Financial Markets
Highlights Treasuries: Keep portfolio duration close to benchmark on a 6-12 month horizon, but continue to hold tactical overlay positions that will profit from modestly higher bond yields: Overweight TIPS versus nominal Treasuries, hold duration-neutral nominal curve steepeners, hold real yield curve steepeners. IG Tech: Given our positive outlook for investment grade corporate bond spreads, the Technology sector’s high credit rating and defensive characteristics make it decidedly un-compelling. However, Tech spreads are attractive compared to other A-rated corporate bonds. HY Tech: We want to focus our high-yield allocation on defensive sectors where a large proportion of issuers are able to benefit from Fed support. The high-yield Technology sector checks both of those boxes and offers attractive risk-adjusted compensation to boot. Feature Chart 1Three Treasury Trades As we have previously written, bond yields should move modestly higher over the course of the summer as the US economy re-opens.1 However, there are enough potential medium-term pitfalls related to US politics and COVID transmission that we aren’t yet comfortable with below-benchmark portfolio duration. Instead, we recommend that investors keep portfolio duration close to benchmark on a 6-12 month horizon, but add three tactical overlay positions that will profit from higher bond yields: Overweight TIPS versus nominal Treasuries Duration-neutral nominal Treasury curve steepeners Real yield curve steepeners All three of these positions have performed well during the past couple of months (Chart 1), and in the first section of this report we assess whether they have further to run. The remaining two sections of this week’s report consider the outlooks for investment grade and high-yield Technology bonds, respectively. Three Trades To Profit From Higher Yields 1) Overweight TIPS Versus Nominals Chart 2Adaptive Expectations Model TIPS breakeven inflation rates have moved up considerably since mid-March. Back then, the 10-year TIPS breakeven rate troughed at 0.50%. It currently sits at 1.31%. Despite the large move, TIPS breakeven inflation rates still have a considerable amount of upside. One way to assess how much is through the lens of our Adaptive Expectations Model (Chart 2).2 This model considers several different measures of inflation expectations (based on realized CPI inflation and surveys) and uses the difference between those measures of inflation expectations and the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate to forecast the future 12-month change in the 10-year TIPS breakeven. At present, the model forecasts that the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate will rise 23 bps during the next 12 months, bringing it to 1.54%. It’s important to note that our model is biased towards measures of longer-run inflation expectations. As a result, it can be surprised from time to time by large fluctuations in drivers of short-term inflation expectations, like the oil price. This year’s massive drop in oil – and concurrent decline in headline inflation – were the main factors that caused the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate to fall so far below our model’s fair value. However, as we discussed in last week’s report, the oil price looks to have troughed and there is preliminary evidence that we might also be past the lowest point for headline CPI.3 Profit from rising bond yields by entering a duration-neutral yield curve steepener. We see TIPS continuing to outperform nominal Treasuries over both short- and long-run horizons. 2) Duration-Neutral Yield Curve Steepeners Chart 3Stick With Steepeners Another way to profit from rising bond yields without taking a large duration bet is via a duration-neutral yield curve steepener. One example would be a long position in the 5-year note and a short position in a duration-matched barbell consisting of the 2-year and 10-year notes. Alternatively, you could use the 2-year note and 30-year bond as the two legs of the barbell. These sorts of duration-matched trades where you take a long position in a bullet maturity near the middle of the curve and go short the wings are designed to perform well in periods of yield curve steepening.4 In the current environment, where dovish Fed guidance has dampened volatility at the front-end of the yield curve, any bond sell-off will be felt disproportionately at the long-end, leading to a steeper curve. The only problem with this proposed trade is that it is no longer cheap. The spread between the 5-year bullet and 2/10 barbell is -6 bps and the spread relative to the 2/30 barbell is -3 bps (Chart 3). What’s more, the 5-year bullet trades expensive relative to the 2/10 and 2/30 barbells, according to our fair value models (Chart 3, bottom panel). However, for the time being we are inclined to overlook stretched valuations. The 5-year bullet does appear expensive but it has been more expensive in the past, most notably during the last zero-lower-bound episode from 2010 to 2013. Similar to then, the market is now priced for an extended period of a zero fed funds rate. We would not be surprised to see bullets become much more expensive in that sort of environment, and possibly even return to extended 2010-2013 valuations. We recommend holding onto duration-neutral yield curve steepeners, despite unattractive valuations. Specifically, we favor going long the 5-year bullet and short a duration-matched 2/10 barbell. 3) Real Yield Curve Steepeners Chart 4Higher Inflation Means Steeper Real Yield Curve The final position we recommend is a steepener along the real yield curve. We first recommended this trade on April 28 when a plunge in oil (and spike in deflationary sentiment) caused the real 2-year yield to jump to 0.28% compared to a real 10-year yield of -0.70%.5 Since then, the real 2-year yield has collapsed to -1% compared to a real 10-year yield of -0.87%. Although the real 2-year/10-year slope is once again positive, it has typically been higher during the past few years (Chart 4). We therefore expect further steepening as long as the oil price and headline inflation continue to recover from April’s lows. Much like during the 2008/09 financial crisis, the combination of the Fed’s zero-lower-bound forward guidance and a massive drop in both oil and headline inflation caused short-dated real yields to jump. Subsequently, this led to a massive steepening of the real yield curve, once the oil price and headline inflation started to recover. We believe that same dynamic is playing out today. Investors should continue to hold real yield curve steepeners, at least until rebounding oil and headline CPI return short-dated inflation expectations to more reasonable levels. Investment Grade Tech Risk Profile Technology accounts for 9% of the overall Bloomberg Barclays investment grade corporate index, which makes it the second biggest industry group, after Banking. Its large index weight is due to the presence of three tech giants: Microsoft (Aaa-rated), Apple (Aa-rated) and Oracle (A-rated) which, combined, constitute 38% of the Tech sector. Investment grade Technology is a highly defensive corporate bond sector. In sharp contrast with the equity market, Technology is a highly defensive corporate bond sector. That is, it tends to outperform the overall corporate bond index during periods of spread widening and underperform during periods of spread tightening. This largely comes down to the fact that Tech has a higher credit rating than the overall corporate index. Twenty five percent of the Tech sector’s market cap carries a Aaa or Aa rating compared to just 9% for the overall index (Chart 5). Further, of the high-flying FAANG stocks that garner a lot of attention from equity analysts, only Apple is a significant presence in the Technology bond index.6 Chart 5Investment Grade Credit Rating Distributions* Chart 6IG Technology Risk ##br##Profile The Tech sector’s defensive nature is confirmed by looking at its duration-times-spread (DTS) ratio and historical excess returns (Chart 6).7 The sector’s DTS ratio is consistently below 1.0, and its excess returns show a clear pattern of outperformance during periods of spread widening and underperformance during periods of spread tightening. Valuation In terms of valuation, although the Tech sector does not offer a spread advantage over the corporate index – which should be expected given its higher credit rating – we find that it trades cheap relative to its comparable credit tier (Table 1). Tech offers an option-adjusted spread of 115 bps versus 111 bps for the A-rated corporate index, and the sector still appears attractive after controlling for duration differences by looking at the 12-month breakeven spread. In absolute terms, Tech sector spreads are just above their median since 2010. The A-rated corporate index spread currently sits right on top of its post-2010 median. Table 1IG Technology Valuation Balance Sheet Health Chart 7IG Technology Debt Growth The Technology sector added a large amount of debt during the last recovery. The par value of the Tech index’s outstanding debt has grown 5.2 times since 2010 compared to 2.4 times for the benchmark. As a result, Tech’s weight in the corporate index has more than doubled, from 4% to 9% (Chart 7). However, earnings have done a pretty good job of keeping pace with the large increase in debt. The market cap-weighted net debt-to-EBITDA ratio for the investment grade Tech index is only 2.4, and the sector’s average credit rating has been stable since 2010. At the individual issuer level, there are 58 issuers in the Tech index and only 4 currently have a negative ratings outlook from Moody’s (Appendix B). What’s more, of the 16 Tech sector ratings that Moody’s has reviewed this year, 12 have been affirmed with a stable outlook, 1 was assigned a positive outlook and only 3 were assigned negative outlooks. Macro Considerations Chart 8Technology Sector Macro Drivers The Tech sector can be split into three major segments that have distinct macro drivers: Software (26% of Tech index market cap, includes Microsoft and Oracle) Hardware (29% of Tech index market cap, includes Apple, IBM and Dell) Semiconductors (24% of Tech index market cap, includes Intel and Avago Technologies) Software investment has been in a structural bull market for many years, and should remain resilient during the COVID recession as demand for remote working solutions increases. While we only have data through the end of March, software investment did not see the same collapse as other sectors during the first quarter (Chart 8). The Hardware and Semiconductor segments are more cyclical and geared toward manufacturing. As such, their macro outlooks were already challenged pre-COVID, due to the US/China trade war and manufacturing downturn of 2019. Both US computer exports and global semiconductor sales were showing signs of life near the end of last year, but were decimated when the pandemic struck in 2020 (Chart 8, panels 3 & 4). A revival in this space is contingent upon continued gradual re-opening and a return to economic growth. More optimistically, US consumer spending on personal computers and peripheral equipment has not fallen as much as broad consumer spending during the past few months (Chart 8, bottom panel). In the long-run, the 5G smartphone rollout is a significant structural tailwind for both semiconductor issuers and Apple. Meanwhile, the threat of significant regulatory crackdown on Tech firms remains a long-run risk. Our sense is that any push toward stricter regulations won’t have that much impact on Technology bond returns. This is because the subjects of most lawmaker scrutiny – Facebook, Amazon and Google – are largely absent from the Bloomberg Barclays Tech index. Investment Conclusions We expect that investment grade corporate bond spreads will tighten during the next 6-12 months. Against this positive back-drop, investors should focus exposure on cyclical (lower-rated) sectors that offer greater expected returns. With that in mind, the Tech sector’s high credit rating and defensive characteristics make it decidedly un-compelling. However, Tech does offer a slight spread advantage compared to other A-rated bonds and the macro back-drop is reasonably supportive. We would therefore recommend Tech bonds to investors looking for some A-rated corporate bond exposure. But in general, we prefer the greater spreads on offer from sectors that occupy the high-quality Baa space, such as subordinate bank debt.8 High-Yield Tech Risk Profile High-Yield Technology’s credit rating profile is similar to that of the overall benchmark, but with a slightly larger presence of low-rated (Caa & below) issuers (Chart 9). The largest issuers in the space are Dell (5.7% of Tech index market cap, Ba-rated), MSCI Inc. (5.1% of Tech index market cap, Ba-rated, see copyright declaration) and CommScope (8.1% of Tech index market cap, B-rated). High-yield Tech recently transitioned from being a cyclical sector to a defensive one. Interestingly, the high-yield Tech sector recently transitioned from being a cyclical sector to a defensive one. The sector behaved cyclically during the 2008 recession, underperforming the index when spreads widened and outperforming when they tightened. But Tech then outperformed the High-Yield index during the spread widening episodes of 2015 and 2020. Based on the sector’s low DTS ratio, this defensive behavior should persist for the next 12 months (Chart 10). Chart 9High-Yield Credit Rating Distributions* Chart 10HY Technology Risk Profile Valuation The High-Yield Technology option-adjusted spread (OAS) is significantly lower than the average OAS for the benchmark High-Yield index. However, it offers a spread premium compared to other Ba-rated issuers (Table 2). Adjusting for duration differences by looking at the 12-month breakeven spread makes high-yield Tech look significantly more attractive. The high-yield Tech spread would have to widen by 146 bps for the sector to underperform duration-matched Treasuries during the next 12 months. This compares to 96 bps for other Ba-rated issuers and 152 bps for the overall junk index. Table 2HY Technology Valuation It is apparent that the Tech sector’s low average duration (Chart 10, bottom panel) is a major reason for its relatively tight OAS. On a risk-adjusted basis, high-yield Tech valuation actually appears quite compelling, with a 12-month breakeven spread only 6 bps below that of the overall index. Balance Sheet Health Chart 11HY Technology Debt Growth The amount of outstanding high-yield Technology debt has grown a bit more rapidly than overall junk index debt since 2010 (Chart 11). As a result, Technology’s weight in the index has increased from 5% in 2010 to 6% today. At the issuer