Equities
In mid-April we boosted the S&P internet retail index to overweight as it was poised to benefit from the shifting consumer spending habits due to the COVID-19 outbreak. True, the “amazonification” of the economy is not a new phenomenon, but COVID-19 acted as an accelerant to an already powerful uptrend in online retail sales (see chart). Today, our overweight in the S&P internet retail index surpassed the 29% relative return mark since the mid-April inception, which compels us to protect profits by instituting a stop at the 20% mark. Bottom Line: We remain overweight the S&P internet retail index, but from a portfolio risk management perspective today we add a stop at the 20% relative return mark in order to protect profits.
BCA Research's US Investment Strategy service concludes that policymakers coming to the rescue for the economy means that value investors can’t catch a break, and all stock pickers will have to contend with a policy backdrop that challenges their established…
BCA Research's Global Investment Strategy service would “buy the dip” if global equities were to fall 5%-to-10% from current levels. COVID-19 is a deadly disease, much deadlier than the common flu. But, at this point, it is a “known known.” The next few…
BCA Research's Global Investment Strategy service believes that a combination of temporarily declined earnings along with a decline in real bond yields has increased the fair value of the S&P 500 by 15% since the start of the year. Bottom-up estimates…
China’s CSI-300 equity index has broken out above its January 2018 peak. BCA Research’s China Investment Strategy team believes this break out has room to run, which should support the relative performance of EM equities. First, the Chinese economy is…
Dear Client, US Investment Strategy will take the first of two summer breaks next week, so there will be no publication on July 13th. We will return on July 20th with the latest installment of our Big Bank Beige Book, reviewing the five largest banks’ second quarter earnings calls. Best regards, Doug Peta Highlights Bottom-up S&P 500 earnings expectations for 2021 are probably high: I/B/E/S expectations incorporating periods six or seven quarters away are little more than extrapolations and investors shouldn’t get hung up on them. The higher corporate income tax rates that would follow a Democratic sweep are a bigger concern. Policymakers have decisively won the early rounds of their bout with the pandemic’s economic effects, … : Transfer payments pushed April and May personal income well above its February level, and households have accordingly stayed current on their rent and other financial obligations. … and they will win the fight provided Congress doesn’t tire, … : Volatility may rise amidst the back and forth of negotiations, but Republican Senators cannot risk allowing aid to elapse three months before the election. … but what’s good for the economy in the long run may come at the expense of active managers’ performance: Value investors can’t catch a break, and all stock pickers will have to contend with a policy backdrop that challenges their established modus operandi. Feature We have not traveled any farther for work than the kitchen table in three and a half months. Renewing our expiring passport could take a year, and the clock is ticking on our ability to fly domestically on a driver’s license from the persona non grata state of New York. Unless the administration or the electorate has a change of heart, the REAL ID rules may prevent us from seeing a client in person until well into 2021. At least the construction at LaGuardia may be finished by then. Even if we’re not seeing clients face to face, however, communication continues. Several topics have come up repeatedly in virtual discussions and we devote this week’s report to examining them. Our overriding impression is that global investors have been surprised by risk assets’ resilience and are skeptical that it can be sustained. We share the surprise and some measure of the skepticism, though we are more constructive than most BCA clients because of our conviction that policymakers can bridge the economic gap created by the pandemic and the commercially restrictive measures undertaken to combat it. Yes, Estimates Are Too High (But It’s Mainly An Election Story) Q: Consensus S&P 500 earnings estimates for next year are in line with actual 2019 earnings, yet 2019 was the tenth full year of an expansion and we’re likely to begin 2021 with an unemployment rate close to 10%. Isn’t there something wrong with this picture? We agree that consensus estimates for 2021 S&P 500 earnings are too high. It seems unlikely on its face that 2021 earnings, currently estimated at $163, will match 2018 ($162) and 2019 ($163) when the public health and economic backdrops are so uncertain. An additional 14% of EPS growth in 2022 seems like a pipe dream. We put very little stock in consensus estimates more than two quarters into the future, however, because analysts put very little effort into producing them. They focus on the current quarter and the following quarter; estimates beyond that range are nothing more than simple extrapolation. Investors familiar with sell-side analysts’ processes presumably