Fixed Income
Highlights Recommended Allocation The sweet spot of non-inflationary accelerating growth is likely to continue. European politics will fade as a risk, and Trump should still be able to get tax cuts through. We continue to be positive on risk assets on a one-year horizon, though returns are unlikely to be as good as in the past 12 months and there is a risk of the next recession arriving in 2019. Our portfolio tilts are generally pro-risk and pro-cyclical. We are overweight equities versus fixed income. We move overweight euro area equities, which should benefit from inexpensive valuations, higher beta and a falling political risk premium. Within fixed income, we prefer credit over government bonds, and raise high-yield debt to overweight on improved valuations. We expect the dollar to appreciate further, which makes us cautious on emerging market assets and industrial commodities. Feature Overview No Reasons To Turn Cautious Markets have paused for breath following the reflation trade that began a year ago and that was given an extra boost by the election of Donald Trump in November. Since the turn of the year, the dollar, U.S. 10-year Treasury yields, credit spreads and (to a degree) equities have all eased back a little (Chart 1). We don't think the risk-on rally is over, but the going will undoubtedly get tougher from here. The momentum of global growth cannot continue to rise at the same pace, with the Global PMI already at its highest level since 2011 (Chart 2). Global equities, therefore, are unlikely to return the 16% over the next 12 months, that they have over the past 12. Chart 1A Pause For Breath Chart 2Growth Momentum Must Slow From Here Nonetheless, we see nothing that is likely to stop risk assets continuing to outperform over the one-year horizon: Growth is likely to rise further. While the initial pick-up was in "soft" data such as consumer sentiment and business confidence, signs are emerging that "hard" data such as household spending and production are now also improving (Chart 3). Models developed by our colleagues on The Bank Credit Analyst indicate that real GDP growth in the U.S. this year will come in above 3% and in the euro area above 2% (Chart 4),1 compared to consensus forecasts of 2.2% and 1.6% respectively. Chart 3Hard Data Also Not Picking Up Chart 4GDP Growth Could Beat Consensus For now, this growth is unlikely to prove inflationary. In the U.S. the diffusion index for PCE inflation shows more prices in the basket falling than rising; in the eurozone, the rise to 2% in headline inflation in January was temporary, mainly because of higher oil prices, and core inflation remains at only 0.7%. The U.S. output gap will close soon, but the eurozone's is still deeply negative (Chart 5). We see the Fed raising rates twice more this year, in line with its dots, though it may have to accelerate the pace next year if the Trump administration succeeds in passing fiscal stimulus. The ECB, however, is unlikely to raise rates until 2019 and will taper asset purchases only slowly.2 Misplaced worries that it will tighten more quickly than this have recently dragged on European equities and strengthened the euro. We think the market is wrong to price out the probability of a tax cut in the U.S. just because of the Trump administration's failure to reform healthcare. Our Geopolitical strategists argue that Republicans in Congress (even the Freedom Caucus) are united behind the idea of cutting taxes, even if these are not funded by tax reforms or spending cuts (they can be justified on the grounds of "dynamic scoring").3 We see a cut in corporate and personal taxes passing before year-end to take effect in 2018. And Trump has not abandoned the idea of infrastructure spending. The market no longer expects any of this: the prices of stocks that would most benefit from lower corporate taxes or from government spending have reverted to their pre-election levels. European political risk is likely to wane. The market continues to worry about the possibility of Marine Le Pen winning the French Presidential election, as shown in the spread of OATs over Bunds (which has widened to 60-80 bp from 20 bp last summer). We think this very unlikely: polls show her consistently at least 20 points behind Emmanuel Macron in the second round of voting (Chart 6). While Italian politics remain a risk, the parliamentary election there is unlikely to take place until March 2018. Brexit is a threat to the U.K., but should have minimal impact on the eurozone. We retain, therefore, our pro-cyclical and pro-risk tilts on a 12-month time horizon. We have even added a little more beta to our recommended portfolio by raising high-yield bonds to overweight (since their valuations now look more attractive after a recent sell-off) and by going overweight eurozone stocks (paid for by notching down our double-overweight in U.S. stocks). The eurozone has consistently been a higher beta (Chart 7), more cyclical equity market than the U.S. and, once the political risks (at least temporarily) subside, should be able to outperform for a while. Chart 5Eurozone Output Gap Still Very Negative Chart 6Can Le Pen Really Win From Here? Chart 7Eurozone Is A High Beta Stock Market But we warn that the good times may not last for long. Tax cuts in the U.S. would add stimulus to an economy already at full capacity. The Fed might have to raise rates sharply next year (although the timing might depend on how President Trump tries to affect monetary policy, for example whom he appoints as Fed chair to replace Janet Yellen next February). U.S. recessions have typically come two or three years after the output gap turns positive (Chart 5). As Martin Barnes, BCA's chief economist, recently wrote,4 that may point to next recession arriving as soon as 2019. Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Global Asset Allocation garry@bcaresearch.com What Our Clients Are Asking Chart 8Expensive, But Not At An Extreme Aren't You Worried About U.S. Equity Valuations? Valuation is a poor timing tool in the short term but, when it reaches extremes, it has historically added value. The valuation metrics we watch show that U.S. equities are expensive, but not at the extreme levels that have historically warranted an outright sell or underweight. First, according to MSCI, U.S. equities are currently trading at 24.4 times 12-month trailing earnings, and 25.7 times 10-year cyclically-adjusted earnings; both measures are about one standard deviation from their 10-year averages. Second, U.S. equities are trading at a premium to global equities, but the premium to the developed markets is in line with the 10-year average (Chart 8, panel 1), while the premium to emerging markets is about 1.5 standard deviations from the 10-year average (panel 2). Third, equities are cheap compared to fixed income: the earnings yield is still higher than the yields on both 10-year government bonds and investment grade corporate bonds, and the yield gaps are currently only slightly lower (more expensive) than their respective 10-year averages (panels 3 and 4). In the long run, the 10-year cyclically-adjusted PE (CAPE) has had relatively good forecasting power for 10 year forward returns. Currently, the regression indicates 143% (9.3% annualized) total returns over the next 10 years. This could be on the optimistic side given that we are no longer in an environment of declining bond yields and margins are elevated compared to the 1990s. That said, we have cut our U.S. equity overweight by half, partly due to valuation concerns. Is EM Debt Attractive? Chart 9Avoid EM Debt Emerging market debt has continued its run from last year, with sovereign and local currency debt providing YTD returns of 3% and 2% respectively. Over long periods, EM debt has displayed the ability to provide substantial returns while also providing robust diversification benefits to a 50/50 DM equity/bond portfolio, even more so than EM equities.5 However, over the cyclical horizon, we remain bearish on EM debt both in absolute terms and relative to global equities. EM fixed income markets have been able to defy deteriorating fundamentals for some time, but this is unsustainable. After years of leveraging, credit excesses will need to be unwound. Decelerating credit growth will be enough to dampen economic growth and damage emerging markets' ability to service their debt. Risks in EM sovereign debt markets are high. Historical returns have shown negative skewness and fat tails, suggesting high vulnerability to large downswings. This is particularly concerning given that yields are one standard deviation lower than their long-term average (Chart 9). While EM local currency debt is more fairly priced and has a more favorable risk/return profile than its sovereign debt counterpart, local currency debt returns are even more heavily influenced by their currencies. Above-trend growth in the U.S. leading to additional rate hikes, as well as rising U.S. bond yields and softer commodity prices will add further downward pressure to EM currencies. For EM dedicated investors, we suggest overweight positions in low beta/defensive markets. Regions that are less susceptible to currency weakness with high yields and low foreign funding requirements include Russia, India and Indonesia. How Will The Fed Shrink Its Balance Sheet, And Does It Matter? After the Fed's third rate hike, attention is turning to when it will begin to reduce its balance sheet. This has grown to $4.5 trillion, up from $900 billion before the Global Financial Crisis. Assets currently include $2.5 trillion of Treasury securities and $1.8 trillion of mortgage-related securities. Since asset purchases ended in October 2014, the Fed has rolled over maturing bonds to maintain the size of the balance sheet. The FOMC statement last December committed to maintaining this policy "until normalization of the level of the federal funds rate is well under way". The market takes this to mean 1-1.5%, a level likely to be reached by year-end. The view of BCA's fixed income team6 is that the Fed will start by ceasing reinvestment of Agency bonds and mortgage-backed securities (MBS) in 2018, at the same time reducing excess bank reserves on the liability side of the balance sheet (Chart 10). This will worry markets to a degree and the Fed will need to be careful how it communicates the policy: for example what size it thinks its balance sheet should ultimately be. It may also need to skip a rate hike or two in the first months of the shrinkage. The MBS market is likely to suffer from the increased supply. But the only historical precedent - the BoJ's unwinding of its 2000-3 QE - is reassuring: this had no discernible effect on rates or the yen (Chart 11). Chart 10Fed Will Cut MBSs First Chart 11Nobody Noticed The BoJ Taper When Will ECB Taper? Chart 12Recovery Not Permanent Euro area growth is recovering and headline inflation has hit the ECB's 2% target (Chart 12). Investors are wondering how rapidly the ECB will taper its asset purchases and when it will raise rates. Our view is that the ECB will move only slowly. The pickup in inflation is mostly driven by the base effect and by the rise in energy prices. The failure of core inflation, which remains below 1%, to pick up appreciably suggests that underlying price pressures are weak. The current program has the ECB purchasing EUR 60 Bn of assets each month until December 2017. Markets have recently become more hawkish with regards to the likely path of policy: currently futures are pricing in the first hike only 19 months away versus an expectations in January of 44 months. We expect the ECB to remain more dovish than that, given weak underlying inflation, political uncertainty, and banking system troubles. We think the ECB will announce around September this year a taper of its asset purchases in 2018. However, it is not clear whether it will cut them to, say EUR 30 Bn a month, or whether it will reduce the amount steadily each month or quarter. But we don't see an interest rate hike soon, since the euro area economy is not expected to reach full employment until 2019. Ewald Novotny, president of the Austrian central bank, spooked markets by suggesting a hike before complete withdrawal of asset purchases but, in our view, that would will send a confusing signal to investors. Nowotny has long been hawkish and we think his view is untypical of ECB council members. If our analysis is correct, ECB policy should be positive for euro area equities and bearish for the euro over the next 12 months. Will REIT Underperformance Continue? Chart 13Underweight REITs Relative REIT performance has continued its downtrend, underperforming the broad index by 5% YTD. While valuations have become more attractive and rental income is still robust, we expect the decline to continue given unsupportive macro factors. We previously argued that real estate is in a sweet spot, where economic growth was sufficient to generate sustainable tenant demand without triggering a new supply cycle.7 This is no longer the case. Office completions increased substantially over the past quarter and apartment completions remain in an uptrend. As we expect growth to remain robust in the U.S., the likelihood is that these two trends remain in place. REIT relative performance peaked at the beginning of August, shortly after long-term interest rates bottomed. REITs have historically outperformed when yields are falling and inflation is low (Chart 13). However, long-term rates should continue to rise over the cyclical horizon, primarily due to higher inflation expectations. Additionally, REITs typically benefit from increasing central bank asset purchases, as increased liquidity and lower interest rates boost real estate values. With the Fed clearly in tightening mode and the strong likelihood of ECB tapering next year, slowing asset purchases will be a considerable headwind to REIT performance. Within REITs, we maintain our sector tilts. Continue to favor Industrials, which will benefit in a rising USD environment and provide considerable income. Maintain underweight position in Apartments, due to rising completions and a low absorption ratio. Additionally, we continue to favor trophy over non-trophy markets given more stable rent growth as well as geopolitical risks in Europe and potential Washington disappointments. Global Economy Overview: The global economy has continued to recover from its intra-cycle slowdown in late 2015 and early 2016. Economic surprise indexes have everywhere surprised significantly on the upside since mid-2016 (Chart 14, panel 1). Although "hard" data (consumption, production etc.) have lagged "soft" data (consumer sentiment, business confidence), the former also have begun to recover recently. Although there are few negative indicators, it will get harder to beat expectations. U.S.: Lead indicators continue to improve, with the manufacturing ISM at 57.7 and new orders at 65.1. Sentiment quickly turned bullish after the presidential election, and hard data has now started to follow, with personal consumption expenditure rising 4.7% year on year and capital goods orders (+2.7% YoY in February) growing for the first time since 2014. With steady wage growth, continuing employment improvements, and a likely pick-up in capex, we expect 2017 GDP growth to beat the current consensus expectations of 2.2%. For now inflation remains quiescent, with core PCE inflation stuck at around 1.8%, below the Fed's 2% target. Euro Area: Leading indicators, such as PMIs, have rebounded in Europe too (Chart 15), suggesting that the consensus 2017 GDP forecast of 1.6% is achievable. Inflation has picked up, with the headline CPI 2.0% for the Eurozone in January, but core inflation remains low at 0.7% and headline fell back to 1.5% in February. However, the recent slowdown in bank loan growth (new credit creation is 36% below the level six months ago) suggests that continuing weakness in the banking sector is likely to keep growth sluggish. Chart 14How Long Can Growth Continue To Surprise? Chart 15A Synchronized Global Growth Rebound Japan is a tale of two segments. International-oriented data have recovered, with IP up 3.7% (Chart 15, panel 2) and exports +5.4% year on year. But domestic demand remains weak: wages are rising only 0.5% YoY (despite a tight labor market), which is holding back household spending (-1.2% YoY in January). Core inflation has shown the first signs of picking up, but remains very low at 0.1% YoY. Emerging Markets: The effects of China's reflationary policies from early 2016 continue to boost activity (Chart 15, panel 3). But the excess liquidity they triggered worries the authorities, who have clamped down on real estate purchases and capital outflows, slowed fiscal spending, and tightened monetary policy. China will prioritize stability until the Party Congress in the fall, but the impact of reflation on commodity prices and on other emerging markets will fade. Interest rates: The Fed is likely to hike twice more this year in line with its "dot plot", unless inflation surprises significantly to the upside. This, plus an acceleration of nominal GDP growth to 4.5-5%, should push the 10-year bond yield above 3% by year end. The ECB will not be as hawkish as the market expects (futures markets indicate a rate hike by end-2018), since Mario Draghi expects headline inflation to fall back once the oil price stabilizes and is concerned about political risk especially in Italy. Consequently, rates are unlikely to rise as quickly as in the U.S. The Bank of Japan will keep its 0% yield target for 10-year JGB for the foreseeable future. Global Equities Global equities continued to make impressive gains in Q1 2017, after a strong 2016. The price appreciation since the low in February 2016 has been driven by both multiple expansion and earnings growth, roughly in equal proportion, as shown in Chart 16, panel 1. Chart 16Earnings Improving But Valuation Stretched Equity valuation is expensive by historical standards but, as an asset class, equities are still attractively valued compared to bonds (see the "What Our Clients Are Asking" section on page 6). In this "TINA" (There Is No Alternative) world, we remain overweight equities versus bonds. Within equities, we maintain our call of favoring DM equities versus EM equities despite of the 6% EM outperformance in Q1, which was supported by attractive valuations. About half of that outperformance came from the appreciation of EM currencies versus the USD. Our house view is that the USD will strengthen further versus the EM currencies. Within EM, we have been more positive on China and remain so on a 6-9 month horizon. The only adjustment we make now is to upgrade euro area equities to overweight by reducing half of our large overweight in the U.S. so that now we are equally overweight the U.S. and euro area (see details on the next page). In terms of global sector positioning, we maintain a pro-cyclical tilt. Our largest overweight in Healthcare panned out very well in Q1 but the overweight in Energy did not, due to the drop in oil prices. Our Energy strategists believe this was caused by one-off technical factors on the supply side, and argue that the oil price will soon revert to $55 a barrel. Euro Area Equities: A Cheaper Alternative To The U.S. Political risks related to elections in some eurozone countries are receding. The ECB is likely to maintain its easy monetary policies, while the Fed is on track to normalize interest rates in the U.S. We have had a large overweight of 6 percentage points (ppts) on U.S. equities while being neutral on the euro area. We upgrade the eurozone to overweight by 3 ppts, so that we are now equally overweight the U.S. and the euro area. The following are the reasons: First, the relative performance of total returns between eurozone and the U.S. equities is at its lowest since 1987. Since April 2015, when the most recent brief period of eurozone outperformance ended, eurozone equities have underperformed the U.S. by over 16% in common currency terms (Chart 17, panel 1), while the euro lost only about 4% versus the USD over the same period. Second, eurozone equities are trading at a 22% discount to the U.S., compared to the five-year average discount of 17% (panel 3). Third, eurozone equities have lower margins than the U.S., but the profit margin in the eurozone has been improving (panel 2). Lastly, the PMIs in the euro area have been improving (panel 4) and this improvement is faster than the global aggregate PMI (panel 5), which implies - based on the close correlation between PMIs and earnings growth - that profitability in the eurozone should improve at a faster pace than the global average. Sector Allocation: We have had a relatively pro-cyclical tilt in our global sector positioning, overweight three cyclical sectors (Energy, Industrials and Info Tech) plus Healthcare, while underweight three defensive sectors (Consumer Staples, Telecoms and Utilities) as well as Consumer Discretionary. We have been neutral on Financials and Materials. After very strong performance in 2016, cyclical sectors underperformed in Q1 2017 (Chart 18, panel 1). The underperformance of cyclicals versus defensives can be largely attributed to the polar-opposite performance of Energy and Healthcare (Chart 19). Going forward, we maintain our current sector positioning for the following reasons: Chart 17Earnings Growth At Lower Valuation Chart 18Maintain The Cyclical Tilt Chart 19Global Sector Performance First, Energy was the only sector which fell in Q1, largely due to the decline in oil prices. BCA's Energy and Commodity Strategy attributes the oil price weakness to inventory buildup related to the production rush before the OPEC agreement to cut production, and therefore expects the WTI oil price to return to the $50-55 range. Energy stocks should benefit once oil prices turn back up. Chart 20Relative Factor Performance Second, the relative profitability between cyclicals and defensives is underpinned by global economic conditions, as represented by the global PMI. The PMI is on track to recover further, which bodes well for the profit outlook for cyclicals versus defensives. Third, our pro-cyclical tilt in sector positioning is hedged by an overweight in Healthcare (a defensive sector) and underweight in Consumer Discretionary (a cyclical). Smart Beta Update: No Style Bet Q1 2017 saw some significant performance reversals in the five most enduring factors: quality, minimum volatility, momentum, value, and size (Chart 20, panels 2-6). Quality and Momentum performed the best, outperforming the global benchmark by over 200 bps in Q1. The star performer in 2016, the Value factor, performed the worst, underperforming by 190 bps. According to the findings in our Special Report,8 recent factor performance seems to be pricing in a "Goldilocks" environment in which growth is rising and inflation falling. We have shown that it is very difficult to time the shift in factor performance cycles and so have advocated an equal weight in the five factors (Chart 20, panel 1) for long-term investors. We reiterate this view. Government Bonds Maintain slight underweight duration. Our 2-factor model made up of global PMI and U.S. dollar sentiment indicates the current fair value of the 10-year Treasury yield is 2.4% (Chart 21). While this suggests bonds are currently correctly priced, we still expect that long-term yields will rise over a cyclical horizon. The long end should grind higher given improving growth, rising equity prices and renewed "animal spirits." Additionally, large net short positions have been unwound, allowing for another leg higher in yields. Overweight TIPS vs. Treasuries. Diffusion indexes for both PCE and CPI inflation shifted into negative territory, suggesting realized inflation will soften in the near term. Nevertheless, with headline and core CPI readings of 2.7% and 2.2% respectively, U.S. inflation has clearly bottomed for the cycle (Chart 22). This trend should continue as a result of cost-push inflation driven by faster wage growth. Very gradual Fed hikes will not be enough to derail the upward momentum in consumer prices. Euro area growth is stable, but expectations of a rate hike from the ECB are premature (Chart 23). While the central bank opened the door slightly to a less-accommodative policy stance, it is unlikely that the ECB will hike until full employment is reached. Our expectation is for a tapering of asset purchases to occur in 2018. Once tapering is complete, rate hikes will follow by approximately 6-12 months. The implication is upward pressure on European bond yields and wider spreads for peripheral government debt. Chart 2110-Year Treasury Fair Value Model Chart 22Inflation Has Bottomed Chart 23Will the ECB Hike Soon? Corporate Bonds The BCA Corporate Health Monitor remains deeply in "Deteriorating Health" territory, indicating weakness within corporate balance sheets (Chart 24). Over the last quarter, the indicator worsened, as profit margins, return-on-capital and liquidity declined. However, leverage did improve slightly. The trend toward weaker corporate health has been firmly established over the past 12 quarters. This is consistent with the very late stages of past credit cycles. Maintain overweight to Investment Grade debt. The U.S. is in a self-reinforcing, low-inflation recovery. Economic growth should accelerate throughout 2017, with strong consumer spending, rising capex intentions, and still accommodative monetary policy. The potential sell-off from rate hikes this year should be fairly mild given that the market is already close to pricing in three. Additionally, credit has historically outperformed in the early stages of the Fed tightening cycle. Expect low but positive excess returns (Chart 25). Shift to overweight in high-yield debt. Our default model is showing improvement due to elevated interest coverage, a robust PMI reading, declining job cut announcements, softening lending standards and a rising sales/inventory ratio. The recent backup in yields has made junk bond valuations more attractive. The default adjusted spread, calculated by subtracting an ex-ante estimate of default losses from the average spread, is now approximately 220bps (Chart 26). Chart 24Balance Sheets Deteriorating Chart 25A Supportive Backdrop Chart 26High Yield: Valuations Becoming More Attractive Commodities Chart 27Upside To Resource Prices Limited Secular Perspective: Bearish A slowdown in Chinese activity, led by its transition to a services economy, coupled with unfavorable global demographics, will continue to constrain demand for commodities. This slack in demand coupled with excess capacity will continue to limit the upside in resource prices and prolong the commodities bear market which began in 2012 (Chart 27). Cyclical Perspective: Neutral Energy markets have moved from excess supply to excess demand, and so we remain positive on oil. But, with the impact of Chinese fiscal stimulus waning, excess supply in the metals market will persist, putting downward pressure on prices. Our divergent outlook for energy vs metals gives us an overall neutral view for commodities over the cyclical horizon. Energy: With a synchronized upturn in global growth and inflation, both OECD and non-OECD demand will remain strong. Following Saudi Arabia's production cuts, we expect the OPEC agreement to be honored by all members, including Russia. With strengthening demand and falling production, storage should draw through the year. We expect the oil-USD divergence to persist as improving fundamentals override the stronger dollar. Base Metals: With Chinese government spending slowing from 24% growth year on year in January 2016 to only 4%, the country's fiscal impulse has ended. Tightening in Chinese liquidity conditions have led to higher borrowing rates for the real estate sector, which is dampening its demand for materials. At the same time, inventories for key metals such as copper and steel have risen. We expect metals prices to correct over the coming months. Precious Metals: Gold has rallied 10% from last December, and another 4% following the Fed's March rate hike. These were responses to the dovish nature of the hike and continuing political risk. We expect the Fed to turn more hawkish in coming weeks, sending the dollar and real yields higher, thereby holding back the gold price from rising much further. Currencies Chart 28Return Of The Dollar USD: The last Fed meeting resulted in a dovish hike, as evidenced by the subsequent fall in the dollar. However, as the U.S. economy nears full employment, we expect a more hawkish tone from FOMC members in the coming weeks which will push the dollar up (Chart 28). The Fed continues to be data dependent, and sees the recent synchronized global upturn as an opportunity to deliver hikes in line with market expectations. Euro: As the economy stabilizes, as