level, the Tech sector should benefit from having a large number of issuers that will be able to take advantage of the Fed’s Main Street Lending facilities. To be eligible for the Main Street facilities, issuers must have less than 15000 employees or less than $5 billion in 2019 revenue. Also, the issuers must be able to keep their Debt-to-EBITDA ratios below 6.0, including any new debt added through the Main Street programs. Of the 43 high-yield Tech issuers with available data, we estimate that 30 are eligible to receive support from the Main Street facilities (Appendix C). This even includes 11 out of the 16 B-rated issuers. Typically, we don’t expect that many B-rated issuers will be eligible for the Main Street facilities, which makes this result encouraging for Tech sector spreads. Investment Conclusions We recommend an overweight allocation to high-yield Technology bonds. As we wrote last week, high-yield spreads appear too tight if we ignore the impact of the Fed’s emergency lending facilities and consider only the fundamental credit back-drop.9 With that in mind, we want to focus our high-yield allocation on defensive sectors where a large proportion of issuers able to benefit from Fed support. The Technology sector checks both of those boxes and offers attractive risk-adjusted compensation to boot. Appendix A: Buy What The Fed Is Buying The Fed rolled out a number of aggressive lending facilities on March 23. These facilities focused on different specific sectors of the US bond market. The fact that the Fed has decided to support some parts of the market and not others has caused some traditional bond market correlations to break down. It has also led us to adopt of a strategy of “Buy What The Fed Is Buying”. That is, we favor those sectors that offer attractive spreads and that benefit from Fed support. The below Table tracks the performance of different bond sectors since the March 23 announcement. We will use this to monitor bond market correlations and evaluate our strategy’s success. Table 3Performance Since March 23 Announcement Of Emergency Fed Facilities Appendix B Table 4Investment Grade Technology Issuers Appendix C Table 5High-Yield Technology Issuers Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Jeremie Peloso Senior Analyst jeremiep@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Bonds Vulnerable As North America Re-Opens”, dated May 26, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 For more details on our Adaptive Expectations Model please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “How Are Inflation Expectations Adapting?”, dated February 11, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “No Holding Back”, dated June 16, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 For an explanation of why this works please see US Bond Strategy Special Report, “Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies”, dated July 25, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Negative Oil, The Zero Lower Bound And The Fisher Equation”, dated April 28, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Of the other FAANG stocks: Google accounts for just 0.5% of Tech bond sector market cap, Facebook has close to no debt, Amazon is included in the Consumer Cyclical corporate bond index and Netflix is included in the Media: Entertainment sector of the High-Yield index. 7 Duration-Times-Spread (DTS) is a simple measure that is highly correlated with excess return volatility for corporate bonds. The DTS ratio is the ratio of a sector’s DTS to that of the benchmark index. It can be thought of like the beta of a stock. A DTS ratio above 1.0 signals that the sector is cyclical (or “high beta”), a DTS ratio below 1.0 signals that the sector is defensive or (“low beta”). For more details on the DTS measure please see: Arik Ben Dor, Lev Dynkin, Jay Hyman, Patrick Houweling, Erik van Leeuwen & Olaf Penninga, “DTS (Duration-Times-Spread)”, Journal of Portfolio Management 33(2), January 2007. 8 For more details on our recommendation to overweight subordinate bank bonds please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Negative Oil, The Zero Lower Bound And The Fisher Equation”, dated April 28, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 9 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “No Holding Back”, dated June 16, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Policymakers vs. the virus remains the story at the macro level: Fiscal support is the wild card, but we expect Senate hawks, caught between the House and the White House, will roll over in the end. The economy is perking up, but it is still too vulnerable to stand on its own: The direction is improving as the economy reopens, but the level still stinks and COVID-19 has not gone away. We’ve reached an accommodation with rich index valuations, … : The alternatives are dismal, the preponderance of professional investors have to participate and the possibility of positive virus surprises cannot be dismissed. … but there’s plenty of silliness at the individual stock level: Retail investors, running amok like Donald Duck’s nephews, appear to have triggered some remarkable moves, especially in small stocks. Feature The big picture remains unchanged, but the view from ground level is becoming increasingly disorienting. The dizzying activity in vulnerable industries and select micro-caps resembles nothing so much as a beach bar after final exams. Sun, noise, adrenaline and a sense of overdue release have come together to wash away any and all inhibitions or standard rules. The pull has been especially strong for newcomers to the scene. We suspect that some of the unusual action in individual equities over the last several weeks may have its origins in an upsurge of active retail participation. Waves of retail interest come and go like the tides, albeit irregularly, and the only thing new about the current iteration, with its smart phone apps and zero commissions, is that it is nearly frictionless. We have nothing against retail investors – we’ve been one since directing our paper route earnings to the purchase of odd lots in Ronald Reagan’s first term – and don’t see them as a portent of doom. Their moves are drawing attention, though, so we review freely available daily data to try to gain some insight into their recent activity and ongoing interest. Novices Versus Experts Chart 1Baseline Change In Robinhood Equity Ownership Robinhood is a deep-pocketed retail brokerage oriented toward novice investors. Although its customers’ balances are almost certainly small, it has over 10 million of them, and it has made a profound impact on the industry by pioneering commission-free trading. Data on its customers’ holdings are aggregated and uploaded several times throughout the day to the dedicated website robintrack.net. They are cumbersome – the full database contains over 8,000 spreadsheets – so we focused our analysis on Robinhood customers’ holdings in airlines, cruise ships and selected mortgage REITs. We found that the number of Robinhood accounts owning these stocks exploded since late March, but that datapoint cannot be considered in isolation because the number of accounts has been rising. Robinhood added over 3 million new accounts in the first four months of the year, an increase of as much as 30% from its year-end customer base.1 A blizzard of anecdotal reports characterizing day trading as a substitute for following professional sports reinforce the notion that ownership of all stocks has risen. To get a sense of how baseline equity holdings have changed since the S&P 500 peak on February 19th, we looked at the number of Robinhood accounts holding Apple (AAPL) and the iShares (SPY) and Vanguard (VOO) S&P 500 Index ETFs, and found they have all roughly doubled (Chart 1). Making equity investing more democratic may be a noble aim, but democracy can be messy. By contrast, the number of Robinhood accounts holding six large- and mid-cap airlines has risen 48 times, with component holdings of United (UAL) and Spirit (SAVE) leading the way at 87 and 81 times, respectively (Chart 2, top two panels), and Southwest (LUV) and Jet Blue (JBLU) bringing up the rear at 12 and 21 times, respectively (Chart 2, bottom two panels). The number of accounts owning cruise lines is up 177 times, on average, powered by Norwegian (NCLH), which has increased a remarkable 365 times (Chart 3, top panel). If Robinhood’s customers are representative of the retail investor population, betting that the pandemic will not be fatal for passenger airlines and cruise lines has become an extremely popular pursuit. Chart 2Buying The Dip In The Airlines Chart 3Stampeding Into The Cruise Lines Chart 4Unafraid Of Falling Knives Robinhood customers have also eagerly attempted to rescue ailing mortgage REITs. Mortgage REITs apply several turns of short-term leverage to their mortgage portfolios to fund generous dividend yields that typically range between the high single and low double digits. Mortgage REITs that invest solely in agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS) were stressed when credit spreads blew out in March, but hybrid REITs with sizable concentrations of illiquid non-agency MBS and whole loans faced an existential crisis. Three hybrids – Invesco Mortgage Capital (IVR), MFA Financial (MFA) and AG Mortgage Investment Trust (MITT) – failed to meet margin calls from their repo lenders. MFA and MITT have indefinitely suspended their dividends, while IVR cut its dividend by 96% last week. The companies’ futures were in doubt in late March and early April, but Robinhood customers have poured into the breach. The number of accounts holding the stocks has risen 93-fold, on average, since the S&P 500 peaked in February, with IVR leading the way at 149 times (Chart 4, top panel). Robinhood customer interest began to surge when the three stocks bottomed but increasing numbers of accounts have added them to their portfolios all throughout a turbulent May and June. The stocks are not yet out of the woods and sell-side analysts have panned their recent surges, as it is unclear who else will want to own them when they don’t pay dividends. Stocks from the groups we highlighted all face daunting current predicaments. They might deliver sizable returns if they can emerge mostly unscathed but that is a big if. They have come to account for an outsized share of Robinhood customers’ holdings (Table 1), especially relative to their market capitalizations. Retail treasure hunting may account for some of the recent surges that seemed to spite fundamentals, but we doubt that a community of first-time investors has the heft to move any but the smallest stocks. We suspect that algorithms, hedge-funds and other fast-money pools of capital may be amplifying the momentum that retail activity has set in motion. Retail investors have provided institutions with an opportunity to exit stocks in the three stressed groups. Per weekly data on the level of institutional holdings from Bloomberg, the composition of ownership of all twelve stocks we examined has shifted materially from institutions to individuals (Table 2). In the case of these stocks, retail investors have served as liquidity providers to institutional sellers seeking to exit their holdings. Instead of amplifying volatility, they may have tamped it down, while helping to speed the redeployment of institutional capital. Table 1Searching The Bargain Bin Table 2Individuals Have Replaced Institutions Direction Versus Level Many investors lament that the equity rally has occurred without regard for fundamental conditions or in seeming defiance of them. The imposition of rigorous social distancing measures to slow the spread of COVID-19 immediately induced a sharp recession, but the economy has begun to bounce back, and a further rollback of virus containment measures will help it build forward momentum. The latest NAHB survey demonstrated that housing is making rapid strides, with buyer traffic smartly reviving (Chart 5, third panel) and builders’ sales expectations snapping back (Chart 5, bottom panel). May housing starts came in well short of the consensus expectation, but leading building permits indicate that a pickup is just around the corner, and the purchase mortgage applications index hit its highest level in eleven years last week (Chart 6). Chart 5Housing Is Coming Back Fast Chart 6Low Rates Help The Real Economy, Too The various regional Fed manufacturing surveys all bounced in May, and the June Philly Fed (Chart 7, top panel) and Empire State (Chart 7, second panel) readings extended the trend, zooming far past expectations. Their moves bode well for the Richmond, Kansas City and Dallas Fed readings due out this week and next. They are not all the way back to their pre-pandemic levels, but they’re moving in the right direction and point to a continued pickup in manufacturing activity (Chart 8). Chart 7Gaining Traction The economic surprise index hit an all-time high last week (Chart 9), reinforcing the point that the improvement in the direction of economic activity is widespread. Activity has not returned to pre-pandemic levels, and it won’t for a while, but it is beginning to pick up or at least weaken at a slower rate. As states progress through their reopening phases, the direction will continue to improve and the level will get closer to its previous position. Chart 8Weak Level, Improving Direction Chart 9Uncoiling The Spring A resurgence in infection rates, or a second wave like the one that appears to be emerging in China, is a threat to ongoing economic improvement. Some states which have moved more rapidly to reopen are experiencing increasing infection rates, but they will only see reversals in economic activity if they revert to strict social distancing measures. It is becoming steadily apparent that most communities, here and abroad, no longer have the stomach for broad lockdowns. It seems that government officials are willing to trade a modest pickup in infections for a pickup in economic growth and individuals are willing to trade an increased risk of infection for a return to some sense of normal life. A severe re-emergence could change the calculus, but for now there is powerful momentum to advance along the path to restarting the economy. Policymakers Versus The Virus A record-high economic surprise index distills the improved direction across a broad sweep of indicators. Our view that Washington will extend fiscal lifelines to households, businesses and state and local governments is still intact. Negotiations over an infrastructure spending initiative are progressing, and we expect a successor to the CARES Act will follow before the end of July. As we’ve discussed before, it is simply too risky politically for Senate Republicans to obstruct aid efforts heading into the homestretch of the campaign. Robust fiscal support, combined with whatever-it-takes monetary support from the Fed, should be enough to see the economy across the pandemic abyss provided that testing bottlenecks are resolved and treatment protocols advance. Investment Implications Wagging a finger at retail investors is not our style. Increased retail participation has probably catalyzed some unexpected equity outcomes but the only outright distortions we’ve seen have occurred in micro-cap stocks and do not have a larger macro resonance. Retail participation in the stock market has always waxed and waned, but major market and economic impacts like the dot-com bubble are rare. We therefore do not believe that equities have become unmoored from reality and that a threatening bubble has formed. The fundamental backdrop has improved. The economy is nowhere near recovering its pre-pandemic levels, but the stock market is a forward-discounting mechanism and direction regularly trumps level. There is surely some froth in the market, and 24 times forward four-quarter earnings is a pricey multiple for the S&P 500, especially when it seems that earnings expectations beyond 2020 are overly optimistic. Retail participation in equities comes and goes, and it rarely proves disruptive at the overall index level. There are also plenty of ways that the virus could spring a nasty surprise, and financial markets seem to be ignoring them. Our geopolitical strategists see scope for turbulence at home, as the administration tries to improve its re-election prospects, and abroad, as any of several hot spots from Iran to North Korea to the South China Sea could flare up. The potential for negative surprises, as well as the furious equity rally, keeps us equal weight equities and overweight cash over the tactical timeframe. We remain constructive on equities over a 12-month horizon, however, as things are moving in the right direction and the alternatives – cash with zero yields and Treasuries with microscopic yields – are so unappealing. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Robinhood announced that it had surpassed the 10-million-customer mark in December.
