Fixed Income
In a webcast this Friday I will be joined by our Chief US Equity Strategist, Anastasios Avgeriou to debate ‘Sectors To Own, And Sectors To Avoid In The Post-Covid World’. Today’s report preludes five of the points that we will debate. Please join us for the full discussion and conclusions on Friday, June 12, at 8:00 AM EDT (1:00 PM BST, 2:00 PM CEST, 8.00 PM HKT). Highlights Technology is behaving like a Defensive. Defensive versus Cyclical = Growth versus Value. Growth stocks are not a bubble if bond yields stay ultra-low. The post-Covid world will reinforce existing sector mega-trends. Sectors are driving regional and country relative performance. Fractal trade: Long ZAR/CLP. Chart of the WeekSector Defensiveness/Cyclicality = Positive/Negative Sensitivity To The Bond Price 1. Technology Is Behaving Like A Defensive How do we judge an equity sector’s sensitivity to the post-Covid economy, so that we can define it as cyclical or defensive? One approach is to compare the sector’s relative performance with the bond price. According to this approach, the more negatively sensitive to the bond price, the more cyclical is the sector. And the more positively sensitive to the bond price, the more defensive is the sector (Chart I-1). On this basis the most cyclical sectors in the post-Covid economy are, unsurprisingly: energy, banks, and materials. Healthcare is unsurprisingly defensive. Meanwhile, the industrials sector sits closest to neutral between cyclical and defensive, showing the least sensitivity to the bond price. The tech sector’s vulnerability to economic cyclicality appears to have greatly reduced. The big surprise is technology, whose high positive sensitivity to the bond price during the 2020 crisis qualifies it as even more defensive than healthcare. This contrasts sharply with its behaviour during the 2008 crisis. Back then, tech’s relative performance was negatively correlated with the bond price, defining it as classically cyclical. But over the past year, tech’s relative performance has been positively correlated with the bond price, defining it as classically defensive (Chart I-2 and Chart I-3). Chart I-2In 2008, Tech Behaved Like ##br##A Cyclical... Chart I-3...But In 2020, Tech Is Behaving Like A Defensive This is not to say that the big tech companies cannot suffer shocks. They can. For example, from new superior technologies, or from anti-oligopoly legislation. However, the tech sector’s vulnerability to economic cyclicality appears to have greatly reduced over the past decade. 2. Defensive Versus Cyclical = Growth Versus Value If we reclassify the tech sector as defensive in the 2020s economy, then the post mid-March rebound in stocks was first led by defensives. Cyclicals took over leadership of the rally only in May. Moreover, with the reclassification of tech as defensive, the two dominant defensive sectors become tech and healthcare. But tech and healthcare are also the dominant ‘growth’ sectors. The upshot is that growth versus value has now become precisely the same decision as defensive versus cyclical (Chart I-4). Chart I-4Defensive Versus Cyclical = Growth Versus Value 3. Growth Stocks Are Not A Bubble If Bond Yields Stay Ultra-Low Some people fear that growth stocks have become dangerously overvalued. There is even mention of the B-word. Let’s address these fears. Yes, valuations have become richer. For example, the forward earnings yield for healthcare is down to 5 percent; and for big tech it is down to just over 4 percent. This valuation starting point has proved to be an excellent guide to prospective 10-year returns, and now implies an expected annualised return from big tech in the mid-single digits. Yet this modest positive return is well above the extremes of the negative 10-year returns implied and delivered from the dot com bubble (Chart I-5). Chart I-5Big Tech Is Priced To Deliver A Positive Return, Unlike In 2000 Moreover, we must judge the implied returns from growth stocks against those available from competing long-duration assets – specifically, against the benchmark of high-quality government bond yields. If bond yields are ultra-low, then they must depress the implied returns on growth stocks too. Meaning higher absolute valuations (Chart I-6 and Chart I-7). Chart I-6Tech's Forward Earnings Yield Is Above The Bond Yield, Unlike In 2000 Chart I-7Healthcare's Forward Earnings Yield Is Above The Bond Yield, Unlike In 2000 In the real bubble of 2000, big tech was priced to return 12 percent (per annum) less than the 10-year T-bond. Whereas today, the implied return from big tech – though low in absolute terms – is above the ultra-low yield on the 10-year T-bond. If bond yields are ultra-low, then they must depress the implied returns on growth stocks too. The upshot is that high absolute valuations of growth stocks are contingent on bond yields remaining at ultra-low levels. And that the biggest threat to growth stock valuations would be a sustained rise in bond yields. 4. The Post-Covid World Will Reinforce Existing Sector Mega-Trends If a sector maintains a structural uptrend in sales and profits, then a big drop in the share price provides an excellent buying opportunity for long-term investors. This is because the lower share price stretches the elastic between the price and the up-trending profits, resulting in an eventual catch-up. However, if sales and profits are in terminal decline, then the sell-off is not a buying opportunity other than on a tactical basis. This is because the elastic will lose its tension as profits drift down towards the lower price. In fact, despite the sell-off, if the profit downtrend continues, the price may be forced ultimately to catch-down. This leads to a somewhat counterintuitive conclusion. After a big drop in the stock market, long-term investors should not buy everything that has dropped. And they should not buy the stocks and sectors that have dropped the most if their profits are in major downtrends. In this regard, the post-Covid world is likely to reinforce the existing mega-trends. The profits of oil and gas, and of European banks will remain in major structural downtrends (Chart I-8 and Chart I-9). Conversely, the profits of healthcare, and of European personal products will remain in major structural uptrends (Chart I-10 and Chart I-11). Chart I-8Oil And Gas Profits In A Major ##br##Downtrend Chart I-9Bank Profits In A Major ##br##Downtrend Chart I-10Healthcare Profits In A Major Uptrend Chart I-11Personal Products Profits In A Major Uptrend 5. Sectors Are Driving Regional And Country Relative Performance Finally, sector winners and losers determine regional and country equity market winners and losers. Nowadays, a stock market’s relative performance is predominantly a play on its distinguishing overweight and underweight ‘sector fingerprint’. This is because major stock markets are dominated by multinational corporations which are plays on their global sectors, rather than the region or country in which they have a stock market listing. It follows that when tech and healthcare outperform, the tech-heavy and healthcare-heavy US stock market must outperform, while healthcare-lite emerging markets (EM) must underperform. It also follows that the tech-heavy Netherlands and healthcare-heavy Denmark stock markets must outperform. Sector mega-trends will shape the mega-trends in regional and country relative performance. Equally, when energy and banks underperform, the energy-heavy Norway and bank-heavy Spain stock markets must underperform. (Chart I-12 and Chart I-13). These are just a few examples. Every stock market is defined by a sector fingerprint which drives its relative performance. Chart I-12Sector Relative Performance Drives... Chart I-13...Regional And Country Relative Performance If sector mega-trends continue, they will also shape the mega-trends in regional and country relative performance – favouring those stock markets that are heavy in growth stocks and light in old-fashioned cyclicals. Please join the webcast to hear the full debate and conclusions. Fractal Trading System* This week’s recommended trade is to go long the South African rand versus the Chilean peso. Set the profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 5 percent. In other trades, long Spanish 10-year bonds versus New Zealand 10-year bonds achieved its 3.5 percent profit target at which it was closed. And long Australia versus New Zealand equities is approaching its 12 percent profit target. The rolling 1-year win ratio now stands at 63 percent. Chart I-14ZAR/CLP 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. 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 Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
