Emerging Markets
According to BCA Research’s Geopolitical Strategy service, the macro and geopolitical outlook is darkening for China’s communist party. The “East Asian miracle” phase of Chinese growth has ended. Potential GDP growth is slowing and it will be harder for…
The Brazilian real was up 1.4% versus the dollar on Thursday – a day of broad dollar strength. The gain comes on the back of the Central Bank of Brazil’s decision to hike rates by 75 bps for the third consecutive time, bringing the benchmark Selic rate to…
Emerging Markets Strategy has been recommending that investors position for a dollar rebound and believes the dollar’s move will be playable: it will be meaningful and last a few months. US dollar strength will be driven by both repricing of the Fed’s…
Singapore trade data is flagging a small warning about the state of the global manufacturing cycle. The country’s non-oil domestic exports (NODX) declined 0.1% m/m in May, disappointing expectations of a 4.5% m/m increase. On a year-over-year basis, NODX is…
Highlights Oil demand expectations remain high. Realized demand continues to disappoint. This means OPEC 2.0's production-management strategy – i.e., keeping the level of supply below demand – will continue to dictate oil-price levels. US producers will remain focused on consolidation via M&A and on returning capital to shareholders, in line with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia's (KSA) expectation. Going forward, shale producers will focus on protecting and growing profit margins. The durability of OPEC 2.0's tactical advantage arising from its enormous spare capacity – ~ 7mm b/d – is difficult to gauge: Tightening global oil markets now in anticipation of Iran's return as a bona fide exporter benefits producers globally, and could accelerate the return of US shales if that return is delayed or re-opening boosts demand more than expected. We are raising our average Brent forecast for 2021 to $66.50 vs. $63/bbl earlier, with 2H21 prices averaging $70/bbl. We are moving our 2022 and 2023 forecasts up slightly to $74 and $81/bbl (Chart of the Week). WTI will trade $2-$3/bbl lower. We remain long the S&P GSCI Dynamic Roll Index ETF (COMT) and the S&P GSCI, expecting tight supply-demand balances to further steepen backwardations in forward curves. Feature While the forecasted rebound in global oil demand continues to drive expectations for higher prices, it is the production discipline of OPEC 2.0 and capital discipline imposed on US shale producers that has and will continue to super-charge the recovery of prices. Continued monetary accommodation and fiscal stimulus notwithstanding, realized global oil demand has mostly flatlined at ~ 96mm b/d following its surge in February, as uncertainty over COVID-19 containment keeps governments hesitant about reopening their economies too quickly. Stronger demand in Asia, led by China, has been offset by weaker demand in India and Japan, where COVID-19 remains a deterrent to re-opening and recovery. The recovery in DM demand generally stalled over this period even as vaccine availability increased (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekOPEC 2.0 Comfortable With Higher Prices Chart 2Global Demand Recovery Stalled That likely will change in 2H21, but it is not a given: The UK, which has been among the world leaders in COVID-19 containment and vaccinations, delayed its full reopening by a month – to July 19 – in an effort to gain more time to bolster its efforts against the Delta variant first identified in India. In the US, New York state lifted all COVID-19-induced restrictions and fully re-opened this week. Still, even in the US, unintended inventory accumulation in the gasoline market – just as the summer driving season should be kicking into high gear – suggests consumers remain cautious (Chart 3). Chart 3Unintended Inventory Accumulation in US Gasoline Market We continue to expect the re-opening of the US and Europe (including the UK) will boost DM demand in 2H21, and wider vaccine availability will boost EM oil demand later in the year and in 2022. For all of 2021, we have lifted our demand-growth estimate slightly to 5.3mm b/d from 5.2mm b/d last month. We expect global demand to grow 4.1mm b/d next year and 1.6mm b/d in 2023. Our 2021 estimates are in line with those of the US EIA and the IEA. OPEC is more bullish on demand recovery this year, expecting growth of 6mm b/d. We continue to believe the risk on the demand side remains to the upside; however, given continued uncertainty around global COVID-19 containment, we remain circumspect. Supply-Side Discipline Drives Oil Prices OPEC 2.0 remains committed to its production-management strategy that is keeping the level of supply below demand. Compliance with production cuts in May reportedly was at 115%, following a 114% rate in April.1 Core OPEC 2.0 – i.e., states with the capacity to increase production – is