Despite the strong rally in stocks since mid-March and a looming second wave of the pandemic, we continue to recommend that investors overweight equities on a 12-month horizon. Needless to say, this view has raised some eyebrows. With that in mind, this week we present a Q&A from the perspective of a skeptical reader who does not fully share our enthusiasm. Q: You said last week that a second wave of the pandemic is now your base case, yet you’re still sticking with your positive 12-month equity view. Why? A: A second wave of the pandemic, along with uncertainty about how the coming fiscal cliff in the US will be resolved, could unnerve investors temporarily. Nevertheless, we expect global equities to rise by about 10% from current levels over the next 12 months, handily outperforming bonds. While low interest rates and copious amounts of cash on the sidelines will provide a supportive backdrop for stocks, the main impetus for higher equity prices will be a recovery in economic activity and corporate profits. Q: It is hard to see the economy recovering very much if there is a second wave. A: It is important to get the arrow of causation right. Part of the reason we expect a second wave is because we think policymakers will continue to relax lockdown measures even if, as has already occurred in a number of US states, the infection rate rises. Granted, a second wave will moderate the pace at which containment measures can be dismantled. It will also prompt people to engage in more social distancing. Thus, a second wave would make the economic recovery slower than it otherwise would have been. However, it is doubtful that growth will grind to a halt. The appetite for continued lockdowns has clearly waned. For better or for worse, most western nations will follow the “Swedish model” of trying to limit the spread of the virus without imposing draconian restrictions on society. Chart 1CBO Projects The Unemployment Rate Will Fall Very Slowly Q: Even if the Swedish model works, and I doubt it will, we are still in a very deep economic hole. The unemployment rate in many countries is the highest since the Great Depression. The Congressional Budget Office does not foresee the US unemployment rate falling below 5% until 2028. A return to positive growth seems like a very low bar for success. We may need many years of above-trend growth just to get back to the pre-pandemic level of GDP! A: The Congressional Budget Office is too pessimistic in assuming that the recovery will be as sluggish as the one following the Great Recession (Chart 1). That recovery was weighed down by the need to repair household balance sheets after the bursting of a debt-fueled housing bubble. The current downturn was caused by external forces – an exogenous shock in econospeak. Historically, recoveries following exogenous shocks have tended to be more rapid than recoveries following recessions that were instigated by endogenous problems. Q: That may be so, but Wall Street is already penciling in a very rapid recovery. Last I checked, analysts expect S&P 500 earnings next year to be close to where they were last year. A: One has to be careful when comparing earnings estimates with economic growth projections. Chart 2 shows a breakdown of S&P 500 EPS estimates by sector. Appendix A also shows the evolution of these estimates over time. While analysts expect overall earnings per share (EPS) to return to last year’s levels in 2021, this is mainly because of the resilient profit outlook in the technology and health care sectors (the two biggest sectors in the S&P 500 by market cap). Outside those two sectors, EPS in 2021 is expected to be down 8.6% from 2019 levels, or 11.2% in real terms. Chart 2Breakdown Of S&P 500 EPS Estimates By Sector If one looks at the cyclically-sensitive industrials sector, earnings are projected to fall by 16% between 2019 and 2021. Energy sector earnings are projected to decline by 65%. Earnings in the consumer discretionary sector are expected to decline by 8%, despite the fact that Amazon accounts for nearly half of the sector by market cap.1 This suggests that analysts are expecting more of a U-shaped economic recovery than a V-shaped one. Chart 3The Present Value Of Earnings: A Scenario Analysis Q: Fair enough, but I am ultimately more interested in what the market is pricing in than what analysts are expecting. It seems to me that stock prices have rebounded much more rapidly than one would have anticipated based on the evolution in earnings estimates. A: That is true, but it is important to keep in mind that the fair value of the stock market does not solely depend on the expected path of earnings. It also depends on the discount rate we use to deflate those earnings. For the sake of argument, let us suppose that S&P 500 earnings only manage to reach $144 per share next year (10% below current consensus) and take five years to return to their pre-pandemic trend. All things equal, such a decline in earnings would reduce the present value of stocks by 4.2% relative to what it was at the start of the year (Chart 3). However, all things are not equal. The US 30-year Treasury yield, adjusted for inflation, has declined by 59 basis points this year. If we use this real yield as a proxy for the discount rate, the fair value of the S&P has actually increased by 8.7% since January 1st, despite the decline in earnings. Q: I think you’re doing a bit of a bait and switch here. You’re assuming that earnings estimates return to trend by the middle of the decade, but that long-term bond yields remain broadly unchanged over this period. If the economy and corporate earnings recover, won’t bond yields just go back to where they were last year, if not higher? A: Not necessarily. Conceptually, there is not a one-to-one mapping between interest rates and the full-employment level of aggregate demand.2 For example, consider a case where an adverse economic shock hits the economy, making households and businesses more reluctant to spend. If that were all there was to the story, the stock market would go down. But there is more to the story than that. Suppose the central bank cuts interest rates in response to this shock, which boosts demand by enough to return the economy to full employment. Now we have a new equilibrium where the level of demand – and by extension, the level of corporate profits – is the same as before but interest rates are lower. The fair value of the stock market has gone up! Q: Hold on. Central banks came into this recession with little fire power left. I agree that their actions have helped the stock market, but they have not been enough to rehabilitate the economy. A: Good point. That is where the role of fiscal policy comes in. One of the unsung benefits of lower interest rates is that they have incentivised governments to borrow more at a time when the economy needs all the fiscal support it can get. As Chart 4 shows, the fiscal response during this year’s downturn has been significantly larger than during the Great Recession. Thus, it is more correct to say that the combination of lower interest rates and fiscal easing have conceivably increased the fair value of the stock market. Chart 4Fiscal Stimulus Is Greater Today Than It Was During The Great Recession Q: And yet despite all this fiscal and monetary support, GDP remains depressed. A: The point of the stimulus was not to raise output or employment. It was to keep households and businesses solvent during a time when their regular flow of income had dried up. Q: If households and businesses did not spend much of that money, where did it go? A: Much of it remains in the banking system. The US savings rate shot up to 33% in April. As Chart 5 illustrates, this was almost perfectly mirrored by the increase in bank deposits. Anyone who claims that savings have nothing to do with deposits should study this chart. Chart 5Lots Of Savings Slushing Around Chart 6Stocks That Are Popular With Retail Investors Are Outperforming Q: And now, I suppose, these deposits are flowing into the stock market? A: Correct. That is one reason why stocks popular with retail investors have outperformed the S&P 500 by 30% since mid-March (Chart 6). Q: Have these retail flows really been important enough to matter? A: They have probably been more important than widely portrayed. Many of the online brokerages touting zero-commission trades make their money by selling order flow to hedge funds. Thus, the trading of individuals is magnified by the trading of institutional investors. More liquid markets tend to generate higher prices. There is also another subtle multiplier effect worth considering. You mentioned that money was “flowing into the stock market.” Technically speaking, “flow” is not the best word to use. For the most part, if I decide to buy some shares, someone else has to sell me their shares. On a net basis, there is no inflow of cash into the stock market. Rather, what happens is that my buy order lifts the price of the shares by enough to entice someone to sell their shares. Thus, if retail investors bid up the price of stocks to the point that institutions are forced to sell, those institutions are now left with excess cash that they have to deploy elsewhere in the stock market. As the value of investors’ stock portfolios rises, the percentage of their net worth held in cash falls. This game of hot potato only ends when the percentage of cash held by investors shrinks to a level that is consistent with their preferences. Importantly, this means that changes in the amount of cash on the sidelines can have a “multiplier” effect on stock prices. For example, if cash holdings go up by a dollar, and people want to hold ten times as much stock as cash, then stock market capitalization has to go up by ten dollars. Q: How far along are we in this game of hot potato? A: Despite the rally in stocks since mid-March, cash held in money market funds and savings deposits is still 10% higher as a share of market capitalization than at the start of the year. This suggests that the firepower to fuel further increases in the stock market has not been fully spent. Chart 7Equity Risk Premium Is Still Quite High Q: Wouldn’t you think that after a pandemic people would be more risk-averse and hence inclined to hold more cash? A: That would be a logical assumption, but it is not clear whether it is empirically true. There is some evidence from the psychological literature that people who survive life-threatening events tend to become less risk averse rather than more risk averse after the event has passed.3 A pandemic seems to qualify as a life-threatening event. In any case, when considering the equity risk premium, we should not only think about the riskiness of stocks; we should also think about the riskiness of bonds. Bond yields are near record lows. To the extent that yields cannot fall much from current levels, this makes bonds a less attractive hedge against downside economic news than they once were. So perhaps the equity risk premium, which is still quite high, should actually be lower than it currently is (Chart 7). Q: It seems that much of your optimism is based on the assumption that policy will stay stimulative. On the monetary side, that seems like a safe assumption. However, as you yourself mentioned at the outset, there is a risk that stocks will be upended by a premature tightening in fiscal policy. A: This is indeed a risk. In the US, the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) will run out of funds over the coming month. The additional $600 per week in benefits that jobless workers are receiving will expire on July 31st, causing average unemployment payments to fall by about 60%. Direct payments to households have also ceased. Together, these three fiscal measures amount to about 5.5% of GDP. Furthermore, most states begin their fiscal year on July 1st. Despite receiving $275 billion in federal aid, they are still facing a roughly $250 billion (1.2% of GDP) financing shortfall in the coming fiscal year, which could force widespread layoffs. The good news is that both Republicans and Democrats want to avert this fiscal cliff. While negotiations over the next stimulus package could unnerve investors for a while, they will ultimately culminate in a deal. The Democrats want more spending, as does the White House. And if public opinion polls are to be believed, congressional Republicans will also cave in to voter demands for continued fiscal largess (Table 1). Table 1There Is Much Public Support For Fiscal Stimulus Q: It seems to me that the fiscal cliff is not the only political risk to worry about. Tensions