BCA Research's Global Fixed Income Strategy service sees five main reasons why global bond yields are moving higher. 1) Investor risk aversion is declining There has been a sharp recovery in global risk appetite since late March, diminishing the demand…
Highlights Rising Bond Yields: Global risk assets are discounting a V-shaped economic recovery. With economic data starting to revive as more economies emerge from virus-related shutdowns, bond yields are showing signs of following suit. Duration Strategy: Even with global yields showing signs of a cyclical bottom, we continue to recommend a neutral duration stance. Central banks will remain highly accommodative given the lack of inflationary pressures after the deep COVID-19 recessions. There are still significant risks in the coming months from a potential second wave of coronavirus after economies reopen, worsening US-China relations and domestic US sociopolitical turmoil. Duration Proxy Trades: Given those lingering uncertainties, we prefer to focus on “duration-lite” trades in the developed economies, like overweighting inflation-linked government bonds versus nominals as inflation expectations will drift higher over the next 6-12 months. Feature Dear Client, Next week, instead of publishing a regular Weekly Report, we will hold a webcast on Tuesday, June 16 at 10:00 am ET, discussing our latest views on global fixed income markets. The format will be a short presentation, followed by a Q&A session. We hope you will join us, armed with interesting questions. Kind regards, Rob Robis, Chief Fixed Income Strategist Chart of the WeekBond Yields Bottoming, But Backdrop Not Yet Bearish Bond yields around the world awoke from their COVID-19 induced slumber last week, responding to a growing body of evidence indicating that global growth has bottomed. Over a span of four days, benchmark 10-year government bond yields rose in the US (+20bps), Germany (+13bps), Canada (+20bps), China (+14bps), Japan (+4bps), Mexico (+13bps) and the UK (+12bps). There is potential for yields to continue drifting higher over the next few months, as more countries reopen from virus-related shutdowns. The bounce already seen in survey data like manufacturing and services PMIs, as well as economic sentiment measures like the global ZEW index, should soon translate into real improvements in activity data. This comes at a time when rising commodity prices, most notably oil, suggest that depressed inflation expectations can lead bond yields higher. The cyclical bottom for global yields has likely passed, based on the improvement already seen in our own Global Duration Indicator (Chart of the Week). However, economic policy uncertainty remains elevated as devastated economies try to reopen from lockdowns. In addition, our Central Bank Monitors continue to indicate pressure on policymakers to keep interest rates as low as possible to maintain easy financial conditions as easy as possible. Tighter monetary policies remain a distant prospect, given very high unemployment rates. The cyclical bottom for global yields has likely passed, based on the improvement already seen in our own Global Duration Indicator. Amid those uncertainties, we recommend maintaining a neutral strategic (6-12 months) and tactical (0-6 months) stance on overall duration exposure in fixed income portfolios. Instead, we prefer focusing on lower volatility trades that will benefit from improving global growth and policy reflation, like going long inflation-linked bonds versus nominal government debt throughout the developed markets with breakevens looking too low on our models. Why Are Bond Yields Rising Now? We see five main reasons why global bond yields have started to move higher: 1) Investor risk aversion is declining There has been a sharp recovery in global risk appetite since late March, diminishing the demand for risk-free global government debt. In the US, the S&P 500 is up 43% from its March lows, while the NASDAQ index is back to the all-time highs reached before the coronavirus turned into a global pandemic (Chart 2). US corporate debt has also performed well since the March 23rd peak in spreads, with investment grade and high-yield spreads down -227bps and -564bps, respectively. Non-US assets are also flying, with emerging market (EM) equities up 29% and EM USD-denominated corporate debt up 14% in excess return terms over US Treasuries since the March trough. Even severely lagging assets like European bank stocks are showing a pulse, up 38% since the lows of May 15. Commodity prices are also improving, led not only by gains in oil after the April crash by recoveries in the prices of growth-sensitive commodities like copper (+17%) and lumber (+42%). Add it all up, and the message is clear: investors now prefer risk to safety, which has tempered the demand for government bonds. The flipside of the boom in risk appetite is weakening prices for safe haven assets (Chart 3). The price of gold in US dollar terms is down -4% from the 2020 high on May 20, while the euro price of gold is down –6%. Safe haven currencies like the Japanese yen and Swiss franc have underperformed, while interest rate volatility measures like the US MOVE index and long-dated euro swaption volatility are back to the pre-coronavirus lows. Chart 2Risk Assets Are Booming Worldwide Chart 3Safe Haven Trades Losing Luster Add it all up, and the message is clear: investors now prefer risk to safety, which has tempered the demand for government bonds that helped drive yields lower when risk assets were tanking in late February and March. 2) Global growth is improving One of the reasons for the improvement in investor risk appetite is belief that the world economy has exited from the severe COVID-19 global recession. While timely real data is still coming in slowly given reporting lags, there has been a notable bounce in survey data in many countries. PMIs for both manufacturing and services climbed higher in May (Chart 4). The expectations components of economic confidence measures like the ZEW indices have also recovered the losses seen in February and March. Data surprises have also been increasingly on the positive side of late in China, Europe and the US, including the shocking 2.5 million increase in US employment in May. However, the US unemployment rate remains very high at 13.3%, indicating abundant spare capacity that will likely take years, not months, to work off – a problem that most of the world will continue to deal with post-recession. 