Financial Markets
Highlights Global manufacturing activity will soon peak due to growing costs and China’s policy tightening. This process will allow the dollar’s rebound to continue. EUR/USD’s correction will run further. This pullback in the euro is creating an attractive buying opportunity for investors with a 12- to 24-month investment horizon. Eurozone banks will continue to trade in unison with the euro. Feature The correction in the euro has further to run. The dollar currently benefits from widening real interest differentials, but a growing list of headwinds will cause a temporary setback for the global manufacturing sector, which will fuel the greenback rally further. Nonetheless, EUR/USD will stabilize between 1.15 and 1.12, after which it will begin a new major up-leg. Consequently, investors with a 12- to 24-month investment horizon should use the current softness to allocate more funds to the common currency. A Hiccup In Global Industrial Activity Global manufacturing activity is set to decelerate on a sequential basis and the Global Manufacturing PMI will soon peak. The first problem for the global manufacturing sector is the emergence of financial headwinds. The sharp rebound in growth in the second half of 2020 and the optimism created by last year’s vaccine breakthrough as well as the rising tide of US fiscal stimulus have pushed US bond yields and oil prices up sharply. These financial market moves are creating a “growth tax” that will bite soon. Mounting US interest rates have lifted global borrowing costs while the doubling in Brent prices has increased the costs of production and created a small squeeze on oil consumers. Thus, even if the dollar remains well below its March 2020 peak, our Growth Tax Indicator (which incorporates yields, oil prices and the US dollar) warns of an imminent top in the US ISM Manufacturing and the Global Manufacturing PMI (Chart 1). Already, the BCA Global Leading Economic Indicator diffusion index has dipped below the 50% line, which usually ushers in downshifts in global growth. A deceleration in China’s economy constitutes another problem for the global manufacturing cycle. Last year’s reflation-fueled rebound in Chinese economic activity was an important catalyst to the global trade and manufacturing recovery. However, according to BCA Research’s Emerging Market Strategy service, Beijing is now tightening policy, concerned by a build-up in debt and excesses in the real estate sector. Already, the PBoC’s liquidity withdrawals are resulting in a decline of commercial bank excess reserves, which foreshadows a slowing of China’s credit impulse (Chart 2). Chart 1The Global Growth Tax Will Bite Chart 2Chinese Credit Will Slow In addition to liquidity withdrawals, Chinese policymakers are also tightening the regulatory environment to tackle excessive debt buildups and real estate speculation. The crackdown on property developers and house purchases will cause construction activity to shrink in the second half of 2021. Meanwhile, tougher rules for both non-bank lenders and the asset management divisions of banks will further harm credit creation. BCA’s Chief EM strategist, Arthur Budaghyan, notes that consumer credit is already slowing. Chinese fiscal policy is unlikely to create a counterweight to the deteriorating credit impulse. China’s fiscal impulse will be slightly negative next year. Chinese financial markets are factoring in these headwinds, and on-shore small cap equities are trying to break down while Chinese equities are significantly underperforming global benchmarks. Chart 3Deteriorating Surprises Bottom Line: The combined assault from the rising “growth tax” and China’s policy tightening is leaving its mark. Economic surprises in the US, the Eurozone, EM and China have all decelerated markedly (Chart 3), which the currency market echoes. Some of the most pro-cyclical currencies in the G-10 are suffering, with the SEK falling relative to the EUR and the NZD and AUD both experiencing varying degrees of weakness. The Euro Correction Will Run Further… Until now, the euro’s decline mostly reflects the rise in US interest rate differentials; however, the coming hiccup in the global manufacturing cycle is causing a second down leg for the euro. First, the global economic environment remains consistent with more near-term dollar upside, due to: Chart 4Commodities Are Vulnerable A commodity correction that will feed the dollar’s rebound. Aggregate speculator positioning and our Composite Technical Indicator show that commodity prices are technically overextended (Chart 4). With this backdrop, the coming deceleration in Chinese economic activity is likely to catalyze a significant pullback in natural resources, which will hurt rates of returns outside the US and therefore, flatter the dollar. The dollar’s counter-cyclicality. The expected pullback in the Global Manufacturing PMI is consistent with a stronger greenback (Chart 5). The dollar’s momentum behavior. Among G-10 FX, the dollar responds most strongly to the momentum factor (Chart 6). Thus, the likelihood is high that the dollar’s recent rebound will persist, especially because our FX team’s Dollar Capitulation Index has only recovered to neutral from oversold levels and normally peaks in overbought territory. Chart 5The Greenback's Counter-Cyclicality Chart 6The Dollar Is A High Momentum Currency Second, the euro’s specific dynamics remain negative for now. Based on our short-term valuation model, the fair value of EUR/USD has downshifted back to 1.1, which leaves the euro 7% overvalued (Chart 7). Until now, real interest rate differentials and the steepening of the US yield curve relative to Germany’s have driven the decline in the fair value estimate. However, the deceleration in global growth also hurts the euro’s fair value because the US is less exposed than the Eurozone to the global manufacturing cycle. Chart 7The Euro's Short-Term Fair Value Is At 1.1 Chart 8Speculators Have Not Capitulated The euro is also technically vulnerable, similar to commodities. Speculators are still massively net long EUR/USD and the large pool of long bets in the euro suggests that a capitulation has yet to take place (Chart 8). The euro responds very negatively to a weak Chinese economy. The Eurozone has deeper economic ties with China than the US. Exports to China account for 1.7% of the euro area’s GDP, and 2.8% of Germany’s compared to US exports to China at 0.5% of GDP. Indirect financial links are also larger. Credit to EM accounts for 45% of the Eurozone’s GDP compared to 5% for the US. Thus, the negative impact of a Chinese slowdown on EM growth has greater spillovers on European than on US ones rates of returns. A weak CNY and sagging Chinese capital markets harm the euro. The euro’s rebound from 1.064 on March 23 2020 to 1.178 did not reflect sudden inflows into European fixed-income markets. Instead, the money that previously sought higher interest rates in the US left that country for EM bonds and China’s on-shore fixed-income markets, the last major economies with attractive yields. These outflows from the US to China and EM pushed the dollar down, which arithmetically helped the euro. Thus, the recent EUR/USD correlates closely with Sino/US interest rate and with the yuan because the euro’s strength reflects the dollar demise (Chart 9). Consequently, a decelerating Chinese economy will also hurt EUR/USD via fixed-income market linkages. Finally, the euro will depreciate further if global cyclical stocks correct relative to defensive equities. Deep cyclicals (financials, consumer discretionary, energy, materials and industrials) represent 59% of the Eurozone MSCI benchmark versus 36% of the US index. Cyclical equities are exceptionally overbought and expensive relative to defensive names. They are also very levered to the global business cycle and Chinese imports. In this context, the expected deterioration in both China’s economic activity and the Global Manufacturing PMI could cause a temporary but meaningful pullback in the cyclicals-to-defensives ratio and precipitate equity outflows from Europe into the US (Chart 10). Chart 9EUR/USD And Chinese Rates Chart 10EUR/USD Will Follow Cyclicals/Defensives Bottom Line: A peak in the global manufacturing PMI will hurt the euro, especially because China will meaningfully contribute to this deceleration in global industrial activity. Thus, the euro’s pullback has further to run. An important resistance stands at 1.15. A failure to hold will invite a rapid decline to EUR/USD 1.12. Nonetheless, the euro’s depreciation constitutes nothing more than a temporary pullback. … But The Long-Term Bull Market Is Intact We recommend buying EUR/USD on its current dip because the underpinnings of its cyclical bull market are intact. Chart 11Investors Structurally Underweight Europe First, investors are positioned for a long-term economic underperformance of the euro area relative to the US. The depressed level of portfolio inflows into Europe relative to the US indicates that investors already underweight European assets (Chart 11). This pre-existing positioning limits the negative impact on the euro of the current decrease in European growth expectations (Chart 11, bottom panel). Second, as we wrote last week, European growth is set to accelerate significantly this summer. Considering the absence of ebullient investor expectations toward the euro, this process can easily create upside economic surprises later this year, especially when compared to the US. Moreover, the deceleration in Chinese and global growth will most likely be temporary, which will limit the duration of their negative impact on Europe. Third, the US stimulus measure will create negative distortions for the US dollar. The addition of another long-term stimulus package of $2 trillion to $4 trillion to the $7 trillion already spent by Washington during the crisis implies that the US government deficit will not narrow as quickly as US private savings will decline. Therefore, the US current account deficit will widen from its current level of 3.5% of GDP. As a corollary, the US twin deficit will remain large. Meanwhile, the Fed is unlikely to increase real interest rates meaningfully in the coming two years because it believes any surge in inflation this year will be temporary. Furthermore, the FOMC aims to achieve inclusive growth (i.e. an overheated labor market). This policy combination forcefully points toward greater dollar weakness. The US policy mix looks particularly dollar bearish when compared to that of the Eurozone. To begin with, the balance of payment dynamics make the euro more resilient. The euro area benefits from the underpinning of a current account surplus of 1.9% of GDP. Moreover, the European basic balance of payments stands at 1.5% of GDP compared to a 3.6% deficit for the US. Additionally, FDI into Europe are rising relative to the US. The divergence in the FDI trends will continue due to the high probability that the Biden administration will soon increase corporate taxes. Chart 12The DEM In The 70s The combination of faster vaccine penetration and much larger fiscal stimulus means that the US economy will overheat faster than Europe’s. Because the Fed seems willing to tolerate higher inflation readings, US CPI will rise relative to the Eurozone. In the 1970s, too-easy policy in Washington meant that the gap between US and German inflation rose. Despite the widening of interest rate and growth differentials in favor of the USD or the rise in German relative unemployment, the higher US inflation dominated currency fluctuations and the deutschemark appreciated (Chart 12). A similar scenario is afoot in the coming years, especially in light of the euro bullish relative balance of payments. Fourth, valuations constitute an additional buttress behind the long-term performance of the euro. Our FX strategy team Purchasing Power Parity model adjusts for the different composition of price indices in the US and the euro area. Based on this metric, the euro is trading at a significant 13% discount from its long-term fair value, with the latter being on an upward trend (Chart 13). Furthermore, BCA’s Behavioral Exchange Rate Model for the trade-weighted euro is also pointing up, which historically augurs well for the common currency. Lastly, even if the ECB’s broad trade-weighted index stands near an all-time high, European financial conditions remain very easy. This bifurcation suggests that the euro is not yet a major hurdle for the continent and can enjoy more upside (Chart 14). Chart 13EUR/USD Trades Well Below Long-Term Fair Value Chart 14Easy European Financial ##br##Conditions Chart 15Make Room For the Euro! Finally, the euro will remain a beneficiary from reserve diversification away from the USD. The dollar’s status as the premier reserve currency is unchallenged. However, its share of global reserves has scope to decline while the euro’s proportion could move back to the levels enjoyed by legacy European currencies in the early 1990s (Chart 15). Large reserve holders will continue to move away from the dollar. BCA Research’s Geopolitical Strategy team argues that US tensions with China transcend the Trump presidency. Meanwhile, the current administration’s relationship with Russia and Saudi Arabia will be cold. For now, their main alternative to the dollar is the euro because of its liquidity. Moreover, the NGEU stimulus program creates an embryonic mechanism to share fiscal risk within the euro area. The Eurozone is therefore finally trying to evolve away from a monetary union bereft of a fiscal union. This process points toward a lower probability of a break up, which makes the euro more attractive to reserve managers. Bottom Line: Despite potent near-term headwinds, the euro’s long-term outlook remains bright. Global investors already underweight European assets, yet balance of payment and policy dynamics point toward a higher euro. Moreover, valuations and geopolitical developments reinforce the cyclical tailwinds behind EUR/USD. Thus, investors with a 12- to 24-month investment horizon should use the current euro correction to gain exposure to the European currencies. Any move in EUR/USD below 1.15 will generate a strong buy signal. Sector Focus: European Banks And The Istanbul Shake The recent decline in euro area bank stocks coincides with the 14% increase in USD/TRY and the 17% decline in the TUR Turkish equities ETF following the sacking of Naci Ağbal, the CBRT governor. President Erdogan is prioritizing growth over economic stability because his AKP party is polling poorly ahead of the 2023 election. The Turkish economy is already overheating, and the lack of independence of the CBRT under the leadership of Şahap Kavcıoğlu promises a substantial increase in Turkish inflation, which already stands at 16%. Hence, foreign investors will flee this market, creating further downward pressures on the lira and Turkish assets. European banks have a meaningful exposure to Turkey. Turkish assets account for 3% of Spanish bank assets or 28% of Tier-1 capital. For France, this exposure amounts to 0.7% and 5% respectively, and for the UK, it reaches 0.3% and 2%. As a comparison, claims on Turkey only represent 0.3% and 0.5% of the assets and Tier-1 capital of US banks. Unsurprisingly, fluctuations in the Turkish lira have had a significant impact one the share prices of European banks in recent years, even after controlling for EPS and domestic yield fluctuations (Table 1). Table 1TRY Is Important To European Banks… Nonetheless, today’s TRY fluctuations are unlikely to have the same lasting impact on European banks share prices as they did from 2017 to 2019 because European banks have already shed significant amounts of Turkish assets (Chart 16). This does not mean that European banks are out of the woods yet. The level of European yields remains a key determinant of the profitability of Eurozone’s banks, and thus, of their share prices (Chart 17, top panel). Moreover, the euro still tightly correlates with European bank stocks as well (Chart 17, bottom panel). As a result, our view that the global manufacturing cycle will experience a temporary downshift and the consequent downside in EUR/USD both warn of further underperformance of European banks. Chart 16… But Less Than It ##br##Once Was Chart 17Higher Yields And A stronger Euro, These Are Few Of My Favorite Things These same views also suggest that this decline in bank prices is creating a buying opportunity. Ultimately, we remain cyclically bullish on the euro and the transitory nature of the manufacturing slowdown implies that global yields will resume their ascent. The cheap valuations of European banks, which trade at 0.6-times book value, make them option-like vehicles to bet on these trends, even if the banking sectors long-term prospects are murky. Moreover, they are a play on Europe’s domestic recovery this summer. We will explore banks in greater detail in future reports. Mathieu Savary, Chief European Investment Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com
Highlights The Biden Administration's $2.25 trillion infrastructure plan rolled out yesterday will, at the margin, boost global demand for energy and base metals more than expected later this year and next. Global GDP growth estimates – and the boost supplied by US stimulus – once again will have to be adjusted higher (Chart of the Week). Energy and metals fundamentals continue to tighten. OPEC 2.0's so-far-successful production management strategy will keep the level of supply just below demand, which will keep Brent crude oil on either side of $60/bbl. Base-metals output will struggle to meet higher demand from the ongoing buildout of renewables infrastructure and growing electric-vehicle sales. Of late, concerns that speculative positioning suggests prices will head lower – or, at other times, higher – are entirely misplaced: Spec positioning conveys no information on price levels or direction. Energy and metals prices, on the other hand, do convey useful information on spec positioning, demonstrating specs do not lead the news or prices, they follow them. Short-term headwinds caused by halting recoveries and renewed lockdowns – particularly in the EU – will fade in 2H21 as vaccines roll out, if the experience of the UK and US are any guide. Continued USD strength, however, would remain a headwind. Feature If the Biden administration is successful in getting its $2.25 trillion infrastructure-spending bill through Congress, the US will join the rest of the world in the race to re-build – in some cases, build anew – its long-neglected bridges, roads, schools, communications and high-speed transportation networks, and, critically, its electric-power grid. There's a lot of game left to play on this, but our Geopolitical Strategy group is giving this bill an 80% of passage later this year, after all the wrangling and log-rolling in Congress is done. In and of itself, the infrastructure-directed spending coming out of Biden's plan will be a catalyst for higher US industrial commodity demand – energy, metals and bulks. In addition, it will support the lift in the demand boost coming out of higher GDP growth globally, which will be pushed higher by US fiscal spending, as the Chart of the Week shows. Of note is the extremely robust growth expected in India, China and the US, which are among the largest consumers of industrial commodities globally. Overall growth in the G20 and globally will be expansive in 2022 as well. Chart of the WeekBiden's $2.25 Trillion Infrastructure Bill Will Boost Global Commodity Demand Higher GDP growth translates directly into higher demand for commodities, all else equal, as can be seen in the relationship between EM and DM GDP, supply and inventories and Brent crude oil prices in Chart 2. While we have reduced our Brent forecast for this year to $60/bbl on the back of renewed demand-side weakness in the EU due to problems in acquiring and distributing COVID-19 vaccines, we expect this to be reversed next year and into 2025, with prices trading between $60-$80/bbl (Chart 3). OPEC 2.0, the oil-producer coalition led by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and Russia, has done an excellent job of keeping the level of oil supply below demand over the course of the pandemic, which we expect to continue to the end of 2025.1 Chart 2Higher GDP Growth Presages Higher Commodity Demand Chart 3Brent Crude Oil Prices Will Average - / bbl to 2025 As the Biden plan makes its way through Congress, markets will get a better idea of how much diesel fuel, copper, steel, iron ore, etc., will be required in the US alone. What is important to note here that the US is just moving to the starting line, whereas other economies like China and the EU already have begun their investment cycles in renewables and EVs. At present, key markets already are tight, particularly copper (Chart 4) and aluminum (Chart 5). In both markets, we expect physical deficits this year and next, which inclines us to believe the metals leg of this renewables buildout is just beginning – higher prices will be required to incentivize the development of new supply.2 Chart 4Copper Will Post Physical Deficit... Chart 5...As Will Aluminum This is particularly important in copper, where growth in mining output of ore has been flat for the past two years. Copper is the one metal that spans all renewables technologies, and is a bellwether commodity for global growth. We expect copper to trade to $4.50/lb (up ~ $0.50/lb vs spot) on the COMEX in 4Q21 on the back of increasing demand and tight supplies – i.e., falling mining supply and refined copper output growth (Chart 6). Worth noting also is steel rebar and hot-rolled coil prices traded at record highs this week on Chinese futures markets. Stronger steel markets continue to support iron ore prices, although the latter is trading off its recent highs and likely will move lower toward the end of the year as Brazilian supply returns to the market.3 We use steel prices as a leading indicator for copper prices – steel leads copper prices by ~ 9 months. This makes sense when one considers steel is consumed early in infrastructure and construction projects, while copper consumption occurs later as airports and houses are fitted with copper for electric, plumbing and communications applications. Chart 6Copper Ore Output Flat Does Speculative Positioning