don’t look beyond near two-quarter estimates themselves. We therefore doubt that the equity market is hanging on stated 2021 estimates and will be at risk when they are eventually revised down. We simply conclude that the S&P 500’s forward four-quarter earnings multiple of 24 is somewhat more elevated than it appears to the naked eye. Stocks are not cheap, and investors have probably gotten somewhat complacent. Equities have little margin for safety now and are therefore vulnerable to a near-term decline. Valuation is a notoriously poor timing tool, however, and we are content to remain neutral on equities over the tactical zero-to-three-month timeframe. A much stronger case against the earnings outlook for 2021 and beyond comes from the president’s flagging re-election prospects. Our Geopolitical Strategy service continues to estimate Joe Biden’s probability of winning the election at 65%. The virtual betting market PredictIt places Biden’s odds at 62%, and has had him as the favorite since May 30th. It is too simplistic to say that a Democratic president, backed by majorities in both houses of Congress,1 would be bad for the economy, but a Biden victory would introduce two profit headwinds. First, reversing half of the decline in the top marginal corporate tax rate, as the Biden campaign has proposed, would directly strike at the earnings stream available to common shareholders. Precisely quantifying that drop is not easy. S&P 500 constituents’ effective tax rates vary widely, with only a small proportion paying the statutory rate, and they do not disclose the federal component of their tax bill. We make the simple back-of-the-envelope assumption that the maximum net earnings impact of the cut in the top marginal rate from 35% to 21%, beginning in 2018, was 21.5%, as .79 (1-.21) is 21.5% greater than .65 (1-.35). Similarly, the maximum net earnings impact of hiking the top marginal rate to 28% from 21%, beginning in 2021, would be -9%, as .72 (1-.28) is nearly 9% less than .79 (1-.21). Equities seem to be ignoring the negative profit margin consequences of an increasingly likely Democratic sweep. Chart 1The Tax Cut Materially Boosted Median S&P 500 Earnings The change in effective tax rates before and after the 2018 tax cuts was about half of our maximum ballpark estimate. In the two years before the rate cut, excluding 4Q17 and its myriad one-time adjustments, the median effective tax rate for S&P 500 constituents was around 28%; in the two subsequent years, excluding 1Q18, the median rate has hovered near 20% (Chart 1). The change suggests that the tax cuts have boosted median S&P 500 earnings by about 11%.2 In addition to raising taxes, a Biden administration would be considerably more friendly to labor than the Trump administration. A soft labor market in which full employment is at least a few years away argues against broad wage gains, but companies that have benefitted from a complaisant National Labor Relations Board for the last four years could face a rude awakening. If Biden wins, we wager that McDonald’s workers will be unionized before next summer,3 a scenario that McDonald’s stock clearly does not anticipate (Chart 2). Chart 2For McDonald's, A Biden Win Means An NLRB Reversal Bottom Line: A Democratic sweep would weigh on earnings via higher corporate income tax rates and revived advocacy for labor at executive branch departments like the NLRB. Considering these incremental drags, it is unlikely that S&P 500 earnings will match their 2019 levels in 2021. Policymakers Versus The Virus: The Fight So Far Chart 3D.C. Is Keeping Households Afloat ... Q: Your constructive cyclical take depends on policymakers’ ability to offset the pandemic’s economic consequences. How do the data say that’s going so far? The data say that it’s going swimmingly. Thanks to generous transfer payments from the federal government, personal income in April and May comfortably surpassed February’s pre-pandemic peak (Chart 3). Households have not spent much of their windfall (Chart 4), choosing instead to squirrel it away, driving the savings rate to 32% in April and 23% in May. The mountain of savings will make it easy for households to service their debt (Chart 5), which they have been paying down. Chart 4... And They're Saving The Money, ... Chart 5... Much To Their Creditors' Relief The apartment REITs will not likely disclose June rent collection data before their earnings calls, but the National Multifamily Housing Council rent tracker shows that June collections have built on May’s month-over-month improvement. Through June 27th, June collections are tracking ahead of April and May collections and are barely off of last year’s pace (Table 1). Table 1Apartment Tenants Are Paying Their Rent Table 2Consumer Borrowers Are Making Their Payments TransUnion’s monthly consumer loan delinquency data for May reinforce the conclusion that policymakers are achieving their goal of preventing a default spiral. Auto loan delinquencies rose sharply in May, but delinquencies in all other personal loan categories fell on a month-over-month basis (Table 2). Mortgage delinquencies are below their year-ago level, while credit cards and other personal loans have risen only slightly from a low base. Auto loan