down to a 19-year low of 5.5% (bottom panel). Chart 11U.K. Growth Set To Slow Chart 12The U.K. Consumer Looks Tapped Out Making matters worse, U.K. consumers are not seeing much of a wealth effect from the housing market. The January 2018 readings of the year-over-year growth rate of U.K. house prices from the Halifax and Nationwide indexes came in at 1.9% and 3.1% respectively (Chart 13). In addition, the net balance of national house price expectations from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) has steadily declined since mid-2016 and now sits just above zero (i.e. equal number of respondents expecting higher prices and falling prices). The same indicator for London was a staggering -47% in January 2018. Apparently, foreigners are no longer interested in a Brexit discount. Our global bond team goes on to point out that political uncertainty is also weighing on U.K. business investment spending. Capital expenditure growth slowed to 4.3% year-over-year in nominal terms in Q3 2017 and is even lower in real terms (Chart 14). Chart 13No Wealth Effect ##br## From Housing Chart 14Brexit Gloom Trumps ##br##Export Boom For U.K. Companies Putting all of this together, neither our global bond team nor our foreign exchange team expect the Bank of England to raise interest rates, despite the market pricing in 36 bps of rate hikes over the next twelve months. As Chart 15 illustrates, inflation across a broad swath of components is likely to slow sharply in the coming months as the trade-weighted pound has stopped depreciating. Thus, the pass-through from a lower exchange rate is beginning to dissipate.18 In the long-term, we understand why investors are itching to bet on Brexit never happening. But to get from here to there, the market will have to riot. And that means more downside to U.K. assets. Chart 15U.K. Inflation:##br## Less Pass-Through From The Pound Chart 16GBP:##br## Stuck In A Rut Bottom Line: BCA's FX strategist, Mathieu Savary, has pointed out that the trade-weighted pound is testing the upper bound of its post-Brexit trading range (Chart 16). As our FX and bond teams show in their respective research, the economics currently at play make it unlikely that the pound will be able to punch above the ceiling of this range. Our political assessment adds to this view. In fact, we expect that the coming political uncertainty, including an early election prior to March 2019, is likely to take the pound back to the floor of its trading range. As such, we are recommending that clients short cable, GBP/USD. Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Timing Of The Next Recession," June 16, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Special Report, "Beware The 2019 Trump Recession," dated March 7, 2017, and "2018 Outlook - Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," dated November 20, 2017, available at bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Special Report, "Timing The Next Equity Bear Market," dated January 24, 2014, and "Timing Equity Bear Markets," dated April 6, 2011, available at bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Global ETF Strategy Special Report, "A Guide To Spotting And Weathering Bear Markets," dated August 16, 2017, available at etf.bcaresearch.com. 5 The ten components of leading economic index for the U.S. include: 1. Average weekly hours, manufacturing; 2. Average weekly initial claims for unemployment insurance; 3. Manufacturers' new orders, consumer goods and materials; 4. ISM® Index of New Orders; 5. Manufacturers' new orders, nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft orders; 6. Building permits, new private housing units; 7. Stock prices, 500 common stocks; 8. Leading Credit Index TM; 9. Interest rate spread, 10-year Treasury bonds less federal funds; and 10. Index of consumer expectations. Source: The Conference Board. 6 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "End Of The 35-Year Bond Bull Market," dated July 5, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "U.S. Election: Outcomes & Investment Implications," dated November 9, 2016, and "Constraints & Preferences Of The Trump Presidency," dated November 30, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Upside Risks In U.S., Downside Risks In China," dated January 17, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 9 We are referring to the Senate deal struck last week to authorize additional military spending ($80bn in FY2018 and $85bn in FY2019) and discretionary spending ($63bn in FY2018 and $68bn in FY2019), as well as to provide disaster relief in the amount of $45bn for both fiscal years. 10 Life is very short, and there's no time ... For fussing and fighting, my friend ... 