holding ~ 7mm b/d of spare capacity, according to the IEA, which will allow it to continue to perform its role as the dominant supplier in our modeling (Chart 4). Earlier this year, KSA's Energy Minister Abdulaziz bin Salman correctly recognized the turn in the market that likely ensures OPEC 2.0's dominance for the foreseeable future – i.e., the shift in focus of the US shale-oil producers from production for the sake of production to profitability.2 This is a trend that has been apparent for years as capital markets all but abandoned US shale-oil producers. Chart 4OPEC 2.0 Remains Dominant Producers outside OPEC 2.0 – what we refer to as the "price-taking cohort" – have prioritized shareholder interests as a result of this market pressure, and remain focused on sometimes-forced consolidation via M&A, which we have been expecting.3 The significance of this evolution of shale-oil production is difficult to overstate, particularly as the survivors of this consolidation will be firms with strong balance sheets and a focus on profitability, as is the case with any well-run manufacturing firm. We also expect large producers to opportunistically shed production assets to reduce their carbon footprints, so as to come into compliance with court-ordered emission reductions and shareholder demands to reduce pollution.4 With the oil majors like Shell, Equinor and Oxy divesting themselves of shale properties, production increasingly will be in the hands of firms driven by profitability.5 We expect US shale-oil production to end the year at 9.86mm b/d and to average 9.57mm b/d next year; however, as the shales become the marginal global supply, production could become more volatile (Chart 5). The consolidation of US production also will alter the profitability of firms continuing to operate in the shales. We expect breakeven costs to fall as acquired production by stronger firms results in high-grading of assets – only the most profitable will be produced given market-pricing dynamics – while less profitable acreage will be mothballed until prices support development(Chart 6). Chart 5US Producers Focus On Profitability Chart 6Shale Breakevens Likely Fall As Consolidation Picks Up Supply-Demand Balances Tightening The current round of M&A consolidation and OPEC 2.0's continued discipline lead us to expect continued tightening of global oil supply-demand balances this year and next (Chart 7). This will allow inventories to continue to draw, which will keep forward oil curves backwardated (Chart 8). Chart 7Supply-Demand Balances Will Continue To Tighten Chart 8Tighter Markets, Lower Stocks The critical factor here will be OPEC 2.0's continued calibration of supply in line with realized demand and the return of Iran as a bona fide exporter, which we expect later this year. OPEC 2.0's restoration of ~ 2mm b/d of supply will be done by the beginning of 3Q21, when we expect Iran to begin restoring production and visible exports (i.e., in addition to its under-the-radar sales presently). The return of Iranian supply – and a possible increase in Libyan output – will present some timing difficulties for OPEC 2.0's overall strategy, but they will be short-lived. We continue to monitor output to assess the evolution of balances (Table 1). Table 1BCA Global Oil Supply - Demand Balances (MMb/d, Base Case Balances) Investment Implications Oil demand will increase over the course of 2H21, as vaccines become more widely distributed globally, and the massive fiscal and monetary stimulus deployed worldwide kicks economic activity into high gear. On the supply side, markets will tighten on the back of continued restraint until Iranian barrels return to the market. The balance of risk is to the upside, particularly if the US and Iran are unable to agree terms that restore Iran as a bona fide exporter. In that case, the market tightening now under way will result in sharply higher prices. That said, realized demand growth has stalled over the past three months, which can be seen in unintended inventory accumulation in the US gasoline markets just as the summer driving season opens. We are raising our average Brent forecast for 2021 to $66.50 vs. $63/bbl earlier, with 2H21 prices averaging $70/bbl. We are moving our 2022 and 2023 forecasts up slightly as well to $74 and $81/bbl (Chart of the Week). WTI will trade $2-$3/bbl lower. We remain long the S&P GSCI Dynamic Roll Index ETF (COMT) and the S&P GSCI, expecting tight supply-demand balances to further steepen backwardations in forward curves. The big risk, as highlighted above, remains an acceleration of COVID-19 infections, hospitalizations and deaths, which force governments to delay re-opening or impose localized lockdowns once again. In this regard, KSA's strategy of calibrating its output to realized – vice forecasted – demand likely will remain in place. Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Ashwin Shyam Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish China's refinery throughput surged 4.4% to 14.3mm b/d in May, a record high that surpassed November 2020's previous record of 14.26mm b/d, according to S&P Platts Global. The increased runs were not unexpected, and were largely accounted for by state-owned refiners, which operated at 80% of capacity after coming out of turnaround season. Turnarounds will fully end in July. In addition, taxes on niche refined-product imports are due to increase, which will bolster refinery margins as inventories are worked down. China's domestic crude oil production was just slightly more than 4mm b/d. Base Metals: Bullish China's Standing Committee approved the release an undisclosed amount of its copper, aluminum and zinc stockpiles via an auction process in the near future, according to reuters.com. The government disclosed its intent on the website of National Food and Strategic Reserves Administration on Wednesday; however, specifics of the auction – volumes and auction schedule, in particular – were not disclosed. Prices had fallen ~ 9% from recent record highs in the lead-up to the announcement, which we flagged last month.6 Prices rallied from lows close to $4.34/lb on the COMEX Wednesday (Chart 9). Precious Metals: Bullish After a worse-than-expected US employment report, we do not expect the Federal Reserve to lift nominal interest rates in Wednesday’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting. The Fed will only raise rates once the US economy reaches a level consistent with its definition of "maximum employment." Wednesday’s interest rate decision will be crucial to gold prices. If the Fed does not mention asset tapering or an interest-rate hike, citing current inflation as a transitory phenomenon, gold demand and prices will rise. On the other hand, if the Fed indicates an interest rate hike sooner than the previously stated 2024, this will weigh on gold prices (Chart 10). Ags/Softs: Neutral As of June 13, 96% of the US corn crop had emerged vs. the five-year average of 91%, according to the USDA. 68% of the crop was rated in good to excellent condition, slightly below the five-year average. In the bean market, 94% of the crop was planted as of 13 June, vs. the five-year average of 88%. The Department reported 86% of the crop had emerged vs. the five-year average of 74%. According to the USDA, 52% of the bean crop was in good-to-excellent condition vs the five-year average of 72%. Chart 9 Chart 10 Footnotes 1 Please see OPEC+ complies with 115% of agreed oil curbs in May - source published by reuters.com on June 11, 2021. 2 Please see Saudis raise U.S. and Asian crude prices for April delivery published by worldoil.com on March 8, 2021. 3 Please see US shale consolidation continues as Independence scoops up Contango Oil & Gas published by S&P Global Platts on June 8, 2021. 4 We discuss this in A Perfect Energy Storm On The Way, published on June 3, 2021. Climate activism will become increasingly important to the evolution of oil and natural gas production, and likely will lead to greater concentration of supply in the hands of OPEC 2.0 and privately held producers that do not answer to shareholders. 5 Please see Interest in Shell's Permian assets seen as a bellwether for shale demand published by reuters.com on June 15, 2021. 6 Please see Less Metal, More Jawboning, which we published on May 27, 2021. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2021 Summary of Closed Trades
The May economic data confirm that China’s domestic demand recovery has passed its peak strength. Most of the macro indicators released yesterday are below the consensus and growing at a slower rate (on both a year-on-year and month-to-month basis) than last…
Dear Client, Next week, in lieu of our regular weekly report, I will be hosting two webcasts where I will discuss the outlook for China’s economy and financial markets, a year into policy normalization. The webcasts will be held on Tuesday, June 22 at 10:00 am EDT (English), and Thursday, June 24 at 9:00 am HKT (Mandarin). We will return to our regular publishing schedule on Wednesday, June 30. Best regards, Jing Sima, China Strategist Feature China’s onshore stocks rebounded in the past two months on the back of a rapidly appreciating RMB versus the US dollar and accelerating foreign capital inflows (Chart 1). However, in our view, China’s domestic policy backdrop and economic fundamentals do not support a sustained rally in Chinese stocks in the next six months. The RMB’s rise vis-à-vis the US dollar will likely falter in the second half of the year as China’s growth weakens. A narrowing in real yields later this year between China’s government bonds and US Treasuries will also discourage foreign flows into Chinese assets. Performance of Chinese cyclical stocks versus defensives failed to decisively breakout in both the onshore and offshore equity markets. An underperformance