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Highlights Global manufacturing inventories are low but this does not guarantee higher share prices for global cyclical stocks. If an increase in inventories is accompanied by strengthening final demand, it will be very bullish for the global business cycle. If final demand growth falters, global cyclical plays will relapse amid rising inventories. China's inventory depletion has been due to the large fiscal and credit impulse in the past 12 months - i.e., improving final demand has been instrumental to inventory shedding. Looking forward, the mainland's aggregate credit and fiscal impulse seems to have topped out raising the odds of a reversal in EM/China plays sooner than later. The risk/reward of EM/China plays remains unattractive. Feature Global Manufacturing Inventories Global manufacturing inventories have been depleted over the past 12 months, and inventory levels are generally low (Chart I-1 and Chart I-2). Chart I-1Global Manufacturing Inventories Are Low Chart I-2Global Manufacturing Inventories Are Low Could inventory re-stocking extend the current manufacturing cycle recovery worldwide? Will low inventories and re-stocking in China lengthen the nation's business cycle upswing? Chart I-3 demonstrates inventory cycles and manufacturing production within manufacturing-intensive economies. The correlation is not stable. Currently, this entails that low manufacturing inventories and a potential rise in inventories over the course of this year do not guarantee acceleration in industrial output growth. Having reviewed manufacturing inventory cycles and their correlation with share prices, we conclude that the key to share prices is final demand - not inventory swings. Manufacturing inventories have dropped in the past 12 months because final demand has been robust (Chart I-4). Historically, periods of re-stocking have often coincided with poor equity market performance. Indeed, Taiwanese, Korean, Japanese and German non-financial share prices have no stable correlation with their respective manufacturing inventory cycles (Chart I-5). In short, manufacturing inventories could rise in the months ahead, but this does not guarantee higher share prices in cyclical industries. Chart I-3Inventories And Production ##br##Are Not Always Correlated Chart I-4Robust Demand Has Led ##br##To Inventory Depletion Chart I-5Non-Financial Share Prices And##br## Inventories: Little Correlation By and large, the outlook for corporate profits is contingent on final demand rather than re-stocking. All of the above confirms that inventories are a residual of demand and supply. Stronger-than-expected demand is bullish for share prices, though it also often coincides with declining inventories. By contrast, rising inventories typically reflect demand falling behind output growth (one can define it as involuntary re-stocking) and these periods are not favorable for share price gains in cyclical industries. One caveat is that there could be a re-stocking cycle amid strengthening demand or, in other words, voluntary re-stocking. If this transpires in the coming months, it will be extremely bullish for share prices as it will supercharge output growth. While the latter scenario - inventory re-stocking amid strengthening final demand - could very well occur within the advanced economies this year, odds of such positive dynamics are low in EM/China. Bottom Line: Share prices in global cyclical sectors are driven by swings in final demand - not in inventories. Going forward, global manufacturing inventories will rise. If this rise is accompanied by strengthening demand, it will be very bullish for the global business cycle. Otherwise, global cyclical plays will relapse as inventories rise. What Drives China's Inventory Cycles Chart I-6 shows that China's manufacturing inventories typically deplete when the credit and fiscal impulse is rising, and vice versa. China's manufacturing inventories have been exhausted because demand has been strong in the past 12 months. In turn, demand strength has originated from the country's massive fiscal and credit stimulus push from the first half of 2016. Chart I-6China: Strong Policy Stimulus Led To Manufacturing Inventories Reduction That said, China's aggregate fiscal and credit impulse seems to have recently rolled over, pointing to a top in its manufacturing mini-cycle and commodities prices (Chart I-7). This signals a potential deceleration in final demand. On the whole, the ongoing modest tightening by the People's Bank of China and by the bank regulator (the China Banking Regulatory Commission) amid a lingering credit bubble is raising the odds of a moderate credit slowdown in the months ahead. Even modest credit growth deceleration will result in a negative credit impulse (Chart I-8, top panel). Meanwhile, the mainland's fiscal impulse has already dropped (Chart I-8, bottom panel). Chart I-7China: Aggregate Credit And Fiscal##br## Stimulus Has Topped Out Chart I-8China: A Breakdown Of Credit ##br##And Fiscal Impulses On the whole, these developments are leading us to maintain our negative bias toward EM risk assets and China plays. What has gone wrong in our view/analysis on China in the past 12 months is that the nation's credit growth has stayed much stronger than we expected. In our April 13, 2016 report,1 we did a scenario analysis and argued that China's large fiscal stimulus push would be offset by a negative credit impulse if credit growth slowed from 11.5% to below 10%. In reality, credit growth has been between 11.5-12.5%, producing a positive credit impulse. Barring tightening by the central bank or bank regulators, mainland banks can continue originating loans/money at a double-digit pace, as they have been doing for many years (Chart I-9). In general, commercial banks do not need savings to create money/loans and there are few limits on Chinese banks originating loans "out of thin air," as we argued in our Trilogy of Special Reports on money/loan creation, savings and investment.2 Chart I-9China's Credit/Money Growth##br## Remains Rampant Therefore, if credit growth does not slow, our negative view on China's growth will be off-the-mark again. The pressure point in such a case will be the exchange rate. Unlimited money creation/oversupply of local currency is bearish for the value of the RMB. The RMB will continue depreciating, but it is not certain if it will hurt EM risk assets. It is a major consensus view nowadays that the Chinese authorities will not allow growth to suffer ahead of the Party Congress in autumn of this year. Yet, the PBoC and bank regulators are modestly tightening to "normalize" credit growth. Some clients may wonder why we are placing so much emphasis on the rollover of credit and fiscal impulses now, while placing little emphasis on these same indicators in 2016 when they were recovering. The rationale is as follows: when there is a credit bubble - as there is in China now - we tend to downplay the importance of policy easing and put more significance on policy tightening. The opposite also holds true: when the credit/banking system is healthy, we tend to downplay the impact of moderate policy tightening and put greater emphasis on policy easing. In a credit bubble, it does not take much tightening to trigger a downtrend that unwinds excesses. Similarly, moderate tightening in a healthy credit system should not be feared. From a big picture perspective, we turned bearish on China's growth several years ago due to the formation of a credit bubble. The bubble has only gotten larger and an adjustment has not yet even started. This does not justify altering our fundamental assessment of China's growth outlook. It would have been ideal to turn positive tactically on EM/China plays a year ago. Unfortunately, we did not do that. Presently, chasing the market higher might not be the best investment idea. Based on all this and given: the sharp rally in EM/China plays and widespread investor complacency and consensus that "everything" will be fine before the end of this year; modest tightening in Chinese monetary policy amid lingering credit and asset (property and the corporate bond market) bubbles; our outlook for higher U.S. bond yields and a stronger U.S. dollar; the fact that financial markets are forward looking, and timing is impossible; We believe the risk/reward of EM/China plays remains unattractive. In regard to EM ex-China, as we documented in last week's report, domestic demand in the developing economies has not recovered at all, or is mixed at best. DM final demand strength and global manufacturing inventory rebuilding will certainly help Korea and Taiwan, but not other emerging economies. The most important variables for other EM economies including China are domestic demand and/or commodities prices. If commodities prices relapse along with China's credit and fiscal impulse (Chart I-7, bottom panel), EM financial markets will suffer regardless of the growth trends within advanced economies. In fact, strong U.S. growth could lead to higher U.S. interest rate expectations and prop up the U.S. dollar. This will also be a bad omen for EM and commodities. Bottom Line: China's inventory depletion has been due to the large fiscal and credit impulse in the past 12 months - i.e., improving final demand has been instrumental to inventory shedding. Looking forward, the mainland's aggregate credit and fiscal impulse seems to have topped out, raising the odds of a reversal in EM/China plays sooner than later. Industrial Metals Inventories And Prices There is no good data reflecting industrial metals inventories globally. London Metal Exchange and Shanghai Futures Exchange data are likely not indicative of global metals stockpiles. China accounts for close to 50% of global demand for industrial metals, and its demand is critical to prices. Given that the large spike in metals prices in the past several months has coincided with improving Chinese economic data, one would expect the mainland to be the driving force behind the rally. However, Chart I-10 demonstrates that China's imports of industrial metals actually contracted in 2016. This is puzzling, but we have to take it at face value. The top panel of Chart I-11 depicts that traders' net long positions in copper are at a six-year high. This might partially explain the rally in copper in the recent months. Chart I-10China's Import Of Base Metals##br## And Base Metals Prices Chart I-11Traders Are Long ##br##Copper And Oil Clearly, China has been depleting its stock of industrial metals, and is likely primed to increase its