delinquencies are up appreciably from May 2019, but TransUnion’s data show that the true rot is concentrated in loans made by independent lenders. Their 60-day delinquencies rose to 7.2% in May from 4.5% in April, while bank (0.62%) and credit union delinquencies (0.51%) eased slightly in May. Bottom Line: Extremely generous income assistance has helped households amass formidable cash reserves. The aid has allowed households to pay their rent and service their debt, shielding landlords, banks and many specialty lenders from pressure. Policymakers Versus The Virus: Going The Distance Q: What might cause the Fed to waver in its resolution to help the economy battle the virus? Will the Senate block future stimulus efforts? Nothing will cause the Fed to waver in its resolution to shield the economy from the virus; investors can take Chair Powell’s pledge to do whatever it takes for as long as it takes to the bank. Capitol Hill’s commitment is much less certain and public posturing during Senate negotiations could stoke market volatility. Elected officials reliably respond to career incentives, however, and those incentives will keep recalcitrant Senate Republicans from blocking another round of fiscal largesse. Investors need not worry that Republicans in the Senate will pull the rug out from under the economy and markets – doing so would wreck their own political fortunes. The Republicans’ election prospects have been sliding for a month. Four months is an eternity in a campaign, and they have ample time to reverse their fortunes. But if Republican Senators were to obstruct the passage of the next aid bill, they would be signing their own death warrant. They simply cannot cut off ailing households’ lifeline, or strip municipalities of essential services, as the campaign enters the homestretch. Any individual Senator would be imperiling his/her own quest for influence, and the party’s majority status and relevance, if s/he were to cast one of the votes that blocked a new spending round, and it would be folly to do so over a minor matter like principle. Policymakers Versus Active Managers Q: If valuations no longer matter, how do we show our clients that we’re adding value? It chagrined us to acknowledge on a call last week that equity valuations have been greatly deemphasized in our base case scenario. That scenario calls for overweighting equities in balanced portfolios over a twelve-month timeframe on the view that the flood of emergency stimulus will linger in the system long after it’s needed, stoking aggregate demand and pushing up the prices of cyclically exposed assets. Provided that policymakers succeed in limiting defaults and bankruptcies, thus preventing a pernicious chain reaction from taking hold, we are willing to overlook elevated valuations. Massive accommodation makes active managers' jobs harder because there's no telling who's swimming naked when policymakers won't let the tide go out. Those valuations are supported arithmetically by discount rates which appear as if they will remain very low for an extended period as long as investors don’t become nervous and demand a higher equity risk premium, diluting the impact of nominally lower interest rates. Our base case is that they won’t, but there is no doubt that equity investors’ margin of safety is quite thin. We cannot use the term margin of safety without thinking of Benjamin Graham, and it gives us a pang to think that his disciples may face another few years of wandering in the wilderness. Value investing is predicated on making distinctions between individual companies, as is security analysis more generally. A rising tide lifts all boats, however, and the massive stimulus efforts that have been unleashed in all the major economies (Chart 6) have the effect of obliterating differences between companies. That potentially limits the value that skilled active managers can add to an investment portfolio via a focus on traditional bottom-up metrics. Chart 6All Together Now Our solution is to try to focus on the varying impact top-down factors will have on different companies and sub-industry groups. We are overweight the SIFI banks because we view them as the biggest beneficiary of policymakers’ attempt to suppress defaults and their rock-bottom valuations stand in sharp contrast with the rest of the market. We echo our fixed income strategists’ recommendations to buy the bonds the Fed is buying. We also think that positioning portfolios for regulatory changes that might ensue in 2021 and beyond could be a rich source of alpha if a blue wave really is poised to strike the US on the first Tuesday in November. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Our geopolitical team expects the Democrats to take the Senate if they win the White House. PredictIt markets imply that Democrats have a 61% probability of winning a Senate majority. 2After-tax earnings before the tax cut were 72 cents on the dollar (1-28%) = .72. After the tax cut, they rose to 80 cents (1-20%) = .80. 80 is 11.11% greater than 72. 3Please see the NLRB/McDonald’s discussion on pp.7-9 of the February 3, 2020 US Investment Strategy Special Report, “Labor Strikes Back, Part 3: The Public-Approval Contest,” available at usis.bcaresearch.com.