11 Please see European Council, "Brexit: Council (Article 50) adopts negotiating directives on the transition period," dated January 29, 2018, available at consilium.europa.eu. 12 Please see "UK will retain access to the EU single market: Brexit leader Johnson," Reuters, dated June 26, 2016, available at uk.reuters.com. 13 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and European Investment Strategy Special Report, "With Or Without You: The U.K. And The EU," dated March 17, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 14 This is not a coincidence. The whole point of the EU is that it is the world's richest consumer market. As such, it has massive negotiating leverage with all trade partners. As a side note, this throws into doubt the logic that the U.K. can get better trade deals by leaving the bloc. The first test of that premise will be its negotiations with the EU itself. 15 Please see BCA Special Report, "Break Glass To Brexit: A Fact Sheet," dated June 17, 2016, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 16 Investors should remember that Westminster voted decisively 319 to 23 to reject the Liberal Democrats' amendment seeking a referendum on the final Brexit agreement. Only nine Labour MPs voted in favor of the amendment after Jeremy Corbyn instructed his party to abstain. 17 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "A Melt-Up In Equities AND Bond Yields?" dated January 23, 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 18 Please see BCA Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "The Euro's Tricky Spot," dated February 2, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com.
The 10% tactical pullback that we had been flagging in recent publications with the tech sector correctly sniffing it out has materialized, and our strategy is to start "buying the dip" as we do not foresee a recession in the coming 9-12 months. While an undershoot cannot be ruled out, given the emotional nature of recent market action, a number of indicators we track suggest that it would be a mistake to get extremely bearish at the current juncture: First, the recent market swoon along with rising EPS estimates have knocked down valuations, pushing them to a 16 handle on a 12-month forward P/E basis, which is also the 4-year average (see chart below). Second, credit spreads have been surprisingly quiet. Bond spreads across the risk spectrum are extremely sensitive to risk-off phases and one would have expected a sharp widening in spreads during the recent turmoil. Third, the U.S. dollar has remained muted despite recent stock market jitters. A soft greenback is purely redistributive and represents a boost to global growth. Fourth, short equity market positions are pinned near all-time highs, representing latent dry powder. Finally, the VIX went vertical, surging beyond the 50 level. Both the jump in the VIX and the swift reversal of 175K net short to roughly 85K net long speculative VIX futures positions signal that capitulation was likely hit. In other words, all these indicators suggest that the bulk of the selling may have already occurred, and an absorption/consolidation phase will likely take place in the next few weeks. Please see yesterday's Weekly Report for additional details.
Highlights Spread Product: TIPS breakeven inflation rates are holding firm despite the correction in equity markets. Remain overweight spread product versus Treasuries for now, but be prepared to reduce exposure once long-maturity TIPS breakevens reach our target range of 2.4% to 2.5%. Volatility: While implied interest rate volatility could increase further in the near-term, its upside will be limited by a flattening yield curve in the second half of this year. Municipal Bonds: After-tax muni yields are near the high-end of their historical ranges relative to investment grade corporate bonds. MBS: The option-adjusted spread offered by a conventional 30-year Agency MBS is tight relative to its own history, but appears quite attractive relative to an investment grade corporate bond. Feature Chart 1Corporate Spreads Are Stoic The stock market is down and volatility is up dramatically. At least so far the pass through to credit spreads has been relatively mild (Chart 1), but this does not make us more optimistic. Rather, our sense is that last week's market action is yet another sign that we are approaching the end of the credit cycle. Same Loop, Different Day Last week's equity sell off is best viewed through the lens of the Fed Policy Loop that we introduced in 2015 (Chart 2).1 The Fed Policy Loop is a framework for understanding the interplay between monetary policy and risk assets. Its recent dynamics can be summarized as follows: The perception of easy Fed policy fuels the outperformance of risk assets, and seven months of falling inflation between last January and August kept that perception in place for all of 2017. The end result is that financial conditions eased dramatically - stock prices soared and credit spreads tightened. But easing financial conditions also sow the seeds of their own destruction. Easier financial conditions eventually beget stronger growth and stronger growth eventually begets higher inflation (Chart 3). Last week the market finally caught a whiff of inflation and started to price-in a more hawkish Fed reaction function. Chart 2The Fed Policy Loop Chart 3Financial Conditions Lead Growth And Growth Leads Inflation On a positive note, the Loop framework also tells us that the Fed will eventually ease policy in response to tighter financial conditions and this will allow the risk-on rally to