evidenced by rising headline inflation, stronger retail sales and improving PMI numbers, the ECB has opened the window for reducing monetary accommodation. However, since the economy is expected to reach full employment only in 2019, we expect rates to be kept low even after the tapering of ECB asset purchases starts next year. This will add further downward pressure on the euro. Yen: The Bank of Japan will continue its highly accommodative monetary policy, centered on its 0% yield target for 10-year government bonds, because Japanese growth and inflation is lagging the global upturn. Japan is benefitting from global growth, as seen in the improvement in its manufacturing PMI, but domestic demand remains weak as consumer confidence and retail sales stagnate. Continued downward pressure on relative interest rates will drive the only reliable source of inflation: a weaker yen. EM: A more hawkish Fed and rising bond yields will tighten global liquidity conditions, making it difficult for emerging nations that run current account deficits. The rising threat of protectionism could affect EM exports and create a new wave of deflationary pressure, forcing central banks to engineer currency devaluation. The fact that commodity prices have risen, yet EM currencies have remained weak, is a clear indications that EM fundamentals are weak. Alternatives Overweight private equity / underweight hedge funds. Leading indicators suggest that global growth continues to improve. In the absence of a recession, private equity typically outperforms as the illiquidity premium should provide a boost to returns. Additionally, surveys suggest that managers are planning on increasing their allocation percentage toward private equity over the rest of the year. Hedge funds, on the other hand, have displayed a negative correlation with global growth. Historically, they have outperformed private equity only during recessions or periods of high credit market stress (Chart 29). Overweight direct real estate / underweight commodity futures. Demand for commercial real estate (CRE) assets remains robust but the increase in completions is worrying. Favor Industrials for its income potential and Retail given resilient consumer spending. Overweight trophy markets, as demand remains robust given multiple macro risks. Commodities have bounced, but remain in a secular bear market caused by a supply glut and exacerbated by a market-share war (Chart 30). Overweight farmland & timberland / underweight structured products. The potential for trade wars, geopolitical risk in Europe and concerns over an equity market correction have increased the importance of volatility reduction. Favor farmland & timberland. Substantial portfolio diversification benefits, resulting from low correlations with traditional assets, coupled with a positive skew, make these assets highly attractive. As the most bond-like alternative, the end of the 35-year bull market in bonds presents a substantial headwind. Structured products also tend to outperform during recessions, which is not our base case (Chart 31). Chart 29PE: Tied To Real Growth Chart 30Commodities: A Secular Bear Market Chart 31Structured Products Outperform In Recessions Risks To Our View Our pro-cyclical pro-risk tilts are based on the premise that global growth will remain strong over the next 12 months. We do not see many risks to this view: leading indicators suggest that consumption and capex are likely to continue to rebound. The one major indicator that suggests downside risk is loan growth. In the U.S., loans to firms have slowed to 5.4% from over 10% last summer, and in the euro area the meager pickup in corporate loan growth seems to have faltered (Chart 32). There may be some special factors: oil companies that borrowed in early 2016 when in difficulty no longer need to tap credit lines, and U.S. companies may be holding back to see details of tax cuts. But loan growth needs to be watched closely. More granularly, our country and sector preferences - in particular, our cautious views on Emerging Markets and industrial commodities - are based partly on the expectation that the U.S. dollar will appreciate further. If the global expansion remains highly synchronized (Chart 33) this might instigate all G7 central banks to tighten, allowing the Fed to raise rates without appreciating the dollar. However, we expect continuing divergences in growth and monetary policy to push the dollar up further. Finally, some indicators suggest that investors have become too positive on the outlook for stocks (Chart 34). Sentiment has in the past not been a reliable indicator of stock market peaks, but excess euphoria could trigger a short-term correction. Chart 32Why Is Bank Loan Growth Slowing? Chart 33Could Synchronized Growth Push Down USD? Chart 34Are Investors Too Euphoric? 1 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst, March 2017, page 33, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see What Our Clients Are Asking: When Will The ECB Taper? on page 9 of this report for a full explanation of why we think this. 3 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Donald Trump Is Who We Thought He Was", dated March 8, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see BCA Special Report titled "Beware The 2019 Trump Recession", dated March 7, 2017, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see Global Asset Allocation Strategy Special Report, "EM Asset Allocation: Is There Any Reason To Own Stocks?," dated November 27, 2012, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "The Way Forward For The Fed's Balance Sheet," dated February 28, 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see Global Asset Allocation Strategy Special Report, "REITs Vs. Direct: How To Get Exposure To Real Estate," dated September 15, 2016, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see Global Asset Allocation Strategy Special Report, "Is Smart Beta A Useful Tool In Global Asset Allocation?," dated July 8, 2016, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com. Recommended Asset Allocation Model Portfolio (USD Terms)
Highlights Economic Outlook: The global economy is in a reflationary window that will stay open until mid-2018. Growth will then slow, culminating in a recession in 2019. While the recession is likely to be mild, the policy response will be dramatic. This will set the stage for a period of stagflation beginning in the early 2020s. Overall Strategy: Investors should overweight equities and high-yield credit during the next 12 months, while underweighting safe-haven government bonds and cash. However, be prepared to scale back risk next spring. Fixed Income: For now, stay underweight U.S. Treasurys within a global fixed-income portfolio; remain neutral on the euro area and the U.K.; and overweight Japan. Bonds will rally in the second half of 2018 as growth begins to slow, but then begin a protracted bear market. Equities: Favor higher-beta developed markets such as Europe and Japan relative to the U.S. in local-currency terms over the next 12 months. Emerging markets will benefit from the reflationary tailwind, but deep structural problems will drag down returns. Currencies: The broad trade-weighted dollar will appreciate by 10% before peaking in mid-2018. The yen still has considerable downside against the dollar. The euro will grind lower, as will the Chinese yuan. The pound is close to a bottom. Commodities: Favor energy over metals. Gold will move higher once the dollar peaks in the middle of next year. Feature Reflation, Recession, And Then Stagflation The investment outlook over the next five years can be best described as a three-act play: First Act: "Reflation" (The present until mid-2018) Second Act: "Recession" (2019) Third Act: "Stagflation" (2021 onwards) Investors who remain a few steps ahead of the herd will prosper. All others will struggle to stay afloat. Let us lift the curtain and begin the play. Act 1: Reflation Reflation Continues If there is one chart that best encapsulates the reflation theme, Chart 1 is it. It shows the sum of the Citibank global economic and inflation surprise indices. The combined series currently stands at the highest level in the 14-year history of the survey. Consistent with the surprise indices, Goldman's global Current Activity Indicator (CAI) has risen to the strongest level in three years. The 3-month average for developed markets stands at a 6-year high (Chart 2). Chart 1The Reflation Trade In One Chart Chart 2Current Activity Indicators Have Perked Up What accounts for the acceleration in economic growth that began in earnest in mid-2016? A number of factors stand out: The drag on global growth from the plunge in commodity sector investment finally ran its course. U.S. energy sector capex, for example, tumbled by 70% between Q2 of 2014 and Q3 of 2016, knocking 0.7% off the level of U.S. real GDP. The fallout for commodity-exporting EMs such as Brazil and Russia was considerably more severe. The global economy emerged from a protracted inventory destocking cycle (Chart 3). In the U.S., inventories made a negative contribution to growth for five straight quarters starting in Q2 of 2015, the longest streak since the 1950s. The U.K., Germany, and Japan also saw notable inventory corrections. Fears of a hard landing in China and a disorderly devaluation of the RMB subsided as the Chinese government ramped up fiscal stimulus. The era of fiscal austerity ended. Chart 4 shows that the fiscal thrust in developed economies turned positive in 2016 for the first time since 2010. Financial conditions eased in most economies, delivering an impulse to growth that is still being felt. In the U.S., for example, junk bond yields dropped from a peak of 10.2% in February 2016 to 6.3% at present (Chart 5). A surging stock market and rising home prices also helped buoy consumer and business sentiment. Chart 3Inventory Destocking Was A Drag On Growth Chart 4The End Of Fiscal Austerity? Chart 5Corporate Borrowing Costs Have Fallen Fine For Now... Looking out, global growth should stay reasonably firm over the next 12 months. Our global Leading Economic Indicator remains in a solid uptrend. Burgeoning animal spirits are powering a recovery in business spending, as evidenced by the jump in factory orders and capex intentions (Chart 6). The lagged effects from the easing in financial conditions over the past 12 months should help support activity. Chart 7 shows that the 12-month change in our U.S. Financial Conditions Index leads the business cycle by 6-to-9 months. The current message from the index is that U.S. growth will remain sturdy for the remainder of 2017. Chart 6Global Growth Will Stay Strong In The Near Term Chart 7Easing Financial Conditions Will Support Activity ... But Storm Clouds Are Forming Home prices cannot rise faster than rents or incomes indefinitely; nor can equity prices rise faster than earnings. Corporate spreads also cannot keep falling. As the equity and housing markets cool, and borrowing costs start climbing on the back of higher government bond yields, the tailwind from easier financial conditions will dissipate. When that happens - most likely, sometime next year - GDP growth will slow. In and of itself, somewhat weaker growth would not be much of a problem. After all, the economy is currently expanding at an above-trend pace and the Fed wants to tighten financial conditions to some extent - it would not be raising rates if it didn't! The problem is that trend growth is much lower now than in the past - only 1.8% according to the Fed's Summary of Economic Projections. Living in a world of slow trend growth could prove to be challenging. The U.S. corporate sector has been feasting on credit for the past four years (Chart 8). Household balance sheets are still in reasonably good shape, but even here, there are areas of concern. Student debt is going through the roof and auto loans are nearly back to pre-recession levels as a share of disposable income (Chart 9). Together, these two categories account for over two-thirds of non-housing related consumer liabilities. Chart 8U.S. Corporate Sector Has Been Feasting On Credit Chart 9U.S. Household Balance Sheets Are In Good Shape, But Auto And Student Loans Are A Potential Problem The risk is that defaults will rise if GDP growth falls below 2%, a pace that has often been described as "stall speed." This could set in motion a vicious cycle where slower growth causes firms to pare back debt, leading to even slower growth and greater pressure on corporate balance sheets - in other words, a recipe for recession. Act 2: Recession Redefining "Tight Money" "Expansions do not die of old age," Rudi Dornbusch once remarked, "They are killed by the Fed." On the face of it, this may not seem like much of a concern. If the Fed raises rates in line with the median "dot" in the Summary of Economic Projections, the funds rate will only be about 2.5% by mid-2019 (Chart 10). That may not sound like much, but keep in mind that the so-called neutral rate - the rate consistent with full employment and stable inflation - may be a lot lower now than in the past. Also keep in mind that it can take up to 18 months before the impact of tighter financial conditions take their full effect on the economy. Thus, by the time the Fed has realized that it has tightened monetary policy by too much, it may be too late. As we have argued in the past, a variety of forces have pushed down the neutral rate over time.1 For example, the amount of investment that firms need to undertake in a slow-growing economy has fallen by nearly 2% of GDP since the late-1990s (Chart 11). And getting firms to take on even this meager amount of investment may require a lower interest rate since modern production techniques rely more on human capital than physical capital. Chart 10Will The Fed's 'Gradual' Rate Hikes End Up Being Too Much? Chart 11Less Investment Required Rising inequality has also reduced aggregate demand by shifting income towards households with high marginal propensities to save (Chart 12). This has forced central banks to lower interest rates in order to prop up spending. From this perspective, it is not too surprising that income inequality and debt levels have been positively correlated over time (Chart 13). Chart 12Savings Heavily Skewed Towards Top Earners Chart 13U.S.: Positive Correlation Between Income Inequality And Debt-To-GDP Then there is the issue of the dollar. The broad real trade-weighted dollar has appreciated by 19% since mid-2014 (Chart 14). According to the New York Fed's trade model, this has reduced the level of real GDP by nearly 2% relative to what it would have otherwise been. Standard "Taylor Rule" equations suggest that interest rates would need to fall by around 1%-to-2% in order to offset a loss of demand of this magnitude. This means that if the economy could withstand interest rates of 4% when the dollar was cheap, it can only withstand interest rates of 2%-to-3% today. And even that may be too high. Consider the message from Chart 15. It shows that real rates have been trending lower since 1980. The real funds rate averaged only 1% during the 2001-2007 business cycle, a period when demand was being buoyed by a massive, debt-fueled housing bubble; fiscal stimulus in the form of the two Bush tax cuts and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; a weakening dollar; and by a very benign global backdrop where emerging markets were recovering and Europe was doing well. Chart 14The Dollar Is In The Midst Of Its Third Great Bull Market Chart 15The Neutral Rate Has Fallen Today, the external backdrop is fragile, the dollar has been strengthening rather than weakening, and households have become more frugal (Chart 16). And while President Trump has promised plenty of fiscal largess, the reality may turn out to be a lot more sobering than the rhetoric. Chart 16Return To Thrift End Of The Trump Trade? Not Yet The failure to replace the Affordable Care Act has cast doubt in the eyes of many observers about the ability of Congress to pass other parts of Trump's agenda. As a consequence, the "Trump Trade" has gone into reverse over the past few weeks, pushing down the dollar and Treasury yields in the process. We agree that the "Trump Trade" will eventually fizzle out. However, this is likely to be more of a story for 2018 than this year. If anything, last week's fiasco may turn out to be a blessing in disguise for the Republicans. Opinion polls suggest that the GOP would have gone down in flames if the American Health Care Act had been signed into law (Table 1). Table 1Passing The American Health Care Act Could Have Cost The Republicans Dearly The GOP's proposed legislation would have reduced federal government spending on health care by $1.2 trillion over ten years. Sixty-four year-olds with incomes of $26,500 would have seen their annual premiums soar from $1,700 to $14,600. Even if one includes the tax cuts in the proposed bill, the net effect would have been a major tightening in fiscal policy. That would have warranted lower bond yields and a weaker dollar. The failure to pass an Obamacare replacement serves as a reminder that comprehensive tax reform will be more difficult to achieve than many had hoped. However, even if Republicans are unable to overhaul the tax code, this will not prevent them from simply cutting corporate and personal taxes. Worries that tax cuts will lead to larger budget deficits will be brushed aside on the grounds that they will "pay for themselves" through faster growth (dynamic scoring!). Throw some infrastructure spending into the mix, and it will not take much for the "Trump Trade" to return with a vengeance. Trump's Fiscal Fantasy Where the disappointment will appear is not during the legislative process, but afterwards. The highly profitable companies that will benefit the most from corporate tax cuts are the ones who least need them. In many cases, these companies have plenty of cash and easy access to external financing. As a consequence, much of the corporate tax cuts may simply be hoarded or used to finance equity buybacks or dividend payments. A large share of personal tax cuts will also be saved, given that they will mostly accrue to higher income earners. Chart 17From Unrealistic To Even More Unrealistic The amount of infrastructure spending that actually takes place will likely be a tiny fraction of the headline amount. This is not just because of the dearth of "shovel ready" projects. It is also because the public-private partnership structure the GOP is touting will severely limit the universe of projects that can be considered. Most of America's infrastructure needs consist of basic maintenance, rather than the sort of marquee projects that the private sector would be keen to invest in. Indeed, the bill could turn out to be little more than a boondoggle for privatizing existing public infrastructure projects, rather than investing in new ones. Chart 18Euro Area Credit Impulse Will Fade In The Second Half Of 2018 Meanwhile, the Trump administration is proposing large cuts to nondefense discretionary expenditures that go above and beyond the draconian ones that are already enshrined into current law (Chart 17). As such, the risk to the economy beyond the next 12 months is that markets push up the dollar and long-term interest rates in anticipation of continued strong growth and lavish fiscal stimulus only to get neither. Euro Area: A 12-Month Window For Growth The outlook for the euro area over the next 12 months is reasonably bright, but just as in the U.S., the picture could darken later next year. Euro area private sector credit growth reached 2.5% earlier this year. This may not sound like a lot, but that is the fastest pace of growth since July 2009. A further acceleration is probable over the coming months, given rising business confidence, firm loan demand, and declining nonperforming loans. Conceptually, it is the change in credit growth that drives GDP growth. Thus, as credit growth levels off next year, the euro area's credit impulse will fall back towards zero, setting the stage for a period of slower GDP growth (Chart 18). In contrast to the U.S., the ECB is likely to resist the urge to raise the repo rate before growth slows. That's the good news. The bad news is that the market could price in some tightening in monetary policy anyway, leading to a "bund tantrum" later this year. As in the past, the ECB will be able to defuse the situation. Unfortunately, what Draghi cannot do much about is the low level of the neutral rate in the euro area. If the neutral rate is low in the U.S., it is probably even lower in the euro area, reflecting the region's worse demographics and higher debt burdens. The anti-growth features of the common currency - namely, the inability to devalue one's currency in response to an adverse economic shock, as well as the austerity bias that comes from not having a central bank that can act as a lender of last resort to solvent but illiquid governments - also imply a lower neutral rate. Chart 19Anti-Euro Sentiment Is High In Italy Indeed, it is entirely possible that the neutral rate is negative in the euro area, even in nominal terms. If that's the case, the ECB will find it difficult to keep inflation from falling once the economy begins to slow late next year. The U.K.: And Now The Hard Part The U.K. fared better than most pundits expected in the aftermath of the Brexit vote. Nevertheless, it would be a mistake to assume that the Brexit vote has not cast a pall over the economy. The pound has depreciated by 11% against the euro and 16% against the dollar since that fateful day, while gilt yields have fallen across the board. Had it not been for this easing in financial conditions, the economic outcome would have been far worse. As the tailwind from the pound's devaluation begins to recede next year, the U.K. economy could suffer. Slower growth in continental Europe and the rest of the world could also exacerbate matters. The severity of the slowdown will hinge on the outcome of Brexit negotiations. On the one hand, the EU has an interest in taking a hardline stance to discourage separatist forces elsewhere, particularly in Italy where pro-euro sentiment is tumbling (Chart 19). On the other hand, the EU still needs the U.K. as both a trade partner and a geopolitical ally. Investors may therefore be surprised by the relatively muted negotiations that transpire over the coming months. In fact, news reports indicate that Brussels has already offered the U.K. a three year transitional deal that will give London plenty of time to conclude a free trade agreement with the EU. In addition, the EU has dangled the carrot of revocability, suggesting that the U.K. would be welcomed back with open arms if enough British voters were to change their minds. Whatever the path, our geopolitical service believes that political risk actually bottomed with the January 17 Theresa May speech.2 If that turns out to be the case, the pound is unlikely to weaken much from current levels. China And EM: The Calm Before The Storm? The Chinese economy should continue to perform well over the coming months. The Purchasing Manager Index for manufacturing remains in expansionary territory and BCA's China Leading Economic Indicator is in a clear uptrend (Charts 20 and 21). Chart 20Bright Spots In The Chinese Economy Chart 21Improving LEI Points To Further Growth Acceleration Moreover, there has been a dramatic increase in the sales of construction equipment such as heavy trucks and excavators, with growth rates matching levels last seen during the boom years before the global financial crisis. Historically, construction machinery sales have been tightly correlated with real estate development (Chart 22). Reflecting this reflationary trend, the producer price index rose by nearly 8% year-over-year in February, a 14-point swing from the decline of 6% experienced in late-2015. Historically, rising producer prices have resulted in higher corporate profits and increased capital expenditures, especially among private enterprises (Chart 23). Chart 22An Upturn In Housing Construction? Chart 23Higher Producer Prices Boosting Profits The key question is how long the good news will last. As in the rest of the world, our guess is that the Chinese economy will slow late next year, setting the stage for a major growth disappointment in 2019. Weaker growth abroad will be partly to blame, but domestic factors will also play a role. The Chinese housing market has been on a tear. The authorities are increasingly worried about a property bubble and have begun to tighten the screws on the sector. The full effect of these measures should become apparent sometime next year. Fiscal policy is also likely to be tightened at the margin. The IMF estimates that China benefited from a positive fiscal thrust of 2.2% of GDP between 2014 and 2016. The fiscal thrust is likely to be close to zero in 2017 and turn negative to the tune of nearly 1% of GDP in 2018 and 2019. The growth outlook for other emerging markets is likely to mirror China's. The IMF expects real GDP in emerging and developing economies to rise by 5.1% in Q4 of 2017 relative to the same quarter a year earlier, up from 4.2% in 2016 (Table 2). The biggest acceleration is expected to occur in Brazil, where the economy is projected to grow by 1.4% in 2017 after having contracted by 1.9% in 2016. Russia and India should also see better growth numbers. Table 2World Economic Outlook: Global Growth Projections We do not see any major reason to challenge these numbers for this year, but think the IMF's projections will turn out to be too rosy for 2018, and especially, 2019. As BCA's Emerging Market Strategy service has documented, the lack of structural reforms in EMs over the past few years has depressed productivity growth. High debt levels also cloud the picture. Chart 24 shows that debt levels have continued to grow as a share of GDP in most emerging markets. In EMs such as China, where banks benefit from a fiscal backstop, the likelihood of a financial crisis is low. In others such as Brazil, where government finances are in precarious shape, the chances of another major crisis remains uncomfortable high. Japan: The End Of Deflation? If there is one thing investors are certain about it is that deflationary forces in Japan are here to stay. Despite a modest increase in inflation expectations since July 2016, CPI swaps are still pricing in inflation of only 0.6% over the next two decades, nowhere close to the Bank of Japan's 2% target. But could the market be wrong? We think so. Many of the forces that have exacerbated deflation in Japan, such as corporate deleveraging and falling property prices, have run their course (Chart 25). The population continues to age, but the impact that this is having on inflation may have reached an inflection point. Over the past quarter century, slow population growth depressed aggregate demand by reducing the incentive for companies to build out new capacity. This generated a surfeit of savings relative to investment, helping to fuel deflation. Now, however, as an ever-rising share of the population enters retirement, the overabundance of savings is disappearing. The household saving rate currently stands at only 2.8% - down from 14% in the early 1990s - while the ratio of job openings-to-applicants has soared to a 25-year high (Chart 26). Chart 24What EM Deleveraging? Chart 25Japan: Easing Deflationary Forces Chart 26Japan: Low Household Saving Rate And A Tightening Labor Market Government policy is finally doing its part to slay the deflationary dragon. The Abe government shot itself in the foot by tightening fiscal policy by 3% of GDP between 2013 and 2015. It won't make the same mistake again. The Bank of Japan's efforts to pin the 10-year yield to zero also seems to be bearing fruit. As bond yields in other economies have trended higher, this has made Japanese bonds less attractive. That, in turn, has pushed down the yen, ushering in a virtuous cycle where a falling yen props up economic activity, leading to higher inflation expectations, lower real yields, and an even weaker yen. Unfortunately, external events could conspire to sabotage Japan's escape from deflation. If the global economy slows in late-2018 - leading to a recession in 2019 - Japan will be hard hit, given the highly cyclical nature of its economy. And this could cause Japanese policymakers to throw the proverbial kitchen sink at the problem, including doing something that they have so far resisted: introducing a "helicopter money" financed fiscal stimulus program. Against the backdrop of weak potential GDP growth and a shrinking reservoir of domestic savings, the government may get a lot more inflation than it bargained for. Act 3: Stagflation Who Remembers The 70s Anymore? By historical standards, the 2019 recession will be a mild one