BCA Research's China Investment Strategy service is upgrading Chinese stocks on a tactical horizon and bringing it in line with its cyclical overweight stance. Chinese stocks have fewer downside risks compared to their global counterparts, which were…
June was the second month in a row to be characterized by expectations of global growth. A cross-sectional review of asset returns shows that the US dollar and treasuries performed the worst, while Brent crude oil, industrial metals, and emerging market…
Highlights A clear U-turn in markets could make investors more conscious of losses, making them likely to sell. Hence, the fear-of-missing-out (FOMO) rally could turn into a fear-of-losing-out, or FOLO selloff. The P/E ratio is negatively correlated to the discount rate and the latter is the sum of the risk-free rate and the equity risk premium (ERP). Enormous lingering uncertainty warrants using an ERP that is at the upper end of its historical range. By using the average equity risk premium in their equity valuation models, investors are underpricing risks that are presently exceptionally high. Several market-based indicators and technical configurations point to a relapse in the global equity rally and renewed US dollar strength. Feature For some time, we have been arguing that the global equity advance since late March can best be described as a fear-of-missing-out, or FOMO, rally. During a FOMO rally, investors are forced to chase share prices higher due to fear of missing out on gains. A clear U-turn in markets and falling share prices could make investors more conscious of losses, and they would likely resort to selling stocks. This will turn the FOMO rally into a fear-of-losing-out, or FOLO, selloff. Marginal investors trade with momentum during both FOMO and FOLO scenarios. This is why we argued in our June 18 note that current investment strategies should be placing more emphasis on momentum than would normally be the case. In a nutshell, if FOMO forces subside, investors – which are facing enormous uncertainty on several fronts – will likely require higher risk premiums to commit money to stocks. For now, the momentum of the equity rally has stalled, but it has not yet reversed (Chart I-1). Our momentum indicator for global share prices is struggling to break above the zero line. In the past, the indicator being above or below zero often differentiated bull versus bear markets, respectively (Chart I-1, bottom panel). Chart I-1Global Share Prices Are Facing An Important Resistance In this report, we examine the bullish narrative behind the rally and offer our interpretation of those arguments. Then, we present our assessment of the fundamentals. Finally, we highlight the signs we are looking for to confirm that a major selloff will soon occur. The Bull Case: Climbing A Wall Of Worries? The bull case rests on the thesis that risk assets are climbing a wall of worries, i.e., investors are correct to look through many apparent negatives. The following are the key bullish arguments that have supported the rally: Policymakers around the world will do whatever it takes. The US, China and Europe will continue to augment stimulus to prevent another relapse in economic activity. We have never doubted the willingness of policymakers around the world to provide stimulus to their economies amid the pandemic. Where we have had reservations and questions is in whether policymakers will be capable of limiting the bear market in stocks to only one month amid the pandemic and the worst global recession in decades. There is plenty of cash on the sidelines looking to be invested. We agree with the lots-of-cash-on-the-sidelines thesis. Our measure of US dollar cash that might be deployed in financial assets is illustrated in Chart I-2. It plots the ratio of the US broad money supply to the market value of all US dollar-denominated securities. The US broad money supply represents all US dollars in the world – in cash and in electronic bank deposits. The denominator is the market capitalization of US dollar-denominated stocks and all types of bonds held by non-bank investors. If the market shows resilience and the pandemic situation and corporate profits ameliorate, cash on the sidelines will leak into assets, lifting their prices. The counterargument is as follows: If and when the equity momentum reverses, FOMO will be followed by a FOLO phase. In such a case, investors will sell to avoid losses or protect profits, and cash on the sidelines might not matter for a period of time. The global economy reached a bottom in April-May. We agree that the worst of the contraction in economic activity globally was in April and May, when major economies were in lockdown. Nevertheless, it is also plausible that global share prices could relapse even if the bottom in economic output has already been