3) Central bank liquidity is booming The other main reason for the boom in risk asset performance that has started to put upward pressure on bond yields is the extremely accommodative stance of global monetary policy. This is occurring through 0% policy rates in the developed economies but, even more importantly, the aggressive expansion of central bank balance sheets through quantitative easing (QE). The Fed has its foot firmly on the monetary accelerator, with year-over-year growth in its balance sheet of 87% (Chart 5). The European Central Bank (ECB) is no slouch, though, with its balance sheet up 19% from a year ago and having expanded its Pandemic Emergency Purchase Program (PEPP) by another €600 billion last week. Chart 4Signs Of Life In The Global Economy Chart 5'QE Forever' Driving Money From Bonds To Risk Assets The combined annual growth of the central bank balance sheets for the “G4” (the Fed, ECB, Bank of Japan and Bank of England) is now up to 26%. The rate of G4 balance sheet expansion has been a reliable leading indicator of global risk asset performance since the 2008 financial crisis (with about a 12-month lead), and the current boom in “liquidity” suggests that the current rise in global equity and corporate bond markets can continue over the next year. Easing global financial conditions are now returning to levels that should support economic growth in the coming months, helping to mitigate (but not eliminate) the potential credit stresses from companies that have suffered during the COVID-19 recession. This recovery remains fragile, however, and policymakers will continue to maintain an extremely dovish policy bias – even with significant fiscal stimulus measures also in place to help economies climb out of recession. This suggests that the current rise in global bond yields is not the start of a new bond bear market driven by expectations of tighter monetary policies. The current rise in global bond yields is not the start of a new bond bear market driven by expectations of tighter monetary policies. Chart 6Global Bond Sentiment Is Still Very Bullish 4) Bullish sentiment for bonds is at extremes From a contrarian perspective, another factor helping put a floor underneath bond yields is investor sentiment towards fixed income, which remains bullish. The widely followed ZEW survey of economic forecasters also contains a question on the expected change in bond yields over the next year. The latest read on the surveys shows a net balance still expecting lower bond yields in the US, Germany, the UK and Japan, nearing levels seen prior to the end of the recessionary bond bull markets in the early 2000s and after the 2008 financial crisis (Chart 6). In addition, the Market Vane survey of bullish sentiment on US Treasuries is nearing past cyclical peaks, suggesting limited scope for new bond buyers that could drive US yields to new lows. 5) Inflation expectations are moving higher Finally, global yields are rising because the inflation expectations component of yields has started to move higher. The hyper-easy stance of monetary policy is playing a role here. Market-based inflation expectations measures like the breakevens on inflation-linked bonds (or CPI swap rates) are a vote of confidence by investors in the “appropriateness” of policy settings. The fact that inflation expectations are now drifting higher suggests that bond markets now believe that central banks are now "easy" enough to give inflation a shot at rising sustainably as growth recovers. Global yields are rising because the inflation expectations component of yields has started to move higher. Chart 7Oil Prices & Breakeven Inflation Rates Are Both Recovering This move higher in inflation expectations can continue in the coming months, particularly with global oil prices likely to move even higher. Our colleagues at BCA Research Commodity & Energy Strategy are quite bullish on oil prices, forecasting the benchmark Brent oil price to rise to around $50/bbl by the end of 2020 and continuing up to $78/bbl by the end of 2021. Such an outcome would push up market-based inflation expectations, and likely put more upward pressure on nominal bond yields, given the strong correlation between oil and inflation breakevens in the developed economies that has existed over the past decade (Chart 7). Bottom Line: Global risk assets are discounting a V-shaped economic recovery. With economic data starting to revive as more economies emerge from virus-related shutdowns, bond yields are showing signs of following suit. Duration Strategy For The Next Few Months The trends in growth, inflation and financial conditions all suggest bond yields can continue to drift higher over at least the next 3-6 months. Yet given the potential for a negative shock from a second wave of coronavirus infection, or geopolitical uncertainties in a volatile US election year, a below-benchmark global duration stance is not yet warranted. This is especially true with unemployment rates in most countries remaining elevated even as growth rebounds from recession, forcing central banks to maintain a very dovish policy posture. Our “Risk Checklist” that we have been monitoring to move to a more aggressive recommended investment stance on global spread product – the US dollar, the VIX and the number of new COVID-19 cases - can also be helpful in helping us determine when to shift to a more defensive bias on global duration. On that note, the Checklist still argues for a neutral duration stance, rather than positioning for a big move higher in yields. The US dollar has started to soften, but remains at a very high level relative to interest rate differentials (Chart 8). A weaker greenback is a source of global monetary reflation, primarily through changes in the prices of commodities and other traded goods that are denominated in dollars, but also by helping alleviate funding pressures for companies that have borrowed heavily in US dollars (especially in the emerging world). The dollar is also an “anti-growth” currency that appreciates during periods of slowing global growth, and vice versa, so some depreciation should unfold as more of the world economy emerges from lockdown (middle panel). The VIX index – a measure of investor uncertainty - continues to climb down from the massive surge in February and March, now sitting at 26 after peaking around 80. This is the one part of our Risk Checklist that argues for reducing duration exposure now. We prefer trades that will benefit from the combination of continued global policy reflation and growing investor risk appetite. We call these “duration-lite” trades. The daily number of new reported cases of COVID-19 (using data from the World Health Organization) has come down dramatically in Europe, but in the US the decline in new cases has stalled over the past month – a worrisome sign as the country continues to reopen amid mass protests in major cities (Chart 9). New cases outside the US and Europe are rapidly moving higher, however, primarily in major Latin American countries like Brazil and Mexico. This suggests that while there is a concern about a “second wave” of coronavirus later in the year, the risks from the first wave are far from over. Chart 8Still Not Much Reflationary Push From A Weaker USD Chart 9The COVID-19 Threat Has Not Gone Away Instead of shifting to a below-benchmark recommended stance on overall portfolio duration too soon in the cycle, we prefer trades that will benefit from the combination of continued global policy reflation and growing investor risk appetite. We call these “duration-lite” trades. Specifically, we like owning inflation-linked government bonds versus nominal debt, while also positioning for steeper government yield curves (on a duration-neutral basis). Longer-dated breakeven inflation rates within the major developed markets are becoming increasingly correlated to both the level of 10-year government bond yields (Chart 10) and the slope of the 2-year/10-year yield curve (Chart 11). Chart 10Rising Inflation Expectations Will Lead To Higher Bond Yields ... Chart 11... And Steeper Yield Curves In terms of country selection for these trades, we look to the valuations on inflation-linked bond breakevens from our modeling framework that we introduced back in late April.1 In that framework, we model 10-year breakevens as a function of oil prices, exchange rates and the long-run trend in realized inflation. Chart 12Global Inflation Breakevens Look Cheap On Our Models In Chart 12, we show the deviation of 10-year inflation breakevens from the model-implied fair value, shown both terms of standard deviations and basis points. The “cheapest” breakevens from our models are for inflation-linked bonds in Italy and Canada, although almost all counties (outside of the UK) have breakevens to look far too low. This suggests that global bond investors should consider a multi-country portfolio of inflation-linked bonds versus nominal paying equivalents – or in countries where the inflation-linked bond markets are small and illiquid, duration-neutral yield curve steepeners - as a more efficient way to play for a continuation of the current reflationary global backdrop without taking duration risk. Bottom Line: Even with global yields showing signs of a cyclical bottom, we continue to recommend a neutral duration stance. Given the lingering uncertainties about a second wave of coronavirus, and the rising political and social tensions in the US only five months before the presidential election, we prefer to focus on “duration-lite” trades in the developed economies - like overweighting inflation-linked government bonds versus nominals as inflation expectations will drift higher over the next 6-12 months. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Global Inflation Expectations Are Now Too Low", dated April 28, 2020, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Duration: Investors should keep portfolio duration close to benchmark, but continue to hold yield curve steepeners (on both the nominal and real yield curves) as well as overweight TIPS positions versus nominal Treasuries. These tactical trades will profit from higher Treasury yields in the near-term. Healthcare: We recommend an overweight allocation to investment grade Healthcare bonds relative to the overall investment grade corporate index. But we also recommend an underweight allocation to high-yield Healthcare relative to the high-yield corporate index. Pharmaceuticals: Investors should underweight Pharmaceutical bonds in both the investment grade and high-yield credit universes. How Much Higher For Bond Yields? Two weeks ago, we warned that bonds would struggle in the near-term as the re-opening of the US economy led to an improvement in economic data.1 However, we definitely didn’t anticipate the magnitude of the positive data surprise that has occurred since then. The US Economic Surprise Index was -55 one week ago and today it sits at +66 (Chart 1)! The bulk of that jump occurred after Friday’s employment report revealed that 2.5 million jobs were added in May when Bloomberg’s consensus estimate had called for a contraction of 7.5 million. Against this back-drop, it shouldn’t be too surprising that bond yields jumped sharply. The 30-year Treasury yield rose 27 bps last week to 1.68% and the 10-year yield rose 26 bps to 0.91% (Chart 2). The 2-year yield rose a more modest 6 bps to 0.22%, as the Fed maintains its tight grip on the front-end of the curve. Chart 1Back In Business Chart 2Yields Have Room To Move Higher For investors, the first relevant question is: How high can yields go? Our view is that if last week does indeed represent the cyclical economic trough, then forward rates at the long-end of the curve will revert to levels consistent with market expectations for the long-run neutral fed funds rate. The median estimate of that rate from the New York Fed’s most recent Survey of Market Participants is 2%, but with an unusually wide interquartile range of 1.3% to 2.5% (Chart 2, bottom panel). At the very least, we’d expect the 10-year and 30-year Treasury yields to re-test their respective 200-day moving averages of 1.38% and 1.91%, respectively. However, we are not ready to declare last week the economic trough for three reasons: First, we cannot rule out a re-acceleration in the number of confirmed COVID cases as the economy re-opens. This could lead to the re-imposition of lockdown measures come fall. Second, last week’s positive economic data might cause some members of Congress to question the need for further fiscal stimulus. This would be a mistake. In last week’s report we showed that fiscal measures have done a good job propping up household income so far, but these measures are temporary and will need to be renewed.2 Even after last week’s large drop, the unemployment rate is still 3.3% above its Great Recession peak (Chart 1, bottom panel). This is by no means a fully healed economy that can withstand policymakers taking their feet off the gas. Even after last week’s large drop, the unemployment rate is still 3.3% above its Great Recession peak. Finally, US political risks are heightened with anti-police protests occurring daily in most major cities. Added to that, President Trump is now the underdog heading into November’s election and he will need to develop a reelection bid that doesn’t hinge on the economy. Our geopolitical strategists think a doubling down on “America First” foreign and trade policies makes the most sense.3 A significant move in that direction would certainly send a flight to quality into US bonds. Investment Strategy As we advised two weeks ago, nimble investors should tactically reduce duration as yields still have more upside in the next month or two. However, we are not yet sufficiently confident in the sustainability of the economic rebound to recommend reducing portfolio duration on a 6-12 month horizon. Rather, we continue to recommend keeping portfolio duration close to benchmark while holding several less risky positions that will profit from higher yields. Specifically, investors should hold duration-neutral curve steepeners along the nominal Treasury curve. We advise going long the 5-year note and short a 2/10 barbell.4 We also like holding TIPS over nominal Treasuries and positioning for a steeper real Treasury curve.5 In terms of spread product, we also recommend staying the course. This entails overweighting corporate bonds rated Ba and higher, Aaa consumer ABS, Aaa CMBS (both agency and non-agency) and municipal bonds, while avoiding corporate bonds rated B and below and residential mortgage-backed securities. Appendix A at the end of this report shows how these positions have performed since the March 23 peak in spreads. The remainder of this report focuses on the Healthcare and Pharmaceutical sectors of both the investment grade and high-yield corporate bond markets. Investment Grade Healthcare & Pharma Risk Profile When assessing the risk profiles for investment grade-rated Healthcare and Pharmaceutical bonds, we first consider the credit rating distributions of both sectors relative to the overall Bloomberg Barclays corporate index (Chart 3). Chart 3Investment Grade Credit Rating Distribution* Immediately, we see that the Healthcare sector has a lower credit rating than the benchmark: 71% of the Healthcare index is rated Baa, compared to 48% for the corporate index. Meanwhile, the Pharmaceuticals sector has slightly higher credit quality than the corporate benchmark: 12% of the Pharmaceuticals index is rated Aa or Aaa, compared to 8% for the corporate index. Credit rating alone suggests that Healthcare should trade cyclically relative to the corporate index. That is, it should outperform during periods of spread tightening and underperform during periods of spread widening. However, this turns out to not be the case. Chart 4 shows that healthcare has outperformed the corporate benchmark during each of the last five major bouts of spread widening and underperformed during periods of spread tightening. Clearly, despite its low credit rating, Healthcare trades like a defensive corporate bond sector. Healthcare’s historically defensive nature is confirmed by its duration-times-spread (DTS) ratio, which has tended to be below 1.0 (Chart 4, top panel).6 Though recently, the DTS ratio climbed above 1.0 due to a lengthening of the sector’s duration (Chart 4, bottom panel). This suggests that Healthcare, while historically defensive, might trade more cyclically during the next 12 months. Neither the Healthcare nor Pharmaceuticals sectors offer a spread advantage over the corporate index. Pharmaceuticals, on the other hand, are a much more cut and dry defensive sector (Chart 5). The DTS ratio is almost always below 1.0 and the sector has a strong track record of outperforming the corporate index during periods of spread widening (Chart 5, panels 2 & 3) Chart 4IG Healthcare Risk Profile Chart 5IG Pharma Risk Profile Valuation Turning to valuation, we find that neither sector offers a spread advantage compared to the corporate index or its comparable credit tier (Table 1). This is true whether we look at the raw option-adjusted spread or if we control for duration differences by looking at the 12-month breakeven spread.7 It is interesting to note that the Healthcare index offers a spread advantage compared to the A-rated corporate index. On the one hand, this is not surprising because the Healthcare index carries an average Baa rating. On the