in cyclical stocks relative to defensives has historically pointed to waning market sentiment towards the Chinese economy (Chart 2). Chart 1Rapid Appreciation In The RMB Buoyed A Recent Rebound In A-Shares Chart 2Cyclical Stocks Continued To Underperform Defensives The number of onshore stocks with prices rising versus falling remains low, even though there has been a slight improvement this year from Q4 2020. The narrow breath in the equity market implies that recent rebound in A-share stocks has been largely driven by a handful of companies (Chart 3). Such narrow breadth suggests that the rebound in Chinese stock prices will not sustain (Chart 4). Chart 3A Narrow-Based Market Rally in A-Shares Chart 4Narrowing Market Breadth Has Historically Led To Price Pullbacks A tightened monetary and credit environment has created obstacles for Chinese equities since early this year. Credit numbers released last week show that credit growth deceleration has gathered speed in May, raising the risk of policy overtightening, i.e. credit growth undershooting the government’s 2021 targets. We could see some moderation in the credit growth deceleration into 2H21. A delay in the rollout of local government (LG) bonds and LG special purpose bonds (SPBs) in the first five months of the year means the pace of LG bond issuance between June and October will escalate, which will help to stabilize credit growth. However, weak corporate bond net financing and contracting shadow banking will cap the upside in credit expansion. Chart 5The Economy Could Surprise The Market To The Downside In Q3 Additionally, if more LG bonds come onto the market in Q3, then we could see tighter interbank liquidity conditions and higher bond yields. This, in turn, would partially offset the positive effects on the economy and equity market from a slower pace in credit growth deceleration. For the next six months, we continue to hold an underweight position in Chinese onshore and investable stocks, in both absolute terms and within a global equity portfolio. Policy tightening has not reversed course and there is an escalating risk that economic data will surprise the market to the downside in Q3 (Chart 5). Qingyun Xu, CFA Associate Editor qingyunx@bcaresearch.com Macro Policy Conditions Are Still Unfavorable For Risk Assets A further deterioration in the credit impulse in May reflects Chinese authorities’ efforts to reduce local government leverage and shadow banking activities. Net corporate bond financing contracted for the first time since early 2018, driven by shrinking local government financing vehicle (LGFV) bonds (Chart 6). Meanwhile, the pace of contraction in shadow-bank loans climbed. At this rate of deceleration, credit growth will undershoot the government’s 2021 target, which is expected to be in line with this year’s nominal GDP growth. The pace in credit expansion on a year-over-year basis has dropped to its previous cycle’s trough (Chart 7). Moreover, the speed of the deceleration in credit growth has outpaced the 2017/18 tightening cycle. It has been seven months since Chinese credit growth peaked (October 2020), which is significantly less than the 13 months it took for credit to decline from top to bottom in 2017/18. Chart 6Contraction In Net Corporate Bond Financing And Shadow Banking Dragged Down Credit Growth In May Chart 7Credit Growth Has Decelerated To Its Trough Reached In 2017/18 Tightening Cycle Chart 8Most Of LG Bonds Issued In The First Five Months Are Refinancing Bonds So far this year, LG bond issuance is also behind schedule. About 63% of LG bonds issued in the first five months are refinancing bonds (Chart 8). The new LG bonds and LG SPBs issued to date account for only 21% and 16.5%, respectively, of their 2021 quotas. A delay in LG bond issuance in the first five months means that much more bonds will be on the market between June and October, which may help to stabilize credit growth in Q3. However, weak corporate bond financing and an acceleration in contracting shadow banking activities will cap the upside on broad credit. We do not expect a reversal in policy tightening. Instead, credit growth will likely hover near current levels for the rest of the year. In the past, Chinese policymakers eased when the global manufacturing backdrop faltered. Given that global growth is robust, Chinese policymakers will not feel any urgency to reverse policy setting and will likely use the strong external environment as an opportunity for domestic deleveraging. Chinese Exports Will Face Challenges In The Second Half Of The Year Chart 9A Broad-Based Moderation In China's Exports to DMs Export growth slowed in May with a broad-based moderation in the country’s exports to developed markets (DMs), albeit from a very elevated level (Chart 9). The easing in exports reflects an ongoing demand shift in the DMs away from goods to services as economic activity normalizes (Chart 10). China’s