reached. Interestingly, in the 2001-2002 recession, global stocks made a major new low in late 2002/early 2003 even though global growth bottomed in 2001 (Chart I-3). Chart I-2The US: Broad Money Supply Relative To US Equity And Bond Markets Capitalization Chart I-3Global Stocks And The Business Cycle In 2000-2003 This recession is different from the perspective of the magnitude of the drop in business activity. Many businesses are still operating below their breakeven points and will likely continue to do so for some time. As such, a marginal increase in the level of activity or slower annual contraction might not be sufficient to enable them to service their debt and resume hiring and business investment. Therefore, the recovery will be stumbling and hesitant and relapses are quite likely, especially in the context of the ongoing pandemic. Finally, one of the pervasive arguments dominating the current investment landscape is that equities are cheap given very low interest rates. Unlike some of our colleagues, we are not in accord with this valuation thesis on global stocks in general and US equities in particular. One consideration that is missing in this argument is the equity risk premium. The P/E ratio is negatively correlated to the discount rate.1 The discount rate is the sum of the risk-free rate and the equity risk premium (ERP). Presently, one should use an ERP that is materially higher than its historical mean (Chart I-4, top panel). Investors are currently facing record-high uncertainty related to the pandemic and the business cycle, as well as the structural trends in the economic, political and geopolitical spheres. This warrants using an ERP that is at the upper end of its historical range. Chart I-4Exceptionally High Uncertainty Warrants A Higher Equity Risk Premium Critically, the ERP is not a static variable. Yet many equity valuation models assume that the ERP is constant, and therefore compare equity multiples with risk-free rates. Such models are wrong-headed because a change in the ERP can in and of itself cause large fluctuations in share prices. The bottom panel of Chart I-4 plots the US ERP and the global policy uncertainty index. The latter is at an all-time high while US ERP is well below its highs. In a nutshell, if FOMO forces subside, investors – which are facing enormous uncertainty on several fronts – will likely require higher risk premiums to commit money to stocks. Bottom Line: By using the average ERP in their equity valuation models, investors are underpricing risks that are presently exceptionally high. Bear Markets (Like Pandemics) Occur In Waves The duration and magnitude of the rally from the late-March lows admittedly has taken us by surprise. Nevertheless, it is hard to believe that the bear market associated with the worst recession and pandemic in a century was confined to only one down leg (albeit a vicious one) and lasted just one month. Just as corrections are inherent parts of bull markets, bear market rallies are an integral part of bear markets. It would be unprecedented if this bear market did not have at least one bear market rally. We do not mean EM or DM share prices will drop to new lows. Our point is that global stocks and EM currencies will likely experience a setback large enough to make investors feel that the bear market is back. Like pandemics, bear markets occur in waves. The timing, duration and magnitude of the second wave of the equity selloff is as impossible to predict as that of the second wave of COVID-19. Just as corrections are inherent parts of bull markets, bear market rallies are an integral part of bear markets. Our fundamental case for a relapse in EM equities and currencies is as follows: First, a downturn in US equities will dampen EM risk assets. The former are vulnerable due to the second wave of the pandemic that is already underway in a considerable portion of the US. Even if the second COVID-19 wave does not produce simultaneous shutdowns across the entire country, rolling lockdowns in parts of the US and lingering general uncertainty will hinder business investment and hiring. This will delay the profit recovery that the market has priced in. Second, global equities have rallied too fast and too far, as evidenced by the unprecedented gap that has opened up between stock prices and forward EPS (Chart I-5). The 12-month forward P/E ratio is 19.5 for global equities, 22.5 for the US and 14 for EM. Rising share prices amid falling projected EPS levels has been one of the key reasons behind our argument that the equity advance of the past three months has been a FOMO rally. Third, retail participation in this equity rally has been unprecedented. This has been true not only in North America but also in many Asian markets. Specifically, Chart I-6 demonstrates increased retail participation in equity markets in