with China are running high and there is domestic unrest in many cities around the world. Even if fiscal policy remains accommodative, President Trump will probably lose in November. This makes a repeal of his tax cuts more likely than not. A: It is true that betting markets now expect Joe Biden to become president (Chart 8). They also expect Democrats to regain control of the Senate. My personal view is that Trump has a better chance of being reelected than implied by betting markets. While the protests have hurt Trump’s favorability ratings in recent weeks, ongoing unrest could help him, given his claim of being the “law and order” president. It is worth recalling that after falling for more than 20 years, the nationwide homicide rate spiked by 23% between 2014 and 2016 following protests in cities such as St. Louis and Baltimore (Chart 9). This arguably helped Trump get elected, just like the Watts Riot in Los Angeles helped Ronald Reagan get elected as Governor of California in 1966. Chart 8Betting Markets Now Expect Joe Biden To Become President If Senator Biden were to prevail, then yes, Trump’s corporate tax cuts would be in jeopardy. A full repeal of the Trump tax cuts would reduce EPS of S&P 500 companies by about 12%. Chart 9Continued Unrest May Help Trump, As It Has In The Past However, it is possible that Democrats would choose to only partially reverse the corporate tax cuts, while also lifting taxes on higher-income households. One should also note that trade tensions with China would probably diminish under a Biden presidency, which would be a mitigating factor for equity investors. Chart 10Cyclical Sectors Should Outperform Defensives As Global Growth Recovers... And A Weaker Dollar Should Also Help Non-US Stocks Q: So to sum up, you are still bullish on stocks over a 12-month horizon, although you see some near-term risks stemming from the likelihood of a second wave of the pandemic and uncertainty about how and when the fiscal cliff problem in the US will be resolved. What are your favorite sectors, regions, and styles? A: Cyclical sectors should outperform defensives over the next 12 months as global growth recovers. Cyclicals are overrepresented outside the US, which should favor overseas markets. A weaker dollar should also help non-US stocks (Chart 10). The dollar generally trades as a countercyclical currency, implying that it will sell off as global growth recovers. Moreover, unlike last year, the greenback no longer enjoys the benefit of higher interest rates than those abroad. In terms of style, value should outperform growth. Growth stocks have done very well in a falling interest rate environment (Chart 11). However, interest rates cannot fall much further from current levels. Small caps should outperform large caps, both because small caps are more growth-sensitive and because they tend to be more popular among day traders. Google searches for “day trading” have spiked in the past few months (Chart 12). Chart 11Interest Rates Cannot Fall Much Lower From Current Levels, Which Will Allow Value To Outperform Growth Chart 12Day Trading Is Back In Vogue These Days Beyond the pure macro plays, the pandemic could lead to a number of unexpected changes that have yet to be fully discounted by markets. For example, we will likely see a surge in the demand for automobiles as people shun public transit. The pandemic could also accelerate the reshoring of manufacturing activity, particularly in the health care sector. Contract manufacturing companies with significant domestic operations will benefit. Additionally, more people will move to the suburbs to work from home and escape the virus and rising crime. This could boost the demand for new houses and lift suburban real estate prices. Since most suburbs are built on top of land previously zoned for agriculture, farmland prices could also rise. Appendix A Evolution Of S&P 500 EPS Estimates By Sector Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Amazon EPS is projected to rise by 54% between 2019 and 2021, from 11% of overall consumer discretionary earnings to 19%. 2 One can see this within the context of the IS-LM model that is taught to economics undergraduates. If the LM curve shifts outward while the IS curve shifts inward, one could end up with the situation where aggregate demand is the same as before, but the equilibrium interest rate is lower. 3 For example, Gennaro Bernile, Vineet Bhagwat, and P. Raghavendra Rau investigated the link between the intensity of early-life experiences on CEO’s attitudes towards risk. Their results suggest that CEOs who witnessed extreme levels of fatal natural disasters appear more cautious in approaching risk. In contrast, those that experience disasters without very negative consequences become desensitized to risk. For details, please see Gennaro Bernile, Vineet Bhagwat, and P. Raghavendra Rau, “What Doesn't Kill You Will Only Make You More Risk-Loving: Early-Life Disasters and CEO Behavior,“ The Journal of Finance, (72:1) February 2017. Global Investment Strategy View Matrix Current MacroQuant Model Scores
Highlights Falling volatility in oil-trading markets will remain suspect while the massive economic uncertainty plaguing global markets persists. Geopolitical risk also will remain high, as the US and China return to loggerheads and India and China move closer to war. Positive consumer and employment data in the US could presage a sharp recovery in demand generally; however, it is immediately countered with fears of a second COVID-19 wave, which now is the baseline scenario of our global investment strategists. Despite lower EM oil-demand growth this year – spurred by weaker GDP growth – deeper production cuts by OPEC 2.0 will keep oil markets on track to rebalance beginning in 3Q20. Massive fiscal and monetary stimulus will bridge global economic activity to a return to normal next year, provided the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic does not result in renewed lockdown measures. Our updated supply-demand balances keep our expectation for Brent prices at $40/bbl this year and put next year’s average price at $65/bbl, $3/bbl below last month’s forecast. We continue to expect WTI to trade $2-$4/bbl lower than Brent. Feature As the OPEC 2.0 Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee convenes today, members will be attempting to sort out the appropriate supply response to a highly uncertain oil-demand evolution over the balance of this year and next. Indeed, global economic policy uncertainty is scaling heights unimagined even in the depths of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) of 2007-09 or the European sovereign-debt crisis of 2010-12, which followed in the GFC’s wake (Chart of the Week). This uncertainty is driving the policy responses of central banks and governments around the world, as they attempt to bridge COVID-19-induced demand destruction and the return to normality they seek in re-opening their economies. The data informing policy are suspect, as are the responses of firms and households to the stimulus they provide. This reflects the near-complete uncertainty in re current economic conditions. This translates directly to estimates of fundamental supply and demand variables, particularly in oil, which has been hardest-hit among the major commodities (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekEconomic Uncertainty Plagues Oil Markets Chart 2Oil Hardest Hit Commodity In 2020 COVID-19 Pandemic Demand To Weaken More Than Expected In 2020 OPEC 2.0’s agreement earlier this month to extend its 9.7mm b/d production cuts into July likely were informed by weaker physical demand. Our updated oil-demand model – driven by World Bank estimates of DM and EM GDP growth – indicates global oil consumption will fall by close to 9mm b/d this year, or ~ 1mm b/d more than we estimated last month.1 For next year, we expect a stronger rebound – 8.5mm b/d vs. last month’s estimate of 8mm b/d – off a lower base this year. This change is driven by the Bank’s more pessimistic assessment of EM GDP growth for 2020 than the IMF growth estimates we used in last month’s forecast (Chart 3). DM demand will take a harder hit than EM, given the extent of the lockdowns in major systematically important economies. This will set up a stronger rebound in oil demand next year, which, among many things spawned by the COVID-19 pandemic, is rarely seen. Chart 3EM Oil Demand Growth Estimate Lowered OPEC 2.0’s agreement earlier this month to extend its 9.7mm b/d production cuts into July likely were informed by weaker physical demand – appearing as unintended inventory accumulation – reflecting slower GDP growth. Global Oil Supply Expansion Required In our updated balances, we expect OPEC 2.0 supply to contract 3.2mm b/d y/y in 2Q20, and to increase in 2H20 and 2021 to keep prices from overshooting in the event the global demand response to fiscal and monetary stimulus is underestimated. We expect US shales to contract 600k b/d this year to 9.3mm b/d of production, and to gradually rebound in 2021 (Chart 4).2 The contraction in US shales will lead non-OPEC 2.0 supply losses in our estimation (Table 1). Chart 4Cuts By OPEC 2.0, US Shales Will Remove 9.4mm b/d Table 1BCA Global Oil Supply - Demand Balances (MMb/d, Base Case Balances) The combination of reduced supply and higher demand growth beginning next month will produce a physical deficit in 2H20 and in 2021 (Chart 5). This will be apparent in falling storage levels (Chart 6) and in a further flattening and eventual backwardating of the Brent and WTI forward curves (Chart 7). Chart 5Physical Markets Will Tighten Chart 6... Causing Storage to Drain ... Chart 7... And Forward Curves To Flatten, Then Backwardate Chart 8Massive Stimulus Flooding Global Economy Upside Favored, But Uncertainty Dominates We reckon even a second wave of the pandemic – now our Global Investment Strategy’s base case – will not derail a recovery in commodity demand. We continue to maintain a bias toward the upside price risk prevailing over the downside – driven by our expectation the massive fiscal and monetary stimulus unleashed globally will serve as an effective bridge from the COVID-19 pandemic to normal economic activity (Chart 8). This is being picked up in BCA Research's Global Nowcast, which closely tracks current economic conditions in leading manufacturing economies (Chart 9). We reckon even a second wave of the pandemic – now our Global Investment Strategy’s base case – will not derail a recovery in commodity demand.3 But the balance could tip the other way, with downside risk dominating the upside. The unprecedented uncertainty now dominating markets makes falling price volatility in oil markets – as measured by the implied volatility of Brent crude oil options’ implied volatility – highly suspect (Chart 10). We continue to emphasize two-way price risk in commodities remains pronounced despite the decline in the implied volatility of traded crude-oil options.4 Chart 9Global Economic Activity Turning Higher Chart 10Falling Vol Does Not Mean Lower Uncertainty Investment Implications The dynamics laid out above continue to point to a tightening physical oil market this year and next and higher prices. However, that does not come without substantial two-way risk. Indeed, the evolution of supply-demand information alone can trigger sharp adjustments in prices, as data revisions – to be expected, given the uncertainty prevailing at present – upend earlier preliminary estimates. We are leaving our 2020 forecast for Brent at $40/bbl and expect 2021 prices to average $65/bbl, $3/bbl below last month’s forecast. We continue to expect WTI to trade $2-$4/bbl lower than Brent (Chart 11). We also expect forward curves to flatten and return to backwardation in Brent and WTI, as the underlying physical markets tighten and inventories draw. Chart 11Brent To Average /bbl In 2021 Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger Associate Editor Commodity & Energy Strategy HugoB@bcaresearch.com Fernando Crupi Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy FernandoC@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Overweight Brent prices are recovering from the dual supply and demand shocks delivered by the COVID-19 pandemic and the short-lived OPEC 2.0 internal market-share war. Brent price are now down 42% ytd vs. -72% two months ago. The contango in the Brent futures curve continues to narrow as voluntary and involuntary production cuts take effect and lockdown measures are relaxed in major economies. Continued production losses and demand recovery will force inventories lower, flattening the oil forward curves and ultimately backwardating them. Base Metals: Neutral As of Tuesday’s close, the LMEX index was up 17% since bottoming in March, 2ppt lower than the level reached last week. Positive data out of China – fueled by stimulative fiscal and monetary policies – indicates demand for industrial metals will grow: Year-on-year industrial production, infrastructure spending, and steel production grew by 4.4%, 10.9%, and 4.2%, respectively, in May (Chart 12). Moreover, y/y floor space started and sold moved up to positive territory. As government support continues to reach the economy, these sectors will encourage base metal consumption, providing further upside to the LME index. Still, fresh outbreaks of COVID-19 cases in Beijing – and associated lockdown measures – illustrate the fragility of the recovery over the short-term. Precious Metals: Neutral Gold prices remain range-bound at ~ $1,700/oz, mimicking movements in US real rates. Going forward, both the Fed and market participants expect US interest rates will remain pinned near zero through the end of 2022 (Chart 13). Our US Investment strategists expect the Fed will err to the side of providing too much accommodation as it navigates the uncertain consequences of the current economic shock. A gradual rebound in inflation next year could push real rates deeper in negative territories, which will be supportive for gold. Ags/Softs: Underweight July soybean prices are up more than 3% since the beginning of the month. Strong export prospects going forward contributed to the strength in prices this past week. On June 4th the USDA reported new sales of soybeans of 1.21 MM MT, a huge week-on-week jump, which brought outstanding sales for the next marketing season to 4.1 MM MT. China was responsible for close to half of these sales and private exporters have since reported a little over an additional 1 million MT of exports to China. Chart 12Chinese Infrastructure Investment Rising Chart 13US Rates Expected To Remain Near Zero Until End 2022 Footnotes 1 Please see p. 3 of the World Bank’s June 2020 Global Economic Prospects. 2 We proxy US shales using the sum of crude production from the top 5 tight oil basins (i.e. Anadarko, Bakken, Eagle Ford, Niobrara, and Permian). Recent news reports suggest as much as 500k b/d of previously shut-in production will be back on line by the end of the month as a consequence of higher prices. This is slightly above our estimates shown in Chart 4. Please see US shale companies to boost oil output by 500,000 bpd by month-end published June 17, 2020, by reuters.com. 3 Please see A Second Wave Is Now The Base Case (But Stocks Will Eventually Shrug It Off) published by BCA Research’s Global Investment Strategy June 12, 2020. It is available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 4 For a discussion of how options markets price risk – i.e., known economic and political factors with outcomes that can be assigned probabilities – please see Ryan, Bob and Tancred Lidderdale (2009), Energy Price Volatility and Forecast Uncertainty, published by the US EIA October 2009. Risk can be thought of a “known unknowns” that can be measured across time and assigned a probability (conditional or otherwise), while uncertainty literally consists of unknown unknowns that cannot be measured. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Trade Recommendation Performance In 2020 Q1 Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2020 Summary of Closed Trades