Matter? Of late, media pundits and analysts have cited an unwinding of speculative positions in oil and metals markets following sharp run-ups in net long positions as a harbinger of weaker prices in the near future (Chart 7).4 At other times, speculation has been invoked as a reason for price surges – e.g., when oil rocketed toward $150/bbl in mid-2008, which was followed by a price collapse at the start of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC).5 Brunetti et al note, "The role of speculators in financial markets has been the source of considerable interest and controversy in recent years. Concern about speculative trading also finds support in theory where noise traders, speculative bubbles, and herding can drive prices away from fundamental values and destabilize markets." (p. 1545) Chart 7Speculative Positioning Lower In Brent Than WTI We recently re-tested earlier findings in our research, which found that knowledge of how specs are positioned – either on the long or the short side of the market – conveys no information on the level of prices or the change that should be expected given that knowledge. However, knowledge of the price level does convey useful information on how speculators are positioned in futures markets.6 In cointegrating regressions of speculative positions in crude oil, natural gas and copper futures on price levels for these commodities, we find the level of prices to be a statistically significant determinant of spec positions. We find no such relationship using spec positions as an explanatory variable for prices.7 On the other hand, Chart 2 above is an example of statistically significant relationships for Brent and WTI price as a function of supply-demand fundamentals displaying coefficients of determination (r-squares) of close to 90% in the post-GFC period (2010 to now). This supports our earlier findings regarding spec behavior: They follow prices, they don't lead them.8 We are not dismissive of speculation. It plays a critical role in markets, by providing the liquidity that enables commodity producers and consumers to hedge their price exposures, and to investors seeking to diversify their portfolios with commodity exposures that are uncorrelated to their equity and bond holdings. Short-Term Headwinds Likely Dissipate COVID-19 remains the largest risk to markets generally, commodities in particular. The mishandling of vaccine rollouts in the EU has pushed back our assumption for demand recovery deeper into 2H21, but it has not derailed it. We expect COVID-related deaths and hospitalizations to fall in the EU as they have in the UK and the US following the widespread distribution of vaccines, which should occur in the near future as Brussels organizes its pandemic response (Chart 8). Making vaccines available for other states in dire straits will follow, which will allow the global re-opening to progress as lockdowns are lifted (Chart 9). Chart 8EU Vaccination Rollouts Will Boost Global Economic Recovery Chart 9Global Re-Opening Has Slowed, But Will Resume In 2H21 The other big risk we see to commodities is persistent USD strength (Chart 10). The dollar has rallied for the better part of 2021, largely on the back of improving US economic prospects relative to other states, and success in its vaccination efforts. The resumption of the USD's bear market may have to wait until the rest of the world catches up with America's public-health response to the pandemic, and the global economy ex-US and -China enters a stronger expansionary mode. Bottom Line: We remain bullish industrial commodities expecting demand to improve as the EU rolls out vaccines and begins to make progress in arresting the pandemic and removing lockdowns. Global fiscal and monetary policy, which likely will be bolstered by a massive round of US infrastructure spending beginning in 4Q21 will catalyze demand growth for oil and base metals. This will prompt another round of GDP revisions to the upside. The dollar remains a headwind for now, but we expect it to return to a bear market in 2H21. Chart 10The USD's Evolution Remains Important Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Ashwin Shyam Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish Going into the April 1 meeting of OPEC 2.0 today, we are not expecting any increase in production. OPEC earlier this week noted demand had softened, mostly due to the slow recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic in the EU, which, based on their previous policy decisions, suggests the producer coalition will not be increasing production. The coalition led by KSA and Russia will have to address Iran's return as a major exporter to China this year, which appears to have been importing ~ 1mm b/d of Iranian crude this month (Chart 11). This puts Iran in direct competition with KSA as a major exporter to China, in defiance of the US re-imposition of sanctions against Iranian exports. China and Iran over the weekend signed a 25-year trade pact that also could include military provisions, which could, over time, alter the balance of power in the Persian Gulf if Chinese military assets – naval and land warfare – deploy to Iran under their agreement. Details of the deal are sparse, as The Guardian noted in its recent coverage. Among other things, government officials in Tehran have come under withering criticism for entering the deal, which they contend was signed with a "politically bankrupt regime." The Guardian also noted US President Joe Biden " is prepared to make a new offer to Iran this week whereby he will lift some sanctions in return for Iran taking specific limited steps to come back into compliance with the nuclear agreement, including reducing the level to which it enriches uranium," in the wake of the signing of this deal. Base Metals: Bullish Copper fell this week, initially on an inventory build, and has now settled right under the $4/lb mark, as investors await details on the US infrastructure bill unveiled in Pittsburgh, PA, on Wednesday. According to mining.com, a major chunk of the proposed bill will be devoted to investments in infrastructure, which will be metals-intensive. Precious Metals: Bullish Gold fell further this week, as US treasury yields rose, buoyed by the increased US vaccine efforts and President Biden’s proposed spending plans (Chart 12). USD strength also worked against the yellow metal, which has been steadily declining since the beginning of this year. COMEX gold fell below the $1,700/oz mark for the third time this month and settled at $1,683.90/oz on Tuesday. Chart 11 Chart 12 Footnotes 1 Please see Five-Year Brent Forecast Update: Expect Price Range of $60 - $80/bbl, which we published 25 March 2021. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see Industrial Commodities Super-Cycle Or Bull Market?, which we published 4 March 2021 for additional discussion, particularly regarding the need for additional capex in energy and metals markets. 3 Please see UPDATE 1-Strong industrial activity, profit lift China steel futures, published by reuters.com 29 March 2021. 4 See, e.g., Column: Frothy oil market deflates as virus fears return published 23 March 2021. 5 Brunetti, Celso, Bahattin Büyüksahin, and Jeffrey H. Harris (2016), " Speculators, Prices, and Market Volatility," Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 51:5, pp. 1545-74, for further discussion. 6 Please see Specs Back Up The Truck For Oil, which we published 26 April 2018, and Feedback Loop: Spec Positioning & Oil Price Volatility published 10 May 2018. Both are available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 7 We group money managers (registered commodity trading advisors, commodity pool operators and unregistered funds) and swap dealers (banks and trading companies providing liquidity to hedgers and speculators) together to test these relationships. 8 In our earlier research, we also noted our results generally were supported in the academic literature. See, e.g., Fattouh, Bassam, Lutz Kilian and Lavan Mahadeva (2012), "The Role of Speculation in Oil Markets: What Have We Learned So Far?" published by The Oxford Institute For Energy Studies. Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Summary of Closed Trades
Highlights President Biden’s $2.4 trillion “American Jobs Plan” is a major US public investment that will dispel any endogenous deflationary tail risk from the US economy this cycle, increase inflation expectations yet boost productivity, and hike corporate taxes. The proposal has an 80% chance of passage before the end of the year given that infrastructure is popular and Democrats can pass the bill via reconciliation with zero Republican votes. The $2.4 trillion infrastructure proposal will take effect over eight years and will be offset by corporate tax hikes that will take effect over 15 years. The increase in the budget deficit will be around $400 billion if all tax hikes pass and $1.4 trillion if only half the tax hikes pass. The American Families Plan will follow with another roughly $700 billion to $1.3 trillion increase to the budget deficit, depending on how much individual/household taxes go up. But this bill only has a 50/50 chance of passing before the 2022 midterm elections. Investors should maintain a bullish cyclical (12-month) bias and keep favoring value stocks, industrials, and materials over tech and health care. We also recommend going long consumer discretionary stocks and energy large caps versus small caps. Feature President Joe Biden spoke in Pittsburgh on Wednesday to unveil his economic vision and policy proposals going forward. Biden proposed a $2.4 trillion “American Jobs Plan” infrastructure and green energy package to be implemented over eight years, which will be part of a $4 trillion-plus “Build Back Better” legislative agenda that will be partially offset by an estimated $3 trillion in tax hikes to take effect over 15 years. The result will be a pro-cyclical boost to fiscal thrust, GDP growth, and inflation expectations; some potential for a productivity boom; a possible expansion of the social safety net; and tax reform that reduces US corporate profits. Pennsylvania is a Rust Belt state, Biden’s home state, and a critical swing state in the 2016 and 2020 elections, so the location makes sense. Biden aims to solidify the economic recovery and restore the Democratic Party’s leadership on infrastructure and manufacturing after Republican President Trump nearly stole their thunder. If he succeeds then his administration and party will improve their support substantially. The US economy is opening rapidly while the COVID-19 vaccination campaign continues apace. Chart 1 shows that household disposable income and net worth surged as a result of giant fiscal relief while consumer spending lags behind due to social distancing. The $1.7 trillion treasure chest of personal savings creates the basis for an increase in spending as consumers get vaccinated and regain their freedom. Economic policy uncertainty has collapsed, even relative to global uncertainty (Chart 2). There are no longer doubts about whether government will spend the country out of a slump. Even state and local governments have been bailed out despite having much stronger finances than predicted. However, there are doubts about how much more deficit spending the Biden administration will be able to push through, and that is what will now be debated in Congress following Biden’s Pittsburgh proposals. Chart 1Lower Spending And Higher Income Led To Mounting Excess Savings Chart 2US Policy Uncertainty Soon To Revive There will not be much of a deflationary tail risk to the new business cycle in the context of this expansive fiscal policy, as bullish investors are well aware. However, policy uncertainty will revive going forward as more spending will raise the risk of economic overheating, tax hikes will affect different sectors disproportionately, deficits and debt will balloon, and Biden’s challenges with immigration and foreign policy will intensify. There is an upside risk for the stock market that Congress delays tax hikes but this is not our base case. In this week’s report we revise and update our estimates for the impact of Biden administration’s legislative proposals – including his projected $4 trillion-plus in spending on infrastructure, health, and education – taking into consideration Biden’s Pittsburgh speech, his first press conference on March 25, and all the rumors and leaks that have come to light over the past two weeks. Back-Of-The-Envelope Estimates Of US Growth And Output Gap After ARPA First we need to revise our back-of-the-envelope estimates of the impact of the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA). Chart 3 shows two scenarios for US GDP growth. The first is the “maximum” scenario, in which US real GDP grows by 10.7% because all of the money authorized under the new law is spent. The second scenario puts real growth at 6% by using only the Congressional Budget Office’s expected federal outlays (as opposed to budget authority) to estimate the government spending component of GDP. In both cases we assume that 33% of the fiscal relief is spent in FY2021 and the remainder in FY2022. These scenarios do not include Biden’s American Jobs and Families Plans because those bills have yet to be drafted, let alone pass Congress. Chart 3Revised US GDP Estimates With ARPA Consensus estimates put real GDP growth at 5.7% and the Federal Reserve estimates that 2021 growth will clock in at 6.5%, as shown in Chart 4. Not all of the government spending will translate directly into aggregate demand because 37% of the ARPA consists of direct checks and unemployment benefits to households that may only spend one-third of the amount they receive (while paying down debt with a third of it and saving a third of it). Yet more government deficit spending is coming down the pike and consumers are sitting on a huge pile of savings, which implies that growth could surprise to the upside of consensus estimates. Chart 4Consensus Estimates Of US GDP PosT-ARPA Chart 5 uses our same back-of-the-envelope calculation to estimate the impact of current law (including ARPA) on the US output gap. The output gap is the difference between actual GDP growth and potential GDP growth – during busts the country’s growth falls well beneath potential while during booms it rises above potential. The chart shows that if all of the government relief funds are spent then the output gap will be more than closed by the end of the year. By contrast, the CBO’s January projection shows the output gap persisting through 2025. While our estimates in Chart 5 may be too generous regarding federal cash handouts translating directly to consumer spending and higher demand, nevertheless the consensus estimate is entirely understated and out of date as a result of ARPA and the Biden administration’s additional fiscal spending that is coming. Chart 5Revised US Output Gap Estimates With ARPA Chart 6Revised US Budget Deficit Projection Post-ARPA Chart 6 updates our US budget deficit outlook using the CBO’s February budget baseline. The ARPA’s increase in government spending is added to create the new Democratic Party status quo scenario over the next ten years, with the budget normalizing by 2025. The Democratic low spending scenario assumes that Biden passes the $2.4tn infrastructure-plus plan announced in Pittsburgh (Table 1) using all the revenue from all the corporate tax hikes. Biden’s agenda will be broken into separate bills with varying probabilities of success. So in our budget deficit outlook we only include the infrastructure-and-corporate-tax-hikes component that is apparently being prioritized. Table 1Biden's 'American Jobs Plan' Bottom Line: US growth will surprise to the upside of consensus estimates while the US output gap will be closed much sooner than expected. Financial markets are largely prepared for this outcome, although it reinforces that investors should maintain a cyclically bullish view and tactically should buy on the dips. Biden’s Pittsburgh Speech And ‘American Jobs Plan’ Budget Impacts Our view is that the Biden administration has a subjective 80% chance of passing a second major budget reconciliation bill (FY2022) and a 50% chance of passing a third budget reconciliation bill (FY2023). The question appears to be resolved that Democrats will prioritize infrastructure over social welfare. Whichever one they prioritize can be linked to tax hikes and yet will still be highly likely to pass given that no Republican votes are needed under budget reconciliation rules. Moderate Democrats may water down the tax provisions but they would be suicidal to oppose their entire party on the administration’s signature piece of legislation. The social spending bill, assuming it follows infrastructure, would have to be pursued via a third reconciliation bill for FY2023 but it is less likely to pass. By next year Biden will have spent a lot of his political capital, fiscal spending fatigue will be a real phenomenon, and the 2022 midterm elections will loom. What matters for investors is the impact on the budget deficit since that will determine how big of an impact will hit GDP and how long US fiscal policy remains accommodative. Table 2 shows the impact on the budget balance if Biden gets all of his spending and all revenue proposals (Baseline), if he gets all the spending but only half the tax hikes (Scenario 1), and if he gets half the spending and half the tax hikes (Scenario 2). Scenarios 3 and 4 treat the social spending plan with varying degrees of tax revenue from the proposed individual tax hikes, while Scenarios 5 and 6 treat the infrastructure plan with varying tax revenue from corporate tax hikes. Table 2Biden’s Forthcoming ‘American Jobs Plan’ Legislative Proposals Table 3 shows the Biden campaign’s proposed tax hikes by line item along with the spending proposals. The range of net deficit spending runs from about $400 billion to about $3 trillion over ten years, which is a broad range and not very telling but which seems, subjectively, likely to settle in the $2 trillion range. Chart 7 shows the budget deficit’s deviation from the status quo trajectory in each of these scenarios, i.e. additional fiscal thrust. Table 3Biden’s Tax-And-Spend Proposals In Detail Chart 7US Budget Deficit Projections With ‘American Jobs Plan’ Agenda The infrastructure package consists of a range of proposals having to do with traditional roads and bridges, renewable energy, rural broadband Internet, domestic manufacturing incentives, supply chain security initiatives, affordable housing, and research and development (see Table 1 above). The social safety net expansion consists of making permanent the child tax credit that was extended in the ARPA; lowering the Medicare eligibility requirement to age 60 from 65; lengthening paid family/medical leave for workers; funding universal pre-school; and funding tuition-free community college. Some Democrats will oppose delaying social spending and tax hikes because they may not pass before the midterms and Republicans could easily take back control of the House of Representatives in 2022. Hence there is still a chance that Biden will pursue infrastructure on a bipartisan and piecemeal basis while using the FY2022 budget reconciliation for his social spending and tax hikes. The reasoning goes as follows: Historically the House has a high probability of shifting against a new president’s party in his first midterm election. The only exception to this rule were George W. Bush and Franklin D. Roosevelt. Republicans will definitely oppose social welfare and tax hikes, whereas they could be convinced to support an infrastructure plan. Republicans will not vote for infrastructure if it includes tax hikes and many Democrats believe that long-term infrastructure spending will enhance productivity and hence need not require revenue offsets. Hence there is still a chance of a bipartisan infrastructure bill. This would jeopardize its overall passage but it would ensure that Democrats could pass their social agenda via FY2022 reconciliation. What are the odds of bipartisanship? Throughout this year we have reserved some space for bipartisan lawmaking to take place under the radar. A recent example is the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) Extension Act of 2021, which Biden signed into law on March 30. This is a bipartisan extension of the small business emergency loan program that began under President Trump. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell quashed objections from within his party to extending the program, which has substantial support from the National Federation of Independent Business.1 The result was a 92-7 vote majority in the Senate, showing that Republican cooperation is possible. The fact that Republicans also cleared the way for the use of earmarks, or pork barrel spending directed at a critical lawmaker’s constituency in exchange for his or her vote, also suggests that bipartisanship is possible, particularly on infrastructure. Republicans can also be brought to support efforts to secure supply chains and energize the US technological race with China, such as the $50 billion funding for semiconductor manufacturing, which could be part of a major infrastructure package or regular budget appropriations. The catch is that Republicans will not support tax hikes, unionization, IRS strengthening, workplace enforcement, or climate change policies pursued under the guise of infrastructure. As a result the Democrats are highly incentivized to bypass Republicans from the beginning and pursue their agenda through two separate reconciliation bills. Finally, Democrats still have the option of removing the Senate filibuster, enabling regular bills to pass with merely 51 votes. Investors should plan on this occurring despite the news media narrative suggesting that moderate Democrats do not want it to happen – the point is that it is not an invincible check on the ruling party’s power. Biden signaled in his first press conference on March 25 that he is willing to see the filibuster removed. Bottom Line: Democrats can pass most of their infrastructure and social safety net proposals via budget reconciliation bills for FY2022 and FY2023, without a single Republican vote. If they do so they can only spare three votes in the House and zero votes in the Senate – meaning that the devil is in the details. Their odds of passing the first are high at a subjective 80% but then their odds of passing the second are 50/50 at best. Thus it is not wise to bet against Democratic tax hikes or new spending. The net impact on the deficit will be negative and hence stimulating for the economy. Growth and inflation will surprise to the upside. Biden’s Political Capital Still Moderate-To-Strong Our argument above is based in great part on Biden’s political capital, which is moderate but likely to strengthen as consumer sentiment rises. Table 4 updates our US Political Capital Index. Political polarization is subsiding from extreme peaks, and business sentiment and economic conditions are improving (with a surge in capex intentions albeit rising concerns over regulation). Table 4Biden’s Political Capital Sufficient For Another Major Bill The weak spot is household sentiment as Biden’s approval rating is falling (normal for presidents as their honeymoon ends). However, consumer confidence is already picking up and will surely accelerate with vaccinations gaining ground, the dole being delivered, and the service sector reviving. Chart 8 shows that Biden’s approval rating is settling in the mid-50% range, which is substantially better than Trump’s at this time although worse than President Obama’s. Biden can be understood as a synthesis of these two predecessors given that he is coopting Trump’s agenda on fiscal spending, infrastructure, trade, and manufacturing while continuing Obama’s legacy on regulation, immigration, civil rights, and foreign policy. We expect Biden’s approval rating not to fall too far, unless he suffers a foreign policy disaster with China, Iran, or Russia, given that over 50% of voters will tend to support him as long as President Trump is the obvious alternative. Chart 9 suggests that Biden’s economic approval rating is weak but this score is going to rise once the new relief funds are distributed and the economic recovery gets going full steam. The early business cycle will probably be a constant source of support for the president over his four-year term. Chart 8Biden’s Approval Rating Fairly Stout Chart 9Biden’s Approval On Economy Will Rise Remarkably even the US Congress is gaining greater popular approval (Chart 10). This is very rare in modern times and could suggest that a major change is taking shape as Congress pursues populist fiscal policy under both Trump and Biden. Congress is handing out free money so people suddenly don’t hate it as much. There is a limit to how popular Congress will become and it will certainly not shake off its hard-earned reputation for gridlock and partisan rancor by suddenly exemplifying enlightenment and bipartisanship. But any rise in congressional approval is notable and would imply greater political capital for the current government and hence greater policy certainty for investors in the short run. Biden’s political capital is not yet suffering due to economic overheating as the latter has not yet happened – but it is a risk to monitor over the medium term. Inflationary pressures continue to build across the supply chain. Small businesses are increasingly flagging cost of labor as a rising concern while consumer price inflation is likely to pick up. Chart 10Congress Is Becoming More Popular Inflation expectations are critical and will take time to change. Americans think about inflation through prices at the pump. Chart 11 shows the US and global crude oil price and average gasoline prices at the gas station for US consumers. Gasoline prices have surged although they are not yet at the $4 per gallon level that causes popular concern to escalate sharply. Chart 11Inflation Is Coming But Geopolitics Brings Oil Price Volatility Oil prices are expected to go higher in the coming two years, according to our Commodity & Energy Strategy, but over a five-year period global supply-demand trends and balances suggest that the price will fluctuate within the $60-$80 dollar range. Biden’s regulations and foreign policy will introduce some volatility by hampering domestic US production, triggering sparks in the Middle East over Iran, and yet ultimately increasing global supply via any diplomatic deal with Iran. The BCA Research House View holds that today’s inflation is a temporary phenomenon whereas a more substantial bout of inflation is waiting in the medium-to-long term. The reason our strategists are not overly concerned in the near term is that there is still substantial slack in the economy: the labor force participation rate has fallen from 63.3% to 61.4% since the pandemic, the U6 unemployment rate stands at 11.1% (up from 7% prior to the pandemic), and the all-important employment-to-population ratio for prime-age workers stands at 57.6%, down from 61.1% prior to the pandemic. However, this slack is on pace to be tightened quickly as long as the pandemic subsides and Biden’s American Jobs Plan passes. Bottom Line: Our US Political Capital Index suggests Biden’s political capital is moderate-to-strong, which supports our view that he can pass at least one more major piece of legislation and possibly two. Inflation expectations will rise further and the selloff in US treasuries will continue. Investment Takeaways The market rally since January has priced a lot of the good news from Biden’s proposals, which are broadly similar to his campaign proposals. There is not a clear legislative strategy and passing two major bills before the midterm elections is a stretch. The priority bill, however, looks to pass by the end of this year after a roller-coaster ride of congressional negotiations and horse-trading. Deep cyclical sectors will benefit the most. We remain long value over growth stocks, specifically industrials and materials. We are also maintaining our long BCA infrastructure basket at least until passage of the bill is secured. Our infrastructure basket consists of a range of materials and machinery producers, construction services, and environmental services, and does not focus on headline “infrastructure” companies in the utilities and telecoms sectors. We recommend going long large cap energy stocks relative to small caps, which will have a harder time adjusting to Biden’s regulatory, tax, and green agenda. A long-term infrastructure plan that includes green energy, manufacturing, digital infrastructure, and R&D could create a productivity boost. Hiking the corporate tax rate to 28% is negative for corporate earnings but it will take place over a longer time frame and is being introduced in the context of a cyclical upswing. Hence we remain bullish over the course of this year. Biden’s Pittsburgh speech ostensibly confirmed the news flow over the past month suggesting that the Democrats will not propose a government-provided health insurance option in their upcoming legislative proposals. Instead they are prioritizing lowering the Medicare eligibility requirement and enabling Medicare to negotiate pharmaceutical prices. Our short of the managed health care sub-sector suffered from this shift in policy focus although we will maintain the trade as we expect the public option to reemerge at a later date. Meanwhile our pair trade of long health equipment and facilities relative to pharmaceuticals and bio-tech continues to perform well (Chart 12). A clear beneficiary of the US’s newfound proactive fiscal policy is the consumer. Consumer spending has not fully recovered from the pandemic and recession. Household disposable income ticked down in February from January, after the distribution of the government’s $900 billion COVID-19 relief funds in the Consolidated Appropriations Act passed in December. However, disposable income is up 8% over the 12 months since COVID broke out, due to fiscal relief. The result of lower spending and higher income is an increase in the personal saving rate to 13.6% in February, well above normal, as our US Bond Strategy highlights in its latest report. Recent research from our US Investment Strategy highlights that consumer growth should track relatively well with increases in household net worth, implying that nominal personal consumption expenditures could grow at a rate of 8.8% by the end of the year and 6.9% by the end of next year. Chart 12Stay Long Industrials Over Health Care Chart 13Go Long Consumer Discretionary Stocks In this context we take a positive view of consumer stocks in general. Cyclically we would favor consumer discretionary stocks and recommend investors go long. While discretionary spending should outperform as the economic upswing gains pace, we are holding consumer staples as a hedge against bad news (Chart 13). Not only will Biden’s tax hikes, inflation, and the rise in bond yields cause ongoing risks to cyclical sectors, but Biden also faces a series of imminent foreign policy tests with China/Taiwan, Iran, Russia, and North Korea, as highlighted in our sister Geopolitical Strategy. Matt Gertken Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Appendix Table A1Political Risk Matrix Table A2APolitical Capital: White House And Congress Table A2BPolitical Capital: Household And Business Sentiment Table A2CPolitical Capital: The Economy And Markets Table A3Biden’s Cabinet Position Appointments Footnotes 1 Bill Scher, “The Bipartisan Senate Bill You Haven’t Heard About,” Real Clear Politics, realclearpolitics.com.
Feature The global macro landscape over the next six months or so will be characterized by a booming US economy and decelerating growth in China. Financial markets will move accordingly. US Treasury yields will remain under upward pressure, the US dollar will rebound, commodities prices will experience a setback and EM equities will continue underperforming DM stocks. The upcoming US economic boom is a well-known narrative and does not require much elaboration. China’s slowdown, on the other hand, is a matter of debate among investors and commentators. We have been arguing that macro policy tightening and a resumption of regulatory clampdowns on the financial system and property market are bound to result in a growth deceleration in China. There are already leading indicators that point to an impending growth slowdown: Chart 1China Is Set To Decelerate The latest datapoint for domestic orders from the PBOC’s survey of 5000 industrial enterprises has relapsed in Q1. It leads A-share companies EPS growth by six months (Chart 1, top panel). The message is that industrial companies’ profit growth will once again slow in H2 2021. The recent setback in Chinese A-shares is evidence that markets are already beginning to price in a profit deceleration in H2. The bottom panel of Chart 1 indicates that banks’ claims on enterprises and households have rolled over and will continue downshifting. This is consistent with easing bank loan approvals and reflects policymakers’ guidance for banks. In Charts 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 13 below, we illustrate more indicators and evidence of a forthcoming peak in the Chinese business cycle in general and commodities prices in particular. Weakening growth in China will hurt EM stocks and currencies more than those in DM, as many emerging economies are exposed to industrial commodities that are much more sensitive to demand in China versus trends in the US. Also, many Asian economies export more to China than they do to the US and Europe. Besides, the growth outlook in EM (ex-China, Korea and Taiwan) remains sub-par, especially relative to the US and DM more broadly. The reasons for this are slower vaccination rates and by extension economic reopening, a lack of fiscal stimulus and unhealthy banking systems. Notably, Chart 39 below demonstrates that EM bank stocks are breaking down relative to DM bank stocks. This potential breakdown reflects the state of EM fundamentals relative to those of DM. This week we recommend a new trade: short EM banks / long DM banks. In the US, the feature story will be the brisk pace of its reopening, an economic boom and intensifying inflationary pressures. So long as US bond yields continue rising, the US dollar will be supported. The next downleg in the greenback will occur when inflation rises but the Fed explicitly refuses to tackle it. Odds are that we are several months away from that. Hence, rising US bond yields will prop up the US dollar for now. The rebound in the US dollar and rising US bond yields will weigh on EM fixed income. The bottom panel of Chart 30 below illustrates that EM credit spreads negatively correlate with commodity prices. All in all, EM credit spreads will likely widen. Together with ascending US Treasury yields, this means higher EM sovereign and corporate dollar bond yields. The latter have always been associated with lower EM share prices (Chart 2, top panel). Chart 2Rising Corporate Bond Yields Are A Threat To Stocks Strategy: As a tactical strategy (three to six months), last week we recommended downgrading the allocation to EM within global equity and credit portfolios from neutral to underweight. We also recommended shorting a basket of the following EM currencies versus the US dollar for the next several months: HUF, PLN, PHP, TRY, CLP, ZAR, KRW, BRL and THB. Strategic portfolios should maintain neutral allocations to EM equities, credit, local bonds and currencies. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Chinese Share Prices Point To A Top In Commodities Prices The recent underperformance of Chinese onshore cyclical stocks relative to defensive stocks heralds a slowdown in growth and has historically been a good indicator for raw materials prices. Consistently, the latest pullback in share prices of materials companies included in the MSCI China Investable Index also signals a drop in industrial metals prices. Chart 3Chinese Share Prices Point To A Top In Commodities Prices Chart 4Chinese Share Prices Point To A Top In Commodities Prices Commodities: New Secular Bull Market Or A Trading Range? Various Chinese liquidity and money measures have historically led the CRB Raw Materials Price Index and presently signal a relapse in commodities. The 200-year chart showing raw materials (excluding oil and gold) prices in real (inflation-adjusted) terms suggests that commodities prices have not undershot their long-term time-trend (Chart 5). We do not argue for a continuation of a structural bear market in commodities, but a medium-term setback is likely in the next three to six months. Chart 5Commodities: New Secular Bull Market Or A Trading Range? Chart 6Commodities: New Secular Bull Market Or A Trading Range? Chart 7Commodities: New Secular Bull Market Or A Trading Range? EM Share Prices Are Beginning To Price A Profit Slowdown In H2 2021 The rally in EM share prices last year has priced the ongoing profit recovery. However, the apex in Chinese money/credit measures entails an EM profit slowdown in H2 this year (Chart 8). Besides, the considerable pullback in Chinese cyclicals-to-defensive stock prices implies further drawdown in EM share prices. Chart 8EM Share Prices Are Beginning To Price A Profit Slowdown In H2 2021 Chart 9EM Share Prices Are Beginning To Price A Profit Slowdown In H2 2021 The Chinese Economy: Shifting Into Low Gear In China, liquidity and money measures portend a peak business cycle. Excluding TMT companies, Chinese investable stocks have failed to break above their trading range of the past ten years. Notably, the slowdown is not limited to the old economy. The Caixin New Economy Index has dropped to its early 2019 level. Chart 10The Chinese Economy: Shifting Into Low Gear Chart 11The Chinese Economy: Shifting Into Low Gear Chart 12The Chinese Economy: Shifting Into Low Gear Chart 13The Chinese Economy: Shifting Into Low Gear Peak Growth And Equity Sentiment We have been showing Chart 14 for the past several months. The record high sentiment on EM equities in January preceded with an apex in EM share prices in February. This measure of sentiment is not yet low enough to expect a bottom in EM stocks. Chart 15 shows a similar indicator for euro area equities. Will it play out in the euro area as it did with EM? Chart 14Peak Growth And Equity Sentiment Chart 15Peak Growth And Equity Sentiment Booming IPOs And Secondary Issues = Peak Investor Sentiment The numbers of IPOs and secondary issuances have risen to a record high in China and EM. Often, this development is consistent with peak investor sentiment that coincides with some sort of top in share prices. Chart 16Booming IPOs And Secondary Issues = Peak Investor Sentiment Chart 17Booming IPOs And Secondary Issues = Peak Investor Sentiment Chart 18Booming IPOs And Secondary Issues = Peak Investor Sentiment Equity Risk Premium: EM Equities Are Not Cheaper Than European And Japanese Equities Equity earnings yield minus interest rates (a proxy for equity risk premium) in EM is similar to that of the US. Hence, adjusted for local interest rates, EM stocks are not cheap. In fact, European and Japanese stocks are cheaper than EM stocks. Chart 19Equity Risk Premium: EM Equities Are Not Cheaper Than European And Japanese Equities Chart 20Equity Risk Premium: EM Equities Are Not Cheaper Than European And Japanese Equities A US Dollar Rebound = EM Setback Both EM equity recent selloffs and relative underperformance versus DM occur alongside US dollar strength. Besides, EM equity relative performance often moves counter to US stocks relative performance against the global benchmark (Chart 23). Finally, emerging Asian stocks’ relative performance versus the global index has hit a major technical resistance. The path of least resistance is, for now, on the downside. Chart 21A US Dollar Rebound = EM Setback Chart 22A US Dollar Rebound = EM Setback Chart 23A US Dollar Rebound = EM Setback Chart 24A US Dollar Rebound = EM Setback EM Stocks Have Formed A Medium-Term Top The EM overall equity benchmark (shown in Chart 20) as well as EM ex-TMT stocks, EM (ex-China, Korea and Taiwan) share prices, EM small caps and the EM equal-weighted index have so far failed to break out. The forthcoming slowdown in China, rising US Treasury yields, the US dollar rebound and poor fundamentals in EM (ex-China, Korea and Taiwan) are consistent with these technical patterns and warrant caution for now. Chart 25EM Stocks Have Formed A Medium-Term Top Chart 26EM Stocks Have Formed A Medium-Term Top Chart 27EM Stocks Have Formed A Medium-Term Top Chart 28EM Stocks Have Formed A Medium-Term Top Rising US Treasury Yields Are A Bad Omen For EM Fixed-Income Investor sentiment on US Treasurys is neutral, as is JP Morgan’s duration survey. Major market moves do not halt when sentiment is neutral but rather persist until sentiment becomes extreme. This and the economic boom and rising inflationary pressures in the US are the basis for higher US bond yields. The latter will push up both EM local currency and US dollar bond yields. In turn, a relapse in commodities prices will lead to a widening EM credit spread. Chart 29Rising US Treasury Yields Are A Bad Omen For EM Fixed-Income The US Dollar Rebound Is In The Making The US dollar will continue its rebound as the US economic growth outpaces others and US yields rise relative to their peers. In turn, a rollover in commodities prices is a harbinger of EM currency weakness. Chart 30The US Dollar Rebound Is In The Making Chart 31The US Dollar Rebound Is In The Making Chart 32The US Dollar Rebound Is In The Making Chart 33The US Dollar Rebound Is In The Making A Strong Dollar Will Redistribute Inflation From The US To The Rest Of the World US import prices are rising in US dollar terms but not enough to offset exporters’ currency appreciation of the past 12 months. In fact, export prices in local currency terms have been tame in China and Korea. The greenback might appreciate in the near term to redistribute inflationary pressures from the US to the rest of the world, where the risk remains deflation/disinflation. Chart 34A Strong Dollar Will Redistribute Inflation From The US To The Rest Of the World Chart 35A Strong Dollar Will Redistribute Inflation From The US To The Rest Of the World EMs’ Poor Fundamentals In recent weeks, Brazil and Russia have hiked their policy rates. However, core consumer price inflation in both countries remains well behaved. Both economies are sluggish. In short, economic growth and inflation did not herald higher policy rates. Higher borrowing costs will jeopardize growth in these and other EM economies. Critically, the breakdown in EM relative to DM bank share prices (Chart 39) is a sign of poor health of EM banks and their inability to finance the economic recovery. Chart 36EMs' Poor Fundamentals Chart 37EMs' Poor Fundamentals Chart 38EMs' Poor Fundamentals Investment Ideas A few of our investment recommendations outside our main strategy are: (1) long Chinese A-shares / short investable stocks; (2) long global value / short Chinese investable value stocks; (3) long global industrials / short global materials; (4) short a basket of EM currencies versus the US dollar or go long EM currency volatility. This week we are adding a new recommendation: short EM banks / long DM banks (Chart 39). Chart 39Investment Ideas Chart 40Investment Ideas Chart 41Investment Ideas Footnotes Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