imports. Nevertheless, periods of metals re-stocking by the mainland have historically not entailed higher industrial metals prices (Chart I-10). On the contrary, rising Chinese imports of metals have actually coincided with falling prices. One can interpret this relationship as China buying industrial metals when prices are falling. This is consistent with China attempting to buy commodities on dips. As to metals inventories in China, the picture is as follows: Steel inventories have plummeted and are low (Chart I-12). One can safely argue that there will be an inventory re-stocking cycle in China. Nevertheless, it is highly uncertain if this will be bullish for steel prices and steel stocks. In fact, there has been a mild negative correlation between steel prices and inventories; historically, when inventories have risen, prices declined (Chart I-12, top panel). This confirms that inventory levels are a residual of demand and supply, and prices are often driven by final demand - not inventories. This is also corroborated by the bottom panel of Chart I-12, which illustrates that share prices of global steel companies are sometimes negatively correlated with China's steel inventories. Stock prices occasionally sell off when inventories rise, and rally when inventories are shrinking. In contrast to steel and steel products, iron ore inventories have risen, and it seems the re-stocking cycle is well advanced (Chart I-13). Chart I-12China: Steel Inventories And Prices Chart I-13China: Iron Ore Inventories And Prices Yet, again there is no strong correlation between inventories and prices of iron ore (Chart I-13). In our discussions with clients, investors often attribute the rally in industrial metals in general and steel prices in particular over the past 12 months to supply cutbacks in China. While supply reductions have helped in the case of certain metals, it is also evident that the rally in industrial commodities has been driven by rising demand globally and in China. First, China's aggregate credit and fiscal impulse was positive until very recently, implying strengthening demand and thereby higher metals prices. Second, if there were only production cutbacks in steel and other commodities and not demand recovery, the mainland's manufacturing PMI would not have risen (Chart I-14). Finally, steel production has risen both in China and the rest of the world (Chart I-15). Hence, world steel supplies have expanded in the past 12 months. Given this has coincided with rising steel prices, it confirms there has been notable improvement in demand for steel. Chart I-14China: Steel Prices Are Up ##br##Because Of Strong Demand Chart I-15Chinese And Global ##br##Steel Production We are not experts in the ebbs and flows of commodities supplies, but it seems the Chinese government's mandated steel capacity cutbacks have not prevented rising steel output in China. In the meantime, rising prices amid rising production and falling inventories are indicative of robust final demand for many metals. Bottom Line: Industrial metals prices have risen because demand in the real economy and among financial investors has been strong. That said, a rollover in China's fiscal and credit impulse and a strong U.S. dollar will likely create headwinds for industrial metals prices over the course of this year. A Word About Oil Inventories OECD oil product inventories have continued to rise, despite supply cuts (Chart I-16, top panel). At the same time, our proxy for change in China's oil inventories has been very elevated for a while, depicting strategic and/or commercial inventory building on the mainland (Chart I-16, bottom panel). It is true that supply curtailments have been instrumental to the rally in oil prices, but the continued inventory buildup also indicates that supply is still outpacing demand. Besides, traders' net long positions in crude have spiked close to their 2014 highs (Chart I-11, bottom panel). This corroborates that demand for crude, like for copper, has partially been financial rather than from final consumers. Finally, U.S. rig counts have recovered somewhat, which may be indicative of a continued rise in America's oil output (Chart I-17). Chart I-16Oil Inventories Keep On Rising Chart I-17U.S. Rig Counts And Oil Production Bottom Line: While we do not have expertise to follow or forecast oil supply dynamics, we are biased in believing that the risk-reward for oil prices is unattractive because of a strong U.S. dollar and potentially weak EM/China asset prices, which could trigger a reduction in net long positions in crude. Investment Conclusions Complacency reigns in the global financial markets. EM equity volatility has fallen close to its cycle lows, the U.S. VIX is depressed, U.S. equity investor sentiment is very elevated and EM corporate credit spreads have plummeted to a ten-year low (Chart I-18). While the timing of a reversal is impossible, the risk-reward profile of EM financial markets is greatly unattractive. The U.S. trade-weighted dollar has consolidated recently, and might be primed for another upleg. As the U.S. dollar resumes its uptrend, EM risk assets will likely sell off. Finally, EM share prices have failed to outperform the developed bourses much, despite the rally in commodities and amelioration in Chinese growth (Chart I-19). Chart I-18Complacency Reigns Chart I-19EM Equities Have Not Yet Outperformed Remarkably, analysts' net earnings revisions for EM stocks have so far failed to turn positive (Chart I-20). Either analysts' EPS expectations were originally still too high, or companies are failing to deliver profits. Whatever the reason, the implication is that the consensus is more bullish on EM than is suggested by the underlying fundamentals. Within an EM equity portfolio, our overweights remain Taiwan, Korea, India, China, Thailand, Russia and central Europe. Our underweights are Malaysia, Indonesia, Turkey, Brazil and Peru. We are neutral on other bourses. Finally, the EM equity benchmark is at a critical technical resistance level (Chart I-21) but odds do not favor a sustainable breakout. Chart I-20EM EPS Net Revisions Are Still Negative Chart I-21EM Stocks: A Breakout Attempt Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please refer to the Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report titled, "Revisiting China's Fiscal And Credit Impulses", dated April 13, 2016, available at ems.bcaresearch.com 2 Trilogy of Special Reports on money/loan creation, savings and investment, titled, "Misconceptions About China's Credit Excesses" dated October 26, 2016, "China's Money Creation Redux And The RMB", dated November 23, 2016 and "Do Credit Bubbles Originate From High National Savings?", dated January 18, 2017, available at ems.bcaresearch.com Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Add the S&P asset manager & custody banks index to the high-conviction overweight list. Prospects for higher interest rates bode well for a catch up phase with the rest of the financials sector. Initiate a long S&P consumer staples/short S&P technology pair trade, a truly out of consensus call. Housing-related equities are likely to gain ground as housing activity should stay resilient amidst rising borrowing costs. Recent Changes S&P Asset Managers & Custody Banks - Added to our high-conviction overweight list on February 16th. Long S&P Consumer Staples/Short S&P Technology - Initiate this pair trade today. Table 1Sector Performance Returns (%) Feature Momentum continues to drive the broad market trend. The drag from a reduction in global liquidity courtesy of depleting foreign exchange reserves continues to be overwhelmed by economic optimism. The latter is fueling a major rotation from bonds to stocks, which is the dominant market force. Valuations have taken a backseat, emblematic of blow-off phases. Two weeks ago we introduced our Complacency-Anxiety Indicator, which hit a new high. Another way to measure greed overwhelming fear is the relentless rise of the forward P/E over the VIX. The spread between these two measures can also gauge complacency. This Indicator has also soared to an all-time high (Chart 1). Chart 2 applies this methodology for the broad S&P sectors, using forward P/E and implied equity volatility, and then standardizes the result to remove biases from perennially low and high P/E sectors. A low reading suggests lower risk, and vice versa. Chart 1Buy At Your Own Risk Chart 2Sector Vulnerabilities And Opportunities At the moment, financials, telecom, utilities, REITs and health care have the lowest implicit vulnerability, while cyclical sectors carry the most risk. How long can this overshoot phase last? There are obviously no easy answers. However, from a purely technical perspective and in the absence of any major monetary, economic and/or geopolitical shocks, an examination of our Composite Technical Indicator (CTI) suggests some running room remains. Our CTI is driven primarily by momentum components. Overbought conditions are signaled once it hits one standard deviation above the mean. Currently, the TI remains slightly below this threshold (Chart 3). Even then, it can cross decisively into the danger zone before the S&P 500 eventually sells off in a meaningful fashion. Chart 3Overbought Conditions Can Persist Importantly, when the CTI swings quickly from deeply oversold to overbought levels, there can be a multi month lead before the broad market crests or suffers a sustained setback (Chart 3), and the bulk of those moves are associated with economic recessions and/or growth disappointments. The implication is that even though extended broad market valuations virtually guarantee paltry long-term returns and economic expectations are now sky-high, technical conditions suggest that momentum may continue to carry the day for a while longer. That does not mean investors should abandon a largely defensive portfolio structure, given that this is where the reward/risk tradeoff is most attractive and timing corrections is inherently difficult. Two weeks ago we recommended buying both gold and packaging stocks. As part of our ongoing rebalancing, this week we are further tweaking our portfolio. We recommend a pair trade to position for the inevitable sub-surface mean reversion heralded by our Indicators in the coming 3-6 months. Asset Managers: Shifting To High-Conviction Status The interest rate and market-sensitive S&P asset managers & custody banks index (AMCB) has lagged most other financials sub-indexes at a time when macro forces are lining up bullishly, particularly in view of the sector's attractive ranking on a forward P/E to