Emerging Markets
Highlights EM equity valuations are neutral. Relative to the U.S., EM share prices do offer some value, but this primarily reflects elevated valuations within the S&P 500. According to the cyclically-adjusted P/E ratio, EM stocks are cheap for investors with a long-term time horizon - longer than two to three years. Corporate profits are much more important than equity valuations in driving share prices in the next 12 months. Our outlook for EM EPS is downbeat for the next 12 months. Maintain a defensive posture and an underweight allocation in EM stocks versus DM. A new trade: go long Russian energy stocks / short global energy ones. Feature Chart I-1EM P/E Ratio And EPS There is ongoing debate in the investment community concerning whether emerging markets (EM) equities are or are not cheap, in both absolute terms and relative to developed markets (DM). In this week's report we review various equity valuation indicators and reiterate that EM stocks are neither cheap nor expensive in absolute terms. For example, the average of trailing and forward P/E ratios is slightly above its historical mean (Chart I-1, top panel). Relative to the U.S., EM share prices do offer value, but this reflects elevated valuations within the S&P 500. Despite this, we recommend underweighting EM vs U.S./DM because the cyclical growth dynamics is much better in DM than EM. EM stocks are cheap if one assumes a strong earnings recovery (Chart I-1, bottom panel). If earnings per share (EPS) begin contracting anew, as we expect, then the current rally will be reversed sooner than later. Overall, we continue to recommend a defensive posture for absolute-return investors and maintaining an underweight allocation in EM stocks versus DM for asset allocators. Valuation Perspectives Below we consider several valuation ratios: The equal-sector weighted trailing P/E ratio is 17.7 for EM (Chart I-2). Table I-1 displays equal-sector weighted P/E ratio, price-to-book value ratio and dividend yields for major equity markets globally. This is an apples-to-apples comparison, as it assigns equal weights to each of the 10 MSCI sectors - i.e., it removes sector biases. Chart I-2Equal-Sector Weighted Trailing P/E Ratio Table I-1Equal-Sector Weighted Valuation Ratios Across EM And DM Hence, on a comparable basis, EM equities are only slightly cheaper than DM stocks as is evident in Table I-1. Besides, the composite valuation indicator based on equal-sector weighted trailing and forward P/E, price-to-book value, price-to-cash earnings ratios and dividend yield indicate that EM stocks are fairly valued (Chart I-3). The cyclically-adjusted P/E (CAPE) ratio. The CAPE ratio is a structural valuation measure, i.e. it matters in the long run. Importantly, it assumes that real (inflation-adjusted) EPS will revert to its historical mean or trend. In short, the CAPE ratio tells us what the P/E ratio would be if EPS were to revert to its historical trend. Chart I-4 illustrates the EM CAPE ratio. If EM EPS in inflation-adjusted U.S. dollar terms reaches its historical time trend, one can safely assume that EM stocks are cheap and currently worth buying. In a nutshell, the current CAPE ratio of 15 assumes that EM EPS should rise by about 30% in nominal U.S. dollar terms over an investor's time horizon. Chart I-3EM Equities Valuations Are Neutral Chart I-4EM CAPE Ratio Given that our time horizon is 12 months, the assumption that EM EPS will surge by about 30% in U.S. dollar terms is in our view ambitious. Therefore, we posit that EM share prices do not offer compelling value at all in the next 12 months. If one's investment horizon were two-to-three years or longer, the assumption that EPS will rise by 30% or more in U.S. dollar terms is much more plausible. In this sense we would concur that EM share prices offer decent value from a longer-term perspective. Our methodology of calculating the CAPE ratio for EM varies from the well-known Robert Shiller's CAPE ratio for the U.S.1 However, even when applying our CAPE methodology to U.S. equities, the resulting ratio is not very different from Shiller's CAPE (Chart I-5). Trimmed-mean equity valuation ratios. Chart 6 illustrates 20% trimmed-mean trailing and forward P/E, price-to-book value, price-to-cash earnings ratios and dividend yields for the EM equity universe. A 20% trimmed-mean ratio excludes the top 10% and bottom 10% of industry groups, and then calculates the average. All calculations are based on 50 EM industry group data available from MSCI. Why look at trimmed-mean valuation ratios? Because by removing the top and bottom 10% of industry groups, this measure excludes outliers and provides a better perspective on valuation. A few observations are in order: First, according to the trimmed-mean valuation ratios, EM equities are not cheap. The trimmed-mean ratios are close to their historical mean (Chart I-6). Second, the trimmed-mean ratios are well above their market cap ones. This indicates that there are a few industry groups with large market caps that pull EM multiples lower. In other words, market-cap weighted multiples are skewed to the downside by a few large industry groups. There are reasons why some sectors and countries have low or high equity multiples. It makes sense to exclude them. Finally, the composite valuation indicator based on trimmed-mean trailing and forward P/Es, PBV and price-to-cash earnings ratios and dividend yield demonstrates that EM equity valuations are neutral (Chart I-7). Chart I-5U.S. CAPE Ratios Chart I-6EM Stocks Are Close to Fair Value Chart I-7EM Equities Have Neutral Value Bottom Line: EM equities by and large command a neutral valuation. According to the CAPE ratio, EM equities are cheap for investors with a long-term time horizon, say two-to-three years or longer. Profits Hold The Key Valuations are not a good timing tool. For low equity valuations to be realized, i.e., to produce solid price gains, corporate profits should grow. The reverse is also true: for an overvalued market to decline, company earnings should contract, or at least disappoint. When valuations are neutral - as they currently are for the EM equity benchmark - a recovery in EPS should entail higher share prices, while EPS shrinkage should lead to a selloff. EM EPS will continue to recover in the next three to six months, given the rally in commodities prices in 2016, amelioration in China's business cycle and the technology sector boom in Asia. However, this moderate and short-lived EPS recovery is already priced in. For the market to rally further, EPS will need to expand beyond the next three to six months. Remarkably, there has been little improvement in EM ex-China domestic demand. Besides, the risk to bank loan growth remains to the downside both in China and EM ex-China. Slower loan growth and the need to recognize and provision for potentially large NPLs will pressure banks' profits in many EM countries. Finally, we expect oil and industrial metals prices to decline considerably over the course of this year. If and as this view plays out, energy and materials stocks will fall. Energy and materials share prices correlate not with their past or current profits but rather with underlying commodities prices. One area where we remain bullish is the technology sector. Even though tech share prices are overbought and could correct in absolute terms in the months ahead, they will continue to outperform the benchmark. Bottom Line: Corporate profits are much more important in driving share prices in the next 12 months than equity valuations. Our outlook for EM EPS is downbeat for the next 12 months or so, even though EPS will continue to recover in the next three to six months. Timing Reversal: Watch Credit Quality Spreads Chart I-8Credit Quality Spreads: ##br##A Correction Or Reversal? Following are some of the indicators we are monitoring to gauge a reversal in EM share prices. EM corporate spreads have widened a notch relative to EM sovereign spreads (Chart I-8, top panel). Similarly, Chinese off-shore corporate spreads have widened versus Chinese sovereign spreads (Chart I-8, middle panel). Credit quality spreads - the gap between B- and BAA-grade corporate bonds - have widened slightly in the U.S. (Chart I-8, bottom panel). These moves are still very small, and do not constitute a definite sign of a major trend reversal. Nevertheless, such widening in credit quality spreads is an important development. If they persist, they will certainly sound the alarm for the reflation trade. Interestingly, this is the first time a simultaneous widening in credit quality spreads has occurred since the risk assets rally began in early 2016. Bottom Line: Major equity market selloffs will occur when lower quality credit begins to persistently underperform better quality credit. There have been budding signs of quality spread widening that are worth being monitored. Identifying Relative Value Within the EM equity universe, valuation ratios differ greatly. For example, banks trade at a trailing P/E of 9.7, while consumer staple stocks trade at 24.8. Table I-2 portrays the trailing P/E ratio and its historical mean as well as 12-month forward EPS growth and the forward P/E ratio for each sector - as well as average of trailing and forward P/E ratios. Table I-3 shows the same valuation measures but for EM countries. Table I-2Stock Valuation Snapshot: EM Sectors Table I-3Equity Valuation Snapshot: EM Countries It is difficult to draw any definitive conclusions from these tables. On a general level, a simplistic approach to investing based on trailing and forward P/E ratios would not have produced great outcomes in EM in recent years. When analyzing EM stock valuations, we prefer to use the trailing rather than forward P/E ratio because historically, EM forward EPS have had a very poor record forecasting actual EPS. One of our favorite ways to identify relative value is to compare the PBV ratio and return on equity (RoE) across countries/sectors. Chart I-9 plots RoE on the X-axis and the PBV ratio on the Y axis. Countries and sectors located in the bottom right corner (at the low end of the shaded area) have a low PBV ratio compared to their RoE. In contrast, in the north-west side of the distribution (at the upper end of the shaded zone), these have an elevated PBV ratio, taking into account their RoE. Chart I-9Searching For Relative Value Among countries, Korea, Russia, Hungary, the Czech Republic and China appear cheap, while Mexico, Brazil, South Africa, Colombia, Malaysia and Poland are on the expensive side. Chart I-10EMS's Recommended ##br##Equity Portfolio Performance Concerning equity sectors, utilities and financials/banks are cheap, yet consumer staples and consumer discretionary, health care, telecom and materials appear expensive in relative terms. Our recommended country equity allocation is based on a qualitative assessment of many variables including but not limited to valuation. Chart I-10 displays the performance of our fully invested EM Equity Portfolio Model versus the EM benchmark. Our overweights presently include: Korea, Taiwan, India, China, Thailand, Russia and central Europe. Our underweights are Brazil, Turkey, Indonesia, Malaysia and Peru. We are neutral on Mexico, Chile, Colombia, South Africa and the Philippines. The lists of our country allocation and other equity investment recommendations are presented each week at the end of our reports. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com Bet On Russia's Non-Compliance With OPEC Odds of Russia's compliance with the OPEC agreement to cut oil output by 300k b/d in the next two months are low. This poses downside risk to oil prices. Russia has so far done only 120k b/d cuts. Hence, in the next two months it should reduce its output by 180k b/d which amounts to 1.6% of the nation's oil output. One way to bet on Russia's non-compliance, regardless the direction of oil prices, is to go long Russian energy stocks / short global energy ones (Chart II-1). There are a number of political, economic and financial motives why Russia might care less about lower oil prices than Saudi Arabia in the next 12-18 months or so. As a result, Russia might not cut as much as it is expected by the OPEC agreement. Russia is able to increase oil production due to a cheaper ruble and technology advances. BCA's Energy Sector Strategy team has been highlighting that there have been concerted efforts by Russia's largest producers to employ horizontal drilling and multi-zone hydraulic fracturing in Western Siberia.2 These have stemmed declines from those aging fields and allowed production to rise (Chart II-2). Chart II-1Long Russia Energy / ##br##Short Global Energy Stocks Chart II-2Russian Oil ##br##Production Will Increase Russia will not shy away from being opportunistic and increase its market share when it can ramp up oil production. A rising global oil market share will allow Russian companies to outperform their global peers regardless the direction of oil prices. There are major cyclical divergences between Russian and Saudi economies. Russia's economy is gradually picking up while there is less certainty about Saudi's growth recovery. The reason is that Russia has allowed the ruble to depreciate and act as a shock absorber. Meanwhile, Saudis have stuck to the currency peg. Oil prices are down by 27% from their top in rubles and 55% in Saudi riyals (Chart II-3). This has reflated Russia's fiscal revenues and the economy, while Saudi Arabia is still struggling with the consequences of low oil prices. On the fiscal front, Russia went through a notable fiscal squeeze and its budget deficit is projected to be 3.2% of GDP in 2017 (Chart II-4). In contrast, the Saudi Arabian fiscal deficit in 2016 reached an outstanding 17% of GDP, accounting for the drawdown in reserves by our estimates.3 Chart II-3Ruble's Depreciation ##br##In 2014-15 Made a Difference Chart II-4Fiscal Deficit: Small In ##br##Russia & Large In Saudi More importantly, Russia's federal budget for 2017 was constructed on the oil price assumption of $40/bbl. The 2017 Saudi budget assumes oil price of $50/bbl.4 Therefore, Russia would not mind if oil prices drop toward or slightly below $40 in the second half of this year. Therefore, Saudis care much more about sustaining oil prices at a higher level than Russians do. Finally, Rosneft has already conducted its IPO while Aramco's IPO has not taken place yet. As such, the need for higher oil prices is much greater in Saudi Arabia - to justify a higher value of their oil giant - than in Russia. Bottom Line: Odds are considerable that Russia will not comply with the OPEC deal and this could cause oil prices to selloff more. Regardless of direction of oil prices, we expect the Russian energy sector to outperform their global peers due to Russia's rising market share in the global oil market. Go long Russian energy stocks / short global ones. Stephan Gabillard, Research Analyst stephang@bcaresearch.com 1 For more detailed discussion on our methodology of CAPE, please refer to January 20, 2016 Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report titled "EM Equity Valuations: A CAPE Model", available at ems. bcaresearch.com 2 Please refer to the Energy Sector Strategy Weekly Report titled, "Russian Oil Production: Surpassing Expectation", dated December 14, 2016, available at nrg.bcaresearch.com 3 Please refer to the Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report titled, "Saudi Arabia: Short-Term Gain, Long-Term Pain", dated February 1, 2017, available at ems.bcaresearch.com 4 https://mof.gov.sa/en/budget2017/Documents/The_National_Budget.pdf Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights Beyond the healthcare vote and its implication for Trump's fiscal stimulus, other risks lurk in the background. Market complacency is at historical extremes but Chinese reflation is rapidly dissipating. The euro could benefit in this environment, especially as markets price in a Macron victory. Longer-term, the euro remains hampered by its two-speed recovery, which will limit the capacity of the ECB to lift rates. Stay long EUR/AUD, short USD/JPY and NZD/JPY. Feature The dollar correction continues. The recent wave of dollar weakness has been dubbed a reversal of the "Trump trade". There is some truth to this. The difficulty President Trump and House Speaker Ryan are facing to pass the American Health Care Act (their replacement for Obamacare) is raising questions about how much tax cuts and infrastructure spending Trump will actually be able to implement. Even if the House votes in favor of the new bill (which is still an unknown at the time of writing), the Senate remains a question mark. So the narrative goes, if the Trump stimulus is at risk, the economy will be weaker, the Fed will not hike interest rates as much as anticipated, and the dollar will falter. While there is validity to this thesis, we think the picture is more nuanced. The potential for less fiscal stimulus in the U.S. is a real worry, but our main concern is that the global industrial sector's growth improvement does not continue the way investors expect. In this environment, the dollar is likely to perform poorly against European currencies and the yen, but hold its own against EM and commodity currencies. We are positioned for such a development. These trends would be reminiscent of the kind of dollar dynamics that emerged in late 2015 / early 2016. Chinese Reflation Matters Too! What underpins our thesis? As our sister service, Global Alpha Sector Strategy, has highlighted in this week's report, the Yale Crash Confidence index has hit 100%, indicating that all of the respondents surveyed expect the stock market to go up in 2017. Moreover, the Minneapolis Fed's market-based implied probability of a 20% or more selloff in the S&P 500 has fallen below 10%, the lowest level since 2007.1 With this high degree of complacency, a rollover in the global economic surprise index represents a major risk for the asset most levered to the global industrial sector (Chart I-1). To us, the key behind the 2016 rebound in global industrial activity was China. While Chinese growth is not about to experience a sharp slowdown, it is unlikely to improve further. To begin with, Chinese monetary conditions are already rolling over (Chart I-2). The big improvement in this indicator in 2016 was the crucial ingredient behind the rebound in global trade, global industrial activity, and all the assets levered to these phenomena. Chart I-1Surprises Are Not ##br##Growing Anymore Chart I-2Chinese Monetary Conditions ##br##Are Tightening We are seeing tentative signs of a mini liquidity crunch emerging in the Chinese interbank system. Seven-day repo rates, a key benchmark for Chinese lending terms, have surged from 3.8% at the end of last week to 5.5% on Tuesday, before settling at 5%, the highest level in two and a half years (Chart I-3). By allowing this volatility, policymakers are most likely sending a warning shot to the Chinese real estate sector, which has been a key driver of Chinese metal demand in 2016. This sector alone accounts for 20% and 32% of global refined copper and steel consumption, respectively. Also, as we have highlighted previously, fiscal stimulus was another key factor behind the floor put under Chinese industrial production and fixed asset investment last year. However, Chinese fiscal spending peaked at a 25% yoy growth rate in November 2015 and is now near 0%. This suggests that a key source of stimulus in China has been removed. It is true that Chinese fiscal stimulus is heavily conducted through credit policy. In this context, the recent rise in Chinese borrowing rates does indicate that the Chinese authorities are not intent in jacking up growth anymore. The reduced growth target for this year is a clear re-affirmation of this change in focus. We are seeing signs that these adjustments are starting to bite. The growth rate of new capex projects started has rolled over and is now flirting with the zero line. As Chart I-4 highlights, this indicator provided a very positive signal for the AUD last year and is now forewarning potential risks. Chart I-3Is The PBoC Sending A Message##br## To The Real Estate Industry? Chart I-4Big Risk For##br## The AUD Additionally, the Canadian venture exchange, an index of high risk, small-cap Canadian equities has historically displayed a tight correlation with Chinese GDP growth (Chart I-5). This market is experiencing a negative divergence between its MACD and prices, potentially an early sign that investors are beginning to worry about China. Risk assets globally are not ready for these developments. In fact, EM spreads are hovering near cycle lows, junk spreads are extremely narrow, the VIX is also near cycle lows, and our global complacency indicator suggests that investors are not ready for negative Chinese surprises (Chart I-6). Not only would a negative surprise out of China cause a repricing of all these factors, but periods of market stress - even shallow stress - are associated with rising correlation among assets and among individual equities. The low level of correlation among S&P 500 constituents has been an important factor behind the fall in the VIX and the rise in margin debt. A rise in risk aversion could get turbo-charged by a rectification of these low correlations, prompting a temporary wave of debt liquidation (Chart I-7). Chart I-5A Key China Gauge Is Losing Momentum Chart I-6Complacency Abounds Chart I-7Correlation Risk In this environment, U.S. stocks could easily correct by 5% to 10%. EM stocks may have even more downside as they are more directly exposed to the biggest risk factor: China. From a currency market perspective, this means that defensive currencies could outperform pro-cyclical ones. This is why we remain long the USD against a basket of commodity currencies, but short against the yen - the most countercyclical currency of all. We also are long the euro against the AUD. These views make our publication more cautious about the near-term outlook than BCA's house view. Bottom Line: Risks beyond the outlook for tax cuts in the U.S. lurk in the background. The Chinese authorities have moved away from stimulating the economy, and some early cracks are showing. A collapse is not in the cards, but given the high degree of complacency present across markets, a disappointment in a supposedly perfect environment would create a headwind for EM and commodity currencies but boost the defensive EUR and JPY. Why Long EUR/AUD Tactically? While the negative view on the AUD fits cleanly in the narrative described above, our motivation to be long the euro is more multifaceted: The euro area has negative nominal interest rates and a current-account surplus of 3.3% of GDP, meaning it exhibits key characteristics of a funding currency. In a risk-off event where unforeseen FX market volatility rises, funding currencies perform well. We expect a further normalization of the French OAT / German bunds spread as we get closer to the French election. Macron is beating Le Pen by more than 20% in second-round polling (Chart I-8). This gap is five times greater than the advantage Clinton held over Trump at a similar point in the U.S. presidential campaign. As we argued in a joint Special Report co-published with our Geopolitical Strategy team seven weeks ago, this kind of advantage is highly unlikely to be overcome by May 7. Thus, the euro area break-up risk premium can narrow between now and then.2 Finally, the number of investors expecting rising short and long rates has bottomed in Europe relative to the U.S. Historically, this indicator has provided valuable lead on EUR/USD. It is currently painting a tactically bullish story for the euro (Chart I-9). Moreover, in the event of market stress, with investors pricing in two more rate hikes by year end in the U.S., but none in Europe, the scope for temporary downward revisions in the U.S. is higher than in