Highlights Underweighting T-bonds, tech versus the market, growth versus value, new economy versus old economy, and US versus the euro area are all just one massive correlated trade. Get the direction of the T-bond yield right, and you will get the whole correlated trade right. The rise in the 10-year T-bond yield will meet resistance much closer to 2 percent than to 3 percent… …because the level of the yield is already starting to weigh on the stock market, the financial system, and the real economy. Hence, on a 6-month horizon, fade the massive correlated trade. When allocating to stock markets, don’t confuse a ‘stock effect’ for a ‘country effect’. Fractal trade shortlist: European autos and European personal products. The Pareto Principle Of Investment Chart of the WeekCorrelated Trade: Tech And The US One of the guiding principles of investment is that: Investment is complex, but it is not complicated. The words complex and complicated are often used synonymously, but they mean different things. Complex means something that is not fully predictable or analysable. Complicated means something that is made up of many parts. Investment is not complicated because a few parts drive the relative prices of everything. This is also known as the Pareto Principle, or the 20:80 rule. Just 20 percent of the input determines 80 percent of the output.1 Right now, the 20 that is determining the 80 is the bond yield. Higher bond yields are hurting high-flying tech stocks. This is because the ‘net present value’ of cashflows that are weighted deep into the future are highly sensitive to rising yields. Therefore, underweighting T-bonds means underweighting tech versus the market. Which extends to growth versus value, new economy versus old economy, US versus the euro area, and so on. In effect, all these positions have become one massive correlated trade (Chart of the Week, Chart I-2, and Chart I-3). Chart I-2Correlated Trade: T-Bond, And Growth Vs. Value Chart I-3Correlated Trade: Growth Vs. Value, ##br##And Tech Get the direction of the bond yield right and your whole investment strategy will be right. You will be a hero. Get the direction of the bond yield wrong and your whole investment strategy will be wrong. You will be a zero. Get the direction of the bond yield right and your whole investment strategy will be right. The hero/zero decision for investors is: from the current level of 1.7 percent, at what level will the 10-year T-bond yield peak and reverse? If the answer is, say, 3 percent, then the recent direction of this correlated trade has much further to go, and investors should stay on the ride. But if the answer is, say, 2 percent, then this correlated trade does not have much further to go, and it will soon be time to get off. To repeat, investment is not complicated, but it is complex. The evolution of the bond yield is not fully analysable or predictable. Still, our assessment is that the rise in the 10-year T-bond yield will meet resistance much closer to 2 percent than to 3 percent. This is because the level of yields is already starting to weigh on the stock market, the financial system, and the real economy. Specifically: The global stock market rally has stalled since mid-February because high-flying growth stocks have been reined back by rising bond yields. Recent margin calls and liquidations in the hedge fund space presage points of fragility in the financial system. Note, there is never just one cockroach. US mortgage applications for home purchases and building permits for new housebuilding appear to be rolling over (Chart I-4). Admittedly, these are just straws in the wind. But straws in the wind can be the first sign of a brewing storm. Chart I-4Are Higher Bond Yields Starting To Weigh On The Housing Market? On a 6-month horizon, fade the underweighting to bonds, tech versus the market, growth versus value, new economy versus old economy, and US versus the euro area correlated trade. Sectors Still Rule The Stock Market World The evolution of the pandemic, the pace of vaccination roll-outs, and the size of fiscal stimuluses have become polarised by region and country, with clear leaders and laggards. This raises the question: are the regions and countries that are winning against the pandemic the investment winners too? For the major stock markets, the answer is an emphatic no. Compared with the US, the euro area is experiencing an aggressive third wave of infections, is lagging in its vaccination roll-outs, and is unleashing much less fiscal stimulus. Yet euro area equities have not been underperforming US equities. Proving that the outperformance and underperformance of the major stock markets has very little to do with what is going on in the local economy. The outperformance and underperformance of the major stock markets has very little to do with what is going on in the local economy. By far the biggest driver of euro area versus US stock market performance is the euro area’s massive underweighting to tech stocks vis-à-vis the US. Hence, the tech sector’s recent travails have boosted the euro area stock market’s relative performance. Similar types of sector skews explain the relative performance of all the major stock markets (Table I-1). For example, developed markets (DM) versus emerging markets (EM) is nothing more than healthcare versus basic resources (Chart I-5). Table I-1The Sector Fingerprints Of The Major Stock Markets Chart I-5DM Vs. EM Is Nothing More Than Healthcare Vs. Basic Resources Exchange rates can also have a bearing on stock market relative performance – though the main transmission mechanism is not through competitiveness, but through the so-called ‘currency translation effect.’ Specifically, the multinationals that dominate the major stock markets have their cost bases diversified across multiple currencies. Hence, for a euro-listed multinational company, a weaker euro doesn’t boost its competitiveness. But it does boost the translation of its multi-currency profits into euros, the currency of its stock market listing. Thereby, the weaker euro boosts its stock price. Don’t Confuse A ‘Stock Effect’ For A ‘Country Effect’ Many people think that there is also a strong ‘country effect’ in stock market selection. For example, if US tech hardware outperforms euro area tech hardware, then this is clearly not a sector effect. It must be to do with a difference between the US and the euro area, meaning a country effect. The truth is more nuanced. Many sectors are now highly concentrated in one or two dominant stocks. US tech hardware is concentrated in Apple while euro area tech hardware is concentrated in ASML. Hence, if US tech hardware is outperforming euro area tech hardware, it is because Apple is outperforming ASML (Chart I-6). Chart I-6Is US Tech Vs. Euro Area Tech A 'Country Effect' Or A 'Stock Effect'? Likewise, if euro area pharma is outperforming UK pharma, it is because the dominant euro area pharma stock, Sanofi, is outperforming the dominant UK pharma stock, AstraZeneca (Chart I-7). Chart I-7Is Euro Area Pharma Vs. UK Pharma A 'Country Effect' Or A 'Stock Effect'? So, if US tech hardware is outperforming euro area tech hardware, and euro area pharma is outperforming UK pharma, are these ‘country effects’, or are they ‘stock effects’? We would argue that, in truth, they are stock effects. Meaning they have little to do with what is happening in the country of listing, and much more to do with the specifics of the company. For example, if UK pharma is underperforming, it is because AstraZeneca is underperforming. And if AstraZeneca is underperforming, it is more likely to do with the performance of its Covid-19 vaccine than the performance of the UK economy. The problem is that most performance attributions will incorrectly count what are stock effects as country effects. And the more concentrated that sectors become, the more pronounced this error becomes. Yet nowadays, extreme concentration in one or two stocks per sector is the norm rather than the exception. Hence, what appears to be a country effect is, in most cases, a stock effect. What appears to be a country effect is, in most cases, a stock effect. The important lesson is that when allocating to the major stock markets, do not think in terms of regions or countries because the country effect is, in truth, negligible. Think in terms of the sectors and the dominant stocks that you want to own, and the regional and country allocation will resolve itself automatically. On this basis our high-conviction structural position to be overweight DM versus EM simply follows from our high-conviction structural position to be overweight healthcare versus basic resources. In the DM versus EM decision, everything else is largely irrelevant. Candidates For Countertrend Reversals This week’s candidates for countertrend reversal are European autos, and European personal products. The euphoria towards electric vehicles (EVs) has taken European auto stocks to a technically overbought extreme (Chart I-8). Chart I-8European Autos Are Overbought Conversely, the euphoria towards economic reopening plays has taken European personal products stocks to a technically oversold extreme (Chart I-9). Chart I-9European Personal Products Are Oversold Our recommended trade is overweight European personal products versus European autos (Chart I-10), setting a profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 15 percent. Chart I-10Overweight European Personal Products Versus European Autos Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The exact numbers 20 and 80 are simply indicative of the Pareto Principle rather than set in stone, they could also be 5 and 95, or indeed 5 and 99 as they do not need to sum to 100. Fractal Trading System 6-Month Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Asset Performance Equity Market Performance Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Euro Area Chart II-2Europe Ex Euro Area Chart II-3Asia Chart II-4Other Developed Interest Rate Chart II-5Expectations Chart II-6Expectations Chart II_7Expectations Chart II-8Expectations
Highlights Global manufacturing activity will soon peak due to growing costs and China’s policy tightening. This process will allow the dollar’s rebound to continue. EUR/USD’s correction will run further. This pullback in the euro is creating an attractive buying opportunity for investors with a 12- to 24-month investment horizon. Eurozone banks will continue to trade in unison with the euro. Feature The correction in the euro has further to run. The dollar currently benefits from widening real interest differentials, but a growing list of headwinds will cause a temporary setback for the global manufacturing sector, which will fuel the greenback rally further. Nonetheless, EUR/USD will stabilize between 1.15 and 1.12, after which it will begin a new major up-leg. Consequently, investors with a 12- to 24-month investment horizon should use the current softness to allocate more funds to the common currency. A Hiccup In Global Industrial Activity Global manufacturing activity is set to decelerate on a sequential basis and the Global Manufacturing PMI will soon peak. The first problem for the global manufacturing sector is the emergence of financial headwinds. The sharp rebound in growth in the second half of 2020 and the optimism created by last year’s vaccine breakthrough as well as the rising tide of US fiscal stimulus have pushed US bond yields and oil prices up sharply. These financial market moves are creating a “growth tax” that will bite soon. Mounting US interest rates have lifted global borrowing costs while the doubling in Brent prices has increased the costs of production and created a small squeeze on oil consumers. Thus, even if the dollar remains well below its March 2020 peak, our Growth Tax Indicator (which incorporates yields, oil prices and the US dollar) warns of an imminent top in the US ISM Manufacturing and the Global Manufacturing PMI (Chart 1). Already, the BCA Global Leading Economic Indicator diffusion index has dipped below the 50% line, which usually ushers in downshifts in global growth. A deceleration in China’s economy constitutes another problem for the global manufacturing cycle. Last year’s reflation-fueled rebound in Chinese economic activity was an important catalyst to the global trade and manufacturing recovery. However, according to BCA Research’s Emerging Market Strategy service, Beijing is now tightening policy, concerned by a build-up in debt and excesses in the real estate sector. Already, the PBoC’s liquidity withdrawals are resulting in a decline of commercial bank excess reserves, which foreshadows a slowing of China’s credit impulse (Chart 2). Chart 1The Global Growth Tax Will Bite Chart 2Chinese Credit Will Slow In addition to liquidity withdrawals, Chinese policymakers are also tightening the regulatory environment to tackle excessive debt buildups and real estate speculation. The crackdown on property developers and house purchases will cause construction activity to shrink in the second half of 2021. Meanwhile, tougher rules for both non-bank lenders and the asset management divisions of banks will further harm credit creation. BCA’s Chief EM strategist, Arthur Budaghyan, notes that consumer credit is already slowing. Chinese fiscal policy is unlikely to create a counterweight to the deteriorating credit impulse. China’s fiscal impulse will be slightly negative next year. Chinese financial markets are factoring in these headwinds, and on-shore small cap equities are trying to break down while Chinese equities are significantly underperforming global benchmarks. Chart 3Deteriorating Surprises Bottom Line: The combined assault from the rising “growth tax” and China’s policy tightening is leaving its mark. Economic surprises in the US, the Eurozone, EM and China have all decelerated markedly (Chart 3), which the currency market echoes. Some of the most pro-cyclical currencies in the G-10 are suffering, with the SEK falling relative to the EUR and the NZD and AUD both experiencing varying degrees of weakness. The Euro Correction Will Run Further… Until now, the euro’s decline mostly reflects the rise in US interest rate differentials; however, the coming hiccup in the global manufacturing cycle is causing a second down leg for the euro. First, the global economic environment remains consistent with more near-term dollar upside, due to: Chart 4Commodities Are Vulnerable A commodity correction that will feed the dollar’s rebound. Aggregate speculator positioning and our Composite Technical Indicator show that commodity prices are technically overextended (Chart 4). With this backdrop, the coming deceleration in Chinese economic activity is likely to catalyze a significant pullback in natural resources, which will hurt rates of returns outside the US and therefore, flatter the dollar. The dollar’s counter-cyclicality. The expected pullback in the Global Manufacturing PMI is consistent with a stronger greenback (Chart 5). The dollar’s momentum behavior. Among G-10 FX, the dollar responds most strongly to the momentum factor (Chart 6). Thus, the likelihood is high that the dollar’s recent rebound will persist, especially because our FX team’s Dollar Capitulation Index has only recovered to neutral from oversold levels and normally peaks in overbought territory. Chart 5The Greenback's Counter-Cyclicality Chart 6The Dollar Is A High Momentum Currency Second, the euro’s specific dynamics remain negative for now. Based on our short-term valuation model, the fair value of EUR/USD has downshifted back to 1.1, which leaves the euro 7% overvalued (Chart 7). Until now, real interest rate differentials and the steepening of the US yield curve relative to Germany’s have driven the decline in the fair value estimate. However, the deceleration in global growth also hurts the euro’s fair value because the US is less exposed than the Eurozone to the global manufacturing cycle. Chart 7The Euro's Short-Term Fair Value Is At 1.1 Chart 8Speculators Have Not Capitulated The euro is also technically vulnerable, similar to commodities. Speculators are still massively net long EUR/USD and the large pool of long bets in the euro suggests that a capitulation has yet to take place (Chart 8). The euro responds very negatively to a weak Chinese economy. The Eurozone has deeper economic ties with China than the US. Exports to China account for 1.7% of the euro area’s GDP, and 2.8% of Germany’s compared to US exports to China at 0.5% of GDP. Indirect financial links are also larger. Credit to EM accounts for 45% of the Eurozone’s GDP compared to 5% for the US. Thus, the negative impact of a Chinese slowdown on EM growth has greater spillovers on European than on US ones rates of returns. A weak CNY and sagging Chinese capital markets harm the euro. The euro’s rebound from 1.064 on March 23 2020 to 1.178 did not reflect sudden inflows into European fixed-income markets. Instead, the money that previously sought higher interest rates in the US left that country for EM bonds and China’s on-shore fixed-income markets, the last major economies with attractive yields. These outflows from the US to China and EM pushed the dollar down, which arithmetically helped the euro. Thus, the recent EUR/USD correlates closely with Sino/US interest rate and with the yuan because the euro’s strength reflects the dollar demise (Chart 9). Consequently, a decelerating Chinese economy will also hurt EUR/USD via fixed-income market linkages. Finally, the euro will depreciate further if global cyclical stocks correct relative to defensive equities. Deep cyclicals (financials, consumer discretionary, energy, materials and industrials) represent 59% of the Eurozone MSCI benchmark versus 36% of the US index. Cyclical equities are exceptionally overbought and expensive relative to defensive names. They are also very levered to the global business cycle and Chinese imports. In this context, the expected deterioration in both China’s economic activity and the Global Manufacturing PMI could cause a temporary but meaningful pullback in the cyclicals-to-defensives ratio and precipitate equity outflows from Europe into the US (Chart 10). Chart 9EUR/USD And Chinese Rates Chart 10EUR/USD Will Follow Cyclicals/Defensives Bottom Line: A peak in the global manufacturing PMI will hurt the euro, especially because China will meaningfully contribute to this deceleration in global industrial activity. Thus, the euro’s pullback has further to run. An important resistance stands at 1.15. A failure to hold will invite a rapid decline to EUR/USD 1.12. Nonetheless, the euro’s depreciation constitutes nothing more than a temporary pullback. … But The Long-Term Bull Market Is Intact We recommend buying EUR/USD on its current dip because the underpinnings of its cyclical bull market are intact. Chart 11Investors Structurally Underweight Europe First, investors are positioned for a long-term economic underperformance of the euro area relative to the US. The depressed level of portfolio inflows into Europe relative to the US indicates that investors already underweight European assets (Chart 11). This pre-existing positioning limits the negative impact on the euro of the current decrease in European growth expectations (Chart 11, bottom panel). Second, as we wrote last week, European growth is set to accelerate significantly this summer. Considering the absence of ebullient investor expectations toward the euro, this process can easily create upside economic surprises later this year, especially when compared to the US. Moreover, the deceleration in Chinese and global growth will most likely be temporary, which will limit the duration of their negative impact on Europe. Third, the US stimulus measure will create negative distortions for the US dollar. The addition of another long-term stimulus package of $2 trillion to $4 trillion to the $7 trillion already spent by Washington during the crisis implies that the US government deficit will not narrow as quickly as US private savings will decline. Therefore, the US current account deficit will widen from its current level of 3.5% of GDP. As a corollary, the US twin deficit will remain large. Meanwhile, the Fed is unlikely to increase real interest rates meaningfully in the coming two years because it believes any surge in inflation this year will be temporary. Furthermore, the FOMC aims to achieve inclusive growth (i.e. an overheated labor market). This policy combination forcefully points toward greater dollar weakness. The US policy mix looks particularly dollar bearish when compared to that of the Eurozone. To begin with, the balance of payment dynamics make the euro more resilient. The euro area benefits from the underpinning of a current account surplus of 1.9% of GDP. Moreover, the European basic balance of payments stands at 1.5% of GDP compared to a 3.6% deficit for the US. Additionally, FDI into Europe are rising relative to the US. The divergence in the FDI trends will continue due to the high probability that the Biden administration will soon increase corporate taxes. Chart 12The DEM In The 70s The combination of faster vaccine penetration and much larger fiscal stimulus means that the US economy will overheat faster than Europe’s. Because the Fed seems willing to tolerate higher inflation readings, US CPI will rise relative to the Eurozone. In the 1970s, too-easy policy in Washington meant that the gap between US and German inflation rose. Despite the widening of interest rate and growth differentials in favor of the USD or the rise in German relative unemployment, the higher US inflation dominated currency fluctuations and the deutschemark appreciated (Chart 12). A similar scenario is afoot in the coming years, especially in light of the euro bullish relative balance of payments. Fourth, valuations constitute an additional buttress behind the long-term performance of the euro. Our FX strategy team Purchasing Power Parity model adjusts for the different composition of price indices in the US and the euro area. Based on this metric, the euro is trading at a significant 13% discount from its long-term fair value, with the latter being on an upward trend (Chart 13). Furthermore, BCA’s Behavioral Exchange Rate Model for the trade-weighted euro is also pointing up, which historically augurs well for the common currency. Lastly, even if the ECB’s broad trade-weighted index stands near an all-time high, European financial conditions remain very easy. This bifurcation suggests that the euro is not yet a major hurdle for the continent and can enjoy more upside (Chart 14). Chart 13EUR/USD Trades Well Below Long-Term Fair Value Chart 14Easy European Financial Conditions Chart 15Make Room For the Euro! Finally, the euro will remain a beneficiary from reserve diversification away from the USD. The dollar’s status as the premier reserve currency is unchallenged. However, its share of global reserves has scope to decline while the euro’s proportion could move back to the levels enjoyed by legacy European currencies in the early 1990s (Chart 15). Large reserve holders will continue to move away from the dollar. BCA Research’s Geopolitical Strategy team argues that US tensions with China transcend the Trump presidency. Meanwhile, the current administration’s relationship with Russia and Saudi Arabia will be cold. For now, their main alternative to the dollar is the euro because of its liquidity. Moreover, the NGEU stimulus program creates an embryonic mechanism to share fiscal risk within the euro area. The Eurozone is therefore finally