While the SPX has now discounted a near fully functioning economy for the rest of the year and beyond (bottom panel), fixed income investors are not in total agreement. In fact, the missing ingredient in giving the green light for equities is a sell-off in the bond market, which financials/banks are currently sniffing out on the back of the reopening of the economy. Until fixed income investors get on the same page as equity investors, the SPX will remain on shaky ground (top panel). Bottom Line: While we remain constructive on the prospects of the broad equity market on the cyclical 9-12 months time horizon, resilience in the fixed income market and uncertainty regarding the Presidential Election outcome are key tail risks to our cyclically sanguine equity market view. Please refer to this Monday’s Weekly Report for additional details.
Highlights When retail investors invest aggressively and central banks buy assets en masse, economic fundamentals take the back seat and momentum becomes king. Global risk assets are at a fork in the road: either they will relapse meaningfully as they have run well ahead of fundamentals or a budding mania will push global share prices to fresh new highs. A budding mania is the basis behind our strategy of chasing momentum from this point on. Investors should adjust their strategy based on momentum in global stocks and the broad trade-weighted US dollar in the coming weeks. We are upgrading Chinese stocks from neutral to overweight and downgrading the Korean bourse from overweight to neutral within an EM equity portfolio. Feature Chart I-1Make It Or Break It Moment For US Dollar Global share prices have reached a point where they are no longer oversold. In turn, the trade-weighted US dollar has worked out its overbought conditions and is sitting on major defensive lines (Chart I-1). If the dollar relapses below its technical resistances, it will enter a bear market. Consistently, EM risk assets will enter a bull market. The trajectory of EM risk assets and currencies in the coming months will ultimately depend on what happens to the ongoing global FOMO (fear-of-missing-out) rally. We refer to it as a FOMO rally because both the DM and EM equity rallies have been taking place despite deteriorating corporate profit expectations, as we documented in our June 4 report. Why The FOMO Rally May Still Have Legs There are a number of reasons why this FOMO-driven rally could persist: Chart I-2Helicopter Money In The US First, the Federal Reserve is explicitly targeting higher asset prices, and to achieve this goal it is deploying its “nuclear” arsenal – printing money and monetizing public debt, lending to the private sector as well as buying corporate bonds. US broad money growth is at an all-time high (Chart I-2). Consequently, the risk of a full-blown equity bubble formation in the US cannot be ruled out. If this occurs, all EM risk assets will rally along with the S&P 500. US policymakers are throwing everything into the system to keep financial asset prices inflated. It seems that after any day that the S&P 500 sells off, the Fed or the US administration comes up with some sort of new measure to support the economy and asset prices. Historically, investors have placed a lot of weight on the Fed’s actions. Aggressive measures by the Fed have recently led investors to purchase stocks and corporate bonds, irrespective of the condition of the underlying economy. As a result, share prices worldwide have decoupled from corporate profit expectations (Chart I-3A and I-3B). If US policymakers succeed in lifting US share prices further, every investor will likely chase the rally and the US equity market will become a full-scale bubble. Chart I-3AGlobal Stocks Are Pricing In A Lot Of Good News Chart I-3BSurging EM Share Prices Amid Plunging Forward EPS Chart I-4Retail Investors Have Driven Up Trading Volumes At some point, the bubble will start cracking even if corporate earnings find their way back to a recovery path. When equities make up a large share of investors’ assets, any trigger could lead to marginal sellers outnumbering marginal buyers. As we discuss below, there are plenty of risks that could result in a trigger. Both retail and institutional investors are very averse to losses, and when the market begins to slide, investors will sell their shares simultaneously. The market will plunge. The Fed will be forced to buy stocks to avert the negative impact of falling share prices on the economy. In a nutshell, US equities and corporate bonds have become extremely dependent on the Fed. This might be good news in the short and medium term. Nevertheless, it is negative for the US in the long run. Second, when retail investors rush into the market and actively trade, fundamentals take the back seat. This is what has been occurring since March. Retail investors appear to be especially attracted to crushed or near-bankrupt US stocks as well as popular tech stocks. This is illustrated by the surge in turnover volumes on the Nasdaq as well as in Southwest Airline, Norwegian Cruise Lines and Chesapeake Energy stocks (Chart I-4). Yet the impact of their actions is not limited to these stocks. Stocks are fungible. When retail investors purchase shares of near-bankrupt companies at elevated prices (at higher than fundamentals warrant), institutional investors sell those stocks and move capital to other companies. In aggregate, the stock market index rises. The ongoing retail investor mania is not solely a US phenomenon. It has become prevalent in many other countries. There are anecdotes that Japanese retail investors have been actively trading Jasdaq stocks, while Korean, Taiwanese and Filipino retail investors have been buying local shares en masse.1 The top panel of Chart I-5 illustrates that Korean individual investors have been accumulating stocks while foreigners have been selling out. In Taiwan, the share of individual investors in equity trading has been rising at the expense of domestic institutional investors (Chart I-5, bottom panel). Retail investors do not do much fundamental analysis, and it should not come as a surprise that share prices have decoupled from their fundamentals (profits) and have gained despite lingering massive risks. Retail investors appear to be especially attracted to crushed or near-bankrupt US stocks as well as popular tech stocks. Third, the mania phase – the last and most speculative stage – in bubble formation typically lasts between nine and 18 months. This is based on the duration of the mania phase in the Nikkei (1989), the NASDAQ (1999-2000), oil (2008) and Chinese A shares (2014-‘15) (Chart I-6). The retail investor-driven equity mania began in March and is now three months old. If the duration of previous manias is any guide, the current rally could last another six months at least. Chart I-5Strong Retail Buying Is Also Evident In Korea And Taiwan Chart I-6How Long Mania Phase Lasted During Previous Bubbles? Chart I-7China A-Share Bubble: A Divergence Between Stocks And EPS The current equity mania resembles the one in China’s A-share market in 2014-‘15 in two aspects: (1) it is driven by retail investors and (2) it is occurring amid very underwhelming corporate profits. Chart I-7 demonstrates that Chinese A-share prices skyrocketed in H1 2015, despite a deteriorating corporate profit picture. It lasted for a while and ended with a bust without any policy tightening taking place. Finally, retail investors are not quick to give up when they lose money. Having acquired a taste for capital gains over the past few months, retail investors will likely become even more aggressive and will keep buying the dips. In such a scenario, institutional and professional investors may be forced to capitulate and chase risk assets higher. We are at a fork in the road: either retail investors will begin reducing their equity holdings soon, or institutional and professional investors will capitulate and start buying en masse. In the first scenario, stocks will tumble as retail investors rapidly head for the exits. The latter scenario on the other hand will push share prices considerably higher. This is the basis behind our strategy of chasing momentum from this point on. Bottom Line: All financial market manias eventually crash. However, if the market breaks out, the rally could endure for several months. Not chasing the rally will be very painful for portfolio managers. This is why even though we believe the current global equity rally has been a FOMO-driven mania, we recommend to play it if EM share prices break above, and the broad-trade weighted dollar relapses below, current levels. Plenty Of (Disregarded) Risks Chart I-8Number Of New Inflections Is Rising In Large EM Countries Even though global risk assets have been rallying, the global investment landscape remains poor, with plenty of risks. In particular: Geopolitical tensions are bound to rise between the US and China. Taiwan and its semiconductor sector are at the epicenter of the US-China technological and geopolitical standoffs. Timing any escalation is tricky, but Taiwanese stocks are not pricing in these risks. Further, odds are high that North Korea will test a strategic weapon, which will undermine the credibility of President Trump’s foreign policy. This is negative for the KOSPI and the Korean won. An escalation in US-China tensions encompassing technology, Hong Kong, Taiwan and the Koreas is negative for equity markets in China, South Korea and Taiwan alike. Together they account for about 60% of the EM MSCI equity benchmark market cap. Moreover, the China-India skirmish is a risk for Indian stocks. The number of new Covid-19 infections is rising in the majority of EM countries excluding China, Korea and Taiwan as demonstrated in Chart I-8. It will be hard to ameliorate consumer and business confidence and thereby boost spending in these countries amid a worsening trend in the global pandemic. Indeed, a second wave of the coronavirus now hitting Beijing is evidence that even the very efficient Chinese system is not able to prevent pockets of renewed infection outbreaks. This risk still looms large over many advanced and developing nations after the first wave subsides. The post-lockdown natural snapback in economic activity is creating a mirage of a V-shaped recovery. Like any mirage, it can last and drive markets for a while. However, it will eventually fade. When that happens, misalignments in financial markets will be ironed out rather abruptly. A snapback in economic activity around the world is natural following the unwinding of strict lockdowns. Nevertheless, the level of business activity remains very low. Going forward, persistent social distancing, the threat of a second wave and an initial substantial income drawdown will cap the speed of recovery in household and business spending around the world. In our February 20 report titled EM: Growing Risk Of A Breakdown, we contended that the most likely trajectory for Chinese growth is the one demonstrated in Chart I-9. It assumed the plunge in business activity would be succeeded by a rather sharp snap-back due to pent-up demand. However, this snapback would likely be followed by weaker growth in the following months. This is also our roadmap for the business cycles of many DM and EM economies. Even though on May 28 we upgraded our economic outlook for Chinese growth from negative to mildly positive, near-term risks for China-related plays remain. Consistent with the trajectory described above, the Chinese economy has been coming back to life, aided in large part by significant credit and fiscal stimulus (Chart I-10, top and middle panel). Traditional infrastructure investment has accelerated strongly (Chart I-10, bottom panel). Chart I-9Our Roadmap For China’s Business Cycle Chart I-10China: Money/Credit And Infrastructure Are Accelerating Consequently, mainland demand for commodities has been very robust and raw materials prices have rallied. However, it remains to be seen if the recent strength in commodities purchases can be maintained going forward. A couple of our indicators and market price signals are also suggesting that caution is warranted in the near term with respect to China-related plays. First, our indicators for marginal propensity to spend among households and enterprises continue to deteriorate, even when May data points are included (Chart I-11). These indicators have been good pointers for consumer discretionary spending and business investment/demand for industrial metals, as illustrated in Chart I-11. Chart I-11Marginal Propensity To Spend Is Falling For Consumers And Enterprises Chart I-12Copper: Shanghai/London Premium And Prices Second, the copper price premium in Shanghai over London has been a good coincident indicator for copper prices and has recently been flagging short-term risks to copper prices (Chart I-12). A rising Shanghai/London copper premium implies more robust demand in China, while a declining premium signals weaker copper demand in the mainland. Finally, share prices of property developers, industrials and materials in the onshore market have failed to advance much (Chart I-13). This fact does not corroborate that there is a strong recovery occurring in China’s broad capital spending outside infrastructure. Chart I-13Chinese Stocks Do Not Corroborate A Strong Recovery A similar message stems from the investable universe of Chinese stocks. We are using the sector indexes from the onshore market because