resume. While this is undoubtedly true, the Fed's breaking point is also a lot higher when inflationary pressures are more pronounced. This is why we have repeatedly stressed that our cyclical call on spread product hinges on the path of long-dated TIPS breakeven inflation rates.2 Chart 4No Correction Here Last year, when the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate was down around 1.6% - well below the 2.4% to 2.5% range that is consistent with inflation anchored around the Fed's target - the market understood that the Fed's tolerance for tighter financial conditions was quite low. This made it very difficult for risk assets to sell off meaningfully. But now, with the 10-year TIPS breakeven rate at 2.05% and the 5-year/5-year forward breakeven rate at 2.27%, the Fed can clearly tolerate more market pain. The bad news from a cyclical perspective is that, despite the equity correction, the market's assessment of inflationary pressure in the economy has barely budged. Long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates are holding firm, as are the prices of crude oil and other commodities - prices that tend to correlate with TIPS breakeven rates (Chart 4).3 In other words, last week's correction didn't give our overweight spread product position any further room to run. While it may take a few more sessions, 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 won't occur until inflationary pressures are even more pronounced. We 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 inflation data take on extra significance between now and then, as each incoming report will help confirm or deny the message priced into TIPS breakevens. Every weak inflation print buys the credit cycle more time, every strong print hastens its demise. Next up: tomorrow morning's CPI. Don't Fear Rising Rate Vol The return of volatility was the other big story last week. The VIX index of implied equity volatility was as low as 9 in early January, but stood at 33 as of last Friday's market close. With rising inflation starting to weaken the "Fed put" in risk assets we think it is unlikely that equity volatility will return to its previous cycle lows.4 But what about the volatility in rates markets? The MOVE index of implied interest rate volatility also jumped last week, and its path going forward is of critical importance for Treasury yields. Chart 5 shows that the Kim & Wright estimate of the term premium embedded in the 10-year Treasury yield is highly correlated with the MOVE index, while the expectations component implied by that term premium is the mirror image of the fed funds rate. It follows that a surge in rate volatility would lead to much higher Treasury yields, particularly if the Fed continues to hike. However, it would be quite unusual for the MOVE index to increase significantly while the Fed is lifting rates. To see this we can simply observe the tight correlation between the MOVE index and the slope of the yield curve (Chart 6). The crucial question then becomes: Does the slope of the yield curve drive volatility or does volatility drive the slope of the curve? Chart 5Volatility And The Term Premium Chart 6Volatility And The Yield Curve Like most things in economics, the answer is a little bit of both. Chart 7Forecasters In Agreement It is relatively straightforward to see why higher rate volatility might lead to a steeper yield curve. To the extent that the slope of the yield curve reflects a term premium to compensate investors for the extra price risk in a long-dated bond, then investors should demand greater compensation to bear that extra risk when rate volatility is elevated. But that analysis ignores the other reason why the yield curve might be steep. Namely, the yield curve might be steep because the market expects the Fed to hike rates substantially. It would seem logical to expect that investors would be more uncertain about a forecast that calls for many rate hikes than they would be about a forecast that calls for only a few rate hikes. It therefore follows that an environment where the market expects a large change in the fed funds would also be an environment of elevated rate volatility. The two-way causation between rate volatility and the slope of the yield curve is reinforced by the fact that both trends also correlate with forecaster uncertainty about the macro environment. Chart 7 shows that the dispersion of individual forecasts for the 3-month T-bill rate and GDP growth correlate with both the MOVE volatility index and the slope of the yield curve. At the moment, disagreement amongst professional forecasters remains low relative to history. All in all, our sense is that once long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates reach our target fair value range of 2.4% to 2.5% they are unlikely to move much higher. Fed hawkishness will ramp up considerably and the yield curve will be much more likely to flatten. This means that while implied interest rate volatility could increase further in the near-term, its upside will be limited by a flattening yield curve in the second half of this year. We are not overly concerned about a huge spike in rate volatility leading to a blow-out in bonds. Two Attractive Ways To De-Risk As stated in the first section of this report, the higher that TIPS breakeven inflation rates rise the closer we get to calling the end of the credit cycle. If current trends continue, then it is likely we will begin to de-risk the spread product side of our recommended portfolio in the not-too-distant future. With that in mind, we have identified two lower risk spread sectors that are starting to look attractive. 