for most countries, especially in the developed world. This is simply because the excesses that preceded the subprime crisis in 2007 and, to a lesser extent the tech bust in 2000, are likely to be less severe going into the next global downturn than they were back then. The policy response may turn out to be anything but mild, however. Memories of the Great Recession are still very much vivid in most peoples' minds. No one wants to live through that again. In contrast, memories of the inflationary 1970s are fading. A recent NBER paper documented that age plays a big role in determining whether central bankers turn out to be dovish or hawkish.3 Those who experienced stagflation in the 1970s as adults are much more likely to express a hawkish bias than those who were still in their diapers back then. The implication is the future generation of central bankers is likely to see the world through more dovish eyes than their predecessors. Even if one takes the generational mix out of the equation, there are good reasons to aim for higher inflation in today's environment. For one thing, debt is high. The simplest way to reduce real debt burdens is by letting inflation accelerate. In addition, the zero bound is less likely to be a problem if inflation were higher. After all, if inflation were running at 1% going into a recession, real rates would not be able to fall much below -1%. But if inflation were running at 3%, real rates could fall to as low as -3%. The Politics Of Inflation Political developments will also facilitate the transition to higher inflation. In the U.S., the presidential election campaign will start coming into focus in 2019. If the economy enters a recession then, Donald Trump will go ballistic. The infrastructure program that Republicans in Congress are downplaying now will be greatly expanded. Gold-plated hotels and casinos will be built across the country. Of course, several years could pass between when an infrastructure bill is passed and when most new projects break ground. By that time, the economy will already be recovering. This will help fuel inflation. As the economy turns down in 2019, the Fed will also be forced to play ball. The market's current obsession over whether President Trump wants a "dove" or a "hawk" as Fed chair misses the point. He wants neither. He wants someone who will do what they are told. This means that the next Fed chair will likely be a "really smart" business executive with little-to-no-experience in central banking and even less interest in maintaining the Federal Reserve's institutional independence. The empirical evidence strongly suggests that inflation tends to be higher in countries that lack independent central banks (Chart 27). This may be the fate of the U.S. Chart 27Inflation Higher In Countries Lacking Independent Central Banks Europe's Populists: Down But Not Out Whether something similar happens in Europe will also depend on political developments. For the next 18 months at least, the populists will be held at bay (Chart 28). Le Pen currently trails Macron by 24 percentage points in a head-to-head contest. It is highly unlikely that she will be able to close this gap between now and May 7th, the date of the second round of the Presidential contest. In Germany, support for the europhile Social Democratic Party is soaring, as is support for the common currency itself. For the time being, euro area risk assets will be able to climb the proverbial political "wall of worry." However, if the European economy turns down in 2019, all this may change. Chart 29 shows the strong correlation between unemployment rates in various French départements and support for Marine Le Pen's National Front. Should French unemployment rise, her support will rise as well. The same goes for other European countries. Chart 28France And Germany: Populists Held At Bay For Now Chart 29Higher Unemployment Would Benefit Le Pen Meanwhile, there is a high probability that the migrant crisis will intensify at some point over the next few years. Several large states neighboring Europe are barely holding together - Egypt being a prime example - and could erupt at any time. Furthermore, demographic trends in Africa portend that the supply of migrants will only increase. In 2005, the United Nations estimated that sub-Saharan Africa's population will increase to 2 billion by the end of the century, up from one billion at present. In its 2015 revision, the UN doubled its estimate to 4 billion. And even that may be too conservative because it assumes that the average number of births per woman falls from 5.1 to 2.2 over this period (Chart 30). Chart 30Population Pressures In Africa The existing European political order is not well equipped to deal with large-scale migration, as the hapless reaction to the Syrian refugee crisis demonstrates. This implies that an increasing share of the public may seek out a "new order" that is more attuned to their preferences. European history is fraught with regime shifts, and we may see yet another one in the 2020s. The eventual success of anti-establishment politicians on both sides of the Atlantic suggests that open border immigration policies and free trade - the two central features of globalization - will come under attack. Consequently, an inherently deflationary force, globalization, will give way to an inherently inflationary one: populism. The Productivity Curse Just as the "flation" part of stagflation will become more noticeable as the global economy emerges from the 2019 recession, so will the "stag." Chart 31 shows that productivity growth has fallen across almost all countries and regions. There is little compelling evidence that measurement error explains the productivity slowdown.4 Cyclical factors have played some role. Weak investment spending has curtailed the growth in the capital stock. This means that today's workers have not benefited from the same improvement in the quality and quantity of capital as they did in previous generations. However, the timing of the productivity slowdown - it began in 2004-05 in most countries, well before the financial crisis struck - suggests that structural factors have been key. Most prominently, the gains from the IT revolution have leveled off. Recent innovations have focused more on consumers than on businesses. As nice as Facebook and Instagram are, they do little to boost business productivity - in fact, they probably detract from it, given how much time people waste on social media these days. Human capital accumulation has also decelerated, dragging productivity growth down with it. Globally, the fraction of adults with a secondary degree or higher is increasing at half the pace it did in the 1990s (Chart 32). Educational achievement, as measured by standardized test scores in mathematics, is edging lower in the OECD, and is showing very limited gains in most emerging markets (Chart 33).5 Given that test scores are extremely low in most countries with rapidly growing populations, the average level of global mathematical proficiency is now declining for the first time in modern history. Chart 31Productivity Growth Has Slowed In Most Major Economies Chart 32The Contribution To Growth From Rising Human Capital Is Falling Chart 33Math Skills Around The World Productivity And Inflation The slowdown in potential GDP growth tends to be deflationary at the outset, but becomes inflationary later on (Chart 34). Initially, lower productivity growth reduces investment, pushing down aggregate demand. Lower productivity growth also curtails consumption, as households react to the prospect of smaller real wage gains. Chart 34A Decline In Productivity Growth Is Deflationary In The Short Run, But Inflationary In The Long Run Eventually, however, economies that suffer from chronically weak productivity growth tend to find themselves rubbing up against supply-side constraints. This leads to higher inflation.6 One only needs to look at the history of low-productivity economies in Africa and Latin America to see this point - or, for that matter, the U.S. in the 1970s, a decade during which productivity growth slowed and inflation accelerated. Financial Markets Overall Strategy Risk assets have enjoyed a strong rally since late last year, and a modest correction is long overdue. Still, as long as the global economy continues to grow at a robust pace, the cyclical outlook for risk assets will remain bullish. As such, investors with a 12-month horizon should stay overweight global equities and high-yield credit at the expense of government bonds and cash. Global growth is likely to slow in the second half of 2018, with the deceleration intensifying into 2019, possibly culminating in a recession in a number of countries. To what extent markets "sniff out" an economic slowdown before it happens is a matter of debate. U.S. equities did not peak until October 2007, only slightly before the Great Recession began. Commodity prices did not top out until the summer of 2008. Thus, the market's track record for predicting recessions is far from an envious one. Nevertheless, investors should err on the side of safety and start scaling back risk exposure next spring. The 2019 recession will last 6-to-12 months, followed by a gradual recovery that sees the restoration of full employment in most countries by 2021. At that point, inflation will take off, rising to over 4% by the middle of the decade. The 2020s will be remembered as a decade of intense pain for bond investors. In relative terms, equities will fare better than bonds, but in absolute terms they will struggle to generate a positive real return. As in the 1970s, gold will be the standout winner. Chart 35 presents a visual representation of how the main asset markets are likely to evolve over the next seven years. Chart 35Market Outlook For Major Asset Classes Equities Cyclically Favor The Euro Area And Japan Over The U.S. Stronger global growth is powering an acceleration in corporate earnings. Global EPS is expected to expand by 12% over the next 12 months. Analysts are usually too bullish when it comes to making earnings forecasts. This time around they may be too bearish. Chart 36 shows that the global earnings revision ratio has turned positive for the first time in six years, implying that analysts have been behind the curve in revising up profit projections. We prefer euro area and Japanese stocks relative to U.S. equities over a 12-month horizon. We would only buy Japanese stocks on a currency-hedged basis, as the prospect of a weaker yen is the main reason for being overweight Japan. In contrast, we would still buy euro area equities on a U.S. dollar basis, even though our central forecast is for the euro to weaken against the dollar over the next 12 months. Our cyclically bullish view on euro area equities reflects several considerations. For starters, they are cheap. Euro area stocks currently trade at a Shiller PE ratio of only 17, compared with 29 for the U.S. (Chart 37). Some of this valuation gap can be explained by different sector weights across the two regions. However, even if one controls for this factor, as well as the fact that euro area stocks have historically traded at a discount to the U.S., the euro area still comes out as being roughly one standard deviation cheap compared with the U.S. (Chart 38). Chart 36Global Earnings Picture Looking Brighter Chart 37Euro Area Stocks Are A Bargain... Chart 38...No Matter How You Look At It European Banks Are In A Cyclical Sweet Spot Of course, if euro area banks flounder over the next 12 months as they have for much of the past decade, none of this will matter. However, we think that the region's banks have finally turned the corner. The ECB is slowly unwinding its emergency measures and core European bond yields have risen since last summer. This has led to a steeper yield curve, helping to flatter net interest margins. Chart 39 shows that the relative performance of European banks is almost perfectly correlated with the level of German bund yields. Our European Corporate Health Monitor remains in improving territory, in contrast to the U.S., where it has been deteriorating since 2013 (Chart 40). Profit margins in Europe have room to expand, whereas in the U.S. they have already maxed out. The capital positions of European banks have also improved greatly since the euro crisis. Not all banks are out of the woods, but with nonperforming loans trending lower, the need for costly equity dilution has dissipated (Chart 41). Meanwhile, euro area credit growth is accelerating and loan demand continues to expand. Chart 39Performance Of European Banks And Bond Yields: A Good Fit Chart 40Corporations Healthier In The Euro Area Chart 41Cyclical Background Positive For Bank Stocks Beyond a 12-month horizon, the outlook for euro area banks and the broader stock market look less enticing. The region will suffer along with the rest of the world in 2019. The eventual triumph of populist governments could even lead to the dissolution of the common currency. This means that euro area stocks should be rented, not owned. The same goes for U.K. equities. EM: Uphill Climb Emerging market equities tend to perform well when global growth is strong. Thus, it would not be surprising if EM equities continue to march higher over the next 12 months. However, the structural problems plaguing emerging markets that we discussed earlier in this report will continue to cast a pall over the sector. Our EM strategists favor China, Taiwan, Korea, India, Thailand, Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, and Russia. They are neutral on Singapore, the Philippines, Hong Kong, Chile, Mexico, Colombia, and South Africa; and are underweight Indonesia, Malaysia, Brazil, Peru, and Turkey. Fixed Income Global Bond Yields To Rise Further We put out a note on July 5th entitled "The End Of The 35-Year Bond Bull Market" recommending that clients go structurally underweight safe-haven government bonds.7 As luck would have it, we penned this report on the very same day that the 10-year Treasury yield hit a record closing low of 1.37%. We continue to think that asset allocators should maintain an underweight position in global bonds over the next 12 months. In relative terms, we favor Japan over the U.S. and have a neutral recommendation on the euro area and the U.K. Chart 42The Market Expects 50 Basis Points Of Tightening Over The Next 12 Months Underweight The U.S. For Now We expect the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield to rise to around 3.2% over the next 12 months. The Fed is likely to raise rates by a further 100 basis points over this period, about 50 bps more than the 12-month discounter is currently pricing in (Chart 42). In addition, the Fed will announce later this year or in early 2018 that it will allow the assets on its balance sheet to run off as they mature. This could push up the term premium, giving long Treasury yields a further boost. Thus, for now, investors should underweight Treasurys on a currency-hedged basis within a fixed-income portfolio. The cyclical peak for both Treasury yields and the dollar should occur in mid-2018. Slowing growth in the second half of that year and a recession in 2019 will push the 10-year Treasury yield back towards 2%. After that, bond yields will grind higher again, with the pace accelerating in the early 2020s as the stagflationary forces described above gather steam. Neutral On Europe, Overweight Japan Yields in the euro area will follow the general contours of the U.S., but with several important qualifications. The ECB is likely to roll back some of its emergency measures over the next 12 months, including suspending the Targeted Longer-Term Refinancing Operations, or TLTROs. It could also raise the deposit rate slightly, which is currently stuck in negative territory. However, in contrast to the Fed, the ECB is unlikely to hike its key policy rate, the repo rate. And while the ECB will "taper" asset purchases, it will not take any steps to shrink the size of its balance sheet. As such, fixed-income investors should maintain a benchmark allocation to euro area bonds. Chart 43A Bit More Juice Left A benchmark weighting to gilts is also warranted. With the Brexit negotiations hanging in the air, it is doubtful that the Bank of England would want to hike rates anytime soon. On the flipside, rising inflation - though largely a function of a weak currency - will make it difficult for the BoE to increase asset purchases or take other steps to ease monetary policy. We would recommend a currency-hedged overweight position in JGBs. The Bank of Japan is committed to keeping the 10-year yield pinned to zero. Given that neither actual inflation nor inflation expectations are anywhere close to that level, it is highly unlikely that the BoJ will jettison its yield-targeting regime anytime soon. With government bond yields elsewhere likely to grind higher, this makes JGBs the winner by default. High-Yield Credit: Still A Bit Of Juice Left The fact that the world's most attractive government bond market by our rankings - Japan - is offering a yield of zero speaks volumes. As long as global growth stays strong and corporate default risk remains subdued, investors will maintain their love affair with high-yield credit. Thus, while credit spreads have fallen dramatically, they could still fall further (Chart 43). Only when corporate stress begins to boil over in late 2018 will things change. Nevertheless, investors will continue to face headwinds from rising risk-free yields in most economies even in the near term. This implies that the return from junk bonds in absolute terms will fall short of what is delivered by equities over the next 12 months. Currencies And Commodities Chart 44Real Rate Differentials Are Driving Up The Dollar Real Rate Differentials Will Support The Greenback We expect the real trade-weighted dollar to appreciate by about 10% over the next 12 months. Historically, changes in real interest rate differentials have been the dominant driver of currency movements in developed economies. The past few years have been no different. Chart 44 shows that the ascent of the trade-weighted dollar since mid-2014 has been almost perfectly matched by an increase in U.S. real rates relative to those abroad. Interest rate differentials between the U.S. and its trading partners are likely to widen further through to the middle of 2018 as the Fed raises rates more quickly than current market expectations imply, while other central banks continue to stand pat. Accordingly, we would fade the recent dollar weakness. As we discussed in "The Fed's Unhike," the March FOMC statement was not as dovish as it might have appeared at first glance.8 Given that monetary conditions eased in the aftermath of the Fed meeting - exactly the opposite of what the Fed was trying to achieve - it is likely that the FOMC's rhetoric will turn more hawkish in the coming weeks. The Yen Has The Most Downside, The Pound The Least Among the major dollar crosses, we see the most downside for the yen over the next 12 months. The Bank of Japan will continue to keep JGB yields anchored at zero. As yields elsewhere rise, investors will shift their money out of Japan, causing the yen to weaken. Only once the global economy begins to teeter into recession late next year will the yen - traditionally, a "risk off" currency - begin to rebound. The euro will also weaken against the dollar over the next 12 months, although not as much as the yen. The ECB's "months to hike" has plummeted from nearly 60 last summer to 26 today (Chart 45). That seems too extreme. Core inflation in the euro area is well below U.S. levels, even if one adjusts for measurement differences between the two regions (Chart 46). The neutral rate is also lower in the euro area, as discussed previously. This sharply limits the ability of the ECB to raise rates. Chart 45Market's Hawkish View Of The ECB Is Too Extreme Chart 46Core Inflation In The U.S. Is Still Higher, Even Excluding Housing Unlike most currencies, sterling should be able to hold its ground against the dollar over the next 12 months. The pound is very cheap by most metrics (Chart 47). The prospect of contentious negotiations over Brexit with the EU is already in the price. What may not be in the price is the possibility that the U.K. will move quickly to reach a deal with the EU. If such a deal fails to live up to the promises made by the Brexit campaign - a near certainty in our view - a new referendum may need to be scheduled. A new vote could yield a much different result than the first one. If the market begins to sniff out such an outcome, the pound could strengthen well before the dust settles. EM And Commodity Currencies The RMB will weaken modestly against the dollar over the coming year. As we have discussed in the past, China's high saving rate will keep the pressure on the government to try to export excess production abroad by running a large current account surplus. This requires a weak currency.9 Nevertheless, a major devaluation of the RMB is not in the cards. Much of the capital flight that China has experienced recently has been driven by an unwinding of the hot money flows that entered the country over the preceding years. Despite all the talk about a credit bubble, Chinese external debt has fallen by around $400 billion since its peak in mid-2014 - a decline of over 50% (Chart 48). At this point, most of the hot money has fled the country. This suggests that the pace of capital outflows will subside. Chart 47Pound: Cheap By All Accounts Chart 48Hot Money In, Hot Money Out A somewhat weaker RMB could dampen demand for base and bulk metals. A slowdown in Chinese construction activity next year could also put added pressure on metals prices. Our EM strategists are especially bearish on the South African rand, Brazilian real, Colombian peso, Turkish lira, Malaysian ringgit, and Indonesian rupiah. Crude should outperform metals over the next 12 months. This will benefit the Canadian dollar and other oil-sensitive currencies. However, Canada's housing bubble is getting out of hand and could boil over if domestic borrowing costs climb in line with rising long-term global bond yields. A sagging property sector will limit the ability of the Bank of Canada to raise short-term rates. On balance, we see modest downside for the CAD/USD over the coming year. The Aussie dollar will suffer even more, given the country's own housing excesses and its export sector's high sensitivity to metal prices. Finally, a few words on the most of ancient of all currencies: gold. We do not expect bullion to fare well over the next 12 months. A stronger dollar and rising bond yields are both bad news for the yellow metal. However, once central banks start slashing rates in 2019 and stagflationary forces begin to gather steam in the early 2020s, gold will finally have its day in the sun. Peter Berezin, Senior Vice President Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Seven Structural Reasons For A Lower Neutral Rate In The U.S.," dated March 13, 2015, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "The "What Can You Do For Me" World?" dated January 25, 2017, and Special Report, "Will Scotland Scotch Brexit?" dated March 29, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Ulrike Malmendier, Stefan Nagel, and Zhen Yan, "The Making Of Hawks And Doves: Inflation Experiences On The FOMC," NBER Working Paper No. 23228 (March 2017). 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "Weak Productivity Growth: Don't Blame The Statisticians," dated March 25, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Special Report, "Taking Off The Rose-Colored Glasses: Education And Growth In The 21st Century," dated February 24, 2011, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 6 Note to economists: We can think of this relationship within the context of the Solow growth model. The model says that the neutral real rate, r, is equal to (a/s) (n + g + d), where a is the capital share of income, s is the saving rate, n is labor force growth, g is total factor productivity growth, and d is the depreciation rate of capital. In the standard setup where the saving rate is fixed, slower population and productivity growth will always result in a lower equilibrium real interest rate. However, consider a more realistic setup where: 1) the saving rate rises initially as the population ages, but then begins to decline as a larger share of the workforce enters retirement; and 2) habit persistence affects consumer spending, so that households react to slower real wage growth by saving less rather than cutting back on consumption. In that sort of environment, the neutral rate could initially fall, but then begin to rise. If the central bank reacts slowly to changes in the neutral rate, or monetary policy is otherwise constrained by the zero bound on interest rates and/or political considerations, the initial effect of slower trend GDP growth will be deflationary while the longer-term outcome will be inflationary. 