robust exports, which have been driven by strong and partly pandemic-induced global demand for goods, will likely gradually lose strength in the second half of the year. China’s weakening new export orders component in the May manufacturing PMI reflects this trend (Chart 11). Chart 10Global Consumption Recovery In Services Will Likely Outpace Goods Chart 11China's Softening New Export Orders Signal Further Export-Sector Weakness An appreciating RMB versus the US dollar is also a headwind for Chinese exports. The USD/CNY historically has led Chinese new export orders by around six months, with the exception of the pandemic-hit outlier in 2020 (Chart 12). The recent sharp RMB appreciation is starting to weight on Chinese exports. Moreover, BCA’s Geopolitical strategists do not expect that China will principally benefit from US President Biden’s $2.4 trillion infrastructure and green energy plan . US explicitly aims to diminish China’s role as a supplier of US goods and materials. The widening divergence between US’s trade deficit with China and the rest of world already shows evidence (Chart 13). Chart 12The RMB's Rapid Rise Creates Headwinds For Chinese Exports Chart 13China's Exports May Not Benefit From Biden's Infrastructure Plan Still No Inflation Pass-Through Chart 14Chinese Producers Are Unable To Pass Rising Input Costs On To Consumers Chinese surging producer prices overstate domestic inflationary pressures. Inflation in the Producer Price Index (PPI) surged by 9.0% year-over-year in May, jumping to its highest level since 2009. High PPI inflation reflects rising commodity prices and a low base effect. Meanwhile, inflationary pressures are much more muted for consumer goods and services. The gap between producer and consumer prices widened to the highest level since 1990, highlighting the absence of price inflation pass-through from producers to consumers (Chart 14). We expect soaring PPI inflation to be transitory; it will ease when low-base factors from last year and global supply constraints are removed later this year. CPI inflation will remain tame through the year. As such, Chinese authorities are unlikely to tighten monetary policy in response to high PPI readings. Instead, Beijing will continue to use regulatory measures to curb speculation in the commodity market and window-guide industries to readjust material inventories to help ease the pace of rising commodity prices. Historically, PPI inflation’s impact on consumer prices has been weak when prices on producer goods were pushed up by supply shocks rather than mounting domestic demand. The sharp uptick in the PPI during the 2017/18 cycle was mostly due to China’s supply-side reforms and a rapid consolidation in the upstream industries. Global supply constraints linked to the pandemic have also resulted in a sharp upturn in the Chinese PPI since mid-2020. Moreover, Chart 15 shows that the pass-through from PPI inflation to consumers is closely correlated to household income growth. The pass-through has weakened significantly since 2011 when household income growth subdued along with a declining Chinese working population (Chart 16). Chart 15Subdued Household Income Growth Since 2011 Has Suppressed CPI Inflation Chart 16Income Growth Decelerated After China's Working Population Peaked Chart 17Profits Diverged Between Upstream And Mid & Downstream Industries Lacking inflation pass-through from producers to consumers has led to a bifurcated profit recovery between upstream and mid & downstream industries. Since late last year, the share of upstream industries in total profits increased sharply at the expense of mid and downstream businesses (Chart 17). A deterioration in the profits of mid and downstream industries will weigh on the outlook for their capex, which in turn, will reduce the demand for upstream goods. Domestic Demand Remains China’s Weakest Link Investments and household demand remain the weakest links in China’s economy. Sluggish household consumption reflects a fragile post-pandemic recovery in manufacturing and services employment, and a rising propensity for precautionary savings (Chart 18). A PBoC survey shows that households’ preference for more saving deposits soared in 2020 (Chart 19). Although it has slightly diminished since late 2020, the reading is still much higher than its pre-pandemic level and will likely persist to year-end on the back of a subdued outlook for employment and income. Chart 18Weak Employment In Both Manufacturing And Service Industries Chart 19Propensity For Precautionary Savings Is Still Elevated Manufacturing investment continued its rebound in April, but the growth has not rallied to its pre-pandemic state and the recovery was more than offset by falling old-economy infrastructure and real estate investment growth (Chart 20). Although a pickup in LG SPB issuance in Q3 will provide some support to infrastructure expenditures, the effect on aggregate