trying to evolve away from a monetary union bereft of a fiscal union. This process points toward a lower probability of a break up, which makes the euro more attractive to reserve managers. Bottom Line: Despite potent near-term headwinds, the euro’s long-term outlook remains bright. Global investors already underweight European assets, yet balance of payment and policy dynamics point toward a higher euro. Moreover, valuations and geopolitical developments reinforce the cyclical tailwinds behind EUR/USD. Thus, investors with a 12- to 24-month investment horizon should use the current euro correction to gain exposure to the European currencies. Any move in EUR/USD below 1.15 will generate a strong buy signal. Sector Focus: European Banks And The Istanbul Shake The recent decline in euro area bank stocks coincides with the 14% increase in USD/TRY and the 17% decline in the TUR Turkish equities ETF following the sacking of Naci Ağbal, the CBRT governor. President Erdogan is prioritizing growth over economic stability because his AKP party is polling poorly ahead of the 2023 election. The Turkish economy is already overheating, and the lack of independence of the CBRT under the leadership of Şahap Kavcıoğlu promises a substantial increase in Turkish inflation, which already stands at 16%. Hence, foreign investors will flee this market, creating further downward pressures on the lira and Turkish assets. European banks have a meaningful exposure to Turkey. Turkish assets account for 3% of Spanish bank assets or 28% of Tier-1 capital. For France, this exposure amounts to 0.7% and 5% respectively, and for the UK, it reaches 0.3% and 2%. As a comparison, claims on Turkey only represent 0.3% and 0.5% of the assets and Tier-1 capital of US banks. Unsurprisingly, fluctuations in the Turkish lira have had a significant impact one the share prices of European banks in recent years, even after controlling for EPS and domestic yield fluctuations (Table 1). Table 1TRY Is Important To European Banks… Nonetheless, today’s TRY fluctuations are unlikely to have the same lasting impact on European banks share prices as they did from 2017 to 2019 because European banks have already shed significant amounts of Turkish assets (Chart 16). This does not mean that European banks are out of the woods yet. The level of European yields remains a key determinant of the profitability of Eurozone’s banks, and thus, of their share prices (Chart 17, top panel). Moreover, the euro still tightly correlates with European bank stocks as well (Chart 17, bottom panel). As a result, our view that the global manufacturing cycle will experience a temporary downshift and the consequent downside in EUR/USD both warn of further underperformance of European banks. Chart 16… But Less Than It Once Was Chart 17Higher Yields And A stronger Euro, These Are Few Of My Favorite Things These same views also suggest that this decline in bank prices is creating a buying opportunity. Ultimately, we remain cyclically bullish on the euro and the transitory nature of the manufacturing slowdown implies that global yields will resume their ascent. The cheap valuations of European banks, which trade at 0.6-times book value, make them option-like vehicles to bet on these trends, even if the banking sectors long-term prospects are murky. Moreover, they are a play on Europe’s domestic recovery this summer. We will explore banks in greater detail in future reports. Mathieu Savary, Chief European Investment Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Trades Currency Performance Fixed Income Performance Government Bonds Corporate Bonds Equity Performance Major Stock Indices Geographic Performance Sector Performance
Dear Client, We are sending you our Strategy Outlook today, where we outline our thoughts on the macro landscape and the direction of financial markets for the rest of 2021 and beyond. Next week, please join me for a webcast on Thursday, April 1 at 10:00 AM EDT (3:00 PM BST, 4:00 PM CEST, 10:00 PM HKT) where I will discuss the outlook. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights Growth outlook: The global economy will rebound over the course of the year, with momentum rotating from the US to the rest of the world. Inflation: Structurally higher inflation is not a near-term risk, even in the US, but could become a major problem by the middle of the decade. Global asset allocation: Investors should continue to overweight equities on a 12-month horizon. Unlike in the year 2000, the equity earnings yield is still well above the bond yield. Equities: Value stocks will maintain their recent outperformance. Investors should favor banks and economically-sensitive cyclical sectors, while overweighting stock markets outside the US. Fixed income: Continue to maintain below average interest-rate duration exposure. Spread product will outperform safe government bonds. Favor inflation-protected securities over nominal bonds. Currencies: While the dollar could strengthen in the near term, it will weaken over a 12-month period. Large budget deficits, a deteriorating balance of payments profile, and an accommodative Fed are all dollar bearish. Commodities: Tight supply conditions and a cyclical recovery in oil demand will support crude prices. Strong Chinese growth will continue to buoy the metals complex. I. Macroeconomic Outlook Global Growth: The US Leads The Way… For Now The global economy should rebound from the pandemic over the remainder of the year. So far, however, it has been a two-speed recovery. Whereas the Bloomberg consensus has US real GDP growing by 4.8% in the first quarter, analysts expect the economies in the Euro area, UK, and Japan to contract by 3.6%, 13.3%, and 5%, respectively. Chart 1Dismantling Of Lockdown Measures Occurring At Varying Pace Chart 2US Is Among The Vaccination Leaders Two things explain US growth outperformance. First, the successful launch of the US vaccination campaign has allowed state governments to begin dismantling lockdown measures (Chart 1). Currently, the US has administered 40 vaccine shots for every 100 inhabitants. Among the major economies, only the UK has performed better on the vaccination front (Chart 2). In contrast, parts of continental Europe are still battling a new wave of Covid infections, prompting policymakers there to further tighten social distancing rules. Second, US fiscal policy has been more stimulative than elsewhere (Chart 3). On March 11, President Biden signed the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan Act into law. Among other things, the Act provides direct payments to lower- and middle-class households, extends and expands unemployment benefits, and offers aid to state and local governments (Chart 4). Unlike President Trump’s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the Democrats’ legislation will raise the incomes of the poor much more than the rich (Chart 5). Chart 3The US Tops The Stimulus Race We expect growth leadership to shift from the US to the rest of the world in the second half of the year. Nevertheless, US real GDP in Q4 of 2021 will probably end up 7% above the level of Q4 of 2020, enough to close the output gap. In Section II of this report, we discuss whether this could cause inflation to take off on a sustained basis. We conclude that such an outcome is unlikely for the next two years. However, materially higher inflation is indeed a risk over a longer-term horizon. Chart 4Composition Of The American Rescue Plan Act Chart 5Biden’s Package Will Boost The Income Of The Poor More Than The Rich The EU: Recovery After Lockdown The EU will benefit from a cyclical recovery later this year as the vaccination campaign picks up steam. The recent weakness in Europe was concentrated in services (Chart 6). The latest European PMI data shows that the service sector may have turned the corner. As in the US, European households have accumulated significant excess savings. The unleashing of pent-up demand should drive consumption over the remainder of the year (Chart 7). Chart 6For Now, The Service Sector Is Doing Better In The US Than The Euro Area Chart 7European Households Have Accumulated Excess Savings Meanwhile, the manufacturing sector continues to do well, with the Euro area manufacturing PMI hitting all-time highs in March. Sentiment indices such as the Sentix and ZEW surveys point to further upside for manufacturing activity (Chart 8). Chart 8Positive Outlook For Euro Area Manufacturing Activity Fiscal policy should also turn modestly more expansionary. The EU recovery fund will begin disbursing aid in the second quarter. This should allow the southern European economies to maintain more generous levels of fiscal support. It also looks increasingly likely that the Green Party will either lead or join the coalition government in Germany, which could translate into greater spending. UK: Recovering From A One-Two Punch The UK had to shutter its economy late last year due to the emergence of a new, more contagious, strain of the virus. The resulting hit to the economy came on top of a decline in exports to the EU following Brexit. The economic picture will improve over the coming months. Thanks to the speedy vaccination campaign, the government plans to lift the “stay at home” rules on March 29. Most retail, dining, and hospitality businesses are scheduled to reopen on April 12. A strong housing market and the extension of both the furlough schemes and tax holidays should also sustain demand. Japan: More Fiscal Support Needed Like many other countries, Japan had to introduce new lockdown measures in late 2020 after suffering its worst wave of the pandemic. While the number of new cases has dropped dramatically since then, they have edged up again over the past two weeks. Japanese regulations require that vaccines be tested on Japanese people. Prime Minster Yoshihide Suga has promised that vaccine shots will be available to the country’s 36 million seniors by the end of June. However, with less than 1% of the population vaccinated so far, strict social distancing will persist well into the summer. The Japanese government passed a JPY 73 trillion (13.5% of GDP) supplementary budget in December. However, only 40 trillion of that has been allocated for direct spending. Due to negative bond yields, the Japanese government earns more interest than it pays on its debt. It should be running much more expansionary fiscal policy. China: Policy Normalization, Not Deleveraging Chart 9China: Tailwind For Easier Monetary And Fiscal Policies Will Fade Over The Remainder Of The Year China’s combined credit/fiscal impulse peaked late last year (Chart 9). The impulse leads growth by about six months, implying that the tailwind from easier monetary and fiscal policies will fade over the rest of the year. Nevertheless, we doubt that China’s economy will experience much of a slowdown. First and foremost, the shock from the pandemic should fade, helping to revive consumer and business confidence. Second, the Chinese authorities are likely to pursue policy normalization, rather than outright deleveraging. Jing Sima, BCA’s chief China strategist, expects the general government deficit to remain broadly stable at 8% of GDP this year. She also thinks that the rate of credit expansion will fall by only 2-to-3 percentage points in 2021, bringing credit growth back in line with projected nominal GDP growth of 8%. Total credit was 290% of GDP at end-2020. Thus, credit growth of 8% would still generate 290%*8%=23% of GDP of net credit formation, providing more than enough support to the economy. II. Feature: Will The US Economy Overheat? As of February, US households were sitting on around $1.7 trillion in excess savings. About two-thirds of those savings can be chalked up to reduced spending during the pandemic, with the remaining one-third arising from increased transfer payments (Chart 10). The recently passed stimulus bill will boost household savings by an additional $300 billion, bringing the stock of excess savings to $2 trillion by April. This cash hoard will support spending. Already, real-time measures of economic activity have hooked up. Traffic congestion in many US cities is approaching pre-pandemic levels. OpenTable’s measure of restaurant occupancy is progressing back to where it was before the pandemic (Chart 11). J.P. Morgan reported that spending using its credit cards rose 23% year-over-year in the 9-day period through to March 19 as stimulus payments reached bank accounts. Anecdotally, airlines and cruise line companies have been expressing optimism on the back of a surge in bookings. Chart 10Lower Spending And Higher Income Led To Mounting Excess Savings Chart 11Real-Time Measures Of Economic Activity Have Hooked Up Meanwhile, the supply side of the economy could face temporary constraints. Under the stimulus bill, close to half of jobless workers will receive more income through to September from extended unemployment benefits than they did from working. This could curtail labor supply at a time when firms are trying to step up the pace of hiring. The Fed Versus The Markets In the latest Summary of Economic Projections released last week, the median “dot” for the fed funds rate remained stuck at zero through to end-2023. The bond market, in contrast, expects the Fed to start raising rates next year. Why is there a gap between the Fed and market expectations? Part of the answer is that the “dots” and market expectations measure different things. Whereas the dots reflect a modal, or “most likely” estimate of where short-term rates will be over the next few years, market expectations reflect a probability-weighted average. The fact that rates cannot fall deeply into negative territory – but can potentially rise a lot in a high-inflation scenario – has skewed market rate expectations to the upside. That said, there is another, more fundamental, reason at work: The Fed simply does not think that a negative output gap will lead to materially higher inflation. The “dots” assume that core PCE inflation will barely rise above 2% over the next two years, even though, by the Fed’s own admission, the unemployment rate will fall firmly below NAIRU in 2023 (Chart 12). Chart 12The Fed Sees Faster Recovery, Same Rate Path Chart 13Just Like It Did In 2011, The Fed Will Disregard What It Sees As Transitory Price Shocks Is the Federal Reserve’s relaxed view towards inflation risk justified? The Fed knows full well that headline inflation could temporarily reach 4% over the next two months due to base effects from last year’s deflationary shock, lingering supply chain disruptions, the rebound in gasoline prices, and the lagged effect from dollar weakness. However, as it did in late 2011, when headline inflation nearly hit 4% and producer price inflation briefly topped 10%, the Fed is inclined to regard these price shocks as transitory (Chart 13). The Fed believes that PCE inflation will tick up to 2.4% this year but then settle back down to 2% by the end of next year as supply disruptions dissipate and most fiscal stimulus measures roll off. Our bet is that the Fed will be right about inflation in the near term, but wrong in the long term. That is to say, we think that core inflation will probably remain subdued for the next two years, as the Fed expects. However, inflation is poised to rise significantly towards the middle of the decade, an outcome that is likely to surprise both the Fed and market participants. War-Time Inflation, But Which War? In some respects, the Fed sees the current environment as resembling a war, except this time the battle is against an invisible enemy: Covid-19. Chart 14 shows what happened to US inflation during WWI, WWII, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. In the first three of those four wars, inflation rose but then fell back down after the war had concluded. That is what the Fed is counting on. What about the possibility that the coming years could resemble the period around the Vietnam War, where inflation continued to rise even though the number of US military personnel engaged in the conflict peaked in 1968? Chart 14Inflation During Wartime: Which War Is Most Relevant For Today? Chart 15Inflation Started Accelerating Quickly Only When Unemployment Reached Very Low Levels In The 1960s In the near term, this does not appear to be a major risk. In 1966, when the war effort was ramping up, the US unemployment rate was two percentage points below NAIRU (Chart 15). As of February, US employment was still more than 5% below pre-pandemic levels. Chart 16Employment Has Been Weak And Edging Lower At The Bottom Quartile Of The Wage Distribution We estimate that the US output gap currently stands at around 5%-to-6% of GDP. Among the bottom quartile of the wage distribution, employment is 20% below pre-pandemic levels, and has been edging lower, not higher, since last October (Chart 16). Thus, for now, hyperbolic talk of how fiscal stimulus is crowding out private-sector spending is unwarranted. Inflation Nation Looking further out, the parallels between today and the late sixties are more striking. As we discussed in a report titled 1970s-Style Inflation: Yes, It Could Happen Again, much of what investors believe about how inflation emerged during the late 1960s is either based on myths, or at best, half-truths. To the extent that there are differences between today and that era, they don’t necessarily point to lower inflation in the coming years. For example, in the late sixties, the baby boomers were entering the labour force, supplying the economy with a steady stream of new workers. This helped to temper wage pressures. Today, baby boomers are leaving the labour force. They accumulated a lot of wealth over the past 50 years – so much so that they now control more than half of all US wealth (Chart 17). Over the coming two decades, they will run down that wealth, implying that household savings rates could drop. By definition, a lower savings rate implies more spending in relation to output, which is inflationary. Chart 17Baby Boomers Have Accumulated A Lot Of Wealth III. Financial Markets A. Portfolio Strategy Overweight Stocks Versus Bonds Stocks usually outperform bonds when economic growth is strong and money is cheap (Chart 18). The end of the pandemic and ongoing fiscal stimulus should support growth over the next 12-to-18 months, allowing the bull market in equities to continue. With inflation slow to rise, monetary policy will remain accommodative over this period. Chart 18AStocks Usually Outperform Bonds When Economic Growth Is Strong... Chart 18B... And Money Is Cheap The recent back-up in long-term bond yields could destabilize stocks for a month or two. However, our research has shown that as long as bond yields do not rise enough to trigger a recession, stocks will shrug off the effect of higher yields (Chart 19 and Table 1). Indeed, there is a self-limiting aspect to how high bond yields can rise, and stocks can fall, in a setting where inflation remains subdued. Higher bond yields lead to tighter financial conditions. Tighter financial conditions, in turn, lead to weaker growth, which justifies an even longer period of low rates. It is only when inflation rises to a level that central banks find uncomfortable that tighter financial conditions become desirable. We are far from that level today. Chart 19What Happens To Equities When Treasury Yields Rise? Table 1As Long As Bond Yields Don’t Rise Into Restrictive Territory, Stocks Will Recover It’s Not 2000 In recent months, many analysts have drawn comparisons between the year 2000 and the present day. While there are plenty of similarities, ranging from euphoric retail participation to the proliferation of dubious SPACs and IPOs, there is one critical difference: The forward earnings yield today is above the real bond yield, whereas in 2000 the earnings yield was below the bond yield (Chart 20). The US yield curve inverted in February 2000, with the 10-year Treasury yield peaking a month earlier at 6.79%. An inverted yield curve is one of the most reliable recession predictors. We are a far cry from such a predicament today. By the same token, the S&P 500 dividend yield was well below the bond yield in 2000. Today, they are roughly the same. Even if one were to pessimistically assume that US companies are unable to raise nominal dividend payments at all for the next decade, the S&P 500 would need to fall by 20% in real terms for equities to underperform bonds. Many other stock markets would have to decline by an even greater magnitude (Chart 21). Chart 20Relative To Bonds, Stocks Are More Favorably Valued Now Than In 2000 Chart 21Stocks Would Need To Fall A Lot For Equities To Underperform Bonds Protecting Against Long-Term Inflation Risk The bull market in stocks will end when central banks begin to fret over rising inflation. In the past, central banks have used forecasts of inflation to decide when to raise rates. The Federal Reserve’s revised monetary policy framework, which focuses on actual rather than forecasted inflation, almost guarantees that inflation will overshoot the Fed’s target. This is because monetary policy fully affects the economy with a lag of 12-to-18 months. By the time the Fed decides to clamp down on inflation, it will have already gotten too high. Investors looking to hedge long-term inflation risk should reduce duration exposure in fixed-income portfolios, favor inflation-protected securities over nominal bonds, and own more “real assets” such as property. In fact, one of the best inflation hedges is simply to buy a nice house financed with a high loan-to-value fixed-rate mortgage. In a few decades, you will still own the nice house, but the value of the mortgage will be greatly reduced in real terms. Gold Versus Cryptos Historically, gold has offered protection against inflation. Increasingly, many investors have come to believe that cryptocurrencies are a better choice. We disagree. As we recently discussed in a report titled Bitcoin: A Solution In Search Of A Problem, not only are cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin highly inefficient mediums of exchange, they are also likely to turn out to be poor stores of value. Bitcoin’s annual electricity consumption now exceeds that of Pakistan and its 217 million inhabitants (Chart 22). About 70% of Bitcoin mining currently takes place in China, mainly using electricity generated by burning coal. Much of the rest of the mining takes place in countries such as Russia and Belarus with dubious governance records. Bitcoin and ESG are heading for a clash. We suspect ESG will win out. Chart 22Bitcoin Is Not Your Eco-Currency B. Equities Favor Cyclicals, Value, And Non-US Stocks Chart 23Cyclicals And Ex-US Stocks Do Best When Global Growth Is On The Upswing The vast majority of stock market capitalization today is concentrated in large multinational companies that are more leveraged to global growth rather than to the growth rate of countries in which they happen to be domiciled. Thus, while country-specific factors are not irrelevant, regional equity allocation often boils down to figuring out which stock markets will gain or lose from various global trends. The end of the pandemic will prop up global growth. In general, cyclical sectors outperform when global growth is on the upswing (Chart 23). As Table 2 illustrates, stock markets outside the US have more exposure to classically cyclical sectors such as industrials, energy, materials, and consumer discretionary that usually shine coming out of a downturn. This leads us to favor Europe, Japan, and emerging markets. We place banks in the cyclical category because faster economic growth tends to reduce bad loans, while also placing upward pressure on bond yields. Chart 24 shows that there is a very close correlation between the relative performance of bank shares and long-term bond yields. As government yields trend higher, banks will benefit. Table 2Financials Are Overrepresented In Ex-US Indices, While Tech Dominates The US Market Chart 24Close Correlation Between Relative Performance Of Banks And Long-Term Bond Yields Banks and most other cyclical sectors dominate value indices (Table 3). Not only is value still exceptionally cheap in relation to growth, but traditional value sectors have seen stronger upward earnings revisions than tech stocks since the start of the year (Chart 25). The likelihood that global bond yields put in a secular bottom last year, coupled with the emergence of a new bull market in commodities, makes us think that the nascent outperformance of value stocks has years to run. Table 3Breaking Down Growth And Value By Sector Chart 25AValue Is Attractive On Multiple Levels (I) Chart 25BValue Is Attractive On Multiple Levels (II) US Corporate Tax Hikes Coming Finally, there is one country-specific factor worth mentioning, which reinforces our view of favoring non-US, cyclical, and value stocks: US corporate taxes are heading higher. BCA’s geopolitical strategists expect the Biden Administration and the Democrat-controlled Congress to raise the statutory corporate tax rate from 21% to as high as 28% later this year in order to fund, among other things, a major infrastructure investment program. Capital gains taxes will also rise. While tax hikes are unlikely to bring down the whole US stock market, they will detract from the relative performance of US stocks compared with their international peers. Cyclical sectors will benefit from the infrastructure spending. To the extent that such spending boosts growth and leads to a steeper yield curve, it should also benefit banks. In contrast, tech companies outside the clean energy sector will lag, especially if the bill introduces a minimum corporate tax on book income and raises taxes on overseas profits, as President Biden pledged to do during his campaign. C. Fixed Income Expect More US Curve Steepening As discussed above, inflation in the US and elsewhere will be slow to take off. However, when inflation does rise later this decade, it could do so significantly. Investors currently expect the Fed to start raising rates in December 2022, bringing the funds rate to 1.5% by the end of 2024 (Chart 26). In contrast, we think that a liftoff in the second half of 2023, preceded by a 6-to-12 month period of asset purchase tapering, is more likely. This implies a modest downside for short-dated US bond yields. Chart 26The Market Sees The Fed Rate Hike Cycle Kicking Off In Late 2022 Chart 27Long-Term US Real Yield Expectations Have Recovered But Remain Below Pre-Pandemic Levels In contrast, long-term yields will face upward pressure first from strong growth, and later from higher inflation. The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS yield currently stands at 0.35%, which is still below pre-pandemic levels (Chart 27). Given structurally looser fiscal policy, the 5-year/5-year forward TIPS yield should be at least 50 basis points higher, which would translate into a 10-year Treasury yield of a bit over 2%. Regional Bond Allocation While the Fed will be slow out of the gate to raise rates, most other central banks will be even slower. The sole exception among developed market central banks is the Norges bank, which has indicated its intention to hike rates in the second half of this year. Conceivably, Canada could start tightening monetary policy fairly soon, given strong jobs growth and a bubbly housing market. While the Bank of Canada is eager to begin tapering asset purchases later this year, our global fixed-income strategists suspect that the BoC will wait for the Fed to raise rates first. An early start to rate hikes by the Bank of Canada could significantly push up the value of the loonie, which is something the BoC wants to avoid. New Zealand will also hike rates shortly after the Fed, followed by Australia. Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey has downplayed the recent rise in gilt yields. Nevertheless, the desire to maintain currency competitiveness in the post-Brexit era will prevent the BoE from hiking rates until 2024. Among the major central banks, the ECB and the BoJ will be the last major central banks to raise rates. Putting it all together, our fixed-income strategists advocate maintaining a below-benchmark stance on overall duration. Comparing the likely path for rate hikes with market pricing region by region, they recommend overweighting the Euro area and Japan, assigning a neutral allocation to the UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, and an underweight on the US. Credit: Stick With US High Yield Corporates Corporate spreads have narrowed substantially since last March. Nevertheless, in an environment of strong economic growth, it still makes sense to favor riskier corporate credit over safe government bonds. Within corporate credit, we favor high yield over investment grade. Geographically, we prefer US corporate bonds over Euro area bonds. The former trade with a higher yield and spread than the latter (Chart 28). CHART 28Favor High-Yield Bonds Over Investment-Grade And US Corporates Over Euro Area (I) Chart 28Favor High-Yield Bonds Over Investment-Grade And US Corporates Over Euro Area (II) One way to gauge the attractiveness of credit is to look at the percentile rankings of 12-month breakeven spreads. The 12-month breakeven spread is the amount of credit spread widening that can occur before a credit-sensitive asset starts to underperform a duration-matched, risk-free government bond over a one-year horizon. For US investment-grade corporates, the breakeven spread is currently in the bottom decile of its historic range, which is rather unattractive from a risk-adjusted perspective. In contrast, the US high-yield breakeven spread is currently in the middle of the distribution. In the UK, high-yield debt is more appealing than investment grade, although not quite to the same extent as in the US. In the Euro area, both high-yield and investment-grade credit are fairly unattractive (Chart 29). Chart 29US High-Yield Stands Out The Most D. Currencies Faster US Growth Should Support The Dollar In The Near Term… Chart 30US Has A Smaller Share Of Manufacturing Than Most Other Developed Economies The US has a “low beta” economy. Compared to most other economies, the US has a bigger service sector and a smaller manufacturing base (Chart 30). The US economy is also highly diversified on both a regional and sectoral level. This tends to make US growth less volatile than growth abroad. The relatively low cyclicality of the US economy has important implications for the US dollar. While the US benefits from stronger global growth, the rest of the world usually benefits even more. Thus, when global growth accelerates, capital tends to flow from the US to other economies, dragging down the value of the dollar. This relationship broke down this year. Rather than lagging other economies, the US economy has led the charge thanks to bountiful fiscal stimulus and a successful vaccination campaign. As growth estimates for the US have been marked up, the dollar has caught a temporary bid (Chart 31). Chart 31US Growth Outperformance Could Be A Near-Term Tailwind For The Dollar … But Underlying Fundamentals Are Dollar Bearish As discussed earlier in the report, growth momentum should swing back towards the rest of the world later this year. This should weigh on the dollar in the second half of the year. To make matters worse for the greenback, the US trade deficit has ballooned in recent quarters. The current account deficit, a broad measure of net foreign income flows, rose by nearly 35% to $647 billion in 2020. At 3.1% of GDP, it was the largest shortfall in 12 years (Chart 32). Consistent with the weak balance of payments picture, the dollar remains overvalued by about 10% on a purchasing power parity basis (Chart 33). Chart 32The Widening US External Gap Chart 33The Dollar Is Expensive Based On Its PPP Fair Value Historically, the dollar has weakened whenever fiscal policy has been eased in excess of what is needed to close the output gap (Chart 34). Foreigners have been net sellers of Treasurys this year. It is equity inflows that have supported the dollar (Chart 35). However, if non-US stock markets begin to outperform, foreign flows into US stocks could reverse. Chart 34The Greenback Tends To Weaken When Fiscal Policy Is Eased Relative To What The Economy Needs Chart 35Equity Inflows Supported The Dollar This Year (I) Chart 35Equity Inflows Supported The Dollar This Year (II) Meanwhile, stronger US growth has pushed long-term real interest rate differentials only modestly in favor of the US. At the short end of the curve, real rate differentials have actually widened against the US since the start of the year, reflecting rising US inflation expectations and the Fed’s determination to keep rates near zero for an extended period of time (Chart 36). Chart 36Real Rate Differentials Have Moved In Favor Of The Dollar At The Long End Of The Curve, But Not At The Short End (I) Chart 36Real Rate Differentials Have Moved In Favor Of The Dollar At The Long End Of The Curve, But Not At The Short End (II) On balance, while the dollar could strengthen a bit more over the next month or so, the greenback will weaken over a 12-month horizon. Chester Ntonifor, BCA’s chief currency strategist, expects the dollar to fall the most against the Norwegian krone, Swedish krona, Australian dollar, and British pound over a 12-month horizon. In the EM space, stronger global growth will disproportionately benefit the Mexican peso, Chilean peso, Colombian peso, South African rand, Czech koruna, Indonesian rupiah, Korean won, and Singapore dollar. Chart 37Weak Dollar Is Usually A Tailwind For Cyclicals, Non-US Stocks, And Value Stocks (I) Chart 37Weak Dollar Is Usually A Tailwind For Cyclicals, Non-US Stocks, And Value Stocks (II) Consistent with our equity views, a weaker dollar would be good news for cyclical equity sectors, non-US stock markets, and value stocks (Chart 37). E. Commodities Favorable Outlook For Commodities Strong global growth against a backdrop of tight supply should sustain momentum in the commodity complex over the next 12-to-18 months. Capital investment in the oil and gas sector has fallen by more than 50% since 2014 (Chart 38). BCA’s Commodity & Energy Strategy service, led by Robert Ryan, expects annual growth in crude oil demand to outstrip supply over the remainder of this year (Chart 39). Chart 38Oil & Gas Capex Collapses In COVID-19’s Wake Chart 39Crude Oil Demand Growth To Outstrip Supply Over The Remainder Of This Year A physical deficit in the metals markets – particularly for copper and aluminum – should also persist this year (Chart 40). While the boom in electric vehicle (EV) production represents a long-term threat to oil, it is manna from heaven for many metals. A battery-powered EV can contain more than 180 pounds of copper compared with 50 pounds for conventional autos. By 2030, the demand from EVs alone should amount to close to 4mm tonnes of copper per year, representing about 15% of annual copper production. Chart 40ACopper Will Be In Physical Deficit... Chart 40B...As Will Aluminum China’s Commodity Demand Will Remain Strong Chart 41China Keeps Buying More And More Commodities Strong demand for metals from China should also buoy metals prices. While trend GDP growth in China has slowed, the economy is much bigger in absolute terms than it was in the 2000s. China’s annual aggregate consumption of metals is five times as high as it was back then. The incremental increase in China’s metal consumption, as measured by the volume of commodities consumed, is also double what it was 20 years ago (Chart 41). As we discussed in our report To Deleverage Its Economy, China Needs MORE Debt, the Chinese government has no choice but to continue to recycle persistently elevated household savings into commodity-intensive capital investment. This will ensure ample commodity demand from China for years to come. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist pberezin@bcaresearch.com Global Investment Strategy View Matrix Special Trade Recommendations Current MacroQuant Model Scores
Highlights Fiscal stimulus is no longer a free lunch. US mortgage applications are down by 20 percent since the start of February. With rising bond yields now starting to choke private sector borrowing, bond yields are nearing an upper-limit, and even a reversal point. In which case, the tide out of defensives into cyclicals, and growth into value, will be a tide that reverses. New 6-month recommendation: underweight US banks (XLF) versus consumer staples (XLP). Fractal trade shortlist: US banks, bitcoin, ether, and GBP/JPY. Feature Chart of the WeekMortgage Applications Are Down 20 Percent Why would anybody not get excited about trillions of dollars of fiscal stimulus? The two word answer is: crowding out. If a dollar that is borrowed and spent by the government (or even forecast to be borrowed and spent by the government) pushes up the bond yield, it makes it more expensive for the private sector to borrow and spend. If, as a result, the private sector scales back its borrowing by a dollar, the dollar of government spending has crowded out a dollar of private sector spending. In this case, fiscal stimulus will have no impact on GDP. The fiscal multiplier will be zero. Under some circumstances though, fiscal stimulus does not crowd out the private sector and the fiscal multiplier is extremely high. 2020 was the perfect case in point. As the pandemic gripped the world, much of the private sector was on its knees. Or to be more precise, in lockdown at home, doing nothing, receiving no income, and unwilling and unable to borrow. In such a crisis, the government became the ‘borrower of last resort’. It could, and had to, borrow at will to replace the private sector’s lost income and thereby to stabilise the collapse in demand. With no competition from private sector borrowers for the glut of excess savings, bond yields stayed depressed. Meaning that fiscal stimulus was a free lunch: it had lots of benefit with little cost (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Fiscal Stimulus Was A Free Lunch In 2020, But Not In 2021 Fiscal Stimulus Is No Longer A Free Lunch Covid-19 is still with us, and could be with us forever. Yet the economy will adapt and even thrive with structural changes, such as decentralisation, hybrid office/home working, a shift to online shopping, and less international travel. In fact, all these structural changes were underway long before Covid-19. Meaning that the pandemic was the accelerant rather than the cause of what was happening to the economy anyway. As the private sector now gets back on its feet to restructure, spend, and invest accordingly, fiscal stimulus is no longer a free lunch. Fiscal stimulus is most effective when it is not pushing up the bond yield. To repeat, last year’s massive fiscal stimulus was highly effective because it had little impact on the bond yield, so there was no crowding out of private sector borrowing. The markets have fully priced the 2021 stimulus, but not the crowding out. However, the most recent stimulus package has pushed up the bond yield or, at least, is a major culprit for the recent spike in yields. Hence, there will be some crowding out of private sector borrowing. Worryingly, US mortgage applications, for both purchasing and refinancing, are down by 20 percent since the start of February (Chart of the Week and Chart I-3). Chart I-3Mortgage Applications For Refi Are Down 20 Percent The resulting choke on private sector borrowing and investment will at least partly negate any putative boost from this fiscal stimulus. The concern is that the markets have fully priced the stimulus, but not the crowding out. Time To Rotate Back In our February 18 report, The Rational Bubble Is Turning Irrational, we warned that high-flying tech stocks were at a point of vulnerability. Specifically, since 2009, the technology sector earnings yield had always maintained a minimum 2.5 percent premium over the 10-year T-bond yield, defining the envelope of a ‘rational bubble.’ In February, this envelope was breached, indicating that tech stock valuations were in a new and irrational phase (Chart I-4). Chart I-4The Rational Bubble Turned Irrational The warning proved to be prescient. In the second half of February, tech stocks did sell off sharply and entered a technical correction.1 As a result, tech-dominated stock markets such as China and the Netherlands also suffered sharp declines. Proving once again that regional and country stock market performance is nothing more than an extension of sector performance (Chart I-5). Chart I-5As Tech Corrected, So Did Tech-Heavy Markets But the aggregate stock market has remained more resilient than we expected, and is only modestly down versus its mid-February peak. The reason is that while highly-valued growth stocks suffered the anticipated correction, value stocks continued to advance (Chart I-6). Chart I-6Time To Rotate Back We can explain this divergence in terms of the three components of stock market valuation: The bond yield. The additional return or ‘risk premium’ for owning stocks. The expected growth of earnings. Tech and other growth stocks are ‘long-duration’ assets meaning that their earnings are weighted into the distant future. Hence, for growth stocks the relevant valuation comparison is a long-duration bond yield, say the 10-year yield. Whereas for ‘shorter-duration’ value stocks the relevant valuation comparison is a shorter-duration bond yield, say the 2-year yield. Given that the 10-year yield has risen much more than the 2-year yield, the pain has been much more pronounced for growth stock valuations. Turning to the ‘risk premium’ for owning stocks, at ultra-low bond yields the risk premium just moves in tandem with the bond yield. Hence, as the 10-year yield has spiked, the combination of a rising yield plus a rising risk premium has doubled the pain for growth stock valuations. For a detailed explanation of this dynamic please see our February 18 report. Regarding the expected growth of earnings, the market believes that stimulus is much more beneficial for economically sensitive value stocks than for economically insensitive growth stocks. But now that we are at the point where rising bond yields are starting to choke private demand, the rise in bond yields is nearing a limit, and even a reversal point. In which case, the strong tide out of defensives into cyclicals will also be a tide that reverses. On this basis, and supported by the strong technical arguments in the next section, we are opening a new 6-month position: Underweight US banks versus US consumer staples, expressed as underweight XLF versus XLP. US Banks, Bitcoin, Ether, And The Pound This week we have identified susceptibilities to countertrend moves in three areas. The bullish groupthink in US banks is at an extreme. First, based on its fragile fractal structure, the (bullish) groupthink in US banks versus consumer staples is at an extreme approaching February 2016 (bearish), December 2016 (bullish), and March 2020 (bearish). All these previous extremes in fragility proved to be turning points in relative performance. If this proves true again, the next six months could see a reversal of US bank outperformance (Chart I-7). Chart I-7The Groupthink In US Banks Is At An Extreme Second, we are extremely bullish on the structural prospects for cryptocurrencies, and are preparing a report detailing the compelling investment case. Look out for it. That said, the composite fractal structures of both bitcoin and ethereum indicate that they are technically very overbought (Chart I-8 and Chart I-9). Accordingly, we are hoping for pullbacks that provide better strategic entry points for bitcoin at $40,000, and for ethereum at $1300. Chart I-8Bitcoin Is Technically Overbought Chart I-9Ethereum Is Technically Overbought Third, the UK’s Covid-19 vaccination program was one of the fastest out of the blocks. As the vaccination rate quickly rose to over half the adult population (based on at least one vaccination dose), the pound was a major beneficiary. But now, the UK vaccination program is facing the hurdle of reduced supplies. Additionally, there is the danger that the third wave of infections in Continental Europe washes onto the shores of Britain. Hence, the recent strong rally in the pound is susceptible to a countertrend reversal (Chart 10). This week’s recommended trade is short GBP/JPY setting the profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 2.2 percent. Chart I-10The Pound Is Susceptible To A Reversal Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 A technical correction is defined as a 10 percent price decline. Fractal Trading System Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Asset Performance Equity Market Performance Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Euro Area Chart II-2Europe Ex Euro Area Chart II-3Asia Chart II-4Other Developed Interest Rate Chart II-5Expectations Chart II-6Expectations Chart II-7Expectations Chart II-8Expectations