other hand, we have seen that Healthcare tends to trade more defensively than its average credit rating implies. This arguably makes its spread advantage over A-rated debt somewhat compelling. Table 1IG Healthcare & Pharma Valuation Balance Sheet Health Both the Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals sectors loaded up on debt during the last recovery. The amount of Healthcare debt in the corporate index grew 8.8 times since 2010. Meanwhile, total debt in the corporate index grew 2.4 times. The result is that Healthcare’s weight in the corporate index increased from 1.1% in 2010 to 4.3% today (Chart 6). The Pharma sector also increased its debt load at a faster pace than the overall corporate universe since 2010 (3.2 times versus 2.4 times), but the boom in Pharma debt has been much milder than in Healthcare. The weight of Pharmaceuticals in the corporate index increased from 4.1% in 2010 to 5.5% today (Chart 7). Chart 6IG Healthcare Debt Growth Chart 7IG Pharma Debt Growth Despite rapid debt growth during the past few years, credit quality in both the Healthcare and Pharma sectors appears quite solid. Appendix B lists the issuers in the Healthcare index, grouping them by credit tier and indicating whether they carry a positive, stable or negative ratings outlook from Moody’s. Of the 56 issuers in the Healthcare index, only six currently have a negative ratings outlook. The two largest issuers in the Healthcare index are Cigna and CVS Health. Both carry Baa ratings, but Moody’s just confirmed Cigna’s ratings outlook at stable in mid-May. CVS Health, on the other hand, has carried a negative ratings outlook since 2018. Appendix C lists issuers in the Pharmaceuticals index. Of the 17 issuers, only four carry a negative ratings outlook. None of the Baa-rated Pharmaceutical issuers currently has a negative ratings outlook. The two biggest issuers in the index are Bristol-Myers Squibb and Abbvie. Bristol-Myers Squibb is A-rated with a negative outlook, while Abbvie is Baa-rated with a stable outlook. Macro Considerations In a typical demand-driven recession, consumers tend to prioritize healthcare spending while they cut back on more discretionary outlays. This dynamic is probably what causes healthcare bonds to trade defensively relative to the overall corporate index. However, the unique nature of the COVID recession has thrown this traditional pattern into reverse. Consumer spending on health care services is down 40% since February while overall consumer spending is 19% lower (Chart 8). Oddly, healthcare bonds shrugged off this year’s massive drop in spending and continued to behave defensively – outperforming the corporate index when spreads widened and underperforming since the March 23 peak in spreads. Despite the plunge in spending, pricing power in the health care industry remains strong. Health care services prices continue to accelerate even as overall inflation has dropped sharply (Chart 8, bottom panel). Unlike healthcare, pharmaceutical spending has held firm during the past couple of months (Chart 9). Consumer spending on pharmaceuticals is only down 4% since February, while overall consumer spending is down 19%. But despite firm spending, medicinal drug prices have decelerated in concert with the overall headline CPI (Chart 9, bottom panel). Chart 8Healthcare Demand & Pricing Power Chart 9Pharmaceutical Demand & Pricing Power Investment Conclusions Putting everything together, we are inclined to recommend an underweight allocation to Pharmaceuticals and an overweight allocation to investment grade Healthcare. Pharmaceuticals are simply too expensive and too defensive for the current environment. Given our positive outlook on investment grade corporate bonds, we should target cyclical sectors with elevated spreads that have more room to compress. Healthcare is slightly more interesting. It has behaved like a typical defensive sector so far this year, but there are some indications that it is becoming more cyclical. The DTS ratio recently shot above 1.0 and consumer spending on healthcare services is poised for a rapid snapback. In terms of valuation, healthcare is expensive relative to other Baa-rated bonds but cheap versus the A-rated universe. This would seem to make healthcare a good risk-adjusted bet. Even if the sector continues to behave defensively, its spread advantage over A-rated bonds makes it an attractively priced defensive sector. High-Yield Healthcare & Pharma Risk Profile Considering the risk profile of high-yield Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals, we first notice that both sectors have significantly lower credit ratings than the overall junk index (Chart 10). Ba-rated credits account for 29% and 24% of the Healthcare and Pharma indexes, respectively, compared to 54% for the High-Yield index as a whole. Chart 10High-Yield Credit Rating Distribution* The fact that significant portions of the Healthcare and Pharmaceutical indexes are rated B and lower immediately raises alarm bells. This is because we do not expect that many B-rated or lower issuers will be able to take advantage of the Fed’s Main Street Lending Program. This lack of Fed support for the lower-rated junk tiers has led us to recommend underweighting junk bonds rated B & below.8 High-yield Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals sectors have significantly lower credit ratings than the overall junk index. Interestingly, despite low credit ratings, a look at both sectors’ DTS ratios and historical excess returns reveals that they tend to trade defensively relative to the high-yield benchmark index. Healthcare outperformed the high-yield index by 473 bps from the beginning of the year until the March 23 peak in spreads and has underperformed the index by 123 bps since (Chart 11). Similarly, Pharmaceuticals outperformed the junk index by 670 bps from the beginning of the year until March 23 and have since underperformed by 136 bps (Chart 12). Chart 11HY Healthcare Risk Profile Chart 12HY Pharma Risk Profile Valuation Turning to spreads, we would characterize both high-yield Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals as expensive (Table 2). Despite both sectors carrying average credit ratings of B, they offer spreads that are below both the overall junk index average and the average for other B-rated credits. Tight option-adjusted spreads are at least partially attributable to low average duration for both sectors. If we adjust for duration differences by looking at 12-month breakeven spreads, we see that Pharmaceuticals look somewhat cheap versus other B-rated credits while Healthcare remains expensive. Table 2HY Healthcare & Pharma Valuation Balance Sheet Health Healthcare debt has grown less quickly than overall high-yield index debt since 2010 (Chart 13). Healthcare debt has grown 1.7 times since 2010 while the overall index has grown 1.8 times. This has caused Healthcare’s weight in the index to fall from 6.2% to 5.7%. In contrast, the high-yield Pharmaceuticals sector has grown rapidly during the past decade (Chart 14). Pharma debt has increased 10.3 times since 2010 compared to 1.8 times for the overall index. This has brought the sector’s weight in the index up to 2.3% from 0.4% Chart 13HY Healthcare Debt Growth Chart 14HY Pharma Debt Growth Looking beyond debt growth, in the current environment we are mostly concerned with the number of issuers in each index that will be able to access Fed support through the Main Street Lending facilities. In this regard, neither sector fares particularly well. Appendix D lists all high-yield Healthcare issuers along with their ratings outlooks, number of employees, 2019 revenues and total debt-to-EBITDA ratios. To qualify for the Fed’s Main Street Lending facilities, issuers must have either less than 15000 employees or less than $5 billion in 2019 revenues. Additionally, they must be able to keep their Debt-to-EBITDA ratios below 6.0. We estimate that all but three of the Ba-rated Healthcare issuers are eligible for the Main Street program, but only one of the B-rated issuers is eligible. High-yield Pharmaceuticals issuers are listed in Appendix E. Here, we once again find that only one of the B-rated issuers is likely to qualify for the Main Street lending facilities. Of the two Ba-rated issuers, one is likely to qualify. The other is Bausch Health, a Canadian firm that is by far the largest issuer in the Pharma index. It would need to turn to the Canadian authorities for help in an emergency lending situation. Investment Conclusions We recommend underweight allocations to both the high-yield Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals sectors. In the current environment we prefer to focus our high-yield credit exposure on the Ba-rated credit tier where issuers are more likely to have access to Fed support. The large concentration of B-rated and lower issuers in both the Healthcare and Pharma sectors, along with their generally expensive valuations, makes us wary about both sectors. 