7 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "End Of The 35-Year Bond Bull Market," dated July 5, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Fed's Unhike," dated March 16, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Does China Have A Debt Problem Or A Savings Problem?" dated February 24, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights The financial market landscape has shifted over the past month with asset correlations changing and the so-called 'Trump trades' going into reverse. Equity valuation is stretched and plenty of risks remain. Nonetheless, we do not believe it is time to become defensive, scale back on risk assets, upgrade bonds and short the dollar. The economic data remain constructive for profits in the major countries. The risks posed by upcoming European elections have eased for 2017, now that the Italian election appears unlikely until 2018. The failure to replace Obamacare does not mean that tax reform is necessarily going to be delayed. If a tax reform package proves too difficult to pass, then the GOP will settle for straight tax cuts and a modest amount of infrastructure spending. Market reaction to the FOMC's 'dovish hike' was overdone. If the U.S. economy performs as we expect, the Fed will have to take a more hawkish tone later this year. Not before September will the ECB be in a position to announce a further tapering of its asset purchases beginning in 2018. A "Bund Tantrum" could thus be the big story for the global bond market later this year. In Japan, the 0% yield cap on the 10-year JGB to remain in place at least for the remainder of this year. Our views on U.S. fiscal policy and the major central banks paint a bullish picture for the dollar, and suggest that the other 'Trump trades' still have legs. The dollar has another 10% upside in trade-weighted terms and the global bond bear phase is not yet over. Another key market development has been the continuing drop in risk asset correlations. This reflects falling perceptions of downside "tail risk", which is reflected in a declining equity risk premium (ERP). Absent further negative shocks, perceptions of downside risk should continue to wane, allowing risk premia and asset correlations to ease further. And, if business leaders come to believe that deflation risk has finally been vanquished, they can focus more on long-term revenue generation rather than on guaranteeing their existence. Much of the normalization of the ERP since 2012 has been due to multiple expansion. Going forward, the lion's share of the remaining adjustment is likely to be in the bond market, with equity multiples trending sideways. This means that equity total returns will be roughly in line with dividends and earnings growth over the next couple of years. The only adjustment to asset allocation we are making this month is an upgrade for U.S. high-yield based on improved valuation. Feature The financial market landscape has shifted over the past month with asset correlations changing and a number of popular trades going into reverse. First, the failure to replace Obamacare triggered a pull-back of the so-called 'Trump trades.' Stock indexes are holding up well, but the U.S. dollar has given back most of the gains made in March and the 10-year Treasury yield has dropped back to the bottom of the post-U.S. election trading range. Moreover, the negative correlation between the U.S. dollar and risk assets has flipped (Chart I-1). Even oil prices have diverged from their usual negative trading relationship with the dollar. Second, investors are questioning the FOMC's appetite for rate hikes in the coming months. They are also wondering how much longer the European Central Bank (ECB) and the Bank of Japan (BoJ) can maintain current hyper-stimulative policy settings. The whole narrative regarding equity strength, a dollar overshoot and bond price weakness may be over if there is not going to be any fiscal stimulus in the U.S., the Fed is not going to hike more aggressively than the market currently expects, and monetary policy is near a turning point in Japan and the Eurozone. Is it time for investors to become defensive, scale back on risk assets, upgrade bonds and short the dollar? We believe the answer is 'not yet', although 2017 was always destined to be a rough ride given the ups-and-downs in the U.S. legislative process and the lineup of European elections. President Trump's first 100 days are turning out to be even more tumultuous than many expected. Allegations of wiretaps and the FBI investigation into the alleged interference of Russia in the U.S. election are costing the President political capital, as well as raising question marks over the Republican Party's wish list. Simply removing the possibility of corporate tax cuts would justify a healthy haircut on the S&P 500. The political situation has admittedly become more complicated, but our geopolitical team makes the following observations: The GOP base supports Trump: Until the mid-term elections, Trump's popularity with Republican voters remains strong, which means that the President still has political capital (Chart I-2). Chart I-1Changing Correlations Chart I-2Trump Not Dead To Republicans Yet Republicans want tax reform: Even if reform gets bogged down, there is broad support for cutting taxes at a minimum. Many deficit hawks appear willing to use the magic of "dynamic scoring" to justify tax cuts as revenue-neutral. Even the chairman of the Freedom Caucus has signaled that he is open to tax reform that is not revenue neutral. Tax reform not conditional on Obamacare: The failure to replace Obamacare does not mean that tax reform is necessarily going to be delayed. The Republicans will need to show success on at least one of their signature platforms before heading into the mid-term elections. The prospective savings from Obamacare's repeal are not needed to "fund" tax cuts. Infrastructure: We still expect that President Trump will get his way on additional spending on defense, veterans, infrastructure and the wall. The tax reform process will undoubtedly be full of drama and may be stretched out, adding volatility to the equity market. Our base case is that some sort of tax reform and infrastructure package will be passed by year end. However, if a reform package proves too difficult to pass, then we believe that the GOP will settle for straight-forward tax cuts and a modest amount of infrastructure spending (please see Table I-1 in the March 2017 monthly Bank Credit Analyst for the probabilities we have attached to the various GOP proposals). Tax cuts and increased spending will be positive for risk assets. The caveat is that we see little change in Trump's commitment to mercantilism. This means he will lean toward backing the border tax or tariff increases, which will offset some of the benefits for risk assets from reduced tax rates. Excess Reaction To FOMC Chart I-3FOMC & Market Disagree Beyond This Year Given the uncertainty on the fiscal side, one can't blame the FOMC for taking a "wait and see" approach. The range for the funds rate was raised to 0.75-1.00% at the March meeting, as expected, but there was virtually no change to any of the median FOMC member projections for GDP growth, inflation or interest rates out to 2019. Another 50 bps of tightening is expected by the Committee this year, with 75 bps expected in both 2018 and 2019 (Chart I-3). The FOMC signaled in March that it was not yet prepared to adjust the 'dot plot,' sparking a rally in bond prices and a pullback in the dollar. This market reaction seemed excessive in our view. The key message from the March meeting was that the Fed now sees inflation as having finally reached its 2% target, as highlighted by the decision to strip the reference to the "current shortfall of inflation" from the statement. If the U.S. economy performs as we expect, the Fed will have to take a more hawkish tone later this year. Is The Dollar Bull Over? Still, recent market action suggests that the dollar may not get a lift from future Fed rate hikes because the outlook for global growth outside of the U.S. is brightening. Moreover, it could be that monetary policy in the Eurozone and Japan is at a turning point. There is increasing speculation that the ECB will have to taper the quantitative easing program sooner than planned. Some are even speculating the ECB will lift rates this year. The recent economic data for the euro area have indeed been stellar. The composite PMI surged to 56.7 in March, with the forward-looking new orders components hitting new cyclical highs. Capital goods orders continue to trend higher, which bodes well for investment spending over the coming months (Chart I-4). In addition, private-sector credit growth has accelerated to the fastest pace since the 2008-09 financial crisis. Our real GDP model for the Eurozone, based on our consumer and business spending indicators, remains quite upbeat for the first half of the year. With unemployment rapidly falling in many parts of the Euro Area, it is becoming increasingly difficult to establish a consensus view on the ECB policy committee. The Bundesbank has been quite vocal on this issue, especially given that Eurozone headline HICP inflation reached 2% in February. The core rate of inflation remains close to 1%, but the rising diffusion index suggests that budding inflation pressure is becoming more broadly based (Chart I-5). Chart I-4Solid Eurozone Economic Data Chart I-5Eurozone Inflation Broadening Out BCA's Global Fixed Income Strategy service recently compared the current economic situation to that of the U.S. around the time of the Fed's 2013 "Taper Tantrum."1 In Chart I-6, we show "cycle-on-cycle" comparisons for the Euro Area and U.S. In the Euro Area, the number of months to the first rate hike discounted in money markets peaked in July of last year right around the time of the U.K. Brexit vote. Interestingly, this indicator has converged with the U.S. path. There is less spare capacity in European labor markets today than was the case in the U.S. when the Fed first hinted at tapering its asset purchases. Nonetheless, the relatively calmer readings on Euro Area core inflation suggest that the ECB does not have to rush to judgment on asset purchases, especially given upcoming elections. Not before September will the ECB be in a position to announce another tapering of its asset purchases beginning in 2018. A "Bund Tantrum" could thus be the big story for the global bond market later this year. We do not believe that the ECB will raise short-term interest rates before it starts the tapering process. A rate hike would result in a stronger euro, downward pressure on inflation, and an unwanted tightening in financial conditions that would threaten the current economic impulse. This means that, between now and September, the window is still open for U.S./Eurozone interest rate spreads to move further in favor of the dollar. The European election calendar remains a risk to our view on currencies and risk assets. Widening OAT/Bund yield spreads highlight that investors remain concerned that the French election will follow last year's populist script in the U.K. and the U.S. However, our geopolitical team believes that Le Pen is unlikely to win since she trails in the polls by a 25-30% margin relative to Macron, her most likely opponent. Even if she were to pull off a win, she will not hold the balance of power in the National Assembly. Over in Germany, where the election is heating up, the fact that the Europhile SPD party is gaining in the polls means that the September vote is unlikely to be a speed bump for financial markets. The real political risk lies in Italy. While the election has been pushed off to February 2018, it appears that there will be genuine fireworks at that time because Euroskeptic parties have seized the lead in the polls (Chart I-7). In the meantime, European elections will be a source of volatility, but investors should ride it out until we get closer to the Italian election. Chart I-6Less Spare Capacity In Europe ##br##Now Vs. Pre-Taper Tantrum U.S. Chart I-7Italian Elections: The Big Risk Japanese Yield Cap To Hold Chart I-8Japanese Wages Still Disappointing Similar to our view on the ECB, we do not believe that the Bank of Japan (BoJ) will be in a position to begin removing monetary accommodation anytime soon. We expect that the 0% yield cap on the 10-year JGB to remain in place at least for the remainder of this year. True, deflationary forces appear to have eased somewhat. Japan is also benefiting from the faster global growth on the industrial side. Nonetheless, the domestic demand story is less positive, with consumer confidence and real retail sales growth languishing. Wages continue to struggle as well (Chart I-8). This year's round of Japanese wage negotiations was particularly disappointing, with many manufacturing companies offering pay raises only half as large as those of last year. We continue to see this as the only way out of the low-inflation trap for Japan - keeping Japanese interest rates depressed versus the rest of the world, thus making the yen weaken alongside increasingly unattractive interest rate differentials. Our views on U.S. fiscal policy and the outlook for the major central banks paint a bullish picture for the dollar and suggest that the other 'Trump trades' still have legs. The dollar has another 10% upside in trade-weighted terms and the global bond bear phase is not yet over. Admittedly, however, the next major move in global yields may not occur until the autumn when the ECB takes a less dovish tone. In the meantime, our fixed-income strategists remain underweight Treasurys within global currency-hedged portfolios. The team recently upgraded (low beta) JGBs to overweight at the expense of core European government bonds, which move to benchmark. Correlation, ERP And Hurdle Rates Chart I-9Market Correlations Are Shifting Another key market development has been the continuing drop in risk asset correlations, a trend that began before the U.S. election (Chart I-9). Elevated financial market correlations have been a hallmark of this expansion, making life difficult for traders and for investors searching for diversification. Correlations have been higher than normal across assets, across regions and within asset classes. However, the situation has changed dramatically over the past 6 months. A drop in asset correlations is important for diversification reasons and because it provides a better backdrop for those seeking alpha. But the reasons behind the decline in correlations may have broader financial and economic implications. One can only speculate on the underlying cause of the surge in asset correlations in the first place. Our theory has been that the large global output gap lingered because of the sub-par recovery that followed the most damaging macroeconomic shock since the Great Depression. The growth headwinds were formidable and many felt that the sustainability of the recovery hinged solely on the success or failure of radical monetary policy. Either policy would "work", the output gap will gradually close, the deflation threat would be extinguished and risk assets would perform well, or it would fail, and risk assets would be dragged down as the economy fell back into recession. Thus, risk assets fluctuated along with violent swings in investor sentiment in what appeared to be a binary economic environment. In the March 2017 Quarterly Review, the Bank for International Settlements described it this way: "In a global environment devoid of growth but plentiful in liquidity, central bank decisions appear to draw investors into common, successive phases of buying or selling risk." In previous research, we developed a model that helps to explain the historical movements in correlations. We chose to focus on the correlation of individual stocks within the S&P 500 (Chart I-10). The two explanatory variables are: (1) the equity risk premium (ERP; the difference between the S&P 500 forward earnings yield and the 10-year Treasury yield); and (2) rolling 1-year realized downside volatility.2 The logic behind the model is that a higher ERP causes investors to revalue cash flows from all firms, which in turn, causes structural shifts in the correlation among stocks. Conversely, a lower ERP results in less homogenization of the present value of future cash flows, and raises the effect of differentiation among business models. A rise in the ERP could occur for different reasons, but the most obvious include an increase in the perceived riskiness of firms, a shift in investor risk aversion, or both. Volatility is included to explain the cyclical variation of correlations, but we use only below-average returns in the calculation because we are more concerned about the risk of equity market declines. It makes sense that perceptions of downside "tail risk" should affect investors' appetite for risk. The model almost completely explains the trend in stock price correlations over the past decade, highlighting the importance of the ERP in driving the structural change in correlations (Chart I-11). But why was the ERP so elevated after 2007? Chart I-10Market Correlation And The ERP Chart I-11Modeling The Stock ##br##Correlation Within The S&P 500 The preceding moderation in risk premia in the 1990s was likely due to a decline in macroeconomic volatility, a phenomenon that began in the early 1980s and has since been dubbed "The Great Moderation". A waning in the volatility of global inflation and growth contributed to a decline in the volatility of interest rates, which are used to discount future cash flows. This also reduced the perceived riskiness of investing in securities that are leveraged to economic growth, thus causing investors to trim their required excess returns to equities. Unfortunately, the Great Moderation contributed to complacency and bubbles in tech stocks and, later, housing.3 The bursting of the U.S. housing bubble brought the Great Moderation to a crushing end, ushering in an era of rolling financial crises and monetary extremism. Our measure of downside volatility soon returned to normal levels after the recession-driven spike. However, the ERP continued to fluctuate at a higher average level, which helps to explain the strong correlation among risk asset prices in the years since the recession. The ERP And Capital Spending Chart I-12Capex Hurdle Rates Never Came Down An elevated equity risk premium is consistent with the view that investors demanded a more generous premium to take risk in a post-Lehman world. This may also help to explain the disappointing rate of capital spending growth in the major countries in recent years. Firms demanded a fat "hurdle rate" when evaluating new investment projects. Sir John Cunliffe, a member of the Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee, recently cited survey evidence related to the dismal U.K. capital spending record since the recession.4 The main culprits were bank lending issues, the high cost of capital and elevated hurdle rates. Eighty percent of publically-owned firms in the survey agreed that financial market pressure for short-term returns to shareholders had been an obstacle to investment. This short-termism makes sense if investors feared that the recovery could turn to bust at any moment. The survey highlighted that market pressure, together with macro uncertainty among CEOs, kept the hurdle rate applied to new investment projects at close to 12%, despite the major drop in market interest rates. In other words, the gap between the required rate-of-return on new projects and the risk-free rate or corporate borrowing rates surged (Chart I-12). J.P. Morgan concluded that hurdle rates have also been sticky at around 12% in the U.S.5 This study blamed uncertainty over the cash-flow outlook (macro risk) and the fact that CEOs believed that low borrowing rates are temporary. It is rational for a firm to hold cash and buy back stock if perceptions of downside tail risk remain lofty. The bottom line is that uncertainty and higher risk aversion related to macro volatility kept the ERP elevated, curtailing animal spirits and lifting correlation among risk asset prices. The good news is that the situation appears to have changed since the U.S. election. Measures of market correlation have dropped sharply across asset classes, within asset classes and across regions. Animal spirits also appear to be reviving given the jump in consumer and business confidence in the major countries. We are not making the case that all risks have dissipated. The military situation in North Korea and upcoming European elections are just two on a long list, as highlighted in this month's Special Report on Brexit's implication for Scotland independence, beginning on page 19. Our point is that, absent further negative shocks, perceptions of downside tail risk and a binary economic future should wane further. And, if business leaders come to believe that deflation risk has finally been vanquished, they can now focus more on long-term revenue generation rather than on guaranteeing their existence. Does The ERP Have More Downside? It is difficult to determine the equilibrium equity risk premium, but back-of-the-envelope estimates can provide a ballpark figure. Let us assume that the ERP is not going back into negative territory, as was the case from 1980-2000. A more reasonable assumption is that the ERP instead converges with the level that prevailed during the last equity bull market, from 2003 to 2007 (about +200 basis points). The ERP is currently 3.2, which is equal to the forward earnings yield of 5.6 minus the 10-year yield of 2.4% (Chart I-13). The ERP would need to fall by 120 basis points to get back to the 2% average yield of 2003-2007. This convergence can occur through some combination of a lower earnings yield or a higher bond yield. If the 10-year Treasury yield is assumed to peak in this cycle at about 3%, then this leaves room for the earnings yield to fall by 60 basis points. This would boost the earnings multiple from 17.8 to 20. However, a rise in the 10-year yield to 3½% would leave no room for multiple expansion. We lean to the latter scenario for bonds, although it will take some time for the bond bear phase to play out. In the meantime, an equity overshoot is possible. The bottom line is that much of the normalization of the ERP since 2012 has been due to multiple expansion. Going forward, the lion's share of the remaining adjustment is likely to be in the bond market, with equity multiples trending sideways. This means that equity total returns will be roughly in line with dividends and earnings growth over the next couple of years, although that will be much better than the (likely negative) returns in the bond market. We continue to favor higher beta developed markets where value is less stretched, such as the euro area and Japan, over the U.S. on a currency-hedged basis. Europe is about one standard deviation cheap relative to the U.S. index, although the extra value in the Japanese market has dissipated recently (Chart I-14). Moreover, both Eurozone and Japanese stocks in local currency terms will benefit from weaker currencies in the coming months, as rising inflation expectations and stable nominal interest rates result in declining in real rates, at least relative to the U.S. Chart I-13Forward Multiple Scenarios Chart I-14Eurozone Stocks Are Cheap Conclusion We have reassessed our asset allocation given that several market calls have gone against us over the past month. However, three key views argue to stay the course for now: Recent economic data support our view that a synchronized global acceleration is underway. This is highlighted by an update of the real GDP growth models we introduced last month (Chart I-15). The implication is that earnings growth will be constructive for stocks; Tax reform is still likely to be passed this year in the U.S. Moreover, were a broad tax reform package to elude the Administration, the fallback position will involve (stimulative) tax cuts, some infrastructure spending and de-regulation; and The FOMC will shift to a more hawkish tone in the coming months, while the ECB, Bank of England and Bank of Japan will maintain extremely accommodative monetary policy at least into the fall. The result is that stocks will outperform cash and bonds, while the dollar still has another 10% upside potential. The only adjustment we are making this month is in the U.S. high-yield corporate bond allocation. According to our fixed-income strategists, value has improved enough that it is worth upgrading the sector to overweight at the expense of Treasurys. Some of the indicators that comprise our default rate model have become more constructive for credit risk, including lending standards, the PMIs and profits. The combination of wider junk spreads and an improving default rate outlook have resulted in a widening in our estimate of the default-adjusted high-yield spread to 219 basis points (Chart I-16). Historically, high-yield earns a positive 12-month excess return 81% of the time when the default-adjusted spread is between 200 and 250 basis points. Chart I-15GDP Models Are Bullish Chart I-16Upgrade U.S. High Yield Turning to oil markets, we expect recent price weakness to reverse despite dollar strength. Building inventories have weighed on crude, but this is a head fake according to our commodity experts. We expect to see a sustained draw in OECD storage volumes this year, now that the year-end surge on crude product from OPEC's Gulf producers has been fully absorbed. With global supply/demand fundamentals now dominating price movements, the recent breakdown in the inverse correlation between oil prices and the dollar should persist. Oil prices will rise back toward the US$55 range that we believe will be the central tendency over 2016 and 2017. Risks are to the upside. Our other recommendations include: Maintain below-benchmark duration within bond portfolios. Shift to benchmark in Eurozone government bonds and upgrade JGBs to overweight within currency-hedged portfolios. The U.S. remains at underweight. Overweight European and Japanese equities versus the U.S. in currency-hedged portfolios. Be defensively positioned within equity sectors to temper the risk associated with overweighting stocks over bonds. In U.S. equities, maintain a preference for exporting companies over those that rely heavily on imports. Overweight investment-grade corporate bonds relative to government issues in the U.S.; upgrade U.S. high-yield to overweight, but downgrade European investment-grade to underweight due to fading support from the ECB. Within European government bond portfolios, continue to avoid the Periphery in favor of the core markets. Fade the widening in French/German spreads. Overweight the dollar relative to the other major currencies. Stay cautious on EM bonds, stocks and currencies. Overweight small cap stocks versus large in the U.S. market, on expected policy changes that will disproportionately favor small companies. Favor oil to base metals. Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst March 30, 2017 Next Report: April 27, 2017 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Will The Hawks Walk The Talk?" dated March 7, 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Downside volatility is calculated in a fashion similar to standard deviation, except only using below-average returns. 3 Of course, the Great Moderation was not the only factor that contributed to the financial market bubbles. 4 Are Firms Underinvesting - and if so why? Speech by Sir Jon Cunliffe, Deputy Governor Financial Stability and Member of the Monetary Policy Committee. Greater Birmingham Chamber of Commerce. February 8, 2017. 5 It's Time to Reassess Your Hurdle Rates. J.P. Morgan, November 2016. II. Will Scotland Scotch Brexit? This month's Special Report, on Scotland's role in Brexit negotiations, was penned by our colleagues Matt Gertken, Marko Papic, and Jesse Kurri of BCA's Geopolitical Strategy service. Scottish secessionist sentiment has increased in response to First Minister Nicola Sturgeon's decision to push for a second popular referendum on Scottish independence, tentatively set for late 2018 or early 2019, though likely to be denied for some time by Westminster. The outcome of a referendum on leaving the U.K., which eventually will occur, is too close to call at this point. The possibility will influence the U.K.'s negotiations with the EU, and vice versa. The risk of a U.K. break-up adds an important constraint to Prime Minister Theresa May's government in the Brexit talks. Since the EU also has an interest in avoiding a devastating outcome for the U.K., our geopolitical team believes that the worst version of a "hard Brexit" will be avoided. That said, independence for Scotland cannot be ruled out, particularly in the context of any adverse economic shock stemming from the U.K.'s divorce proceedings. I trust that you will find the report as insightful as I did. Mark McClellan Senior Vice President A second Scottish referendum will be "too close to call"; There is upside potential to the 45% independence vote of 2014; Scots may vote with their hearts instead of their heads; But the EU will not seek to dismember the U.K. ... ...And that may keep the kingdom united. "No sooner did Scots Men appear inclined to set Matters upon a better footing, than the Union of the two Kingdoms was projected, as an effectual measure to perpetuate their Chains and Misery." - George Lockhart, Memoirs Concerning The Affairs Of Scotland, 1714. British Prime Minister Theresa May has had a busy week. On Monday she met with Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon as part of a tour of the United Kingdom to drum up national unity. On Wednesday she communicated with European Council President Donald Tusk and formally invoked Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, initiating the process of the U.K.'s withdrawal from the European Union. And on that day and Thursday, she turns to the parliamentary battle over the "Great Repeal Bill" that will replace the 1972 European Communities Act, which until now translated European law into British law. Brexit is finally getting under way. As our colleague Dhaval Joshi puts it, the "Phoney War" has ended, and now the real battle begins.1 Indeed, the dynamic has truly shifted in recent weeks. Not because PM May invoked Article 50, which was expected, but rather because Scottish secessionist sentiment has ticked up in reaction to Sturgeon's decision to hold a second popular referendum on Scottish independence (Chart II-1), tentatively set for late 2018 or early 2019. Scottish voters are still generally opposed to holding a second referendum, but the gap is narrowing (Chart II-2). A sequel to the September 2014 referendum was always in the cards in the event of a Brexit vote. Financial markets called it, by punishing equities domiciled in Scotland following the U.K.'s EU referendum (Chart II-3). The timing of the move toward a second referendum is significant for two reasons. First, the odds of Scotland actually voting to leave have increased relative to 2014, even as the economic case for secession has worsened. Second, Scotland's threat of leaving will impact the U.K.'s negotiations with the EU, slated to end in March 2019.2 Chart II-1A Second Independence Referendum... Chart II-2...Is Looking More Likely Chart II-3Scottish Stocks Have Underperformed BCA's Geopolitical Strategy service believes that a second Scottish referendum will eventually take place. And as with the Brexit referendum, the outcome will be "too close to call," at least judging by the data available at present. In what follows we discuss why, and how Scotland could influence the Brexit negotiations, and vice versa. While the U.K. can avoid the worst version of a "hard Brexit," the high risk of a break-up of the U.K. will add urgency to negotiations with the EU. Why Scotland Rejected "Freedom" In 2014 In a Special Report on "Secession In Europe," in May 14, 2014, we argued that the incentives for separatism in Europe had weakened and that this trend specifically applied to Scotland:3 The world is a scary place: Whereas the market-friendly 1990s fueled regional aspirations to independence by suggesting that the world was fundamentally secure and that "the End of History" was nigh, the multipolar twenty-first century discourages those aspirations, with nation-states fighting to maintain their integrity. For Scotland, the Great Recession drove home the dangers of socio-economic instability. EU and NATO membership is difficult to obtain: Scotland could not be assured to find easy accession to the EU as it faced opposition from states like Spain, which