Europe. This could put more upward pressure on this indicator and therefore, the euro. Chart I-8Macron: En Marche! Chart I-9Short-Term Euro Upside Together, these factors suggest that the euro could rebound toward 1.12 before the middle of 2017. Again, our favored currency to play this move is against the AUD. EUR/USD: Short-Term Gain But Long-Term Pain Chart I-10Monetary Policy Is The ##br##Common Shock In Europe What about the longer term dynamics for the euro? We are more skeptical of the common currency's ability to rally durably, and we are expecting the euro to fall below parity by mid-2018. Based on our months-to-hike indicator, the market expects the ECB to hike by the fall of 2018. We disagree and think the first hike could come much later. While the economic rebound in Europe is real, it seems to be very dependent on the high degree of easing that has been put in place by the ECB. As Chart I-10 illustrates, the credit impulse - a measure underpinning domestic economic activity - and the euro have moved very closely together. While we do not imply that the credit impulse's rebound has reflected the fall in the euro, their tight co-movement has been driven by a similar factor: easy money. Thus, a removal of that easy money could prompt a reversal of that domestic improvement. Even more crucially, the conditions in the periphery are what really matters to the ECB. At the beginning of the millennium, the ECB was acting as Germany's central bank, keeping rates too low for the periphery, but alleviating Germany's deflationary tendencies. Today, the ECB behaves as the periphery's central bank. Germany seems ready to handle higher interest rates, but the same is not true for most other European countries. To begin with, even within the core, wage dynamics remain tepid. French and Dutch wages continue to slow while Austrian wage growth has collapsed near 0% (Chart I-11A). If the situation is poor in most core countries, it is dismal in the periphery. Wages are still contracting in Greece and Portugal, and growing at a sub 1% pace in Spain and Italy (Chart I-11B). These differentiated wage trends reflect the fact that worker shortages in the periphery are simply inexistent, while in Germany, they are commonplace (Chart I-12). Chart I-11AOnly Germany Is Witnessing##br## Strong Wages... Chart I-11BOnly Germany Is Witnessing ##br##Strong Wages... Chart I-12...Because Germany Has The##br## Tightest Labor Market.... As a result, the dynamics in core inflation remain muted. German core inflation has been extremely stable near 1% for six years now, but is hitting record lows levels of 0.3% in France (Chart I-13A and Chart I-13B). Core inflation also remains near 0% in most peripheral nations. Chart I-13A...Explaining Europe's Bifurcated Core Inflations Chart I-13B...Explaining Europe's Bifurcated Core Inflations When the Fed first increased rates in 2015, U.S. wages were growing at 2%. This is a far cry from current levels in Europe. Moreover, the first U.S. rate hike was a mistake considering the subsequent deceleration in growth and poor performance of risk assets. Thus, the Fed experience is probably not an example for the ECB to emulate. Moreover, rising interest rates represent a risk for debt servicing ratios in many European countries, limiting the ECB's ability to hike if nominal growth does not pick up further. The Netherlands, Belgium, Portugal, and France rank amongst the countries with the highest private-sector debt servicing costs as a percent of income. Meanwhile Italy and Portugal score extremely poorly when this metric is applied to the public sector (Chart I-14). The Italian and Portuguese cases are especially worrisome as rising stress caused by rising rates will further lift government rates. An argument has also been made that for the ECB, what matters is the headline rate of inflation. We would argue that since Draghi became the leader, this inflation measure is less relevant. But nonetheless, let's temporarily entertain this premise. It has also been argued that if European and U.S. statistical agencies treated housing similarly, inflation on both sides of the Atlantic would be the same. As Chart I-15 illustrates, this is no longer true. Chart I-14Debt Service Payments Are ##br## A Problem In Europe Chart I-15European Inflation Is Lower, ##br##No Matter What This line of reasoning also forgets that since 2014, the U.S. has endured a 22% appreciation in the trade-weighted dollar, which could have already curtailed nearly 1% to U.S. GDP growth, a significant amount of monetary tightening. However, the euro has greatly depreciated over this time frame, representing a large monetary easing. Due to these highly divergent monetary backdrops, one can deduce that endogenous inflationary pressures are much greater in the U.S. than in the euro area. All these factors suggest that it will be hard for the ECB to increase rates by the end of 2018. Thus, on a cyclical basis we would fade this recent massive fall in the ECB's months-to-hike metric (Chart I-16). On the U.S. ledger, the labor market is clearly tightening and the U6 unemployment rate is now congruent with levels where wages have gained traction in previous cycles (Chart I-17). This suggests that the market is correct to expect the Fed to hike much more aggressively in the coming years. In fact, while the near future might be filled with political complexity, we continue to expect fiscal stimulus to materialize in the U.S by 2018, suggesting upside risk to the Fed's forecast. Chart I-16Too Soon! Chart I-17The U.S. Labor Market Is Tight Finally, equilibrium real rates in Europe are probably substantially lower than in the U.S. Not only have European interest rates been historically lower than in the U.S., but also, slower population growth alone would justify lower neutral rates. This highlights that the scope for the ECB to hike is limited compared to the Fed. These bifurcated monetary dynamics will continue to support the USD on a 12-18 months basis, and as a corollary, hurt the euro despite its apparent cheapness on a PPP basis. Bottom Line: The months-to-hike in the euro area has fallen to less than 20 months. While Germany could handle higher rates, poor wage and core inflation dynamics in the rest of the euro area suggest it is still much too early to increase rates. Moreover, without a more significant pick-up in growth, many European nations will face dire debt-servicing situations if the ECB hikes rates durably. Meanwhile, the U.S. is moving closer to full employment, a situation warranting higher rates. The euro could fall below parity by mid-2018. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Alpha Sector Strategy Weekly Report, "Caveat Emptor" dated March 24, 2017 available at gss.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy and Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "The French Revolution" dated February 3, 2017 available at fes.bcaresearch.com and gps.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 March weakness has been because of a mix of monetary and fiscal disappointments. The Fed's "unhike" initiated the downtrend as markets were surprised by the dovish tone of the Fed's communications. Now, President Trump and his team are facing difficulties passing the American Health Care Act. Markets are extrapolating this difficulty to the realm of fiscal policy in general. Nevertheless, it is unlikely for the DXY to breach the 98-99 support level this month. The stronger current account number of USD -112.4 billion was supported by high foreign income, suggesting a key warning sign for the USD cyclical bull market is not present. Stronger new home sales monthly growth of 6.1% highlights that domestic economic activity remains robust, meaning the Fed is unlikely to disappoint over the life of the business cycle. Report Links: USD, Oil Divergences Will Continue As Storage Draws - March 17, 2017 Et Tu, Janet? - March 3, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Political risks have been exaggerated in Europe, with the Dutch and Austrian elections confirming that populist successes in Europe are overstated. As such, the French election will likely be market-bullish with a Le Pen defeat. This entails a further normalization of OAT / Bund spreads, and a short-term bullish outlook for the euro, which is likely to settle above 1.10. Corroborating this view, the MACD is currently above 0 and outpacing the signal line, a bullish development. Inflationary pressures are building up in Europe with German PPI at 3.1% annually in February. However, outside Germany, even the core, let alone the periphery, seems to be struggling, with poor wage growth. The ECB will therefore need to stay easy for longer to protect the euro area's weakest members, capping the long-term upside to rates and the euro. Report Links: Et Tu, Janet? - March 3, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 The French Revolution - February 3, 2017 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 The yen has continued to rally, with USD/JPY trading below 111 over the last couple of days. We continue to be bullish on the yen on a tactical basis, as we believe that the global industrial sector will fall short of investors' expectations. This is an environment where the dollar will probably appreciate against EM currencies, but falter against the yen. On a cyclical basis we remain yen-bearish, as U.S. rates should continue to go up, while Japanese rates will continue to be anchored around 0%. The Bank of Japan will continue with this policy, as the depreciation of the yen has given a boost to exports, which are now growing at 11.3% on a yearly basis, as well as to the economy as a whole, which should yield higher inflation expectations over time. Report Links: Et Tu, Janet? - March 3, 2017 JPY: Climbing To The Springboard Before The Dive - February 24, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 The British pound rallied on Tuesday following the unexpected surge in headline inflation in February from 1.8% to 2.3%. This number is significant, because inflation has broken through the BoE's target. The central bank remains cautious, as the MPC pointed out that the rise in inflation is not domestic, but rather a reflection of the fall in the pound. However, we believe that internal inflationary pressures might start to emerge: the U.K. economy is doing much better than expected and the labor market is tight. Recent data highlights this, and opens the possibility that the pound could rally, particularly against the euro: Retail sales growth and retail sales ex fuel growth came in at 3.7% and 4.1% respectively, outperforming expectations. The CBI Distributive Trades Survey monthly growth also beat expectations, coming in at 9%. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 The Pound Falls To The Conquering Dollar - October 14, 2016 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 As mentioned last week, the AUD's strength was a temporary feat. Before declining, the Aussie was initially lifted by high house price growth of 7.7% annually for 4Q2016, really surpassing expectations. The RBA minutes highlighted a need for the current monetary policy to remain very accommodative: labor market conditions remain mixed, household perceptions of personal finances is at average levels, wage growth remains subdued, and inflation is expected to rise only slowly. The outlook for the AUD is therefore likely to remain poor. Corroborating this view is a contracting Westpac Leading Index number of -0.1% that may be foretelling weak data. Report Links: AUD And CAD: Risky Business - March 10, 2017 Et Tu, Janet? - March 3, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Yesterday, the RBNZ kept its policy rate unchanged at 1.75%. Governor Graeme Wheeler once again asserted that the kiwi remains overvalued, although he welcomed the recent depreciation of the trade-weighted kiwi. More depreciation might be in the cards, particularly against the U.S. dollar and the yen. Global FX Vol stands at very low levels, thus any uptick could severely hamper the NZD, a carry currency. Furthermore, the tightening in Chinese monetary conditions will likely weigh on commodity currencies. Nonetheless, the NZD could perform well against the AUD as domestic inflationary pressures in Australia are much weaker than in New Zealand. Additionally, the tightening in Chinese monetary conditions should be more harmful for the AUD, given that iron is more sensitive to economic activity than dairy products. Report Links: Et Tu, Janet? - March 3, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Risks To The Cyclical Dollar View - February 3, 2017 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 The oil-based currency has sustained the recent oil shocks well, helped by the USD's weakness. Indeed, Canadian data has generally been positive: Manufacturing shipments increased 0.6% monthly in January, much above the expected -0.4%; Wholesale sales increased 3.3% in January on a monthly basis; Monthly retail sales picked up to 2.2% and 1.7% when autos are excluded; The 2017 government budget marginally loosened fiscal policy. As the greenback is likely to display further downside, the short-term outlook for USD/CAD is negative. This is corroborated by the negatively trending MACD line. However, Governor Poloz is likely to maintain a dovish tilt relative to the Fed, signifying longer-term CAD weakness. Report Links: AUD And CAD: Risky Business - March 10, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Following the surge in the Euro, EUR/CHF has moved back to 1.07. This has eased some pressure off the SNB, which was active in the foreign exchange market to preserve the floor in this cross. The early returns of this policy seem positive, as data is showing a gradual recovery in Switzerland: The SNB's trimmed mean core inflation measure (TM15) is now in positive territory and continues to rise. Swiss PMI has surged so far this year, and now stands at the highest level since 2011. So far these improvements are not enough to prompt a change in policy by the SNB, as inflation needs to be sustained at a higher level and corroborated by wages. Nevertheless, we will continue to monitor economic developments in Switzerland to assess whether the SNB could remove its floor under EUR/CHF. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 Long-Term FX Valuation Models: Updates And New Coverages - September 30, 2016 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 USD/NOK has been relatively flat this week, as the sharp decline in oil has been offset by a downturn in the U.S. dollar. The outlook for the krone remains poor though, as the economy is weak, and inflation is falling quickly. Recent data illustrates this: After a gradual slowdown, non-financial business credit is now heading into outright contraction. Employment is contracting at a 1% rate, while wages are contracting at a 4% pace. Core inflation has plunged to 1.5% from its peak of 4% around 6 months ago. This poor economic outlook leads us to believe that the dovish bias of the Norges Bank will stay entrenched for the time being, putting downward pressure on the krone. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 The Pound Falls To The Conquering Dollar - October 14, 2016 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Inflationary pressures continue to emerge in Sweden. We believe these pressures are likely to pick up further. USD/SEK has broken down below a key trend line that has underpinned its rally since May 2016, suggesting that as the euro continues to rebound, the SEK will also outperform the USD. However, it remains to be seen if the SEK can outperform the euro: while the SEK tends to be more sensitive to the dollar's weakness than the euro, the Riksbank is likely to want to make sure that the early signs of inflation in Sweden do indeed generate a durable way out of any deflationary tendencies in this economy. This means that the Swedish central bank is likely to try to weigh on any strength in the SEK, especially against the euro. However, as inflation is indeed coming back, the Riksbank will likely be forced to abandon its super-dovish stance later this year. The SEK will ultimately rally further against the euro on a 12-18 months basis. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 One Trade To Rule Them All - November 18, 2016 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights Chart of the WeekCopper Term Structure, Inventories##br## Are Not Reflecting Scarcity Transitory supply disruptions and financial demand have kept copper prices buoyant, but these influences will wane. A surge in inventories (Chart of the Week), coupled with slower Chinese demand growth as reflationary policies wind down, will prevent a sharp rally in copper prices. A stronger USD also will weigh on base metals in general, copper in particular. Energy: Overweight. We continue to expect oil inventories to draw throughout the rest of this year and next and are positioned for a backwardated forward curve in WTI. We are adding to our long Dec/17 vs. short Dec/18 WTI spread, which, as of our Tuesday mark to market, is up 183.33% since it was elected on Mar 13/17, and going long Dec/17 Brent vs. short Dec/18 Brent position basis tonight's close, as a strategic position. We also are adding a tactical position in WTI, buying $50/bbl calls vs. selling $55/bbl calls for July, August and September delivery basis tonight's close. Base Metals: Neutral. We remain neutral base metals longer term. Transitory supply disruptions in copper markets will subside, while reflationary stimulus in China will wane, keeping a lid on prices near term (see below). Precious Metals: Neutral. Gold rallied 3.7% following the Fed's rate hike last week. We expect this to reverse as the Fed ratchets up its hawkish rhetoric. Our long volatility position in gold - i.e., long a June put spread vs. long a June call spread - is down 27.5%, following the post-FOMC meeting rally. Ags/Softs: Underweight. We remain bearish, and are comfortable on the sidelines going into the month-end planting-intentions report from the USDA. Higher output of corn and beans in South America and a well-supported USD keep us bearish. Feature Actions taken by Chinese policymakers to slow the property market, wind down reflationary policies, and resume the pivot to services- and consumer-led growth will be critical to the evolution of copper demand, hence prices. Near term, we expect transitory supply disruptions in key mines in Chile, Peru and Indonesia will be addressed, and ore output will be restored. A stronger USD will present a headwind to copper demand, and will lower local production costs in Chile, Peru, Indonesia and elsewhere. Supply And Demand Shocks In the short-term (i.e. 2-3, months), copper prices should remain supported by the disruptions at Escondida in Chile, Grasberg in Indonesia, and more recently at Peru's biggest mine, Cerro Verde. Additionally, flooding in Peru is disrupting copper mining and transport operations beyond Cerro Verde, forcing the declaration of force majeure. BHP Billiton's third meeting with union officials at its Escondida mine failed to end to the strike. This is the world's largest mine - producing ~ 1.1mm MT/yr, or 5% of world supply. Escondida hasn't produced any copper since the strike began on Feb 9/17. This has reduced Chilean copper output 12% yoy as of February, and reduced Chile's GDP by ~ 1%. Unions this week showed interest in resuming talks with management, however. A settlement between PT Freeport Indonesia (PT-FI) and the Indonesian government re export permitting for Grasberg output has yet to materialize. PT-FI produced ~ 500k MT last year. As of this week, PT-FI restarted producing around 40% of its capacity. Lastly, strike action at the Cerro Verde mine is set to end today by order of the Peruvian government, but union officials said the strike would resume Friday if no agreement is reached with management. Cerro Verde produced ~ 500k MT of copper last year; the mine currently produces 50% of its capacity, after replacement workers were hired by the company. The lost output of these three mines accounts for ~ 10% of the global copper mine output. These developments clearly represent a transitory, albeit unexpected, supply shock with effects that should start to dissipate as these issues are resolved. It is worthwhile noting that copper is trading lower in the wake of this news, suggesting markets either prepared for labor action ahead of time - building precautionary inventories ahead of the labor-contract negotiations now underway - or that demand growth is slowing. We think a combination of both likely explains the price weakness following the transitory supply disruptions noted above. On the demand side, any optimism about rising copper prices due to an expected $1 trillion fiscal package in the U.S. is misplaced. Indeed, increased U.S. infrastructure spending - a largely unknown demand-side factor in terms of its details and dimensions - does not figure prominently in our assessment of future copper and based metals prices. The U.S contribution to global copper demand, and to base metals consumption in general, remains limited and has been decreasing in the last decades. U.S. copper demand now represents ~ 7.5% of world copper demand. Therefore, the U.S. market has a relatively small influence on copper prices compared to China, which accounts for close to 50% of global demand (Chart 2A and Chart 2B). Chart 2AU.S. Copper Consumption Pales Relatively To China Chart 2B We believe recent run-up in copper prices mainly was due to financial demand rather than physical demand (Chart 3). This elevated demand from financial investors could elevate price volatility, as any new fundamental information that provokes a sudden change in the copper outlook - e.g., faster restart to once-sidelined production, say, at Glencore's Katanga Mining facilities in the DRC, which are scheduled to be back on line later this year and next - could lead to an exodus of investors out of their long positions. Copper ETF holdings and copper open interest have been elevated in past weeks, and can have a significant effect on the evolution of copper prices (Chart 4).1 Prices have started to trend lower, a development that bears watching, given the still-high speculative holdings of the red metal. Chart 3Speculators Are Exiting Copper, ##br##Even As Supply Disruptions Mount Chart 4China PMI Vs. Copper Net Speculative Positions: ##br##Spec Positioning Matters For The Red Metal Global Copper Fundamentals Keep Us Neutral Looking at the next 6 to 12 months, we see no clear evidence to be bullish copper given supply-demand fundamentals. On the supply side, Australia's Department of Industry, Innovation and Science (DIIS) estimates mine output will be up 3.1% this year to 21mm MT - roughly in line with our estimates - and 4.1% next year to 21.8mm MT. Refined output hit a record high of almost 23.6mm MT last year, and is expected to increase 2.5% next year to 24mm MT. By 2018, the DIIS expects refined output to be up 4%, at 25mm MT. Large production gains were reported by the International Copper Study Group (ICSG) for Peru, where mine output was up 38% at 650k MT last year, offsetting lower mine production in Chile, where output was down 3.8% to 220k MT. Global production estimates by the DIIS for 2016 were in line with ICSG estimates for both mine production and world refined production. The ICSG estimates were released earlier this week. Global demand was up 3% last year at 23.4mm MT, and is expected to increase 2% this year to 24mm MT and 3% next year to 24.6mm MT, based on DIIS's estimates. These estimates also are in line with the ICSG's assessment of global sage. The ICSG estimated global demand last year was up ~ 2%. As is apparent, global supply and demand for copper have been, and will remain, relatively balanced this year and next (Chart 5).2 This will be supported by countervailing fundamentals: Global economic activity is picking up, especially in the manufacturing sectors of major economies, which will be supportive for copper prices (Chart 6); and, running counter to that, A strong USD, coupled with inventories at close to 3-year-high levels, will keep copper prices from escalating dramatically.3 Chart 5Global Copper Market Is Balanced Chart 6Global Growth Synchronization Is Underway China's Reflationary Policies Will Wind Down While reflationary policies launched over the past couple of years will continue to stimulate the Chinese economy in 2017, the fiscal and monetary impulses from them are waning. China's manufacturing sector, fixed-asset investment and the property sector are expected to stay strong during the first half of the year, which will support copper demand (Chart 7). However, this stimulus is winding down, and, following the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party in the autumn, we expect it to decline at a faster pace: These lagged effects of the wind-down of fiscal and monetary stimulus will be apparent - particularly in the property markets. Policymakers likely will reduce and re-direct policy stimulus to support consumer- and services-led growth, and continue to invest in the country's electricity grid, which accounts for about a third of China's copper demand. Net, demand likely will grow, but at a slower pace. Global copper inventories are now at an elevated level, which suggests there is no alarming scarcity in the market. This is corroborated by the contango observed in the copper futures market (Chart of the Week). An important takeaway from last week's People's Congress is that the main objective of Premier Li's work plan is to maintain economic and social stability. This primary objective is now more important than the Communist's Party's growth objective, and can be seen in the lower GDP growth target approved by policymakers (6.5%) going forward. The Chinese fiscal impulse already has started to roll over - government expenditures are now growing at a rate of close to 7.5% versus a peak of 29% in Nov/15 (Chart 8). This poses a risk to the downside for base metals prices, given that much of China's base-metals demand is dependent on government expenditures. Chart 7Fixed Asset Investments Are Resilient Chart 8Expansionary Chinese Fiscal Policy Is Slowing Down Chart 9China Might Have Reached A Sustainable Growth Path That said, recent data from China showing resilient industrial activity and fixed-asset investments despite the roll-over in government expenditures gives hope the economy reached a sustainable growth path and that it will stay buoyant throughout the year (Chart 9). China's Red-Hot Property Market Will Cool China's housing sector has, since the economy's liberalization in the late 1990s, grown into one of the most important drivers of its GDP. Most of the 2002 - 2010 increase in base metal prices - nearly 85% - can be explained by the spectacular growth in the Chinese housing sector.4 Building construction accounts for close to 45% of total copper consumption in China (Chart 10). Within that, residential construction makes up 70% of China's real estate investment, according to Australia's DIIS.5 Globally, China accounts for a third of the copper used in construction, according to the CME Group.6 This equates to ~ 10% of global copper usage. Chart 10Building Construction Is Crucial For Copper Demand In 2016, the Chinese real estate sector experienced extremely high growth, which was mainly fueled by easy access to credit, interest-rate cuts, easing of mortgage rules and an income effect from reflationary policies. This tendency reversed in late 2016 - early 2017, as can be seen in Chart 11. Looking forward, the evolution of the housing market will rely heavily on the policy path taken by the Chinese government. In the second half of 2016, the high level of speculative demand apparent in the property market red-flagged Chinese authorities that a price bubble was developing, producing an inflated debt load that posed a risk to future economic growth. President Xi repeatedly affirmed that China's priority going forward will be to keep the economy stable. This implies keeping the property market stable by nudging investment behavior and expectations to control the supply-side of the market. This is reflected in President Xi statement: "houses are for living in, not for speculating" during the recent Peoples Congress.7 Chinese authorities will maintain loan restrictions and stricter selling conditions implemented late last year, for first- and second-tier cities, where prices increased dramatically. First-tier newly constructed residential building prices were up on average by 18% year-on-year in February 2017, and the National Bureau of Statistics of China's sales price index of residential buildings in 70 large and medium-sized cities was up 11.3% in 2016. For other cities - where home inventories are still elevated and prices are relatively stable - the government could keep its facilitating policies in place, to encourage consumption and to draw down inventories of unsold homes. These developments will introduce downside risk to copper prices, given the importance of Chinese residential construction. Still, the Chinese government cannot allow real estate prices to drop suddenly, or even to slow too much, given that housing remains the main savings vehicle - directly or indirectly - for households. According to Xi and Jin (2015), Chinese citizens save around 70-80% of their wealth via the property market. It is true that financial innovation and the opening of Chinese financial markets should help households save using alternative strategies. However, changing households' savings behavior is not an instantaneous process. Moreover, we believe reflationary policies in other sectors of the economy will remain accommodative during the first half of the year, as headline and core inflation are still at relatively low levels (Chart 12). And, as mentioned previously, we expect continued investment in China's power grid, which will support copper prices this year and next. As the consumer economy grows, we would expect demand for electricity to continue to grow. Chart 11China's Property Market Peaked In 2016 Chart 12Inflation Close To Six-Year Lows Bottom Line: Combining these opposing effects, Chinese demand should remain high enough to maintain copper prices at a relatively stable level in 2017. However, following the 19th Communist Party later this year, we expect reflationary stimulus to wind down and for fiscal and monetary policy to be directed to supporting consumer- and services-led growth, which is less commodity intensive than heavy industrial and investment-led growth. We strongly believe the Communist Government will strengthen its focus on stronger enforcement of environmental regulations, which will introduce new supply-demand dynamics to the copper market. We will be exploring the "greening" of China in subsequent research, and its implications for base metals demand. Hugo Bélanger, Research Assistant Commodity & Energy Strategy hugob@bcaresearch.com Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com 1 We found that year-on-year variations in copper prices and in speculative long open interest exhibit a feedback loop - there is two-way Granger causality between them (i.e., they are endogenously related and each of their lagged values explain variation in the other's current price). The causality is stronger from copper prices to speculative long open interest; however, it also is significant the other way around. This means that in period of high speculative interest in copper - similar to what we experienced following the U.S. presidential election in late 2016 - the open interest variable is actually driving copper prices in the short term. We have also been able to explain copper prices by modeling year-on-year percentage change in the broad U.S trade-weighted index (TWI), Chinese PMI and in speculative long open interest. We find a 1% increase in the yoy speculative long open interest leads to a 0.19% increase in yoy copper prices. The adjusted R2 of the regression is 0.84. 2 The ICSG estimated there was a 50k MT deficit last year, trivial in a 23.4mm MT market. 3 We estimated the long-term relationship between copper prices, china PMI, world copper consumption and the U.S. TWI using a cointegrating regression. Interestingly, we found that, in equilibrium, a 1% increase in the China PMI variable translates to a 1.17% increase in copper prices. This relation can obviously be thrown out of equilibrium following an exogenous shock to the fundamentals of any of the variables in the model. The adjusted R2 of the regression is 0.71. 4 Please see "The Evolution of The Chinese Housing Market and Its Impact on Base Metal Prices," published by the Bank of Canada, March, 2016. It is available at http://www.bankofcanada.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/sdp2016-7.pdf. Using an approach that accounts for the uncertainty around the official data, the lack of consistency in the data and the high level of seasonality and volatility in the data, the authors concluded that the Chinese GDP would have been around 9% lower at the end of 2010 in a scenario in which the housing market did not grow after 2002. Following this, they estimated two vector-error-correction models (VECM), one with the actual level of global activity, and one where the Chinese activity is 9% lower. 5 Please see "China Resources Quarterly" published by Australia's DIIA. It is available at https://industry.gov.au/Office-of-the-Chief Economist/Publications/Documents/crq/China-Resources-Quarterly-Southern-autumn-Northern-spring-2016.pdf 6 Please see "Copper: Supply and Demand Dynamics," published by the CME Group January 27, 2016. 7 Please see "Xi says China must 'unswervingly' crackdown on financial irregularities" published by Reuters. It is available at http://ca.reuters.com/article/businessNews/idCAKBN1671A0 Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed In 2017 Summary of Trades Closed in 2016
Highlights Please note that today we are publishing an abbreviated Weekly Bulletin as tomorrow we will publish Great Debate: Does China Have Too Much Debt Or Too Much Savings? The latter report will elaborate on long-standing view differences on China within BCA. I will be debating my colleagues Peter Berezin and Yan Wang on the issues surrounding China's savings and debt as well as the growth outlook. Arthur Budaghyan Feature Singapore: MAS Will Cap Interest Rates Higher U.S. interest rates will temporarily place upward pressure on Singaporean local interest rates (Chart I-1). However, Singapore is not in position to tolerate higher borrowing costs due to lingering credit excesses and deflationary pressures that currently prevail in its economy. The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) will therefore respond by injecting liquidity to keep interbank rates low. The MAS operates monetary policy by guiding the exchange rate - and by default - often allowing interest rates to fluctuate freely. Yet higher interest rates are not an optimal policy option at the moment. If and as U.S. interest rates and the U.S. dollar rise, the MAS will intervene to cap local rates even if it entails a weaker Singapore dollar. While there is a recovery going on in non-oil export volumes and narrow money (M1) (Chart I-2), many other cyclical indicators are still negative. Chart I-1Rising Libor Rates Will Exert ##br##Upward Pressure On Singaporean Rates Chart I-2Singapore: Non-Oil ##br##Exports Are Picking Up The exchange rate-targeting system was introduced in the early 1980s when exports stood at 150% of GDP. Today, exports relative to GDP have fallen substantially to 115% of GDP (Chart I-3). On the other hand, total private non-financial sector debt levels have risen to 180% of GDP (Chart I-3). Therefore, the Singaporean economy has become much