they are less hyped by the global FOMO rally, and the number of companies included in these onshore sector indexes is larger than in the investable indexes. Bank share prices have done even worse (Chart I-13, bottom panel). Overall, near-term risks to China-plays remain and we are looking for a better entry point in the weeks and months ahead. The trend-setting US equity market is expensive, as we corroborated in our report on EM and US equity valuations a month ago. The forward P/E ratio stands at 22, using analysts’ 12-month forward EPS expectations that we believe are still optimistic. Global financial market correlations are presently high, and domestic conditions in EM ex-China, Korea and Taiwan are rather grim. If the S&P 500 relapses for whatever reason, there is little chance EM risk assets will avoid selling off. Bottom Line: Risks are abundant and fundamentals (profits, valuations, geopolitical risks, the ongoing pandemic) do not justify higher share prices. However, if a FOMO-driven rush into stocks persists, financial markets will continue ignoring fundamentals. Investment Strategy: Momentum Is Now King When retail investors invest aggressively and central banks buy assets en masse, it is not the time for fundamental analysis. Indeed, momentum becomes king. Investors should adjust their strategy based on momentum in global stocks and the broad trade-weighted US dollar in the coming weeks. Our composite momentum indicator for global share prices has risen to zero from extremely oversold levels (Chart I-14). Chart I-14Global Share Prices Are At A Critical Juncture If global and EM share prices break meaningfully above their 200-day moving averages and the US dollar breaks materially below its 200-day moving average (see Chart I-1 on page 1), our advice will be for investors to chase the rally. Even if DM and EM share prices break out, the odds are that EM stocks will continue underperforming DM ones. Hence, we continue to underweight EM in a global equity portfolio. The basis is that North Asian equity markets (China, Korea and Taiwan) are at risk of a heightened geopolitical confrontation between the US and China, as per our discussion above. Meanwhile, the remainder of EM is struggling with the pandemic. Hence, EM will continue to underperform, even if global share prices rise a lot. The current equity mania resembles the one in China’s A-share market in 2014-‘15 in two aspects: (1) it is driven by retail investors and (2) it is occurring amid very underwhelming corporate profits. That said, if global stocks and commodities prices break out and the greenback breaks down, we will close our remaining short positions in EM currencies and upgrade our stance on EM fixed-income markets from neutral to bullish. We have been receiving rates in Mexico, Colombia, Russia, India, China, Korea, Pakistan, Ukraine and Egypt, but have been reluctant to take on currency risk. Also, we upgraded our stance on EM credit markets to neutral on June 4. We will likely upgrade EM local currency bonds and EM credit markets further to “buy” if the above-mentioned breakouts transpire. Upgrade Chinese, Downgrade Korean Stocks Chart I-15DRAM And Korean Tech Stocks We are moving China from neutral to overweight and downgrading Korea from overweight to neutral relative to the EM equity benchmark. Regarding Korean equities, the risks are as follows: First, rising threats of North Korea testing a strategic weapon is negative for South Korea’s equities and currency. Second, DRAM prices and volumes are dropping. Chart I-15 shows that the DRAM revenue proxy is falling, a bad omen for Korean tech stocks that derive a lot of operating profits from DRAM sales. Finally, the Korean bourse is heavy in old-economy stocks, which will experience a slow recovery in their profits from very low levels amid the enduring global trade downturn. The reasons to upgrade Chinese investable stocks relative to the EM equity benchmark include: As we discussed above, the medium-term growth outlook for China is mildly positive due to the credit and fiscal stimulus Beijing has unleashed. The outlook for domestic demand is worse in many other developing economies. The credit and money bubble in China will inflate further and will pose a major challenge in the years ahead. That said, another round of major credit/money expansion will likely stabilize the system in the medium term. If the FOMO-driven mania continues, FAANG stocks will likely outperform, which will spread to similar stocks around the world. The Chinese investable index includes Alibaba, Tencent and other new economy stocks that will likely outperform the EM benchmark. If global markets correct and EM currencies drop, the Chinese RMB will appreciate relative to most EM exchange rates. This will help China’s equity performance relative to other EM bourses. Finally, if US-China tensions escalate and EM markets sell off, Chinese authorities will support share prices by deploying the national team and other government proxies to buy Chinese stocks. This will help the broad universe of Chinese stocks to outperform the EM benchmark. Chart I-16Long Chinese Investable / Short Korean Equities Bottom Line: We are upgrading Chinese stocks from neutral to overweight and downgrading the Korean bourse from overweight to neutral within an EM equity portfolio. Market-neutral investors should consider the following trade: long Chinese / short Korean equities (Chart I-16). Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see the following articles: Coronavirus spawns new generation of Japanese stock pickers Stuck at Home, More Filipinos Try Luck at Stock Investing Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
Highlights We conservatively estimate lost output from shutdowns and social distancing will equal $10 trillion, and we expect the jobs market to be permanently scarred. Inflation, even at 2 percent, is a pipe dream, which leads to three investment conclusions on a 1-year horizon: Overweight US T-bonds and Spanish Bonos versus German Bunds and French OATs. Any high-quality bond yield that can decline will decline. Overweight CHF/USD. The tightening yield spread will structurally favour the CHF, while the haven status of the CHF should prevent it from underperforming in periods of market stress. Overweight defensive equities (technology and healthcare) versus cyclical equities (banks and energy). This implies underweight European equities versus other markets. Fractal trade: Short Germany versus the UK. The recent outperformance of German equities is technically extended. Feature Chart of the WeekCredit Impulses Are Large, But The Hole In Output Is Much Larger Big numbers befuddle us. Hardly a day passes without someone listing the unprecedented global stimulus unleashed to counter the coronavirus forced shutdowns – the trillions in government spending promises, tax relief, loan guarantees, money supply growth, and central bank asset-purchases. The most optimistic estimates quantify the total stimulus at $15 trillion. This includes $7 trillion of loan guarantees plus increases in central bank balance sheets which do not directly boost demand. So the direct stimulus is closer to $7 trillion.1 Yet the size of the stimulus is meaningless until we quantify the massive hole in economic output that needs to be filled. Assuming no further large-scale shutdowns, we conservatively estimate that the hole will amount to 12 percent of world output, or $10 trillion. A $10 Trillion Hole In Output Last week, the UK’s Office for National Statistics (ONS) helped us to estimate the hole in output, because unusually the ONS calculates UK GDP on a monthly basis. Between February and April, when the UK economy went from fully open to full shutdown, UK GDP collapsed by 25 percent. This despite the UK having an outsized number of jobs suitable for ‘working from home.’ For a more typical economy, we estimate that a full shutdown collapses output by 30 percent (Chart I-2). Chart I-2A Full Shutdown Collapses Output By 30 Percent The next question is: how long does the full shutdown last? Assuming it lasts for three months, output would suffer a hole amounting to 7.5 percent of annual GDP.2 But in practice, the economy will not fully re-open after three months. Social distancing will persist until people feel confident that the pandemic is under control. An effective vaccine against Covid-19 is unlikely to be available for a year. So, even without government policy to enforce social distancing, many people will choose to avoid crowds and congregations for fear of catching the virus. The size of the stimulus is meaningless until we quantify the massive hole in economic output. This means that the sectors that rely on crowds and congregations – leisure and hospitality and retail trade – will be operating at half-capacity, at best. Given that these sectors generate 9 percent of GDP, operating at half-capacity will create an additional hole amounting to 4.5 percent of output. More worryingly, these two sectors employ 21 percent of all workers, so operating at sub-par will leave the jobs market permanently scarred.3 Combining the 7.5 percent existing hole with the 4.5 percent future hole, the full hole in economic output will amount to around 12 percent of annual GDP. As global GDP is worth around $85 trillion, this equates to $10 trillion. Crucially though, our estimate assumes that a second wave of the pandemic will not force a new cycle of shutdowns. If it does, the hole will become even bigger. Don’t Be Fooled By Money Supply Growth The recent growth in broad money supply seems a big number. Since the start of the year, the outstanding stock of bank loans has increased by around $0.7 trillion in the euro area, and by $1 trillion in both the US and China (Chart I-3 and Chart I-4). This has boosted the 6-month credit impulses in all three economies. Indeed, the US 6-month credit impulse recently hit its highest value of all time, and the combined 6-month impulse across all three blocs equals around $2 trillion (Chart of the Week). Chart I-3Don't Be Fooled By Money Supply Growth In The Euro Area And The US... Chart I-4...And In ##br##China This 6-month credit impulse quantifies the additional borrowing in the most recent six-month period compared to the previous period. Ordinarily, a $2 trillion impulse would create a huge boost to demand. After all, the private sector does not usually borrow just to hold the cash in a bank. Yet in the coronavirus crisis this is precisely what has happened. While the shutdowns lasted, firms drew on existing bank credit lines to build up emergency cash buffers. Therefore, much of the money growth will not generate new demand. While the shutdowns lasted, firms drew on existing bank credit lines to build up emergency cash buffers. To the extent that this cash is sitting idly in a firm’s bank account, the monetary velocity will decline. Meaning there will be a much-reduced transmission from credit impulses to spending growth. Furthermore, when the economy re-opens, many firms will relinquish the precautionary credit lines. There is no point holding cash in the bank when there are few investment opportunities. Hence, credit impulses will fall back – as seems to be the case right now in the US. QE: The Great Misunderstanding To repeat, big numbers befuddle us. They must always be put into context. No truer is this than when it comes to central bank asset-purchases. The great misunderstanding is that the act of central banks buying assets, per se, drives up those asset prices. Central banks act as lenders of last resort to solvent but illiquid banks and sovereigns. If there is ample liquidity in these markets – as is the case now – then the primary function of central bank asset-purchases is to set the term-structure of interest rates. In turn, the term-structure of global interest rates establishes the prices of $500 trillion of global assets. The prices of these assets are inextricably inter-connected and inter-dependent4 (Chart I-5). Chart I-5The Prices Of $500 Trillion Of Assets Are Inextricably Inter-Connected The great misunderstanding is that the act of central banks buying assets, per se, drives up those asset prices. Yet central banks set no price target for their asset-purchases. They leave that to the market. Moreover, in the context of the $500 trillion of inter-dependent asset prices, the $10-15 trillion or so of central bank asset-purchases to date constitutes chicken feed (Chart I-6). Hence, the mechanism by which asset-purchases work is through the signal they give to the $500 trillion market on the likely course of interest rate policy. This sets the term-structure of interest rates, which in turn sets the required return on all the $500 trillion of assets (Chart I-7). Chart I-6$10-15 Trillion Of QE Is Chicken Feed... Chart I-7...Compared To $500 Trillion Of Assets Priced By The Term-Structure Of Interest Rates As the ECB’s former Chief Economist, Peter Praet, explains: “There is a signalling channel inherent in asset purchases, which reinforces the credibility of forward guidance on policy rates. This credibility of promises to follow a certain course for policy rates in the future is enhanced by the asset purchases, as these asset purchases are a concrete demonstration of our desire (to keep policy rates at the lower bound.)” The credible commitment to keep policy rates near the lower bound for an extended period depresses bond yields towards the lower bound too. But once bond yields have reached their lower bound the effectiveness of central bank asset-purchases becomes exhausted. Three Investment Conclusions The main purpose of this report was to put the $7 trillion of direct stimulus dollars unleashed into the economy into a proper context. With lost output estimated at $10 trillion and the jobs market permanently scarred, inflation – even at 2 percent – is a pipe dream. Moreover, a second wave of the pandemic and a new cycle of shutdowns would inject a further disinflationary impulse. This leads to three investment conclusions on a 1-year horizon: Any high-quality bond yield that can decline – because it is not already near the -1 percent lower bound to yields – will decline. An excellent relative value trade is to overweight US T-bonds and Spanish Bonos versus German Bunds and French OATs (Chart I-8). Long CHF/USD is a win-win. The tightening yield spread will structurally favour the CHF, while the haven status of the CHF should prevent it from underperforming in periods of market stress. Overweight defensive equities versus cyclical equities, with technology correctly defined as defensive, not cyclical. The performance of cyclicals (banks and energy) versus defensives (technology and healthcare) is now joined at the hip to the bond yield (Chart I-9). This implies underweight European equities versus other markets. Chart I-8Bond Yields That Can Decline Will Decline Chart I-9The Performance Of Cyclicals Versus Defensives Is Joined At The Hip To The Bond Yield Fractal Trading System* The recent outperformance of German equities is technically extended. Accordingly, this week’s recommended trade is to go short Germany versus the UK, expressed through the MSCI dollar indexes. Set the profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 5 percent. In other trades, long euro area personal products versus healthcare achieved its 7 percent profit target at which it was closed. The rolling 1-year win ratio now stands at 65 percent. When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Footnotes 1 Source: Reuters estimate. 