wanted to discourage Catalan independence. Enlargement of the EU and NATO have both become increasingly difficult and Scotland would need a special dispensation. The United States and the European Union vociferously discouraged Scotland from striking out on its own ahead of the 2014 referendum. Domestic politics: The Great Recession revived old fissures in every country, including the old Anglo-Scots divide. The U.K. imposed budgetary austerity while Scotland opposed it. Left-leaning Scotland resented the rightward shift in the U.K., ruled by the Conservative Party after 2010. We also highlighted some of Scotland's particular impediments to independence: Energy: Scotland's domestic sources of energy are in structural decline. This would weigh on the fiscal balance and domestic private demand. The referendum actually signaled a top in the oil market, with oil prices collapsing by 58% in 2014. Deficits and debt: Scotland's public finances would get worse if it left the U.K. If that had happened in 2014, it was estimated that the country's fiscal deficit would have been 5.9% of GDP and that its national debt would have been 109% of GDP. (Today those numbers are 8% and 84% of GDP respectively) (Table II-1). A newborn Scotland would have to adopt austerity quickly. Table II-1Scotland Would Be A High-Debt Economy Central banking: If Scotland walked away from its share of the U.K.'s national debt, yet retained the pound unilaterally and without the blessing of the BoE, it would lose access to the English central bank as lender of last resort. And if it walked away from its U.K. debt obligation and the pound, then it would also lose its financial sector and much of its wealth, which would be newly redenominated into a Scots national currency. Scotland is every bit as reliant on the financial sector as the U.K. as a whole (Chart II-4), making for a major constraint on any political rupture that threatens to force it to change currencies or lose control of monetary policy. Chart II-4Highly Financialized Societies Politics: We also posited that domestic political changes in the U.K. could provide inducements to keep Scotland in the union, particularly if the Conservatives suffered in the 2015 elections. The opposite, in fact, occurred, sowing the seeds for today's confrontation. For all these reasons, we argued that the risks of Scottish secession were overstated. The September 2014 referendum confirmed our forecast. The economic prospects were simply too daunting outside the U.K. But the 45% pro-independence tally also left open the possibility for another referendum down the line. Bottom Line: Scottish independence did not make sense in 2014 for a range of geopolitical, political, and economic reasons. But note that while independence still does not make economic sense, the political winds have shifted. Scottish antagonism toward the Conservative leadership in England has only intensified, while it remains to be seen how the European Union will respond to Scotland in a post-Brexit world. The Three Kingdoms In our Strategic Outlook for 2017, we argued that the British public not only did not regret the Brexit referendum outcome, but positively rallied around the flag because of it. This helped set up an environment in which the ruling party could charge forward aggressively and pursue the outcome confirmed by the vote (Chart II-5). Brexit does indeed mean Brexit. We have since seen that the Tories have forced parliament's hand in approving the bill authorizing the government to initiate exit proceedings. Chart II-5Three Cheers For Brexit And The Tories It stood to reason that the crux of tensions would shift to the domestic sphere, i.e. to the troubling constitutional problems that Brexit would provoke between what were once called "the Three Kingdoms," England (and Wales), Scotland, and Northern Ireland.4 While 52% of the U.K. public voted to leave the EU, the subdivision reveals the stark regional differences: England and Wales voted to leave (53.4% and 52.5% respectively), while Scotland and Northern Ireland voted to stay (62% and 55.8% respectively). Scotland and the London metropolitan area were the clear outliers. The Scottish parliament is a devolved parliament subordinate to the U.K. parliament in Westminster, and it cannot hold a legally binding referendum on independence without the latter's permission.5 The May government is insisting that it will not allow a referendum to go forward until the Brexit negotiations are completed. This is an obvious strategic need. Although the Scottish National Party (SNP), the dominant party in Edinburgh, could hold a non-binding referendum at any time to apply pressure on London (reminder: the Brexit vote was also non-binding), it has an interest in waiting to see whether public opinion of Brexit will shift in England and what kind of deal the U.K. might get from the EU in the exit negotiations. Eventually, however, Scotland is likely to push for a new vote. The SNP is a party whose raison d'être is independence sooner or later. It faces a once-in-a-generation opportunity, with the 2014 referendum producing an encouraging result and Brexit adding new impetus. The party manifesto made clear in 2016 that a new independence vote would be justified in case of "a significant and material change in the circumstances that prevailed in 2014, such as Scotland being taken out of the EU against our will." Why have the odds of Scottish independence increased? First, Brexit removes a domestic political constraint on independence. After the Brexit vote, the SNP and other pro-independence groups can say that England changed the status quo, not Scotland. It is worth remembering that the Anglo-Scots union was forged in 1707 at a time of severe Scottish economic hardship, in which a common market was the primary motivation to merge governments. Today, Scotland's comparable interest lies in maintaining access to the European single market, which is now under threat from Westminster. In particular, as with the U.K. as a whole, Scotland stands to suffer from a decline in immigration and hence workforce growth (Chart II-6). Second, Brexit removes an external constraint. The EU's official opposition to Scottish independence, particularly European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso's threat that Scottish accession would be "extremely difficult, if not impossible," likely affected the outcome of the 2014 referendum. Of course, many Scots rejected all such warnings as the vote approached, with polls showing a rally just before the referendum date toward the 45% outcome (Chart II-7). But if the EU's warnings even had a temporary effect, what happens if the EU gives a nod and wink this time around? While EU officials have recently reiterated the so-called "Barroso doctrine," we suspect that they are less likely to play an interventionist role under the new circumstances. Spain - which is still concerned about Scotland fanning Catalan ambitions - might be less vocal this time, since Madrid could plausibly argue that Brexit makes a material difference from its own case. Catalonians could not argue, like the Scots, that their parent country attempted to deprive them of access to the European Single Market. Chart II-6Immigration Curbs ##br##Threaten Scots Growth Chart II-7Scottish Patriots ##br##Only Temporarily Deterred To put this into context, remember that it is not historically unusual for continental Europe to act as a patron to Scotland to keep England in check. There is ample record of this behavior, namely French and Spanish patronage of the exiled Stuart kings after 1688. The situation is very different today, but the analogy is not absurd: insofar as Brexit undermines the integrity of the EU, the EU can be expected to reciprocate by not doing everything in its power to defend the integrity of the U.K. All is fair in love and war. Nevertheless, the economic constraints to Scottish secession are even clearer than they were in 2014: The North Sea is drying up: Scotland's North Sea energy revenues have essentially collapsed to zero (Chart II-8). Meanwhile the long-term prospects for the North Sea oil production remain as bleak as they were in 2014, especially since oil prices halved. Reserves of oil and gas are limited, hovering at around five to eight years' worth of supply - i.e. not a good basis for long-term independence (Chart II-9). Decommissioning costs are also expected to be high as the sector is wound down. England still foots many bills: Total government expenditures in Scotland exceed the total revenue raised in Scotland by about £15 billion or 28% of Scotland's government revenue (Chart II-10). Chart II-8No Golden Goose In The North Sea Chart II-9Limited Domestic Energy Supplies Chart II-10The U.K. Pays For Scotland's Allegiance Scottish finances stand at risk: Scotland's fiscal, foreign exchange, and monetary policy dilemmas are as discouraging as they were in 2014 (Chart II-11). Judging by the value of financial assets (which come under risk if Scotland loses the BoE's support or changes currencies), Scotland is incredibly exposed to financial risk (Chart II-12). Chart II-11Scotland's Deficits Getting Worse Chart II-12Scottish Financial Assets Need Currency Stability Thus, while key domestic political and foreign policy impediments may be removed, the country's internal economic impediments remain gigantic. Moreover, Scotland already has most of the characteristics of a nation state. It has its own legal and education system, prints its own banknotes, and has some powers of taxation (about 40% of revenue). It lacks a standing army and full fiscal control, but in these cases it clearly benefits from partnering with England. It also has a strong sense of national identity, regardless of whether it is technically independent. Why, then, do we believe Scottish independence is too close to call? Because Brexit has shown that "math" is insufficient! The Scots may go with their hearts against their heads, just as many English voters did in favor of Brexit. Nationalism and political polarization are a two-way street. History also shows that strictly materialist or quantitative assessments cannot anticipate paradigm shifts or national leaps into the unknown. Compare Ireland in 1922, the year of its independence from the U.K. Ireland was far less prepared to strike out on its own than Scotland is today. It comprised a smaller share of the U.K.'s population, workforce, and GDP than Scotland today (Charts II-13 and II-14). It was less educated and less developed relative to its neighbors, and it faced unemployment rates above 30%. Yet it chose independence anyway - out of political will and sheer Celtic grit. Ireland's case was very different than Scotland's today, but there is an interesting parallel. The U.K. was absorbed with continental affairs, the Americans played the role of external economic patron, and the Irish were ready to seize their once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Today the U.K. is similarly distracted with Europe, and the SNP leadership is ready to seize the moment, having revealed its preference in 2014. But foreign support (in this case the EU's) will be a critical factor, even though the EU's common market is much less valuable to Scotland than the U.K.'s (Chart II-15). Chart II-13Irish Independence: ##br##Poverty Not An Obstacle Chart II-14Scotland: If The Irish ##br##Can Do It So Can We Chart II-15EU Market No ##br##Substitute For British Market Will the SNP be able to get enough votes? We know that more Scots voted to stay in the EU (62%) than voted to stay in the U.K. (55%), which in a crude sense implies that there is upside potential to the first referendum outcome. However, looking at the referendum results on the local level, it becomes clear that there is no correlation between Scottish secessionists and Europhiles, or unionists and Euroskeptics (Chart II-16). Nor is there any marked correlation between level of education and the desire for independence, as was the case in Brexit. Yet there is evidence that love of the Union Jack is correlated with age (Chart II-17). Youngsters are willing to take risks for the thrill of freedom, while their elders better understand the benefits from economic links and transfer payments. In the short and medium run, this suggests that demographics will continue to work against independence - reinforcing the fact that the SNP can wait to see what kind of deal the U.K. gets first.6 Chart II-16No Relationship Between IndyRef And Brexit Chart II-17Old Folks Loyal To The Union Jack The most striking indicator of Scottish secessionism is unemployment (Chart II-18). Thus an economic downturn that impacts Scotland, for example as result of uncertainty over Brexit, poses a critical risk to the union. The SNP will be quick to blame even a shred of economic pain on Tory-dominated Westminster. The British government and BoE have shown a commitment to use accommodative monetary and fiscal policy to smooth over the transition period, and they have fiscal room for maneuver (Chart II-19), but much will depend on what kind of a deal London gets from the EU and whether the markets remain calm. Chart II-18Joblessness Boosts Independence Vote Chart II-19The U.K. Has Room To Maneuver Bottom Line: Economics is an argument against Scottish independence, but history and politics are unclear. We simply note that independence cannot be ruled out, particularly in the context of any adverse economic shock stemming from the U.K.'s actual divorce proceedings. Will Scotland Scotch Brexit? From the beginning of the Brexit saga, BCA's Geopolitical Strategy service has argued that Britain, of all EU members, was uniquely predisposed and positioned to leave the union. Hence the referendum was "too close to call."7 This did not mean that the U.K. could do so without consequences. Leaving would be detrimental (albeit not apocalyptic) to the U.K.'s economy, particularly by harming service exports to the EU and reducing labor force growth via stricter immigration controls. In the event, upside economic surprises have occurred, though of course Brexit has not happened yet.8 How does the Scottish referendum threat affect the Brexit negotiations? This is much less clear and will require constant monitoring over the coming two years, and perhaps longer if the European Council agrees to extend the negotiating period (which would require a unanimous vote). Still, we can draw a few conclusions from the above. First, London is a price taker not a price maker. It cannot afford not to agree to a trade deal or transition deal of some sort upon leaving in 2019. Even if England were willing to walk away from the EU's offers, a total rupture (reversion to minimal WTO trade rules) would be unacceptable to Scotland after being denied a say in the negotiation process. Therefore Scotland is now a moderating force on the Tory leadership that is otherwise unconstrained by domestic politics due to the high level of support for May's government (see Chart II-5, page 24). To save the United Kingdom, the Tories may simply have to accept what Europe is willing to give. This supports our view that the risk of a total diplomatic war between Europe and the U.K. is unlikely and that expectations of cross-channel fireworks may be overdone. Second, Scotland is twice the price taker, because it can only afford independence from the U.K. if the EU is willing to grant it a special arrangement. This is possible, but difficult to see happen early in the negotiations process. It will be important to monitor Brussels' statements on Scottish independence carefully for signs that the EU is taking a tough stance on Brexit negotiations. Sturgeon has to play it safe and see what kind of a deal May brings back from Brussels. By waiting, she can profit from Scottish indignation over both May's use of prerogative to block the referendum in the first place and then over the Brexit deal itself, when it takes place. Third, the saving grace for both countries is that it is not in Europe's interest to dismantle the U.K., or to force it into a debilitating economic crisis. We have long differed from the view that the EU will be remorseless in its negotiations over Brexit. The EU seeks extensive trade engagements with every European country, from Norway and Switzerland to Iceland and Turkey, because its interest lies in expanding markets and forging alliances. Europe is not Russia, seeking to impose punitive economic embargoes on Ukraine and Belarus for failure to conform to its market standards. While free trade agreements usually take longer than two years to negotiate, and while the CETA agreement between the EU and Canada is a recent and relevant example of the risks for the U.K., the U.K. and EU are already highly integrated, unlike the two parties in most other bilateral trade negotiations. In addition, the U.K. is a military and geopolitical ally of key European states. The U.K.-EU negotiations are not being conducted in a ceteris paribus economic laboratory, but are occurring in 2017, a year in which Russian assertiveness, transnational terrorism and migration, and global multipolarity are all shared risks to both the U.K. and EU. Investment Implications Since January 17 - the date of Theresa May's speech calling for the exit from the common market - we have argued that the worst is probably over for the U.K.9 Yes, the EU negotiations will be tough and the British press - surprisingly lacking the stiff upper lip of its readers - will make mountains out of molehills. However, by saying no to the common market, Theresa May plays the role of a spouse who does not want to fight over the custody of the children, thus defusing the divorce proceedings. Our Geopolitical Strategy service has been short EUR/GBP since mid-January and the trade is down 2%. This suggests that the market has been in "wait and see mode" since the speech. We are comfortable with this trade regardless of our analysis on the rising probability of the Scottish referendum for two reasons: Hard Brexit is less likely: Many Tory MPs have had a tough time getting behind the "hard Brexit" policy, but until now they have had a tough time expressing their displeasure. However, the threat of Scottish independence and the dissolution of the U.K. will give the members of the Conservative and Unionist Party (as it is officially known) plenty of ammunition to push May towards a softer Brexit outcome. This should be bullish GBP in ceteris paribus terms. It's not the seventeenth century: We do not expect the EU to act like seventeenth-century France and subvert U.K. unity, at least not this early in the negotiations. For clients who expect the "knives to come out," we offer Scottish independence as a critical test of the thesis. Let's see if the EU is ready to play dirty and if it decides to alter the "Barroso doctrine" for Scotland. If they do, then our sanguine thesis is truly wrong. To be clear, we do not have high conviction that the pound will outperform either the euro or the U.S. dollar. Instead, we offer this currency trade as a way to gauge our political thesis that the U.K.-EU negotiations will likely go more smoothly than the market expects. Matt Gertken Associate Editor Geopolitical Strategy Marko Papic Senior Vice President Geopolitical Strategy Jesse Anak Kuri Research Analyst Geopolitical Strategy 1 Please see BCA European Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Phoney War Ends. Battle Begins," dated March 16, 2017, available at eis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Article 50 allows for a two-year negotiation period, after which the departing party may have an exit deal but is not guaranteed a trade deal for the future. The negotiation period can be extended with a unanimous vote in the European Council. 3 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Secession In Europe: Scotland And Catalonia," dated May 14, 2014, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Brexit: The Three Kingdoms," in Strategic Outlook, "We Are All Geopolitical Strategists Now," dated December 14, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 The union of the kingdoms of Scotland and England is a power "reserved" to parliament and the crown in Schedule 5 of the Scotland Act of 1998. Altering the union would therefore require the U.K. and Scottish parliaments to agree to devolve the power to Scotland using Section 30(2) of the same act, which the monarch would then endorse. This was the case in 2012 when the 2014 referendum was initiated. 6 On the other hand, demographics also may work against Brexit in the long run, given that - as our colleague Peter Berezin has said in the past - many who voted to leave the EU will eventually pass away. 7 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Strategic Outlook, "Multipolarity & Markets," dated December 9, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and European Investment Strategy Special Report, "With Or Without You: The U.K. And The EU," dated March 17, 2016, and "BREXIT Update: Brexit Means Brexit, Until Brexit," dated September 16, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "The 'What Can You Do For Me' World?" dated January 25, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. III. Indicators And Reference Charts The S&P 500 index has pulled back from its recent highs, but it has not corrected enough to 'move the dial' in terms of the valuation or technical indicators. Stocks remain expensive based on our valuation index made up of 11 different measures. The technical indicator is still bullish. Our equity monetary indicator has dropped back to the zero line, meaning that it is not particularly bullish or bearish at the moment. The speculation index is elevated, however, pointing to froth in the market. The high level of our composite sentiment index and the low level of the VIX speaks to the level of investor complacency. Net earnings revisions remain close to the zero mark, although it is somewhat worrying that the earnings surprises index is slowly deteriorating. Our U.S. Willingness-to-Pay (WTP) indicator continues to send a positive message for the S&P 500. This indicator tracks flows, and thus provides information on what investors are actually doing, as opposed to sentiment indexes that track how investors are feeling. Investors often say they are bullish but remain conservative in their asset allocation. However, the widening gap between the U.S. WTP and that of Japan and Europe highlights that recent flows have favored the U.S. market relative to the other two. Looking ahead, this means that there is more "dry powder" available to buy the Japanese and European markets. A rise in the WTPs for these two markets in the coming months would signal that a rotation into Europe and Japan is taking place. U.S. bond valuation is hovering close to fair value. However, we believe that fair value itself is moving higher as some of the economic headwinds fade. The composite technical indicator for the 10-year Treasury shows that oversold conditions are unwinding, although the indicator is not yet back to zero. This suggests that the consolidation period for bonds is not yet complete. Oversold conditions are almost completely gone in terms of the U.S. dollar. The dollar is very expensive on a PPP basis, although it is less so by other measures. We believe the dollar has more upside. Technical conditions are also benign in the commodity complex. However, we are only bullish on oil at the moment. EQUITIES: Chart III-1U.S. Equity Indicators Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk Chart III-3U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators Chart III-4U.S. Stock Market Valuation Chart III-5U.S. Earnings Chart III-6Global Stock Market ##br##And Earnings: Relative Performance Chart III-7Global Stock Market ##br##And Earnings: Relative Performance FIXED INCOME: Chart III-8U.S. Treasurys And Valuations Chart III-9U.S. Treasury Indicators Chart III-10Selected U.S. Bond Yields Chart III-1110-Year Treasury Yield ComponentsChart III-12U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor Chart III-13Global Bonds: Developed Markets Chart III-14Global Bonds: Emerging Markets CURRENCIES: Chart III-15U.S. Dollar And PPP Chart III-16U.S. Dollar And Indicator Chart III-17U.S. Dollar Fundamentals Chart III-18Japanese Yen TechnicalsChart III-20Euro/Yen Technicals Chart III-19Euro TechnicalsChart III-21Euro/Pound Technicals COMMODITIES: Chart III-22Broad Commodity Indicators Chart III-23Commodity Prices Chart III-24Commodity Prices Chart III-25Commodity Sentiment Chart III-26Speculative Positioning Chart III-27U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop ECONOMY: Chart III-28U.S. Macro Snapshot Chart III-29U.S. Growth Outlook Chart III-30U.S. Cyclical Spending Chart III-31U.S. Labor Market Chart III-32U.S. Consumption Chart III-33U.S. Housing Chart III-34U.S. Debt And Deleveraging Chart III-35U.S. Financial Conditions Chart III-36Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Chart III-37Global Economic Snapshot: China