more leveraged to interest rates and somewhat less exposed to global trade. Improving exports will not be sufficient to offset the negative impact of rising borrowing costs. Moreover, our proxy for interest payments on domestic debt has also surged and now stands at close to 10% of GDP (Chart I-4). What is precarious is that the rise in interest payments relative to income has occurred in a period when rates are close to record-low levels. Chart I-3Singapore: Debt Is ##br##Overshadowing Exports Chart I-4Singapore: Interest Payments Are ##br##Large Despite Record Low Rates If borrowing costs rise, it will likely cause major debt deflation concerns. The MAS will not allow this to happen. Employment is stagnating, while employment in the construction and manufacturing sectors is contracting (Chart I-5). Weak employment has weighed on the consumer sector. Retail and department store sales are still shrinking (Chart I-6). Chart I-5Singapore: Employment Is Weak Chart I-6Retail Spending Is Contracting Importantly, the real estate sector, one of the major pillars of the Singapore economy, is depressed. Property prices across the board are deflating, while vacancy rates are rising (Chart I-7). Bank loan growth to property developers has also stalled (Chart I-7, bottom panel). Weak economic growth should be reflected on banks' balance sheets. Surprisingly, non-performing loans (NPLs) among Singapore's three largest banks still stands at a low 1.4%. If and as loan losses begin to rise, commercial banks will rush to increase provisioning for these losses, which will hurt their profits and keep credit growth subdued. Furthermore, Singaporean banks are also very exposed to Malaysia. Singapore's largest banks have extended loans to Malaysia of approximately 67 billion Singapore dollars - or 16% of GDP. Aggregate external loans stand at 137% of GDP (Chart I-8). Economic fundamentals are currently very weak and will continue to deteriorate in Malaysia. This warrants more assets write-offs among Singapore banks and less appetite to expand their balance sheet. Chart I-7Property Sector In Singapore Chart I-8Singaporean External Loans Are Enormous On the whole, if Singaporean interest rates begin to rise due to either depreciation of the Singapore dollar or higher U.S. interest rates, the central bank will intervene to bring local rates down. It would not be the first time the MAS has intervened to bring down interest rates. In 2015 when EM risks escalated, local interbank rates spiked. The MAS promptly injected liquidity in the banking system by buying back its outstanding MAS bills, and by also purchasing government securities, supplying liquidity to the banking system. This essentially placed a cap on interbank rates. Chart I-9Go Long Singapore Real ##br##Estate Stocks Vs. Hong Kong What is noteworthy is that the Singapore dollar weakened as a result of the intervention, although the MAS's official monetary policy stance was not stimulative - i.e. the monetary authorities did not target to weaken the trade-weighted SGD. In that instance, the MAS decided to focus on interest rates/funding market stability and ignore the exchange rate's response. This highlights that despite the MAS's official monetary policy framework of guiding the exchange rate, it will not allow interest rates to rise. Unlike Singapore, Hong Kong does not operate an independent monetary policy and as such will be forced to import higher U.S. rates. As a bet on higher interest rates in Hong Kong and the U.S. relative to Singapore, investors should consider going long Singaporean real estate stocks and shorting Hong Kong real estate stocks. Chart I-9 shows that Singaporean real estate stocks outperform Hong Kong's when the latter's interest rates/bond yields rise relative to Singapore and when Singapore's M1 growth accelerate relative to Hong Kong. As discussed above, the MAS has the capacity and will to inject liquidity to lower interest rates. Hong Kong, however, does not have this privilege due to the currency's peg to the greenback. Besides, Singapore's property correction is now much more advanced than Hong Kong's. In fact, Hong Kong property prices are still rising, i.e., the real estate market adjustment in Hong Kong has not yet started. While both city states are vulnerable to a potential slowdown in Chinese inflows, Hong Kong real estate prices will ultimately fall from a higher starting point. Bottom Line: A rising U.S. dollar and U.S. interest rates may exert upward pressure on Singaporean local interest rates. However, the Singaporean central bank will respond by injecting liquidity, which will cap rates relative to the U.S. and Hong Kong. This opens a tactical trade opportunity (for the next 3 months): Long Singapore real estate stocks / short Hong Kong real estate shares. Asian equity portfolio investors should have a neutral allocation to Singapore stocks within the EM/emerging Asian benchmarks. Ayman Kawtharani, Research Analyst ayman@bcaresearch.com Colombia: Not Out Of The Woods Yet Even though global economic growth has been improving and commodities prices have rallied, Colombia's growth is still bound to disappoint. We remain structurally bullish on the nation's longer-term prospects. That said, there will still be more downside this year. Credit growth will continue to decelerate, despite the beginning of a rate cut cycle (Chart II-1). Interest rates are still high, both in nominal and real terms (Chart II-2). This along with poor consumer and business confidence (Chart II-3) will depress credit demand and spending. Chart II-1Colombia: Negative Credit Impulse Chart II-2Borrowing Costs Are Still High Chart II-3Consumer & Business Confidence Are Weak Furthermore, the central bank's liquidity injections into the banking system have dropped considerably (Chart II-4). In the past few years, abundant liquidity provisioning by the central bank had allowed commercial banks to sustain robust credit growth. Hence, a withdrawal of banking system liquidity will cap loan origination. The current account deficit remains wide at $12.5 billion, or 5.2% of GDP. Financing such a wide deficit will prove challenging. Besides, BCA's Emerging Markets Strategy team believes oil prices are at risk of additional declines. Hence, we are bearish on the Colombian peso. Fiscal policy is set to tighten as the budget deficit has ballooned due to strong spending and shrinking revenues (Chart II-5). Recently introduced tax reforms represent a step forward with respect to the country's structural reforms agenda, as it will simplify the tax code and reduce corporate tax rates. Chart II-4Withdrawal Of Liquidity Will Cap Credit Growth Chart II-5Government Fiscal Balance Is Deteriorating However, redistributing the tax burden onto individuals, mainly by increasing the VAT from 16% to 19%, will reinforce the slump in household spending. In terms of high frequency data, there are little signs of economic revival (Chart II-6). Retail sales volume remain tame. The latest bounce in this series most likely reflects consumers front running the impending VAT hike. Furthermore, oil production is likely to decline further, and non-oil exports are still contracting. In terms of financial markets, we recommend the following: We are closing our bet on yield curve flattening - receive 10-year/pay 1-year swap rates. Initiated on September 16, 2015, this trade has produced a 190 basis-point gain (Chart II-7). At the moment, the risk-reward for this position is no longer attractive. Chart II-6Cyclical Economic Activity Remains Subdued Chart II-7Take Profits On The Yield Curve Trade We remain neutral on Colombian equities and sovereign credit relative to their respective EM universes. Even though our long Colombian bank stocks/short Peruvian banks bet has been deep in the negative, we are reluctant to cut it. The basis is that Colombia's central bank may opt to cut rates further, even if the peso depreciates anew. In contrast, the Peruvian central bank is more likely to hike rates if its currency comes under downward pressure. Bank share prices will likely react to marginal shifts in relative interest rates between the two countries. Andrija Vesic, Research Assistant andrijav@bcaresearch.com Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights Trump's agenda has not derailed ... at least not yet; Europe remains a red herring ... as the Dutch showed; Turkey cannot restart Europe's immigration crisis; Supply-side reforms are still likely in France; The ECB will remain dovish for longer than expected; EUR/USD may rise in the short term, but it will relapse. Feature In this Weekly Report, we focus on the key questions regarding continental European politics. To begin, however, we will briefly address the U.S., since investors are starting to worry about whether President Donald Trump can get his legislative agenda through, given the recent testimony of FBI Director James Comey on the alleged interference of Russia in the U.S. election. There are three points to focus on in the U.S.: Chart 1Trump Not Dead To Republicans Yet The GOP base supports Trump: President Trump was always going to be a controversial president. Anyone who is surprised by it today clearly was not paying attention last year. In the long term, Trump's extraordinarily low popularity will be an albatross around his neck, draining his political capital. However, until the mid-term elections, his popularity with Republican voters is all that matters, and it remains strong (Chart 1). House Republicans have to worry that they could face pro-Trump challengers in primary elections in the summer ahead of the 2018 midterms. As such, as long as the Republican voters support Trump, he still has political capital. Republicans in Congress want tax reform: Budget-busting tax reform is not only a Trump policy, it is a Republican policy. We have already received plenty of signals from fiscal hawks in Congress that they intend to use "dynamic scoring," macroeconomic modeling that takes into account revenue-positive effects of tax cuts when assessing the impact on the budget, in order to justify cuts as revenue-neutral. Republicans are also looking at the repatriation of corporate earnings and a border adjustment tax to raise revenue. Obamacare delay may not mean much: We already pointed out before that the GOP intention to focus on Obamacare first, tax reform second, would get them in trouble.1 This is now playing out. Opposing the Obamacare replacement may make sense to small-government Tea Party members. Repeal, alone, is why they are in Congress in the first place, given the 2010 wave election. But opposing tax cuts - once justified by dynamic scoring as revenue neutral - will be much more difficult. The Tea Party is "small government" first, fiscal restraint second. In other words, if tax reform cuts taxes and reduces revenue available to Washington D.C., "temporary" budget deficits will be easy to swallow. This is not to say that the recent events have not hurt the chances of whopping tax cuts and infrastructure spending. In particular, we think that Congressional GOP members may take over the agenda if Trump loses any more political capital. And this will mean less budget-busting than Trump would have done. Also, tax reform was always going to be difficult as special interests and lobbyists were bound to get involved. Chart 2French Spreads Are Overstated In addition, the probability of an eventual Trump impeachment - were Republicans to lose the House, or grassroots Republicans to abandon him in droves - has risen. Investors can no longer ignore this issue, even though it was initially a liberal fantasy. However, all of these risks to the Trump agenda will likely spur the GOP in the House to focus on passing tax reform while they still have a majority in Congress and control of the White House. We still expect tax reform to be done this year - within the fiscal year 2018 reconciliation bill - as time now may truly be running out for Republicans. Europe, meanwhile