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 Healthcare Issuers Appendix C Table 5Investment Grade Pharmaceuticals Issuers Appendix D Table 6High-Yield Healthcare Issuers Appendix E Table 7High-Yield Pharmaceuticals Issuers Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@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 Please see US Bond Strategy Portfolio Allocation Summary, “Filling The Income Gap”, dated June 2, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, “Spheres Of Influence (GeoRisk Update)”, dated May 29, 2020, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 4 For more details on this recommended yield curve position please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Life At The Zero Bound”, dated March 24, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 For more details on these recommendations 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 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. 7 The 12-month breakeven spread represents the spread widening that must occur for a sector to underperform a duration-matched position in Treasury securities during the next 12 months. It can be proxied by option-adjusted spread divided by duration. 8 For more details 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 Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
A common refrain is that equities have moved fast ahead of any reasonable expectation of the speed of the recovery. At first glance, this argument is compelling, but the reality is more complex. The stock-to-bond ratio is pricing in a quick recovery from…
Highlights Social distancing must persist to prevent dangerous super-spreading of COVID-19. The jobs recovery will be much weaker than the output recovery, because the sectors most hurt by social distancing have a very high labour intensity. This will force a prolonged period of ultra-accommodative monetary policy… …structurally favour T-bonds and Bonos over Bunds and OATs… …growth defensives such as tech and healthcare… …and the S&P 500 over the Euro Stoxx 50. Stay overweight Animal Care (PAWZ). Working from home has generated a puppy boom. Fractal trade: short gold, long lead. Feature As economies reopen, economists and strategists are quibbling about the shape of the output recovery: U, V, W, square root, or even ‘swoosh’. But for the furloughed or displaced worker, the more urgent question is, what will be the shape of the jobs recovery? Unfortunately, the jobs recovery will be much weaker than the output recovery – because the sectors most hurt by social distancing have a very high labour intensity (Chart Of The Week). Chart Of The Week 1ALeisure And Hospitality Makes A Large Contribution To Jobs Relative To Output Chart Of The Week 1BFinance Makes A Small Contribution To Jobs Relative To Output Output Might Snap Back, But Jobs Will Not The sectors most hurt by social distancing make a huge contribution to employment but a much smaller contribution to economic output. This is true for Europe and all advanced economies, though the following uses US data given its superior granularity and timeliness. The leisure and hospitality sector generates 11 percent of jobs, but just 4 percent of output. Retail trade generates 10 percent of jobs, but just 5 percent of output. It follows that if both sectors are operating at half their pre-coronavirus capacity, output will be down by 4.5 percent, but employment will collapse by 10.5 percent. Conversely, sectors which are relatively unaffected by social distancing make a small contribution to employment but a much bigger contribution to economic output. Financial activities generate just 6 percent of jobs, but 19 percent of economic output. Information technology generates just 2 percent of jobs, but 5 percent of output (Table I-1). Table I-1Sectors Hurt By Social Distancing Have A Very High Labour Intensity If economies are reopened but social distancing persists – either via government policy or personal choice – then output can rebound in a V-shape, but employment cannot (Chart I-2). Forcing a prolonged period of ultra-accommodative monetary policy, with all its ramifications for financial markets. Chart I-2UK Unemployment Is Set To Surge If The US Is Any Guide This raises a key question. Must social distancing persist? To answer, we need to pull together our latest understanding of COVID-19. COVID-19: What We Know So Far Many people argue that coronavirus fears are disproportionate. The mortality rate seems comfortingly low, at well below 0.5 percent (Chart 3). Yet this argument misses the point. Chart I-3The COVID-19 Mortality Rate Is Not High COVID-19 is dangerous not because it kills, but because it makes a lot of people seriously ill. It has a low mortality rate, but a high morbidity rate. According to the World Health Organisation, around one in six that gets infected “develops difficulty in breathing”. Moreover, The Lancet points out that many recovered COVID-19 patients suffer pulmonary fibrosis, a permanent scarring of the lungs that impairs their breathing for the rest of their lives. Hence, while COVID-19 is highly unlikely to kill you, it could damage your health forever1 (Figure I-1). Figure 1COVID-19 Is Unlikely To Kill You, But It Could Permanently Damage Your Lungs The most famous COVID-19 victim to date is British Prime Minister Boris Johnson who spent several days recovering in intensive care. By his own admission, Johnson’s only pre-existing conditions are that he is overweight and “drinks an awful lot”. But those pre-existing conditions could apply to a large swathe of the population. COVID-19 is virulent. But we now know that most infections are the result of so-called ‘super-spreaders’ – a small minority of virus carriers who infect tens or hundreds of other people. We also know that talking loudly, singing, or chanting tends to eject higher doses of the virus, and in an aerosol form that can linger in enclosed spaces. This creates the perfect conditions for one infected person to infect scores of others very quickly. Based on this latest knowledge, the good news is that economies can reopen. The bad news is that, until an effective vaccine is developed, social distancing must persist. Specifically, people must avoid forming the crowds, congregations, and loud gatherings that can generate very dangerous super-spreading events. Hence, the sectors that are most hurt by social distancing – leisure and hospitality and retail trade – will continue to operate well below capacity for many months, at a minimum. And as these sectors have a very high labour intensity, there will be no V-shape recovery in jobs. Without Higher Bond Yields, European Equities Struggle To Outperform Social distancing is set to persist, which will create heaps of slack in advanced economy labour markets. This will force central banks to push the monetary easing ‘pedal to the metal’ – though in many cases, the pedal is already at the metal. In turn, this will force bond yields to stay ultra-low and, where they can, go even lower. One immediate takeaway is to stay overweight positively yielding US T-bonds and Spanish Bonos versus negatively yielding German Bunds and French OATs. Depressed bond yields must also compress the discount rate on competing long-duration investments that generate safely growing cashflows. Meaning, growth defensive equities such as technology and healthcare. Now comes the part that is conceptually difficult to grasp because it is novel to this unprecedented era of ultra-low bond yields. Take some time to absorb the following few paragraphs. For growth defensives, both components of the discount rate – the bond yield and the equity risk premium (ERP) – compress together. This is because the ERP is a tight function of the difference in equity and bond price ‘negative asymmetries’, defined as the potential price downside versus upside. When bond yields converge to their lower limit, bond prices converge to their upper limit, which increases the potential price downside versus upside. The result is that the difference in equity and bond negative asymmetries converges to zero, forcing the ERP to converge to zero. As the discount rate on growth defensives such as tech and healthcare collapses towards zero, the net present value must increase exponentially. This exponentially higher valuation of tech and healthcare is a mathematical consequence of the novel risk relationship between growth defensive equities and bonds at ultra-low bond yields. The unprecedented phenomenon has a major implication for European equity relative performance. The Euro Stoxx 50 is heavily underweight technology and healthcare, and this defining sector fingerprint is the key structural driver of European equity market relative performance (Chart I-4). Meanwhile, the relative performance of technology and healthcare is just an inverse exponential function of the bond yield (Chart I-5). The upshot is that European equities tend to outperform other regions only when bond yields are heading higher and the growth defensives are underperforming (Chart I-6). Chart I-4The Euro Stoxx 50's Underweight In Tech Drives Its Relative Performance Chart I-5Tech Outperforms When The Bond Yield Declines... Chart I-6...Hence, Without Higher Bond Yields The Euro Stoxx 50 Struggles To Outperform Some commentators are calling the higher valuations in tech and healthcare a new bubble. But it is a bubble only to the extent that bond yields are in a ‘negative bubble’, meaning that ultra-low yields are unsustainable. However, with social distancing set to leave heaps of slack in the advanced economy labour markets, ultra-low bond yields are here to stay and could go even lower. Moreover, as shown earlier, tech and healthcare demand and output are immune to social distancing. They may even benefit from social distancing. Hence, on a one-year horizon and beyond, stay overweight the growth defensive tech and healthcare sectors. And stay overweight the tech and healthcare heavy S&P 500 versus Euro Stoxx 50. A Puppy Boom We finish on a very positive note for animal lovers. The shift to working from home has generated a puppy boom. The Association of German Dogs claims that “the demand for puppies is endless” and the UK Kennel Club says that “there is unprecedented demand.” In the era of social distancing, the waiting list for puppies has quadrupled, and prices of easy to look after crossbreeds such as cockapoos have more than doubled. The demand for pet food and equipment is also very strong. Dogs make excellent companions for the socially isolated, which describes how many people are now feeling. Furthermore, with millions of people now working from home or on extended furlough, a growing number of households can fulfil the dream of owning a dog. We have recommended a structural overweight to the Animal Care sector based on the ‘humanisation’ of pets and the structural uptrend in spend per pet, especially on veterinary costs (Chart I-7). Animal Care has outperformed by 50 percent in the past two and a half years, but the shift to working from home will add impetus to the structural uptrend (Chart I-8). Chart I-7Animal Care Prices Are Rising... Chart I-8...And The Animal Care Sector Is Strongly Outperforming Stay overweight Animal Care. The ETF ticker, appropriately enough, is called PAWZ. Fractal Trading System This week’s recommended trade is to short gold versus lead, given that the relative performance recently reached a fractal resistance point that has successfully identified four previous turning points. Set the profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 13 percent. In our other open trades, five are in profit and one is in loss. The rolling 1-year win ratio now stands at 64 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. Dhaval Joshi Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanres/article/PIIS2213-2600(20)30222-8/fulltext Fractal Trading System Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Since March 9, the US 5-/30-year yield curve has steepened by 68bps. This is a more pronounced steepening than that of the 2-/30-year yield curve because the Fed’s actions have a lower impact on the volatility of T-Bonds than that of T-Notes. This…
Highlights The Chinese economy continues to recover, albeit less quickly than the first two months following a re-opening of the economy. The demand side of the Chinese economic recovery in May marginally outpaced the supply side, with a notable improvement concentrated in the construction sector. We are initiating two new trades: long material sector stocks versus the broad indices, in both onshore and offshore equity markets. Feature The recovery in China’s economy and asset prices has entered a “tapering phase”, in which the speed of the recovery is normalizing from a rapid rebound two months after the economy re-opened. The direction of the ultra-accommodative monetary and fiscal stance has not changed, but the aggressiveness in the stimulus impulse is abating as the recovery continues. As we highlighted in last week’s report, the announced stimulus at this year's NPC was less than meets the eye of investors.1 Chart 1A Quick Reversal In The Outperformance Of Chinese Stocks Near-term downside risks in Chinese stocks were highlighted by last week’s quick reversal in the outperformance of Chinese equities relative to global benchmarks (Chart 1). As the US and European economies re-open and the stimulus impulse in major developed markets (DMs) is at peak intensity, Chinese stocks will underperform those in DMs, particularly US stocks. The re-escalation in Sino-US tensions will also add to the near-term volatility in Chinese equities. Therefore, we maintain our tactical (0-3 months) neutral view on aggregate Chinese equity indexes, in both domestic and offshore markets. Beyond Q2, however, our baseline view still supports an outperformance in Chinese stocks. The stepped-up stimulus measures since March should start to trickle down into the broader economy. Global business activities and demand will slowly normalize in the summer, helping to revive China’s exports. Moreover, an intensified pressure on employment, indicated in this month’s employment subcomponents in manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMIs, should prompt policymakers to roll out more growth-supporting measures in Q3. Tables 1 and 2 below highlight key developments in China’s economic and financial market performance in the past month. Table 1China Macro Data Summary Table 2China Financial Market Performance Summary Chart 2ASpeed Of Manufacturing Activity Recovery Has Moderated China’s official manufacturing PMI slipped to 50.6 in May from 50.8 a month earlier (Chart 2A). While the reading suggests that manufacturing activities are still in an expansionary mode, the speed of the expansion has moderated compared with April and March. The supply side of manufacturing activities and employment were the biggest drags on May’s official PMI. The production subcomponent in the PMI decelerated whereas new orders increased from April (Chart 2A, bottom panel). The net result is an improved supply-demand balance in the manufacturing sector, however, the improvement is marginal. It also differs from the V-shaped recovery in 2008/09, when both new orders and production subcomponents grew simultaneously (Chart 2B). The demand side of the economy is still concentrated in the policy-driven construction sector. The rebound in construction PMI continues to significantly outpace that in manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMIs (Chart 2C, top panel). The construction employment sub-index ticked up by 1.7 percentage points in May, compared with a slowdown of 0.8 percentage points in manufacturing and 0.1 percentage points in non-manufacturing employment PMIs (Chart 2C, bottom panel). Chart 2BDemand Struggles To Outpace Supply Chart 2CDemand Recovery Is Concentrated In Construction While a buoyant construction sector should provide a strong tailwind to raw material prices and related machinery sales, a laggard recovery from other sectors means the upside potential in aggregate producer prices (PPI) will be limited in the current quarter. In May, there was a rebound in the PMI sub-indices measuring raw material purchase prices and ex-factory prices, which heralds easing in the contraction of PPI in Q2 (Chart 3). However, neither of the PMI price sub-indices has returned to levels reached in January, when PPI growth was last positive. Moreover, weaker readings in the purchases and raw material inventory subcomponents suggest that manufacturers may be reluctant to restock due to sluggish global trade and a lagging rebound in domestic demand (Chart 3, bottom panel). This month’s PMI shows that the employment subcomponents in both the manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMIs are contracting (Chart 4). Because demand for Chinese export goods remains sluggish, we expect unemployment in China’s labor-intensive export manufacturing sector to rise in Q2 and even into Q3. The intensified pressure on employment will likely prompt Chinese policymakers to roll out more demand-supporting measures. Chart 3PPI Contraction Will Ease But Upside Limited In Q2/Q3 Chart 4Employment In Trouble, A Catalyst For More Easing The BCA Li Keqiang Leading Indicator rose moderately in April. A plunge in the Monetary Conditions Index (MCI) limited the magnitude of the indicator's increase, offsetting an uptick in money supply and credit growth (Chart 5). A rapid disinflation in headline consumer prices (CPI) since the beginning of this year has pushed up the real savings deposit rate, which contributed to the MCI’s nose-dive. In our view, the MCI’s sharp drop is idiosyncratic and does not signify a tightening in the PBoC’s monetary stance or overall monetary conditions. Huge fluctuations in food prices have been driving the headline CPI since March 2019, while the core CPI remains stable. While food prices historically have very little correlation with the PBoC's monetary policy actions, a disinflationary environment will provide the central bank more room for easing. Odds are high that the PBoC will cut the savings deposit rate for the first time since 2015. Chart 5Monetary Conditions Are Not As Tight As The Indicator Suggests The yield curve in Chinese government bonds quickly flattened around the time of the National People’s Congress (NPC), with the short end of the curve rising faster than the long end (Chart 6). This is in keeping with our assessment that while the market is expecting the recovery to continue in China, it is unimpressed with the intensity of upcoming stimulus and monetary easing. Monetary easing seems to be taking a pause, but we do not think this indicates a change in the PBoC’s policy stance (Chart 7). Instead, weak global demand, slow recovery in the domestic economy and intensified pressure on domestic employment, all will incentivize policymakers to up their game by mid-year. As such, we expect the yield curve to steepen again in H2, with the short-end of the curve fluctuating at a low level and the 10-year government bond yield picking up when the economy gains traction. Chart 6The Bond Market May Be Incorrectly Pricing In A Monetary Tightening Chart 7A Pause Before More Easing In June The spread in Chinese corporate bond yields has dropped by more than 30bps from its peak in April. This is in line with that of major DM countries and a reflection of the easier liquidity conditions globally (Chart 8). We anticipate that the yield spreads in Chinese corporate bonds will continue to normalize. However, a flare in US-China tensions will put upward pressure on the financing costs of lower-rated corporations (Chart 8, bottom panel). The default rate among Chinese corporate bonds is unlikely to rise meaningfully this year, in light of ultra-accommodative monetary conditions and the Chinese government’s bailout programs to backstop corporate defaults. Chinese corporate bond defaults and non-performing loans historically have correlated with periods of financial sector de-leveraging and de-risking, other than during economic downturns. We continue to recommend investors hold China’s corporate bonds in the coming 6-12 months in a USD-CNH hedged term. Chart 8Financing Costs May Rise For Lower-Rated Corporations Chart 9Cyclicals Are Struggling To Break Out Among Chinese equities, cyclical sectors have struggled to outperform defensives in both onshore and offshore markets (Chart 9). This reflects investors’ concerns over the slow recovery in domestic demand and heightened geopolitical risk between the US and China. As such, we continue to favor domestic, demand-driven sectors among the cyclical stocks, such as consumer discretionary and construction-related materials. We upgraded consumer discretionary stocks from neutral to overweight on May 20, and we are now initiating two trades to long material sector stocks versus the broad markets in both the domestic and investable markets. The constituents of both China’s investable and domestic material sectors are highly concentrated in the metal and mining subsectors, which roughly account for half of the material sectors’ weight in the MSCI and MSCI A Onshore Indexes, respectively. Chart 10 highlights that the material sectors’ relative performance is highly correlated with CRB raw materials in both domestic and investable markets. Given that China’s credit cycles historically lead the CRB material index by about six months, China’s massive credit stimulus will boost CRB raw materials by end-Q2 and thus, the outperformance of the material sectors. The RMB has depreciated by almost 3% in the wake of a re-escalation in US-China frictions. The CNY/USD spot rate is approaching its weakest point reached in September 2019 (Chart 11). Furthermore, on May 29, the PBoC set the CNY/USD reference rate at its lowest level since 2008, a move that suggests defending the RMB is no longer in China’s interest. Downward pressure on the RMB will persist in the months leading up to the November US presidential election. The US economy is in a much more fragile state than in 2018/19, which may hinder President Trump’s willingness to resort to tariffs between now and November. However, we cannot completely roll out the probability that Trump will impose further tariffs on Chinese exports, if he is losing the election through weak public support and is removed from his financial and economic constraints. In any case, in the coming months CNY/USD exchange rate will likely continue to decouple from the economic fundamentals such as interest rate differentials (Chart 11, bottom panel). Instead, the exchange rate will be largely driven by market sentiment surrounding the US-China frictions. Volatility in CNY/USD will increase, but the overall trend in the CNY/USD will continue downwards as long as the escalation in US-China tensions persists. On a 6- to 12-month horizon, however, we expect that the depreciation trend in the RMB to moderately reverse as the Chinese economy continues to strengthen. Chart 10Material Sectors Should Benefit From The Stimulus And Construction Boom Chart 11The CNY/USD Will Continue To Decouple From Interest Rate Differentials Qingyun Xu, CFA Senior Analyst qingyunx@bcaresearch.com Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Taking The Pulse Of The People’s Congress," dated May 28, 2020, available at cis.bcaresearch.com Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
The recent strength in the performance of the S&P 1500 trucking index raises questions beyond the equity market. We previously used the relative performance of the Dow Jones Transport index relative to the utility index as a gauge for the behavior of…