1) Municipal Bonds Like all spread sectors, at first blush municipal bonds appear quite expensive relative to Treasuries. Chart 8 shows Aaa-rated municipal bond yields, adjusted for the top marginal tax rate, relative to equivalent-maturity Treasury yields. The message is quite clear. Municipal bonds offer far less excess compensation relative to Treasuries than has been typical in the past. However, the valuation picture changes completely when we consider municipal bonds versus investment grade corporates. Chart 9 once again shows Aaa-rated municipal bond yields, adjusted for the top marginal tax rate, but this time relative to equivalent-duration corporate bonds. We do not attempt to match credit quality in Chart 9, so Aaa-rated municipal bonds are being compared to the corporate bond index which has an average credit rating of A3/Baa1. Chart 8Munis Expensive Versus Treasuries Chart 9Munis Cheap Versus Corporates Chart 9 shows that after-tax muni yields are near the high-end of their historical ranges relative to investment grade corporate bonds. In fact, a 10-year Aaa-rated municipal bond currently offers only 13 bps less yield than an equivalent duration A3/Baa1-rated corporate bond. In addition, whenever the after-tax yield on a 10-year Aaa-rated municipal bond has exceeded the yield on a 10-year corporate bond in the past, it has been a fairly good signal that investment grade corporates are too expensive and due for a correction. Not only did municipal bonds look more attractive than corporates before the crisis in 2007, but also before corporates sold off in 2011 and 2014 (Chart 9, bottom panel). Agency MBS Chart 10An Opportunity In MBS? As with munis, the option-adjusted spread (OAS) offered by a conventional 30-year Agency MBS is tight relative to its own history, but appears quite attractive relative to investment grade corporate bonds (Chart 10). Further, in a rising rate environment the risk of a large increase in mortgage refinancings is low and this should keep MBS spreads well contained. The biggest potential risk for MBS spreads is that a large spike in Treasury yields causes MBS duration to extend, and sparks a spread widening. In our report from two weeks ago we introduced a model for excess MBS returns in an attempt to quantify what sort of increase in Treasury yields would be necessary to make duration extension a meaningful risk for MBS.5 We modeled monthly excess returns for conventional 30-year MBS relative to duration-matched Treasuries using the following equation: Formula The monthly change in Treasury yields enters the equation with a positive sign because it proxies for refinancing risk. Higher yields lead to lower refis, and lower refis lead to MBS outperformance. The squared change in yields enters the equation with a negative sign because it proxies for extension risk. If yields rise too much during the month, then MBS duration will extend and the sector will underperform. Chart 11Refi Risk Is Low From that equation we calculated that, holding the change in OAS flat, it would take a monthly increase in yields of at least 72 bps to lead to negative monthly excess returns. However, in January this appeared not to work very well. The duration-matched Treasury yield in our equation increased only 38 bps in January and the OAS was virtually flat, but MBS still managed to underperform Treasuries by 16 bps on the month. Upon further investigation, the reason our model failed in January is that mortgage refinancings actually increased on the month even though Treasury yields rose (Chart 11). This behavior is unusual and we would not expect it to persist going forward. However, we also made one modification to our model that we expect will lead to more accurate results on a real-time basis. Specifically, we removed the intercept term from the prior model and replaced it with a 1-month lag of the average index OAS. The rationale is that since the intercept term is in the equation to capture the carry return in an MBS trade, we should use a more accurate measure of MBS carry rather than relying on the regression to calculate the historical carry. Our new equation is as follows: Formula Chart 12 Interestingly, using our new equation we find that the monthly increase in Treasury yields required to spark MBS underperformance is now a function of the current average OAS of the MBS index. This would seem to make sense. If the carry buffer is higher, then it should take a greater duration extension for capital losses to overcome the carry and lead to negative excess returns. The relationship between the required monthly increase in yields and the index OAS is illustrated in Chart 12. At the current average index OAS of 31 bps, our equation suggests that a monthly increase in Treasury yields of 58 bps or higher is required for extension risk to become meaningful. Bottom Line: Both municipal bonds and Agency MBS are starting to look attractive relative to investment grade corporate bonds. We stand ready to upgrade these sectors at the expense of investment grade corporate bonds when the time comes to de-risk our spread product portfolio. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Caught In A Loop", dated September 29, 2015, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Most Important Chart In Finance", dated January 30, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 For further details on the correlation between TIPS breakevens and commodity prices please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "It's Still All About Inflation", dated January 16, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see BCA Research Special Report, "The Return Of Vol", dated February 6, 2018, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Most Important Chart In Finance", dated January 30, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Relentless selling in utilities stocks is overdone and we are compelled to lift exposure to neutral. Operating metrics have turned the corner for the better, but a still challenging macro backdrop suggests that it is too soon to boost to an overweight stance. A rising interest rate backdrop, the sinking Cyclical Macro Indicator and near collapse in our sales growth model along with high chances of a profit margin squeeze, suggest that telecom services stocks are a sell. Recent Changes S&P Utilities - Upgrade to neutral for a gain of 15%. S&P Telecom Services - Downgrade to underweight, and add to high-conviction underweight list today. S&P Utilities - Removed from high-conviction underweight list last week for a gain of 18%.1 S&P Semiconductor Equipment - Removed from high-conviction underweight list last week for a gain of 20%.2 S&P Homebuilding - Removed from high-conviction underweight list last week for a gain of 10%.3 Feature Chart 1Time To Start 'Buying The Dip' Panic selling persisted last week, and equities struggled for direction, as the battle between liquidity withdrawal and stellar profit growth rages on. As we wrote in a recent report, the market will test the new Fed Chairman's resolve and this must have been an unnerving first week for Powell at the helm of the Fed.4 The 10% tactical pullback that we had been flagging in recent publications with the tech sector correctly sniffing it out has materialized, and our strategy is to start "buying the dip" as we do not foresee recession in the coming 9-12 months. While an undershoot cannot be ruled out given the emotional nature of recent market action, a number of indicators we track suggest that it would be a mistake to get extremely bearish at the current juncture. First and foremost, empirical evidence suggests that investors with a cyclical 9-12 month investment horizon should start to buy this correction (Chart 1). We analyzed SPX data back to the early-1960s and identified daily falls of 4% or more. There have been 16 such occurrences. In our sample we excluded the 1982 and 2015 incidents that rounded up to 4%, but were a hair below that level. For 1987 we included only one datapoint for the Black Monday crash and omitted occurrences very close to that date. Similarly, in the autumn of 2008 we only used the first large daily decline in our study and excluded other sizable downdrafts that were clustered around Lehman's collapse. We decided to exclude such clustered datapoints as they would skew our results to the upside. This analysis clearly demonstrates that it pays to "buy the dip" (top panel, Chart 1), and on average the SPX rises roughly 14% in the ensuing 12 months following the steep daily pullback (bottom panel, Chart 1). Interestingly, within a few weeks of the mini-crash empirical evidence suggests that markets typically retest those beaten-down levels and tend to hold above them. The implication is that investors have some time to deploy cash and/or reposition portfolios in order to take advantage of the recent pullback. Second, credit spreads have been surprisingly quiet. Bond spreads across the risk spectrum are extremely sensitive to risk off phases and one would have expected a sharp widening in spreads during the recent turmoil (fourth panel, Chart 2A). Chart 2ANo Systemic Risk Evident Chart 2BLatent Buying Power Third, the U.S. dollar has remained muted despite recent stock market jitters. A soft greenback is purely redistributive and represents a boost to global growth (third panel, Chart 2A). Fourth, short equity market positions are pinned near all-time highs representing latent dry powder (Chart 2B). Fifth, the VIX has gone vertical surging beyond the 50 level. Both the jump in the VIX and the explosion in trading volumes signal that capitulation was likely hit (second panel, Chart 2A). Finally, the recent market swoon along with rising EPS estimates have knocked down valuations pushing them to a 16 handle on a 12-month forward P/E basis (bottom panel, Chart 2A). In