remains a focal point in client meetings. Our view that Europe will be a geopolitical red herring in 2017 - and thus an investment opportunity - remains controversial. We will address Brexit and the new Scottish independence referendum in our report next week, to coincide with London's formal invocation of Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty to initiate the exit proceedings. Popular support for independence in Scotland has been one of our measures of "Bregret" since last summer and it has just sprung back to life, which adds a new source of risk for investors. On the continent, investors are particularly concerned that the upcoming French election will follow the populist script from the U.K. and the U.S. last year. This worry has pushed French bond yield spreads over German bonds to the highest level since 2011, bringing French bonds into the same trend as peripheral bonds (Chart 2). Since the outbreak of the euro area's sovereign debt crisis, a tight correlation between French and Italian/Spanish bonds has signified systemic political risk. We disagree that political events represent a systemic risk to the euro area in 2017. This week, we address five critical questions inspired by challenges to our view presented by our clients in meetings and conference calls. Question 1: Is The Dutch Election Result Important? Few clients have asked for a post-mortem on the March 15 Dutch election, but many asked about the vote beforehand. It has come and gone with little fanfare. Financial media have brushed it aside as it does not fit the neat script of rising Euroskepticism on the continent. To recap, the Euroskeptic and populist Party for Freedom (PVV), led by Geert Wilders, gained five seats in the election (13% of the votes cast), bringing its total support to 20 in the 150-seat parliament. Despite the gains, however, the election was an unmitigated disaster for Wilders, as the PVV was polling strong for most of the campaign and was expected to win between 30 and 35 seats (Chart 3). In terms of its share of total votes, the PVV's performance in 2017 trails its performance in the 2010 general election and the 2009 and 2014 European Parliament elections. Not only did the PVV underperform the past year's polls, but also they only managed to eke out their fourth-best performance ever. Chart 3Dutch Euroskeptics Were Always Overrated Chart 4Austria Leans Euroskeptic... Chart 5...Yet Chose A Europhile President It is a mistake to ignore these results. They teach us three valuable lessons: Trend reversal: In April of last year we warned clients that the upcoming Brexit referendum and U.S. elections had a much higher chance of populist outcomes than the European elections in 2017.2 The basis for our controversial claim was the notion that European social-welfare states dampened the pain of globalization for the middle class. We now have two elections that confirm our view that European voters are just not as angry as their Anglo-Saxon counterparts. Aside from the Dutch, there is also the lesson from the similarly ignored Austrian presidential election last December. Despite Austria's baseline as a relatively Euroskeptic country (Chart 4), the right wing, populist candidate lost his solid lead in the last few weeks ahead of the election (Chart 5). Clients should not ignore Austria and the Netherlands, since both countries have a long tradition of Euroskepticism and their populist, anti-immigration parties are well established and highly competitive. If Euroskeptics cannot win here, where can they win? It's immigration, stupid: Investors should make a distinction between anti-immigrant and anti-euro sentiment. In both the Netherlands and Austria, it was anti-immigrant sentiment that propelled populist parties in the polls. However, as the migration crisis abated, their polling collapsed. This was clearest in the Netherlands, where asylum applications to the EU - advanced by six months - tracked closely with PVV polling (Chart 6). The distinction is highly relevant as it means that even if the populists had taken power, they would not necessarily have had enough political support to take their country out of the euro area. This is particularly the case in the Netherlands, where support for the euro remains high (Chart 7). Brexit is not helping: Much ink has been spilt in the media suggesting that Brexit would encourage voters in Europe to hold similar popular referendums. We disagreed with this assertion and now the evidence from Austria and the Netherlands supports our view.3 Chart 3 shows that the decline in the PVV's support sped up around the time of the U.K. referendum, suggesting that Brexit may even have discouraged voters from voting for the populist option. Geert Wilders was temporarily buoyed by the kangaroo court accusing him of racial insensitivity. But the sympathy vote quickly dissipated and PVV polling reverted back to the post-Brexit trend.4 Chart 6Dutch Populists Linked To Immigration Chart 7The Dutch Approve Of The Euro Bottom Line: The election in the Netherlands provides an important data point that should not be ignored. The populist PVV not only failed to meet polling expectations, it failed to repeat its result from seven years ago. Investors are ignoring how important the abating of the migration crisis truly was for European politics. Question 2: Can Turkey Restart The Immigration Crisis? The end of the migration crisis in Europe clearly played a major role in dampening support for the Dutch and Austrian populists. We expected this in September 2015, when we argued with high conviction that the migration crisis would prove ephemeral (Chart 8).5 How did we make the right call at the height of the influx of asylum seekers into Europe? Three insights guided us: Civil wars end: No civil war can last forever. Eventually, battle lines ossify into de facto borders between warring factions and hostilities draw to a close. The Syrian Civil War is still going, but its most vicious phase has ended. Civilians have either moved into safer zones or, tragically, have perished. Enforcement increases: The influx of 220,000 asylum seekers per month - the height of the crisis in October 2015 - was unsustainable. Eventually, enforcement tightens. This happened to the "Balkan route" as countries reinforced their borders and Hungary built a fence. Liberal attitudes wane: European attitudes towards migrants soured quickly as the crisis escalated. After the highly publicized welcoming message from Chancellor Angela Merkel, the tone shifted to one of quiet hostility. This significantly changed the cost-benefit calculus of the economic migrants most likely to be deported. Given that roughly half of asylum seekers in 2015 were not fleeing war, but merely looking for a better life, the change in attitude in Europe was important. Many of our clients are today worried that Turkey might deliberately restart the migration crisis as a way to punish Europe amidst ongoing Euro-Turkish disputes. The rhetoric from Ankara supports this concern: Turkish officials have threatened economic sanctions against the Netherlands, and accused Germany of supporting the July 2016 coup and the U.S. of funding the Islamic State. We call Turkey's bluff on this threat. First, the number of migrants crossing the Mediterranean collapsed well before the EU-Turkey deal was negotiated in March 2016. This puts into doubt Turkey's role in dampening the flow in the first place. Second, unlike in 2015, Turkey is now officially involved in the Syrian conflict, having invaded the country last August. By participating directly, Turkey can no longer tolerate the unfettered flow of migrants through its territory to Europe, a luxury in 2015 when it was a "passive" bystander. Today, migrants flowing through its territory are even more likely to be parties active in the Syrian war looking to strike Turkish targets for strategic reasons. Third, the Turkish economy is reliant on Europe for both FDI and export demand (Chart 9). If Turkey were to lash out by encouraging migration into Europe, the subsequent economic sanctions would devastate the Turkish economy and collapse its currency. Investment and trade with Europe make up the vast majority of its current account deficit. Chart 8Migration Crisis Well Past Its Peak Chart 9Turkey Depends On Europe Bottom Line: Turkey can make Europe's life difficult. However, the migration crisis did not end because of Turkey and therefore will not restart because of Turkey. Furthermore, Ankara has its own security to consider and will continue to keep its border with Syria closed and closely monitored. Question 3: Is A Supply-Side Revolution Still Possible In France? In February, we posited that a supply-side revolution was afoot in France.6 Since then, the Thatcherite candidate for presidency - François Fillon - has suffered an ignominious fall in the polls due to ongoing corruption scandals. This somewhat dampens our enthusiasm, given that Fillon's program was by far the most aggressive in proposing cuts to the size of the French state. Still, the new leading candidate Emmanuel Macron (Chart 10) is quite possibly the most right-wing of left-wing candidates that France has ever fielded. He quit the Socialist Party and has received endorsements across the ideological spectrum. In addition, his governing program is largely pro-market: Public expenditure will go down to 50% of GDP (from 57%) by 2022; Corporate taxes will be reduced from 33.3% to 25%; Regulation will be simplified for small and medium-sized businesses; Productive investment will be exempt from the wealth tax, which will focus solely on real estate; Exceptions to the 35-hour work week will be allowed at the company level. More important than Macron's campaign promises is the evidence that the French "median voter" is shifting. Polls suggest that a "silent majority" in France favors structural reform (Chart 11). Chart 10Macron's Huge Lead Over Le Pen Chart 11France: 'Silent Majority' Wants Reform As such, France may be ready for reforms and Emmanuel Macron could be France's Gerhard Schröder, a centrist reformer capable of pulling the left-wing towards pro-market reforms. What about the fears that Macron will not be able to command a majority in France's National Assembly? Macron's party En Marche! was founded less than a year ago and is unlikely to be competitive in the upcoming June legislative elections (a two-round election to be held on June 10 and 17). This will force Macron, should he win, to "cohabitate" with a prime minister from another party. Most likely, this will mean a prime minister from the center-right Republicans. For investors, this could be very positive. The French constitution gives the National Assembly most power over domestic affairs when the president cannot command a majority. This means that a center-right prime minister who receives his mandate from Macron will be in charge of domestic reforms. We see no reason why Macron would not be able to work with such a prime minister. In fact, the worse En Marche! does in the parliamentary election, the more likely that Macron will be perceived as non-threatening to the center-right Republicans. What if no party wins a majority in parliament? We think that Macron would excel in this situation. He would be able to get support from the right-wing of the Socialist Party and the centrist elements of the Republicans. And if the National Assembly fails to support his program, he could always call for a new parliamentary election in a year's time, given his presidential powers. In other words, investors may be unduly pessimistic about the prospect of reforms under Macron. Several prominent center-right figures - including Alain Juppé and Manuel Valls - have already distanced themselves from Fillon, perhaps opening up the possibility of a premiership under Macron. In addition, Macron himself has refused to accuse Fillon of corruption, a smart strategy given that he will need his endorsement in the second round