volatility basis. While the capital markets and banks groups are seen as having higher torque to these positive forces, these three groups tend to move together. Lately, a divergence has opened, but a number of factors point to an imminent AMCB catch up phase (Chart 4), especially given that AMCB is not levered to overall credit growth, which has dried up. Fed Chair Yellen's testimony last week was interpreted to be slightly more on the hawkish side. That, coupled with the recent upside surprise in core inflation, raises the possibility of more 2017 tightening than currently discounted. That would provide further relief for custody banks, as ultra-low interest rates have been an anchor on this group's profitability as fees earned on funds held in trust have been minimal. The increase in short-term Treasury yields heralds a share price rally (Chart 5, top panel). Chart 4Catch Up Ahead Chart 5Time To Rally Moreover, the boost in economic expectations signals scope for an increase in fee generating activity, such as M&A, stock issuance and even stock lending. BCA's Global Economic Sentiment Index also indicates that the share price ratio has undershot (Chart 5). Most importantly, the asset preference shift from bonds to stocks reverses another major drag on profitability (Chart 5, third panel). Fixed income products carry lower margins than equity products, so as equity assets under management grow, profit margins should expand. If so, then we would anticipate a relative valuation re-rating, especially if the pace and scale of financial sector deregulation disappoints. The latter has been a key factor propelling capital markets and banks, and any disappointment could cause a capital rotation into the lagging AMCB index. Bottom Line: We are already overweight the S&P asset management & custody banks index, and added it to our high-conviction list in a daily Sector Insight on February 16th. New Pair Trade This week we are recommending what can be considered a highly contrarian pair trade: long the S&P consumer staples sector and short the S&P technology sector. It may be difficult to swallow executing such a non-consensus position while the broad market is going gangbusters. However, the objective message from our Indicators and increasing odds of a vicious, un-telegraphed correction, argue that the reward/risk trade-off is too attractive to ignore. As outlined in last week's Cyclical Indicator Update, the technology sector's relative earnings profile has deteriorated, because the corporate sector is not spending much yet and tech companies have suffered a serious loss of pricing power. Conversely, the consumer staples sector has a better chance of earnings outperformance, according to our model (Chart 6). Both sectors appear to have discounted the opposite outcome. Moreover, from a technical perspective, tech stocks are overbought and consumer staples are extremely oversold (Chart 6). Even a simple technical/momentum renormalization would imply a sharp jump in the share price ratio. Both sectors lose competitiveness when the U.S. dollar rise, but given that the technology sector's share of foreign sales (58%) is much higher than that of consumer staples (28%), the pain is disproportional. Importantly, consumer staples exports are accelerating, whereas tech exports are shrinking (Chart 7). Chart 6Contrasting Profiles Chart 7The Strong Dollar Is Worse For Tech Non-durable consumer goods are less sensitive to emerging market prospects, and thus when their currencies weaken, momentum in the consumer staples/tech share price ratio tends to accelerate (EM currencies shown inverted and advanced, bottom panel, Chart 7). Moreover, a strong U.S. dollar tends to reduce input costs for many consumer staples vendors, both through lower commodity prices and a reduced cost of imported goods sold. We have shown that tech stocks fare poorly toward the latter stages of a U.S. dollar bull market, when consumer staples start to shine. This dynamic reflects the economic fallout abroad from a strong U.S. dollar, particularly on developing economies, as well as the drag on U.S. corporate profits, and by extension, capital spending. While the U.S. dollar and stocks have risen in tandem in recent months, that cannot continue indefinitely, and when the correlation breaks down, the defensive consumer staples sector should outperform. In terms of economic dynamics, this share price ratio tends to accelerate when consumer spending outperforms capital spending. Consumer confidence is outpacing business confidence (Chart 8, top panel), signaling such an environment ahead. That sentiment mismatch has already translated into faster consumption than business investment on tech goods (Chart 8, second panel). Unless the gap between the return on and cost of capital reverses course and widens anew, then this trend is likely to persist. As a result, the surge in consumer staples vs. technology pricing power will continue, ultimately flattering the share price ratio through relative profit performance (Chart 8, bottom panel). The message is that consumer staples profits can have the upper hand over tech even when overall GDP growth is positive, provided the underlying driver is consumption rather than capital spending. From an external standpoint, it is notable that consumer staples have a better track record than tech stocks during inflationary periods. Chart 9 shows that the uptrend in long-term inflation expectations and increase in actual inflation both forecast a revival in this pair trade. Chart 8Unsustainable Divergences Chart 9Inflation Pressures? Buy This Ratio Rising inflation ultimately heralds tighter monetary policy, which is a precursor to elevated broad market volatility and a rise in the discount rate, to the detriment of long duration sectors. History shows that the high priced tech sector is more vulnerable than the safe haven staples sector in such an environment. In sum, the time is ripe for a contrary pair trade favoring consumer staples vs. technology. Notable risks to this trade are that the U.S. dollar weakens meaningfully and/or global capital spending re-accelerates decisively, relative to consumer spending. Bottom Line: We recommend a market neutral long consumer staples/short technology pair trade. The time horizon for this trade is 3-6 months. Will Housing Stocks Go Through The Roof? Housing-related stocks have delivered positive earnings surprises, but anxiety about rising mortgage rates challenges the outlook. While the latter is a risk, cheap valuations and consumers' underappreciated ability to absorb rising borrowing costs offset these concerns. Sensitivity analysis shows that even a 200 basis point (bps) spike in interest rates from current levels would fail to push housing affordability back to the long-term average (Chart 10). Moreover, mortgage payments as a percentage of incomes and effective borrowing costs would also remain below their respective historic means even with such a spike. Importantly, housing market fundamentals are improving. Lumber prices are on fire. Lumber has been the best performing commodity year-to-date. This is a real time indicator of housing demand (Chart 11). Similarly, railroad carloads of lumber are also firming, signaling that the price rise is demand-driven rather than a speculative bet in the trading pits. Sustained house price inflation, solid housing turnover and the acceleration in building permits reinforce that housing activity remains robust (Chart 11). Chart 10Higher Rates Are Not A Show Stopper Chart 11Lumber Strength Is Housing Bullish The credit tap to sustain strong activity is still open. According to the latest Fed Senior Bank Loan Officer Survey, banks are willing and able to extend residential mortgage credit (bottom panel, Chart 11). This contrasts with many other credit categories, where banks are tightening the screws and credit demand is faltering: C&I loans have shrunk over the past three months, as has total bank credit. First time home buyers are also reappearing and anecdotes of increased house flipping activity signal a vibrant market with unobstructed access to credit. All of this should continue to support earnings-led outperformance from both homebuilders and home improvement retailers (HIR). The bullish outlook for the S&P homebuilding index rests on four pillars. The latest National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) survey revealed that sales expectations remain over 20 points above the boom/bust line and just shy of recent cyclical highs (Chart 12). Homebuilders are clearly still seeing strong traffic. New home prices are still expanding at a healthy clip (Chart 12). Sales growth and new home price inflation are tightly linked. The mortgage application purchase index has picked up steam despite the mortgage rate increase, confirming that first time homebuyers are entering the market after a long hiatus as the financial motivation to buy vs. rent has improved. This optimism is causing an aggressive re-rating in earnings estimates from chronically bearish levels (Chart 12), a harbinger of further gains in relative share prices. The S&P HIR index also has a concrete foundation. Higher lumber prices flow straight to the bottom line, because HIR companies typically earn a set margin on lumber-related sales. Moreover, higher housing turnover is a boon for industry sales volumes (Chart 13). Historically, home sales momentum has been an excellent leading indicator of renovation activity. Chart 12Buy Homebuilders... Chart 13... And Building Supply Retailers Encouragingly, the NAHB remodeling survey is still in expansion territory, and tends to follow the trend in home sales, underscoring that home renovation activity is set to improve (Chart 13). Our HIR model encapsulates many of these key drivers, and has climbed anew (Chart 13). The message is that profits, and share prices, are on track to outperform. Adding it all up, the housing backdrop remains attractive, and even a steady increase in borrowing costs should not disrupt momentum. The time to become concerned will be if inflation becomes a serious risk, causing the Fed to get 'tight' and credit availability to dry up. The next few interest rate hikes won't move the monetary settings to that phase yet. Until then, we recommend erring on the bullish side. Bottom Line: We reiterate our high-conviction overweight in the S&P home improvement retail index (HD, LOW) and continue to recommend an above benchmark allocation in the S&P homebuilding index (PHM, DHI, LEN). Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps. Favor growth over value (downgrade alert).