Highlights Biden has enough political capital to pass at least one more major piece of legislation. The next major bill will increase the budget deficit further, adding additional stimulus, though it will consist of structural reforms over a ten-year time frame and with a drag created by tax hikes. Our annual key views are on track: polarization has subsided but remains at peak levels from a historical point of view; structural reform is underway, although any chance of bipartisanship is slipping; the Republicans remain deeply divided despite some signs of regrouping. Investors should remain cyclically bullish although the sharp rise in bond yields, the bounce in the US dollar, China’s growth deceleration, and geopolitical risks all warrant tactical caution in the near term. Feature The first quarter of the year brought a few political surprises – from the Capitol Hill riot to Trump’s second impeachment – but the only significant surprise for the American investor was the Democratic victory in the Georgia Senate runoffs. This victory changed the policy setting, producing a Democratic majority in the US Senate and enabling the Biden administration to project three budget reconciliation bills (for FY2021, 2022, 2023) that require zero Republican votes. The first of these bills was signed into law promptly as expected. The $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan Act consists of short-term cash handouts and social spending that will supercharge an economic recovery that is rapidly accelerating due to the rollout of vaccines for COVID-19 (Chart 1). Chart 1American Rescue Plan Boosts GDP The second major piece of legislation, likely the budget reconciliation bill for FY2022, will consist of net increases to the budget deficit, thus further stimulating the economy, albeit along with structural reform, i.e. social safety net and tax hikes, and a 10-year time horizon. In the second quarter investors will learn the parameters of the bill through Biden’s address to a joint session of Congress, an idealistic presidential budget proposal, a more realistic House and Senate budget resolution, and an extended negotiation. Yet Biden’s second bill will probably not be signed into law until the third or even fourth quarter. Big Government Is Back The American Rescue Plan Act cements a new era of “Big Government” that should be ascribed not to any particular party but to underlying populist pressures in the United States. President Trump’s big-spending ways and pandemic relief packages had already produced a major step up in the government contribution to economic output, as shown in Chart 2, and this will go higher once Biden’s 8.7% of GDP bill is added to the mix. This increase in the government role is likely to last beyond the pandemic given that President Trump had already taught the Republicans that fiscal austerity does not win votes. Republicans will still be the party of “limited government” but that is a relative concept and they will not be able to win elections on a platform of slashing spending, at least not until stagflation returns. In the meantime they are out of power and tax-and-spend liberals rule the roost. Chart 2Era Of Big Government Is Back Our updated budget projections show that the decline of stimulus spending will be gradual in the coming years if Biden delivers his second reconciliation bill for FY2022 (Chart 3). Major changes from previous versions have to do with changes to the Congressional Budget Office’s baseline outlook. Our new Democratic Low Spending scenario assumes a $2 trillion dollar green/infrastructure package, a $1 trillion health care reform, and a roughly $2 trillion increase in tax revenue. The Democrats will raise taxes – at least partially repealing Trump’s Tax Cut and Jobs Act and raising a few other taxes. We expect the market to be negatively surprised by the magnitude of tax hikes, at least initially, though the upside risk to the equity market is that tax hikes will be watered down by moderate Democrats in the Senate. We would not bet on a positive tax surprise because even moderate Democrats are in favor of taxing corporations and the wealthy, the taxes can be phased in over a 10-year period, and the economy is on a cyclical upswing combined with mammoth new spending programs. Chart 3US Budget Deficit Booms Under Biden Our presumption that Biden will sign his second major bill into law this fall (even as late as December) rests on the vulnerability of his administration and party. Traditional Democrats, embodied by Biden, Democratic leaders in Congress, and Biden’s technocratic cabinet (Appendix), face a historic accumulation of political pressure from their populist left-wing and from Trump’s populist Republican Party. If they cannot deliver on major “bread and butter” promises to the American people, while including just enough progressive elements to keep the far left at bay, they risk extinction in coming election cycles. This pressure is real and will enable at least one more major legislative achievement. Bottom Line: Government spending has taken a big step up and Biden’s second major legislative initiative will ensure that the step up is permanent rather than a temporary response to a crisis. The macro impact is inflationary on the margin. Biden’s Second Reconciliation Bill Is the Biden administration over-stimulating the economy and setting the US up for overheating? It looks like it, though the size of tax hikes is as yet unknown. Going forward the stock market will be extremely attentive to two risks that cut in different directions: excessive stimulus and excessive tax hikes. The American Rescue Plan alone is more than twice as large as the estimated output gap. The output gap is widely expected to be closed by the end of the year (Chart 4). Even a $1 trillion infrastructure package – much lower than the currently rumored $3 trillion – would be excessive in this context. Chart 4Output Gap Is Virtually Closed The infrastructure package that is being planned – which would include a range of measures in addition to roads and bridges, such as green energy projects, supply chain on-shoring, and digital infrastructure – would take place over a ten-year period and will be coupled with a drag from new taxes. A modern-age infrastructure plan would boost productivity and hence potential GDP growth, which could offset some of the inflationary impact. Speculatively, the simplest path for achieving Biden’s objectives would be to put his health care reform (with other welfare proposals) in the FY2022 reconciliation bill along with tax reform. Tax changes are the purpose of the reconciliation process. Unlike infrastructure, health provisions are virtually guaranteed to pass the arcane rules of reconciliation. This is not a minor concern: the Senate parliamentarian ruled out a federal minimum wage hike in the American Rescue Plan because it was not directly germane to government revenues and expenditures and could do the same to infrastructure. Bear in mind that the Obama administration passed a key component of the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) via reconciliation, setting a precedent that health care is germane. More broadly the Democratic Party has prioritized health care since 1992, now has a chance to clinch it, and has repeatedly benefited at the ballot box on the health agenda. Infrastructure, unlike health and tax reform, could conceivably pass in a regular bill, or piecemeal in annual spending bills, in which Biden would wheel and deal to try to get 60 votes (50 Democrats, 10 Republicans). However, the latest rumors as we go to press suggest the Democrats will prioritize infrastructure and link it to tax reform. Republicans will not vote for tax hikes so reconciliation would still be required in this case. Reconciliation is trickier with infrastructure spending than with health care, though not impossible. What is clear is that Biden’s agenda is too large to fit into one bill, that tax hikes are being planned, and that reconciliation is necessary for tax hikes. Based on our scenarios in Table 1, every realistic scenario involves an increase to the budget deficit, ranging from around $500 billion to $5.4 trillion over the 10-year period. Therefore the economy will receive additional stimulus on top of the unprecedented peacetime stimulus it has already received. Table 1Scenarios For Biden’s Second Reconciliation Bill Two other gleanings from Q1 bear mentioning: Biden’s policies on trade and immigration. On trade, Biden is coopting Trump’s hawkish China policy while trying to improve trade relations with allies and partners. The trade deficit is set to expand along with economic recovery and stimulus, resulting in larger twin deficits (Chart 5). This trend should weigh on the US dollar – but the dollar has strengthened so far this year. Given the US’s inherent strengths – rule of law, innovation, faster relative growth – and the structural rise in global geopolitical tensions, covered regularly by our twin Geopolitical Strategy, we are loathe to bet against a rising dollar. However, investors should note that the BCA House View expects the dollar to relapse and the dollar bear market to continue. On immigration, Biden faces his greatest domestic policy challenge. By easing border and immigration enforcement amid a hyper-charged economic recovery, he has invited a large flow of immigrants and refugees (Chart 6). He is thus forced to take urgent border actions to staunch the flow. If he does what is necessary to maintain order then he will widen the rift with the far left. Meanwhile Republicans are finding an issue over which they can start to reunite. Chart 5US Twin Deficits Balloon Chart 6Immigration A Looming Problem For Biden Bottom Line: The air of crisis is dissipating rapidly and proposed tax hikes will motivate opposition but Biden still has enough political capital to get at least one more budget reconciliation bill passed. The bill will focus on health/welfare (easier to pass but more inflationary) or infrastructure (harder but better for productivity). Either way the net deficit impact will be negative and the dual risk of higher taxes and economic overheating will create hurdles for the stock market rally. Updating Our Three Key Views For 2021 How do the events of Q1 impact our three key views for 2021? At the start of the year we forecast (1) that the US’s political polarization would subside but remain at historically peak levels; (2) that the US would launch major structural reforms, in some cases on a bipartisan basis; (3) that Republican disunity would enable this contradictory environment of polarization yet occasional bipartisanship. Based on the first quarter’s events, we would draw the following conclusions for the second quarter and beyond: 1. Peak Polarization: Polarization has indeed subsided (Chart 7). The country is still vulnerable to major polarizing events, including domestic extremists of whatever stripe, though any major terrorist attack would likely strengthen support for the sitting government. A fall in polarization is just one positive factor in Biden’s overall political capital, which we measure through our US Political Capital Index (Table 2). We consider Biden’s political capital moderate-to-strong because consumer confidence and the economy will likely improve. However, passing legislation will gradually get harder. The Obama administration had considerably greater strength in the Senate than the Biden administration, though, as mentioned, reconciliation guarantees Biden one or two more major pieces of legislation (Chart 8). Democrats can still overturn the filibuster, which requires a 60-vote majority on regular legislation, as we have long highlighted. But for now they seem to accept a watering-down of the filibuster (a “talking filibuster”) that will still give the minority Republicans the ability to halt controversial legislation. Chart 7Polarization Slips But Remains Elevated Table 2Biden’s Political Capital Is Moderate To Strong Chart 8Major Legislation Can Pass Early In Presidential Term 2. Bipartisan Structural Reform: The fact that not a single Republican senator voted for the American Rescue Plan Act, despite the lingering pandemic and air of crisis, suggests that bipartisanship is extremely limited, e.g. limited to the seven Republican senators who voted to convict Trump (Table 3). However, bipartisanship is still possible on an infrastructure package if the Democrats do not link it with tax hikes. Table 3Centrist Senators – And Republicans Who Voted To Convict Trump Beneath the surface there is bipartisanship when it comes to trade, supply chains, and countering China. Tariffs bottomed under the Obama administration and Biden started off with another round of “Buy America” provisions and a tentative decision to maintain Trump’s tariffs on China (Chart 9). Measures to boost US supply chain resilience in technology, health, and defense could be rolled up into an infrastructure package to help garner 10 Republican votes. Republicans have prepared for possible compromise by clearing the way for the use of “earmarks,” or constituency-based legislative incentives, otherwise known as pork-barrel spending. Chart 9Tarriff Levels Bottomed Under Obama The market currently expects an infrastructure bill to pass, as indicated by the outperformance of infrastructure-related stocks, industrials, and materials relative to the market. Our BCA Infrastructure basket is outperforming (Chart 10). The market does not currently expect the Democrats to focus on health care policy, which creates the likelihood of a negative surprise for this sector (Chart 11). Chart 10Market Says Infrastructure Will Pass (One Way Or Another) The managed health care sub-sector (the insurance companies) staged a surprise rally over the past month that should reverse as Biden’s legislative proposals become known. However, Big Pharma and biotech continue to sell off as expected. Again, the simplest FY2022 reconciliation bill would consist of Biden’s health reform plus tax reform. The market is having some doubts about Democrats’ climate change agenda, which will be stuffed into the infrastructure package, given that the US renewable energy index has rolled over relative to global renewables. US cyclicals are also outperforming renewables (Chart 12). If Democrats do not use reconciliation, they may not get many green projects passed. If they do use reconciliation, their health and welfare reforms will have to wait until a FY2023 reconciliation bill that may not get passed. Chart 11More Pain Coming For Health Insurers, Big Pharma Chart 12Market Skeptical About Biden Climate Agenda Passage 3. Republicans In The Wilderness: Although Republicans have begun to regroup faster than many expected, the divisions within the party have not been healed and will continue to flare up in disputes that threaten to wreck the party. Trump and the populist wing are preparing to put up primary election challengers to establishment Republican senators and representatives who voted against Trump or otherwise who vote against his “America First” agenda. Yet it is possible that 10 Republicans will find it impossible to vote against Biden’s infrastructure package if it is well-designed regarding supply chains and China and not linked with tax hikes. Trump could split the party via his personal following (which may be enhanced by a new social media outlet) and his ability to divide the party’s votes if he forms a “Patriot Party.” We recently showed, via the “Prisoner’s Dilemma” in game theory, that the Republicans must choose a Trumpist agenda of fiscal largesse, trade protectionism, and border security if they are to succeed. Yet Trump may or may not choose to run for president again or form a third party. The result is that Trump is more likely than not to be the Republican candidate in 2024 but there are huge risks to the party’s coherence as the party establishment tries to convince Trump to bow out and support a successor (Diagram 1). The point is that Trump remains a loose cannon and is capable of dividing the party single-handedly. Since investors cannot predict Trump’s behavior they should not expect the Republicans to unite in the near term. Diagram 1Game Theory Says Republicans Will Court Trump Bottom Line: Our three key views for 2021 are broadly on track – polarization is subsiding but still near peak levels, structural reform is underway (though bipartisanship is clearly at risk), and the Republicans remain divided and ineffectual. The Democrats’ handling of their infrastructure package will determine if bipartisanship can reinforce structural reform but the FY2022 reconciliation process enables them to achieve some reform regardless. Investment Takeaways The Federal Reserve expects GDP to grow by 6.5% in 2021 as a whole (up from the 4.2% estimate in December) and the unemployment rate to fall to 4.5% by the end of the year (down from 5% previously). Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen is expected to predict full employment by 2022. Households are likely to spend at least a third of the $699 billion in dole money they receive (stimulus checks and topped-up unemployment benefits), according to surveys highlighted by our Global Investment Strategy. This summer will have a party on every block, whether authorized or not. While details are scant about the exact makeup of the Biden administration’s next major legislation, what is clear is that it will have a net negative impact on the budget balance. Democrats will raise taxes but not so much as to jeopardize the economic recovery and their election prospects in 2022-24. This ultra-easy fiscal policy coincides with an ultra-easy monetary policy in which the Fed has insisted it will not raise rates through 2023. The market expects four rate hikes by that time, which would put the Fed funds rate at about 1.1%. The Fed will eventually have to adjust its path for the Fed funds rate and start thinking about thinking about tapering asset purchases. But the main thing to remember is that the Fed has committed to generating an inflation overshoot. In this context, US investors should be cyclically bullish albeit tactically guarded given the sharp rise in bond yields and rising dollar. A pro-cyclical orientation would favor small caps over large caps, cyclicals over defensives, and value over growth stocks. All of these positions have recently met with some resistance and could face a healthy near-term correction. Cyclical stocks are historically very elevated relative to defensives (Chart 13). But over a 12-month period the recovery and stimulus will reinforce the bullish view, as rising bond yields will not stop equities from rising if the Fed stands pat. Chart 13Cyclicals Look Toppy Versus Defensives The chief risks to the pro-cyclical orientation stem from any breakout in the US dollar, the rollover in China’s growth momentum, and the Biden administration’s tax hikes and foreign policy challenges. These risks are all immediate and serious, especially given high stock market valuations. China’s policy tightening will not be fully felt in the economy until the second half of the year and Biden’s specific foreign policy challenges can result in negative geopolitical shocks at any time this year or over the next four years. The point is to buy on the dips unless surprise events fundamentally alter the reflationary cyclical backdrop. With regard to equity sectors, our US Political Risk Matrix highlights the chief policy risks to our US Equity Strategy’s views. Generally speaking Biden poses upside risks to industrials and consumer discretionary sectors and downside risks to energy, health care, tech, and communications (Table 4). After a quarter’s worth of information on markets and policy, these views are mostly confirmed: stay cyclically bullish on industrials and financials, bearish on tech and health care. Table 4US Political Risk Matrix In the case of energy we continue to be neutral-to-bullish over a 12-month time horizon as long as demand is recovering, global inventories are drawing down, and the immediate geopolitical scene is conducive to tit-for-tat attacks in the Middle East, as is the case in the first half of the year. But Biden’s regulatory risks and disruptive climate change agenda can bring negative surprises for US oil producers and Biden’s foreign policy would ultimately be positive for Middle East oil supply. In the case of communications services we are neutral-to-bearish. The Biden administration is allied with Big Tech but it is tightening regulation and anti-trust enforcement gradually to gain greater control over the sector.1 The Treasury selloff is set to continue. Yields are starting to reach pre-COVID levels and have a way to go until they challenge 2018 levels. From peak to trough in the Bloomberg Barclays Treasury Index, the current selloff is not as bad as in the past four recoveries, as our US Bond Strategy has shown. As the economic rebound shows up in hard data over the course of this year, the Fed’s revised expectations will confirm the bond selloff in the financial market. We would thus favor high-yield corporate bonds. We remain overweight TIPS and municipal bonds relative to duration-matched nominal bonds. In recent years presidential approval has correlated remarkably well with the stock-to-bond ratio about two months later (Chart 14). The implication is that higher presidential approval is consistent with receding uncertainty and greater consumer optimism about the economy, which is reflected in rising bond yields and share prices. Neither Biden’s approval rating nor the stock-to-bond ratio is likely to go much higher without a consolidation phase, however, as implied by the chart. Chart 14Stock-To-Bond Ratio Needs A Breather In Q2 Matt Gertken Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Appendix Table A1APolitical Capital: White House And Congress Table A1BPolitical Capital: Household And Business Sentiment Table A1CPolitical Capital: The Economy And Markets Table A2Biden’s Cabinet Position Appointments Footnotes 1 Biden is expected to nominate anti-trust scholar Lina Khan for FTC commissioner.