Korea, Thailand, and Malaysia. These are corroborated by numerous media articles such as: Amateur Traders Pile Into Asian Stocks, Making Pros Nervous Small India Investors Are Latest to Snag Beaten-Down Stocks Fear of Missing Historic Rally Has Koreans Borrowing to Invest Retail Investors Are Driving Record Turnover in Thai Stocks Singapore’s Retail Investors Load Up On What Institutions Dump Chart I-5The Global Forward P/E Ratio Is At Its Highest Since 2002 Chart I-6A Stampede By Asian Retail Investors Into Local Equities Chart I-7Oil Inventories Are Rising In The US And OECD Retail investors chasing share prices higher is another fact leading us to term this advance as a FOMO rally. If share prices relapse meaningfully, retail investors may well turn from net buyers to net sellers – i.e. FOMO will turn into FOLO. Fourth, oil prices have had a nice run, despite crude inventories in the US and OECD countries continuing to mushroom (Chart I-7). Rising inventories signify that demand remains deficient relative to supply. Hence, the oil price rally can also be qualified as a FOMO rally, driven by investors rather than demand-supply dynamics. Interestingly, global energy stocks have a higher correlation with forward oil prices rather than the spot rate. Both share prices of oil producers and three-year forward oil prices have already rolled over (Chart I-8). Finally, geopolitical tensions between the US and China are set to escalate as President Trump attempts to save his re-election campaign by rallying the nation behind the flag against foreign adversaries. China would certainly respond. As part of China’s response, North Korea will likely be “allowed” by Beijing to test a strategic weapon, undermining President Trump’s foreign policy achievements. The resulting geopolitical uncertainty will further weigh on the confidence of investors in Asian markets. Critically, share prices in north Asia – China, Korea and Taiwan – that account for 60% of the MSCI EM equity benchmark will come under selling pressure. Excluding these three bourses, EM shares prices have already rolled over (Chart I-9). Chart I-8Global Oil Stock Prices Move With Forward Oil Prices Chart I-9Diverging Equity Performance: North Asia Versus The Rest Of EM In short, the key risk to Chinese, Korean and Taiwanese stocks is geopolitics. The rest of the EM universe is suffering from the acute COVID-19 crisis and numerous economic challenges. Bottom Line: The overarching message from our fundamental analysis is that the rally in global and EM share prices has ignored many negatives and is at a risk of a meaningful relapse. Gauging The Second Selling Wave: Technical Observations Chart I-10The US Dollar And VIX Have Not Yet Broken Below Their Supports We constantly monitor numerous market indicators. We highlight below some of the most important ones that we feel are pointing to a second sell-off wave occurring sooner than later. The broad trade-weighted US dollar and the VIX index have not yet entered a bear market (Chart I-10). In fact, it seems they are finding support at their 200-day moving averages and respective horizontal lines - shown on Chart I-10. A rebound in both the trade-weighted dollar and VIX will coincide with an air pocket in global stocks. Our Risk-On/Safe-Haven Currency ratio has rolled over (Chart I-11). It correlates with EM shares prices, and points to a relapse in EM stocks. Chart I-11The Risk-On/Safe-Haven Currency Ratio Heralds A Pullback In EM Stocks Finally, credit spreads of riskier parts (CAA rated) of the US high-yield corporate bond universe have commenced widening versus the aggregate US high-yield benchmark. These relative spreads are shown inverted in Chart I-12. Chart I-12US Credit Markets Internals Point To A Relapse In US Small Cap Stocks Underperformance of riskier parts of the US corporate credit market often coincides with lower US small-cap share prices (Chart I-12). Bottom Line: Several critical market-based indicators and technical configurations point to a relapse in global equities and renewed US dollar strength. The odds of a selloff in EM share prices, currencies and credit markets are considerable. Investment Recommendations In our June 18 report, we contended that a breakout of global share prices and a breakdown in the trade-weighted US dollar would indicate that this rally might persist for a while. Conversely, a drawdown in global equities and a rebound in the greenback could be considerable. Since then, neither global stocks have broken out nor the US dollar broken down. Hence, the jury is still out. At the moment, the risk-reward profile of EM stocks remains unattractive. Within a global equity portfolio, we continue underweighting EM. Within a global credit portfolio, we are neutral on EM sovereign credit versus US corporate credit. The rationale is as follows: the low odds of public debt defaults among mainstream developing countries and the Federal Reserve’s purchases of US corporate bonds has channeled flows to EM credit, possibly precluding relative EM underperformance. We continue shorting the following basket of EM currencies versus the US dollar: BRL, CLP, ZAR, TRY, IDR, PHP and KRW. Structurally, we are also short the RMB and SAR. Finally, we continue receiving rates in Mexico, Colombia, India, China, Malaysia, Korea, Russia, Ukraine, Pakistan and Egypt. Central banks in the majority of EM countries will continue cutting rates, but we find better value in these fixed-income markets. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The P/E ratio inversely correlates to the discount rate: P/E ratio = (Payout rate x (1 + Growth rate))/ (Discount rate – Growth rate) Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
The GAA DM Equity Country Allocation model is updated as of June 30, 2020. The model has added another 6 points to the US overweight at the expense of the euro area, mainly Germany, Netherlands, and Spain. The driving force for this change is from the relatively favorable momentum and liquidity indicators, despite an unfavorable valuation indicator. Now the top four overweight countries are the US, Spain, Australia, and Sweden, while the biggest four underweight countries remain Japan, the UK, France, and Switzerland, as shown in Table 1. Table 1Model Allocation Vs. Benchmark Weights As shown in Table 2 and Charts 1, 2 and 3, the overall model outperformed the MSCI World benchmark in June by 49 bps. The Level 2 model outperformed its benchmark by 162 bps, thanks largely to the underweight in Japan and the UK, as well as the overweight in Australia and Spain. The Level 1 model underperformed slightly by 3 bps due to the slight overweight in the US. Since going live, the overall model has outperformed its MSCI World benchmark by 260 bps, with 463 bps of outperformance from the Level 2 model, and 29 bps of outperformance from the Level 1 model. Table 2Performance (Total Returns In USD %) Chart 1GAA DM Model Vs. MSCI World Chart 2GAA US Vs. Non US Model (Level 1) Chart 3GAA Non US Model (Level 2) For more on historical performance, please refer to our website https://www.bcaresearch.com/site/trades/allocation_performance/latest/G…. For more details on the models, please see Special Report, “Global Equity Allocation: Introducing The Developed Markets Country Allocation Model,” dated January 29, 2016, available at https://gaa.bcaresearch.com. Please note that the overall country and sector recommendations published in our Monthly Portfolio Update and Quarterly Portfolio Outlook use the results of these quantitative models as one input, but do not stick slavishly to them. We believe that models are a useful check, but structural changes and unquantifiable factors need to be considered as well when making overall recommendations. GAA Equity Sector Selection Model The GAA Equity Sector Model (Chart 4) is updated as of June 30, 2020. Chart 4Overall Model Performance The model’s relative tilts between cyclicals and defensives have changed compared to last month. The model maintains its cyclical stance driven by an improvement in its global growth proxy. The model reversed its overweight position on the only defensive sector where it was previously overweight, Healthcare, given a deterioration in its momentum component. Over the past month, the model outperformed its benchmark by 42 basis points. Year-to-date, the model has outperformed its benchmark by 109 basis points, and 108 basis points since inception. Table 3Overall Model Performance Table 4Current Model Allocations The model’s global growth proxy improved – driven by EM currencies and rising metal prices, and therefore continues to remain positive on cyclical sectors. Global monetary easing and low rates should keep the liquidity component favoring a mixed bag of cyclical and defensive sectors. The valuation component remains muted across all sectors except Energy. However, multiple sectors continue to be near the expensive and cheap zones – mainly Info Tech and Consumer Discretionary (expensive), and Real Estate and Consumer Staples (cheap). The model awaits confirming momentum signals to change recommendations for those sectors. The model is now overweight four cyclical sectors in total. These are Information Technology, Consumer Discretionary, Communication Services, and Materials. For more details on the model, please see the Special Report “Introducing the GAA Equity Sector Selection Model”, dated July 27, 2016, as well as the Sector Selection Model section in the Special Alert “GAA Quant Model Updates,” dated March 1, 2019, available at https://gaa.bcaresearch.com. Xiaoli Tang Associate Vice President xiaoliT@bcaresearch.com Amr Hanafy Senior Analyst amrh@bcaresearch.com