Highlights Recent economic and inflation data can be characterized as Goldilocks: strong enough to keep recession fears at bay, yet not hot enough to warrant Fed tightening. Historical precedent suggests that the current period of positive economic surprises could persist for at least another month or two, fueling ever-more lopsided positioning into equities. Despite a lot of good news already discounted, we retain a cyclical bias toward small caps. Currently, the main driver of style performance is sector weightings. Value stocks are likely to perform slightly better than Growth by virtue of a smaller weighting in technology and larger weighting to financials. Higher conviction in Value stocks outperformance awaits better credit growth trends. Feature The term Goldilocks is used to describe an economy that is growing, but is not quite hot enough to create serious inflation risks, and not so cold that it fosters recession fears. Last week's major data reports fit this view of the world and helped U.S. equity prices soar to a new all-time high (Chart 1): NFIB Small Business Survey: Since small businesses have long been considered the job engine of the U.S. economy, monitoring the sentiment of small businesses owners, their likelihood to undertake expansion plans, and raise/cut prices, can often give a good glimpse into the likelihood of financial market trends to be sustained on a cyclical basis. In January, the NFIB small business sentiment indexes surged and to our surprise, the positive sentiment did not correct in February (Chart 2). The expectations component actually rose even further! Chart 1Rotation Into Stocks Chart 2Will Hopes Be Dashed? We continue to believe the survey reflects a lot of hope and is likely to reverse substantially. According to the survey, business conditions are the best in thirty years, save for a brief period in the early 2000s. Even the most ardent of Trump supporters will find it difficult to explain how a handful of executive orders and memoranda have so significantly altered the business landscape in such a short space of time! This radical shift in sentiment makes risk asset prices vulnerable: the pace of economic expansion has only gradually improved, but investors and other economic agents have drastically revised upward their expectations. Retail Sales: A number of cyclical tailwinds are beginning to finally align for consumers, as discussed in January 16 Weekly Report, and consumers appear to be in slightly better shopping moods in 2017. January retail sales beat expectations and prior months were revised higher. Spending improved across categories and these broad-based gains reinforce our view that the consumer can lead a gradual, self-reinforcing economic recovery (Chart 3). Inflation: We do not worry that cyclical inflation trends will be strong enough to force the Fed to raise rates faster than the FOMC's current expectations (three rate hikes by end-2017). True, both headline and core CPI were stronger than consensus expectations in January, and producer prices are in a noticeable uptrend. But this should not be viewed as the beginning of a new, more dangerous inflation problem. As Chart 4 shows, producer prices - at all stages of production - have been rising for the past few months. But only a fraction of any price rise at the producer level is likely to be passed on to consumers. Chart 5 shows that core goods prices have decoupled with finished goods producer prices (i.e. the last stage of production) since 2000. This speaks to the massive deflationary impulse at the end of the supply chain: a combination of deflation via imported goods, major technological advances in supply chain management and logistics, and changing consumer behavior in an e-commerce age means that consumers are not price takers. These factors imply that any budding inflation pressures will stay "trapped" at the earlier stages of the supply chain and it should not be a foregone conclusion that PPI can drive CPI prices higher. Chart 3Consumer Supports Are In Place Chart 4Producer Prices Turning Higher... Chart 5...But PPI Barely Leaks Into CPI Similarly, the rise in the headline inflation rate - for the first time since 2013 above core CPI - should not be viewed as an omen for what lies ahead for broader inflation trends. As Chart 6 shows, the relationship between energy prices and core CPI broke down during the early 1980s: a rise in energy prices does not correlate with non-energy consumer prices. Chart 6Energy Prices Uncorrelated With Core CPI Since The 1980s Finally, we note that despite general optimism about business conditions in the NFIB survey, the pricing backdrop remains a glaring exception. In the most recent survey, the number of businesses expecting to raise prices actually fell. With respect to last week's core CPI print, the monthly increase of 0.3% is unlikely to be sustained. A few components were behind the upside surprise. For example, new car prices increased 0.9% m/m, apparel prices rose 1.4% m/m and airline fares spiked 2.0% m/m. The usual suspects behind outsized price gains were actually quite tame in January. Homeowners' equivalent rents increased by 0.2% m/m versus several months of 0.3% gains. Similarly, medical care was up 0.2% m/m. Our CPI diffusion index fell further below the zero line, confirming that inflation pressures are not broad based. Perhaps the only negative development last week was that positive data surprises, combined with a slightly hawkish interpretation of Janet Yellen's testimony, have pushed forward the bond market's expectations of the next Fed interest rate hike. We expect the most likely outcome will be that the next rate hike will be in June. If that forecast proves correct, then any upward pressure on bond yields should be modest in the next few months. We do not expect a resumption of the cyclical bond bear market to be a headwind for stocks until later this year at the earliest. How long can the Goldilocks backdrop persist? As Chart 7 shows, positive economic surprises have been propping up financial markets alongside optimism about a Trump-led Republican government. Importantly, for the first time since 2011, positive economic surprises are occurring in the first quarter of the calendar year. During past episodes, this level (i.e. above 40) in the Economic Surprise Index has persisted for upwards of three months. The implication is that economic surprises may continue to help fuel the momentum in equity prices for another month or even longer. Chart 7Economic Surprises Could Persist A While Longer This corroborates our review two weeks ago of technical indicators, which showed that apart from extreme sentiment and despite the persistent run-up in equity prices, most short-term indicators are not yet flashing warning signs. In sum, recent data prints show that the U.S. economy is on sturdier footings. The absence of a meaningful inflation threat implies that a prolonged economic cycle can feed positive gains in the stock/bond ratio over a cyclical horizon. But these positive underpinnings cannot explain the speed and magnitude of the recent financial market adjustments. Although the bulk of our indicators suggest that positioning may become more lopsided in the short term, the current phase of the rally is high-risk. Size And Style Guide Several clients have asked about size and style investing in recent weeks. We remain overweight small caps relative to large, and are only slightly more optimistic about Value versus Growth. In the case of Value versus Growth, we echo the advice of our Global ETF strategy:1 the Value/Growth decision has become, more than ever, a matter of sector preference. As Table 1 shows, there are three sectors with vastly differing weights between S&P Growth and Value Indexes. The Value index is dominated by Financials (27% of the index, versus a 4% weight in the Growth index and 15% in the S&P 500) and Energy (12% in the Value Index versus 3% and 7% in the Growth and S&P 500 Indexes, respectively). Meanwhile, technology stocks make up a whopping 34% of the Growth Index. It is no wonder then that Value stocks shot higher on the back of a post-election financial sector outperformance streak (Chart 8). Financials (as well as the energy sector) received a big boost due to the promise of drastic de-regulation of the industry under a majority-Republican government. TABLE 1Sector Composition Our U.S. Equity Strategy service is underweight the technology sector, but only neutral on financials and energy stocks. On this basis, only a slight Value bias would make sense. At present, relative sector weightings appear to be the highest conviction argument in favor of a particular style, since many indicators that have reliably gauged style performance are not convincingly tilting in one direction or another. For example, growth stocks tend to need rising long-term earnings expectations to help them outperform. But this cycle, Growth stocks outperformed long before long-term earnings expectations started to move higher. Now that EPS have adjusted upward, it is hard to see - absent a repeat of the tech bubble in the late 1990s - long-term earnings growth rising enough to drag relative share performance higher. Conversely, the conditions for a plunge in long-term earnings expectations do not exist (Chart 8). Similarly, Value stocks tend to require improving global growth conditions in order to sustain relative outperformance over Growth stocks (Chart 8, bottom panel). That condition is in place, though the strength of the trend is unclear. In an upcoming publication by our Bank Credit Analyst, BCA editors uncover that although it is clear that an upswing in global growth is occurring in both the "soft" and "hard" data, there is little concrete evidence that this cyclical upturn will be any more enduring than previous mini-cycles so far in this lackluster expansion. The bottom line is that the outperformance in Value stocks relative to Growth may endure, by virtue of Value stocks having a comparably small allocation to technology stocks and a relatively larger allocation to financials (and energy). A more compelling case for Value stocks requires a higher conviction view in a prolonged financial sector outperformance phase. The latter awaits a move from promises to watch action on financial deregulation and more importantly, a more positive outlook on credit creation. As for small caps relative to large, we expect that the cyclical outperformance trend in small caps is sustainable (Chart 9). True, in the near term, there is room for overbought conditions to be further unwound. The consensus opinion that corporate tax reform and Trump trade policy will disproportionately benefit small companies is likely already fully discounted, making small cap share prices vulnerable to political disappointment. Chart 8Growth Will Struggle ##br##To Keep Up With Value Chart 9Small Cap Outperformance##br## Is Not Constrained By Valuation Meanwhile, if the dip in the U.S. dollar becomes a more sustainable trend, then small caps will be at further risk. However, that is not our base case: we expect broad dollar strength to be supportive of small cap stocks over the next six to twelve months. The U.S. economy is on sounder footing than its global counterparts and the Fed is far out in front; both of these conditions are supportive of a stronger dollar. Fortunately, small caps earnings are far more insulated from dollar strength, by virtue of the fact that small caps revenues are much more domestically oriented than large caps. The one area that small caps earnings may come under more pressure than large caps is margins. As noted above, small businesses are not yet particularly optimistic about their ability to raise prices in order to match wage hikes. Nonetheless, we expect better domestic (and thus small-cap positive) top-line growth to outweigh a margin squeeze felt more heavily for small caps versus large. Finally, small caps are often viewed as a higher beta play on growth (although this has not always been the case). Since relative valuations are not yet problematic, then if our base case of a prolonged, albeit not necessarily overly robust, non-inflationary economic expansion pans out, then the small cap outperformance phase could also endure for a prolonged period. Lenka Martinek, Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy lenka@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global ETF Strategy/ETS Equity Trading Strategy Special Report “Smart-Beta ETF Selection, Part I - Value Funds,” dated February 15, 2017, available at bcaresearch.com.