infrastructure investment probably will be muted. China’s Ministry of Finance has raised the requirements for approvals of new investment projects, which have decreased notably since early this year (Chart 21). Hence, growth in infrastructure investment may not significantly improve in 2H21 without a harmonized policy impetus for more bank loans and loosened regulations on local government spending. Chart 20Recovery In Manufacturing Investment Was More Than Offset By Falling Infrastructure And Real Estate Investment Growth Chart 21Falling New Projects Approval Real Estate Sector: Mounting Deleverage Pressure Property developers face challenges from heightened government scrutiny on bank loans and limits on the sector’s leverage ratio, along with curtailed off-balance sheet funding due to Asset Management Regulation (AMR) . Bank loans to real estate developers and household mortgages have tumbled to historical lows and will likely slow further in the next few months (Chart 22, top panel). The tightened financing policies have started to cool demand in the real estate market (Chart 22, bottom panel). Softer housing demand will start to drag down property developers’ capital spending and real estate construction activities (Chart 23). Chart 22Deteriorating Financing Starting To Cool The Property Market Chart 23Real Estate Investments And Construction Activities May Slow Further Table 1China Macro Data Summary Table 2China Financial Market Performance Summary Footnotes Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Note: An update on Peru is available on page 10. Highlights The longer it takes the Colombian government to drastically expand fiscal policy and increase social benefits, the higher the risk that next year’s presidential election will result in a win for the left. The government will be slow or reluctant to act and, hence, odds of a left-wing government in one year’s time is increasing. We are not forecasting that radical left-wing candidate Gustavo Petro will win next year’s presidential elections. Our point is that rising odds of a victory will be sufficient to undermine Colombia’s financial markets as the nation’s macro risk premium widens. We are downgrading Colombian equities from neutral to underweight and local currency bonds and sovereign credit from overweight to neutral relative to their respective EM benchmarks. Short the Colombian peso versus the US dollar. Feature Colombia has entered a critical moment in its history. The country was once seen as a beacon of political stability, fiscal orthodoxy, and market friendly policies. However, recent large-scale protests have raised the question as to whether Colombia will move toward the left, as has occurred in Mexico, Argentina and more recently in Peru with the election of Pedro Castillo. The nationwide protests in Colombia were triggered by the government’s attempt to raise taxes amidst a recession. What’s more, these protests are a manifestation of deep-rooted popular anger about poor social security benefits, income inequality and unaffordability of education and health care for a large chunk of the population. Further, angst relating to organized crime and government corruption has boiled over as the government has failed to address these systemic issues. In a nutshell, years of market-friendly conservative policies have widened the gap between “haves” and “have nots”. The recent recession has only exaggerated this income disparity and has unleashed public anger toward the government. Critically, social transfers in Colombia amid the pandemic were among the lowest in the world (Chart 1). Chart 1Colombia: Is A Political Shift To The Left Coming? The main risk to the nation’s financial markets is not that President Duque drastically increases fiscal spending to calm down protests, but rather the rising odds of a left-wing victory in the May 2022 presidential elections. Unfortunately, the current government’s reluctance to let go of traditional economic conservatism could eventually backfire and inadvertently swing the country to the far left. As a result, we are downgrading our stance on Colombian equities from neutral to underweight and are downgrading local and sovereign bonds from overweight to neutral in their respective EM portfolios. Underlying Motives For Popular Discontent There are fundamental grounds for Colombia’s popular discontent. This year’s protests against President Duque echo the sentiment of previous demonstrations that occurred in 2019 and 2020: weak income growth, high income inequality, low government support for social programs, and unsuccessful policies to reduce corruption and organized crime. These issues have not been resolved even as Colombia emerged as one of the most successful economies in the region. In essence, wealth and development have not been felt by the entire population. According to the Gini coefficient, Colombia is the most unequal country among