other words, all these indicators suggest that the bulk of the selling may have already occurred, and an absorption/consolidation phase will likely take place in the next few weeks. In fact, the recent let-up of soft data and simultaneous perkiness of hard data also corroborates that a lateral move is in the cards for the broad market (Chart 3). Chart 3Consolidation Phase Ahead We are willing to ride out the volatility and selectively look for opportunities to put cash to work, given our view that the longevity of the business cycle remains intact. Our core strategy remains to stay heavily focused on financials and industrials that benefit from our two key 2018 themes: higher interest rates and synchronized global capex upcycle. The energy sector also provides excellent value and a positive cyclical earnings outlook, based on BCA's upbeat crude oil view and rising odds of a virtuous capex upcycle. Meanwhile, health care remains our core defensive sector underweight. This sector still has to contend with political backlash against its multi-decade resilient selling price backdrop. With regard to the niche fixed income proxies, we are making a small tweak this week lifting the bombed-out utilities sector to neutral from underweight and locking in gains of 15% since inception. We are also downgrading defensive telecom stocks from neutral to underweight. Enough Is Enough In Bombed-Out Utilities In mid-summer we downgraded utilities to a below benchmark allocation, and subsequently on November 27th we were compelled to add it to our 2018 high-conviction underweight list, doubling down on our bearishness toward this fixed income proxy sector. These moves have paid handsome dividends and added alpha to our portfolio. Last week we crystalized gains by obeying our trailing stop that got triggered on our high-conviction list, registering 18% gains for the utilities underweight call. And, today we recommend an upgrade to a neutral stance to the niche S&P utilities sector, booking 15% gains since the July 24th inception, as indiscriminate selling has gone way too far in our opinion. Chart 4 shows that relative utilities performance has hit rock-bottom, plumbing all-time lows. In fact, the relative share price ratio has been so downbeat that if history at least rhymes a temporary relief rebound is in sight. Such oversold levels in our composite technical indicator have marked previous troughs (bottom panel, Chart 5). Tack on a gap down in relative valuations right at the neutral zone, and the implication is that it does not pay to be bearish from current washed out relative share price levels. Chart 4Unloved... Chart 5...And Under-owned Utilities... On the operational front, nat gas prices are no longer reeling and should boost industry pricing power as they are the marginal price setter for utilities (top two panels, Chart 6). Electricity production is also staging a slingshot recovery. This demand increase should also underpin utilities selling prices. Resource utilization is on the rise, up roughly 700bps from the 2016 trough. Once again the removal of excess slack should at least put a floor under industry producer price inflation. Indeed, our utilities sector productivity proxy has caught on fire recently pushing four year highs as both industry output and employment restraint are aiding our gauge. The upshot is that sell side analyst pessimism has likely hit a trough (bottom panel, Chart 6). All of these positives signal that we should take a punt and boost exposure all the way to overweight, nevertheless a challenging macro backdrop keeps us on the sidelines for now. Chart 7 shows that utilities stocks are the mirror image of the global manufacturing PMI survey. In other words, relative share prices move inversely with the ebb and flow of global growth, showcasing their ultimate safe-haven status. Similarly, increasing capital outlays are negatively correlated with utilities stocks, and given our synchronized global growth and global capex themes, utilities have limited cyclical upside. Finally, this high dividend yielding sector also suffers when Treasury bond yields shoot higher, as competing risk free assets become more appealing. Higher interest rates is one of BCA's key 2018 themes, and any resumption of the 10-year Treasury selloff will continue to weigh on relative performance (bottom panel, Chart 7). Chart 6...Are Coming Back To Life... Chart 7...But Do Not Get Carried Away Netting it all out, relentless selling in utilities stocks is overdone and we are compelled to lift exposure to neutral. Operating metrics have turned the corner for the better, but a still challenging macro backdrop suggests that it is too soon to boost to an overweight stance. Bottom Line: Take profits of 15% and lift the S&P utilities sector to a benchmark allocation. Trim Telecom Services To Underweight We are filling the void from the upgrade in the S&P utilities sector by downgrading the S&P telecom services sector to underweight, and also adding it to the high-conviction underweight list. This defensive sector swap preserves our bearishness toward safe haven assets as both sectors have a similar weight in the SPX. 