2 A 30 percent loss in output for a quarter of a year (3 months) amounts to a 30*0.25 = 7.5 percent loss in annual output. 3 Using the weights of leisure and hospitality and retail trade in the US economy as a proxy for the global weights. 4 The $500 trillion of assets comprises: real estate $300 trillion, public and private equity $100 trillion, corporate bonds and EM debt $50 trillion, and high-quality government bonds $50 trillion. Dhaval Joshi Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights High-Yield: Our analysis of current junk spread levels relative to likely economic outcomes leaves us inclined to maintain our current recommended positioning: Overweight Ba-rated bonds, underweight bonds rated B & below. Fed/Treasuries: There is no urgency for the Fed to provide more explicit forward rate guidance. The market has already taken on board the expectation that the funds rate will stay pinned at zero at least through the end of 2022. Investors should keep portfolio duration near benchmark but add tactical overlay positions: long TIPS versus nominal Treasuries, and steepeners along both the nominal and real yield curves. Securitizations: We recommend that investors continue to overweight Aaa-rated consumer ABS and CMBS, as both sectors offer attractive spreads and benefit from TALF. Despite the lack of Fed support, adding some non-Aaa consumer ABS exposure also makes sense. Investors should continue to avoid Agency MBS, where value has improved but prepayment risk remains high. Feature In case it wasn’t already obvious that the Fed will continue to act as a tailwind behind risky asset prices, Chair Powell made it abundantly clear at last week’s FOMC press conference. When asked about the risk of bubbles in financial markets, Powell’s response was to focus on the millions of unemployed workers and imply that it would be a dereliction of the Fed’s duties if it were to hold back on monetary stimulus because it thought asset prices were too high. Ironically, this strong statement of market support came the day before the S&P 500 fell 6% in a single session. Nonetheless, with the Fed providing such aggressive forward guidance on top of direct intervention in certain segments of the fixed income market, it behooves us to consider whether our recommended portfolio allocation is insufficiently aggressive. The Strong Performance Of Low-Rated Junk Chart 1Lower-Rated Junk Bonds Playing Catch-Up Within the high-yield corporate bond market we have been advising an overweight allocation to Ba-rated bonds but an underweight allocation to bonds rated B and below. The reasoning is that Ba-rated bonds are largely eligible for the Fed’s emergency lending facilities while lower-rated junk bonds are mostly left out in the cold.1 This positioning worked well throughout April and the first half of May, but lower-rated junk bonds have started to play catch-up during the past month (Chart 1). High-Yield Index Fundamentals To get a sense of whether we should extend our overweight recommendation to the B and below credit tiers, let’s first perform a valuation exercise on the entire high-yield index. In this exercise we consider current spread levels relative to likely economic outcomes. We set aside any impact from direct Fed intervention for the time being. Our analysis revolves around the High-Yield Default-Adjusted Spread (Chart 2). This valuation measure takes the junk index spread and subtracts default losses realized during the subsequent 12 month period. The spread’s historical average is around 250 bps, but it has occasionally dipped below zero during periods when default losses swamp the compensation offered by the index. Chart 2High-Yield Index Assessment: Default-Adjusted Spread The Default-Adjusted Spread also lines up very closely with 12-month excess returns (Chart 2, panel 2). A simple linear regression model of 12-month excess returns versus the Default-Adjusted Spread gives an R2 of 53% and tells us that the threshold between positive and negative excess returns is a Default-Adjusted Spread of 187 bps. That is, if the Default-Adjusted Spread is above 187 bps we should expect high-yield to outperform Treasuries, if it is below 187 bps we should expect high-yield to underperform. With that in mind, we can apply some quick figures to the current context. The High-Yield index option-adjusted spread is 611 bps. If we assume a default rate of 10% and recovery rate of 25% for the next 12 months, we get expected default losses of 750 bps and a Default-Adjusted Spread of -139 bps. We should expect Treasuries to outperform junk bonds in that scenario. Ba-rated bonds are largely eligible for the Fed’s emergency lending facilities while lower-rated junk bonds are mostly left out in the cold. We can also perform the same sort of analysis in reverse. If we target a Default-Adjusted Spread of 187 bps – the spread that is consistent with high-yield performing in line with Treasuries – and we also assume a recovery rate of 25%, then the current index spread gives us an implied 12-month default rate of 5.7% (Chart 2, bottom panel). That is, we should expect high-yield to outperform Treasuries during the next 12 months if the default rate comes in below 5.7%, and underperform if it is above 5.7%. There are a couple assumptions used in the above analysis that require clarification. First, we relied on a simple linear regression model to get the result that a Default-Adjusted Spread of 187 bps is consistent with junk bonds breaking even with Treasuries. This is not an entirely accurate depiction of the historical record. Table 1 shows a more complete picture of the historical linkage between the Default-Adjusted Spread and 12-month high-yield excess returns. Here, we see that junk bonds have actually outperformed duration-matched Treasuries 81% of the time when the Default-Adjusted Spread is between 150 bps and 200 bps, and 72% of the time when it is between 100 bps and 150 bps. Relative junk bond losses only become more likely than gains when the Default-Adjusted Spread is below 100 bps. Table 1The Default-Adjusted Spread & High-Yield Excess Returns Second, we assumed a 25% recovery rate when we calculated our implied default rate of 5.7%. This is low compared to the historical average, but we would argue that a low recovery rate assumption is appropriate in the current environment. We analyzed the main economic drivers of default and recovery rates in a recent Special Report and found that the recovery rate observed during an economic downturn is primarily driven by corporate balance sheet leverage heading into that downturn.2 Corporate balance sheets were carrying a lot of debt heading into the current recession, meaning that we should expect a lower-than-normal recovery rate. In fact, the current trailing 12-month recovery rate is 22%, below our assumed level. Table 2 shows what the Default-Adjusted Spread will be for the next 12 months under different default and recovery rate assumptions. We think that 25% is a reasonable recovery rate assumption and expect that the default rate will be somewhere between 9% and 12% during the next 12 months. At present, Moody’s baseline 12-month default rate forecast is 11.6%. Table 2Default-Adjusted Spread (BPs) Given Different Assumptions For Default And Recovery Rates Clearly, junk spreads do not offer adequate compensation for default losses in the economic environment we anticipate. This logic also extends to the individual B and Caa/C credit tiers when we look at them in isolation. A Focus On B-Rated & Below Junk Bonds Charts 3A and 3B show the historical linkage between Default-Adjusted Spreads and excess returns for those specific credit tiers, with forecasts plugged in for “mild”, “moderate” and “severe” default scenarios. All three scenarios use a recovery rate of 25%. The assumed default rate is 6% in the “mild” scenario, 9% in the “moderate” scenario and 12% in the “severe” scenario. Default-adjusted compensation is unattractive in all three cases. Chart 3AB-Rated Default-Adjusted Spread Chart 3BCaa/C-Rated Default-Adjusted Spread Bottom Line: Our analysis of current junk spread levels relative to likely economic outcomes leaves us inclined to maintain our current recommended positioning: Overweight Ba-rated bonds, underweight bonds rated B & below. The Fed’s support for the Ba credit tier will significantly limit default losses for those bonds, making current spread levels attractive. However, absent Fed intervention, junk spreads are already far too tight. Investors should avoid bonds rated B & below where issuers generally don’t benefit from the Fed’s emergency programs. No Rush For More Explicit Forward Guidance In addition to Chair Powell’s strong statement of support for risky assets, last week’s FOMC meeting brought us the committee’s updated interest rate projections. With only two exceptions, those projections revealed that all Fed policymakers expect to keep the fed funds rate at its current level at least until the end of 2022. There had been some expectation that the Fed might provide more explicit forward guidance for the funds rate. Something along the lines of the “Evans Rule” that was used during the last zero-lower-bound episode. For example, the Fed could pledge to not increase rates until the unemployment rate is below some specified threshold or inflation is above some specified threshold. Fed policymakers expect to keep the fed funds rate at its current level at least until the end of 2022. This sort of forward guidance would be useful if the Fed needed to convince markets about its commitment to keeping rates pinned near zero, but the market has already internalized that message. Notice in Chart 4 that expectations priced into the overnight index swap curve show no rate hikes through the end of 2022. The same goes for the median estimate from the New York Fed’s April 2020 Survey of Market Participants. Chart 4Fed Policymakers And Market Participants Agree: No Hikes Until 2023 More explicit forward rate guidance will likely be required in the future, when the market starts to price-in the eventual return of rate hikes. But for the time being, the Fed will probably be content to stay the course. Treasury Positioning The combination of the Fed’s strong commitment to zero interest rates and the risks to the 6-12 month economic outlook that we detailed in last week’s report make us inclined to maintain our recommended “At Benchmark” portfolio duration stance.3 However, we also recognize that yields are more likely to rise than fall in the coming months as the US economy re-opens and the economic data trend higher. For this reason, we advise holding several tactical overlay trades that will profit from rising bond yields: overweight TIPS versus nominal Treasuries, duration-neutral nominal curve steepeners, real yield curve steepeners. On TIPS, May’s CPI report showed a third consecutive month-over-month decline but the drop was far less severe than what was seen in March and April (Chart 5). This is a preliminary indication that we could already be passed the trough in inflation. The fact that trimmed mean CPI has not followed the core measure lower during the past few months is further evidence that inflation may not fall much more from its current level (Chart 5, bottom panel). If inflation has indeed bottomed, then our recommendation to favor TIPS over nominal Treasuries looks very good. We calculate that the current 1-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate is 0.1%, slightly below trailing 12-month headline CPI inflation (Chart 5, panel 2). Along the nominal Treasury curve, we continue to recommend favoring the 5-year bullet over a duration-matched 2/10 barbell. This position will profit from continued 2/10 yield curve steepening (Chart 6). We also recommend steepeners along the real yield curve. The real 2/10 slope has already steepened a lot (Chart 6, bottom panel), but has more room to run given that the 2-year cost of inflation compensation remains well below the 10-year cost (Chart 6, panel 3). Chart 5Is The Trough In Inflation Already##br## Behind Us? Chart 6Keep Steepeners Along Both The Nominal And Real Yield Curves Bottom Line: There is no urgency for the Fed to provide more explicit forward rate guidance. The market has already taken on board the expectation that the funds rate will stay pinned at zero at least through the end of 2022. Investors should keep portfolio duration near benchmark but add tactical overlay positions: long TIPS versus nominal Treasuries, and steepeners along both the nominal and real yield curves. Securitized Products Update Take Some Non-Aaa Risk In Consumer ABS, But Not In CMBS Since the Fed rolled out its emergency lending facilities in late-March, our spread product strategy has been to favor sectors that offer attractive spreads and that benefit from Fed support. This has meant owning Aaa-rated consumer ABS and CMBS, which are eligible for the Fed’s Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF), and avoiding non-Aaa securitizations, which don’t qualify for Fed support. How has this worked out? Aaa-rated ABS and CMBS have both performed well since spreads peaked on March 23 (Chart 7). Within ABS, Aaa issues have beaten Treasuries by 390 bps since March 23 compared to 290 bps for non-Aaa securities. In CMBS, non-Aaa securities have lagged, losing 470 bps versus Treasuries since March 23 compared to gains of 810 bps for Aaa CMBS. As Chart 7 makes plain, no segments of either market have regained all of the ground that was lost during March’s blow-up. Chart 7Opportunities In Non-Aaa Consumer ABS, But Not In CMBS Going forward, we think it is wise to re-consider our strategy when it comes to consumer ABS. Specifically, we think investors should dip into non-Aaa ABS where we see potential for strong returns, even in the absence of Fed support. The reason for our optimism is that consumer credit losses will probably turn out to be significantly lower than many had feared in March. During the past two months, we learned that federal government stimulus actually