against Le Pen and that he will likely need to cohabitate with the Republicans to govern. What of Marine Le Pen's probability of winning? At this point, polling does not look good for her. Not only is she trailing Macron by 22% in the second round, but she is even trailing Fillon by 11%. Nonetheless, we suspect that she will close the gap over the next month. Election momentum works in cycles and she should be able to bounce back, giving investors another scare ahead of the election. Bottom Line: Concerns over Emmanuel Macron's ability to pursue structural reforms are overstated. Yes, he is less ideal of a candidate than Fillon from the market's perspective, but no, we do not doubt that he would be able to cohabitate with a center-right parliament. That said, we cannot pass definitive judgment until the parliamentary election takes place in June. Question 4: Will Germans Want A Hawk In 2019? An Austrian member of the ECB Governing Council, Ewald Nowotny, spooked the markets by suggesting that Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann would be one of the two most likely candidates to replace Mario Draghi in 2019. Weidmann is a noted hawk who has opposed the ECB's easy monetary policy and even testified against Angela Merkel's government during the court case assessing the constitutionality of the ECB's Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT). The prospect of a Weidmann ECB presidency fits the narrative that Germans will want a hawk to replace Mario Draghi in 2019. The idea is that by 2019, inflation will be close to the ECB's target of 2% and Germans would be itching to beat it down. We have heard this view from colleagues and clients for some time. And we have disagreed with it for quite some time as well! As we pointed out in 2012, it was a German political decision to shift the ECB towards a dovish outlook.7 This is not to say that the ECB takes its orders from Berlin. Rather, it is that Chancellor Merkel had plenty of opportunities via personnel decisions to ensure that the ECB followed a more monetarist and hawkish line. For example, she could have signed off on former Bundesbank President Axel Weber, who was the leading candidate for the job in 2011. She refused when Weber signaled his opposition to the ECB's initial bond-buying program (the Securities Market Program). Mario Draghi was quickly tapped as the alternative candidate suitable to Berlin. Later in 2011, ECB Executive Board member Jürgen Stark resigned over opposition to the same ECB bond-buying program. Since Stark was the German member of the Executive Board, convention held that Berlin would propose his replacement. In other words, while Merkel had her pick of Germany's foremost economists, she picked her finance minister's deputy, Jörg Asmussen. Neither Draghi nor Asmussen have a strand of monetarist or inflation-hawk DNA between the two of them. ECB policy has not been dovish by accident but by design. While it is true that the ECB will inhabit a different macro environment in 2017-19 from the crisis of 2011-12, nevertheless we suspect that dovishness will continue beyond 2019 for two key reasons: German domestic politics: Germans are not becoming Euroskeptic, they are turning rabidly Europhile! If the polls are to be believed, Germans are now the most pro-euro people in Europe (Chart 12). Martin Schulz, chancellor-candidate of the center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD), is campaigning on an aggressive anti-populist, pro-EU platform. He has accused Merkel of being too reticent and of providing Europe's Euroskeptics with a tailwind due to her policies. The SPD's recent climb in the polls is stunning (Chart 13). But even if Schulz fails to win, Merkel will have to take into account his brand of politics if she intends to reconstitute the Grand Coalition with the SPD. It is highly unlikely that Schulz will sign off on a hawkish ECB president (or on the return of Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble for that matter). Italian risks: While we have been sanguine about this year's political risks, the Italian election slated for February 2018 is set for genuine fireworks. Euroskeptic parties have now taken a lead in the polls (Chart 14). While the election is still too close to call, and a lot of things can happen between now and then, we expect it to be a risk catalyst in Europe. The problem with Italy is that the election is unlikely to provide any clarity. A hung parliament will likely produce a weak, potentially minority government. Given Italy's potential GDP growth rate of about 0%, this means that a weak government will at some point have to deal with a recession, heightening political risks beyond 2018. Chart 12Germans Love The Euro Chart 13Pro-Europe Sentiment Drives SPD Revival Chart 14Italian Elections: The Big Risk Bottom Line: Italy will hang over Europe like a Sword of Damocles for quite some time. The ECB will therefore be forced to remain dovish a lot longer than investors think. We see no evidence that Berlin will seek to reverse this policy. In fact, given the political paradigm shift in Germany itself, we suspect that Berlin will turn more Europhile over the next several years. Question 5: What Is The Big Picture For Europe? What explains the dogged persistence of support for European integration on the continent? Even in the case of Italy - where Euroskepticism is clearly on the rise - we would bet on voters supporting euro area and EU membership in a referendum (albeit with a low conviction). Why? In 2011, at the height of the euro area sovereign debt crisis, we elucidated our view on the long-term trajectory of European integration.8 We highly recommend that our clients re-read this analysis, as it continues to inform our net assessment of Europe. Our assertion in 2011 was that Europe is integrating out of weakness, not out of misplaced hope of strength. Much of the analysis in the financial community and media does not understand this point. It therefore rejects the wisdom of integration on the basis that Europhile policymakers are blinded by ambition. In our view, they are driven by necessity. As Chart 15 suggests, the average "hard power" of the five largest economies in the euro area (the EMU-5) is much lower than the average "hard power" of the BRIC states.9 European integration is therefore an attempt to asymptotically approach the aggregate, rather than the average, "hard power" of the EMU-5. Europe will never achieve the aggregate figure, as that will require a level of integration that is impossible. But the effort lies beneath European policymakers' goal of an "ever closer union." The truth of the matter is that European nation-states - as individual sovereign states - simply do not matter anymore. Their economic weight, demographics, and military strength relative to other nations are a far cry from when Europe dominated the world (Chart 16). Chart 15European Integration Is About Geopolitics... Chart 16...And Global Relevance If European countries seek to shape their geopolitical and macroeconomic environment, they have to act in unison. This is not a normative statement, it is an empirical fact. This means that everything from Russian assertiveness and immigration crises to energy policy and trade negotiations have to be handled as a bloc. But is this not an elitist view? To what extent do European voters think in such grand geopolitical terms? According to polling, they think this way more than most analysts are willing to admit! Chart 17 shows that most Europeans - other than the British and Italians - are "in it" for geopolitical relevance and security, and only secondarily for economic growth. Even in Italy, geopolitical concerns are more important than economic performance, although levels of both suggest that Italy is again the critical risk for Europe. We suspect that it is this commitment to the non-economic goals of European integration that sustains the political commitment of both elites and the general public to the European project. As Chart 18 suggests, European voters continue to doubt that their future will be brighter outside of the bloc. Chart 17Voters Grasp The EU's Purpose ... Chart 18...And Most Want To Stay In It Bottom Line: European integration is not just an economic project. Voters understand this - not in all countries, but in enough to sustain integration beyond the immediate risks. Given this assessment, it is not clear to us that the project would collapse even if Italy left. Investment Implications Given our political assessment, we continue to support the recommendation of our colleague Peter Berezin that investors overweight euro area equities in a global portfolio.10 As Peter recently elucidated, capital goods orders continue to trend higher, which is a positive for investment spending on a cyclical horizon - helping euro area assets (Chart 19). Furthermore, private-sector credit growth remains robust, despite political risks (Chart 20). Chart 19European Economy Looking Up Chart 20Credit Growing Well Despite Election Risk Over the next 6-12 months, we see EUR/USD rising, especially as the ECB contemplates tapering its bond purchases. We recommend a tactical long EUR/USD trade as a result. The euro could rise higher if the Trump administration disappoints the market on tax reform and infrastructure spending, policies that were supposed to supercharge the U.S. economy and prompt further Fed hawkishness. Over the long term, however, we doubt that the ECB will have the luxury of hawkishness. And we highly doubt that Berlin will rebel against dovish monetary policy. In fact, investors may be using the wrong mental map if they are equating Mario Draghi's taper with that of Ben Bernanke. While Bernanke intended to signal eventual tightening, Draghi will likely do everything in his power to dissuade the market from believing that interest rate hikes are inevitably coming soon. Therefore, we suspect that EUR/USD will eventually hit parity, after a potential rally in 2017. While this long-term depreciation may make sense from a political and macroeconomic perspective for Europe, it will likely set the stage for a geopolitical confrontation between the Trump Administration and Europe sometime next year. Marko Papic, Senior Vice President marko@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Constraints And Preferences Of The Trump Presidency," dated November 30, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "The End Of The Anglo-Saxon Economy," dated April 13, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "After BREXIT, N-EXIT?" dated July 13, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 The media has suggested that the PVV merely suffered because of the Turkey-Netherlands spat over Turkish political campaigning in the Netherlands. We see no evidence of this. First, the PVV's collapse in the polls predates the crisis by several weeks. Second, the crisis had all the hallmarks of a trap for the establishment. It is not the fault of incumbent Prime Minister Mark Rutte for adeptly capitalizing on the situation. 5 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "The Great Migration - Europe, Refugees, And Investment Implications," dated September 23, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "The French Revolution," dated February 3, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see "Draghi And Asmussen, Not The OMT, Are A Game Changer," in BCA Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report "Fortuna And Policymakers," dated October 10, 2012, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see BCA Bank Credit Analyst, "Europe's Geopolitical Gambit: Relevance Through Integration," dated November 2011, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 9 As measured by the BCA Geopolitical Power Index. 10 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Three Battles That Will Determine The Euro Area's Destiny," dated March 10, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com.