Dear Client, Dhaval Joshi has started publishing the new BCA Research Counterpoint product, in which he will continue to apply his unique process to dig up original investment opportunities around the globe. I trust many of you will continue to read Dhaval’s excellent and thought-provoking work. I also hope to keep your readership as I take the helm of the European Investment Strategy product, where I will apply BCA’s time-tested method which emphasizes analysis of global liquidity and economic trends to forecast European market outcomes. Thank you for your continued trust and support. Best regards, Mathieu Savary Highlights The Eurozone’s economy lags the US’s because of weakness in the service sector. Poor vaccine rollouts and tighter fiscal policy explain this bifurcated outcome. Even though Europe will continue to trail the US this year, the summer period will see a sharp European recovery. Investors can take advantage of this rebound by buying the cyclical equities that have lagged during last year’s rally. Favor the French, Italian and Spanish equity markets over the German and Dutch markets. The Bank of England does not need to fight rising Gilt yields; favor the pound over the euro as the UK-German spread widens. The Norges Bank will be the first G-10 central bank to lift rates, which will hurt EUR/NOK. Fade any hawkish noise coming from the German election season. Feature The service sector constitutes the biggest drag on the Eurozone’s economy, which will cause European growth to trail that of the US further. The euro area’s fundamental problem is that it lags the US significantly on both vaccination and fiscal stimulus fronts. Nonetheless, by the summer, the European service sector will start catching up, which will favor a basket of sectors exposed to the economic re-opening that have lagged until now. The Service Sector Remains Under The Weather The consensus is correct to expect European growth to lag that of the US in 2021, even if the extent of the shortfall does not hit the 4% currently penciled in by Bloomberg. Chart 1The Service Sector Is the Problem Unlike normal business cycles, the service sector is now Europe’s biggest handicap, while the manufacturing sector is performing in line with that of the US (Chart 1, top panel). On both sides of the Atlantic, industrial activity has benefited from the same set of positives in recent quarters. Goods purchases were the only outlet for pent-up demand built up in the first and second quarter of 2020. Extraordinarily accommodative global liquidity conditions and record-low interest rates boosted spending on big-ticket items, especially in light of the housing boom that has engulfed the globe. Finally, China’s rapid recovery fueled a swift rebound in the demand for natural resources, autos and machinery that benefited manufacturers the world over. Service activity did not enjoy a similar unified tailwind. Consequently, while the US Services PMI stands at a seven-year high, the Eurozone’s lingers at 45.7, in contraction territory (Chart 1, middle panel). The weaker confidence of European households sheds light on this bifurcated performance (Chart 1, bottom panel). Health and fiscal policies are the main headwinds in the Eurozone that have hurt its service sector and hampered the mood of its households, at least compared to the US. With regard to health policy, the poor vaccination rates on the European continent create the greatest problem. The vaccination effort has only reached 11.8, 11.1, 11.9 and 12.5 doses per 100 person in Germany, France, Italy and Spain respectively. In the US and the UK, authorities have already delivered more than 30 doses per 100 person (Chart 2). As a result, while infection and death per capita are rapidly declining in the US and in the UK, mortality is once again rising in France as well as in Italy and caseloads are increasing there and in Germany. Moreover, hospitalization rates and ICU usage in France, Germany, Italy or Portugal are once again trending up, and in some cases they are hitting threatening levels for the healthcare system. In response to these COVID-19 dynamics, governments in many major Eurozone countries are resorting to the re-imposition of restrictions. Italy has announced new lockdowns in half of its 20 regions while France just entered its third lockdown over the weekend. By contrast, the stringency of restrictions is set to ease in the UK and the US. In the US, limitations were already imposed or followed more laxly relative to the euro area (depending on the state) and mobility was improving (Chart 3). Chart 2Slow Vaccination In The Eurozone Chart 3The Stringency Of Lockdowns Matter Despite the lower mobility created by stricter restrictions in the Eurozone, the US government has opened the fiscal tap much more aggressively than European governments (Chart 4). Since the beginning of the crisis, the US fiscal help has reached 25% of GDP, while in Italy, Germany, France or Spain the budget deficits have swelled by a more modest 14%, 10%, 9% and 13% of GDP, respectively. True, European governments have also offered credit guarantees totaling EUR3 trillion euros, but these sums only have a very indirect impact on aggregate demand and should mostly be understood as liquidity insurance to prevent a liquidity crisis from morphing into a solvency crisis. Chart 4Tight Fists On The Continent For the remainder of 2021, European fiscal policy is unlikely to be eased compared to the US. BCA Research’s Geopolitical strategy team anticipates the Biden government to add a further $2 trillion dollars of spending by the end of 2021, mostly in the form of long-term and infrastructure outlays, in addition to the $1.9 trillion recently legislated.While the European Union’s NGEU plan is an important step in the integration of European fiscal policy, its generous EUR750 billion envelope will be disbursed over five years. This implies a debt-based fiscal expansion of 1% per annum between 2021 and 2024 (the years of maximum disbursements). Individual state plans are also limited. Bottom Line: The European economy is lagging the US economy because of the inferior performance of its service sector. This disadvantage is the consequence of both a slower vaccine rollout that is negatively impacting mobility and a much more timid fiscal policy. Relief Is On Its Way The Eurozone’s service sector and domestic economic performance is nonetheless set to improve, despite the current health and fiscal policy deficiencies. First, the economy continues to adapt to its new socially distanced form. In the second quarter of 2020, the imposition of lockdowns caused the euro area’s quarterly GDP to collapse by 11%. The contribution to GDP of the retail, wholesale, artistic, entertainment, and hospitality sectors tumbled to -7.3%. In Q4 2020, as European governments were imposing equally stringent lockdowns, quarterly GDP growth fell to -0.1% and the contribution to growth of the same sectors only hit -0.54%. Second, the continental vaccination campaign is progressing. It is easy to worry that it will take a very long time to vaccinate the entire population, but the main reason to impose lockdowns is to preserve capacity in the healthcare system. Thus, the priority is to inoculate 50-year olds and above because they constitute 90% of hospitalizations. Through this aperture, even if the pace of vaccination remains tepid in Europe, the goal to decrease economic restrictions can reasonably be achieved by summer. Moreover, with Pfizer’s logistical issues corrected, the pace of vaccination can accelerate. Concerns remain over the population’s willingness to receive the vaccines, but these issues will fade as well. The current worries surrounding the AstraZeneca vaccines provide an example. The incidence of thromboembolic events is marginally higher than for the general population and the European Medicines Agency deemed the AstraZeneca vaccines safe, especially in light of the human costs of the disease it prevents. As caseloads and mortality rates decline in Israel, the UK and the US, even French elderlies will become more willing to receive their vaccines. Table 1Parsimonious But Constant Fiscal Stimulus… Third, fiscal policy will remain easy. True, European government support is tepid compared to the US, but the continual drip of new policy measures shows that authorities are not intransigent (Table 1). In all likelihood, the various furlough and employment protection schemes implemented since the spring of 2020 are likely to remain in place this year even if lockdowns decrease. Their impact on employment was major and they contributed meaningfully to preserve household income (Chart 5). Finally, COVID-19 is a seasonal illness and summer is on its way in Europe. The experience of 2020, when vaccines and testing were much more limited than they are today, has taught us that in the summer months, this coronavirus spreads much less. Therefore, seasonal patterns will allow a relaxation of social distancing measures. Chart 5Furloughs Played A Crucial Role In this context, service activity in the Eurozone will improve, which will boost GDP. European households, like their US counterparts, have accumulated significant excess savings (Chart 6). Furthermore, global manufacturing activity will remain robust, which will support employment and household income in the Eurozone. Hence, consumer confidence will improve and some of the EUR300 billion in excess savings will make its way into the economy. The service sector should be the prime beneficiary of this money because households have already fulfilled a large proportion of their pent-up demand for goods. What they now want to do is to go out, go to restaurants and spend their income on experiences. The rebound in the contribution to GDP of the retail and recreation sectors will be accretive to job and household income, unleashing a virtuous circle of activity (Chart 7). Chart 6European Are Building Their Nest Egg too Chart 7Services Will Contribute Again to Growth Bottom Line: In 2021, the euro area’s economy will further lag that of the US, but investors should nonetheless expect a robust uptick in service activity this summer. How To Play The Summer Recovery? Chart 8Buy The Laggards / Sell the Leaders Five weeks ago, BCA Research’s US Equity Sector Strategy service designed a strategy to buy the laggards within a basket of sectors that should benefit from the recovery while selling the “back-to-work” stocks that had already priced in that recovery. This recommendation protects investors against potential hiccups in the re-opening trade and is simple to implement: sell/underweight the pro-cyclical sectors that stand above their February 19 relative peak and buy/overweight those that remain below their relative highs (Chart 8). In the Eurozone context, this strategy involves focusing on the cyclical sectors, and buying/overweighting these cyclical stocks that stand below their pre-COVID high relative to the MSCI benchmark while selling/underweighting those that have punched above this threshold. Chart 9 illustrates the sectors to favor and the ones to avoid using this methodology. In essence, not only should the “laggards” baskets experience a catch up in earnings, but also, the shift in sentiment should prompt a re-rating of relative valuations (Chart 10). Chart 9Who Are the Laggards And the Leaders? This strategy makes sense beyond the COVID-19 dynamics. From a global perspective, the basket of sectors purchased (the laggards”) outperforms the former “leaders” after global bond yields increase (Chart 11, top panel). This relationship reflects the heavy representation of financials in the “laggards” basket while tech and the interest rates-sensitive automobile sector are key constituents of the “leaders” basket. Additionally, the former “leaders” are more exposed to the Chinese business cycle than the “laggards". Chart 10Relative Valuations will Adjust Chart 11Macro Forces Favor The Laggards over the Leaders The deceleration in the Chinese economy is a problem for the “leaders” relative performance (Chart 11, bottom panel). China’s credit impulse has rolled over as Beijing aims to prevent excess speculation in the real estate sector. Moreover, a regulatory tightening is taking place in the Middle Kingdom, which will further slow its economy. Already, the new orders-to-inventories ratio from the NBS PMI reflects the downside risk for the Chinese economy, which highlights the threat to the previous high-flying leaders. A strategy that favors the former “laggards” at the expense of the previous “leaders” also has implications for geographical allocation within euro area equities. As Table 2 shows, Italy, France and Spain over represent the “laggards” in their national benchmarks while the Netherlands and Germany overweight the “leaders”. On a net basis, the tech-heavy Netherlands is the country to avoid, with a 27% relative underweight for the “laggards”, while Spain and Italy should be favored, with their 24% and 22% overweight in the “laggards” relative to the “leaders”. Spain and Italy in particular will also benefit from a further narrowing in sovereign spreads that will boost the performance of their financial sector while the re-opening of trade continues. Additionally, investors should favor France at the expense of Germany. Table 2France, Italy, and Spain Over The Netherlands And Germany Bottom Line: The economic re-opening favors the Eurozone cyclicals that still trade below their February 19 2020 relative highs as the expense of those cyclicals that have already overtaken their pre-COVID peaks. This means buying/overweighting the Banks, Insurance, Energy and Aerospace & Defense sectors at the expense of the IT, Automobiles and Building products sectors. It also implies a preference for Italian and Spanish equities, especially relative to Dutch equities. Country Focus: The BoE Follows the Fed, Not The ECB Last Thursday, the Bank of England followed in the Fed’s footprints, not the ECB’s. The BoE refrained from adding to its asset purchases, even if this year, 10-year Gilt yields are rising in line with the Treasuries and rapidly outpacing Bund yields. However, the BoE remains committed to keeping short rates at record lows and it keeps the window open for rate cuts if economic conditions ever warrant it. We agree with the Bank of England that the UK’s economic outlook has improved in recent months. The extension of both the furlough schemes and tax holidays, along with the rapid pace of vaccination in the British Islands point to robust growth in the coming quarters. Nonetheless, the picture is not without blemish. Specifically, the UK’s exports to the EU are collapsing in wake of Brexit. Moreover, the pace of vaccination in the UK is set to slow a bit over the coming months. These risks to the outlook are unlikely to topple the economy, because the vigor of the UK’s housing market is an important support to domestic demand. While the UK’s labor market remains frail, the strength of the RICS housing survey suggests that real wages will stay well bid (Chart 12). The increase in household income will cause consumption to accelerate sharply once lockdowns are eased. This could accentuate inflationary pressures this year, and cause inflation over the next few years to trend higher relative to the euro area. Chart 12UK Real Wages Have Upside With this economic backdrop, the market’s pricing of the SONIA curve is appropriate. Over the past month, the OIS curve has steepened significantly (Chart 13). The BoE is comfortable with that pricing and considers the back up in interest rates to be reflective of stronger growth and not constraining of activity. In fact, financial conditions are roughly unchanged since the MPC’s last meeting, which highlights that rising risk asset prices have compensated for an appreciating pound and rising gilt yields. Chart 13SONIA Is Climbing Up, And The BoE Is Fine With It Bottom Line: The SONIA curve will continue to shift higher relative to the EONIA curve. Consequently, the spread between Gilt and Bund yields will widen further and EUR/GBP will depreciate more over the coming six to nine months, especially because the pound keeps trading at a discount. Moreover, thanks to their domestic focus and lower sensitivity to the pound, UK mid-cap and small-cap stocks will outperform the FTSE-100. Country Focus: Norges Bank, First Out Of The Gate Chart 14The Norges Bank Will Raise Rates First Last Thursday, Governor Øystein Olsen indicated that the Norges Bank would increase interest rates from zero later this year, which validates the message of the Norwegian swap curve. Looking at economic fundamentals, investors should not bet against this outcome. BCA’s Central Bank Monitor confirms that the Norges Bank will be the first central bank in the West to lift interest rates (Chart 14). It is the only one of our Monitors in “Tight Money Required” territory. The message from our Norges Bank Monitor reflects the prompt recovery of the Norwegian economy. Thanks to rebounding Brent prices and rapidly expanding production at the new Johan Sverdrup oil field (the largest in the North Sea), Norwegian nominal exports are growing at a double-digit pace. Meanwhile Norwegian retail sales are increasing at a 16% annual rate. Beyond some near-term COVID worries, consumer spending will remain robust because the strong employment component of the PMI points to solid job gains and a rapidly rising consumer confidence. Finally, Norwegian inflation is already above the central bank’s target of 2%, with core CPI at 2.05% and headline inflation at 3.3%. Chart 15A Weaker EUR/NOK ahead Thanks to Norway’s economic performance, the krone remains one of the favorite currencies of BCA’s Foreign Exchange Strategy service. The global economic environment creates additional tailwind for the NOK. A continued global economic recovery will allow oil prices to rise further on a 12- to 18-month basis, which should lead to a weaker EUR/NOK (Chart 15). In a similar vein, the NOK is particularly sensitive to the USD dollar’s fluctuations. As a result, BCA’s negative cyclical stance toward the USD will create an important support for the NOK, even if the greenback’s countertrend bounce could last another quarter or so. Finally, along with the SEK, the NOK is the cheapest pro-cyclical currency in the G10, trading at a 5% discount to its fair value. Thus, the Norwegian krone should benefit greatly from continued risk taking this year. Bottom Line: The Norwegian krone remains one of the most attractive currencies in the world. The status of the Norges Bank as the front-runner to lift rates this year only amplifies the NOK’s appeal. A Few Words On Germany’s State Elections Chart 16German Party Polling The defeat of Angela Merkel’s CDU party in the states of Baden-Wurttemberg and Rhineland-Palatinate highlights that the German electorate is moving slowly to the left. According to BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy Service, it is too early to tell whether a left-wing coalition will take power in Germany this fall. However, the marginal shift toward the SPD and the Green Party indicates that even the CDU will have to listen to the median voter’s demands (Chart 16). Practically, this means that German politics will push for more European integration and that ultimately, more fiscal stimulus will materialize in Europe over the coming years. As a result, investors should fade any hit to the euro or European assets caused by hawkish sounds made by CDU potential leaders during the campaign for the September federal election. Mathieu Savary, Chief European Investment Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Trades Closed Trades Currency Performance Fixed Income Performance Government Bonds Corporate Bonds Equity Performance Major Stock Indices Geographic Performance Sector Performance