caused real personal income to rise by 9% since February. Also, consumers have generally been able to keep up with their debt payments.4 According to data from TransUnion, the percentage of credit card and mortgage loans that are more than 30 days past due actually declined in April compared to March. For auto loans it only increased by 7 bps (Table 3). Further, the data show that households paid off significantly more of their credit card balances than usual in April, presumably because they received an influx of cash from the government but had fewer spending opportunities due to the quarantine. Table 3No Spike In Consumer Credit Delinquencies There remains a risk that Congress will delay passing further stimulus measures to keep consumers flush during the next few months. But we think enough stimulus will be delivered to prevent a significant default spike in credit cards and auto loans. Investors should add some exposure to non-Aaa consumer ABS. CMBS is a different story. The commercial real estate market is particularly challenged by the current environment. The office and retail sectors in particular were already facing structural headwinds from remote working and online shopping, respectively. The pandemic has accelerated the adoption of those trends. Not surprisingly, May’s CMBS delinquency rate saw its largest jump since 2017 and more delinquencies are certainly on the way (Chart 8). Chart 8Challenging Environment For CMBS Investors should continue to avoid non-Aaa CMBS. Continue To Avoid Agency MBS We have been advising an underweight allocation to Agency MBS because, even though the securities benefit from support through the Fed’s direct MBS purchases, value has been insufficiently attractive. That is starting to change. Agency MBS spreads widened considerably during the past month and are now very close to Aa-rated corporate bond spreads. They are also greater than Agency CMBS and Aaa ABS spreads (Chart 9). However, despite improving valuations, we remain concerned about risks in the MBS sector. Notice in the top 2 panels of Chart 9 that the MBS option-adjusted spread (OAS) has returned to 2012 levels, but the nominal spread (which is not adjusted for expected prepayment losses) remains quite low. This means that the prepayment loss assumption embedded in the current index OAS is much lower than it was in 2012. Is this reasonable? We estimate that 63% of the conventional 30-year MBS index is eligible for refinancing. In part, yes it is. Even with mortgage rates at all-time lows, we estimate that 63% of the conventional 30-year MBS index is eligible for refinancing. This is lower than what was seen in 2012 (Chart 10). However, we would also argue that mortgage rates have room to fall further Chart 9Agency MBS Spreads Have Widened Chart 10Prepayment Risk Is Elevated Despite having fallen to all-time lows, this year’s decline in the 30-year mortgage rate has been much smaller than what was seen in Treasury or MBS yields (Chart 10, bottom 3 panels). The 30-year mortgage rate could drop by another 50 bps and it would only restore typical primary and secondary mortgage spread levels. We estimate that a further 50 bps drop in the mortgage rate would increase the refinanceable share of the MBS index from 63% to 74% (horizontal dashed line in the second panel of Chart 10). This is below 2012 levels, but still leads us to the conclusion that the current index OAS understates the risk of prepayment losses. In summary, the Agency MBS OAS is starting to look more attractive but we are concerned that it embeds an overly optimistic prepayment loss assumption. Investors should maintain underweight allocations to Agency MBS. Bottom Line: We recommend that investors continue to overweight Aaa-rated consumer ABS and CMBS, as both sectors offer attractive spreads and benefit from TALF. Despite the lack of Fed support, adding some non-Aaa consumer ABS exposure also makes sense. Investors should continue to avoid Agency MBS, where value has improved but prepayment risk remains high. Appendix A: Buy What The Fed Is Buying The Fed rolled out a number of aggressive lending facilities on March 23. These facilities focused on different specific sectors of the US bond market. The fact that the Fed has decided to support some parts of the market and not others has caused some traditional bond market correlations to break down. It has also led us to adopt of a strategy of “Buy What The Fed Is Buying”. That is, we favor those sectors that offer attractive spreads and that benefit from Fed support. The below Table tracks the performance of different bond sectors since the March 23 announcement. We will use this to monitor bond market correlations and evaluate our strategy’s success. Table 4Performance Since March 23 Announcement Of Emergency Fed Facilities Footnotes 1 For more details on the Fed’s emergency lending facilities please see US Investment Strategy/US Bond Strategy Special Report, “Alphabet Soup: A Summary Of The Fed’s Anti-Virus Measures”, dated April 14, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see US Bond Strategy/Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, “Trading The US Corporate Bond Market In A Time Of Crisis”, dated March 31, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Assessing Healthcare & Pharma Bonds In A Pandemic”, dated June 9, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 For more details on the outlook for the US consumer please see US Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “So Far, So Good (How Markets Learned To Stop Worrying And Love Washington, DC)”, dated June 8, 2020, available at usis.bcaresearch.com Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Dear client, It was my pleasure to join Dhaval Joshi, BCA’s Chief European Investment Strategist, this past Friday June 12, 2020 on a webcast he hosted titled: “Sectors To Own, And Sectors To Avoid In The Post-Covid World”. You can access the replay of the lively webcast here, where Dhaval and I debate how investors should be positioned in different time horizons. I hope you will find it both insightful and informative. Kind Regards, Anastasios Highlights Portfolio Strategy While we cannot time the exact equity market top, our sense is that we are more than fairly valued at the current juncture and the equity market has entered a speculative phase; thus the risk/reward tradeoff is poor in the near-term. We are compelled to put the S&P home improvement retailers index (HIR) on our downgrade watch list and institute a stop at the 10% return mark in order to reflect softness in our HIR macro model, a hook down in existing home sales and a high profit growth bar that sell-side analysts have set for the coming year. Recent Changes Our rolling 10% stop got hit last Tuesday and we monetized 32% gains since the reinstatement of the long S&P oil & gas exploration & production / short global gold miners pair trade.1 Feature Equities briefly erased all losses for the year early last week, but the Fed’s June meeting lacked any additional easing measures and served as a catalyst for a much needed breather – the fifth 5.3-7.3% pullback since the March 23 bottom – as the week drew to a close. While extremely easy monetary and fiscal policies remain the key macro drivers for the SPX, any hiccups in passing a new fiscal spending bill once the money runs out on July 31, carry enough risk to short circuit the equity market’s momentum and result in a shakeout phase. Importantly, given the recent speculative overshoot in equities, the cyclical return potential has diminished, and that is cause for concern. The ongoing COVID-19 catalyzed recession that the NBER last week confirmed commenced in February, the “second wave” risk, a flare up in the US/Sino trade war and more recently, civil unrest have dominated the news flow. However in all this chaos, the November election has slowly moved into the background, especially the SPX return implications during the 4th year of a Presidency. Chart 1 shows the profile of the S&P 500 during Presidential Election calendar years, going back to the 1950s. The solid green line shows the historical mean, and shaded areas denote the 10th and 90th percentiles of SPX performance. If history rhymes, the average profile of these 17 iterations suggests that more cyclical gains are in store for the S&P 500. Chart 1Do Not Ignore… Nevertheless, before getting carried away, a word of caution is in order. As we highlighted last week, a Biden win represents a risk to the SPX’s euphoric rise from the March lows, and could serve as a catalyst for a much needed pullback (Chart 2).2 Thus, according to our analysis if the 90th percentile proves accurate, then the SPX could trace this lower bound and fall 640 points or 20% (Chart 1). This is a key tail risk to our cyclically sanguine equity market view. Chart 2…(Geo)Political Risks Turning over to the reopening of the economy, while the SPX has now discounted a near fully functioning economy for the rest of the year and beyond (bottom panel, Chart 3), fixed income investors are not in total agreement. In fact, the missing ingredient in giving the green light for equities is a selloff in the bond market, which financials/banks are currently sniffing out on the back of the reopening of the economy. Until fixed income investors get on the same page as equity investors, the SPX will remain on shaky ground (top panel, Chart 3). We first turned positive on the cyclical prospects of the equity market in mid-March3 and cemented our conviction in our March 23 report presenting 20 reasons to buy stocks.4 Since then, the SPX has rocketed higher by 1000 points and overshot our 3,000 SPX target that we recently derived from three methods.5 While we cannot time the exact top and equities may have a bit more upside, our sense is that today, stocks are more than fairly valued and they have entered a speculative phase (Chart 4). Thus the risk/reward tradeoff in the near-term has shifted to the downside. Once these (geo)political risks get appropriately repriced via a higher risk premium, then the broad equity market will resume its cyclical upside march. Chart 3Bond Market Is Not Buying Stock Market’s Euphoria Chart 4Lots Of Good News Is Priced In This week we update one consumer discretionary subgroup and put it on our downgrade watch list. Put Home Improvement Retailers On Downgrade Alert We are putting the S&P home improvement retailers index (HIR) on downgrade alert and setting a stop at the 10% return mark in order to protect handsome gains for our portfolio since the mid-April overweight inception. HIR have catapulted to all-time highs both in absolute terms and relative to the broad market. Granted, this has been an earnings-led propulsion (top panel, Chart 5), however, we are uneasy that HD is a top ten holding in the S&P growth index (middle panel, Chart 5).6 Importantly, the first print in the real GDP release for Q1/2020 in late-April made for grim reading, with one notable exception: real residential investment. Business capex took it to the chin, but housing related outlays spiked over 20% on a quarter-over-quarter annualized basis, and signal that DIY same-store retail sales will likely prove resilient this summer (bottom panel, Chart 6). Chart 5An Earnings-Led Advance… Chart 6…Buttressed By Resilient Residential Investment… As a reminder, these Big Box retailers are highly levered to the ebbs and flows of residential investment and the latest GDP print should sustain the recent bid under S&P HIR prices (top & middle panels, Chart 6). Tack on the roughly $75/tbf jump in lumber prices since the early-April trough (not shown), and profits benefit from a dual lift: rising volumes and firming selling prices. The DIY avalanche is real and not likely to dissipate any time soon as a consequence of the coronavirus-induced working from home pervasiveness. Yet, HIR has run too far too fast and is due for a consolidation phase. One yellow flag is the recent fall in existing home sales, despite the all-time lows in mortgage rates brought back by the Fed’s ZIRP. The middle panel of Chart 7 shows that if the home sales decline continues in the summer months, then HIR sales will face stiff headwinds as remodeling activity suffers a setback. In addition, in previous recessions the inventory of homes for sale has surged, but at the current juncture only a small jump in inventories is visible (inventories shown inverted, top panel, Chart 7). Were that trend to gain steam, it could put downward pressure to high-flying HIR equities. Chart 7…But Soft Home Sales Are An Issue… Chart 8…And The Tick Down In Our HIR Model Is A Yellow Flag The industry’s net earnings revision ratio has climbed to multi-year highs and warns that analyst optimism is excessive, which is contrarily negative (bottom panel, Chart 7). Our macro driven HIR model does an excellent job in encapsulating all the moving parts and its recent tick down is worrisome (Chart 8). Nevertheless, given that this has been a profit-led advance, HIR have a large valuation cushion. The relative forward P/E is trading near a market multiple and below the historical mean (bottom panel, Chart 5). Netting it all out, we are compelled to put the S&P HIR index on our downgrade watch list and institute a stop at the 10% return mark in order to reflect softness in our HIR macro model, a hook down in existing home sales and a high profit growth bar that sell-side analysts have set for the coming year (middle panel, Chart 5). Bottom Line: While we remain overweight the S&P HIR index it is now on downgrade alert. We also set a stop at the 10% return mark in order to protect profits for our portfolio. Stay tuned. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HOMI – HD, LOW. Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Insight Report, “Pocketing Gains In Oil/Gold Pair Trade” dated June 10, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Don’t Turn A Blind Eye To Geopolitical Risks” dated June 8, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Inflection Point” dated March 16, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “The Darkest Hour Is Just Before The Dawn” dated March 23, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “New SPX Target” dated April 20, 2020, and “Gauging Fair Value” dated April 27, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 6 https://us.spindices.com/indices/equity/sp-500-growth#data-constituents Current Recommendations Current Trades Strategic (10-Year) Trade Recommendations Size And Style Views June 3, 2019 Stay neutral cyclicals over defensives (downgrade alert) January 22, 2018 Favor value over growth April 28, 2020 Stay neutral large over small caps June 11, 2018 Long the BCA Millennial basket The ticker symbols are: (AAPL, AMZN, UBER, HD, LEN, MSFT, NFLX, SPOT, TSLA, V).