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 A profit margin squeeze is looming The top panel of Chart 8 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 (bottom panel, Chart 8). BCA's bond market view remains that the 10-year yield will continue to rise on the back of rising inflation expectations, and this represents a bearish backdrop for the telecom services sector. Our CMI has melted and relative consumer outlays on telecom services have also taken a nosedive (top two panels, Chart 9), 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 9). 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 (fourth panel Chart 10). Chart 8No Dial Tone Chart 9Models Say Shy Away Chart 10Looming Margin Squeeze The sell side analyst community does not share this dire earnings picture. Net earnings revisions have gone vertical likely on the back of the recent tax reform. However, increasing industry slack underscores that beyond any one time gains from a lower corporate tax rate, organic EPS growth will be anemic at best. In fact, telecom services weekly hours worked do an excellent job of forecasting the sector's net earnings revision ratio and the current message is grim for profits (bottom panel, Chart 10). Adding it up, a rising interest rate backdrop, the sinking CMI and near collapse in our sales growth model along with high chances of a profit margin squeeze, suggest that a fresh bear phase is likely in the S&P telecom services sector. Bottom Line: Downgrade the S&P telecom services sector to a below benchmark allocation. We are also adding it to our high-conviction underweight list. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: T, VZ, CTL. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Insight, "Stocks Take An Escalator Up, And An Elevator Down," dated February 7, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Insight, "Housekeeping In Turbulent Times," dated February 9, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Ibid. 4 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Will The Market Test Powell?" dated November 13, 2017, 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).
Risk management is important in tumultuous times. Our long held strategy of how to navigate choppy waters during a tactical correction has been to book gains in pair trades and thus de-risk the portfolio, and institute trailing stops to the high-flyers in our high-conviction call list. Two additional high-conviction underweight calls got stopped out recently with hefty gains for our portfolio: 10% for our underweight call on homebuilders and 20% for our underweight call in semi equipment stocks. We are obeying both stops and taking profits by removing them from the high-conviction underweight list. Nevertheless, the spiking lumber prices, surging interest rates and tax reform trifecta is still, at the margin, weighing on homebuilders. Therefore, we continue to recommend an underweight stance in this niche consumer discretionary industry. Similarly, while our underweight conviction level is not as high for semiconductor equipment stocks as on November 27, 2017, we continue to recommend a below benchmark allocation to this highly cyclical industry. Rising interest rates, a key BCA theme for 2018 is working against last year's stellar performers with growth stocks (semi equipment equities included) suffering a valuation derating. Bottom Line: Crystalize profits of 20% and 10% in chip equipment and homebuilding stocks, respectively, and remove from the high-conviction underweight list. We continue to recommend a below benchmark allocation in both indexes. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the S&P semi equipment and S&P homebuilders indexes are: AMAT, LRCX, KLAC, and LEN, DHI, PHM, respectively.
While the S&P 500 has been struggling for direction and volatility has gone haywire, we continue to believe that "buy the dip" is the proper strategy for this latest market drawdown. Empirical evidence suggests that this is the proper strategy for investors with a cyclical 9-12 month investment horizon. We analyzed SPX data back to the early 1960s and identified daily falls of 4% or more. There have been 16 such iterations, and we excluded the 1982 and 2015 incidents that rounded up to 4%, but were a hair below that level. For 1987 we used one iteration for the black Friday crash, but omitted occurrences very close to that date, and another on for late November 1987. Similarly, in 2008 we only used the first iteration in September of that year for our study as a number of sizable downdrafts clustered around Lehman's collapse. We decided to exclude numerous close by iterations as it would skew our results to the upside. This analysis clearly demonstrates that it pays to "buy the dip" (top panel), and on average the SPX rises roughly 14% following the steep daily pullback in the ensuing 12 months (bottom panel). Interestingly, within a few weeks of the mini-crash empirical evidence suggests that markets typically retest those beaten down levels and tend to hold above them, suggesting that investors have some time to reposition portfolios and take advantage of the recent pullback. Stay tuned.