Dear Client, In addition to our regular Weekly Report, we sent you a Special Report on Wednesday prepared by my colleague Marko Papic, BCA's chief geopolitical strategist, assessing the election landscape in Europe this year. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Senior Vice President Global Investment Strategy Highlights Global growth has accelerated, corporate earnings are rebounding, and leading indicators suggest that these positive trends will persist over the remainder of the year. This supports our cyclically bullish view on global equities. Looking further out, the impulse to growth from the easing in financial conditions that began in early 2016 will fade, setting the stage for a slowdown in 2018. If growth does falter next year, easier fiscal policy could provide an offsetting tailwind. However, there continues to be a large gap between what politicians are promising and what they can realistically deliver. What is different this time is that spare capacity is much lower than it was during previous mid-cycle slowdowns. Thus, while global bond yields could eventually dip, they remain in a secular uptrend. Feature The Elusive Correction We have been arguing since last fall that stronger global growth will help fuel a variety of reflationary trades.1 This part of our view has panned out nicely. What has surprised us is just how relentlessly the market has traded that view. With the exception of a few small wobbles, the S&P 500 has basically marched higher since the morning following the U.S. presidential election. Reflecting this development, the VIX fell to near record low levels earlier this week (Chart 1). The market's failure to take a breather has sabotaged our efforts to have our cake and eat it too - to maintain an overweight stance on global equities, while also profiting from the occasional correction. In contrast to our last three tactical hedges - which generated a cumulative return of 42% - our latest hedge is now down 9%. That's a lot of red ink. Out of pure risk management considerations, we will close this trade if the loss breaches 10%. Nevertheless, most indicators continue to warn of a looming correction. In particular, our U.S. equity strategists' new "Complacency-Anxiety" index is at an all-time high, suggesting that stocks have entered a technical overshoot phase (Chart 2).2 Chart 1VIX Is Near Record Lows Chart 2Complacency Reigns Cyclical Picture Still Solid In contrast to the short-term outlook, the 12-month cyclical picture for risk assets still looks reasonably good. Measures of current activity are rebounding as animal spirits begin to kick in (Chart 3). Falling unemployment and stronger wage growth are causing households to open their wallets. Against the backdrop of decreasing spare capacity, firms are reacting to this by increasing investment spending. Capital goods orders in the G3 economies have jumped higher in recent months, and capex intention surveys are pointing to further upside (Chart 4). Chart 3Current Activity Indicators Are Rebounding Chart 4An Upswing In Capex Corporate earnings have also accelerated on the back of faster economic growth. Consensus estimates call for global EPS to expand by 12% in local-currency terms this year, with the S&P 500 registering 10.4% growth, the STOXX Europe 600 gaining 14.3%, Japan's TOPIX adding 12.5%, and MSCI EM leading the pack at 16%. Outside the U.S., year-to-date earnings revisions have generally been positive, particularly in Japan and EM (in the U.S., 2017 EPS estimates have ticked down a modest 0.8%). BCA's in-house earnings models are consistent with this optimistic profit picture (Chart 5). What accounts for this fortuitous turn of events? A number of reasons help explain why growth accelerated in the second half of 2016: The drag on global growth from the plunge in commodity sector investment ran its course. U.S. energy sector capex, for example, tumbled by 70% between Q2 of 2014 and Q3 of 2016, knocking 0.7 percent off the level of U.S. GDP. The fallout for commodity-exporting EMs such as Brazil and Russia was considerably more severe. The global economy emerged from a protracted inventory destocking cycle (Chart 6). In the U.S., inventories made a negative contribution to growth for five straight quarters starting in Q2 of 2015, the longest streak since the 1950s. The U.K., Germany, and Japan also saw notable inventory corrections. Fears of a hard landing in China and a disorderly devaluation of the RMB subsided as the Chinese government ramped up fiscal stimulus, helping to reflate the economy. Global growth benefited with a lag from the easing in financial conditions that began in earnest in early 2016. Government bond yields fell to record low levels in July. In addition, junk bond spreads collapsed, dropping from a peak of 7.9% in February to 4.3% by year-end (Chart 7). Higher equity prices, particularly in a number of beaten down emerging markets, also helped. Chart 5Broad-Based Acceleration In Corporate Earnings Chart 6Inventory Destocking Was A Drag On Growth Chart 7Corporate Borrowing Costs Have Fallen How Much Longer? Chart 8Improvement In Global ##br##Leading Economic Indicators The key question for investors is how long the good times will last. Right now, most leading indicators that we follow are signaling that the expansion will endure for the remainder of this year (Chart 8). As we look towards 2018, however, things get murkier. Conceptually, it is the change in financial conditions that matters for growth. While the ongoing rally in global equities and continued narrowing in credit spreads has contributed to some easing in financial conditions since the U.S. presidential election, this has been partly offset by higher government bond yields. A stronger dollar has also led to an incremental tightening in the U.S., as well as in some emerging markets with high levels of U.S. dollar-denominated debt. As such, it is likely that the positive "impulse" to economic growth from the easing in financial conditions that took place last year will begin to dissipate towards the end of this year. Fiscal Policy To The Rescue? If growth does slow next year, easier fiscal policy could provide an offsetting tailwind. The fiscal thrust for developed economies turned positive in 2016, the first year this happened since 2010 (Chart 9). However, it remains to be seen whether this trend will continue. There is little support among Republicans in Congress for a big infrastructure program. It once seemed possible that Chuck Schumer and his fellow Democrats could find common ground with President Trump on this issue, but that is looking less likely with each passing day, given the level of vitriol in Washington. Broad-based tax cuts are a certainty, but the risk is that they will be coupled with cuts to government spending. Empirically, the latter have a larger "multiplier effect" on GDP than the former. To complicate matters, the introduction of a border adjustment tax - something to which we assign 50% odds - could generate significant near-term dislocations for the global economy.3 Meanwhile, much of Trump's regulatory agenda is in limbo. A repeal of Dodd-Frank is off the table. Senate Republicans do not have the 60 votes needed to scrap it. The Volcker rule is here to stay. On the other side of the Atlantic, the European Commission has recommended a further loosening in fiscal policy this year, but member states themselves are actually targeting somewhat smaller fiscal deficits (Chart 10). As is often the case, budgetary overruns are likely, but with the Greek bailout program now back on the ropes, Germany and a number of other countries may begin to dial up the austerity rhetoric. Chart 9Will Fiscal Policy Continue To Ease? Chart 10European Commission Recommending Greater Fiscal Expansion Uncertainty over the slew of European elections slated for this year could also weigh on business sentiment. Marine Le Pen is likely to place first in the initial round of the French presidential election, but faces an uphill battle in the subsequent runoff. Nevertheless, betting markets are assigning a one-in-three chance of Le Pen becoming president - similar to the odds they were assigning to a Brexit "yes vote" and a Trump victory (Chart 11). Italy also remains a risk, as my colleague Marko Papic, BCA's chief geopolitical strategist, discussed in this week's Special Report.4 Anti-euro sentiment is now stronger there than in any other major European economy (Chart 12). Chinese fiscal policy has already tightened significantly, with the year-over-year rate of change in government spending falling from a high of 25% in November 2015 to zero at present (Chart 13). So far the Chinese economy has held up well, but there is a risk that this may change. Despite Trump's backpedaling on the "One China" question, we expect the Trump administration to declare China a currency manipulator later this year. This will pave the way for higher tariffs on a variety of Chinese goods, which could lead to retaliatory measures by China. Chart 11Brexit, Then Trump... Is Le Pen Next? Chart 12Italy: Anti-Euro Sentiment Is A Risk Chart 13China: Fiscal Stimulus Is Fading Investment Conclusions Chart 14Diminished Slack In The Global Economy Global growth continues to be strong, and is likely to stay that way for the remainder of this year. However, there is a heightened risk that the global economy will falter in 2018. We remain cyclically overweight global equities and underweight government bonds, but are not dogmatic about this view. As the discussion above suggests, plenty of things could derail the reflation trade. If evidence begins to mount that a slowdown is coming earlier than we think, we will turn more bearish on stocks. Given that equities are technically overbought at present, we would not fault anyone for taking some money off the table. If growth does slow in 2018, does this mean that bond yields will fall back towards last year's lows? We don't think so. For one thing, a major deflationary commodity bust of the sort we endured in 2014-15 is not in the cards. In addition, there is less slack in the global economy now than there was last year, or for that matter, anytime since early 2008 (Chart 14). As we discussed in our Q1 Strategy Outlook, potential GDP growth is likely to remain structurally depressed across much of the world, owing to slower productivity and labor force growth.5 Lower potential growth means that excess capacity could continue to be absorbed even if growth slows somewhat from its current well-above trend pace. In the U.S., this absorption of excess capacity is nearly complete, with most labor market indicators suggesting that the economy is approaching full employment (Chart 15). In this vein, we would heavily discount the decline in average hourly earnings in January's employment report. Chart 16 shows that this was mainly driven by an anomalous drop in compensation in the financial sector. Broader measures continue to point to brewing wage pressures (Chart 17). We expect the Fed to raise rates three times this year, one more hike than the market is now pricing in. If this happens, the dollar is likely to strengthen modestly over the remainder of the year. Chart 15U.S. Economy Approaching ##br##Full Employment Chart 16Financial Sector Dragging ##br##Down Hourly Earnings In The U.S. Chart 17U.S.: Broad Measures Pointing ##br##To Rising Wage Pressures Peter Berezin, Senior Vice President Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Better U.S. Economic Data Will Cause The Dollar To Strengthen," dated October 14, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Bridging The Gap," dated February 6, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "U.S. Border Adjustment Tax: A Potential Monster Issue For 2017," dated January 20, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Climbing The Wall Of Worry In Europe," dated February 15, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see Global Investment Strategy, "Strategy Outlook First Quarter 2017: From Reflation To Stagflation," dated January 6, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights Chinese fiscal stimulus, both direct fiscal spending and infrastructure investment, has slowed significantly since late last year. This raises a red flag on the sustainability of the cyclical upturn. The Chinese economy should remain buoyant in the near term, despite fiscal retrenchment. Policy initiatives should be closely monitored. Tactically upgrade H shares back to "overweight." Stay cyclically