Highlights Spread Product: Any near-term correction in risk assets is likely to be fleeting. Investors should take the opportunity to increase credit exposure and maintain overweight spread product allocations on a 6-12 month horizon. Duration: Our 2-factor Global PMI model pegs fair value for the 10-year Treasury yield at 2.54%. Economy: U.S. economic growth will remain solidly above-trend this year, helped along by renewed strength in both residential and non-residential investment. Above-trend growth will ensure that inflation remains in its current gradual uptrend. Feature Chart 1Back Above 400 bps The reflation trade has come under question during the past couple of weeks. The S&P 500 is 1.7% off its recent high, the VIX has bounced and the average spread on the Bloomberg Barclays High-Yield index is back above 400 basis points (Chart 1). After such a move, it is reasonable to ask if the economic landscape has changed enough to warrant a reversal of our current overweight spread product allocation. We think not, and we advise investors to buy the dips, adding credit risk to their portfolios from more attractive levels. This week we examine why risk assets are vulnerable to a near-term correction, but also why these corrections are likely to be short lived. On a 6-12 month investment horizon we continue to recommend a pro-risk portfolio characterized by: below-benchmark duration, overweight spread product, curve steepeners and TIPS breakeven wideners. Three Catalysts For A Near-Term Sell Off... Three main factors suggest that risk assets might continue to correct in the near-term. The first is that Fed rate hike expectations might be increasing too quickly. Chart 2 shows the fed funds rate that is priced into the overnight index swap curve for the end of this year. The lower dashed horizontal line is the level consistent with one more rate hike between now and the end of the year. The higher dashed horizontal line is the level consistent with two more rate hikes between now and the end of the year. We see that risk assets were able to handle the shift in rate expectations up to the lower dashed line with no trouble. The yield curve steepened and the cost of inflation compensation rose (Chart 2, bottom panel). But now, as rate expectations approach the higher dashed line, the reflation trade is starting to fray. The yield curve has started to flatten and TIPS breakevens are rolling over. A second reason why risk assets might sell-off in the near-term is the still elevated level of economic policy uncertainty (Chart 3, top panel). Last Friday, markets hung on every word related to the likelihood of a new healthcare bill being passed. Now that the bill has failed, attention will turn quickly to tax reform. It is very likely that risk assets will suffer if it appears as though tax reform will be delayed or scrapped altogether. Importantly, it is the opinion of our Geopolitical Strategy service that tax reform will be passed before the end of the year.1 Chart 2How Much Hawkishness Can Markets Take? Chart 3Correction Catalysts? A third reason why risk assets are vulnerable to a near-term correction is that investors have bought into the reflation trade, and sentiment is extremely bullish (Chart 3, bottom panel). Surveys of investors conducted by Yale University show that 99% of investors expect the Dow to increase during the coming year, while simultaneously only 47% of investors characterize the stock market as "not too high" relative to its fundamental value. The divergence in itself suggests that the equity rally is built on a shaky foundation. It seems likely that either confidence needs to wane or valuations need to correct for the rally to be prolonged. ...But The Fed Cycle Trumps Them All In previous reports2 we outlined the four phases of the Fed Cycle (see Box), and observed that in all likelihood we are currently in Phase I. Box: The Four Phases Of The Fed Cycle Chart 4Stylized Fed Cycle The four phases of the Fed Cycle are illustrated in Chart 4 and defined as follows: Phase I represents the early stage of the withdrawal of monetary stimulus. This phase begins with the first hike of a new tightening cycle and ends when the fed funds rate crosses above its equilibrium (or neutral) level. Phase II represents the late stage of the tightening cycle, when the Fed hikes its target rate above equilibrium in an effort to slow the economy. Phase III represents the early stage of the easing cycle. It begins with the first rate cut from the peak and lasts until the Fed cuts its target rate below equilibrium. Phase IV represents the late stage of the easing cycle. It encompasses both the period when the fed funds rate descends to its cycle trough and the subsequent adjustment period when the Fed remains on hold in an effort to kick start an economic recovery. In Phase I, the Fed has begun to remove monetary accommodation but still needs inflation to rise back to target. In other words, if risk assets sell off and financial conditions start to tighten the Fed will adopt a more dovish policy stance to ensure that the recovery persists and inflation continues to trend higher. We note that core PCE inflation is running at 1.74% year-over-year, still below the Fed's 2% target. Further, the St. Louis Fed Price Pressures Measure3 is signaling only a 19% chance that PCE inflation will exceed 2.5% during the next twelve months, and market-based measures of inflation compensation are well below levels that are consistent with the Fed's inflation target (Chart 5). Chart 5Fed Still Needs Higher Inflation In this environment, if risk assets sell off because of overly aggressive rate hike expectations, fiscal policy disappointments or over-extended sentiment, the Fed will quickly adopt a more dovish policy stance, lending support to the reflation trade. Of course, if any of the catalysts for the market correction also cause a severe contraction in economic growth, then the reflation trade would face a more lasting setback. However, none of the three reasons for a market correction listed above seem likely to have significant pass-through effects on the economy. Even if fiscal stimulus turns out to be much less than was previously anticipated, there appears to be sufficient momentum in economic growth to maintain inflation on its upward trajectory (see section titled "Above-Trend Growth: Aided By Housing & Capex" below). It follows from this analysis of the Fed Cycle that a strategy of "buying the dips" should work whenever we are in an environment where the Fed needs inflation to move higher. It is only when inflation is more firmly anchored around the Fed's target that the Fed will be less willing to support markets, making a "buy the dips" strategy less effective. To test this theory, we devised a trading rule for high-yield bonds where we buy the High-Yield index whenever spreads widen by 20 bps or more during a month. We then hold that position for a period ranging from 1 to 3 months and calculate excess returns relative to duration-matched Treasuries during that period. Our goal is to see if the effectiveness of this "buy the dips" strategy differs depending on the stage of the Fed Cycle. For this test we define the stages of the Fed Cycle using the aforementioned St. Louis Fed Price Pressures Measure, which we split into four ranges: 0% to 15%: An environment of very limited inflation pressure most consistent with Phase IV of the Fed Cycle. 15% to 30%: Still muted inflation pressures. Roughly consistent with Phase I of the Fed Cycle. 30% to 50%: Rising inflation pressures, but still less than a 50% chance that PCE will exceed 2.5% in the coming 12 months. This likely coincides with some Phase I periods and some Phase II periods of the Fed Cycle. 50% to 70%: Strong inflation pressures, and a good chance of inflation overshooting the Fed's target. Most likely coincides with Phase II or Phase III of the Fed Cycle. We indeed find that a "buy the dips" strategy is more effective when inflation pressures are lower (Table 1). A strategy of buying the junk index after spreads widen by at least 20 bps and holding it for three months produces positive excess returns 65% of the time when the St. Louis Fed Price Pressures Measure is between 0% and 15%. This same strategy works 59% of the time when the Price Pressures Measure is between 15% and 30%, 44% of the time when the Measure is between 30% and 50% and only 25% of the time when the Measure is between 50% and 70%. Table 1High-Yield Corporate Bond Returns* Achieved By Holding The Junk Index Following ##br##A 20 BPs Widening In High-Yield Corporate OAS** Under Different Ranges##br## Of The St. Louis Fed Price Pressure Measure*** (February 1994 To Present) With the Price Pressures Measure at only 19% currently, we advise investors to increase exposure to spread product on any near-term correction. Bottom Line: Any near-term correction in risk assets is likely to be fleeting. Investors should take the opportunity to increase credit exposure and maintain overweight spread product allocations on a 6-12 month horizon. Above-Trend Growth: Aided By Housing & Capex For the analysis of the Fed cycle performed above to be applicable, we must have confidence in the view that GDP will continue to grow at an above-trend pace. That is, growth must at least be strong enough to remove slack from the labor market and cause inflation to trend gradually higher. This has mostly been the case since measures of core inflation bottomed in early 2015 and we see no evidence at the moment to suggest it is about to change. In fact, measures of global growth most relevant for Treasury yields have hooked up strongly in recent months, and our model now suggests that fair value for the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield is 2.54% (Chart 6). At the time of publication the 10-year yield was 2.40%. The fair value reading from our model moved higher during the past month even though PMIs in both the U.S. and Japan ticked down. This negative move was offset by an acceleration in Eurozone PMI and a decline in bullish sentiment toward the dollar (Chart 6, bottom two panels). Less bullish dollar sentiment is a signal that the global recovery is becoming more synchronized which means that U.S. Treasury yields must rise more quickly for a given level of global growth.4 Returning to the U.S. growth outlook specifically, a recent BCA Special Report 5 showed that cyclical spending as a percent of overall GDP is an excellent leading indicator of economic downturns (Chart 7). Cyclical spending has been relatively firm as a percent of GDP during the past couple of years, and would have been stronger if not for stagnant residential investment (Chart 7, panel 3) and contracting non-residential investment in equipment & software (Chart 7, bottom panel). However, leading indicators suggest that both of these factors should shift from being sources of disappointment to sources of strength in the coming months. Chart 610-Year Treasury Fair Value Model Chart 7Cyclical Spending Is Firm... Chart 8 shows the year-over-year change in each of the three cyclical components of GDP as a percent of overall growth alongside a reliable leading indicator. Consumer confidence suggests that consumer spending on durables will remain firm (Chart 8, panel 1). Our composite indicator of New Orders surveys also points to a rebound in nonresidential investment on equipment & software (Chart 8, panel 2). In prior reports we observed that nonresidential investment was held back by the 2014 oil price shock and should recover now that oil prices have found a floor.6 Also, any potential benefit from a more favorable tax and regulatory environment under the new federal government would only increase the upside for capex. Residential investment as a percent of GDP also rolled over last year, but homebuilder confidence has been trending sharply higher during the past few months (Chart 8, bottom panel). Home construction will be strong this year, despite the recent increase in mortgage rates. As was recently observed by our U.S. Investment Strategy service,7 the constraint on housing demand since the financial crisis has not come from un-affordable monthly mortgage payments. In fact, we calculate that even if mortgage rates rise by another 200 bps from current levels, the mortgage payment as a percent of income for the median household would still be below its long-run average (Chart 9). Chart 8...And Likely To Increase Chart 9Higher Rates Won't Kill Housing Rather, the constraint on housing demand has come from insufficient savings on the part of potential first time homebuyers relative to required down payments. This constraint can only subside as household savings increase and mortgage lending standards ease, two trends that are ongoing. Finally, housing supply is approaching historically low levels relative to demand (Chart 9, bottom panel) even including the "shadow inventory" from foreclosed properties which has now mostly vanished in any case. With supply at such depressed levels and demand likely to remain firm, it is no wonder that homebuilders are feeling more confident. Bottom Line: U.S. economic growth will remain solidly above-trend this year, helped along by renewed strength in both residential and non-residential investment. Above-trend growth will ensure that inflation remains in its current gradual uptrend. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Donald Trump Is Who We Thought He Was", dated March 8, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Inflation: More Fire Than Ice, But Don't Sound The Alarm", dated January 24, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 A composite of 104 economic indicators designed to capture the probability of PCE inflation exceeding 2.5% during the subsequent 12 month period. https://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/economic-synopses/2015/11/06/introducing-the-st-louis-fed-price-pressures-measure 4 A more detailed explanation of the inverse relationship between dollar sentiment and Treasury yields can be found in the U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Dollar Watching: Another Update", dated January 31, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see BCA Special Report, "Beware The 2019 Trump Recession", dated March 7, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see U.S. Investment Strategy Special Report, "U.S. Housing: What Comes Next?", dated March 27, 2017, available at usis.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights U.S. Treasuries: The surprisingly positive response from financial markets to last week's Fed rate hike should force the Fed to quickly shift back to a hawkish bias. Maintain an underweight exposure to U.S. Treasuries, and an overall below-benchmark portfolio duration stance. Bearish Fed Trade: As a new tactical trade, go short the January 2018 fed funds futures contract to benefit from the Fed ramping up the hawkish language again. Japan: Japanese inflation remains too low for the Bank of Japan to move away from its 0% target on JGB yields anytime soon, even with signs of better Japanese growth and rising pressure on global bond yields. Upgrade low-beta Japan to above-benchmark in global hedged bond portfolios, while downgrading core Europe (Germany, France, the Netherlands) to neutral. Feature Chart of the WeekAre Central Banks OK With This? The major central banks all had a chance to send a more hawkish message to the markets in the past couple of weeks, and every one took a pass. Even the Fed, who actually hiked rates, signaled that U.S. monetary policy would not be tightened more aggressively than previously planned, which financial markets took very bullishly. With the global economy finally enjoying a synchronized upturn after several years of sluggishness, policymakers are showing no interest in hitting the brakes too hard, too soon and risking a sudden downturn in growth The current backdrop of improving economic momentum, with central banks remaining accommodative, is sustaining the strong performance of growth-sensitive assets like equities and corporate debt over government bonds. This should continue over the next 6-12 months. Inflation rates, both realized and expected, continue to rise across the developed economies alongside faster economic growth, putting upward pressure on government bond yields (Chart of the Week). Central bank dovishness is looking increasingly non-credible as long as this dynamic persists, but policymakers will likely be slow to respond without a more rapid rise in inflation. Bond yields will continue to climb higher against this backdrop, first from continued increases in inflation expectations and, later, from a shift to less restrictive monetary settings. We continue to recommend a below-benchmark duration stance, while underweighting government bonds versus corporate debt, particularly in the U.S. This week, we are making a significant portfolio shift to get even more defensive within our government bond allocation, upgrading low-beta Japan to above-benchmark while downgrading core Europe (Germany, France & the Netherlands) to neutral. The Fed Declares Victory Over "Low-flation" The market response to last week's Fed tightening was consistent with the idea of a "dovish hike", with U.S. equity and bond markets rallying while the U.S. dollar sold off and overall U.S. financial conditions actually easing. There was heightened nervousness heading into the meeting that the Fed could signal a faster or steeper trajectory for interest rates. That turned out to be a false alarm, as not much was changed from the Fed's prior guidance to markets. The range for the funds rate was raised to 0.75-1.00%, as expected, but there was virtually no change to any of the median FOMC member projections for GDP growth, inflation or interest rates out to 2019. Another 50bps of increases are expected this year, with 75bps in both 2018 and 2019 (Chart 2). This would bring the funds rate to 3% in 2019, which is the median FOMC member's assessment of where the terminal rate lies. The pricing from the U.S. Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve shows that market expectations for the funds rate are in line with the Fed's projections for this year, but lower for the next two years. Our proxy measure for the market's assessment of the terminal rate - the 5-year OIS rate, 5-years forward - sits at 2.25%, 75bps below the Fed's number. Our bias is closer to the market on this point, as we do not see a need for the funds rate, in real terms, to end this tightening cycle much above 0% against a backdrop of still very high U.S. debt levels and low U.S. productivity growth. A 0% real funds rate would be the result of the Fed successfully getting U.S. inflation expectations back to its 2% target level, with a nominal funds rate of 2%. That inflation goal has not yet been reached, however, as inflation expectations are still below levels consistent with the Fed's inflation target (Chart 3, bottom panel). Chart 2FOMC & Market Disagree Beyond This Year Chart 3Few Signs Of An Overheating U.S. Economy The FOMC has made it clear that they believe the U.S. economy is running very close to full employment. Yet the recent modest deceleration in the various measures of wage inflation (middle panel) suggests that there could still be some excess slack in the U.S. labor market - even with the recent Payrolls reports showing job growth of over 200k per month. If that pace is sustained for several months, however, the unemployment rate will likely fall further and wage pressures will intensify. In the near-term, the Fed will continue to focus on financial markets to get a sense of whether current policy settings are too restrictive or too accommodative. One recent development on this front is that the correlation between the U.S. dollar (USD) and risk assets has flipped, with a stronger USD now positively correlated to global equities and credit (Chart 4). This shift was already starting to happen before the election of Donald Trump and his pro-growth agenda last November, likely because the global economy was improving as evidenced by the accelerating trend in our global purchasing managers' index (PMI, bottom panel). We have written extensively about the Fed being stuck in a "policy loop" in the past couple of years, where a shift to a more hawkish bias would sharply drive up the USD and cause a risk-off move in global financial markets. This unwanted tightening of financial conditions would cause the Fed to back off from its hawkishness, causing the USD to soften and markets to rally. We have argued that the way to break out of this loop would likely be a rise in non-U.S. economic growth that would allow the Fed to continue slowly normalizing U.S. monetary policy without disrupting global markets. We seem to be in that period now. One implication of this is that the longer risk assets can withstand rising U.S. interest rates and a stronger USD, the more the fed funds rate and U.S. Treasury yields must rise in response to U.S. economic strength. For this reason, we continue to recommend a below-benchmark duration stance on U.S. Treasuries on a 6-12 month horizon. We also maintain our bias towards a bear-steepening of the Treasury curve through our butterfly trade, long the 5-year bullet versus a duration-matched 2-year/10-year barbell. The curve will remain positively correlated to inflation expectations until those reach the Fed's target level, after which any additional Fed rate hikes will likely flatten the yield curve in a more typical pattern during the latter stages of a tightening cycle. It is possible, though, that because markets shrugged off the latest rate increase, the Fed could return to sending hawkish signals in the near term. To play for this possibility, our colleagues at BCA U.S. Bond Strategy recommend that investors add a tactical trade: going short the January 2018 fed funds futures contract (Chart 5). We are today adding this trade to our list of Tactical Overlay Trades (see page 12). Chart 4The Strong USD Is Not A Problem Chart 5Go Short January 2018 Fed Funds Futures We calculate that this trade will return 11bps in a scenario where the Fed lifts rates twice more before the end of the year and 37bps in a scenario where the funds rate is raised a more aggressive-than-expected three times. However, we do not expect to hold this trade until the end of the year. Rather, we expect the Fed will nudge rate expectations higher in the next month or two in response to the latest easing of financial conditions, and that these gains will be realized over a much shorter horizon. We also add a caveat that, in the present environment, it is safer to implement any "hawkish Fed trades" in either fed funds futures or the OIS market. The Eurodollar market does not provide the same potential for gains because the LIBOR / OIS spread is currently elevated and could tighten to offset the profits from rising rate expectations. Bottom Line: The surprisingly positive response from financial markets to last week's Fed rate hike could force the Fed to quickly shift back to a hawkish bias. Maintain below-benchmark exposure to U.S. Treasuries. As a new tactical trade, go short the January 2018 fed funds futures contract to benefit from the Fed ramping up the hawkish language again. Japan: A Weaker Yen Is Still The Only Way Out The Bank of Japan (BoJ) stayed on hold last week, as expected. There had been some increased speculation of late that the BoJ could start to signal a potential increase in its 0% target for the 10-year Japanese Government Bond (JGB) yield, given the rising trend in global yields and signs of better growth in Japan. At the press conference following the BoJ meeting, however, Governor Kuroda shot down that notion, saying that the current accommodative policy stance must be maintained given how far Japanese inflation is below the central bank's 2% target. It remains far too soon for the central bank to signal any shift to a less accommodative stance, as both the pace of economic growth and inflation are not only modest but lagging the current global upturn. In Chart 6, we show some Japanese growth variables relative to an aggregate of the same data for the major developed economies.1 What is clear from the chart is that Japan is benefitting from faster global growth on the industrial side, with the manufacturing PMI above 50. However, the domestic demand story is not as positive, with consumer confidence and real retail sales growth languishing. The lack of real income growth remains the biggest drag on Japanese consumers, as we show in another set of international comparisons in Chart 7. Japan's unemployment rate, currently at 3%, is below the OECD's estimate of the full employment level (consistent with stable domestic inflation pressures). This is in contrast to the other major economies, which are either at, or close to, full employment. Yet Japanese wages continue to struggle, both in nominal terms (a year-over-over growth rate of 1%) and real terms (a year-over-year growth rate of 0.4%). The current annual spring round of Japanese wage negotiations is showing that downward pressure remains powerful, with many manufacturing companies offering pay raises only half as large as those of last year.2 Chart 6Japan Is Lagging The Global Upturn Chart 7Still No Wage Growth In Japan Japan is still struggling to generate positive rates of inflation, even as price growth is accelerating in the other major economies (Chart 8). This is keeping Japanese inflation expectations, which the BoJ believes are mostly a function of the recent performance of actual inflation, subdued. As always, the only reliable source of Japanese inflation seems to be yen weakness. We continue to see this as the only way out of the low-inflation trap for Japan - keeping Japanese interest rates depressed versus the rest of the world, thus weakening the yen through increasingly unattractive interest rate differentials. The BoJ's 0% yield curve targeting framework has been successful in keeping rate differentials wide enough to soften up the yen, especially against the USD (Chart 9). Given our expectations of additional Fed rate hikes, and higher U.S. Treasury yields, over the rest of the year, the yen will likely depreciate further as long as the BoJ sticks with its current interest rate targets. A similar argument holds for the yen versus the Euro, given the increasing likelihood that the European Central Bank (ECB) will be forced to signal a less accommodative monetary policy stance later this year. Against this backdrop, JGBs are likely to outperform the major global government bond markets over the rest of 2017. We upgraded our recommended stance on JGBs from underweight to neutral last October after the BoJ introduced its yield curve targeting framework. In Chart 10, we show the relative performance of JGBs versus some other bond benchmarks, on a duration-matched and common-currency (hedged into USD) basis. We broke up the returns into two periods, from our October 11, 2016 Japan upgrade to January 31 of this year when we upgraded our U.S. corporate bond exposure and cut our overall portfolio duration stance to below-benchmark. The chart shows that JGBs were a good defensive hedge during the latter part of 2016 when global yields were rising, led by U.S. Treasuries. The more recent period, however, shows a much more negligible relative performance, both against other government bonds and corporate debt, during a period where global bond yields have generally traded sideways. Chart 8Japan Inflation Still A No-Show Chart 9A Weaker Yen Is Still Necessary Chart 10Relative Performance Of JGBs Given our views that U.S. Treasury yields will continue to move higher in the next 6-9 months, and that the performance of core European government bonds will suffer over the same period as the ECB signals a slower pace of asset purchases for next year, a return to the late 2016 relative performance of JGBs is very likely. Thus, we are upgrading Japan to an above-benchmark stance in our model portfolio this week, while downgrading core Europe (Germany, France, the Netherlands) to neutral. This is purely a move to get even more defensive in our overall country exposures, by allocating into JGBs which are low-beta to both U.S. Treasuries (where we are already below-benchmark) and core European government debt. Bottom Line: Japanese inflation remains too low for the Bank of Japan to move away from its 0% target on JGB yields anytime soon, even with signs of better Japanese growth and rising pressure on global bond yields. Upgrade Japan to above-benchmark in global hedged bond portfolios, while downgrading core Europe (Germany, France, the Netherlands) to neutral. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 The U.S., Euro Area, U.K., Canada & Australia 2 https://www.ft.com/content/0895c4ee-eb3b-11e5-888e-2eadd5fbc4a4 The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Duration & Fed Policy: The longer risk assets can withstand rising rates, the higher will be the ultimate resting place for Treasury yields. Maintain below-benchmark duration on a 6-12 month horizon and add a short fed funds futures trade to profit from increased Fed hawkishness in the near-term. Yield Curve: While the long-run trend will be for the yield curve to flatten as the Fed hiking cycle progresses, rising inflation expectations will cause the curve to steepen between now and the end of the year. Maintain a position long the 5-year bullet, short a duration-matched 2/10 barbell to profit from a steeper curve on a 6-9 month horizon. Feature Say Uncle Chart 1More Tightening To Come The Fed lifted rates last week but kept its median projected path for future rate hikes unchanged. Judging from the market's reaction, this was a more dovish outcome than was anticipated. Since last Wednesday's meeting the dollar is down 0.5%, junk spreads have tightened 10 basis points and the 2/10 yield curve has steepened 1 bp. In other words, financial conditions have continued to ease even as the Fed took another step toward more restrictive policy. All in all, money markets are now discounting only a slightly slower pace of rate hikes than the Fed's median forecast (Chart 1) and financial conditions suggest that further incremental tightening is in store. The financial conditions component of our Fed Monitor1 is above zero, meaning that financial conditions are more accommodative than the long-run average, and the Chicago Fed's Adjusted Financial Conditions Index also shows that conditions are easy relative to the strength of the economy (Chart 1, bottom panel). New York Fed President William Dudley has previously described how the Fed incorporates financial conditions into its decision making:2 Chart 2The Fed Policy Loop All else equal, if financial conditions tighten sharply, then we are likely to proceed more slowly. In contrast, if financial conditions were not to tighten at all or only very little, then - assuming the economic outlook hadn't changed significantly - we would likely have to move more quickly. In the end, we will adjust the policy stance to support financial market conditions that we deem are most consistent with our employment and inflation objectives. We have also described this process in the context of our Fed Policy Loop3 (Chart 2). In essence, the Fed will continue to nudge rate hike expectations higher until financial conditions tighten excessively. At that point - because with inflation below target the Fed still has an interest in supporting the recovery - it will quickly shift to a more dovish stance. Chart 3Short Jan 2018 Fed Funds Futures One implication of the Fed Policy Loop is that the longer risk assets can withstand rising rates, the higher will be the ultimate resting place for the fed funds rate and Treasury yields. As such, we continue to recommend a below-benchmark duration allocation on a 6-12 month horizon. Another implication is that because markets shrugged off the latest rate increase, Fed policy is likely to turn more hawkish in the very near term. We therefore recommend investors add a tactical trade: short the January 2018 fed funds futures contract (Chart 3). We calculate that this trade will return 11 bps in a scenario where the Fed lifts rates twice more before the end of the year and 37 bps in a scenario where the funds rate is raised three times. However, we do not expect to hold this trade until the end of the year. Rather, we expect the Fed will nudge rate expectations higher in the next month or two and that these gains will be realized over a much shorter horizon. We also add a caveat that, in the present environment, it is safer to implement any "hawkish Fed trades" in either fed funds futures or the overnight index swap market. The Eurodollar market does not provide the same potential for gains because the LIBOR / OIS spread is currently elevated and could tighten to offset the profits from rising fed funds rate expectations (Chart 3, bottom panel). Fed hawkishness also argues for a flatter yield curve in the very near term. While this could materialize, we continue to hold our position in the 5-year bullet over a duration-matched 2/10 barbell - a trade designed to profit from a steeper 2/10 slope. For reasons described in the next section we believe the yield curve will steepen between now and the end of the year, although the risks are tilted toward flattening in the very near term and in 2018 and beyond. What Drives The Yield Curve? In this week's report we present an overview of the main drivers of the slope of the Treasury yield curve. Specifically, we identify (i) the fed funds rate, (ii) inflation expectations, (iii) implied volatility and (iv) unit labor costs as factors that correlate strongly with the slope of the yield curve on a cyclical horizon. We review the outlook for each of these factors and conclude that the Treasury yield curve has room to steepen between now and the end of the year. Beyond that, the curve will likely resume flattening as inflationary pressures start to bite and the Fed's rate hike cycle picks up steam. Chart 4Fed Rate Hikes Flatten The Curve 1. The Fed Funds Rate Not surprisingly, the slope of the Treasury curve correlates very strongly with the level of short rates (Chart 4). Typically, short-maturity yields are much more influenced by the expected path of Fed rate hikes than long-maturity yields. As such, when the Fed is lifting rates the yield curve tends to bear-flatten - both the 2-year and 10-year Treasury yields rise, but the 2-year rises more quickly. In contrast, when the Fed is cutting rates the yield curve tends to bull-steepen - both the 2-year and 10-year Treasury yields fall, but the 2-year falls more quickly. In a typical cycle the yield curve will start to flatten as the Fed lifts rates and will eventually become completely flat when the end of the rate hike cycle is reached and the fed funds rate is at its "equilibrium" or "terminal" level. Usually, at that point in the cycle, the Fed will keep policy too tight in an effort to rein in inflation. This causes the economy to slow and the yield curve to invert, signaling the start of the next recession. A recent BCA Special Report4 speculates that if the federal government succeeds in delivering sizeable fiscal stimulus, inflationary pressures could start to build next year, leading to a more rapid pace of Fed rate hikes and a flat or inverted yield curve by the end of 2018. This would be consistent with a recession in 2019. In terms of the behavior of the yield curve, this is not far off from the Fed's own projections. At present, the median FOMC projection calls for the fed funds rate to reach its equilibrium level of 3% by the end of 2019. If this forecast plays out, it means that the 2/10 Treasury slope must flatten by roughly 117 bps between now and then. Turning back to Chart 4, we see that the Treasury curve has already flattened considerably even though the Fed has only raised rates three times. This means that either the equilibrium fed funds rate is much lower than the Fed's 3% projection and the 2/10 slope will reach zero with a much lower fed funds rate, or that the curve flattening is overdone and the curve has room to steepen before it resumes its cyclical flattening trend. As is explained below, we favor the latter interpretation. 