Latin American and OECD nations, even after accounting for taxes and transfers (Chart 2). Colombia suffers from a stubbornly high official unemployment rate which has seldom fallen below double-digit levels in the past two decades (Chart 3). Chart 2Colombia Is One Of The Most Unequal Countries In The World Chart 3Colombia’s Unemployment: High And No Improvement Yet Government cash transfers and spending on pensions and education remain among the lowest of developed and developing nations (Chart 4). Voters are frustrated with the government’s failure to tackle crime and insurgent paramilitary groups, especially given that Duque ran on an anti-crime platform. According to data from Transparency International, Colombian’s perception of government corruption has risen dramatically since 2018 (Chart 5). Chart 4The Government’s Social Spending In Colombia Is Small Chart 5Corruption Perception Has Been Rising Bottom Line: Even though Colombia’s GDP growth has been solid, especially relative to its Latin American peers, the benefits have not been widely distributed across all social groups. The severe recession has highlighted Colombia’s challenges and unleashed popular anger toward the government. When Too Much Economic Orthodoxy Backfires Colombia’s right-wing government has provoked massive public discontent due to its insistence on tightening fiscal policy during the worst recession in the country’s history. In essence, the government tried to pass a tax reform bill which would raise taxes on utilities, consumer goods, and business income at the height of the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic and amid a massive nominal and real GDP contraction (Chart 6). Chart 6Colombia: The First Nominal GDP Contraction On Record What followed were not only protests but also a broad-based backlash against the government from all corners, including political parties. President Duque has become isolated and is quickly turning into a lame duck president. Duque’s economic policies, his failure to reduce violence from insurgent paramilitary groups in recent years, and his own militant response to protests have made him lose the confidence of voters. Moreover , his failure to control the political upheaval from the outset has made him lose the confidence of international investors. Going forward, the major risk to financial markets will be rising odds that a left-wing candidate might win next year’s presidential elections. Chart 7 illustrates that leftist Gustavo Petro leads other potential contenders by a wide margin. Petro is a former member of a guerilla organization and was the frontrunner in the 2018 presidential election. Chart 7Growing Risks Of A Left-Wing Presidency In 2022 If he were to win, it would mark a major pivot from an orthodox/conservative approach to a considerably leftist model of economic policy. Some of his proposals include nationalizing mining companies, de-investing from fossil fuels, government confiscation of land for agriculture, reducing central bank independence, and import substitution policies for the industrial sector. In order to reduce Petro’s odds of winning the election, the current government must splurge on public spending and dramatically reform the country’s social security policies to appease a wide portion of the population. Nevertheless, we believe the government’s response will be too little, too late. Not only is the government reluctant to open the fiscal taps, but it also has no intention of revamping social security, health care and education policies. In fact, talks with protesters have yet to go anywhere after more than a month of a national strike. The current government’s failure to address Colombians’ concerns may boost the popularity of left-wing politicians. As a result, the market could soon start pricing in rising odds of a left-wing presidency in Colombia. This is negative for financial assets. Bottom Line: Investors will soon start realizing that there is a risk that a left-wing government could upend Colombia’s structural backdrop in a year’s time. To reiterate, we are not forecasting that radical left-wing presidential candidate Gustavo Petro will win next year’s presidential elections. Rather, our point is that rising odds of his victory will be sufficient to undermine Colombia’s financial markets as the nation’s macro risk premium widens. Implications For Financial Markets 1. Downgrade equities from neutral to underweight within an EM equity portfolio. A lingering pandemic, dwindling consumer and business confidence, and a broken monetary policy transmission mechanism are major headwinds for the economy and for corporate profits: Various sectors of the economy are struggling to recover, and our proxy for the marginal propensity to spend is suggesting that the economy will underwhelm (Chart 8). Nominal income growth is very weak. One of the reasons is very low inflation – core CPI measures remain below the central bank’s target range (Chart 9). Chart 8Growth Will Surprise To The Downside Chart 9Colombia: Inflation Is Nowhere To Be Seen Commercial banks are not expanding credit and will not do so any time soon. Credit growth is negative, and provisions and non-performing loans will continue rising, reaching historical highs (Chart 10). Given that banks make up a large part of Colombia’s bourse, this will weigh heavily on Colombian equity indexes. Notably, lending rates are higher than warranted by economic conditions. This will make it very difficult for borrowers to service debt. While the central bank (Banrep) has cut rates to a historical low of 1.75%, the nominal prime lending rate is at 8.1% and real (deflated by core inflation) lending rates remain elevated at 6% (Chart 11). Rolling economic lockdowns will impede the economic normalization process. Colombia is still suffering from a deadly second wave of COVID-19 infections. New daily cases and deaths are at all-time highs, and the country’s vaccination drive is falling behind most DM countries and large regional peers. This will further cap economic growth. Chart 10Bank Credit Is Very Weak Chart 11Colombian Lending Rates Are Elevated 2. Short the Colombian peso versus the US dollar. The basis is that the current account deficit remains wide at 3.8% of GDP while foreign capital inflows – both FDI and portfolio flows – will wane due to political volatility and rising odds of a left-wing government next year (Chart 12). 3. Downgrade Local Currency Bonds and Sovereign Credit to Neutral Domestic Bonds: While local yields seem quite attractive, currency depreciation risks are too high. The yield curve is incredibly steep and swap rates are pricing in about 75 basis points in rate hikes over the next 12 months (Chart 13). Yet, economic conditions warrant lower not higher interest rates. This makes long-term bond yields attractive, barring the election of a left-wing government next year. Chart 12Balance Of Payments Will Weigh On The Currency Chart 13Colombian Local Bonds: Value Or A Value Trap? Despite very attractive yields and low inflation, the risk-reward tradeoff of overweighting Colombian local bonds is no longer attractive. We are also closing the position of receiving 10-year swap rates. Sovereign credit: The nation’s sovereign credit spreads will widen if and as international agencies downgrade Colombia’s rating. The nation’s sovereign credit spreads are tight because its governments have been known for orthodox macroeconomic policies and prudent debt management. With political pressures for more social spending, sharply rising public debt and growing odds of a left-wing victory in the next presidential elections, sovereign credit might be repriced. We will monitor the situation and if the government fails to appease protesters with higher fiscal spending, we will downgrade our allocation to local currency bonds and sovereign credit further to underweight within their respective EM benchmarks. A Word On The Peruvian Elections The election of left-wing candidate Pedro Castillo in Peru is all but confirmed. While right-wing presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori is alleging signs of fraud and is demanding a recount of hundreds of thousands of votes, it is unlikely that this will change the outcome of the election. Fujimori lost the popular vote by an even smaller margin in 2016 but conceded victory after days of uncertainty. Chart 14Peruvian Stocks Are On The Edge Of A Breakdown Nevertheless, next week will prove to be volatile as the electoral tribunal makes a decision on Fujimori’s appeal. We expect uprisings from voters on both sides: Castillo supporters will defend his triumph and Fujimori supporters will voice their anger at what they perceive to be an unfair election. We continue to recommend an underweight allocation on Peruvian equities within an EM-dedicated equity portfolio. In the short term, Peruvian share prices will suffer from socio-political volatility. In the medium to long term, Castillo’s populist and anti-market policies will undermine business and investor confidence. Chart 14 shows that Peruvian equities have reached critical levels, displaying a tapering wedge technical profile. If they relapse further, it would qualify as a major breakdown. A significant gap down is likely to follow. We also recommend investors maintain a neutral allocation to Peruvian local bonds and downgrade sovereign credit to underweight. While public debt remains low at 22.6% of GDP, an overhaul of orthodox macroeconomic policies requires a re-rating of Peruvian sovereign credit. Juan Egaña Research Analyst juane@bcaresearch.com
On a month-on-month basis, Chinese credit was relatively stable in May. Aggregate financing was flat at CNY 1.92 trillion versus CNY 1.85 trillion in April. Similarly, CNY 1.5 trillion worth of new yuan loans were extended, broadly in line with April’s CNY…