positive, and favor Chinese equities in global and EM portfolios. There are early signs that deflation is re-emerging in Hong Kong. Feature The Chinese economy has maintained strong momentum since the beginning of the year. Some sectors are showing remarkable strength, an extraordinary development considering that January is historically a lackluster month for industrial activity due to seasonality factors. The recent strength is all the more noteworthy as policymakers have apparently rolled back fiscal support significantly since late last year, and have more recently also tightened on the monetary front.1 The divergence between strengthening growth momentum and waning policy support raises hopes that the economy has finally found its footing with self-sustainable dynamics, but at the same time raises the risk that growth may relapse anew without policy tailwinds - especially if struck by an exogenous shock. For now we maintain our benign view on China's cyclical growth outlook, but the risk is tilted to the downside, and policy initiatives should be closely monitored going forward. Meanwhile, we remain positive on Chinese equities on a cyclical basis. This week we are also upgrading our tactical "bullishness rating" on H shares back to "overweight." Strengthening Growth Versus Waning Fiscal Support Despite seasonal noise in the macro data in the first two months of the year, most macro numbers coming out of China of late have surprised significantly to the upside. Producer prices have continued to accelerate, heavy-machine sales have been booming, and even exports have rebounded sharply (Chart 1). The regained strength in the economy is partly attributable to early last year's low base, which has supercharged year-over-year growth rates. However, there is little doubt at this stage that China's growth recovery since early last year has developed into a mini boom. Beneath the robust growth numbers, there are some disconcerting undercurrents on the policy front (Chart 2). Fiscal spending growth has decelerated sharply since early 2016, and actually contracted towards year end. More importantly, capital spending on infrastructure construction, which can be viewed as an indicator for broader policy-driven spending in the economy, also slowed sharply in the last quarter. Fixed asset investment in transportation networks and utility concerns have also abruptly slowed. Investment in railway construction contracted by almost 30% in the final months of last year from a year earlier. All of this underscores a synchronized reduction in the public sector's involvement in the economy of late. Chart 1Growth Recovery... Chart 2... Meets Waning Fiscal Stimulus It is not immediately clear why the government has significantly scaled back fiscal support. Combined with the latest interest rate adjustments by the People's Bank of China, it is likely that the authorities have become content with the economy's performance to a degree that any direct policy pump-priming in their view is no longer necessary or justified. If China's ongoing cyclical growth improvement was due to the authorities' reflationary efforts, then the abrupt change in policy course certainly raises a red flag on how long the recovery may last. Can The Growth Recovery Continue Without Fiscal Support? Chart 3Monetary Conditions Matter More Than Fiscal We expect the Chinese economy to remain buoyant in the next two quarters, even without major acceleration in fiscal spending, for the following reasons: First, China's growth recovery since last year has been driven primarily by easing monetary conditions through a weakening exchange rate and falling real interest rates, rather than strong fiscal boost. Chart 3 shows that industrial sector growth deterioration worsened dramatically in 2014, which in hindsight was due to a combination of aggressive fiscal retrenchment and tighter monetary conditions index (MCI). Even though fiscal expenditures began to accelerate strongly starting in early 2015, the economy only began to improve a year later when the MCI started to ease. In fact, the industrial sector continued to improve throughout 2016 along with a rising MCI when fiscal expenditures decelerated. In other words, the industrial sector's performance is much more tightly correlated with the country's monetary conditions than the cyclical swings in fiscal spending. On one hand, the RMB exchange rate matters fundamentally for the manufacturing sector, which is heavily exposed to overseas markets. On the other hand, lower real interest rates, either through easing deflation or falling nominal rates, has been a primary driver of corporate profitability and overall business conditions, given the country's debt-centric financial intermediation system (Chart 4). As PPI is still rising rapidly and the trade-weighted RMB has once again rolled over, monetary conditions will likely continue to ease, which will further boost the industrial sector despite the fiscal cuts. Second, the slowdown in infrastructure spending will likely be compensated by accelerating investment in other sectors, manufacturing and mining in particular. Easing monetary conditions and ensuing growth improvement have significantly boosted corporate profitability, which should in turn boost manufacturing capital spending (Chart 5). It is likely that the multi-year slowdown in manufacturing sector capital spending has run its course and will accelerate going forward, albeit gradually.2 Investment in the mining sector is still contracting sharply. However, there has also been a dramatic improvement in profits among mining related industries, particularly coal and base metals (Chart 5, bottom panel). If historical correlations hold, the dramatic contraction in mining sector investment has likely already become very advanced, if not already bottomed. At minimum, it is highly unlikely that mining-related capex will continue to contract at an accelerating pace. Chart 4Interest Rates Versus Corporate Profits Chart 5Profits Versus Capital Spending A potential revival in manufacturing and mining capex will reverse a major growth headwind the Chinese economy has faced in recent years, which will continue to buoy growth despite slowing infrastructure construction. Manufacturing and mining account for over 33% of China's total fixed asset investment, higher than the 25% share of infrastructure alone (Chart 6). Indeed, there are signs that the corporate sector's intentions to expand capital investment may already be improving. In recent months medium- to long-term new loans to the corporate sector have accelerated strongly, which could be a sign that the corporate sector is beefing up on investment capital (Chart 7). Chart 6Manufacturing And Mining Capex ##br##Versus Infrastructure Construction Chart 7Longer Term Loans##br## Have Accelerated Sharply Finally, we maintain the view that overall inventory levels in the economy are unsustainably low, and improving growth and easing deflation should push producers to re-stock (Chart 8). This should also ease any near-term pressure on production, even if new orders are hit by slowing public sector demand. In other words, the economy has a built-in buffer for a period of weaker demand which could allow policymakers to re-orient demand-side policies in light of the new growth situation. Chart 8The Case For Inventory Restocking In short, we expect that waning fiscal support in the economy will not derail the cyclical recovery. Macro numbers may look toppy in the coming months, as the favorable base effect from last year's low levels wears out, but business activity should remain buoyant at least in the coming two quarters. Nonetheless, in a global environment that is still facing enormous challenges and mounting uncertainties, domestic policy tightening obviously raises downside risks. The annual People's Congress in early March should offer some important clues on the Chinese government's growth priorities and policy directions, and should be closely monitored. Tactically Upgrade H Shares In terms of Chinese stocks, our attempt to time a market correction in H shares ahead of the U.S. presidential elections in October did not bear fruit as expected.3 This week we are upgrading our tactical "bullishness rating" on H shares back to "overweight". Even though H shares did correct, they found support at key technical levels and have broken out of late, underscoring a strong technical pattern (Chart 9). We are still concerned that some global markets, especially U.S. stocks, appear frothy and are vulnerable to some sort of shakeout, but the market appears to be in a melt-up phase in the near term. The risk of being left out in a rising market is higher than otherwise. More importantly, Chinese H shares are not nearly as frothy, if not outright cheap, which should further limit downside risks. The Trump administration has notably toned down the anti-China rhetoric, and the near term risk of escalating trade tension between the U.S. and China has abated.4 This should also soothe investors' concerns on Chinese stocks. Bottom Line: Tactically upgrade H shares back to "overweight." A shares will likely remain largely trendless. Meanwhile, stay cyclically positive, and favor Chinese equities in global and EM portfolios. Hong Kong: Is Deflation Coming Back? Hong Kong's GDP numbers to be released next week are likely to show the economy accelerated in the final quarter of the year, according to our model (Chart 10). However, the improvement was likely almost entirely driven by exports rather than domestic factors. In fact, retail sales contracted by 3% in December from a year ago. More importantly, with the exception of essential items such as food, alcohol and tobacco, the growth rates of all other major consumer goods are in deeply negative territory. Durable goods, an important barometer for consumer confidence and spending power, dropped by a whopping 20% in value, or 15.8% in real terms from a year ago, underscoring very weak domestic demand. Therefore, Hong Kong's growth outlook will remain heavily dependent on external demand. Chart 9H Shares: A Technical Breakout Chart 10Hong Kong's Growth Recovery Weak domestic demand also weighs heavy on inflation. Hong Kong's headline inflation is falling rapidly, primarily driven by declining rental prices, and odds are high that inflation may dip below zero in the coming months. This means that deflation may re-emerge for the first time since 2005. These developing deflationary pressures underscore the frothy housing market, and also suggest the Hong Kong dollar may have become expensive again. The currency board system prevents nominal exchange rate adjustments, and therefore any adjustment has to be through changes in domestic prices. There is little systemic risk in Hong Kong's financial system, but the re-emergence of deflationary pressures further weakens domestic demand, augments growth difficulties and bodes poorly for asset prices, especially real estate. We will follow up on these issues in the coming weeks. Yan Wang, Senior Vice President China Investment Strategy yanw@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "On Chinese Tightening," dated February 9, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Growth Watch," dated January 19, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Housing Tightening: Now And 2010," dated October 13, 2016, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "Dealing With The Trump Wildcard," dated January 26, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
The S&P asset manager and custody bank index is in a prime position for a catch up rally. This interest rate and market-sensitive financial sector group has lagged most others at a time when macro forces are lining up bullishly. Fed Chair Yellen slightly more hawkish commentary this week raised the possibility of an earlier than expected interest rate hike. That would provide further relief for custody banks, as ultra-low interest rates have been an anchor on profitability. Moreover, the boost in global economic sentiment indicates increased scope for fee generating activity, such as M&A, issuance and even stock lending. Most importantly, the asset preference shift from bonds-to-stocks represents a potential boost to profit margins (bottom panel), which would warrant a valuation re-rating. We are already overweight, and are adding this group to our high-conviction list today. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5AMCB - BK, BLK, STT, AMP, NTRS, TROW, BEN, IVZ, AMG.
An Insight early in the year, highlighted that the NFIB small business survey was at an historic extreme, and that was typically a precursor to a reversal of fortunes in the small/large ratio. Since then, small caps have modestly underperformed large caps. This corrective phase could have a bit further to run, based on relative volatility trends. Large cap volatility is probing multiyear lows, but small cap volatility remains 30% above the 2013 all-time low, and trades at a massive premium to the VIX or large cap volatility. Diverging volatilities have historically forecast corrective phases in the relative share price ratio. Nevertheless, as outlined in Monday's Cyclical Indicator Update, relative profit forces continue to trend in favor of small vs. large companies, and relative valuations do not fully discount this backdrop. Consequently, we recommend riding out any pullback and sticking with a small vs. large cap bias.
Our Industrials sector Cyclical Macro Indicator has edged lower after a modest recovery in recent months. The strong U.S. dollar, relapse in short-term pricing power measures and sector productivity contraction are offsetting improvement in global PMI surveys. The lack of confirmation of an industrial sector revival from emerging markets is also holding back the CMI. The post-election surge in share prices is slowly being unwound, as the sector was quick to discount expectations for massive domestic fiscal stimulus. Participation is beginning to fray around the edges, as our relative advance/decline line has rolled over, as has breadth. Our TI is pulling back from overbought levels, warning that a further correction in the share price ratio looms. It would be nearly unprecedented for the share price ratio to trough before our TI hits oversold levels. We retain our high conviction underweight position in the S&P industrials sector.
Our macro models are not signaling that investors should position as if robust and self-reinforcing economic growth lies ahead. Our Deep Cyclical indicators are the weakest, while defensive and interest rate-sensitive models are grinding higher. Deep cyclical sectors are very overvalued and overbought, while defensives are deeply undervalued and oversold. The message from our models is that sub-surface mean reversion is an apt theme for the next few months. The most attractive combination of macro, valuation and technical readings are in the consumer staples, health care sectors with the financials sector a close second, but it is overbought. The least attractive combinations are in energy, materials and industrials. Consistent with the objective readings from these Indicators, prospects for elevated market volatility, stronger economic growth in developed vs developing economies, a tighter Fed and expensive U.S. dollar are consistent with maintaining a largely defensive portfolio structure. Please see yesterday's Cyclical Indicator Update for more details.
Highlights Key Portfolio Highlights Improved world economic growth and rising inflation expectations have buoyed global equities (Chart 1). The downside is that financial conditions are tightening and U.S. dollar-based liquidity is contracting, which is growth restrictive (Chart 2). The massive outperformance of the financials and industrials sectors since the U.S. election implies that U.S. markets have been largely politically-motivated. Positive economic surprises remain mostly sentiment/confidence driven, rather than from upside in hard economic data (Chart 3). That unusually large gap implies that a big jump in 'hard data' surprises is already discounted and represents a latent risk, as it did in the spring of 2011 just before the summertime equity market swoon. Federal income tax receipts are contracting, suggesting that an economic boom is not forthcoming (Chart 4). In fact, there has never been a contraction in tax receipts without a corresponding slump in employment growth. Corporate sector pricing power gains have not been evenly distributed. Deep cyclicals gains came off a low base and may already be experiencing a relapse. Conversely, defensive and interest rate-sensitive sectors are demonstrating the most strength (Chart 5). Our macro models are not signaling that investors should position as if robust and self-reinforcing economic growth lies ahead. Our Deep Cyclical indicators are the weakest, while defensive and interest rate-sensitive models are grinding higher (Chart 6). Deep cyclical sectors are very overvalued and overbought, while defensives are deeply undervalued and oversold (Charts 7 and 8). Mean reversion is an apt theme for the next few months. The most attractive combination of macro, valuation and technical readings are in the consumer staples, health care sectors. The financials sector is a close second, but it is overbought. The least attractive combinations are in energy, materials and industrials. Prospects for elevated market volatility, stronger economic growth in developed vs developing economies, a tighter Fed and expensive U.S. dollar are consistent with maintaining a largely defensive portfolio structure (Charts 9-12). Chart 1Pricing Power Revival... Chart 2... But A Liquidity Drain Chart 3Show Me The Money Chart 4Yellow Flag Chart 5Pricing Recovery Is Not Broad Based Chart 6Indicator Snapshot Chart 7Focus On Value Chart 8Mean Reversion Ahead Chart 9Fundamentals Favor Defensives... Chart 10... As Do Market Signals Chart 1112-Month Performance After Fed Hikes Chart 1224-Month Performance After Fed Hikes Chart 13Staples Will Cushion A Volatility Resurgence Chart 14Media Stocks Like A Strong Currency Chart 15Unduly Punished Chart 16Strong Fundamental Support Chart 17Less Production... Chart 18... Means More Rigs Chart 19End Of Sugar High Chart 20A Toxic Mix Chart 21Tech Stocks Don't Like Inflation Chart 22Time To Disconnect Feature S&P Consumer Staples (Overweight - High Conviction) The Cyclical Macro Indicator (CMI) has been grinding higher for several months, even climbing through last year's share price shellacking. The CMI has been supported by the uptrend in relative consumer spending on essential items and consumer preference for saving vs. spending. More recently, a pricing power recovery in a number of groups has provided an assist as has a rebound in staples export growth. Booming consumer confidence and business confidence have held the CMI in check. The strong U.S. currency, particularly bilaterally against China, also implies a reduction in the cost of imported goods sold, and has also been an indication of relative valuation expansion because it often signals increased financial market volatility (Chart 13 on page 6). The attractive valuation starting point this cycle, and historic outperformance when the Fed raises interest rates (Chart 13 on page 6), were key factors behind our upgrade to high conviction status in January. Technical conditions are completely washed out. Sector breadth and momentum have reached oversold extremes. That signals widespread bearishness, which is positive from a contrary perspective. Chart 23 S&P Consumer Discretionary (Overweight) Our CMI is forming a tentative trough, supported by rebounding relative outlays on media services, low prices at the pump, a budding recovery in mortgage equity withdrawal and firming wage growth. The biggest drags over the past few months have come from higher Treasury yields and consumers increased propensity to save. However, rising job certainty and a vibrant residential real estate market suggest that consumers should loosen their purse strings. The VI has deflated toward the neutral zone, although remains moderately expensive from a long-term perspective. Our TI started to rebound from oversold levels. History shows that a recovery in the TI from one standard deviation below the mean has heralded a playable relative performance rally. Overweight positions should remain concentrated in housing-related equities and the media space, both of which benefit from U.S. dollar appreciation (Chart 14 on page 6). Chart 24 S&P REITs (Overweight - High Conviction) Our new REIT CMI has ticked lower, but the share price ratio has over-exaggerated this small move down. REITs have traded as if the back up in global bond yields will persist indefinitely, and that they are the only factor that drives relative performance. Improving cash flows and cheap valuations suggest that REITs can decouple from bond yields. Banks have tightened standards on commercial real estate loans, but this appears more likely to limit supply growth than create a slowdown. Commercial property prices are hitting new highs and our REIT Demand Indicator (RDI) has climbed into positive territory, signaling higher rental inflation. The latter is already outpacing overall CPI by a wide margin (Chart 15 on page 7). While REITs are back to fair value from a long-term perspective, on a shorter term basis the sector is very undervalued (Chart 15 on page 7), particularly with Treasury yields now in undervalued territory. Our REIT TI is extremely oversold, at a point which forward relative returns typically shine on a 12 and 24 month basis, even excluding the dividend yield kicker. Chart 25 S&P Health Care (Overweight) Our CMI continues to grind higher, opening a massive divergence with relative performance. This gap can be explained by the political attack on the pharmaceutical industry, the sector's heavyweight, rather than by a downturn in relative earnings drivers. Pharmaceutical shipments are hitting new highs and pricing power continues to grow at a robust mid-single digit rate. Future pricing gains may slow if government gets more heavily involved in setting prices, but this is already discounted. Pricing power in the rest of the sector remains strong, while wage inflation is tame. Health care spending is still growing as a share of total spending, but the pace is decelerating. Typically, this backdrop signals outperformance for health care insurers, who may also receive a risk premium reduction from a potential revamp of the Affordable Care Act, albeit the timing will likely be drawn out. Relative valuations are very attractive. The sector has been used as a source of capital to fund purchases in areas expected to benefit from increased fiscal stimulus. That is an overreaction, and flows should be restored to reflect the sector's appealing investment profile, particularly given the sector's track record during Fed tightening cycles (Chart 16 on page 7). The TI is deeply oversold. Breadth measures are beginning to recover from completely washed out levels. These conditions reinforce that an exploitable undershoot has occurred. Chart 26 S&P Financials (Neutral) Our Financial CMI has surged, underscoring that the advance in relative performance reflects more than just a reaction to anticipated sector deregulation by the Trump Administration. Leading indicators of capital formation, such as the stock-to-bond ratio, have jumped sharply. Moreover, the yield curve has steepened in recent months, bolstering the CMI. An improvement in overall profit growth and the tight labor market suggest that the credit cycle may not become a profit drag until the economy begins to cool. While not yet evident, the restrictive move in oil, the dollar and bond yields warn that disappoint may emerge in the coming months. It is notable that bank loan growth has dropped to nil over the last 3 months. C&I loan growth is contracting over that time period. Banks are hiring more aggressively, yet are tightening lending standards, suggesting productivity disappointment ahead. Despite the share price jump, value remains attractive after 8 years of financial repression. Our TI is overbought and breadth is beginning to recede, which is often a precursor to a consolidation phase. We are not willing to move beyond a market weight allocation at this juncture. Chart 27 S&P Energy (Neutral) Our CMI has plunged, probing all-time lows. Rising oil inventories and spiking wage inflation are exerting severe gravitational pull on the CMI, more than offsetting the budding recovery in domestic production. Refining margins are probing six year lows as the Brent/WTI spread has evaporated. Nevertheless, OPEC is finally curtailing production, joining non-OPEC producers (Chart 17 on page 8), which should ultimately help eat into excess global oil supply. History shows that once supply growth peaks, the rig count typically firms. That is a plus for energy services (Chart 18 on page 8), even though rising oil production will prove self-limiting for oil prices. High yield spreads have narrowed significantly from nosebleed levels, but industry balance sheets remain bruised. Net debt is historically elevated, EBITDA has yet to return to its glory days, and interest coverage remains anemic and vulnerable to any downside energy price surprises. The surge in our VI reflects depressed cash flow, and is overstating the degree of overvaluation. The TI has returned to the neutral zone, and will need to hold at current levels otherwise a relapse in the share price ratio toward previous lows is probable. Selectivity is still warranted in the energy complex. We remain underweight refiners and overweight the energy services index. Chart 28 S&P Utilities (Neutral) Our utilities sector CMI is stabilizing. That is a surprise, given the rebound in inflation expectations and firming global leading economic indicators, which are typically bearish for this defensive, fixed-income proxy. The latter negative exogenous factors are being offset by falling wage inflation, better pricing power and rising electricity output growth. Power demand is linked with manufacturing activity, underscoring that there is an element of cyclicality to sector profits. The share price ratio has held up better than most other defensive sectors since the U.S. election, perhaps on the hope that an overhaul of the tax code will benefit this domestic sector. Regardless, valuations have retreated from the extremely expensive zone where we took profits and downgraded to neutral last summer, but are not yet at a level that warrants re-establishing overweight positions. An upgrade could occur once our TI becomes fully washed out, provided that occurs within the context of additional CMI strength and a peak in global growth and inflation momentum. Chart 29 S&P Industrials (Underweight - High Conviction) The CMI has edged lower after a modest recovery in recent months. The strong U.S. dollar, relapse in short-term pricing power measures and sector productivity contraction are offsetting improvement in global PMI surveys. The lack of confirmation of an industrial sector revival from emerging markets is also holding back the CMI. There continues to be a deflationary undercurrent in the form of more rapid capacity than industrial sector output growth, suggesting that durable pricing power gains may remain elusive (Chart 19 on page 9). The post-election surge in share prices is slowly being unwound, as the sector was quick to discount expectations for massive domestic fiscal stimulus. Our valuation gauge is not at an extreme, although a number of individual groups are trading at historically rich multiples, such as machinery and railroads. Participation is beginning to fray around the edges, as our relative advance/decline line has rolled over, as has breadth. Our TI is pulling back from overbought levels, warning that a further correction in the share price ratio looms. It would be nearly unprecedented for the share price ratio to trough before our TI hits oversold levels. Industrials fare poorly when the Fed tightens. Chart 30 S&P Materials (Underweight) The CMI has nosedived, reflecting China's diminishing fiscal thrust and the recent tightening in monetary policy. Commodity price inflation peaked in mid-December concurrent with the Fed raising rates, signaling that emerging markets end-demand, in general and Chinese in particular, is likely past its prime. The nascent rebound in EM currencies represents a positive offset, but not by enough to turn around the CMI. Select heavyweight EM manufacturing PMIs are still below the boom/bust line. Relative valuations are becoming extended according to our VI, and stretched technical conditions are waving a red flag. Keep in mind the materials sector has an abysmal performance history after the Fed starts tightening (Chart 20 on page 9). The heavyweight chemical index (75% of the sector) bears the brunt of the downside risks owing to excess capacity (Chart 20 on page 9). On the flipside, overweight exposure in gold mining (via the GDX:US ETF) and the niche containers & packaging sub-indexes is recommended. Chart 31 S&P Technology (Underweight) The CMI has rolled over, driven lower by contracting relative pricing power, decelerating new orders-to-inventories growth, lack of capital expenditure traction and the appreciating greenback. Tech stocks thrive in a disinflationary/deflationary environment and suffer during inflationary periods (Chart 21 on page 10). Inflation is making a comeback, so it will be an uphill battle for tech companies to successfully raise selling prices at a fast enough pace to keep profits on a par with the broad corporate sector. While a capital spending cycle would be a welcome development, the narrowing gap between the return on and cost of capital warns against extrapolating improvement in business sentiment just yet. Our S&P technology operating profit model warns that tech profits are likely to trail the broad market as the year progresses, a far cry from what is embedded in analysts' forecasts. The good news is that valuations are not demanding nor are technical conditions overbought, which should cushion the magnitude and sharpness of downside risks. Chart 32 S&P Telecom Services (Underweight) Our CMI for telecom services has gained ground of late, primarily on the back of a sharp decline in wage inflation. However, we recently downgraded exposure to underweight, because of a frail spending backdrop. Our telecom services sales model is extremely weak (Chart 22 on page 10). Softening outlays on telecom services have reinvigorated the industry price war, and our pricing power gauge is sinking like a stone (Chart 22 on page 10). Telecom carrier capital expenditures have been running at a healthy clip, which could further pressure profit margins. Undervaluation exists, but this has been a chronic feature for the sector over the past decade, and does not foretell of cyclical upside or downside risks. Our TI has plunged into the sell zone, but remains above levels that would signal that a countertrend rally is imminent. Chart 33 Size Indicator (Overweight Small Vs. Large Caps) The small/large cap ratio is correcting short-term overbought conditions. The dip in the U.S. dollar has provided a fundamental reason for corrective action in this domestically-oriented asset class. However, we doubt a trend change is at hand. Our style CMI is climbing steadily. Small company business optimism has soared, partly because of an increase in planned price hikes, but also from an anticipated reduction in the regulatory burden. If small company price hikes persist, then rising labor costs will be more easily absorbed. That is critical to narrowing the profit margin gap between small and large firms. A stronger domestic vs. global economy and the potential for trade barriers is also unambiguously positive for small firms that do the bulk of their business at home. Despite the surge in the share price ratio post-U.S. election, our valuation gauge is not yet at an overvalued extreme. The lack of extreme overvaluation suggests that positive momentum will persist, perhaps similar to the 2004-2006 period, when the share price ratio stayed in overbought territory for years. Chart 34