2. Inflation Expectations The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate is also highly correlated with the slope of the yield curve (Chart 5). As long-dated inflation expectations increase the yield curve tends to steepen, and vice-versa. Interestingly, the positive correlation between long-dated inflation expectations and the slope of the Treasury curve persists even when the Fed is hiking rates. Notice that in the 1999 rate hike cycle, the yield curve did not start to flatten until the 5-year/5-year breakeven fell. Also, in the 2004-06 hike cycle, curve flattening ebbed just as the breakeven started to widen. Chart 5Rising TIPS Breakevens Steepen The Curve Charts 6 and 7 show the relationship between the 2/10 Treasury slope and the 5-year/5-year breakeven in more detail. Chart 6 shows the correlation between monthly changes in the 2/10 Treasury slope and the 5-year/5-year breakeven using all available data back to January 1999. We see that a positive correlation between the slope and the breakeven prevailed in 64% of monthly observations, while only 36% of months displayed a negative correlation. Chart 62/10 Nominal Treasury Slope Vs. TIPS Breakeven ##br##Inflation Rate 5-Year/5-Year Forward (February 1999 - Present) Chart 72/10 Nominal Treasury Slope Vs. TIPS Breakeven Inflation Rate 5-Year/5-Year ##br##Forward During Fed Tightening Cycles (June 1999 To May 2000 & June 2004 To June 2006) In Chart 7, we focus exclusively on the past two Fed tightening cycles (1999-2000 & 2004-2006). Not only does a linear regression show an even stronger correlation than was achieved with the full sample, but we also see that a positive correlation between the slope and the breakeven existed in 73% of monthly observations, while only 27% of months displayed a negative correlation. At present, core PCE inflation is still below the Fed's 2% target and different measures of inflation expectations are all well below levels that prevailed during prior rate hike cycles (Chart 8). In other words, the Fed must proceed slowly enough with rate hikes to ensure that long-dated inflation expectations continue to trend higher, which argues for a steeper yield curve until inflation and inflation expectations are more firmly anchored around the Fed's target. For the 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate we think a range of 2.4% to 2.5% would signal that inflation expectations are well anchored around the Fed's target. 3. Volatility Implied interest rate volatility - as measured by the MOVE volatility index - is another factor that correlates with the yield curve on a cyclical horizon (Chart 9). In theory, higher rate volatility should coincide with a steeper yield curve, all else equal, and this is exactly the correlation we observe. Chart 8Fed Wants Inflation Expectations To Rise Chart 9Higher Vol Steepens The Curve Let's consider that there is a risk premium applied to taking a unit of duration risk (usually called the term premium) and that said risk premium is larger for longer-maturity bonds that carry more duration risk. All else equal, the risk premium applied to one unit of duration risk should be larger when rate volatility is higher. This should also coincide with a steeper yield curve, since there is more duration risk at the long-end of the curve. In a recent report,5 we concluded that the level of disagreement among forecasters about future GDP growth and T-bill rates were the two most important drivers of cyclical swings in implied rate volatility, the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty Index has at times also played a role (Chart 9, bottom 3 panels). Chart 10Higher Unit Labor Costs Flatten The Curve At the moment, the amount of forecaster disagreement about future GDP growth is near its lows since 1990 and T-bill forecast disagreement has, until recently, been suppressed by the zero lower bound on interest rates. All this implies that the balance of risks favors higher implied interest rate volatility in the months ahead, which will apply steepening pressure to the yield curve. 4. Unit Labor Costs Unit labor costs are the final yield curve indicator we discuss in this report. Since faster wage growth tends to coincide with Fed tightening and slowing wage growth tends to correlate with Fed easing, it makes sense for wage indicators to be inversely correlated with the slope of the yield curve. While it is broadly true that all wage indicators show a reasonable inverse correlation with the slope of the curve, unit labor costs are the best. The reason is that unit labor costs (compensation per unit produced) actually measure both wage growth (compensation per hour) and labor productivity (output per hour) (Chart 10). It turns out that the yield curve can flatten in the traditional way - a bear-flattening driven by rising wages and Fed tightening - but occasionally it can also bull-flatten if the market starts to discount a lower equilibrium (or terminal) fed funds rate. We might expect this sort of curve behavior in an environment of extremely low productivity growth, and this is exactly what has occurred during the past few years. Notice in Chart 10 that compensation per hour does not explain the curve flattening that started in 2014, but unit labor costs do because they also factor in incredibly low productivity growth. In the longer-run, we would strongly expect unit labor costs to remain in an uptrend. Wage growth is accelerating and there are structural headwinds that will prevent productivity growth from returning to the levels seen at the height of the IT revolution in the late 1990s and early 2000s. As was discussed last year in a Special Report from our Global Investment Strategy service,6 the rate of human capital accumulation is in a secular downtrend as is the share of workers in their 40s - the age cohort when people are most productive. However, there has also been a cyclical component to the productivity slowdown and it is possible that productivity growth could accelerate somewhat in the near-term as the cycle matures. The capital stock per worker correlates strongly with productivity growth (Chart 11), and while capital investment has been depressed for most of the recovery there are finally some signs that it may return (Chart 12). Chart 11Productivity Held Back By Lack Of Investment Chart 12Getting Optimistic About Capex In fact, it is even conceivable that more rapid wage growth itself might encourage firms to replace labor with capital, causing traditional measures of wage growth to accelerate relative to unit labor costs. Also, the prospect of tax reform and regulatory relief could give capital spending a boost - it has already led to a jump higher in small business optimism (Chart 12, bottom panel). Unit labor costs will likely continue to accelerate on a cyclical investment horizon, applying flattening pressure to the yield curve. But this flattening pressure would be mitigated to the extent that there is any cyclical rebound in productivity growth. Yield Curve Strategy Upon consideration of the four factors described above, we conclude that while the slope of the yield curve will likely be close to zero sometime in late 2018, curve flattening won't start in earnest until late this year or early next year when inflation expectations are higher (2.4% to 2.5% on long-dated TIPS breakevens) and core PCE inflation is firmly anchored around the Fed's 2% target. This conclusion is based on our observations that: TIPS breakevens and the slope of the curve tend to be positively correlated, even during rate hike cycles. Interest rate volatility is more likely to rise than fall. Unit labor costs are likely to remain in an uptrend on a cyclical horizon, but there is scope for them to level-off if we see a modest late-cycle rebound in productivity growth. To position for a steeper yield curve between now and the end of this year we continue to recommend that investors favor the 5-year Treasury note relative to a duration-matched position in a 2-year/10-year barbell. Long bullet/short barbell trades tend to outperform when the yield curve steepens, and our model suggests that the 5-year yield is currently very cheap relative to the 2/10 slope (Chart 13). We have been recommending this trade since December 20, 2016 and it has so far returned +2 bps even though the 2/10 slope has flattened 13 bps during that time. The strong positive carry means that not much curve steepening is required for the trade to realize strong positive gains. Chart 13The 5-Year Bullet Is Cheap On The Curve Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 For further details on our Fed Monitor please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Buy The Back-Up In Junk Spreads", dated March 14, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 https://www.newyorkfed.org/newsevents/speeches/2015/dud150605 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Caught In A Loop", dated September 29, 2015, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see BCA Special Report, "Beware The 2019 Trump Recession", dated March 7, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Road To Higher Vol Is Paved With Uncertainty", dated February 14, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "Weak Productivity Growth: Don't Blame The Statisticians", dated March 25, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Once the Brexit starting gun is fired, the EU27's high-level guidelines and red lines will create more vulnerabilities and uncertainties for the U.K. than for the euro area. The BoE will be more boxed in than the ECB. Brexit trades have more legs. We describe four structural disruptors to economies and financial markets (on page 6). Our favourite structural investment themes are Personal Product equities, euro/yuan, and real estate in Spain, Ireland and Germany. Feature "Many in Great Britain expected a major calamity... but what happened was near enough nothing ." The citation above perfectly describes the 9 months that have elapsed since the U.K.'s June 23 2016 vote to exit the EU. In fact, it refers to the 9 months that elapsed after Britain declared war on Germany on September 3 1939 - a period of calm, militarily speaking, which became known as the 'Phoney War'.1 But outside the military sphere a lot did happen in the Phoney War. Most notably, a propaganda war ensued. On the night of September 3 1939 alone, the Royal Air Force dropped 6 million leaflets over Germany titled 'Note to the German People'. Chart of the WeekOne Big Correlated Trade: Pound/Euro And Eurostoxx600 Vs. FTSE100 Brexit Phoney War And The Markets Fast forward 77 years. The 9 months since the Brexit vote has also been a period of calm, economically speaking. Indeed, the U.K. economy has sailed along remarkably smoothly. And this has fuelled a propaganda war for those who believe that Brexit's economic impact will be near enough nothing. But outside the economic sphere, a lot has happened in the Brexit Phoney War: The pound has slumped 12% versus the euro and 17% versus the dollar. The FTSE100 has surged 16%, substantially outperforming the 8% gain in the Eurostoxx600 The U.K. 10-year gilt yield is down 40 bps when the equivalent German bund yield is up 40 bps and the equivalent U.S. Treasury yield is up 90 bps. These relative moves appear to reflect different asset class stories, but it is crucial to realise that: All of these relative moves are just one big correlated trade. The relative moves in bond yields have just tracked the expected differences in central bank policy rates two years ahead (Chart I-2 and Chart I-3). This is exactly in line with the theory that a bond yield just equals the expected average interest rate over the bond's lifetime. Chart I-2Difficult Brexit = Gilt Yields Fall Vs. Bund Yields Chart I-3Difficult Brexit = Gilt Yields Fall Vs. T-Bond Yields Likewise, the moves in pound/dollar and pound/euro have also closely tracked the same expected differences in central bank policy rates (Chart I-4 and Chart I-5). Again, this is exactly in line with theory. Over short horizons, the biggest driver of exchange rates is fixed income cross-border portfolio flows - which always seek out the highest yield adjusted for hedging costs. Chart I-4Difficult Brexit = Pound/Euro Falls Chart I-5Difficult Brexit = Pound/Dollar Falls In turn, FTSE100 performance versus the Eurostoxx600 has near-perfectly tracked the inverse direction of pound/euro. Once more, this is exactly as theory would suggest. The FTSE100 and Eurostoxx600 are just a collection of multinational dollar-earning companies quoted in pounds and euros respectively. So when pound/euro weakens, the dollar earnings increase more in FTSE100 index terms than in Eurostoxx600 index terms, resulting in Eurostoxx600 underperformance (Chart of the Week). Now that the Brexit battle is about to begin in earnest, what will happen to these Brexit trades? Brexit Battle Begins It is not our intention here to forecast all the twists and turns of the Brexit battle. We will leave that to a later report. Instead, we just want to list the likely opening salvos. With Parliamentary approval now sealed, Theresa May is due to trigger Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty in the week commencing March 27 and thereby formally begin the Brexit battle. Expect the first EU27 response within 48 hours, probably through the President of the European Council, Donald Tusk. In this response, Tusk may also give the date for the first European Council 'Brexit' summit. This EU27 Brexit summit will take place within 8 weeks of the Article 50 trigger, and likely after the two-round French Presidential Election in April/May. At the Brexit summit, the EU27 will establish its strategy, high-level guidelines and red lines for the Brexit negotiations. The European Council will present these negotiating guidelines to the European Commission. Drawing upon its own legal and policy expertise, the Commission will then draft a mandate which sets out more technical details of each area of negotiation. Next, the Council of the EU2 must approve this draft mandate by qualified majority vote (obviously excluding the U.K.) Once approved, the European Commission can begin the detailed negotiations with the U.K., keeping within the final mandate's guidelines. But what does all this mean for investors? The preceding analysis showed that the dominant driver for all Brexit trades is the expected difference in central bank policy interest rates two years ahead. Recall that not long ago the BoE was vying with the Fed to be the first to hike rates in this cycle, while the ECB was likely to ease further. But after the Brexit vote and the resulting uncertainty about the U.K.'s position in the world, the tables have turned. The EU27's high-level negotiating guidelines and red lines are likely to create more vulnerabilities and uncertainties for the U.K. than for the euro area. And now, these vulnerabilities and uncertainties are amplified by Scotland First Minister, Nicola Sturgeon, calling for a second referendum on Scottish Independence. For central bank policy, this means that the BoE will be hamstrung; whereas, absent any tail-events, the ECB can continue to back away from its extreme dovishness - a process that Draghi verbally started at the ECB Press Conference last week. Therefore, at least into the early summer, stay: Overweight U.K. gilts versus German bunds. Long euro/pound. Long FTSE100 versus Eurostoxx600 (or Eurostoxx50). Long U.K. Clothes and Apparel equities versus the market (Chart I-6). Short U.K. Real Estate equities versus the market (Chart I-7). But a word of warning for risk control. Remember that all five positions are in effect just one big correlated trade. So they will all work together, or they will all not work together! Chart I-6Difficult Brexit = U.K. Clothes And Apparel Outperforms Chart I-7Difficult Brexit = U.K. Real Estate Equities Underperform Four Disruptors The final section this week takes a wider-angle view of the world, and briefly highlights four structural disruptors to economies and financial markets in the coming years. Disruptor 1: Protectionism. Since the Great Recession, an extremely polarised distribution of economic growth has left most people's standard of living stagnant - despite seemingly decent headline economic growth and job creation (Chart I-8). Looking to find a scapegoat, economic nationalism and protectionism have resonated very strongly with voters in the U.K. and U.S. - resulting in Brexit and President Donald Trump. Other voters could follow in the same vein. But history teaches us that protectionism ends up hurting many more people than it helps. Disruptor 2: Technology. The bigger danger is that people are misdiagnosing the illness. The vast majority of middle-income job losses are not due to globalization, but due to technology. Specifically, Artificial Intelligence (AI) is replacing secure middle-income jobs and displacing workers into insecure low-income manual jobs - like bartending and waitressing - which AI cannot (yet) replace (Table I-1). And AI's impact on middle-income jobs is only in its infancy.3 The worry is that by misdiagnosing the illness as globalization and wrongly taking a protectionist medicine, the illness will intensify, rather than improve. Chart I-8Disruptor 1: Protectionism Table I-1Disruptor 2: Technology Disruptor 3: Debt super-cycles have reached exhaustion. The protectionist medicine carries a further danger. Major emerging market economies are coming to the end of structural credit booms and need to wean themselves off their credit addictions (Chart I-9). At this point of vulnerability, aggressive protectionism risks tipping these emerging economies into a sharp slowdown. Chart I-9Disruptor 3: Debt Super-Cycles Have Reached Exhaustion Disruptor 4: Equities are overvalued. Disruptors one, two and three come at a time when equities are valued to generate feeble total nominal returns over the next decade (Chart I-10). Risk premiums are extremely compressed. And if investors suddenly demand that risk premiums rise to average historical levels, it necessarily requires equity prices to adjust downwards. Chart I-10Disruptor 4: Equities Are Overvalued The long-term investment message is crystal clear. With the four disruptors in play, we strongly advise long-term investors not to follow passive (equity) index-tracking strategies. Instead, we advise long-term investors to stick to bespoke structural investment themes. Our favourite structural investment themes are Personal Product equities, euro/yuan, and real estate in Spain, Ireland and Germany. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President European Investment Strategy dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 C N Trueman 'The Phoney War'. 2 The Council of the EU should not be confused with the European Council. 3 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report, "The Superstar Economy: Part 2," dated January 19, 2017, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model This week's trade is to short Netherlands equities, but wait until after the election result. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-11 Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions 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
Highlights Fed: The Fed will deliver another rate hike tomorrow, but we do not expect a signal that a higher trajectory for the funds rate is necessary. The Fed wants to see higher inflation expectations and will remain as accommodative as possible until that happens. Maintain a below-benchmark allocation to U.S. Treasuries within global fixed income portfolios. ECB: The ECB opened the door slightly to a less-accommodative policy stance last week, although the talk of a rate hike is premature. A 2018 taper is the more probable scenario, likely to be introduced at the September 2017 policy meeting. This will raise longer-dated European bond yields and widen spreads for both Peripheral European government debt and Euro Area corporate bonds. Reduce Euro Area IG to below-benchmark. U.S. High-Yield: U.S. junk bond spreads have widened even though default rate indicators continue to show improvement. With valuations now looking more attractive, we upgrade U.S. High-Yield from neutral to overweight. Feature Chart of the WeekStill A Positive Backdrop ##br##For U.S. Corporates After a run of smooth sailing for the markets so far in 2017, investors will have a lot of event risk to chew over this week. A slew of central bank meetings - the Fed on Wednesday followed by the Bank of England, Bank of Japan and Swiss National Bank all on Thursday - provide opportunities for policymakers to respond to the rising trends in global growth and inflation. Only the Fed is expected to make a change, though, delivering a now fully priced rate hike. Throw in the Dutch elections on Wednesday and the G20 finance ministers meeting in Germany at the end of the week and there are plenty of potentially market-moving headlines that can hit the tape. While there has been selling pressure on all global bonds during the bear phase since last July, U.S. Treasuries still remain most exposed to additional losses in the near term given the combination of improving growth, booming asset markets, a whiff of Trumpian "animal spirits" and a Fed that still appears to be playing catch-up to the overall positive U.S. macro backdrop. A bigger potential move in yields could occur if and when the European Central Bank (ECB) shifts to a less accommodative monetary stance - a taper of asset purchases first, not a rate hike, in our view - although that will likely require more evidence that medium-term Euro Area inflation expectations are sustainably moving back to the ECB's 2% target (Chart of the Week). For now, we continue to see a more negative near-term environment for U.S. Treasuries over core European debt, and a more positive environment for U.S. corporate bonds than European equivalents. As we have discussed in recent Weekly Reports, the time is coming for a shift out of core European government debt into U.S. Treasuries, although we prefer to wait for that switch until after the French elections. After the recent back-up in U.S. High-Yield spreads that has restored some value to junk bonds, however, we are upgrading our allocation to U.S. High-Yield this week to above-benchmark, while downgrading Euro Area Investment Grade corporate bonds to neutral from above-benchmark. Simply put, we prefer to take our growth-sensitive spread risk in U.S. corporates over European equivalents. Fed Vs. ECB: Dawn Of Hawkish? Some investors and financial media pundits have been asking if the Fed has fallen "behind the curve" with regards to U.S. monetary policy, especially after another solid Payrolls report and with U.S. inflation expectations holding firm despite a pullback in oil prices. In our view, being a little bit behind the curve is exactly where the Fed wants to be, allowing the economic upturn to blossom and inflation expectations to continue drifting towards the Fed's 2% target. We do not anticipate that the Fed will shift to a more aggressively hawkish stance this week, with no signal that rates will rise in 2017 more than is currently projected (three times by year-end). However, we do expect some acknowledgement of the positive macro backdrop both in the U.S. and abroad, justifying the need to move sooner by hiking now. This is especially true with the U.S. dollar still well off the 2017 peak and not providing much of a tightening in monetary conditions that could postpone a Fed rate hike. Any surprise shift higher in the Fed's interest rate projections (the "dots") would not be taken well by the Treasury market, particularly after last week's European Central Bank (ECB) meeting where a message that was merely less dovish than expected sent European bond yields sharply higher. A more hawkish shift by either central bank would be premature right now, as bond markets are not yet signaling that significantly higher real interest rates are necessary. It is important to note that most of the rise in Treasury yields since last July, and virtually all of the rise in German Bund yields, has come from rising inflation expectations rather than higher real yields (Chart 2 & Chart 3). Also, the market expectation for the real terminal policy rate - where interest rates should end up at the end of the tightening cycle - remains around 0% in the U.S. and -1% in Europe, using our proxy measure of the 5-year Overnight Index Swap (OIS) rate, 5-years forward minus the equivalent forward inflation rate from the TIPS and CPI swap markets (bottom panel of both charts). In other words, markets are only expecting a cyclical rise in interest rates in response to faster inflation, not a structural rise in interest rates because of faster potential economic growth. Chart 2Rising Inflation Explains ##br##Most Of The Rise In U.S. Yields... Chart 3...And All Of The Rise##br## In European Yields On that front, the winds are shifting in a fashion that is more bearish for Treasuries, at least in the near term. In Chart 4, we show the relationship between inflation expectations and oil prices for the U.S. and Euro Area. As can be seen in the bottom panel, the correlation between oil and expectations remains high in the Euro Area, but has fallen to zero in the U.S., where inflation expectations are increasingly influenced by domestic price pressures (i.e. rising wage growth and faster core inflation). Chart 4U.S. Inflation Now Not Just About Oil, ##br##Unlike Europe This remains a key element underpinning of our current below-benchmark call on U.S. Treasuries, particularly versus core European bonds. U.S. yields are likely to have more upside from higher inflation expectations with the Fed likely to stay as accommodative as possible by hiking rates at a slower pace than inflation is rising. At some point, monetary policy will become restrictive, particularly if the U.S. dollar bull market resumes with gusto as the Fed is delivering additional rate hikes and expectations for U.S. growth and inflation moderate, capping the current cyclical rise in Treasury yields. We are still some time away from that point, however. Bottom Line: The Fed will deliver another rate hike tomorrow, but we do not expect a signal that a higher trajectory for the funds rate is necessary. The Fed wants to see higher inflation expectations, and will remain as accommodative as possible until that happens. Maintain a below-benchmark allocation to U.S. Treasuries within global fixed income portfolios. ECB Begins The Path To Tapering The ECB last week put a relatively positive spin on the Euro Area economy, while declaring that the worst of the deflationary pressures have passed. President Draghi sounded less downbeat on the Euro Area economy than he has for some time, citing the broadening Euro Area economic upturn that was pushing down unemployment and absorbing economic slack. The ECB only slightly raised its growth forecast for 2017 and 2018, though, raising both figures by 0.1 percentage points to 1.8% and 1.7%, respectively. This would still be sufficient to remove additional slack from the economy, with the ECB currently estimating trend growth of around 1% in the Euro Area. A look at the details of those projections showed that real consumer spending is only expected to grow by 1.4% this year and next, even as the Euro Area unemployment rate is projected to fall below 9% in 2018 on the back of steady job gains. Capital spending is also expected to pick up in the next couple of years, but the projections were downgraded slightly from previous forecasts. These numbers seem a bit too cautious compared to the recent improvements seen in consumer and business confidence in the Euro Area (Chart 5), and to the more positive tone on the economy expressed in the ECB policy statement and in Draghi's press conference following the meeting. Perhaps this is simply central bank prudence at work, particularly in an environment where there is still considerable uncertainty about politics within the Euro Area and global trade in the Trumpian era. Whatever the reason, it now seems likely that growth will at least match, if not exceed, the relatively low bar set by the ECB. This is important, as the central bank is already projecting that the Euro Area will reach full employment by 2019, when the unemployment rate is projected to fall to 8.4%. The ECB expects wage pressures to rise as a result, helping boost core inflation up to 1.8% within two years (Chart 6). This would be consistent with the rising path of interest rates currently discounted in the Euro Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve where rates are now expected to start going up in the middle of next year, with the negative rate era ending in 2019 (bottom panel). Chart 5ECB Too Pessimistic On ##br##Euro Area Growth? Chart 6ECB Will Not Hike Rates Before ##br##Full Employment Is Reached The ECB knows that interest rates will have to rise if its core inflation forecast pans out, as this would almost certainly mean that headline inflation and inflation expectations would be at the ECB target of "at or just below" 2%. Yet it is still too soon to discuss that scenario, with core inflation struggling to surpass 1% and the 5-year CPI swap rate, 5-years forward at similar levels. The ECB did slightly alter its forward guidance in its policy statement to suggest that it was now much less likely that additional monetary easing would be needed to boost growth, and that it would no longer be necessary to use "all instruments" to fight deflation in Europe. This was taken as a hawkish surprise by the markets, particularly after media reports indicated that some members of the ECB discussed raising interest rates before the tapering of the ECB's asset purchases. As we discussed in our previous Weekly Report, the current backdrop in Europe looks similar in many respects to the U.S. prior to the "Taper Tantrum" episode in 2013.1 We see the ECB following a similar path to what the Fed did during the Tantrum, by signaling a tapering of asset purchases several months in advance, then raising interest rates after the taper is complete. Many clients have asked us if it is possible for the ECB to raise short-term interest rates before starting a tapering of asset purchases. This question also came up at last week's ECB meeting, and President Draghi reiterated the view that rates would be expected to "remain at present or lower levels for an extended period of time, and well past the horizon of our net asset purchases." This fits with the ECB's unemployment and inflation scenarios, which do not project a return to full employment - which would justify a rate hike - until 2019. A rate hike too soon would result in an unwanted tightening in financial conditions in Europe that could threaten the current economic upturn. We do not believe that investors could neatly separate the impact of a rate hike from that of a taper. A tightening is a tightening, as can be seen in the strong correlation of our Euro Area months-to-hike measure and the term premium on 10yr German Bund yields in recent years (Chart 7).2 If the ECB were to deliver a rate hike, even a modest one of less than the typical 25bp increment, while maintaining the current pace of bond buying, it would send a contradictory message given the ECB's benign inflation outlook for the next couple of years. Clearly, the market is already a bit confused, as the months-to-hike has been rapidly declining, even as shorter-dated bond yields in core Europe stay low and the term premium on longer-dated government debt has stopped rising. We still see a taper next year as a more likely scenario, to be announced at the September 2017 ECB meeting, with a rate hike to occur within 6-12 months of the completion of the taper. This would allow the ECB to reduce the pace of monetary expansion in line with a less deflationary backdrop in Europe, while leaving the rate hike for a more traditional move when full employment is reached in 2019. In Chart 8, we present some potential tapering scenarios and what it would mean for the growth rate of the ECB's monetary base. We show the base case for this year of €60bn/month in asset purchases that ends in December (a "full-stop" with no tapering), along with alternative scenarios of a pace of tapering that reduces the bond buying to zero within six months (i.e. a €10bn/month reduction until June 2018) and with a full taper over 12 months (i.e. a €5bn/month reduction until December 2018). We also show an additional scenario where the ECB decides to extend the asset purchases into 2018 at the same current pace of €60bn/month. Chart 7A Rate Hike Before Tapering ##br##Is A Confusing Message Chart 8Taper Or Not, ECB Effect ##br##On Bund Yields Fading... The bottom panels of Chart 8 show the annual growth rate of the monetary base under the different scenarios, and how that maps into longer-term German bond yields through a widening term premium. Importantly, the growth rate of the ECB's monetary base would decelerate even if there was no taper next year, which would put upward pressure on European bond yields. Unless the ECB is willing to raise the pace of bond buying next year, which would only occur if there was an unexpected downturn in the Euro Area economy before full employment is reached, then the writing is on the wall for Euro Area government bond yields. They are moving higher. The same goes for Peripheral European debt and even Euro Area Investment Grade corporate debt, which the ECB has also been buying. A slowing pace of ECB buying will put upward pressure on both yields and spreads next year (Chart 9), although a better Euro Area economy that improves corporate profits and tax revenues will help mitigate the rise in yields. It is possible that the ECB could alter the composition of its purchases while tapering, choosing to continue to buy more shorter-dated bonds to limit the potential of an unwanted rise in the Euro. As can be seen in Chart 10, the typical indicators that correlate to the EUR/USD currency pair - the relative balance sheets of the Fed and ECB, and the 2-year interest rate differential between European and U.S. interest rates - are still pointing to an extended period of Euro weakness. It would take a combination of rate hikes in Europe and rate cuts in the U.S. to turn EUR/USD around on a sustainable basis. While the tapering announcement will likely push the Euro immediately higher, such a move will not last without a more fundamental change in relative interest rates. Chart 9...And For European ##br##Spread Product, Too Chart 10Tapering Will Not Sustainably ##br##Boost The Euro Bottom Line: The ECB opened to door slightly to a less-accommodative policy stance last week, although the talk of a rate hike is premature. A 2018 taper is the more probable scenario, likely to be introduced at the September 2017 policy meeting. This will raise longer-dated European bond yields and widen spreads for both Peripheral European government debt and Euro Area corporate bonds. Reduce Euro Area Investment Grade to below-benchmark. The Value Is Back In U.S. High-Yield One of our key themes for 2017 is that the uptrend in the U.S. High-Yield default rate is due for a pause.3 With the first quarter of the year nearly complete, all the indicators that make up our U.S. Default Rate Model are showing noticeable improvement (Chart 11). Interest coverage remains elevated A strong U.S. Manufacturing PMI points to a rebound in after-tax cash flow Lending standards have rolled over and are now just barely in "net tightening" territory An improving sales/inventory ratio portends a return to positive industrial production growth Job cut announcements have fallen back to 2011 levels on a trailing 12-month basis Chart 11Default Rate Indicators Are Showing Improvement Meantime, even though the default outlook continues to improve, junk spreads have actually widened during the past couple of weeks. The average option-adjusted spread on the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. High-Yield index has widened from a low of 344bps up to 378bps (Chart 12). Some of that spread increase is likely attributable to declining oil prices, as energy sector credits have indeed underperformed the overall index. However, the underperformance of the energy sector did start before the sharp drop in oil prices (Chart 12, bottom panel). In any event, our commodity strategists are not expecting the current decline in oil prices to persist and their estimates show that the oil market has recently shifted from an environment of excess supply to one of excess demand. U.S. crude oil inventories are poised to decline later this month and the OPEC / non-OPEC production deal negotiated by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Russia at the end of last year should be met with high compliance.4 If this view is correct, then the energy sector will not drag overall junk spreads wider in the months ahead. The combination of wider junk spreads and an improving default outlook has led to an increase in our preferred gauge of value for high-yield bonds - the default-adjusted spread (Chart 13). The default-adjusted spread is calculated by subtracting an ex-ante estimate of default losses from the average spread on the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. High-Yield index. Chart 12Energy Contributed To Junk Sell-Off Chart 13Some Value Returns To High-Yield To arrive at an estimate of default losses we use the Moody's baseline forecast for the default rate and our own forecast for the recovery rate based on the historical relationship between recoveries and defaults. With the release of February's default report, the Moody's baseline default rate forecast fell to 3.14% for the next 12 months. Based on this forecast, we estimate that the recovery rate will be 44%. Combining the default and recovery rate forecasts gives an estimate for default losses of 3.14% x (1- 0.44) = 176bps for the next 12 months. Since the average option-adjusted spread of the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. High-Yield index is currently 378bps, we calculate the default-adjusted spread to be: 378 bps - 176bps = 202bps. A default-adjusted spread of 202bps is 60bps higher than the reading of 142bps that prevailed just last week. This 60bps spread advantage makes a considerable difference in terms of projected excess returns. Chart 14 shows the relationship between 12-month excess returns and the starting default-adjusted spread. We observe a reasonably strong correlation and note that, using a linear regression, an extra 60bps of spread translates to an extra +251bps of excess return on average over a 12-month period. Chart 1412-Month Excess High-Yield Returns Vs. Ex-Ante Default-Adjusted Spread (2002 - Present) Table 1 provides more detail in terms of what excess returns have historically been associated with different levels of the default-adjusted spread. We see that when the default-adjusted is between 100 bps and 150bps, high-yield bonds earn positive excess returns 64% of the time over the following 12 months. When the default-adjusted spread is between 200bps and 250bps, high-yield earns a positive 12-month excess return 71% of the time. Table 112-Month High-Yield Excess Returns & Ex-Ante Default-Adjusted Spread Given our upbeat assessment of the trend in defaults and a wider junk spread than we have seen in a while, we think it is a good time to upgrade high-yield from neutral to overweight. The key near-term risk to this view is that the Fed will be more hawkish than we anticipate at this week's meeting. If the Fed's median forecast is revised up to four hikes in 2017, then it is possible that the recent bout of junk spread widening will have a bit further to run. However, given still-low inflation readings, the Fed would eventually be forced to back away from its hawkish rhetoric and support renewed spread tightening. In our view, the main risk to upgrading junk this week is that we are a bit too early. Bottom Line: U.S. junk bond spreads have widened even though default rate indicators continue to show improvement. With valuations now looking more attractive, we upgrade U.S. High-Yield from neutral to overweight. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Will The Hawks Walk The Talk?", dated March 7, 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com 2 Last week, we presented the Euro Area months-to-hike measure. We discovered that our measure was not calibrated for the current era of negative interest rates in Europe, and the months-to-hike indicated was actually signaling the "months until interest rates turned positive." We have since corrected our methodology to show the months until one full 25bp rate hike was priced in from the current negative levels, which is what is shown in Chart 7 of this report. This does not change the direction of the months-to-hike indicator, but it does bring forward to date of the first rate hike versus what was presented last week. 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Fed's Pre-Emptive Hike Will Hit Gold, Not Oil", dated March 9, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Monetary Policy: The Fed will lift rates this week, but will likely leave its median forecast for three hikes this year unchanged. With inflation still below target the Fed has an incentive to take it easy. Curve steepeners, TIPS breakeven wideners and overweight spread product positions will benefit. Duration: The growth outlook is improving and the 10-year Treasury yield could soon move higher, breaking out of its recent trading range. An already elevated economic surprise index should not be a deterrent. High-Yield: Junk spreads have widened even though default rate indicators continue to show improvement. With valuations now looking more attractive, we upgrade high-yield from neutral to overweight. Feature Chart 1How Much Hawkishness ##br##Can Markets Take? In early November, just prior to the U.S. election, money markets were still only discounting one rate hike before the end of 2017. The Fed has already raised rates once since then and the market is now almost priced for another three hikes before year-end (Chart 1). Encouragingly, financial markets digested the shift up to two 2017 rate hikes without much of a hiccup - the yield curve steepened, TIPS breakevens widened and junk spreads tightened - but the journey from two to three hikes has not gone down quite as easily (Chart 1, bottom panel). The yield curve has now started to flatten, breakevens have leveled off and junk spreads have edged wider. The worry is that a further shift in expectations - from three to four hikes in 2017 - might cause markets to choke. Fed Will Take It Slow Markets are already priced for a rate hike at this week's FOMC meeting along with no change to the Fed's median forecast for three hikes in 2017. As such, we would not expect much of a market reaction if that outcome is delivered. If the Fed were to increase its median forecast from three to four hikes in 2017, then we would anticipate at least some tightening of financial conditions. In other words, we would expect the yield curve to flatten, TIPS breakevens to narrow, the dollar to strengthen and credit spreads to widen. As we have written several times,1 with core inflation and TIPS breakevens still below target, the Fed must ensure that the economic recovery continues. It will therefore be quick to back away from any nascent hawkishness if financial conditions start to tighten. With markets already showing some signs of stress, we expect the Fed to err on the side of caution this week. This means the Fed will lift rates, but also leave the median forecast of three 2017 rate hikes unchanged. This notion that the Fed should be lifting rates, but only very slowly, is confirmed by our Fed Monitor (Chart 2). The Fed Monitor is a composite of 32 indicators that track the evolution of U.S. economic growth, inflation pressures and financial market conditions. Historically, a positive reading from the monitor has coincided with rate hikes, and vice versa. Chart 2BCA Fed Monitor Suggests A Slow Pace Of Rate Hikes The Fed Monitor just recently moved above zero, suggesting that only modestly tighter monetary policy is required. As an aside, we view the strongly positive readings from the Fed Monitor in 2011 and 2012 as anomalous and an artifact of the zero-lower-bound on interest rates. Since interest rates could not be lowered as much as would have been necessary (according to the Fed Monitor) in 2009, they also could not be raised as quickly as the monitor suggested in 2011. With the base effects from the financial crisis now out of the data, the Fed Monitor should go back to providing a useful signal about the future course of monetary policy. Chart 3BCA Fed Monitor Components We gain further insight from splitting the Fed Monitor into its three key components: growth, inflation and financial conditions (Chart 3). The growth component has accelerated strongly into positive territory but the inflation component still suggests that an easy policy stance is required. Financial conditions are also consistent with modest Fed tightening but have ticked down in recent weeks as the market has discounted a more rapid pace of hikes. Judging from the prior two cycles, an acceleration of the inflation component will be necessary for the Fed to deliver on its current expected path of rate hikes. While the Fed has sometimes started to lift rates with the inflation component below zero, that component has always surged into positive territory soon after hikes began (Chart 3, panel 2). While economic growth is accelerating, below-target inflation means that the Fed must continue to nurture the economic recovery. Investors should position for a steeper curve, wider TIPS breakevens and tighter credit spreads until inflationary pressures are more pronounced. This means at least until long-maturity TIPS breakevens reach the 2.4% to 2.5% range and core PCE inflation is firmly anchored around 2%. Bottom Line: The Fed will lift rates this week, but will likely leave its median forecast for three hikes this year unchanged. With inflation still below target the Fed has an incentive to take it easy. Curve steepeners, TIPS breakeven wideners and overweight spread product positions will benefit. Consolidation Complete? The 10-year Treasury yield has been stuck in a tight range below 2.6% since mid-December (Chart 4), but recent trends in the economic data suggest that it could be on the verge of breaking through this key resistance level. Economic surprises are positively correlated with changes in the 10-year Treasury yield and currently appear extended (Chart 4, bottom panel). While not a mean-reverting series by construction, economic surprises tend to follow a mean reverting pattern because investors revise their expectations higher as the economic data outperform. Eventually, expectations are bound to become excessive and the series will mean revert. However, we have found that economic surprises are usually first reflected in Treasury yields. In fact, changes in the 10-year Treasury yield tend to lead the economic surprise index by several weeks. This means that stagnant yields during the past few months have already foreshadowed a reversal in the surprise index. In other words, some mean reversion in economic surprises is already in the price and should not prevent yields from rising in the coming weeks. More important is that economic growth should be sustainably above trend on a 6-12 month horizon. This will continue to put upward pressure on inflation and ensure that the Fed remains in a rate hike cycle. Judging from recent data, not only is growth sustainably above trend, but it is probably even accelerating. Last week's February employment report showed that nonfarm payrolls rose by 235k, the second consecutive month of gains above 200k. The rate of change of employment growth is now threatening to reverse the downtrend that started in early 2015, and aggregate hours worked have accelerated suggesting that GDP growth will be strong in Q1 (Chart 5). Chart 410-Year Yield Facing Resistance Chart 5Labor Market Points To Stronger Growth... Financial conditions are also supportive of a further acceleration in growth. We found that the financial conditions component of our Fed Monitor provides a strong indication of near-term trends in GDP growth (Chart 6). This highlights that growth should be strong during the next few months but also that the Fed must respond to any tightening in financial conditions if it wants growth to remain robust. Chart 6...So Do Financial Conditions Bottom Line: The growth outlook is improving and the 10-year Treasury yield could soon move higher, breaking out of its recent trading range. An already elevated economic surprise index should not be a deterrent. The Value Is Back In High-Yield One of our key themes for 2017 is that the uptrend in the high-yield default rate is due for a pause.2 With the first quarter of the year nearly complete, all the indicators that make up our Default Rate Model are showing noticeable improvement (Chart 7). Chart 7Default Rate Indicators Are Showing Improvement Interest coverage remains elevated A strong Manufacturing PMI points to a rebound in after-tax cash flow Lending standards have rolled over and are now just barely in "net tightening" territory An improving sales/inventory ratio portends a return to positive industrial production growth Job cut announcements have fallen back to 2011 levels on a trailing 12-month basis Meantime, even though the default outlook continues to improve, junk spreads have actually widened during the past couple of weeks. The average option-adjusted spread on the Bloomberg Barclays High-Yield index has widened from a low of 344 basis points up to 378 bps (Chart 8). Some of that spread increase is likely attributable to declining oil prices, as energy sector credits have indeed underperformed the overall index. However, the underperformance of the energy sector also started before the sharp drop in oil prices (Chart 8, bottom panel). In any event, our commodity strategists are not expecting the current decline in oil prices to persist and their estimates show that the oil market has recently shifted from an environment of excess supply to one of excess demand. U.S. crude oil inventories are poised to decline later this month and the OPEC / non-OPEC production deal negotiated by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Russia at the end of last year should be met with high compliance.3 If this view is correct, then the energy sector will not drag overall junk spreads wider in the months ahead. The combination of wider junk spreads and an improving default outlook has led to an increase in our preferred gauge of value for high-yield bonds - the default-adjusted spread (Chart 9). The default-adjusted spread is calculated by subtracting an ex-ante estimate of default losses from the average spread on the Bloomberg Barclays High-Yield index. Chart 8Energy Contributed To Junk Sell-Off Chart 9Some Value Returns To High-Yield To arrive at an estimate of default losses we use the Moody's baseline forecast for the default rate and our own forecast for the recovery rate based on the historical relationship between recoveries and defaults. With the release of February's default report, the Moody's baseline default rate forecast fell to 3.14% for the next 12 months. Based on this forecast we estimate that the recovery rate will be 44%. Combining the default and recovery rate forecasts gives an estimate for default losses of 3.14% x (1- 0.44) = 176 bps for the next 12 months. Since the average option-adjusted spread of the Bloomberg Barclays High-Yield index is currently 378 bps, we calculate the default-adjusted spread to be: 378 bps - 176 bps = 202 bps. A default-adjusted spread of 202 bps is 60 bps higher than the reading of 142 bps that prevailed just last week. This 60 bps spread advantage makes a considerable difference in terms of projected excess returns. Chart 10 shows the relationship between 12-month excess returns and the starting default-adjusted spread. We observe a reasonably strong correlation and note that, using a linear regression, an extra 60 bps of spread translates to an extra +251 bps of excess return on average over a 12-month period. Chart 1012-Month Excess High-Yield Returns Vs. ##br##Ex-Ante Default-Adjusted Spread (2002 - Present) Table 1 provides more detail in terms of what excess returns have historically been associated with different levels of the default-adjusted spread. We see that when the default-adjusted is between 100 bps and 150 bps, high-yield bonds earn positive excess returns 64% of the time over the following 12 months. When the default-adjusted spread is between 200 bps and 250 bps, high-yield earns a positive 12-month excess return 71% of the time. Table 112-Month High-Yield Excess Returns & Ex-Ante Default-Adjusted Spread Given our upbeat assessment of the trend in defaults and a wider junk spread than we have seen in a while, we think it is a good time to upgrade high-yield from neutral to overweight. The key near-term risk to this view is that the Fed will be more hawkish than we anticipate at this week's meeting. If the Fed's median forecast is revised up to four hikes in 2017, then it is possible that the recent bout of junk spread widening will have a bit further to run. However, given still-low inflation readings, the Fed would eventually be forced to back away from its hawkish rhetoric and support renewed spread tightening. In our view, the main risk to upgrading junk this week is that we are a bit too early. Bottom Line: Junk spreads have widened even though default rate indicators continue to show improvement. With valuations now looking more attractive, we upgrade high-yield from neutral to overweight. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Inflation: More Fire Than Ice, But Don't Sound The Alarm", dated January 24, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Fed's Pre-Emptive Hike Will Hit Gold, Not Oil", dated March 9, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification