Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.
Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Global

Highlights Global bourses celebrated solid earnings growth and the passage of U.S. tax cuts heading into year-end. The direct effect of the tax cuts will likely boost U.S. real GDP growth in 2018 by 0.2 to 0.3 percentage points. It could be more, depending on the impact on animal spirits in the business sector and any fresh infrastructure spending. The good news on global growth continue to roll in. Real GDP growth is accelerating in the major advanced economies, driven in part by a surge in capital spending. Nonetheless, record low volatility and a flat yield curve in the U.S. highlight our major theme for 2018; policy is on a collision course with risk assets because output gaps are closing and monetary policy is moving away from "pedal to the metal" stimulus. We expect inflation to finally begin moving higher in the U.S. and some of the other advanced economies. This will challenge the consensus view that "inflation is dead forever", and that central banks will respond quickly to any turbulence in financial markets with an easier policy stance. The S&P 500 would suffer only a 3-5% correction if the VIX were to simply mean-revert. But the pain would likely be more intense if there is a complete unwinding of 'low-vol' trading strategies. We will be watching inflation expectations and our S&P Scorecard for signs to de-risk. Government yield curves should bear steepen, before flattening again later in 2018. Stay below benchmark in duration for now and favor bonds in Japan, Italy, the U.K. and Australia versus the U.S. and Canada (currency hedged). Interest rate differentials in the first half of the year should modestly benefit the U.S. dollar versus the other major currencies. Investors should remain exposed to oil and related assets, and bet on rising inflation expectations in the major bond markets. The intensity of forthcoming Chinese reforms will have to be monitored carefully for signs they have reached an economic 'pain threshold'. We do not view China as a risk to DM risk assets, but even a soft landing scenario could be painful for base metals and the EM complex. Bitcoin is not a systemic threat to global financial markets. Feature Chart I-1Policy Collision Course? Global bourses celebrated solid earnings growth and the passage of U.S. tax cuts heading into year-end. Ominously, though, a flatter U.S. yield curve and extraordinarily low measures of volatility hover like dark clouds over the equity bull market (Chart I-1). The flatter curve could be a sign that the Fed is at risk of tightening too far, which seems incompatible with depressed asset market volatility. This combination underscores the major theme of the BCA Outlook 2018 that was sent to clients in November; policy is on a collision course with risk assets because output gaps are closing and monetary policy is moving away from "pedal to the metal" stimulus. Analysts are debating how much of the decline in volatility is due to technical factors and how much can be pinned on the macro backdrop. For us, they are two sides of the same coin. Betting that volatility will remain depressed has reportedly become a yield play, via technical trading strategies and ETFs. Trading models encourage more risk taking as volatility declines, such that lower volatility enters a self-reinforcing feedback loop. The danger is that this virtuous circle turns vicious. On the macro front, many investors appear to believe that the structure of the advanced economies has changed in a fundamental and permanent way. Deflationary forces, such as Uber, Amazon and robotics are so strong that inflation cannot rise even if labor becomes very scarce. If true, this implies that central banks will proceed slowly in tightening, and that the peak in rates is not far away. Moreover, below-target inflation allows central banks to respond to any economic weakness or unwanted tightening in financial conditions by adopting a more accommodative policy stance. In other words, investors appear to believe in the "Fed Put". Implied volatility is a mean-reverting series. It can remain at depressed levels for extended periods, especially when global growth is robust and synchronized. Nonetheless, we believe that the "outdated Phillips curve" and the "Fed Put" consensus views will be challenged later in 2018, leading to an unwinding of low-vol yield plays. For now, though, it is too early to scale back on risk assets. Global Growth Shifts Up A Gear... The good news on global growth continue to roll in. Easy financial conditions and the end of fiscal austerity provide a supportive growth backdrop. A measure of fiscal thrust for the G20 advanced economies shifted from a headwind to a slight tailwind in 2016 (Chart I-2). Our short-term models for real GDP growth in the major countries continue to rise, in line with extremely elevated purchasing managers' survey data (Chart I-3). The major exception is the U.K., where our GDP growth model is rolling over as the Brexit negotiations take a toll. Chart I-2Fiscal Austerity Is Over Chart I-3GDP Growth Models Are Upbeat Much of the acceleration in our GDP models is driven by the capital spending components. Animal spirits appear to be taking off and it is a theme across most of the advanced economies. G3 capital goods orders pulled back a bit in late 2017, but this is more likely due to noise in the data than to a peak in the capex cycle (Chart I-4). Industrial production, the PMI diffusion index and advanced-economy capital goods imports confirm strong underlying momentum in investment spending. Chart I-4Capital Spending Helping To Drive Growth In the U.S., tax cuts will give business outlays and overall U.S. GDP growth a modest lift in 2018. The House and Senate hammered out a compromise on tax cuts that is similar to the original Senate version. The new legislation will cut individual taxes by about $680 billion over ten years, trim small business taxes by just under $400 billion, and reduce corporate taxes by roughly the same amount (including the offsetting tax on currently untaxed foreign profits). The direct effect of the tax cuts will likely boost U.S. real GDP growth in 2018 by 0.2 to 0.3 percentage points. However, much depends on the ability that the tax changes and immediate capital expensing to further lift animal spirits in the business sector and bring forward investment spending. Any infrastructure program would also augment the fiscal stimulus. The total impact is difficult to estimate given the lack of details, but it is clearly growth-positive. ...But The U.S. Yield Curve Flattens... Bond investors are unimpressed so far with the upbeat global economic data. It appears that long-term yields are almost impervious as long as inflation is stuck at low levels. In the U.S., a rising 2-year yield and a range-trading 10-year yield have resulted in a substantial flattening of the 2/10 yield slope (although some of the flattening has unwound as we go to press). Investors view a flattening yield curve with trepidation because it smells of a Fed policy mistake. It appears that the bond market is discounting that the Fed can only deliver another few rate hikes before the economy starts to struggle, at which point inflation will still be below target according to market expectations. We would not be as dismissive of an inverted yield curve as Fed Chair Yellen was during her December press conference. There are indeed reasons for the curve to be structurally flatter today than in the past, suggesting that it will invert more easily. Nonetheless, the fact that the yield curve has called all of the last seven recessions is impressive (with one false positive). The good news is that, in the seven episodes in which the curve correctly called a recession, the signal was confirmed by warning signs from our Global Leading Economic Indicator and our monetary conditions index. At the moment, these confirming indicators are not even flashing yellow.1 Our fixed-income strategists believe that the curve is more likely to steepen than invert over the next six months. If inflation edges higher as we expect, then long-term yields will finally break out to the upside and the curve will steepen until the Fed's tightening cycle is further advanced. If we are wrong and inflation remains stuck near current levels or declines, then the FOMC will have to revise the 'dot plot' lower and the curve will bull-steepen. In other words, we do not think the FOMC will make a policy mistake by sticking to the dot plot if inflation remains quiescent. Rising inflation is a larger risk for stocks and bonds than a policy mistake. A clear uptrend in inflation would shake investors' confidence in the "Fed Put" and thereby trigger an unwinding of the low-vol investment strategies. A sharp selloff at the long end of the curve in the major markets would send a chill through the investment world because it would suggest that the Phillips curve is not dead, and that central banks might have fallen behind the curve. ...As Inflation Languishes For now there is little evidence of building inflation pressure in either the CPI or the Fed's preferred measure, the core PCE price index. The latter edged up a little in October to 1.4% year-over-year, but the November core CPI rate slipped slightly to 1.7%. For perspective, core CPI inflation of 2.4-2.5% is consistent with the Fed's 2% target for the core PCE index. The Fed has made no progress in returning inflation to target since the FOMC started the tightening cycle. A risk to our view is that the expected inflation upturn takes longer to materialize. The annual core CPI inflation rate fell from 2.3 in January 2017 to 1.7 in November, a total decline of 0.55 percentage points. The drop was mostly accounted for by negative contributions from rent of shelter (-0.31), medical care services (-0.13) and wireless telephone services (-0.1). These categories are not closely related to the amount of slack in the economy, and thus might continue to depress the headline inflation rate in the coming months even as the labor market tightens further. Recent regulatory changes, for example, suggest that there is more downside potential in health care services inflation. We have highlighted in past research that it is not unusual for inflation to respond to a tight labor market with an extended lag, especially at the end of extremely long expansion phases. Chart I-5 updates the four indicators that heralded inflection points in inflation at the end of the 1980s and 1990s. All four leading inflation indicators are on the rise, as is the New York Fed's Underlying Inflation Indicator (not shown). Importantly, economic slack is disappearing at the global level. The OECD as a group will be operating above potential in 2018 for the first time since the Great Recession (Chart I-6). Finally, oil prices have further upside potential. Higher energy prices will add to headline inflation and boost inflation expectations in the U.S. and the other major economies. Chart I-5U.S. Inflation: Indicators Point Up Chart I-6Vanishing Economic Slack The bottom line is that we are sticking with the view that U.S. inflation will grind higher in the coming months, allowing the FOMC to deliver the three rate hikes implied by the 'dot plot' for 2018. In December, the FOMC revised up its economic growth forecast to 2.5% in 2018, up from 2.1%. The projections for 2019 and 2020 were also revised higher. Growth is seen remaining above the 1.8% trend rate for the next three years. The FOMC expects that the jobless rate will dip to 3.9% in 2018 and 2019, before ticking up to 4.0% in 2020. With the estimate for long-run unemployment unchanged at 4.6%, this means that the labor market is expected to shift even further into 'excess demand' territory. If anything, these forecasts look too conservative. It is unreasonable to expect the unemployment rate to stabilize in 2019 and tick up in 2020 if the economy is growing above-trend. This forecast highlights the risk that the FOMC will suddenly feel 'behind the curve' if inflation re-bounds more quickly than expected, at a time when the labor market is so deep in 'excess demand' territory. The consensus among investors would also be caught off guard in this scenario, resulting in a rise in bond volatility from rock-bottom levels. How Vulnerable Are Stocks? How large a correction in risk assets should we expect? One way to gauge this risk is to estimate the historical 'beta' of risk asset prices to mean-reversions in the VIX. The VIX is currently a long way below its median. Major spikes to well above the median are associated with recessions and/or financial crises. However, as a starting point, we are interested in the downside potential for risk asset prices if the VIX simply moves back to the median. Table I-1 presents data corresponding to periods since 1990 when the VIX mean-reverted from a low level over a short period of time. We chose periods in which the VIX surged at least to its median level (17.2) from a starting point that was below 13. The choice of 13 as the lower threshold is arbitrary, but this level filters out insignificant noise in the data and still provides a reasonable number of episodes to analyze.2 Table I-1Episodes Of VIX 'Mean Reversion' The episodes are presented in ascending order with respect to the starting point for the 12-month forward P/E ratio. This was done to see whether the valuation starting point matters for the size of the equity correction. The "VIX Beta" column shows the ratio of the percent decline in the S&P 500 to the change in the VIX. The average beta over the 15 episodes suggests that stocks fall by almost a half of a percent for every one percent increase in the VIX. Today, the VIX would have to rise by about 7½% to reach the median value, implying that the S&P 500 would correct by roughly 3½%. Investment- and speculative-grade corporate bonds would underperform Treasurys by 22 and 46 basis points, respectively, in this scenario. Interestingly, the equity market reaction to a given jump in the VIX does not appear to intensify when stocks are expensive heading into the shock. The implication is that a shock that simply returns the VIX to "normal" would not be devastating for risk assets. The shock would have to be worse. Chart I-7Market Reaction To 1994 Fed Shock The episodes of VIX "mean reversion" shown in Table I-1 are a mixture of those caused by financial crises and by monetary tightening (and sometimes both). The U.S. 1994 bond market blood bath is a good example of a pure monetary policy shock. It was partly responsible for the "tequila crisis", but that did not occur until late that year. Chart I-7 highlights that the U.S. equity market reacted more violently to Fed rate hikes in 1994 than the average VIX beta would suggest. The VIX jumped by about 14% early in the year, coinciding with a 9% correction in the S&P 500. Investors had misread the Fed's intension in late 1993, expecting little in the way of rate hikes over the subsequent year. A dramatic re-rating of the Fed outlook caused a violent bond selloff that unnerved equity investors. We are not expecting a replay of the 1994 bond market turmoil because the Fed is far more transparent today. Nonetheless, the equity correction could be quite painful to the extent that the VIX overshoots the median as the large volume of low-volatility trades are unwound. A 10% equity correction in the U.S. this year would not be a surprise given the late stage of the bull market and current market positioning. Yield Curves To Bear Steepen Upward pressure on inflation, bond yields and volatility will not only come from the U.S. We expect inflation to edge higher in the Eurozone, Canada, and even Japan, given tight labor markets and diminished levels of global spare capacity. The European economy has been a star performer this year and this should continue through 2018. Even the periphery countries are participating. The key driving factors include the end of the fiscal squeeze in the periphery and the recapitalization of troubled banks. The latter has opened the door to bank lending, the weakness of which has been a major growth headwind in this expansion. Taken at face value, recent survey data are consistent with about 3% GDP growth (Chart I-3). We would dis-count that a bit, but even continued 2.0-2.5% GDP growth in the euro area would compare well to the 1% potential growth rate. This means that the output gap is shrinking and the labor market will continue tightening. Despite impressive economic momentum, the ECB is sticking to the policy path it laid out in October. Starting in January, asset purchases will continue at a reduced rate of €30bn per month until September 2018 or beyond. Meanwhile, interest rates will remain steady "for an extended period of time, and well past the horizon of the net asset purchases." If asset purchases come to an end next September, then the first rate hike may not come until 2019 Q1 at the earliest. Thus, rate hikes are a long way off, but the deceleration of growth in the Eurozone monetary base will likely place upward pressure on the long end of the bund curve (shown inverted in Chart I-8). Chart I-8ECB Tapering Will Be Bond-Bearish Canada is another economy with ultra-low interest rates and rapidly diminishing labor market slack. The Bank of Canada will be forced to follow the Fed in hiking rates in the coming quarters. In Japan, strong PMI and capital goods orders are hopeful signs that domestic capital spending is picking up, consistent with our upbeat real GDP model (Chart I-3). Recent data on industrial production and retail sales were weak, but this was likely due to heavy storm activity; we expect those readings to bounce back. Nonetheless, it is still not clear that the Japanese economy has moved away from a complete dependency on the global growth engine. We would like to see stronger wage gains to signal that the economy is finally transitioning to a more self-reinforcing stage. It is hopeful that various measures of core inflation are slightly positive, but this is tentative at best. That said, the BoJ may be forced to alter its current "yield curve control" strategy by modestly lifting the target on longer-term JGB yields later in 2018, in response to pressures from robust growth and rising global bond yields. Thus, the pressure for higher bond yields should rotate away from the U.S. in the latter half of 2018 towards Europe, Canada and possibly Japan. This could eventually see the U.S. dollar head lower, but we still foresee a window in the first half of 2018 in which the dollar will appreciate on the back of widening interest rate differentials. We are less bullish than we were in mid-2017, expecting only about a 5% dollar appreciation. China: Long-Term Gain Or Short-Term Pain? The Chinese cyclical outlook remains a key risk to our upbeat view on risk assets. Significant structural reforms are on the way, now that President Xi has amassed significant political support for his reform agenda. These include deleveraging in the financial sector, a more intense anti-corruption campaign focused on the shadow-banking sector, and an ongoing restructuring in the industrial sector. The reforms will likely be positive for long-term growth, but only to the extent that they are accompanied by economic reforms. This month's Special Report, beginning on page 19, highlights that 2018 will be pivotal for China's long-term investment outlook. In the short term, reforms could be a net negative for growth depending on how deftly the authorities handle the monetary and fiscal policy dials. We witnessed this tension between growth and reform in the early years of President Xi's term, when the drive to curtail excessive credit growth and overcapacity caused an abrupt slowdown in 2015. Managing the tradeoff means that China's economy will evolve in a series of growth mini cycles. China is in the down-phase of a mini cycle at the moment, as highlighted by the Li Keqiang Index (LKI; Chart I-9). The LKI is a good proxy for the business cycle. BCA's China Strategy service recently combined the data with the best leading properties for the LKI into a single indicator.3 This indicator suggests that the LKI will end up retracing about 50% of its late 2015 to early 2017 rise before the current slowdown is complete. The good news is that broad money growth, which is a part of the LKI leading indicator, has re-accelerated in recent months. This suggests that the current economic slowdown phase will not be protracted, consistent with our 'soft landing' view. The intensity of forthcoming reforms will have to be monitored carefully for signs they have reached an economic pain threshold. We will be watching our LKI leading indicator and a basket of relevant equity sectors for warning signs. We do not view China as a risk to DM risk assets, but even a soft landing scenario could be painful for base metals and the EM complex (Chart I-10). Chart I-9China: Where Is The Bottom? Chart I-10Metals At Risk Of China Soft Landing Equity Country Allocation For now we continue to recommend overweight positions in stocks versus bonds and cash within balanced portfolios. We also still prefer Japanese stocks to the U.S., reflecting our expectation for rising bond yields in the latter and an earnings outlook that favors the former. Chart I-11 updates our earnings-per-share growth forecast for the U.S., Japan and the Eurozone. We expect U.S. EPS growth to decelerate more quickly in 2018 than in Japan, since the U.S. is further ahead in the earning cycle and is more exposed to wage and margin pressure. European earnings growth will also be solid in 2018, but this year's euro appreciation will be a headwind for Q4 2017 and Q1 2018 earnings. European and Japanese stocks are also a little on the cheap side versus the U.S., although not by enough to justify overweight positions on valuation grounds alone. We have extended our valuation work to a broader range of countries, shown in Chart I-12. All are expressed relative to the U.S. market. These metric exclude the Financials sector, and adjust for both differing sector weights and structural shifts in relative valuation. Mexico is the only one that is more than one standard deviation cheap relative to the U.S. Nonetheless, our EM team is reluctant to recommend this market given uncertainty regarding the NAFTA negotiations. Russia is not as cheap, but is in the early stages of recovery. Our EM team is overweight. Chart I-11Top-Down EPS Projection Chart I-12Valuation Ranking Of Nonfinancial Equity Markets Relative To The U.S. A Note On Bitcoin Finally, we have received a lot of client questions regarding bitcoin. The incredible surge in the price of the cryptocurrency dwarfs previous asset price bubbles by a wide margin (Chart I-13). As is usually the case with bubble, supporters argue that "this time is different." We doubt it. Chart I-13Bitcoin Bubble Dwarfs All The Rest BCA's Technology Sector Strategy weighed into this debate in a recent Special Report.4 In theory, blockchain technology, including cyber currencies, can be used as a highly secure, low cost, means of transfer value from one person to the next without an intermediary. However, the report highlights that bitcoin is highly subject to fraud and manipulation because it is unregulated. Liquidity and accurate market quotes are questionable on the "fly by night" exchanges. Its use as a medium of exchange is very limited, and governments are bound to regulate it because cryptocurrencies are a tool for money laundering, tax evasion and other criminal activities. Another fact to keep in mind is that, although the supply of new bitcoins is restricted, the creation of other cryptocurrencies is unlimited. Would the bursting of the bitcoin bubble represent a risk to the economy? The market cap of all cryptocurrencies is estimated to be roughly US$400 billion (US$250 billion for bitcoin alone). This is tiny compared to global GDP or the market cap of the main asset classes such as stocks and bonds. The amount of leverage associated with bitcoin is unknown, but it is hard to see that it would be large enough to generate a significant wealth effect on spending and/or a marked impact on overall credit conditions. The links to other financial markets appear limited. Investment Conclusions Our recommended asset allocation is "steady as she goes" as we move into 2018. The policy and corporate earnings backdrop will remain supportive of risk assets at least for the first half of the year. In the U.S., the recently passed tax reform package will boost after-tax corporate cash flows by roughly 3-5%. Cyclical stocks should outperform defensives in the near term. Nonetheless, we expect 2018 to be a transition year. Stretched valuations and extremely low volatility imply that risk assets are vulnerable to the consensus macro view that central banks will not be able to reach their inflation targets even in the long term. The consensus could be in for a rude awakening. We expect equity markets to begin discounting the next U.S. recession sometime in early 2019, but markets will be vulnerable in 2018 to a bond bear phase and escalating uncertainty regarding the economic outlook. If risk assets have indeed entered the late innings, then we must watch closely for signs to de-risk. One item to watch is the 10-year U.S. CPI swap rate; a shift above 2.3% would be consistent with the Fed's 2% target for the PCE measure of inflation. This would be a signal that the FOMC will have to step-up the pace of rate hikes and aggressively slow economic growth. We will also use our S&P Scorecard Indicator to help time the exit from our overweight equity position (Chart I-14). The Scorecard is based on seven indicators that have a good track record of heralding equity bear markets.5 These include measures of monetary conditions, financial conditions, value, momentum, and economic activity. The more of these indicators in "bullish" territory, the higher the score. Currently, four of the indicators are flashing a bullish signal (financial conditions, U.S. unemployment claims, ISM new orders minus inventories, and momentum). We demonstrated in previous research that a Scorecard reading of three or above was historically associated with positive equity total returns in the subsequent months. A drop below three this year would signal the time to de-risk. Our thoughts on the risks facing equities carry over to the corporate bonds space. Our Global Fixed Income Strategy service notes that uncertainty about future growth has the potential to increase interest rate volatility that can also push corporate credit spreads wider (Chart I-15).6 Elevated leverage in the corporate sector adds to the risk of a re-rating of implied volatility. For now, however, investors should continue to favor corporate bonds relative to governments for the (albeit modest) yield pickup. Chart I-14Watch Our Scorecard To Time The Exit Chart I-15Higher Uncertainty & ##br##Vol To Hit Corporate Bonds Overall bond portfolio duration should be kept short of benchmark. We may recommend taking profits and switching to benchmark duration after global yields have increased and are beginning to negatively affect risk assets. While yields are rising, investors should favor bonds in Japan, Italy, the U.K. and Australia within fixed-income portfolios (on a currency-hedged basis). Underweight the U.S. and Canada. German and French bonds should be close to benchmark. Yield curves should steepen, before flattening later in the year. Interest rate differentials in the first half of the year should modestly benefit the U.S. dollar versus the other major currencies. Finally, investors should remain exposed to oil and related assets, and bet on rising inflation expectations in the major bond markets. Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst December 28, 2017 Next Report: January 25, 2018 1 Please see BCA Global ETF Strategy service, "A Guide to Spotting And Weathering Bear Markets," August 16, 2017, available at etf.bcaresearch.com 2 Note that we are not saying that a rise in the VIX "causes" stocks to correct. Rather, we are assuming that a shock occurs that causes stocks to correct and the VIX to rise simultaneously. 3 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "The Data Lab: Testing The Predictability Of China's Business Cycle," November 30, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see BCA Technology Sector Strategy Special Report, "Cyber Currencies: Actual Currencies Or Just Speculative Assets?" December 12, 2017, available at tech.bcaresearch.com 5 Market Timing: Holy Grail Or Fool's Gold? The Bank Credit Analyst, May 26, 2016. 6 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy service, "Our Model Bond Portfolio Allocation In 2018: A Tail Of Two Halves," December 19, 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com II. A Long View Of China 2018 is a pivotal year for China, as it will set the trajectory for President Xi Jinping's second term ... and he may not step down in 2022. Poverty, inequality, and middle-class angst are structural and persistent threats to China's political stability. The new wave of the anti-corruption campaign is part of Xi's attempt to improve governance and mitigate political risks. Yet without institutional checks and balances, Xi's governance agenda will fail. Without pro-market reforms, investors will face a China that is both more authoritarian and less productive. Hearts rectified, persons were cultivated; persons cultivated, families were regulated; families regulated, states were rightly governed; states rightly governed, the whole world was made tranquil and happy. - Confucius, The Great Learning Comparisons of modern Chinese politics with Confucian notions of political order have become cliché. Nevertheless, there is a distinctly Confucian element to Chinese President Xi Jinping's strategy. Xi's sweeping anti-corruption campaign, which will enter "phase two" in 2018, is essentially an attempt to rectify the hearts and regulate the families of Communist Party officials and civil servants. The same could be said for his use of censorship and strict ideological controls to ensure that the general public remains in line with the regime. Yet Xi is also using positive measures - like pollution curbs, social welfare, and other reforms - to win over hearts and minds. His purpose is ultimately the preservation of the Chinese state - namely, the prevention of a Soviet-style collapse. Only if the regime is stable at home can Xi hope to enhance the state's international security and erode American hegemony in East Asia. This would, from Beijing's vantage, make the whole world more tranquil and happy. Thus, for investors seeking a better understanding of China in the long run, it is necessary to look at what is happening to its governance as well as to its macroeconomic fundamentals and foreign relations.1 China's greatest vulnerability over the long run is its political system. Because Xi Jinping's willingness to relinquish power is now uncertain, his governance and reform agenda in his second term will have an outsized impact on China's long-run investment outlook. The Danger From Within From 1978-2008, the Communist Party's legitimacy rested on its ability to deliver rising incomes. Since the Great Recession, however, China has entered a "New Normal" of declining potential GDP growth as the society ages and productivity growth converges toward the emerging market average (Chart II-1). In this context, Chinese policymakers are deathly afraid of getting caught in the "middle income trap," a loose concept used to explain why some middle-income economies get bogged down in slower growth rates that prevent them from reaching high-income status (Chart II-2).2 Chart II-1The New Normal Chart II-2Will China Get Caught In The Middle-Income Trap? Such a negative economic outcome would likely prompt a wave of popular discontent, which, in turn, could eventually jeopardize Communist Party rule. The quid pro quo between the Chinese government and its population is that the former delivers rising incomes in exchange for the latter's compliance with authoritarian rule. The party is not blind to the fate of other authoritarian states whose growth trajectory stalled. The threat of popular unrest in China may seem remote today. The Communist Party is rallying around its leader, Xi Jinping; the economy rebounded from the turmoil of 2015 and its cyclical slowdown in recent months is so far benign; consumer sentiment is extremely buoyant; and the global economic backdrop is bright (Chart II-3). Yet these positive political and economic developments are cyclical, whereas the underlying political risks are structural and persistent. China has made massive gains in lifting its population out of poverty, but it is still home to 559 million people, around 40% of the population, living on less than $6 per day, the living standard of Uzbekistan. It will be harder to continue improving these workers' quality of life as trend growth slows and the prospects for export-oriented manufacturing dry up. This is why the Xi administration has recently renewed its attention to poverty alleviation. The government is on target in lifting rural incomes, but behind target in lifting urban incomes, and urban-dwellers are now the majority of the nation (Chart II-4). The plight of China's 200-250 million urban migrants, in particular, poses the risk of social discontent. Chart II-3China's Slowdown So Far Benign Chart II-4Urban Income Targets At Risk Moreover, while China knows how to alleviate poverty, it has less experiencing coping with the greatest threat to the regime: the rapid growth of the middle class, with its high expectations, demands for meritocracy and social mobility, and potential for unrest if those expectations are spoiled (Chart II-5). Democracy is not necessarily a condition for reaching high-income status, but all of Asia's high-income countries are democracies. A higher level of wealth encourages household autonomy vis-à-vis the state. Today, China has reached the $8,000 GDP per capita range that often accompanies the overthrow of authoritarian regimes.3 The Chinese are above the level of income at which the Taiwanese replaced their military dictatorship in 1987; China's poorest provinces are now above South Korea's level in that same year, when it too cast off the yoke of authoritarianism (Chart II-6). Chart II-5The Communist Party's Greatest Challenge Chart II-6China's Development Beyond Point At Which Taiwan And Korea Overthrew Dictatorship This is not an argument for democracy in China. We are agnostic about whether China will become democratic in our lifetime. We are making a far more humble point: that political risk will mount as wealth is accumulated by the country's growing middle class. Several emerging markets - including Thailand, Malaysia, Turkey and Brazil - have witnessed substantial political tumult after their middle class reached half of the population and stalled (Chart II-7). China is approaching this point and will eventually face similar challenges. Chart II-7Middle Class Growth Troubles Other EMs The comparison reveals that an inflection point exists for a society where the country's political establishment faces difficulties in negotiating the growing demands of a wealthier population. As political scientists have shown empirically, the very norms of society evolve as wealth erodes the pull of Malthusian and traditional cultural variables.4 Political transformation can follow this process, often quite unexpectedly and radically.5 Clearly the Chinese public shows no sign of large-scale, revolutionary sentiment at the moment. And political opposition does not necessarily result in regime change. Nevertheless, it is empirically false that the Chinese people are naturally opposed to democracy or representative government. After all, Sun Yat Sen founded a Republic of China in 1912, well before many western democratic transformations! And more to the point, the best survey evidence shows that the Chinese are culturally most similar to their East Asian neighbors (as well as, surprisingly, the Baltic and eastern European states): this is not a neighborhood that inherently eschews democracy. Remarkably, recent surveys suggest that China's millennial generation, while not wildly enthusiastic about democracy, is nevertheless more enthusiastic than its peers in the western world's liberal democracies (Chart II-8)! Chart II-8Chinese People Not Less Fond Of Democracy Than Others China is also home to one of the most reliable predictors of political change: inequality. China's economic boom is coincident with the rise of extreme inequalities in income, wealth, region, and social status. True, judging by average household wealth, everyone appears to be a winner; but the average is misleading because it is pulled upward by very high net worth individuals - and China has created 528 billionaires in the past decade alone. A better measure is the mean-to-median wealth ratio, as it demonstrates the gap that opens up between the average and the typical household. As Chart II-9 demonstrates, China is witnessing a sharp increase in inequality relative to its neighbors and peers. More standard measures of inequality, such as the Gini coefficient, also show very high readings in China. And this trend has combined with social immobility: China has a very high degree of generational earnings elasticity, which is a measure of the responsiveness of one's income to one's parent's income. If elasticity is high, then social outcomes are largely predetermined by family and social mobility is low. On this measure, China is an extreme outlier - comparable to the U.S. and the U.K., which, while very different economies, have suffered recent political shocks as a result of this very predicament (Chart II-10). Chart II-9Inequality: A Severe Problem In China Chart II-10China An Outlier In Inequality And Social Immobility "China does not have voters" unlike the U.S. and U.K., is the instant reply. Yet that statement entails that China has no pressure valve for releasing pent-up frustrations. Any political shock may be more, not less, destabilizing. In the U.S. and the U.K., voters could release their frustrations by electing an anti-establishment president or abrogating a trade relationship with Europe. In China, the only option may be to demand an "exit" from the political system altogether. Note that there is already substantial evidence of social unrest in China over the past decade. From 2003 to 2007, China faced a worrisome increase in "mass incidents," at which point the National Bureau of Statistics stopped keeping track. The longer data on "public incidents" suggests that the level of unrest remains elevated, despite improvements under the Xi administration (Chart II-11). Broader measures tell a similar story of a country facing severe tensions under the surface. For instance, China's public security spending outstrips its national defense spending (Chart II-12). Chart II-11Chinese Social Unrest Is Real Chart II-12China Spends More On ##br##Domestic Security Than Defense In essence, Chinese political risk is understated. This conclusion may seem counterintuitive, given Xi's remarkable consolidation of power. But is ultimately structural factors, not individual leaders, that will carry the day. The Communist Party is in a good position now, but its leaders are all-too-aware of the volcanic frustrations that could be unleashed should they fail to deliver the "China Dream." This is why so much depends upon Xi's policy agenda in the second half of his term. To that question we will now turn. Bottom Line: The Communist Party is at a cyclical high point of above-trend economic growth and political consolidation under a strongman leader. However, political risk is understated: poverty, inequality, and middle-class angst are structural and persistent and the long-term potential growth rate is slowing. If we assume that China is not unique in its historical trajectory, then we can conclude that it is approaching one of the most politically volatile periods in its development. Chart II-13Xi's Anti-Corruption Campaign The Governance And Reform Agenda Since coming to office in 2012-13, President Xi has spearheaded an extraordinary anti-corruption campaign and purge of the Communist Party (Chart II-13). The campaign has understandably drawn comparisons to Chairman Mao Zedong's Cultural Revolution (1966-76). Yet these are not entirely fair, as Xi has tried to improve governance as well as eradicate his enemies. As Xi prepares for his "re-election" in March 2018, he has declared that he will expand the anti-corruption campaign further in his second term in office: details are scant, but the gist is that the campaign will branch out from the ruling party to the entire state bureaucracy, on a permanent basis, in the form of a new National Supervision Commission.6 There are three ways in which this agenda could prove positive for China's long-term outlook. First, the regime clearly hopes to convince the public that it is addressing the most burning social grievances. Corruption persistently ranks at the top of the list, insofar as public opinion can be known (Chart II-14). Public opinion is hard to measure, but it is clear that consumer sentiment is soaring in the wake of the October party congress (see Chart II-3 above). It is also worth noting that the Chinese public's optimism perked up in Xi's first year in office, when the policy agenda on offer was substantially the same and the economy had just experienced a sharp drop in growth rates (Chart II-15). Reassuring the public over corruption will improve trust in the regime. Second, the anti-corruption campaign feeds into Xi's broader economic reform agenda. Productivity growth is harder to generate as a country's industrialization process matures. With the bulk of the big increases in labor, capital, and land supply now complete in China, the need to improve total factor productivity becomes more pressing (Chart II-16). Unlike the early stages of growth, this requires reaching the hard-to-get economic conditions, such as property rights, human capital, financial deepening, entrepreneurship, innovation, education, technology, and social welfare. Chart II-14Chinese Public Grievances Chart II-15Anti-Corruption Is Popular Chart II-16Productivity Requires Institutional Change On this count, the Xi administration's anti-corruption campaign has been a net positive. The most widely accepted corruption indicators suggest that it has made a notable improvement to the country's governance. Yet the country remains far below its competitors in the absolute rankings, notably its most similar neighbor Taiwan (Chart II-17 A&B). The institutionalization of the campaign could thus further improve the institutional framework and business environment. Chart II-17AAnti-Corruption Campaign Is A Plus... Chart II-17B...But There's A Long Way To Go Third, the anti-corruption campaign can serve as a central government tool in enforcing other economic reforms. Pro-productivity reforms are harder to execute in the context of slowing growth because political resistance increases among established actors fighting to preserve their existing advantages. If the ruling party is to break through these vested interests, it needs a powerful set of tools. Recently, the central government in Beijing has been able to implement policy more effectively on the local level by paving the way through corruption probes that remove personnel and sharpen compliance. Case in point: the use of anti-corruption officials this year gave teeth to environmental inspection teams tasked with trimming overcapacity in the industrial sector (Chart II-18). And there are already clear signs that this method will be replicated as financial regulators tackle the shadow banking sector.7 Chart II-18Reforms Cut Steel Capacity, ##br##Reduced Need For Scrap These last examples - financial and environmental regulatory tightening - are policy priorities in 2018. The coercive aspect of the corruption probes should ensure that they are more effective than they would otherwise be. And reining in asset bubbles and reducing pollution are clear long-term positives for the regime. Ideally, then, Xi's anti-corruption campaign will deliver three substantial improvements to China's long-term outlook: greater public trust in the government, higher total factor productivity, and reduced systemic risks. The administration hopes that it can mitigate its governance deficit while improving economic sustainability. In this way it can buy both public support and precious time to continue adjusting to the new normal. The danger is that these policies will combine to increase downside risks to growth in the short term.8 Bottom Line: Xi's anti-corruption campaign is being expanded and institutionalized to cover the entire Chinese administrative state. This is a consequential campaign that will take up a large part of Xi's second term. It is the administration's major attempt to mitigate the socio-political challenges that await China as it rises up the income ladder. Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely? The problem, however, is that Xi may merely use the anti-corruption campaign to accrue more power into his hands. As is clear from the above, Xi's governance agenda is far from impartial and professional. The anti-corruption campaign is being used not only to punish corrupt officials but also to achieve various other goals. Xi has even publicly linked the campaign to the downfall of his political rivals.9 In essence, the campaign highlights the core contradiction of the Xi administration: can Xi genuinely improve China's governance by means of the centralization and personalization of power? Chart II-19China's Governance Still Falls Far Behind Over the long haul, the fundamental problem is the absence of checks and balances, i.e. accountability, from Xi's agenda. For instance, the National Supervision Commission will be granted immense powers to investigate and punish malefactors within the state - but who will inspect the inspectors? Xi's other governance reforms suffer the same problem. His attempt to create "rule of law" is lacking the critical ingredients of judicial independence and oversight. The courts are not likely to be able to bring cases against the party, central government, or powerful state-owned firms, and they will not be able to repeal government decisions. Thus, as many commentators have noted, Xi's notion of rule of law is more accurately described as "rule by law": the reformed legal system will in all probability remain an instrument in the hands of the Communist Party. Likewise, Xi's attempt to grant the People's Bank of China greater powers of oversight in order to combat systemic financial risk suffers from the fact that the central bank is not independent, and will remain subordinate to the State Council, and hence to the Politburo Standing Committee. This is not even to mention the lamentable fact that Xi's campaign for better governance has so far coincided with extensive repression of civil society, which does not mesh well with the desire to improve human capital and innovation.10 Thus it is of immense importance whether Xi sets up relatively durable anti-corruption, legal, and financial institutions that will maintain their legitimate functions beyond his term and political purposes. Otherwise, his actions will simply illustrate why China's governance indicators lag so far behind its peers in absolute terms. Corruption perceptions may improve further, but there will be virtually no progress in areas like "voice and accountability," "political stability and absence of violence," "rule of law," and "regulatory quality," each of which touches on the Communist Party's weak spots in various ways (Chart II-19). Analysis of the Communist Party's shifting leadership characteristics reinforces a pessimistic view of the long run if Xi misses his current opportunity.11 The party's top leadership increasingly consists of career politicians from the poor, heavily populated interior provinces - i.e. the home base of the party. Their educational backgrounds are less scientific, i.e. more susceptible to party ideology. (Indeed, Xi Jinping's top young protégé, Chen Miner, is a propaganda chief.) And their work experience largely consists of ruling China's provinces, where they earned their spurs by crushing rebellions and redistributing funds to placate various interest groups (Chart II-20). While one should be careful in drawing conclusions from such general statistics, the contrast with the leadership that oversaw China's boldest reforms in the 1990s is plain. Chart II-20China's Leaders Becoming More 'Communist' Over Time Bottom Line: Xi's reform agenda is contradictory in its attempt to create better governance through centralizing and personalizing power. Unless he creates checks and balances in his reform of China's institutions, he is likely to fall short of long-lasting improvements. The character profiles of China's political elite do not suggest that the party will become more likely to pursue pro-market reforms in Xi's wake. Xi Jinping's Choice Xi is the pivotal player because of his rare consolidation of power, and 2018 is the pivotal year. It is pivotal because it will establish the policy trajectory of Xi's second term - which may or may not extend into additional terms after 2022. So far, the world has gained a few key takeaways from Xi's policy blueprint, which he delivered at the nineteenth National Party Congress on October 18: Xi has consolidated power: He and his faction reign supreme both within the Communist Party and the broader Chinese state; Xi's policy agenda is broadly continuous: Xi's speech built on his administration's stated aims in the first five years as well as the inherited long-term aims of previous administrations; China is coming out of its shell: In the international realm, Xi sees China "moving closer to center stage and making greater contributions to mankind"; The 2022 succession is in doubt: Xi refrained from promoting a successor to the Politburo Standing Committee, the unwritten norm since 1992. Markets have not reacted overly negatively to these developments (Chart II-21), as the latter do not pose an immediate threat to the global rally in risk assets. The reasons are several: Chart II-21Market Not Too Worried About ##br##Party Congress Outcomes Maoism is overrated: While the Communist Party constitution now treats Xi Jinping as the sole peer of the disastrous ruler Mao Zedong, the market does not buy the Maoist rhetoric. Instead, it sees policy continuity, yet with more effective central leadership, which is a plus. Reforms are making gradual progress: Xi is treading carefully, but is still publicly committed to a reform agenda of rebalancing China's economic model toward consumption and services, improving governance and productivity, and maintaining trade openness. Whatever the shortcomings of the first five years, this agenda is at least reformist in intention. China's tactic of "seeking progress while maintaining stability" is certainly more reassuring than "progress at any cost" or "no progress at all"! Trump and Xi are getting along so far: Xi's promises to move China toward center stage threaten to increase geopolitical tensions with the United States in the long run, yet markets are not overly alarmed. China is imposing sanctions on North Korea to help resolve the nuclear missile standoff, negotiating a "Code of Conduct" in the South China Sea, and promoting the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), which will marginally add to global development and growth. Trump is hurling threatening words rather than concrete tariffs. 2022 is a long way away: Markets are unconcerned with Xi's decision not to put a clear successor on the Politburo Standing Committee, even though it implies that Xi will not step down at the end of his term in five years. Investors are implicitly approving Xi's strongman behavior while blissfully ignoring the implication that the peaceful transition of power in China could become less secure. Are investors right to be so sanguine? Cyclically, BCA's China Investment Strategy is overweight Chinese investible equities relative to EM and global stocks. Geopolitical Strategy also recommends that clients follow this view and overweight China relative to EM. Beyond this 6-12 month period, it depends on how Xi uses his political capital. If Xi is serious about governance and economic reform, then long-term investors should tolerate the other political risks, and the volatility of reforms, and overweight China within their EM portfolio. After all, China's two greatest pro-market reformers, Deng Xiaoping and Jiang Zemin, were also heavy-handed authoritarians who crushed domestic dissent, clashed with the United States from time to time, and hesitated to relinquish control to their successors. However, if Xi is not serious, then investors with a long time horizon should downgrade China/EM assets - as not only China but the world will have a serious problem on its hands. For Deng Xiaoping and Jiang Zemin always reaffirmed China's pro-market orientation and desire to integrate into the global economic order. If Xi turns his back on this orientation, while imprisoning his rivals for corruption, concentrating power exclusively in his own person, and contesting U.S. leadership in the Asia Pacific, then the long-run outlook for China and the region should darken rather quickly. Domestic institutions will decay and trade and foreign investment will suffer. How and when will investors know the difference? As mentioned, we think 2018 is critical. Xi is flush with political capital and has a positive global economic backdrop. If he does not frontload serious efforts this year then it will become harder to gain traction as time goes by.12 If he demurs, the Chinese political system will not afford another opportunity like this for years to come. The country will approach the 2020s with additional layers of bureaucracy loyal to Xi, but no significant macro adjustments to its governance or productivity. It is not clear how long China's growth rate is sustainable without pro-productivity reforms. It is also not clear that the world will wait five years before responding to a China that, without a new reform push, will appear unabashedly mercantilist, neo-communist, and revisionist. Bottom Line: The long-run investment outlook for China hinges on Xi Jinping's willingness to use his immense personal authority and concentration of power for the purposes of good governance and market-oriented economic reform. Without concrete progress, investors will have to decide whether they want to invest in a China that is becoming less economically vibrant as well as more authoritarian. We think this would be a bad bet. Matt Gertken Associate Vice President Geopolitical Strategy Marko Papic Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist Geopolitical Strategy 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Taking Stock Of China's Reforms," dated May 13, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Chinese policymakers are expressly concerned about the middle-income trap. Please see the World Bank and China's Development Research Center of the State Council, "China 2030: Building A Modern, Harmonious, And Creative Society," 2013, available at www.worldbank.org. Liu He, who is perhaps Xi Jinping's top economic adviser, had a hand in drafting this report and is now a member of the Politburo and shortlisted to take charge of the newly established Financial Stability and Development Commission at the People's Bank of China. 3 Please see Indermit S. Gill and Homi Kharas, "The Middle-Income Trap Turns Ten," World Bank, Policy Research Working Paper 7403 (August, 2015), available at www.worldbank.org 4 Please see Ronald Inglehart and Christian Welzel, Modernization, Cultural Change and Democracy: the Human Development Sequence (Cambridge: CUP, 2005). 5 For example, the collapse of the Soviet Union and the Arab Spring, as well as the downfall of communist regimes writ large, were completely unanticipated. 6 Specifically, Xi is creating a National Supervision Commission that will group a range of existing anti-graft watchdogs under its roof at the local, provincial, and central levels of administration, while coordinating with the Communist Party's top anti-graft watchdog. More details are likely to be revealed at the March legislative session, but what matters is that the initiative is a significant attempt to institutionalize the anti-corruption campaign. Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "China's Party Congress Ends ... So What?" dated November 1, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 7 China has recently drafted top anti-graft officials, such as Zhou Liang, from the powerful Central Discipline and Inspection Commission and placed them in the China Banking Regulatory Commission, which is in charge of overseeing banks. Authorities have already imposed fines in nearly 3,000 cases in 2017 affecting various kinds of banks, including state-owned banks. On the broader use of anti-corruption teams for economic policy, please see Barry Naughton, "The General Secretary's Extended Reach: Xi Jinping Combines Economics And Politics," China Leadership Monitor 54 (Fall 2017), available at www.hoover.org. 8 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Three Questions For 2018," dated December 13, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see Gao Shan et al, "China's President Xi Jinping Hits Out at 'Political Conspiracies' in Keynote Speech," Radio Free Asia, January 3, 2017, available at www.rfa.org 10 Xi has cranked up the state's propaganda organs, censorship of the media, public surveillance, and broader ideological and security controls (including an aggressive push for "cyber-sovereignty") to warn the public that there is no alternative to Communist Party rule. This tendency has raised alarms among civil rights defenders, lawyers, NGOs, and the western world to the effect that China's governance is actually regressing despite nominal improvement in standard indicators. This is the opposite of Confucius's bottom-up notion of order. 11 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "China: Looking Beyond The Party Congress," dated July 19, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 12 Xi faces politically sensitive deadlines in the 2020-22 period: the economic targets in the thirteenth Five Year Plan; the hundredth anniversary of the Communist Party in 2021; and Xi's possible retirement at the twentieth National Party Congress in 2022. At that point he will need to focus on demonstrating the Communist Party's all-around excellence and make careful preparations either to step down or cling to power. III. Indicators And Reference Charts Global equity indexes remained on a tear heading into year-end on the back of robust earnings growth in the major countries and U.S. tax cuts. There are some dark clouds hanging over this rally, as discussed in the Overview section. The technicals are stretched, but none of our fundamental indicators are warning of a market top. Implied equity volatility is very low, which can be interpreted in a contrary fashion. Investor sentiment is frothy and our Speculation Indicator is very elevated. Moreover, our equity valuation indicator has finally reached one standard deviation, which is our threshold of overvaluation. Valuation does not tell us anything about timing, but it does highlight the downside risks. Our monetary indicator also deteriorated a little more in December, although not by enough on its own to justify downgrading risk assets. On a positive note, earnings surprises and the net revisions ratio are not sending any warning signs for profit growth (although net revisions have edged lower recently). Moreover, our new Revealed Preference Indicator (RPI) continued on its bullish equity signal in November for the fifth consecutive month. The RPI combines the idea of market momentum with valuation and policy measures. It provides a powerful bullish signal if positive market momentum lines up with constructive signals from the policy and valuation measures. Conversely, if constructive market momentum is not supported by valuation and policy, investors should lean against the market trend. Our Willingness-to-Pay (WTP) indicators are also bullish on stocks in the U.S., Europe and Japan. These indicators track flows, and thus provide information on what investors are actually doing, as opposed to sentiment indexes that track how investors are feeling. The small dip in the Japanese WTP in December is a little worrying, but we need to see more weakness to confirm that flows no longer favor Japanese equities. In contrast, Europe's WTP rose sharply in December, suggesting that investors are allocating more to their European equity holdings. We are overweight both Europe and (especially) Japan relative to the U.S. (currency hedged). U.S. Treasury valuation is still very close to neutral, even following December's backup in yields. There is plenty of upside potential for yields before they hit "inexpensive" territory. Similarly, our technical bond indicator suggests that technical factors will not be headwind to a further bond selloff in 2018. Little has change for the dollar. The technicals are neutral. Value is expensive based on PPP, but less so by other valuation metrics. We see modest upside for the greenback in 2018. EQUITIES: Chart III-1U.S. Equity Indicators Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk Chart III-3U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators Chart III-4Revealed Preference Indicator Chart III-5U.S. Stock Market Valuation Chart III-6U.S. Earnings Chart III-7Global Stock Market And ##br##Earnings: Relative Performance Chart III-8Global Stock Market And ##br##Earnings: Relative Performance FIXED INCOME: Chart II-9U.S. Treasurys And Valuations Chart II-10U.S. Treasury Indicators Chart II-11Selected U.S. Bond Yields Chart II-1210-Year Treasury Yield ComponentsChart II-13U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor Chart II-14Global Bonds: Developed Markets Chart II-15Global Bonds: Emerging Markets CURRENCIES: Chart II-16U.S. Dollar And PPP Chart II-17U.S. Dollar And Indicator Chart II-18U.S. Dollar Fundamentals Chart II-19Japanese Yen Technicals Chart II-20Euro Technicals Chart II-21Euro/Yen Technicals Chart II-22Euro/Pound Technicals COMMODITIES: Chart II-23Broad Commodity Indicators Chart II-24Commodity Prices Chart II-25Commodity Prices Chart II-26Commodity Sentiment Chart II-27Speculative Positioning ECONOMY: Chart II-28U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop Chart II-29U.S. Macro Snapshot Chart II-30U.S. Growth Outlook Chart II-31U.S. Cyclical Spending Chart II-32U.S. Labor Market Chart II-33U.S. Consumption Chart II-34U.S. Housing Chart II-35U.S. Debt And Deleveraging Chart II-36U.S. Financial Conditions Chart II-37Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Chart II-38Global Economic Snapshot: China
Dear Client, We are sending you this last issue of the year, a lighter fare than usual, highlighting 10 charts we find important. The first two charts tackle two of the key economic questions of the day: U.S. inflation and Chinese construction. The next seven charts are displays of technical action that has captured our attention for key currency pairs. The last chart tackles the topic du jour, bitcoin. We will resume regular publishing on January 5th, 2018. Finally, the Foreign Exchange Strategy team would like to thank you for your continued readership, and wishes you and your families a joyful holiday season as well as a healthy, happy and prosperous 2018. Warm Regards, Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com Feature 1) U.S. Inflation Chart I-1AU.S. Inflation Is On Its Merry Way (I) Chart I-1BU.S. Inflation Is On Its Merry Way (II) U.S. inflation has been moribund in 2017, dismaying believers of the Philips curve, the Federal Reserve included. A few factors have been at play. The Fed sigma models show that the negative impact of a dollar rally on U.S. inflation is at its strongest with a two-year lag. Additionally, the fall in capacity utilization that happened following the industrial recession in late 2015/early 2016 continued to affect inflation negatively this year. These headwinds are passing. As the left panel of Chart I-1 illustrates, the easing in U.S. financial conditions this past year is likely to continue and become most salient for inflation in 2018. Meanwhile, the right panel of the chart shows that as the deceleration in money velocity growth forecasted the weakness in core inflation in 2017, its recent re-acceleration points to a pick-up in inflation next year. The Fed might be able to achieve its interest rate forecast of 3.1% in 2020 after all. 2) Chinese Housing Chart I-2AFrosty Outlook For Chinese Construction (I) Chart I-2BFrosty Outlook For Chinese Construction (II) Chinese monetary conditions have been tightened in 2017, fiscal expansion has been curtailed, and the growth of the M3 broad money supply has fallen to 8.8%. So far, the Chinese economy is hanging in, still benefiting from the fact that real interest rates have collapsed since November 2015 as producer price inflation rebounded from a 6% contraction to a 6% expansion today. This increase in producer prices has also helped industrial profits, which are expanding at a 23% pace, helping put a floor under industrial production. However, the outlook for residential investment needs to be monitored. Construction contributed 17% of GDP growth during the past two years. Chinese construction also contributed to 20% and 32% of the global consumption of refined copper and steel, respectively. This means that Chinese construction was a key driver of metal prices. Yet our leading indicator for Chinese house prices points toward a marked deceleration in the coming quarters. As the right panel of Chart I-2 shows, this could get translated into additional downside for iron ore. 3) EUR/USD Chart I-3The Euro Is At A Key Threshold 1.20 continues to represent a big hurdle to cross for EUR/USD. For the euro to punch above this mark, U.S. inflation will have to remain moribund in 2018. The rally in EUR/USD tracked an improvement in market estimates of the European Central Bank's terminal policy rate relative to the Fed's. Yet this improvement did not reflect an upgrade of the ECB's terminal rate itself, but rather a major downgrade of the Fed's, as U.S. inflation disappointed. If U.S. inflation rebounds as BCA anticipates, the dollar should be able to rally toward 1.10, especially as euro area inflation is unlikely to follow suit, as euro area financial conditions have tightened massively relative to the U.S. If U.S. inflation does not rebound, a move toward 1.30 is possible. Glimpsing at Chart I-3, it should also be obvious that any strength in the dollar next year is likely to prove a long-term buying opportunity for the euro. The EUR/USD has only traded below current levels when the U.S. dollar has been in the thralls of a major bubble. Additionally, global portfolios are deeply underweight euro area assets, therefore, a long-term rebalancing of portfolios toward euro area assets will support the euro down the road. Finally, when the next recession hits, the ECB is likely to have less room to stimulate its economy than the Fed will have. This means that during the next recession, the euro could behave like the yen has over the past 20 years: because the ECB will be impotent to fight deflationary pressures, falling euro area inflation will result in rising euro area real interest rates, especially against the U.S. This helped the yen then, and it could help the euro in the future, especially as the euro area's net international investment position is set to move into positive territory over the next 24 months. 4) EUR/GBP Chart I-4Brexit And Valuations Will Keep EUR/GBP Range-Bound For Now EUR/GBP is at an interesting juncture. EUR/GBP has rarely traded above current levels (Chart I-4). On one hand, Brexit would suggest that EUR/GBP could actually rise. The uncertainty around the U.K. leaving the EU has caused the U.K. economy to be among the rare ones to not accelerate in unison with global growth this year, despite the stimulative effect of a lower pound. This suggests that the hands of the Bank of England will remain tied, limiting its capacity to increase the cash rate. Moreover, U.K. politics continue to take an increasingly populist tone, and the growing popularity of Jeremy Corbyn suggests that the discontent is present on all sides of the political spectrum. Populist policies are rarely good for a currency. On the other hand, the GBP is trading at such a discount to its fair value against both the USD and the EUR that historically, buying the pound at current levels has generated gains for investors with investment horizons measured in years. Moreover, if the EUR weakens in the first half of 2018, historical antecedents argue that EUR/GBP would also weaken in this context. When taken altogether, these factors suggest that EUR/GBP is likely to remain stuck in its post-Brexit trading range for as long as political uncertainty remains, especially as it is unlikely that the U.K. will receive a sweetheart FTA deal from the EU. Thus, while we expect EUR/GBP to retest 0.84 over the course of the next three to six months, at these levels we would buy EUR/GBP with a target of 0.90. 5) EUR/SEK Chart I-5EUR/SEK Will Fall From 10 To 9 EUR/SEK flirted with 10 this month. As Chart I-5 illustrates, this only happened during the financial crisis. Sweden is a much more pro-cyclical economy than the euro area, hence EUR/SEK exhibits very strong counter-cyclical behavior. It only trades above 10 when global growth is in tatters, and below 9 when it is booming. The recent spate of strength in EUR/SEK is thus perplexing, since global growth has been very robust and broad-based this year. The very easy policy of the Riksbank has been the main culprit. Timing a reversal in EUR/SEK is tricky, as it remains a function of the rhetoric of the Riksbank. But today, Swedish inflation is on the rise, with the CPIF, the inflation gauge targeted by the Swedish central bank, being at target. Thus, the days of super easy monetary policy in Sweden are numbered, especially as the output gap is a positive 1%, unemployment stands nearly 1% below equilibrium, and resource utilization measures have spiked up. Today, it makes sense to buy the SEK versus the euro. However, EUR/SEK is unlikely to move below 9, as the best of the global business cycle is probably behind us. 6) USD/JPY Chart I-6A Big Move In USD/JPY Is On Its Way USD/JPY is at an interesting technical juncture. This pair has been forming a very large tapering wedge in recent years (Chart I-6). This type of formation can be resolved in either a bullish fashion or a bearish one. Our current inclination is to bet on a bullish resolution for USD/JPY, as global bond yields seem to finally be regaining some vigor, which historically has been poison for the yen. Supporting our bias is the fact that we see more interest rate increases in the U.S. than are currently priced in, as we foresee a pick-up in inflation in 2018. The one thing that keeps us awake at night when thinking about our bullish disposition for USD/JPY is that EM carry trades have begun to weaken. Historically, this has led to a softening in global activity which foments further EM-carry-trade reversals and weakness in USD/JPY. Investors should keep an eye on this space. 7) AUD/USD Chart I-7AUD/USD At 0.8 Is A Line In The Sand The Australian dollar possesses the poorest outlook among the G10 currencies. The Australian economy continues to be plagued by large amounts of overcapacity, inflation is still absent, and Australia is the economy most exposed to a slowdown in Chinese construction activity as Australian terms-of-trade shocks follow metals prices. Additionally, China's push to fight pollution points to weakening coal prices, another key export of Australia. Moreover, Chart I-7 illustrates that the AUD rarely trades above 0.8. To do so, it needs an especially robust global economy, with China firing on all cylinders. We do not think China is about to crash, but it is not about to accelerate either, especially when it comes to demand for metals. Thus, with AUD/USD trading at 0.77, we see more downside for this pair than upside. In fact, when observed in a broader, longer-term context, the rally since 2016 in the AUD looks like a consolidation within a larger downtrend. 8) AUD/CAD Chart I-8AUD/CAD Will Breakdown AUD/CAD seems to have hit its natural ceiling this year. Only in the first half of the 1990s and when China was reflating its economy with all its might right after the financial crisis was AUD/CAD able to punch above 1.03 (Chart I-8). We do not see a repeat of this performance in the coming two years. First, as we mentioned, BCA does not anticipate any re-acceleration in Chinese investment or EM demand. Second, AUD/CAD is expensive, trading 9% above its fair value. Third, BCA remains more bullish on oil prices than metals prices. Fourth, a weakening AUD/USD tends to be associated with a weakening AUD/CAD. Finally, if these four factors cause AUD/CAD to weaken below 0.964, a key upward trend line that has supported AUD/CAD since late 2008 will be broken, which should prompt additional selling in this cross. 9) AUD/NZD Chart I-9AUD/NZD: Buffeted Between China, Jacinda, And Valuations AUD/NZD is likely to remain stuck in its trading range established since 2013 (Chart I-9). To begin with, the Australian dollar is trading at a 10% premium to the NZD. This has happened three times over the previous 17 years. Each of these instances were followed by vicious corrections in this cross. Additionally, while the AUD is very exposed to a slowing in Chinese construction and the associated problems for base metals prices, the NZD is not. In fact, the NZD may even benefit from the new economic objectives set by China's leadership. One of these new key objectives is to rebalance the economy toward the consumer. Moreover, Chinese consumer preferences have seen a switch toward higher quality foodstuffs.1 Higher quality foodstuffs, meat and dairy in particular, are exactly what New Zealand exports. Thus, a relative negative terms-of-trade shock is likely to come for AUD/NZD. The one big negative to our view is the political situation in New Zealand. The recent wave of populism points toward a fall in the potential growth rate, and thus a fall in the terminal policy rate of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand. The limit on foreign investment in Kiwi housing is another negative.2 Thus, we are not yet willing to bet on AUD/NZD falling below parity. 10) Bitcoins Chart I-10Groupthink Points To A Bitcoin Correction Toward 11,000 Valuing bitcoins is an arduous exercise. A lack of clearly defined fundamentals is the key difficulty. It is also why bitcoin prices can move so violently. We have already covered the technological elements behind Bitcoin and the blockchain,3 but to uncover what could be driving investors' imaginations, we have to move back to the realm of economics and finance. One theory tries to value bitcoin by linking it to a mode of payment. Using this method, Dhaval Joshi, who writes our BCA European Investment Strategy service, estimates a fair value for BTC/USD. Using the quantity of money theory, he shows that if the market assumes that bitcoins can support US$0.5 trillion of global GDP, and if the velocity of money historically averages 1.5 times, with 21 million potential bitcoins in issuance, a bitcoin should be worth US$17,000.4 Changing estimates for velocity or how much of global GDP will be transacted using bitcoins varies this estimate. Another approach has been to value bitcoins as an asset with a limited supply, like gold. Using this methodology, the global gold stock is worth approximately US$7 trillion, but cryptocurrencies, with their high volatility, are unlikely to steal the yellow metal's entire market share. Instead, they might be able to carve out 25% of gold's current total market capitalization. In this case, cryptos would be worth US$1.75 trillion. Bitcoin could represent half of this amount, which equates to a total market capitalization of US$875 billion. With a stock of 21 million bitcoins, the "fair value" would be around US$42,000. A third approach exists, and it is the simplest (Occam Razor's alert?). As Peter Berezin argues in BCA's Global Investment Strategy service, global governments extract seigniorage benefits from issuing currency.5 As an example, by printing cash, the U.S. government can buy services and good worth roughly US$90 billion per year, at a near zero cost. This is a very significant amount. Governments are unlikely to ever give up this source of funding. Since crypto currencies are a direct threat to this, they will likely be made illegal as a result. This would imply a fair value of BTC/USD of zero. The current fair value is likely to be a probability weighted average of all three scenarios. We assign a 10% probability for the first case (mode of payment), a 10% probability to the second case (store of value), and an 80% probability to the last case (zero value due to illegality). This would give a current fair value of roughly US$6,000. At the current juncture, bitcoin trading is exhibiting strong herd-like tendencies. When groupthink takes over a market, as is the case right now with crypto-currencies in general and bitcoin in particular, a trend reversal is likely to materialize. Today, bitcoin's "fractal dimension" has hit the 1.25 neighborhood, where such reversals have tended to happen (Chart I-10). As such, a correction is very likely. The average correction since 2016 has been around 35%. Following similarly parabolic moves as the one observed over the past month, pullbacks have been closer to 45%. A retracement toward BTC/USD of 11,000 is very probable over the coming quarters. That being said, it is too early to call the ultimate top for bitcoin. With the narrative among the bitcoin investing public increasingly switching to bitcoin being a store of value akin to gold, a move to the US$40,000 neighborhood is, in fact, not a tail event. However, this is a move to play at one's own peril, since fair value is likely to be well below these levels. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Atkinson, Simon. "Why are China instant noodle sales going off the boil?" BBC News, BBC, 20 Dec. 2017, www.bbc.com/news/business-42390058. He, Laura. "China's growing middle class lose appetite for instant noodles." South China Morning Post, 20 Aug. 2017, www.scmp.com/business/companies/article/2107540/chinas-growing-middle-class-lose-appetite-instant-noodles. 2 For a more detailed discussion of the political situation in New Zealand as well as its potential impact, please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Reverse Alchemy: How to Transform Gold into Lead" dated November 3, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, titled "Blockchain And Cryptocurrencies" dated May 12, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see European Investment Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Bitcoins And Fractals" dated December 21, 2017, available at eis.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Don't Fear A Flatter Yield Curve" dated December 22, 2017, available gis.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 U.S. data was mixed: Housing starts increased by 1.3 million units, beating expectations, building permits also outperformed; Both the Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Survey and Chicago Fed National Activity Index outperformed expectations; However, annualized Q3 GDP growth came in at 3.2%, less than the expected 3.3%; Growth in headline and core personal consumption deflators also failed to meet expectations, coming in at 1.5% and 1.3% respectively. Easier financial conditions are expected to slowly push the core PCE deflator back to the Fed's 2% target. This will allow Jerome Powell to continue in Janet Yellen's footsteps. As credit continues to grow, the large U.S. consumer sector will become an increasingly important tailwind to growth. The fiscal thrust from the new tax plan will could also accentuate growth and inflationary pressures. Therefore, investment and consumption activity are both likely to pick up next year. This will should support the Fed as well as the USD. Report Links: Canaries In The Coal Mine Alert 2: More On EM Carry Trades And Global Growth - December 15, 2017 Riding The Wave: Momentum Strategies In Foreign Exchange Markets - December 8, 2017 The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 European data was mixed: German ZEW Current Situation increased to 89.3, outperforming expectations of 88.5; European ZEW Current Situation slightly underperformed expectations of 18, coming in at 17.4; Manufacturing and services PMIs for Germany and Europe as a whole both outperformed expectations; European trade balance decreased to EUR 19 bn from EUR 25 bn, and the current account also underperformed; European CPI was in line with expectations, contracting at a monthly pace, and growing at a 0.9% annual pace, under the expected 1% rate. On the Back of strong momentum in activity indicators, the ECB upgraded its growth and inflation forecasts for the upcoming years. However, since inflation is expected to remain under target for the whole forecast horizon, the ECB is likely to tighten policy at a much slower pace than the Fed. Report Links: The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Temporary Short-Term Rates - November 10, 2017 Market Update - October 27, 2017 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan has been mixed: Annual Import growth came in at 17.2%, surprising to the downside. Moreover, the All Industry Activity Index monthly growth also underperformed expectations, coming in at 0.3%. However, export annual growth surprised to the upside, coming in at 16.2%, an acceleration relative to last month's reading. On Wednesday, the Bank of Japan left its policy rate unchanged at -0.1%. Furthermore, the yield curve control policy, in which 10-year yields are kept around 0%, has been maintained. We stay bullish on USD/JPY, as we expect U.S. bond yields to rise when inflation picks up next year. However the yen could appreciate against commodity currencies if a risk-off period is triggered by tightening in China. Report Links: Riding The Wave: Momentum Strategies In Foreign Exchange Markets - December 8, 2017 The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Temporary Short-Term Rates - November 10, 2017 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. has been mixed: Gfk Consumer confidence underperformed expectations, coming in at -13. This measure also decline from the November reading. However, CBI industrial Trend Survey for orders, surprised to the upside, coming in at 17. Finally, public sector borrowing also surprised to the upside, coming in at 8.118 Billion pounds. The pound has been flat against the U.S. dollar this week. Overall we remain skeptical in the ability of the Bank of England to tighten much in the near future, given that real disposable income growth is very depressed, house price growth continues to be tepid, and uncertainty weighs on capex. Moreover, inflation will likely come down from present levels, as the pass through from the pound depreciation dissipates. All of these factors will limit any upside to cable in the next months. Report Links: The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Reverse Alchemy: How To Transform Gold Into Lead - November 3, 2017 Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 The AUD rallied solidly in recent weeks thanks to buoyant data out of Australia and China. Last week's labor numbers were especially important in this regard. The growth in full-time employment has outperformed that of part-time since summer, while the underemployment rate has declined by 0.3% since 2017Q2.. Moreover, RBA officials identified further positives in the housing market: excessive price appreciation has slowed down considerably and household's balance sheets are improving. For now, the biggest risk to the Australian dollar remains the Chinese economy. Xi Jinping's commitment to clamp down on pollution, debt and inequalities is a bearish prospect for the AUD. Additionally, Chinese house prices could decline substantially - something which would have negative repercussions for the AUD. Report Links: The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Recent data in New Zealand has been mixed: The current account surprised to the downside, coming in at -2.6% of GDP. However this number did improve from last quarter's -2.8% reading. However, both imports and exports outperformed expectations, coming in at 5.82 billion and 4.63 billion respectively. Moreover, GDP growth outperformed expectations, coming in at 2.7%. However, this number did decline from the 2.8% reading in Q2. NZD/USD was flat this week, even as the USD weakened. We continue to believe that carry currencies like the NZD, will be affected by tightening of financial conditions in China. However, the NZD has upside against the AUD, as the New Zealand dollar is cheaper than the AUD, and it is not as levered to the Chinese industrial cycle as the Australian dollar is. Report Links: The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Reverse Alchemy: How To Transform Gold Into Lead - November 3, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Canadian data was strong this week: Retail sales increased month-on-month by 1.5%, outperforming expectations by 0.8%; core retail sales also increased by a 0.8% monthly pace; Core inflation is at 1.3%, outperforming the expected 0.8%; Headline CPI is at 2.1%, above the expected 2%; The Canadian economy is growing in line with our expectations. A strong U.S. economy has allowed the export sector to flourish, while high demand for jobs has caused the labor market to tighten substantially. As labor shortages intensify, wages should gain traction in the near future, paving way for the BoC to tighten at least twice next year. Report Links: The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Market Update - October 27, 2017 Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recently, the SNB released its 4th quarter quarterly bulletin. This report highlighted that the Swiss economy continues to recover, and GDP growth is expected to reach 2% in 2018, after a 1% expansion this year. Furthermore, the bulletin remarked that the labor market continues to tighten, with unemployment reaching 3% and employment growth finally hitting its long term average. The SNB also remarked that although the output gap continues to be negative, measures of capacity utilization are very close to reaching their long term average. However, the SNB continues to be unapologetically committed to its dovish bias and to intervention in currency markets, as inflation in Switzerland continues to be too weak for the SNB to change its stance. Thus, the CHF is likely to continue depreciating. Report Links: The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 USD/NOK has appreciated by nearly 1.5% since last week, even as Brent has rallied by more than 2.5%. This dynamic highlights the fact that USD/NOK continues to be more correlated to interest rate differentials between Norway and the U.S. than to oil prices. Inflationary pressures and economic activity continue to be too tepid for the Norges to adopt a much more hawkish tone than it did last week. Meanwhile, the Fed is likely to surprise the market next year, by following up on its "dot plot". These dynamics will continue to put upward pressure on USD/NOK. Nevertheless, foreign exchange investors can still use the krone to bet on higher oil prices resulting from the extension of the OPEC supply cuts. The way to do so is by shorting EUR/NOK, which is more correlated with oil prices. Report Links: Canaries In The Coal Mine Alert 2: More On EM Carry Trades And Global Growth - December 15, 2017 The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Swedish data has bounced back considerably: Headline CPI increased by 1.9% annually and CPIF grew by 2% annually; The unemployment rate dropped substantially from 6.3% to 5.8%, while the seasonally adjusted figure dropped from 6.7% to 6.4%. This week, the Riksbank announced a formal end to additional bond purchases by the end of December. However, reinvestments will continue until the middle of 2019, which means that the Bank's holdings of government bonds will actually increase into 2019. Additionally, the Swedish central bank also forecasts the repo rate to begin gradually increasing in the middle of 2018. This makes sense as the Swedish economy is running beyond capacity conditions. Given Sweden's stellar growth period, an appreciation in the SEK is long-awaited, but this will have to wait until Governor Ingves convinces markets that his perennial dovish-bias is ebbing. At that point, any hint of hawkishness will cause a sharp appreciation in the SEK, especially against the euro. Report Links: Canaries In The Coal Mine Alert 2: More On EM Carry Trades And Global Growth - December 15, 2017 The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights As bitcoin has developed into a fledgling form of money, the best valuation framework for it is the quantity theory of money. This states that the bitcoin money supply (in dollars) times bitcoin's velocity of circulation = the amount of world GDP carried out in bitcoin. In the short term, excessive herding signals a likely countertrend reversal, and implies that the bitcoin price will retest $12,750 at some point in the next 130 days. In the long term, the wholesale acceptance of cryptocurrencies in the global economy will be deflationary. Feature Bitcoin's near-vertical price ascent to $19,000 has left many commentators crying "bubble!" The problem with this is that you cannot define an asset bubble simply from the behaviour of a price. You need to assess fundamental value, and the extent of deviation above this fundamental value. Conceivably, bitcoin's near-vertical price ascent could be a correction from an "anti-bubble", in which the price was a long way below its fundamental value and rapidly corrected upwards. Which begs the question: what is the best way to assess the fundamental value of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies? Chart of the WeekCryptocurrencies Will Prevent Inflation, Just Like The Gold Standard A Valuation Framework For Bitcoin As bitcoin has developed into a fledgling form of money, one potential valuation framework is the quantity theory of money. This states that the money supply times its velocity of circulation equals nominal GDP. Given that the supply of bitcoin will not exceed an upper limit of 21 million coins, we can say that the bitcoin money supply (in dollars) is the bitcoin price times 21 million. We can then use the quantity theory to deduce: Bitcoin price times 21 million times bitcoin's velocity of circulation = Amount of world GDP carried out in bitcoin. If we additionally assume that bitcoin's velocity is similar to that of the stock of broad fiat money, 1.5, then we can rearrange and simplify the equation to approximately: Bitcoin price = Amount of world GDP carried out in bitcoin divided by 30 million So if the market was discounting that $0.5 trillion of world GDP would be carried out in bitcoin, then its price should be $16,700. Given the purported nefarious uses of cryptocurrencies at the moment, and an estimated size of the world's shadow economy at around $16 trillion, an assumption of $0.5 trillion of bitcoin use in the world economy does not seem excessive. On the other hand, nefarious use might make bitcoin's velocity of circulation a lot higher than conventional money. Which would pull bitcoin's fair price much lower. Suffice to say, the above assumptions are broad-brush and open to challenge. Nevertheless, despite the many caveats, the above framework is probably the most valid for valuing a cryptocurrency once it gains acceptance as a fledgling form of money. Putting Bitcoin Through Fractal Analysis The behaviour of price alone cannot gauge an asset bubble. But the behaviour of price alone can gauge a shortage of liquidity in the asset which implies a potential countertrend reversal. Liquidity is plentiful when the market is split between short-term momentum traders and longer-term value investors. This is because the two herds generally disagree with each other. If the price fluctuates up, the momentum trader wants to buy while the value investor wants to sell; and vice-versa. So the herds trade with each other with plentiful liquidity and little movement in price. This raises an obvious question. Can there really be any value investors in cryptocurrencies? The answer is potentially yes, if these investors believe that cryptocurrency acceptance will increase over time. And if they apply the aforementioned valuation framework from the quantity theory of money. Still, liquidity will periodically evaporate if too many value investors join the short-term momentum herd. Instead of dispassionately investing on the basis of a valuation framework, value investors get lured into participating in a strong rally, and their buy orders add fuel to the rally. A tipping point comes when all the value investors have joined the momentum herd. If a value investor then suddenly reverts to type and puts in a sell order, he will find that there are no buyers left. Liquidity has evaporated, and finding new liquidity might require a substantial reversal in the price to attract a buy order from an ultra-long-term deep value investor. As regular readers know, fractal analysis measures whether the herding behaviour in any financial instrument has reached its tipping point, signalling a likely end of its price trend. Today, the 130-day herding indicator for bitcoin is at a level which has indicated three previous countertrend reversals of at least one fifth of the preceding 130-day move (Chart I-2, Chart I-3, Chart I-4). Chart I-2Bitcoin: The 130 Day Fractal Dimension Signalled A Reversal In 2015 Chart I-3Bitcoin: The 130 Day Fractal Dimension Signalled Two Reversals In 2017 Chart I-4Bitcoin: The 65 Day Fractal Dimension Also Signalled Two Previous Reversals If this herding indicator signals a fourth countertrend reversal, it implies that the bitcoin price will retest $12,750 at some point in the next 130 days. Are Cryptocurrencies Inflationary Or Deflationary? On the face of it, the emergence of cryptocurrencies sounds inflationary. After all, if the general acceptance of cryptocurrencies for commercial transactions increases, there will be new money supply. And this new money supply will increase the nominal demand for goods and services. However, the truth is more nuanced. Unlike fiat money supply - which can expand without limit - each cryptocurrency has a defined limit to its supply. Although new cryptocurrencies can emerge, there seems to be a limit to the aggregate amount of cryptocurrency supply. The limiting factor is that it takes energy to create cryptocurrency through so-called 'mining'. Miners must compete to validate transactions that occur in a cryptocurrency. The competition takes the form of solving a mathematical problem - for example, finding the prime factors of a very large number. And the computational demands are energy sapping. Furthermore, the computational demands - known as 'proof of work' - get progressively more difficult for each additional new coin mined. Given that the computational resources in the world are finite and growing at a gentle and predictable rate, the implication is that the growth in the total amount of cryptocurrency is also limited. So while the emergence of cryptocurrencies does increase the money supply in the near-term (Chart I-5), a large-scale rejection of fiat money would make it impossible for uncouth policymakers to spike the overall money supply over the longer-term. Chart I-5Cryptocurrencies: Market Cap Is Now Non-Trivial Here's a further thought. Imagine if the proof of work computations, instead of being random mathematical calculations, solved useful problems that expanded the envelope of knowledge. This could boost real productivity, which is ultimately just a function of the stock of human ingenuity. In which case, any increase in money supply would be matched by an increase in potential real output. Interestingly, a recent paper from the Bank of Canada proposes that a wholesale acceptance of cryptocurrencies in the global economy could act as a new gold standard, whose effect would be mildly deflationary1 (Chart of the Week) and Table I-1). We fully agree with the Bank of Canada analysis. Table I-1No Persistent Inflation For 700 Years! The sting in the tail is that the analysis describes prices denominated in cryptocurrency terms. In fiat currency terms, the quantity theory of money implies that prices would rise2 - unless central banks reacted to the emergence of cryptocurrencies by shrinking the supply of fiat money. Would they? Very likely yes. If they didn't, the demise of fiat money would accelerate as people voted with their wallets and switched to superior stores of purchasing power. Nevertheless, we suspect that any central bank response would just delay the inevitable. As Larry Summers puts it: I am much more confident that the world of payments will look very different 20 years from now than I am about how it will look. And with that observation, I am signing off for 2017. I do hope you have enjoyed our provocative and counterintuitive insights this year. In the vast majority of cases, these insights have led to highly profitable investment recommendations. We promise to continue the success in 2018! Early next year, we will also unveil a major enhancement to our proprietary fractal trading strategy. So stay tuned. It just remains for me to wish you all a very enjoyable Festive Season and a prosperous 2018. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 Bank of Canada Staff Working Paper, A Bitcoin Standard: Lessons from the Gold Standard https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2016/03/staff-working-paper-2016-14/ 2 Please see the Global Investment Strategy Special Report titled "Bitcoin's Macro Impact", dated September 15, 2017 available at gis.bcaresearch.com and Technology Sector Strategy Special Report titled "Cyber Currencies: Actual Currencies Or Just Speculative Assets?", dated December 12, 2017 available at tech.bcaresearch.com. Fractal Trading Model* As discussed in the main body of this report, this week's trade is to expect a countertrend reversal in bitcoin. Go short with a profit target at $12750 and stop-loss at $28000. In other trades, long silver has had a strong 1-week bounce while long U.K. personal products / short U.K. food and beverages reached the end of its 65 day maximum holding period and closed with a small profit. 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-6 The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model 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##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch ##br##- Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch ##br##- Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch ##br##- Interest Rate Expectations
Dear Client, This is our last report of 2017. We will be back on January 4, 2018, with our customary recap of recommendations made this year. We wish you and your loved ones the very best this lovely season has to offer. Sincerely, Robert P. Ryan, Chief Commodity Strategist Commodity & Energy Strategy Highlights With GDP growth accelerating in ~ 75% of countries monitored by the IMF, we expect commodity demand - particularly for crude oil and refined products - to remain strong in 2018. On the supply side, OPEC 2.0 - the producer coalition led by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and Russia - will maintain its production discipline, which will force commercial oil inventories lower in 2018. As a result, we expect oil markets to continue to tighten in 2018, keeping upside risk to prices from unplanned production outages acute. This was clearly demonstrated in separate incidents in the U.S. and North Sea in the past two months, which removed more than 400k b/d from markets since November. Geopolitical risk will remain elevated, particularly in Venezuela, where operations at the state oil company were paralyzed after senior military officers assumed leadership positions there. Beyond 2018, we believe OPEC 2.0 will endure as a coalition. It will manage production and provide forward guidance consistent with a strategy to keep WTI and Brent forward curves backwardated. This will provide a supportive backdrop for the Saudi Aramco IPO, expected toward the end of next year, and will limit the volume of hedging U.S. shale-oil producers are able to effect. In turn, this will limit the number of rigs U.S. E&Ps can profitably deploy. Energy: Overweight. Our Brent and WTI call spreads in 2018 - long $55/bbl calls vs. short $60/bbl calls - are up an average 53.8%. We will retain these exposures into 2018. Base Metals: Neutral. We expect base metals to be supported through 1Q18, after which reform measures in China could crimp supply and demand, as we discuss below. Precious Metals: Neutral. We remain long gold as a strategic portfolio hedge against inflation and geopolitical risk, even though inflation remains quiescent (see below). Ags/Softs: Underweight. Fed policy will be critical to ag markets in 2018. We expect as many as four rate hikes next year, as the Fed continues with rates normalization (see below). Feature Our updated balances model indicates global oil markets will continue to tighten in 2018, as demand growth accelerates and OPEC 2.0 - the producer coalition led by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and Russia - maintains production discipline (Chart of the Week). Earlier this week, IMF noted improving employment conditions globally, which will continue to support aggregate demand and the synchronized global expansion in manufacturing and trade (Chart 2 and Chart 3).1 This acceleration of GDP growth rates globally will continue to support income growth and commodity demand generally. Oil-exporters have not participated in the global economic expansion to the extent of other economies, according to the Fund, which can be seen in the trade data (Chart 3). However, imports by Middle East and African countries are moving higher, and look set to post year-on-year (yoy) growth in the near future. Chart of the WeekOil Balances Will Continue to Tighten In 2018 Chart 2Global Upturn Boosts Manufacturing, ##br##Commodity Demand... The combination of continued production discipline from OPEC 2.0 and expanding incomes boosting demand will force crude and product inventories lower, particularly those in the OECD, which are the primary target of the producer coalition (Chart 4). Chart 3...And Global Trade Chart 4OECD Inventories Will Fall Below 5-year ##br##Average In BCA's Supply-Demand Assessment Unplanned Outages Mounting; Risk Remains Acute Unlike many forecasters, we continue to expect inventories to draw in 1Q18. This expectation is the direct result of our supply-demand modelling, and also is supported by our expectation that the risk of unplanned outages is increasing. This already has been demonstrated in the U.S. and U.K. North Sea, where more than 400k b/d of pipeline flows in November and December were lost. Of far greater moment, however, is the potential for unplanned outages in Venezuela. We believe the state-owned oil company there is one systemic malfunction away from shutting down exports entirely - e.g., a breakdown in pumping stations - as happened in 2002. Reuters reports the government of Nicolas Maduro appears to be consolidating power via an "anti-corruption" campaign, and is installing senior military officials with little or no industry experience in leadership roles inside PDVSA.2 Reuters notes, "The ongoing purge, in which prosecutors have arrested at least 67 executives including two recently ousted oil ministers, now threatens to further harm operations for the OPEC country, which is already producing at 30-year-lows and struggling to run PDVSA units including Citgo Petroleum, its U.S. refiner." The news service goes on to report, "Executives that remain, meanwhile, are so rattled by the arrests that they are loathe to act, scared they will later be accused of wrongdoing." We have Venezuela output at just under 1.90mm b/d, and expect it to decline to a little more than 1.70mm b/d by the end of 2018. Brent Expected To Average $67/bbl In 2018 We continue to forecast average Brent prices of $67/bbl and WTI at $63/bbl next year, given our assessment of global supply-demand balances, which drive our fundamental price forecasts: We expect global crude and liquids supply to average 100.23mm b/d in 2018, vs 100.01mm b/d expected by the U.S. EIA, while we have global demand coming in at 100.29mm b/d on average next year, vs the 99.97mm b/d expected by EIA (Chart 5 and Chart 6). Chart 5BCA's Expected Crude Oil Supply Vs. EIA's Chart 6BCA's Expected Demand Exceeds EIA's In 2018 Our expectations translate into a 2.55mm b/d increase in supply next year, vs a 1.67mm b/d increase in demand yoy (Table 1). Running the EIA's supply-demand assessments through our fundamental pricing models produces average Brent and WTI prices of $49/bbl and $47/bbl, respectively. EIA is expecting a 2.04mm b/d increase in supply next year, vs a 1.63mm b/d increase in demand. Table 1BCA Global Oil Supply - Demand Balances (mm b/d) In line with our House view, we are expecting some USD strengthening on the back of as many as four interest-rate hikes by the Federal Reserve in the U.S. (Chart 7). As we've noted in the past, we expect these effects to be felt more in 2H18. Along with higher U.S. shale-oil production driven by higher prices - we expect shale output to go up 0.97mm b/d next year to 6.64mm b/d - a stronger USD will keep Brent and WTI prices below $70/bbl next year. Oil Beyond 2018: OPEC 2.0 Endures OPEC 2.0 will remain an enduring feature of the oil market going forward, in our view. Allowing the coalition to fade away, and returning the global oil market to a production free-for-all once again serves neither KSA's nor Russia's interests. Following the IPO of Saudi Aramco toward the end of 2018, KSA will, we believe, want to maintain stability in the market, by demonstrating to capital markets that OPEC 2.0 can manage crude-oil supplies in a way that is not disruptive to its new-found investors. It is important to remember the Aramco IPO is only the beginning of the process of transforming KSA from a crude resource exporter into a vertically integrated global refining and marketing colossus. To eclipse Exxon as the world's largest refiner, Aramco would benefit from continued access to capital markets throughout the following decades, as well reliable cash flows to lower its cost of capital, service debt, and maintain whatever dividends it envisions. This cannot occur if oil markets are continually at risk of collapsing because production cannot be managed in a business-like manner. While Russia has not embarked on the same sort of transformation of its resource industry as KSA, it still has a very strong interest in maintaining stability in the crude oil markets, given its dependence on hydrocarbon exports. The Russian rouble moves in near-lock-step with Brent prices - since 2010, Brent prices explain ~80% of the movement in the rouble (Chart 8). It is obvious a collapse in global crude oil prices would, once again, have devastating effects on Russia's economy, as it did in 2009 and 2014. Such a collapse would trigger inflation domestically, as the cost of imports skyrockets, and threaten civil unrest as incomes and GDP are hobbled and foreign reserves evaporate. Chart 7Stronger USD Limits Oil-Price Appreciation In 2018 Chart 8Russia Cannot Afford An Oil Price Collapse Both KSA and Russia have a deep interest in maintaining oil's pre-eminent position as a transportation fuel for as long as possible. For this reason, neither wants to encourage prices that are too high - $100/bbl+ prices greatly encouraged the development of shale technology in the U.S. - nor too low, given the dire consequences such an outcome would have for both their economies. The common goals of KSA and Russia cannot be achieved by allowing OPEC 2.0 to dissolve, leaving member states to produce at will in the sort of production free-for-all that characterized the OPEC market-share war of 2014 - 15. To the extent possible, OPEC 2.0 must continue to manage member states' production in a manner that does not permit inventories to once again fill to the point where the only way to moderate over-production is to push prices through cash costs, so that enough output is shut in to clear the market. The most obvious way for these goals to be accomplished is by keeping markets relatively tight. This can be done by keeping commercial oil inventories worldwide low enough to keep Brent and WTI forward curves backwardated - particularly in highly visible OECD and U.S. storage facilities. A backwardated forward curve means the average price over a typical 2- or 3-year hedge horizon is lower than the spot price received by OPEC 2.0 producers. The deeper the backwardation, the lower the average price a U.S. shale producer can lock in by hedging. This limits the number of rigs that can be deployed by shale producers. This will require continual communication with markets to assure them sufficient spare capacity and easily developed production can be brought to market to alleviate any temporary shortage. In the meantime, OPEC 2.0 members with flexible storage will need to communicate these barrels will be readily available to the market. This management and forward-guidance should be easier for OPEC 2.0 to execute on, following its recent success in keeping some 1.0mm b/d of production off the market - largely in KSA and Russia - and member states' existing spare capacity and storage. We continue to expect the daily working dialogue of the OPEC 2.0 member states - most especially KSA and Russia - to deepen as time goes by, and for tactics and strategy to evolve as each gains comfort operating with the other. Whether OPEC 2.0 can pull this off remains to be seen. However, given the success of the coalition over the past two years, we are inclined to believe they will continue to develop a durable modus operandi supporting this outcome. Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger, Research Analyst HugoB@bcaresearch.com Opposing Forces: Stay Neutral Metals In 2018 Chart 9Strong Global Demand Will Neutralize ##br##Impact of China Slowdown While we expect more upside to metal prices in the first half of 2018, slowing growth in China and a stronger USD will prevent a repeat of this year's stellar performance. While a deceleration in China is - ceteris paribus - most definitely a headwind to metal prices, we believe the impact may pan out differently this time around. The silver lining comes from the Communist Party's commitment to environmental reforms, which, in many cases, will manifest themselves in the form of less supply of the refined product, or demand for the ores. Either way, this alone is a positive for metals. China's Environmental Reforms Will Dominate in 1Q18 China's commitment to cleaning its air is currently shaping up in the form of winter cuts in major steel- and aluminum-producing provinces. While policies are hard to predict, we will keep monitoring the development and implementation of reforms from within China to assess how they will impact the markets. Outcomes from the Annual National People's Congress in March will give us a clearer indication of what to expect in terms of policy. For now, we see these reforms putting a floor under metal prices, at least in the beginning of 2018. Robust Global Demand Offsets Stronger USD & Slower Chinese Growth Xi's reforms will turn into a headwind for metal prices as they begin to impact the real economy in 2H18. Signs of weakness have already emerged in measures of industrial activity such as the Li Keqiang and Chinese PMI (Chart 9). In addition, the real estate sector has been showing some weakness since the beginning of the year. Annual growth rates in real estate investment and floor-space started are decelerating - a worrisome sign. Nonetheless, domestic demand remains robust, and policymakers in Beijing are approaching economic reforms gradually and with caution. Consequently we do not expect a major policy mistake to derail the Chinese economy. While Chinese growth will likely slow from above trend levels, a hard landing is most probably not in the cards. Another bearish risk comes from a stronger USD. We see the Fed as more committed to interest-rate normalization than markets expect, and consequently would not be surprised to see up to four rate hikes next year. Inverting the yield curve is a policy mistake incoming Chair Jerome Powell will try to avoid; however, we expect inflation to bottom in the first half of next year, giving the Fed room to accelerate its path of rate hikes. This will result in a stronger USD, which is bearish for commodities priced in U.S. dollars. In any case, these bearish factors will likely be offset by strong global growth, supported by a robust U.S. economy. Bottom Line: Xi's reforms will dominate metal markets in 2018 as bullish supply side environmental reforms duel against bearish demand-side economic reforms. Robust global growth will neutralize the impact of downside pressures. Stay neutral, but beware of modest USD strength. Low Inflation Retards Gold's Advance Once again, reality confounded theory: Inflation failed to emerge this year, even as systematically important central banks remained massively accommodative, and some 70% of the economies tracked by the OECD reported jobless rates below the commonly used estimate of the natural rate of unemployment (Chart 10). Chart 10Massive Monetary Accommodation Failed ##br##To Spur Inflation In The U.S. These fundamentals should be inflationary and supportive of gold. To date, they haven't been. We Expect Inflation To Revive The global economy has endured decades of low inflation going back at least to the 1990s. This has been driven by numerous factors. First, the expansion of the global value chain (GVC) over the past three decades has synchronized inflation rates worldwide, as our research and that of the BIS has found. As a result, U.S. wages and goods' inflation are now more dependent on global spare capacity. With the global output gap now almost closed, this disinflationary force will dissipate.3 Second, most measures of labor-market slack are now pointing toward tighter conditions, which, we expect, will strengthen the Phillips curve trade-off between inflation and unemployment next year. Inflation is a lagging indicator: Wage inflation lags the unemployment rate, and CPI inflation lags wage inflation. Investors should expect inflation to show up in 2018.4 Lastly, one-off technical factors, which depressed inflation last year - e.g. drop in cellphone data charges and prescription drug prices - also will fade. Once these big one-offs are no longer in annual percent-change calculations, inflation rates will rise. The Fed's Choppy Waters Against this backdrop, the Fed is embarking on a rates-normalization policy, which we believe will result in U.S. central bank's policy rate being increased up to four times next year. The risk of a policy error is high. Should the Fed proceed with its rate hikes while inflation remains quiescent, real interest rates will increase. This would depress gold prices, and, at the limit, threaten the current economic expansion by tightening monetary conditions well beyond current levels, potentially lifting unemployment levels. If, on the other hand, the Fed deliberately keeps rate hikes below the rate of growth in prices - i.e., it stays "behind the curve" - it risks being forced to implement steeper rate hikes later in 2018 or in 2019 to get stronger inflation under control. This could tighten monetary conditions suddenly, and threaten the expansion, pushing the U.S. economy into recession. There's a lot riding on how the Fed navigates these difficult conditions. Geopolitical Risks Will Support Gold On the geopolitical side, the risks we've identified in our October 12, 2017 publication - i.e. (1) U.S.-North Korea tensions, (2) trade protectionism of the Trump administration, and (3) ongoing conflicts in the Middle East-- will add a geopolitical risk premium to gold prices, supporting the metal's role as a safe haven.5 Bottom Line: We remain neutral precious metals, but still recommend investors allocate to gold as a strategic portfolio hedge against inflation and geopolitical risk. U.S. Policies Will Weigh On Ags In 2018 U.S. monetary and trade policy will dominate ags next year. Our modelling reveals that U.S. financial factors - real rates and the USD - are significant in explaining ag price behavior (Chart 11).6 Given that we expect the Fed to hike interest rates more aggressively than what the market is currently pricing in, we see grains as vulnerable to the downside. In addition, the risk that NAFTA is abrogated by the U.S. would weigh on ag markets, as Canada and Mexico are among the U.S.'s top three ag export destinations. Chart 11Bearish U.S. Monetary And Trade Policies ##br##Amid Healthy Inventories Will Weigh On Ags We expect ag markets will remain well supplied next year, and inventories will moderate the impact of supply-side shocks - most notably in the form of a La Nina event. The probability of a La Nina currently stands above 80%, and is expected to last until mid-to-late spring. U.S. Monetary Policy Is Relevant With U.S. inflation rates still subdued, there has been much talk about how soon the Fed will be able embark on its tightening cycle. A weaker-than-expected USD has been favorable for ag markets this year, and thus kept U.S. ag exports competitive. However, if and when the economy reaches the kink in the Philipps Curve, and inflation begins its ascent, the Fed will be able to proceed with its rate-hiking cycle. With the New York Fed's Underlying Inflation Gauge at a cycle high, we expect this scenario to unfold in the first half of 2018. This would give incoming Fed Chairman Jerome Powell ample room to hike rates which would - ceteris paribus - bear down on ag prices. FX Developments In Other Major Exporters Will Also Be Bearish The effects of higher U.S. interest rates are translated to ag markets via the exchange-rate channel. Commodities are priced in USD, thus a stronger USD vis-à-vis the currency of a major ag exporter will, all else equal, increase the profitability of farmers competing against U.S. exporters in international markets. Among the ag-relevant currencies, we highlight the Brazilian Real, EUR, Russian Rouble, and Australian Dollar as most likely to depreciate vis-à-vis the USD in 2018. Termination Of NAFTA Is A Risk For American Farmers U.S. farmers are keeping a close eye on NAFTA renegotiations, and rightly so. Canada and Mexico are the U.S.'s second and third largest agricultural export markets - accounting for 15% and 13% of U.S. agricultural exports in 2016, respectively. In fact, corn, rice, and wheat exports to Mexico accounted for 26%, 15%, and 11% share of U.S. exports of those commodities, respectively. However, as BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy service points out, the long-run impact depends on the underlying reason for the termination of the trade agreement. If Trump is merely a "pluto-populist" - as they expect - NAFTA will simply be replaced by bilateral trade agreements, with no lasting economic disturbance. The risk is that Trump is a genuine populist. If this turns out to be the case, tariffs and a rejection of the WTO would make U.S. exports less competitive, and would become a bearish force in ag markets.7 The risk of a collapse in the NAFTA trade deal would be devastating for U.S. farmers. In fact, in a bid to reduce reliance on the U.S., Mexican Economic Minister Ildefonso Guajardo recently announced that they are working on a Mexico-European Union trade deal.8 In addition, Mexico signed the world's largest free trade agreement with Japan, and is currently exploring the opportunity to join Mercosur. Bottom Line: Weather-induced volatility is possible in the near term, as a La Nina event threatens to reduce yields. Nevertheless, U.S. financial conditions and trade policy will dominate ag markets in 2018. With markets underestimating the Fed's resolve regarding interest rate hikes, we see some upside to the USD. This will keep a lid on ag prices next year. 1 Please see "The year in Review: Global Economy in 5 Charts," published on the IMF Blog December 18, 2017. https://blogs.imf.org/2017/12/17/the-year-in-review-global-economy-in-5-charts/ 2 Please see "Paralysis at PDVSA: Venezuela's oil purge cripples company," published by reuters.com December 15, 2017. 3 The IMF estimates the median output gap for 20 advanced economies reached -0.1% in 2017 and will rise to +0.3% in 2018. Please see BIS https://www.bis.org/publ/work602.htm. The Bank for International Settlements in Basel describes the GVC as "cross-border trade in intermediate goods and services." 4 The U.S. unemployment has been under its estimated NAIRU for 9 consecutive months now. 5 Please see Commodity and Energy Strategy Weekly Report titled "Balance Of Risks Favors Holding Gold," dated October 12, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 6 Our modelling indicates that U.S. financial factors are important determinants of agriculture commodity price developments. More specifically, a 1% move in the USD TWI and a 1pp change in 5 year real rates are associated with a 1.4%, and an 18% change in the CCI Grains & Oilseed Index, in the opposite direction. 7 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report titled "NAFTA - Populism Vs. Pluto-Populism," dated November 10, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see "Mexico sees possible EU trade deal as NAFTA talks drag on," dated December 13, 2017, available at reuters.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trade Recommendation Performance In 3Q17 Trades Closed in Summary of Trades Closed in
Highlights 2018 Model Bond Portfolio Positioning: Translating our 2018 key global fixed income views into recommended positioning within our model bond portfolio comes up with the following: target a moderate level of portfolio risk, with below-benchmark duration and overweights on corporate credit versus government debt. These allocations will shift later in the year as central banks shift to a more restrictive monetary policy stance and growth expectations for 2018 become more uncertain. Country Allocations: Divergences in likely central bank policy moves in 2018 will lead to more cross-country bond market investment opportunities. In our model portfolio, we are maintaining underweight positions in the U.S., Canada and the Euro Area, keeping a moderate overweight in low-beta Japan, and adding small overweights in the U.K. and Australia (where rate hikes are unlikely). Spread Product: Slower bond buying by central banks will result in a more volatile bond backdrop later in 2018, which will impact credit spreads. Stay overweight in the first half of the year, however, until higher inflation forces the hand of central banks. Feature Two weeks ago, we published our "Key Views" report, outlining the main fixed income investment implications deriving from the 2018 BCA Outlook.1 In this, our final report of 2017, we translate those Key Views into direct allocations in the Global Fixed Income Strategy (GFIS) model bond portfolio. As we always remind our clients, our model portfolio is intended as a vehicle to communicate our opinions on the relative attractiveness and trade-offs between fixed income countries and sectors. That is to say, the portfolio not only includes our traditional individual country and sector recommendations, but attaches actual weightings to those views within a fully invested hypothetical bond portfolio. The main takeaway from our Key Views is that bond market performance, and ideal asset allocation, is likely to look very different as the year progresses (Table 1). The first half of the year will see continued strong global growth and slowly rising inflation, but with central banks only slowing shifting to a less accommodative policy stance. This will create an environment where global bond yields will rise but with credit markets outperforming government bonds. The story will play out differently in the latter half, however, as worries over global growth expectations for 2018 will create more market volatility - albeit with lower cross-asset correlations as central banks act in a less-coordinated fashion than in recent years. Table 1A Pro-Risk Recommended Portfolio In H1/2018, Looking To Get Defensive Later In The Year Top-Down Bond Portfolio Implications Of Our Key Views The main predictions for 2018 in our Key Views report from December 5th were the following: A more bearish backdrop for bonds, led by the U.S.: Faster global growth, with rebounding inflation expectations, will trigger tighter overall global monetary policy. This will be led by Fed rate hikes and, later in 2018, ECB tapering. Global bond yields will rise in response, primarily due to higher inflation expectations. Growth & policy divergences will create cross-market bond investment opportunities: Global growth in 2018 will become less synchronized compared to 2016 & 2017, as will individual country monetary policies. Government bonds in the U.S. and Canada, where rate hikes will happen, will underperform, while bonds in the U.K. and Australia, where rates will likely be held steady, will outperform. The most dovish central banks will be forced to turn less dovish: The ECB and BoJ will both slow the pace of their asset purchases in 2018, in response to strong domestic economies and rising inflation. This will lead to bear-steepening of yield curves in Europe, mostly in the latter half of 2018. The BoJ could raise its target on JGB yields, but only modestly, in response to an overall higher level of global bond yields. The low market volatility backdrop will end through higher bond volatility: Incremental tightening by central banks, in response to faster inflation, will raise the volatility of global interest rates. This will eventually weigh on global growth expectations over the course of 2018, and create a more volatile backdrop for risk assets in the latter half of the year. The first step in translating these themes into allocations into our model bond portfolio is to determining the ideal top-down asset allocation parameters for the start of the 2018: Maintain a moderate overall level of portfolio risk. Both bond yields (Chart 1) and credit spreads (Chart 2) are at the low end of their historical ranges since 2000. This suggests that bond market returns will be much lower than in recent years, simply because initial valuations are not cheap. Coming at a time when bond volatility is also at historically depressed levels, and with central banks starting to slowly take away the monetary punch bowl, keeping overall portfolio risk at modest levels is prudent. Within the GFIS model bond portfolio, that means keeping our tracking error versus our custom benchmark performance index well below our maximum target level of 100bps (Chart 3). Chart 1Historical Range Of Bond Yields For Various Fixed Income Markets, 2000-2017 Chart 2Historical Range Of Global Credit Spreads, 2000-2017 Maintain a below-benchmark overall portfolio duration. The combination of solid global growth, rising inflation and a slower pace of bond buying by the major central banks all suggest that bond yields will move higher in 2018. We will continue to target a recommended portfolio duration that is one year short versus our benchmark index (Chart 4). Chart 3Maintain Moderate Overall Portfolio Risk Chart 4Stay Cautious On Duration Risk Maintain an overweight stance on corporate credit over government bonds, focusing on the U.S. Although spreads are tight in so many asset classes, the global growth and monetary backdrop remains supportive for the outperformance of credit over government bonds. We recommended focusing on U.S. corporate credit, both Investment Grade (IG) and High-Yield (HY), where growth momentum remains solid and Fed policy is not yet restrictive. After setting those broad portfolio parameters, our recommendations get more interesting in terms of country allocations. Bond yields within the developed markets have become highly correlated to inflation expectations in the past few years (Chart 5). This is no surprise given how strongly central banks have tied their monetary policy decisions to their own inflation forecasts, and to market-based and survey-based inflation expectations. Inflation is likely to move higher next year alongside tight global labor markets and higher oil prices. If the bullish views on oil from BCA's commodity strategists comes to fruition, this implies that both market-based inflation expectations can rise and yield curves can bear-steepen. The key to the latter will be how fast central banks respond to faster rates of inflation. Yield curve steepness remains highly correlated to the level of REAL interest rates. Curves steepen when real interest rates decline and vice versa. Lower real rates can happen in two ways - bullishly, if central banks cut policy rates faster than inflation is falling; or bearishly, if central banks do not hike rates as fast as inflation is rising. We see the latter as being the likely story in 2018, which will lead to steeper government bond yield curves but through higher yields and rising inflation expectations. In Chart 6, where we plot the level of real central bank policy rates (deflated by 10-year CPI swaps as a measure of inflation expectations) vs. the 2-year/10-year bond yield curves. If global inflation expectations merely follow the path implied by our bullish oil forecast (Brent crude average $65/bbl in 2018), and central banks did not respond with rate hikes, then this would generate lower real interest rates (the "x" in each panel of the chart) and steepening pressure on yield curves. Chart 5Bond Yields In 2018 Will Be Driven More##BR##By Inflation Expectations Chart 6Steepening Pressure On Yield Curves##BR##From Inflation In 2018 We don't see all central banks responding the same way to an oil-driven move higher in inflation. Lower unemployment rates, and other measures of diminished economic slack, will be needed to give policymakers confidence that their economies can tolerate higher interest rates. Judging central banks along these lines will create more interesting country bond allocation decisions in 2018 (Chart 7). Specifically, we see a greater likelihood that the Fed and Bank of Canada (BoC) can actually raise interest rates next year. It will be much harder for the Bank of England (BoE) to raise rates given sluggish domestic economic growth, lingering Brexit uncertainty and the fact that market-based inflation expectations have already peaked. The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) will also be unable to hike rates next year given the lack of core inflation pressures and with an unemployment rate that is still much higher than previous cyclical troughs. This leads us to add moderate portfolio overweights in the U.K. and Australia to the government bond portion of our model bond portfolio, while maintaining our current underweight stances for the U.S. and Canada (Chart 8). The ECB and Bank of Japan (BoJ) will be nowhere near a point where interest rate hikes would be considered, although the decisions those banks make with their asset purchase programs will be a bigger issue for their bond markets in 2018. Chart 7Tight Labor Markets Will##BR##Influence Bond Returns Chart 8Monetary Policy Divergences##BR##Will Drive Country Allocation Bottom Line: Translating our 2018 key global fixed income views into recommended positioning within our model bond portfolio comes up with the following: target a moderate level of portfolio risk, with below-benchmark duration and overweights on corporate credit versus government debt. These allocations will shift later in the year as central banks shift to a more restrictive monetary policy stance and growth expectations for 2018 become more uncertain. The Asset Allocation Implications Of Slower Central Bank Asset Purchases The big risk factor for global bonds in 2018 will be how markets respond to less buying from the Fed, ECB and BoJ. As the growth rate of the expansion of the major balance sheets slows, bond yields have the potential to rise through two channels: higher term premia on longer maturity bonds and the market pulling forward the expected future path of interest rates. This will become a major issue for Euro Area bond markets in the 2nd half of 2018, as the ECB will be forced by strong domestic growth and rising inflation pressures to announce a full taper of its asset purchase program by the end of 2018. This will come on top of a slower pace of buying by the BoJ (who is now targeting a price target on bond yields rather than a quantity target), and the Fed allowing some run off of its massive balance sheet. The result is that the growth rate of the major developed market central bank balance sheets is likely to slow to a low single-digit pace in 2018 (Chart 9), creating upside potential for global yields. The case for significant underweights in Euro Area fixed income will be much stronger later next year when the ECB will be forced to prepare the market for a taper. But in the first half of 2018, the impact of the ECB's purchases will continue to dampen Euro Area bond yields. At the same time, Japanese yields will remain pegged near 0% by BoJ buying. In terms of our model bond portfolio, we are maintaining an overweight stance on low-beta Japan given our views on rising global bond yields, while keeping aggregate Euro Area bond weightings close to neutral (and looking to go more aggressively underweight later in the year as the ECB taper talk ramps up). Bond markets that are less propped up by ultra-accommodative central banks will create a more volatile market backdrop for global fixed income as the year progresses. That is hardly a provocative statement, of course, given the starting point of utterly low realized bond market volatility (Chart 10). As discussed earlier, our views for 2018 lead us to recommend a more moderate portfolio risk level in 2018. The potential for higher central-bank driven market volatility fits with that expectation. Chart 9Global Yields Will Rise As##BR##Central Banks Buy Fewer Bonds Chart 10The Low Bond Vol Regime##BR##Looks Stretched A slower pace of central bank bond buying also has another implication for portfolio construction. With the wave of central bank liquidity becoming a less dominant factor, cross-asset correlations should diminish. We can see that by looking at the average correlation between sectors within our model bond portfolio benchmark index (Chart 11). We have found that the correlation is itself highly correlated to the breadth of global economic growth, as measured by our leading economic indicator diffusion index (top panel). But the average correlation is also linked to the growth rate of central bank balance sheets (bottom panel), which is a by-product of massive asset purchases reducing global macroeconomic risks and forcing investors to plow into similar asset classes to chase acceptable returns. Slightly less coordinated global growth, and less active central banks, should result in lower market correlations in 2018. At the same time, as central banks shift to a less accommodative stance - especially in the U.S. - the uncertainty about future growth has the potential to increase interest rate volatility that can also push corporate credit spreads wider (Chart 12). This will likely lead us to cut our recommended overweight allocations to U.S. IG and HY corporate debt in our model portfolio later in 2018. To begin the year, however, we are keeping an overweight stance until the Fed is forced to signal a shift to a more hawkish stance because of rising U.S. inflation. Chart 11Expect Lower Global Bond##BR##Correlations In 2018 Chart 12The Link Between U.S. Growth,##BR##Bond Vol & Credit Spreads Bottom Line: Slower bond buying by central banks will result in a more volatile bond backdrop later in 2018, which will impact credit spreads. Stay overweight in the first half of the year, however, until higher inflation forces the hand of central banks. Summing It All Up Chart 13Aiming For Moderate Carry##BR##In Our Model Portfolio On Page 12, we show our model bond portfolio allocations after making some changes to reflect our key views for 2018. We are doing some tweaks to our existing recommendations: modestly increasing our overweight U.S. IG corporates allocation at the expense of U.S. Treasuries; reducing our underweight in the Euro Area by reducing the large Italy underweight; adding exposure to the U.K. and Australia; while cutting our large overweight in Japan. The latter was there as a desire to get more defensive on the portfolio's duration stance, but having such a large allocation has left our portfolio with no yield advantage versus the custom benchmark index (Chart 13). With the changes we are making this week, the model bond portfolio will have a yield that is 12bps over that of our custom index. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "2018 Key Views: BCA's Outlook & What It Means For Global Fixed Income Markets", dated December 5th 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights The dollar has decoupled from interest rate differentials, being hurt by buoyant global growth. For the dollar to weaken more in 2018, global growth will have to accelerate further from current lofty rates. The tightening in Chinese policy along with the poor performance of EM carry trades point to a slight slowdown, not an acceleration. A pick up in volatility would magnify the underperformance of EM carry trades, and thus, tighten global liquidity conditions. This will help the dollar, but could help the yen even more. Buy NOK/SEK. Feature This past Wednesday, the Federal Reserve increased its growth forecast through 2020. It also cut expectations for the U.S. unemployment rate in 2018 and 2019 to 3.9%, and finally it increased its interest rate forecast to 3.1% by 2020. Yet, the U.S. dollar weakened substantially. Even if we acknowledge that interest rate markets are skeptical that the Fed will be able to fulfill its promises, the U.S. dollar has also decoupled itself from market interest rates. While rate spreads between the U.S. and the rest of the world point to a higher USD, the dollar is in fact gaining no traction (Chart I-1). We think global growth has been the key to this conundrum. Global Growth Steals The Limelight Interest rate differentials are the most common driver of exchange rates, but sometimes, growth dynamics also play a role. Currently, strong global growth stands firmly in the driver's seat, explaining why the dollar is weakening. Generally, when non-U.S. activity improves, the dollar underperforms (Chart I-2). Chart I-1Dollar And Rates Spot The Disconnect Chart I-2The Dollar Doesn't Like Strong Global Growth The reason is straightforward, and has two main elements. First, the U.S. is a low-beta economy. When global growth accelerates, the U.S. does not benefit as much as Europe. The IMF estimates that a 1% gyration in EM activity affects euro area growth three times as much as it impacts the U.S. Not only is EM activity a key source of variance in the global industrial cycle, it has also been the key factor behind this upswing. Second, money tends to flow out of the U.S. when global growth accelerates. Since non-U.S. economies are more levered to the global industrial cycle than the U.S., so is their profit growth. Additionally, an accelerating global economy is associated with a rise in central bank foreign exchange reserves outside of the U.S. as global trade expands. This creates generous liquidity conditions in the rest of the world, which further favors economic growth and asset price expansion. Money flows where higher returns are to be found. In recent quarters, global reserves have indeed expanded, highlighting this easing in global liquidity conditions (Chart I-3). To bet on the U.S. dollar weakening is to bet on this set of conditions continuing. This is the wager market participants are currently making. Investors are very short the U.S. dollar index and very long the euro, the CAD, the AUD, gold and oil (Chart I-4). This suggests that even a mild slowdown in global growth would indeed be a surprise - one that would cause the dollar to move back toward levels implied by interest rate differentials (Chart I-5). Chart I-3Buoyant Growth Equals Reserves Accumulation Equals Strong EM Currencies Chart I-4Investors Are Short The Dollar Long Growth Chart I-5Dollar Is Cheap Relative To Rates Bottom Line: A key factor behind the dollar's weakness in 2017 has been the positive global growth surprise. This helps explain why the dollar has been much weaker than interest rate differentials would otherwise suggest. Since the dollar is trading at such a discount to interest rate differentials, for the greenback to weaken further global growth needs to continue to accelerate. Based on positioning, the surprise for investors would be if global industrial activity decelerates. Risks To Global Growth Chart I-6China Helped Australia The acceleration in global growth needed for the dollar to sell off more is unlikely to emerge. To the contrary, growing evidence indicates that a mild slowdown is likely to hit global industrial activity next year. One of the key pillars for global growth, China, is turning the corner. China has played an essential role in explaining the strong growth of many economies in 2017. The link for EM or commodity producers like Australia to Chinese growth is relatively self-evident. For example, the value of Australian exports received a strong fillip when Chinese industrial activity surged in 2016 and 2017. As such, the recent rollover in the Li Keqiang index - a key gauge of China's secondary sector - points to a reversal in Chinese growth (Chart I-6). Chinese activity also has important implications for the performance of growth in the euro area relative to the U.S. As Chart I-7 highlights, when Chinese monetary conditions ease or when the Chinese marginal propensity to save - as approximated by the gap between the growth rate of M2 and M1 - decreases, the Eurozone's economy accelerates relative to the U.S. Currently, Chinese monetary conditions are tightening and the marginal propensity to save is rising, highlighting that European growth will decelerate relative to the U.S. Chart I-7AChina Also Matters For The Distribution Of Growth Between Europe And The U.S. (I) Chart I-7BChina Also Matters For The Distribution Of Growth Between Europe And The U.S. (II) The outlook for Chinese growth suggests that the recent reversal in industrial activity could run a bit deeper. Arthur Budaghyan, who leads BCA's Emerging Markets Strategy service, has highlighted that Chinese broad money growth is decelerating, and that the Chinese fiscal impulse is slowing. This is normally associated with falling Chinese imports, which is China's direct footprint on the global economic cycle and global trade (Chart I-8). Moreover, Chinese borrowing costs are rising and the real estate sector is already showing signs of slowing. The amount of new floor space sold is now contracting, which often precedes serious decelerations in new house prices (Chart I-9, top panel). Thus, Chinese construction is likely to contribute less to global growth and to demand for commodities in the coming year than in the past two years. Chart I-8Slowing Chinese Money Is A ##br##Headwind For Global Activity Chart I-9Excess Investment Is A Real Problem China Fixed Capital Formation To Slow in 2018 Meanwhile, China has overinvested in its capital stock when compared with other EM economies at similar stages of development (Chart I-9, bottom panel). Therefore, the risk that capex will slow in response to policy tightening is high. This would further weigh on Chinese imports. Various Chinese leading economic indicators have also rolled over sharply. This portends a further fall in the Li Keqiang index (Chart I-10) and also gives more credence to our view that China's industrial activity and imports will slow in 2018. As BCA's Geopolitical Strategy team has argued, the willingness of the Chinese authorities to implement reforms and control credit growth next year will only solidify this negative impulse.1 It is not just Chinese variables that are deteriorating, but other key leading indicators of the global industrial cycle seem to be picking up on this impulse (Chart I-11). The recent deceleration in global money growth also confirms this insight (Chart I-12). Chart I-10Chinese Monetary Conditions ##br##Point To Slowing Industrial Activity Chart I-11Global Growth Gauges Corroborate ##br## Chinese Indicators Chart I-12Where Global Money Growth Goes, ##br##So Does Activity Most importantly, the performance of our EM Carry Canaries - how key EM carry currencies are performing against the quintessential funding currency, the yen, corroborates this picture. EM carry trades' total returns have sharply rolled over, a signal that has always led to a slowdown in global industrial activity for the past 20 years (Chart I-13). We argued two weeks ago that EM carry trades are beginning to weaken because of the negative impulse emanating from China. We also stressed that the relationship between EM carry trades and global industrial activity is strengthened by the role carry trades play in disseminating and enhancing global liquidity.2 Strongly performing EM carry trades are a symptom of liquidity making its way across the globe, leading to supportive conditions for risk assets and growth. On the other hand, an underperformance in EM carry trades is an early signal that liquidity is on the wane, pointing to an upcoming downturn in risk taking and economic activity. Going forward, there is a growing likelihood that policy within developed markets will amplify the weakness in EM carry trades that currently reflects mostly changing growth dynamics in China. Global volatility has been extremely muted in 2017, which normally helps carry trades perform well. However, as Chart I-14 illustrates, volatility tends to experience upside when U.S. inflation picks up. This is because as inflation picks up, not only does the Fed increase rates, which tightens global liquidity conditions and hampers risk taking, but the path for future growth also becomes trickier to discount, requiring higher volatility in the process. BCA expects U.S. inflation to pick up significantly in 2018. The rise in the growth of the velocity of money in the U.S. is one of the clearest indications of that risk (Chart I-15). Chart I-13EM Carry Trades Are Confirming These Trends Chart I-14Global Vol Will Rise With Inflation Chart I-15U.S. Core Inflation Has Upside The tax repatriation included in the U.S. Tax Cuts and Jobs Act represents an additional risk for global aggregate volatility. When U.S. entities repatriate dollars back home, this curtails the supply of USD collateral available in the offshore market. As a result, dollar funding becomes scarcer, creating widening pressures on USD cross-currency basis swap spreads (Chart I-16, top panel).3 The introduction in January of rules by the BIS for banks to hold greater collateral against OTC transactions will further exacerbate this potential dollar squeeze in the swap market, increasing the risk that the U.S. tax bill will result in wider USD basis-swap spreads. Historically, wider swap spreads haven been associated with rising volatility, a logical consequence of more expensive funding (Chart I-16, bottom panel). This rise in volatility is likely to aggravate the weakness in EM carry trades. This will amplify the risks to global liquidity. As this process unfolds, global growth will begin to slow, precisely at the time when investors are not positioned for it. Bottom Line: Global growth is being hit by the beginning of a slowdown in Chinese industrial activity. This slowdown does not constitute a crisis, nor a repeat of the 2015 period of elevated risks for China. However, it does nonetheless create a headwind for global industrial activity that is already being picked up by key reliable gauges of global growth. Moreover, EM carry trades, which have been an extremely reliable leading indicators of global growth, are already corroborating this picture. Since volatility is set to increase in 2018 as U.S. inflation picks up and U.S. tax repatriation dries global dollar funding, the downside in EM carry trades has further to go which will result in tighter global liquidity conditions, in turn increasing the probability that global growth will disappoint. Global Growth, U.S. Policy, And The Dollar We began this report by highlighting that since the dollar is now trading at a substantial discount to interest rate differentials, betting on a weaker dollar is akin to betting on additional strengthening in global growth. However, the factors highlighted above argue against an acceleration in global growth, especially in global industrial activity. Moreover, global growth is set to decelerate while the Fed is hiking rates - a scenario reminiscent of the late 1990s. In fact, the gap between growth indicators and the Fed's policy setting has in the past been a useful tool in pinpointing dollar bull and bear markets (Chart I-17). Chart I-16Tax Repatriation Leads To Wider ##br## Swap Spreads And Greater Volatility Chart I-17A USD-Positive ##br##Dichotomy Thus, we continue to follow the scenario we elaborated on in early September:4 The dollar will end the year having generated positive but uninspiring returns during the fourth quarter. It will only gather steam in Q1 2018, once U.S. inflation picks up significantly. This rebound in U.S. core inflation will help the Fed fulfill its promise to increase rates three times next year. It will also create a non-negligible headwind to global growth by pushing volatility higher, hurting global carry trades and global liquidity conditions in the process. At this point, any move in DXY to 93 should be used to build bullish bets on the dollar. Conversely, moves in EUR/USD to 1.18 should be used to sell the USD. We remain short commodity currencies and our portfolio is especially negative on the AUD. Finally, we have professed a negative view on the JPY on the basis of higher U.S. rates. While higher U.S. rates may continue to lift USD/JPY, the window to be short the JPY is likely closing. If volatility does pick up on the back of the risks highlighted in this report, the yen could buck the dollar's strength and rally. We thus remain short NZD/JPY to protect against this eventuality, and we will look to close our long USD/JPY position around the New Year. Bottom Line: As global growth is set to slow somewhat, the Fed is redoubling on its hawkish rhetoric. Since the dollar is trading at a discount to interest rate differentials and is being sold by speculators, this raises the risk that the USD will experience a significant rally in the first half of 2018. Any move in the DXY to 93 should be used to build significant long positions in the USD, whether through the index or by shorting EUR/USD, or by betting on further AUD weakness. The yen could benefit in this environment. An Uncorrelated Trade: Long NOK/SEK It is always important to find potentially uncorrelated trades within a portfolio, as it increases diversification benefits. The FX space is no exception to this rule. Such an opportunity seems to be emerging in the European currency space: buying Nokkie/Stokkie. NOK/SEK currently trades at a large 8% discount to purchasing power parity. More sophisticated models incorporating productivity differentials and terms-of-trade shocks also show that the krone is cheap relative to its neighbor (Chart I-18). Moreover, the IMF expects the Norwegian current account to stand at 5.5% of GDP for 2017, while Sweden's will be a more modest 3.9% of GDP. This gap is anticipated to be maintained in 2018. In terms of catalysts for a rally in NOK/SEK, Sweden's relative economic outperformance that has been so vital to this cross's weakness is ebbing. Norwegian real GDP and industrial production growth are both accelerating relative to Sweden's. This trend looks set to endure as the Norwegian leading economic indicator is displaying a similar profile (Chart I-19). Confirming this picture, the Norwegian economic surprise index is turning up from exceptionally depressed levels when compared to Sweden's. Historically, this tends to translate into a stronger NOK. Yesterday's comments by Norges Bank Governor Oystein Olsen pointing to a first hike in late 2018 are helping catalyze the pricing of these dynamics in the cross's price. Financial markets are telling a similar story. Norwegian equities have been outperforming their Swedish counterparts since the middle of 2017. Moreover, Norwegian nominal and real yields are rallying relative to Sweden, which normally puts upward pressure on NOK/SEK (Chart I-20). Chart I-18NOK/SEK Is Cheap Chart I-19Growth Momentum Moving In Favor Of Norway Chart I-20Relative Yields Point To Higher NOK/SEK While a slowdown in global growth is a risk when holding a commodity currency like the NOK, NOK/SEK offers a healthy level of cushion against this eventuality. Overwhelmed by domestic fundamentals, NOK/SEK has decoupled from its historical relationship with EM equities, EM spreads, oil and global growth. Thus, this cross is not as levered to the global economic cycle as it normally is. In fact, BCA's view that oil prices have upside, especially relative to EM asset prices, points toward a higher NOK/SEK (Chart I-21). Finally, from a technical perspective, NOK/SEK looks interesting. The pair's 40-week rate-of-change measure is hitting oversold levels. More tellingly, NOK/SEK is forming an inverted head-and-shoulder pattern exactly as its 13-week rate of change loses downward momentum (Chart I-22). Chart I-21Liking Oil Relative To EM Stocks ##br##Is The Same Thing As Being Long NOK/SEK Chart I-22Favorable Technical ##br##Set Up Thus, we are buying NOK/SEK this week, with an entry point at 1.0163, a stop at 0.998, and an initial target at 1.08. Bottom Line: Buying NOK/SEK at current levels makes sense. Not only is it an uncorrelated trade with the dollar, but the pair is also cheap. Moreover, economic momentum, which was overwhelmingly in favor of the SEK, is now rolling in favor of the NOK, a message confirmed by financial market indicators. NOK/SEK is trading at cheap levels relative to global economic and financial variables, suggesting a cushion to negative shocks is in the price. Instead, NOK/SEK should benefit if oil prices outperform EM assets, a view held by BCA. Finally, the trade looks attractive from a technical perspective. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Reports, titled "How To Read Xi Jinping's Party Congress Speech," dated October 18, 2017, and "China: Party Congress Ends... So What?" dated November 1, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Canaries In The Coal Mine Alert: EM/JPY Carry Trades," dated December 1, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, titled "It's Not My Cross To Bear," dated October 27, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Conflicting Forces For The Dollar," dated September 8, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 U.S. data has been mixed: Core CPI grew by 1.7% annually, lower than the expected 1.8%; Producer prices were strong annually at 3.1%, above the expected 2.9%; while the core measure also produced strong results of 2.4%, above the expected 2.3%; Retail sales were also quite positives, beating expectations by a wide margin. This week, in line with expectations, the Fed hiked rates to 1.25 - 1.5%. The FMOC also upgraded its growth forecasts while still penciling in three rate hikes for next year. However, Treasurys rallied and the DXY dropped 0.6%, showing that markets believe the Fed is potentially making a hawkish error inflation continues to underperform. We do agree with the Fed and we expect inflation be in the process of bottoming. Report Links: Riding The Wave: Momentum Strategies In Foreign Exchange Markets - December 8, 2017 The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 It's Not My Cross To Bear - October 27, 2017 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 European data was generally positive: German ZEW Current Situation increased to 89.3 while economic sentiment declined to 17.4; European PMIs were very strong, with the manufacturing and services indices coming in at 60.6 and 58, respectively, both increasing and beating expectations. German inflation stayed steady and in line with expectations at 1.8%; French CPI underperformed expectations, growing at 1.2% annually; Italian inflation was in line with consensus at 1.1%; European growth is currently stellar, and markets have priced in this reality. The ECB agrees, and it has upgraded its growth and inflation forecasts up to 2020. Yet, even under the new set of forecasts, inflation fails to hit the ECB's target. With the end of the asset purchases program anticipated for the September 2018, the first hike could materialize in the second quarter of 2019, suggesting EONIA rates possess some genuine but limited upside from current levels. However, most importantly, we think that EONIA pricing will still lag the U.S. OIS going forward, putting downward pressure on EUR/USD. Report Links: The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Temporary Short-Term Rates - November 10, 2017 Market Update - October 27, 2017 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data has been mixed in Japan: Nikkei Manufacturing PMI outperformed expectations, coming in at 53.8. Machinery orders yearly growth also outperformed expectations, coming in at 5%. Moreover, gross domestic product growth also outperformed, coming in at 2.5% in the third quarter. This was a significant improvement from the 1.4% growth number registered in Q2. However labor cash earnings growth underperformed expectations, coming in at 0.6%, suggesting still muted inflation pressures. Finally, housing starts growth surprised to the downside, coming in at -4.8%. After rising throughout the week, USD/JPY collapsed following the FOMC rate decision, as U.S. Treasuries rallied. Overall we continue to be bullish on the yen against risk-on currencies like the NZD and the AUD, as tightening Chinese financial conditions should set the stage for a temporary slowdown in global growth. Report Links: Riding The Wave: Momentum Strategies In Foreign Exchange Markets - December 8, 2017 The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Temporary Short-Term Rates - November 10, 2017 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. has been positive: Markit Manufacturing PMI outperformed expectations, coming in at 58.2. This number also increased from the October reading. Construction PMI also outperformed expectations, coming in at 53.1, and also increasing from the previous month's number. Headline inflation also outperformed expectations, with a reading of 3.1%. Nevertheless, core inflation came in according to expectations at 2.7% Finally, the trade balance also outperformed expectations on the month of October, coming in at -1.405 Billion pounds. The BOE's MPC left policy rates unchanged at 0.5%. Overall, we believe that in the short term, the ability of the BoE to continue to hike is limited, given that consumption remains sluggish and leading indicators of house prices still flag some frailty. Furthermore, the uncertainty surrounding Brexit continues to make the BoE more cautious than otherwise. Report Links: The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Reverse Alchemy: How To Transform Gold Into Lead - November 3, 2017 Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Australian data was mixed: House prices contracted at a quarterly pace by 0.2%, less than the expected 0.5%; NAB Business Confidence went down from 9 to 6; NAB Business Conditions went down from 21 to 12; Westpac consumer confidence went up to 3.6% from -1.7%; However, employment increased by 61,600, beating expectations of 18,000, with full-time employment increasing by 41,900, outperforming part-time employment of 19,700; The AUD rallied on these data releases. Furthermore, faltering U.S. inflation and upbeat Chinese data fed into the AUD's rally. The Australian economy is still mired in substantial slack, and the RBA is likely to stay easy, putting a lid on AUD upside. Report Links: The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Recent data in New Zealand has been negative: Seasonally-adjusted building permits contracted by 9.6% in October. Furthermore, the terms of trade index, continued to fall in the third quarters, coming in at 0.7%. This number also surprised to the downside. Manufacturing sales grew by 0.3% in the third quarter, a slowdown from the 1% growth witnessed in Q2. Finally, the ANZ Business Confidence measure fell to -39.3, the lowest level in more than 9 years. The NZD/USD has rallied by roughly 3% in the past week. This mostly reflects weakness on the part of the USD yesterday following the FOMC interest rate decision as NZD is flat against the AUD on the weak. Overall, the long term outlook for NZD/USD, NZD/EUR, and NZD/JPY is negative, as decreased immigration and the addition of an employment mandate for the RBNZ, will structurally lower rates in New Zealand. However, NZD still possesses upside against the AUD. Report Links: The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Reverse Alchemy: How To Transform Gold Into Lead - November 3, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Last week, the BoC left its policy rate unchanged at 1%. The Bank is delaying hiking as inflation and growth have slowed. The BoC also want to appraise the impact of its previous two interest rate hikes as well as the brewing risks surrounding NAFTA negotiations. That being said, inflation still is around 40 bps higher than it was in June. Employment data remains stellar, and the tightening labor market is pointing to a pickup in wages. Additionally, oil could offer additional upside as supply continues to be curtailed by Saudi Arabia and Russia. The CAD is likely to perform well next year, particularly against the SEK and the AUD. However, upside against the U.S. dollar will be limited. Report Links: The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Market Update - October 27, 2017 Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland has been mixed: Headline inflation surprised to the downside, coming in at 0.8%. However it increased from 0.7% on the previous month. The unemployment rate came in below expectations, at 3%. Additionally, the SNB kept its -0.75% deposit rate unchanged. Furthermore, it continued to signal that it will stay active in the foreign exchange markets. Indeed, the SNB stated that although the overvaluation of the franc has decreased "the franc remains highly valued". On a more positive note, however, the SNB revised its inflation forecast for its coming quarters, suggesting an overshoot may even happen and be tolerated as this inflation upgrade mainly reflected the appreciation of oil and the depreciation of the franc. We continues to believe that the SNB will keep its ultra-dovish monetary policy in place as long as core inflation remains very low and the Swiss franc stays overvalued on a PPP basis. These negatives for the franc could get occasionally interrupted when volatility re-emerges global markets. Report Links: The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Recent data in Norway has been mixed: Core inflation surprised to the downside, coming in at 1.1%. This number also declined from last week's number of 1.2%. Retail Sales growth also underperformed expectations, coming in at -0.2%. However this number improved from last month's 0.8% contraction. However manufacturing output outperformed expectations, coming in at 0.7%. However this number slowed down from last month's 2.8% growth. The Norges Bank kept rates unchanged at 0.5% at its latest monetary policy meeting. Overall, this release was less dovish than markets expected as the Norge Bank brought forward to late 2018 it expectations for a first hike. Essentially, despite a weak batch of data this week, the Norwegian economy is heeling, and is not experiencing the same debilitating deflationary pressures as has been experienced by other countries in Europe. Our favored way to play these improvements in the Norwegian economy, along with the change of tone at the Norges Bank helm is to buy NOK/SEK And short EUR/NOK. Report Links: The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Swedish data has recently taken a stronger turn: Industrial production increased by 6% annually, higher than the previous 2.7% growth rate; Manufacturing new orders increased by 3.8% annually; Inflation popped up to 1.9%, higher than the previous 1.7%, and outperforming the expected 1.7%. While inflation has picked back up, last quarter's disappointing GDP numbers still raises important question marks. The risks are still skewed toward the current Riksbank leadership maintaining a dovish stance, despite an economy that hardly needs it. This risk will only grow if our EM canaries are correct and global industrial activity turns around, a phenomenon that will impact Swedish growth and inflation negatively. Report Links: The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights Global growth will remain strong in 2018, but the composition of that growth will shift in favour of the U.S. The surprise results of the Alabama Senate election are unlikely to scuttle the Republicans' tax plans. We expect a bill to be finalized by the end of the year. The Fed is poised to raise rates four times next year, two more hikes than the market is pricing in. The dollar should stage a modest rebound in 2018. China's economy will decelerate over the coming months, but merely from an above-trend pace. Near-term concerns about Chinese debt levels are overblown. Stay cyclically overweight global risk assets at least for the next six months. Feature Tax Cut Or Not, U.S. Growth Is Likely To Stay Strong In 2018 We expect global growth to remain strong in 2018. However, the composition of that growth is likely to shift back towards the United States. The weakening of the dollar this year should boost net exports, while dwindling spare capacity and faster wage growth should spur business investment and consumer spending. A looser fiscal policy will also help buoy the U.S. economy, but as we have discussed in recent reports, the contribution to growth from lower tax rates is likely to be fairly modest.1 We estimate that the final bill will lift real GDP growth by about 0.2%-0.3% in 2018 and 2019. The effects will diminish thereafter, eventually turning negative as larger budget deficits crowd out the savings that are necessary to finance private-sector investment. Democrat Doug Jones' surprise victory in the Alabama Senate election has thrown a wrench into the legislative process. Outgoing Senator Bob Corker voted against the original bill. If the reconciled House and Senate bill is not passed by the time Jones is seated in January, the Republicans may not have enough votes to get it through the chamber. Our geopolitical strategists expect the bill to pass by the end of the year, but this will likely require that Congressional Republicans acquiesce to Senator Collins' demand that Congress adopt legislation to help health insurers deal with the proposed abolition of the individual mandate. It may also require that Republican dealmakers ditch their last-minute effort to cut the marginal personal tax rate to 37% (the House version of the bill penciled in a top rate of 39.6%, while the Senate version envisioned a rate of 38.5%). The Fed Keeps On Hiking The Federal Reserve hiked rates again this week, taking the fed funds target range up to 1.25%-1.50%. The Fed's determination to tighten monetary policy at a time when inflation is still below target has many investors fretting. We are not particularly concerned. Inflation is a highly lagging indicator. The New York Fed's Underlying Inflation Gauge, which includes various forward-looking inflation components such as producer prices and the ISM prices paid index, has accelerated to a cycle high of 3.0% (Chart 1). The unemployment rate is likely to fall to 3.5% by the end of next year. This would leave it more than one full point below NAIRU and 0.4 points below the median dot in the Summary Of Economic Projections released on Wednesday. Auxiliary measures of labor market slack, such as the U-6 rate and the share of the working-age population that is out of the labor force but wants a job, have also fallen back to pre-recession levels (Chart 2). Chart 1U.S. Inflationary Pressures Starting To Brew Chart 2Labor Market Slack Has Largely Vanished If U.S. growth surprises on the upside next year, as we expect, the Fed is likely to raise rates four times in 2018. This is roughly two more hikes than the market is currently pricing in. We recommended shorting the December 2018 fed funds futures contract on September 7th. The trade is up 48 basis points since then, but we think there is still scope for further gains. Modestly Slower Growth Elsewhere Outside the U.S., growth is likely to come down a notch in 2018. Japanese growth should cool somewhat from the heady pace of 2.7% seen over the past two quarters. Euro area growth is also likely to tick lower, as the impact of a stronger euro begins to bite. Financial conditions in the U.S. have loosened significantly relative to those in the euro area since the start of 2017. If history is any guide, this will cause euro area inflation to rise less than U.S. inflation over the coming year (Chart 3). This, in turn, will keep the ECB's forward guidance on the dovish side. This week's ECB meeting reinforced the message that the central bank is unlikely to raise rates at least until the summer of 2019. Chart 3Diverging Financial Conditions Will Have Inflationary Consequences Chart 4 shows that the euro has strengthened more against the dollar since the beginning of this year than can be accounted for by changes in interest rate expectations. We expect EUR/USD to fall back to 1.11 by the end of 2018. Chart 4AEUR/USD Has Strengthened More Than What One Would Have Expected Based On Changes In Interest Rate Differentials Chart 4BEUR/USD Has Strengthened More Than What One Would Have Expected Based On Changes In Interest Rate Differentials The Chinese Wildcard The biggest question mark over growth surrounds China. Real-time measures of industrial activity such as electricity generation, freight traffic, and excavator sales have slowed since the start of the year (Chart 5). The Caixin manufacturing PMI has also dipped, signaling weaker growth prospects among the country's small-to-medium sized private enterprises. Monetary conditions have tightened (Chart 6). How worried should investors be? So far, there is no reason to panic. Growth has weakened, but from an above-trend pace. Nominal GDP growth reached 11.2% year-over-year in Q3 2017, up from 6.4% in Q4 2015. Producer price inflation rose to 6.9% in October before backing off to 5.8% in November. Some cooling in the economy was both inevitable and desirable (Chart 7). Chart 5Growth Has Ticked Down ##br##Modestly In China Chart 6Monetary Conditions Have##br## Tightened In China Chart 7Chinese Growth Has Merely Weakened##br## From An Above-Trend Pace A more ominous slowdown cannot be ruled out, but that would require a substantial policy error. Such errors have occurred in the past. In 2015, the government undertook measures to reduce credit growth and cool the property market just as the global manufacturing sector was entering a recession on the heels of a sudden decline in energy sector capex. The Chinese authorities amplified the problem by trying to tippy-toe over the question of whether to devalue the currency, even as other EM currencies were sinking. This led to large capital outflows, thereby exacerbating the tightening in Chinese financial conditions. The circumstances today are quite different from 2015. While the authorities have clearly stepped up the pace of reforms following the Party Congress, the global and domestic backdrop is a lot more favorable. Global growth is much stronger. The yuan is also a lot cheaper - down 8.8% in real trade-weighted terms since its peak in 2015 (Chart 8). Chart 8The Yuan Has Cheapened Since 2015 Domestic demand remains on a firm footing. The service sector PMI ticked up further in November, an important development considering that China's service sector is now larger than its manufacturing sector (Chart 9). Alibaba reported sales of over U.S. $25 billion on its platform on "Singles Day" last month, up 39% from last year, and greater than U.S. online sales on Black Friday and Cyber Monday combined. The Chinese government is unlikely to take measures that allow growth to fall significantly below trend. Indeed, if anything, the recent evidence suggests that the authorities are tentatively easing their foot off the brake. Bond yields and credit spreads have come off their recent highs. New loans to the real economy clocked in at RMB 1.12 trillion in November, well above consensus estimates of RMB 800 billion. While the year-over-year change in M2 growth remains close to historic lows, the three-month change has hooked up (Chart 10). Chart 9It's Not All About Manufacturing In China Chart 10China: Money Growth Starting To Accelerate Higher core inflation has pushed real deposit rates into negative territory, making it increasingly painful for households to hold cash. This should cause the velocity of money to speed up, allowing nominal GDP growth to exceed money growth. Don't Bet On A Chinese Debt Crisis... Yet What about the longer-term debt issues haunting China? Here, there is both good and bad news. The bad news is that China's need to keep piling on debt may be an even more vexing problem than typically assumed. Pundits often claim that the government simply needs to bite the bullet and take the painful measures that are necessary to curb debt growth. The problem with this argument is that it sidesteps the question of what will offset the loss in spending from slower debt accumulation. Chinese households are massive net savers (Chart 11). As a matter of arithmetic, these savings must either be transformed into domestic investment or exported abroad via a current account surplus. China used to emphasize the latter. Its current account surplus reached 10% of GDP in 2007, mainly due to a widening trade surplus. It would be economically and politically impossible to pursue such a beggar-thy-neighbour strategy today. Economically, China is simply too big. Its economy has more than doubled relative to the rest of the world over the past decade (Chart 12). Politically, no major economy these days is prepared to tolerate a massive trade deficit with China - certainly not the U.S. Chart 11Mattresses Are ##br##Thicker In China Chart 12China's Size Limits Its Ability To Export Its ##br##Way Out Of Its Problems This means that China must now recycle excess savings internally. One way that Chinese households have done this is by purchasing real estate. In many respects, the Chinese property market has served as a piggy bank of sorts for much of the population. Large amounts of savings have also been placed into bank deposits and, increasingly, so-called wealth management products. These funds have then been used to satisfy the borrowing needs of local governments and business enterprises. It is no surprise that credit growth in China began to accelerate in 2009, just as the current account surplus was starting to narrow (Chart 13). In practice, the distinction between fiscal and corporate spending in China is rather blurry. Chart 14 shows China's official general government budget deficit as well as an augmented version constructed by the IMF which includes various off-balance sheet expenses. The former stands at a reasonably slim 3.7% of GDP, while the latter weighs in at a hefty 12.6% of GDP. Chart 13Credit Growth Took Off As ##br##Current Account Surplus Shrunk Chart 14China's "Secret" ##br##Budget Deficit A large chunk of these off-balance sheet items consist of losses incurred by China's state-owned enterprises. In many respects, these companies are the equivalent of Japan's fabled "bridges to nowhere": They exist to prop up demand in an economy where there is too much savings. Rather than making the economy more efficient, the risk is that structural reforms, if undertaken too rapidly, will simply depress growth. The most misallocated resource is a worker who wants a job but cannot find one. The troubling implication is that deleveraging may be difficult to achieve without causing significant economic distress. On The Bright Side... Fortunately, a number of factors mitigate the risks of a Chinese debt crisis. As Japan's experience shows, as long as a country has ample domestic savings and borrows primarily in its own currency, debt can increase to levels that many people might have thought impossible. Moreover, most of China's debt mountain consists of loans made by state-owned banks to SOEs and local governments. These loans often carry implicit guarantees from the central government. While this exacerbates the moral hazard problem, it does limit the potential of "leveraged losses" to lead to a massive credit crunch of the sort experienced during the Global Financial Crisis. China also has reasonably good long-term growth prospects. Output-per-worker is only a quarter of U.S. levels. Likewise, capital-per-worker is a fraction of what it is among advanced economies (Chart 15). Even with its bleak demographics, China would need to grow by around 6% per year over the coming decade if it were to remain on course to catch up to South Korea in output-per-worker by 2050 (Chart 16). Chart 15China Has More Catching Up To Do (1) Chart 16China Has More Catching Up To Do (2) Given China's well-educated labor force, it is likely that productivity levels will continue to converge with richer economies in the years ahead (Chart 17). Rapid growth, in turn, will allow China to outgrow some its debt and overcapacity problems more easily than would be the case for slower growing economies. Chart 17A Well-Educated Labor Force Bodes Well For China's Development Lastly, not all credit creation in China represents the intermediation of savings into productive investment. A lot of it is simply driven by speculative activities that contribute little to growth. Curbing the ability of individuals and companies to use extreme amounts of leverage to supercharge financial returns would enhance economic stability. To its credit, the government is actively addressing this issue. The bottom line is that Chinese growth is likely to slow modestly next year, but not by enough to imperil the global economy. Investors should remain cyclically overweight global equities and other risk assets at least for the next six months. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "When To Get Out," dated December 8, 2017; and Weekly Report, "Fiscal Follies," dated November 17, 2017. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Recommended Allocation Highlights We are late cycle. Strong growth could turn in 2018 from a positive for risk assets into a negative. More risk-averse investors may thus want to turn cautious. But the last year of a bull run can be profitable, and we don't expect a recession until late 2019. For now, therefore, our recommendations remain pro-risk and pro-cyclical. We may turn more defensive in 2H 2018 if the Fed tightens above equilibrium. We expect inflation to pick up in 2018, which will lead the Fed to hike maybe four times. This will push long rates to 3%, and strengthen the U.S. dollar. Equities should outperform bonds in this environment. We prefer euro zone and Japanese equities over U.S., and remain underweight EM. Late-cycle sectors such as Financials and Industrials, should do well. We also favor corporate bonds and private equity. Feature Overview Fin de cycle Global economic growth in 2017 was robust for the first time since the Global Financial Crisis (Chart 1). Forecasts for 2018 put growth slightly lower, but are likely to be revised up. However, as the year rolls on, the strong economic momentum may turn from being a positive for risk assets into a negative. U.S. output is now above potential, according to IMF estimates. As Chart 2 shows, historically recessions - and consequently equity bear markets - have usually come within a year or two of the output gap turning positive. With the economy operating above capacity, inflation pressures force the Fed to tighten monetary policy, which eventually causes a slowdown. Chart 1Growth Finally On A Firm Footing Global Growth Has Accelerated Chart 2Recessions Follow Output Gap Closing That is exactly how BCA sees the next couple of years panning out, leading to a recession perhaps in the second half of 2019. U.S. inflation was soft in 2017, but underlying inflation pressures are picking up, with core CPI inflation having bottomed, and small companies saying they are raising prices (Chart 3). Add to that wage pressures (with unemployment heading below 4% in 2018), tax cuts (which might boost growth by 0.2-0.3% points in their first year) and a higher oil price (we expect Brent to average $67 a barrel during the year), and core PCE inflation is likely to rise to 2%, in line with the Fed's expectations. This means the market is too sanguine about the risk of monetary tightening in the U.S. It has priced in less than two rates hikes in 2018, compared to the Fed's three dots, and almost nothing after that (Chart 4). If inflation picks up as we expect, four rate hikes in 2018 could be on the cards. Chart 3Inflation Pressures Picking Up Chart 4Market Still Underpricing Fed Hikes The consequences of this are that bond yields are likely to rise. Despite a significant market repricing since September of Fed behavior, long-term rates have not risen much, leading to a flattening yield curve (Chart 5). The market has essentially priced in that inflation will not rebound and that, consequently, the Fed will be making a policy mistake by hiking further. If, therefore, we are correct that inflation does reach 2%, the yield curve would be likely to steepen over the next six months, with the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield reaching 3% by mid-year. Other developed economies, however, have less urgency to tighten monetary policy and we, therefore, see the U.S. dollar appreciating. The only other major economy with a positive output gap currently is Germany (Chart 6). However, the ECB will continue to set policy for the weaker members of the euro area, and output gaps in France (-1.8% of GDP), Italy (-1.6%) and Spain (-0.7%) remain significantly negative. In the absence of inflation pressures, the ECB won't raise rates until late 2019. Japan, too, continues to struggle to bring inflation up the BOJ's 2% target and the Yield Curve Control policy will therefore stay in place, meaning that a rise in global rates will weaken the yen. Chart 5Is Fed Making A Policy Mistake? Chart 6Still A Lot Of Negative Output Gaps This sort of late-cycle environment is a tricky one for investors. The catalysts for strong performance in equities that we foresaw a few months ago - U.S. tax cuts and upside surprises in earnings - have now largely played out. Global earnings will probably rise next year by around 10-12%, in line with analysts' forecasts. With multiples likely to slip a little as the Fed tightens, high single-digit performance is the best that investors should expect from equities. The macro environment which we expect, would be more negative for bonds than positive for equities. That argues for the stock-to-bond ratio to continue to rise until closer to the next recession (Chart 7). And, for now, none of the recession indicators we have been consistently monitoring over the past months is flashing a warning signal (Chart 8). Chart 7Stock-To-Bond Ratio Likely To Rise Further Chart 8Recession Warning Signals Still Not Flashing More risk-averse investors might chose to reduce their exposure to risk assets now, given how close we are to the end of the cycle. But this would be at the risk of leaving some money on the table, since the last year of a bull run can often be the most profitable (remember 1999?). We, therefore, maintain our recommendation for pro-cyclical and pro-risk tilts: overweight equities versus bonds, overweight credit, overweight higher-beta equity markets and sectors, and a preference towards riskier alternative assets. We may move towards a more defensive stance in mid to late 2018, when we see clearer signs that the Fed has tightened above equilibrium or that the risk of recession is rising. Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Global Asset Allocation garry@bcaresearch.com What Our Clients Are Asking What Will Be The Impact Of The U.S. Tax Cuts? It is not a done deal, but it still seems likely (notwithstanding the Democratic victory in Alabama) that the U.S. House and Senate will agree a joint tax bill to pass before the end of the year. Since the two current bills have only minor differences, it is possible to make some estimates of the macro and sector impacts of the tax reform. The Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that the cuts will reduce government revenue by $1.4 trillion over 10 years - or $1 trillion (5% of GDP) once positive effects on growth are accounted for. The Treasury argues that tax reform (plus deregulation and infrastructure development) will push GDP growth to 2.9% and therefore government revenues will increase by $300 billion. BCA's estimate is that GDP growth will be boosted by 0.2-0.3% in 2018 and 2019.1 For businesses, the key tax changes are: 1) a reduction in the headline corporate rate from 35% to 21%; 2) immediate expensing of capital investment; 3) a limit to deduction of interest expenses to 30% of taxable income; 4) a move to a territorial tax system from a worldwide one, with a 10% tax on repatriation of past profits held overseas; 5) curbs for some deductions, such as R&D, domestic production and tax-loss carry-forwards. Corporate tax cuts will give a one-off boost to earnings, since the effective tax rate is currently over 25% (Chart 9, panel 1), with telecoms, utilities and industrials likely to be the biggest beneficiaries. This is not fully priced into stocks, since companies with high tax rates have seen their stock prices rise only moderately (Chart 9, panel 2). BCA's sector strategists expect that capex will especially be boosted: they estimate that the one-year depreciation increases net present value by 14% (Table 1).2 This should be positive for the Industrials sector (supplying the capital goods) and for Financials (which will see increased demand for loans). We are overweight both. Chart 9Tax Cuts Should Boost Earnings Table 1 Is Bitcoin A Bubble, And What Happens When It Bursts? The recent surge in prices (Chart 10) of virtual currencies has pushed Bitcoin and aggregate cryptocurrency market cap to $275 billion and $500 billion respectively. The recent violent run-up certainly bears a close resemblance to classic bubbles, but the impact of a sharp correction should be minimal on the real economy and traditional capital markets. As mentioned above, the market cap of cryptocurrencies has reached $500 billion. Globally, there is about $6 trillion in currency3 outstanding, so the value of virtual currencies is now 8% that of traditional fiat currency. Additionally, an estimated 1000 people own about 40% of the world's total bitcoin, for an average of about $105 million per person. At the moment, the macro impact has been constrained by the fact that most people are buying bitcoins as a store of value (Chart 11) or vehicle for speculation, rather than as a medium of exchange. However, when the public begins to regard them as legitimate substitutes for traditional fiat currencies, their impact will be felt on the real economy. Chart 10A Classic Bubble Chart 11Bitcoin Trading Volume By Top Three Currencies That would raise the issue of regulation. The U.S. government generates close to $70 billion per year as "seigniorage revenue." Governments across the world have no intention of losing this revenue, and would most likely introduce their own competitors to bitcoin. Until then, the biggest potential impact of these private currencies might be to spur inflation in the fiat currencies in which their prices are measured. That would be bad for government bonds, but potentially good for stocks. A further risk - and a similarity with the real estate bubble of 2007 - is the use of leverage. The news of a Tokyo-based exchange (BitFyler) offering up to 15x leverage for the purchase of bitcoins has spooked investors. However, the U.S. housing market is valued at $29.6 trillion, almost 60 times that of cryptocurrencies. Finally, the 19th century free banking era in the U.S., which at one point saw 8000 different currencies in circulation, experienced multiple banking crises. A world with myriad private currencies all competing with one another would be similarly unstable. Why Did The U.S. Dollar Weaken In 2017, And Where Will It Go In 2018? Chart 12Positioning And Relative Rates Supportive For USD We were wrong to be bullish on U.S. dollar at the start of 2017. We think the dollar weakness during most of the year can be attributed to the fact that investors were massively long the dollar at the end of 2016 (Chart 12, panel 2), which made the market particularly vulnerable to surprises. Several surprises did come: inflation softened in the U.S. but strengthened in the euro area. There were also positive geopolitical surprises in Europe - for example the victory of Emmanuel Macron in the French presidential election - while the failure to repeal Obamacare in the U.S. raised investors' concerns on the administration's ability to undertake fiscal stimulus. As a result, the U.S. dollar depreciated against euro despite widening interest rate differentials (Chart 12 panel 4) in 2017. Chart 13late Cycle Outperformance Since investors are now aggressively short the dollar, the hurdle for the greenback to deliver positive surprises is much lower than a year ago. Since the Senate passed the Republican tax bill in early December, we have already seen some recovery in the dollar (Chart 12, panel 1). As the labor market continues to firm, with GDP running above potential, U.S. inflation should finally start to pick up in 2018, which will allow the Fed to hike rates, possibly as many as four times during the year. This will contrast with the macro situation overseas: Japan and Europe are likely to continue loose monetary policy to maintain the momentum in their economies. All this should be supportive of the dollar. Are Convertible Bonds Attractive Over The Next 12 Months? With valuations for traditional assets expensive and investors' thirst for yield continuing, the market is in need of alternative sources of return. Convertible bonds offer a hybrid credit/equity exposure, giving investors the option to participate in rising equity markets but with less risk. An allocation to convertibles could prove attractive for the following reasons: Convertible bonds typically outperform high-yield debt in the late stages of bull markets, because of their relatively lower exposure to credit spreads. Junk spreads have a history of starting to widen before equity bear markets begin. Fifty percent of the convertibles index comprises issuance from small-cap and mid-cap firms. Although equity valuations are expensive, prices should continue to rise as long as inflation stays low. Additionally, our U.S. Investment Strategy service thinks that small-cap equities will outperform large caps in the coming months, partly because the likely cuts in U.S. corporate taxes will disproportionately benefit smaller companies. Convertible bonds do appear somewhat cheap relative to equities (Chart 13, panel 3) but, on balance, there is not a strong valuation case for the asset class. Equities appear fairly valued relative to junk bonds, and convertibles are trading at an elevated investment premium. However, valuation is not likely to be a significant headwind to the typical late-cycle outperformance of convertibles versus high yield. biggest near-term risk for convertibles relative to high yield stems from the technology sector, which makes up 35% of the convertibles index. Technology convertible bonds have strongly outperformed their high-yield counterparts in recent months (Chart 13, panel 4), and are possibly due for a period of underperformance. We recommend investors stay cautious on technology convertibles. Other Than U.S. Tips, What Other Inflation-Linked Bonds Do You Like? Our research shows that inflation-linked bonds (ILBs) are a good inflation hedge in a rising inflationary environment.4 With our house view of rising inflation in 2018, we have been overweight U.S. Tips over nominal Treasury bonds as the U.S. is the most liquid market for inflation-linked bonds, with a market cap of over US$ 1.2 trillion. Outside the U.S., we favor ILBs in Japan and Australia, while we suggest investors to avoid ILBs in the U.K. and Germany (even though the U.K. linkers' market is the second largest after the U.S.), for the following two key reasons: First, even though inflation is below target in Japan, Australia and the euro area, while above target in the U.K., in all of these markets, inflation has bottomed, as shown in Chart 14. Second, our breakeven fair-value models, which are based on trade-weighted currencies, the Brent oil price in local currencies, and stock-to-bond total-return ratios, indicate that ILBs are undervalued in Japan and Australia, while overvalued in the U.K. and Germany, as shown in Chart 15. Chart 14Inflation Dynamics Chart 15Where to Buy Inflation? The shorter duration (in real terms) of ILBs are an added bonus which fits well with our overall underweight duration positioning in the government bond universe. Global Economy Overview: Growth in developed economies remains strong and there is little in the data to suggest it will slow. This is likely to push up inflation and interest rates, especially in the U.S., over the next six to 12 months. Prospects for emerging markets, however, are less encouraging given that China is likely to slow moderately as it pushes ahead with reforms. U.S.: U.S. growth momentum remains very strong. GDP growth in the past two quarters has come in over 3%, and NowCasts for Q4 point to 2.9-3.9%. The Citigroup Economic Surprise Index (Chart 16, panel 1) has surged since June, and the Manufacturing ISM is at 53.9 and the Non-Manufacturing at 57.4 (panel 2). The worst that can be said is that momentum will be unable to continue at this rate but, with business confidence high, wage growth likely to pick up in 2018, and some positive impacts from tax cuts, no significant slowdown is in sight. Euro Area: Given its stronger cyclicality and ties to the global trade cycle, euro zone growth has surprised on the upside even more strongly than in the U.S. The Manufacturing PMI reached 60.6 in December (its highest level since 2000), and GDP growth in Q3 accelerated to 2.6% QoQ annualized. The euro's strength in 2017 seems to have done little to dent growth, and even weaker members of the euro zone such as Italy have seen improving GDP growth (1.7% in Q3). With the ECB reining back monetary easing only slightly, and banking problems shelved for now, growth should remain resilient in early 2018. Japan: Retail sales saw some weakness in October (-0.2% YoY), probably because of bad weather, but elsewhere data looks robust. Q3 GDP came in at 1.3% QoQ annualized and export growth remains strong at 14% YoY. There are even some signs of life in the domestic economy, with wages finally picking up a little (+0.9% YoY), driven by labor shortages among part-time workers, and consumer confidence at a four-year high. Inflation has been slow to rise, but at least core core inflation (the Bank of Japan's favorite measure) is now in positive territory at +0.2%. Emerging Markets: Chinese credit and monetary series, historically good lead indicators for the real economy, continue to decline (M2 growth in October of 8.8% was the lowest since data started in 1996). But, for now, economic growth has held up, with the Manufacturing and Non-Manufacturing PMIs both stably above 50 (Chart 17, panel 3). Key will be how much the government's moves to deleverage the financial system and implement structural reform in 2018 will slow growth. Elsewhere in emerging markets, economic growth remains sluggish, with GDP growth in Brazil barely rebounding to 1.4% YoY, Russia to 1.8%, and India slowing to 6.3% (down from over 9% in early 2016). Chart 16Growth Momentum Very Strong Chart 17Will China And EM Slow in 2018? Interest rates: We expect U.S. inflation to pick up in 2018, as the lagged effects of 2017's stronger growth and the weak dollar start to come through, amid higher oil prices and rising wages. We, along with the Fed, expect core PCE inflation to rise to 2% during the year. This means the Fed is likely to raise rates four times, compared to market expectations of twice. Consequently, we see the 10-year Treasury yield over 3% by mid-year. In the euro zone, the still-large output gap means inflation is less likely to surprise on the upside, allowing the ECB to keep negative rates until well into 2019. The Bank of Japan is unlikely to alter its Yield Curve Control, given the signal this would send to the market when inflation expectations are still well below its 2% target (Chart 17, panel 4). Chart 18Equities: Priced for Perfection Global Equities Still Cautiously Optimistic: Our pro-cyclical equity positioning in 2017 worked very well in terms of country allocation (overweight euro zone and Japan in the DM universe) and global sector allocation (favoring cyclicals vs defensives). The two calls that did not pan out were underweight EM equities vs. DM equities, which was partially offset by our positive stance on China within the EM universe, and the overweight of Energy, which was the worst performing sector of the year. The stellar equity performance in 2017 was largely driven by strong earnings growth. Margins improved in both DM and EM; earnings grew in all sectors, and analysts remained upbeat (Chart 18). Another important contributor to 2017 performance was the extraordinary performance of the Tech sector, especially in China: globally, tech returned 41.9%, outperforming the MSCI all country index by 18.9%. GAA's philosophy is to take risk where it is mostly likely be rewarded. In July, we took profits in our Tech overweight and used the funds to upgrade Financials to overweight from neutral. Then in October we started to reduce tracking risk by scaling down our active country bets, closing our overweight in the U.S. to reduce the underweight in EM. BCA's house view is for synchronized global growth to continue in 2018, but a possible recession in late 2019. We are a little concerned that equity markets are priced for perfection, given that our earnings model indicates a deceleration in the coming months mostly due to a base effect. As such, our combination of "close to shore" country allocation and "pro-cyclical" sector allocation is appropriate for the next 9-12 months. Country Allocation: Still Favor DM Over EM Chart 19China: From Tailwind to Headwind for EM ? Our longstanding call of underweight EM vs. DM since December 2013 was gradually reduced in scale, first in March 2016 (to -5 percentage points from -9) and then in October 2017 (further to -2 points). Going forward, investors should continue to maintain this slight underweight position in EM vs. DM. First, our positive stance on China proved to be timely as shown in Chart 19, panel 4, with China outperforming EM by 54.1% since March 2016, and by 18.8% in 2017. Back then our positive stance on China was supported by attractive valuations (bottom panel) and our view that Chinese politics would be supportive for global growth in the run up to the 19th Party Congress. Now BCA's Geopolitical Strategists think that "China politics are shifting from a tailwind to a headwind for global growth and EM assets".5 In addition, Chinese equities are no longer valued at a discount to the EM average (bottom panel). Second, BCA's currency view is for continued strength in the USD, especially against emerging market currencies. This does not bode well for EM/DM performance in US dollar terms (Chart 19, panel 1). Third, EM money growth leads profit growth by about three months (Chart 19, panel 2). The rolling over in money growth indicates that the currently strong earnings growth may lose steam going forward, while relative valuation is in the fair-value zone (Chart 19, panel 3). Sector Allocation: Stay Overweight Energy Our pro-cyclical sector positioning has worked well in aggregate as the market-cap-weighted cyclical index significantly outperformed the defensive index in 2017. This positioning is also in line with BCA's house view of synchronized global growth and higher inflation expectations, which translates into two major sector themes: capex recovery and rising interest rates. (Please see detailed sector positioning on page 24.) Within the cyclical space, however, the Energy sector did not perform as expected in 2017 (Chart 20). It returned only 3.4%, underperforming the global aggregate by 19.6%. For the next 9-12 months, we recommend investors to stay overweight this underdog of 2017. Chart 20Energy Stocks Lagging Oil Price First, the energy sector is a major beneficiary from a capex recovery. There are already signs of a recovery in basic resources investment in the U.S.6 Second, the energy sector's relative return lagged oil price performance in 2017. Given the generally close correlation between earnings and the oil price, and between analyst earnings revisions and OECD oil inventory growth, earnings in the sector should outpace the broad market. Third, based on price-to-cash earnings, the energy sector is still trading at about a 30% discount to the broad market, and offers a much higher dividend yield (about 1.2 points higher) than the broad market. Even though these discounts are in line with historical averages, they are still supportive of an overweight. Government Bonds Maintain Slight Underweight Duration. One important theme for 2018 will be a resumption of the cyclical uptrend in inflation.7 The implications are that both nominal bond yields and break-even inflation rates will be higher in 2018. We have been underweight duration in government bonds since July 2016. Now with the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield at 2.35%, much lower than its fair value of 2.81%, there is considerable upside risk for global bond yields from current low levels. Investors should continue to underweight duration in global government bonds Maintain Overweight Tips Vs. Treasuries. The base-case forecast from our U.S. bond strategists is that the Tips breakeven rate will rise to 2.4-2.5% as U.S. core PCE reaches the Fed's 2% target, probably sometime in the middle of 2018. Compared to the current level of 1.87%, 10-yr Tips would have upside of 33-38 bps, an important source of return in the low-return fixed-income space (Chart 21, bottom panel). In terms of relative value, Tips are now slightly cheaper than nominal bonds, also supportive of the overweight stance. Underweight Canadian Government Bonds. BCA's Global Fixed Income Strategy has taken profits in their short Canada vs. U.S. and U.K. tactical position, as the market has become too aggressive in pricing in more rate hikes in Canada. Strategically, however, the underweight of Canada (Chart 22) in a hedged global portfolio is still appropriate because: 1) the output gap has closed in Canada, according to Bank of Canada estimates, and so any additional growth will translate into higher inflation; and 2) the rising CAD will not deter the BoC from more rate hikes if the oil prices remain strong. Chart 21U.S. Bond Yields Have Further To Rise Chart 22Strategic Underweight Canadian Bonds Corporate Bonds Our overweights through most of 2017 on spread product worked well: U.S. investment grade (IG) bonds returned around 290 bps over Treasuries in the year to end-November, and high-yield bonds almost 600 bps. Returns over the next 12 months are unlikely to be as attractive. Spreads (Chart 24) are now close to historic lows: the U.S. IG bond spread, at 90 bps, is only about 30 bps above its all-time record. High-yield valuations look a little more attractive: based on our model of probable defaults over the next 12 months, the default-adjusted spread over U.S. Treasuries is likely to be around 240 bps (Chart 25). In both cases, however, investors should expect little further spread contraction, meaning that credit is now no more than a carry trade. However, in an environment where rates remain fairly low and investors continue to stretch for yield, that pick-up will remain attractive in the absence of a significant turn-down in the economic cycle. The key to watch is the shape of the yield curve. An inverted yield curve in history has been an excellent indictor of the end of the credit cycle. We expect the yield curve to steepen somewhat in H1 2018, before flattening again and then inverting late in the year. Spread product is likely, therefore, to produce decent returns until that point. Thereafter, however, the deterioration of U.S. corporate health over the past three years (Chart 23) could mean a sharp sell-off in corporate bonds. This might be exacerbated by the recent popularity of open-ended mutual funds and ETFs: a small widening of spreads could be magnified by a panicked sell-off in such funds. Chart 23Rising Leverage May Worsen Sell-Off Chart 24Credit Spreads Close To Record Lows Chart 25But Default - Adjusted, Junk Still Looks Attractive Commodities Energy: Bullish Energy prices performed strongly in H2 2017, and we expect bullish sentiment to continue. OPEC 2.0 is likely to maintain production discipline, and will maintain its promised 1.8mm b/d production cuts through the end of 2018. Our estimates for global demand growth are higher than those of other forecasters. This, along with potential unplanned production outages in Iraq, Libya and Venezuela (together accounting for 7.4mm b/d of production at present), drives our above-consensus price forecast of $67 a barrel for Brent crude during 2018. Industrial Metals: Neutral Since China accounts for more than 50% of world base-metal consumption, prices will continue to be highly dependent on developments there. (Chart 26, panel 4). Since the government is trying to accelerate environmental and supply-side reforms, domestic production capacity for base metals will shrink, which will be a positive for global metals prices. However, a focus on deleveraging in the financial sector and restructuring certain industries could slow Chinese GDP growth, reducing base-metal demand. Precious Metals: Neutral Gold has risen by 12% in 2017, supported by an uncertain geopolitical environment coupled with low interest rates. We believe that geopolitical uncertainties will persist and may even intensify, and that inflation may rise in the U.S., which would be positives for gold (Chart 26, panel 3). Based on BCA's view that stock market could be at risk from the middle of 2018,8 a moderate gold holding is warranted as a safe-haven asset. However, rising interest rate and a potentially stronger U.S. dollar are likely to limit the upside for gold. Currencies USD: The currency is down over 6% on a trade-weighted basis over the past 12 months (Chart 27). Looking into 2018, the USD is likely to perform well in the first half. U.S. inflation should gather steam in the first two to three quarters, and the Fed will be able at least to follow its dot plot - something interest rate markets are not ready for. As investors remain short the USD, upside risk to U.S. interest rates should result in a higher dollar. Chart 26Bullish Oil, Neutral Metals Chart 27Dollar Likely To Appreciate EM/JPY: Carry trades are a key mechanism for redistributing global liquidity, and they have recently begun to lose steam. A crucial reason for this has been the policy tightening in China which has been the key driver of growth in EM economies. Additionally, Japanese flows have been chasing momentum into EM assets. Further tightening in EM could reverse the flows and initiate a flight to safety, favoring the yen relative to EM currencies. CHF: The currency continues to trade at a 5% premium to its PPP fair value against the euro. However, after considering Switzerland's net international investment position at 130% of GDP, the trade-weighted CHF trades in line with fair value. The CHF will continue to behave as a risk-off currency, and so long as global volatility remains well contained, EUR/CHF will experience appreciating pressure. GBP: Sterling continues to look cheap, trading at an 18% discount to PPP against the USD. However, Brexit remains a key problem. If future immigration is limited, the U.K. will see lower trend growth relative to its neighbors, forcing its equilibrium real neutral rate downward. Consequently, it will be more difficult to finance the current account deficit of 5% of GDP. Until negotiations with the EU come closer to completion, the pound will continue to offer limited reward and plenty of volatility. Alternatives Chart 28Favor Private Equity and Farmland Alternative assets under management (AUM) have reached a record $7.7 trillion in 2017. Lower fees and a broader range of investment types have helped attract more capital. Private equity remains the most popular choice,9 driven by its strong performance and transparency. Many investors have also shifted part of their allocations toward potentially higher-return private debt programs. Return Enhancers: Favor Private Equity Vs. Hedge Funds In 2017 so far, private equity has returned 12.1%, whereas hedge funds have managed only a 5.9% return (Chart 28). We expect private-equity fund-raising to continue into 2018, but with a larger focus on niche strategies with more favorable valuations. Additionally, deploying capital gradually not only provides for vintage-year diversification, but also creates opportunities for investors to benefit from potential market corrections. We continue to favor private equity over hedge funds outside of recessions. During a recession, we recommend investors take shelter in hedge funds with a macro mandate. Inflation Hedges: Favor Direct Real Estate Vs. Commodity Futures In 2017 to date, direct real estate has returned 5.1%, whereas commodity futures are down over 3.7%. Direct real estate as an asset class continues to provide valuable diversification, lower volatility, steady yields and an illiquidity premium. However, a slowdown in U.S. commercial real estate (CRE) has made us more cautious on the overall asset class. With regards to the commodity complex, the long-term transition of the global economy to a more renewables-focused energy base will continue the structural decline in commodity demand. We continue to stress the structural and long-term nature of our negative recommendation on commodities. Volatility Dampeners: Favor Farmland & Timberland Vs. Structured Products In 2017 to date, farmland and timberland have returned 3.2% and 2.1% respectively, whereas structured products are up 3.7%. Farmland continues to outperform timberland. The slow U.S. housing recovery has added downward pressure to timberland returns. Investors can reduce the volatility of a traditional multi-asset portfolio with inclusion of farm and timber assets. For structured products, low spreads in an environment of tightening commercial real estate lending standards and falling CRE loan demand, warrant an underweight. Risks To Our View We think upside and downside risks to our central scenario for 2018 - slowing but robust economic growth, and continuing moderate outperformance of risk assets - are roughly evenly balanced. On the negative side, perhaps the biggest risk is China, where the slowdown already suggested in the monetary data (Chart 29) could be exacerbated if the government pushes ahead aggressively with structural reforms. Geopolitical risks, which the market over-emphasized in 2017, seem under-estimated now.10 U.S. trade policy, Italian elections, and North Korea all have potential to derail markets. Also, when the U.S. yield curve is as flat as it is currently, small risks can be blown up into big sell-offs. This is particularly so given over-stretched valuations for almost all asset classes. Chart 29China Monetary Conditions Suggest A Slowdown Table 2How Will Trump Try To Influence The Fed? The most likely positive surprise could come from a dovish Fed. New Fed chair Jay Powell is something of an unknown quantity, and the White House could use the three remaining Fed vacancies to push the Fed to keep rates low, so as not to offset the positive effect of the tax cuts. Without these new appointees, the Fed would have a slightly more hawkish bias in 2018 (Table 2). The intellectual argument for hiking only slowly would be, as Janet Yellen said last month: "It can be quite dangerous to allow inflation to drift down and not to achieve over time a central bank's inflation target." The Fed has missed its 2% target for five years. It is possible to imagine a situation where the Fed increasingly makes excuses to keep monetary policy easy (encouraged, for example, by a short-lived sell-off in markets or a slowdown in China) and this causes a late-cycle blow-out, similar to 1999. 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "When To Get Out," dated December 8, 2017 available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see U.S. Equity Strategy Insight Report, "Tax Cuts Are Here - Sector Implications," dated December 12, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 CBNK Survey: Monetary Base, Currency in Circulation. Source: IMF - International Financial Statistics. 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "Two Virtuous Dollar Circles," dated October 28, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "China: Party Congress Ends ... So What?" dated November 1, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "High-Conviction Calls," dated November 27, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst, "Outlook 2018 - Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," dated 20 November 2017, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst, "Outlook 2018 - Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," dated November 20, 2017, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 9 Source: BNY Mellon - The Race For Assets; Alternative Investments Surge Ahead. 10 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "From Overstated To Understated Risks," dated November 22, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. GAA Asset Allocation
Highlights The stellar performance in metals over the past year resulted from a combination of favorable demand- and supply-side developments, propelled along, as always, by China's outsized effect on fundamentals. On the demand side, robust global growth is keeping metals consumption strong. On the supply side, environmental reforms in China and the shuttering of mills - as well as supply-side shocks in individual markets - continues to bolster prices. A weak U.S. dollar - which lost 6% of its value in broad trade-weighted terms - further supports these bullish conditions for metal markets. We expect China's winter supply cuts to dominate 1Q18 market fundamentals. As we move toward mid-year, we expect a soft and controlled slowdown in China, brought about by the Communist Party's goals of reducing industrial pollution and pivoting toward consumer-led growth. Although this will moderate demand from the world's top metal consumer, strong growth from the rest of the world will neutralize the impact of this slowdown. Energy: Overweight. Pipeline cracks in the critical Forties system in the North Sea highlight the unplanned-outage risk to oil prices we flagged in recent reports. We remain long Brent and WTI $55/bbl vs. $60/bbl call spreads in 2018, which are up an average of 47%, respectively, since they were recommended in September and October 2017. Base Metals: Neutral. Following a strong 1Q18, a moderate slowdown in China will be offset by growth in the rest of the world (see below). Precious Metals: Neutral. We continue to recommend gold as a strategic portfolio hedge, even though we expect as many as three additional Fed rate hikes next year. Ags/Softs: Underweight. The U.S. undersecretary for trade and foreign agricultural affairs warned farmers this week they "need to have a backup plan in the event the U.S. exits the North American Free Trade Agreement," in an interview with agriculture.com's Successful Farming. No specifics were offered. Canada and Mexico - the U.S.'s NAFTA partners - are expected to account for $21 billon and $19 billion of exports, respectively, based on USDA estimates for FY 2018. These exports largely offset imports of $22 billion and $23 billion, respectively, from both countries. The U.S. runs an ag trade surplus of ~ $23.5 billion annually. Feature Metals had another extraordinary year in 2017. The LME base metal index rallied more than 20% year-to-date (ytd) bringing the index up more than 50% since it bottomed in mid-January 2016 (Chart Of The Week). Chart of the WeekA Great Year For Metals Steel, zinc, copper, and aluminum led the gains. In fact, of the metals we track, iron ore is the only one in negative territory - having lost almost 8% ytd. Nonetheless, it has been on the uptrend recently - gaining ~ 24% since it bottomed at the end of October. Capacity reductions in China, where policymakers mandated inefficient and highly polluting mills and smelters in steel- and aluminum-producing provinces be taken offline, continue to affect the supply side in those metals most. As China churns out less of these commodities, competition for the more limited supply will pull prices for them higher. Nevertheless, a stronger USD - brought about by a more hawkish Fed - likely will cap significant upside gains, and prevent a repeat of this year's exceptional performance. Strong Global Demand Will Neutralize China Slowdown The Chinese economy is beginning to show signs of a slowdown. The Li Keqiang Index - a proxy for China's economic activity - has rolled over. Furthermore, the manufacturing PMI has plateaued following last year's rapid ascent (Chart 2). This deceleration is also evident in China's infrastructure data. Annual growth in infrastructure spending in the first three quarters of the year are below the four-year average. And, although spending grew 15.9% year-on-year (yoy) in the first 10 months of this year, the rate of growth is slower than the four-year average of 19.6% (Chart 3). Chart 2A China Slowdown Is In The Cards... Chart 3...Threatening A Pull Back In Metals Demand That said, it is important to point out that this is due to a significant decline in utilities spending growth, which accounts for ~ 20% of infrastructure investments. Investment in utilities grew a mere 2.3% in the first ten months of the year, in contrast with the average 15.7% yoy increase of the previous four years. In any case, the slowdown in China's reflation reflects President Xi Jinping's resolve to shift gears and emphasize quality over quantity in future growth strategies. Now that Xi has consolidated his power, we expect policymakers to build on the momentum from the National Communist Party Congress, and be more effective in implementing reforms going forward. As such, Beijing should be more willing to tolerate slower growth than it has in the past. Nonetheless, we do not anticipate a significant slowdown. More likely than not, policymakers will resort to fiscal stimulus if the economy is faced with notable risks. Consequently, a hard landing in China is not our base case scenario. In any case, strong global demand will neutralize a slowdown in China's metal consumption in 2018. Despite a deceleration in China, the IMF expects global growth to pick up in 2018 (Table 1). The Global PMI is at its highest level since early 2011, supported by strong readings in the Euro Area and the U.S. (Chart 4). In all likelihood, conditions for global metal demand will remain favorable in 2018. Table 1IMF Economic Forecasts Chart 4Strong Global Demand Will Neutralize##BR##Impact Of China Slowdown China Real Estate Will Slow; Major Downturn Not Expected Chart 5Slowing Real Estate Investment Is A Mild Risk We do not foresee significant risks to China's real estate market, which is the big driver of base-metals demand in that economy. Total real estate investment is up 7.8% in the first 10 months of the year - the strongest growth for the period since 2014 (Chart 5). Even so, it is important to note the slowdown in that sector. After growing 9% yoy in 1Q17, growth rates fell to 8% and 7% in 2Q and 3Q17, respectively. In fact, growth in October, the latest month for which data are available, came in at 5.6% yoy - significantly slower than the average monthly yoy rate of 8% in the first nine months of the year. The slowdown in floor-space-started is more pronounced. The area of floor space started grew 5% in the first 10 months of the year, down from an 8% expansion in the same period in 2016. October data showed a yoy as well as month-on-month contraction - 4.2% for the former, and 12.1% for the latter. This is the second yoy contraction in 2017, with July experiencing a 4.9% reduction in floor area started. Similarly, quarterly data shows a significant slowdown from almost 12% yoy growth rates registered in 4Q16 and 1Q17 to the mere 0.4% yoy growth in 3Q17. In addition, the growth rate in commodity building floor-space-under-construction has slowed down to 3.1% yoy in the first 10 months of 2017, down from almost 5% for the same period in the previous two years. Although the data are a reflection of Xi's resolve to tighten control of the real estate market, we do not expect a major downturn that will weigh on metal demand. As BCA Research's China Investment Strategy desk notes, strong demand in the real estate sector, coupled with declining inventories, will prevent a major slowdown in construction activity, even in face of tighter policies.1 A Stronger Dollar Moderates Upside Price Pressures In our modeling of the LME Base Metal Index, we find that currency movements are important determinants of the evolution of metals prices. More specifically, the U.S. dollar is inversely related to the LME base metal index. While U.S. inflation has remained stubbornly low, we expect inflation to start its ascent sometime before mid-2018, allowing the Fed to proceed with its rate-hiking cycle. Given our view that too few hikes are currently priced in for 2018, there remains some upside to the USD. Thus, while dollar weakness has been supportive for metal prices in 2017, a stronger dollar will be a headwind in 2018. A Look At The Fundamentals In terms of supply/demand dynamics in individual metal markets, idiosyncrasies in their current states, and variations in how China's environmental reforms manifest themselves will mean the different metals will follow different trajectories next year. Muted Consumption Mitigated Impact Of Supply Disruptions In Copper Copper production had a bumpy 2017, rocked by sporadic supply disruptions in some of the world's top mines.2 This led to a contraction in world refined production ex-China, which was offset by an increase in Chinese output (Chart 6). Although Chinese refined copper output grew a healthy 6% yoy in the first three quarters, this was nonetheless a slowdown from the 8% yoy expansion for the same period in 2016. Even so, increased Chinese copper production more than offset declines from other top producers. Refined copper production in the rest of the world contracted by 1.5% in the first three quarters, bringing world production growth to 1.3% - significantly slower than the average 2.6% yoy increase witnessed in the same period in the previous two years. The supply-side impact on the overall market was mitigated by a slowdown in consumption. Chinese consumption, which accounts for 50% of global refined copper demand, remained largely unchanged in the first three quarters of the year compared to last year. This follows a yoy increase of ~ 8% in Chinese demand vs. the same period in 2016. Demand from the rest of the world contracted by 0.6% yoy, down from a 2.5% yoy expansion in the same period last year. So, despite supply disruptions, the copper market remained balanced - registering a 20k MT surplus in the first three quarters of this year, following a 230k MT deficit in the same period in 2016. Recently, there is news of capacity cuts in Anhui province - where China's second-largest copper smelter will be eliminating 20 to 30% of its capacity during the winter.3 If the copper market is the next victim of China's environmental reforms, global balances may be pushed to a deficit. Although copper remains well stocked at the major warehouses, an adoption of these winter cuts by other copper producing provinces would weaken refined copper supply and support prices (Chart 7). Chart 6Copper Rallied On Back Of Supply-Side Fears Chart 7Copper Warehouses Are Well Stocked Steel Prices Will Remain Elevated Throughout Q1 China's steel sector has undergone significant reforms this year. In addition to the 100-150 mm MT of capacity cuts to be implemented between 2016 and 2020, Beijing has also eliminated steel produced by intermediate frequency furnaces (IFF).4 Even so, Chinese steel production - paradoxically - is at record highs. This comes down to the nature of IFFs, which are illegal and thus not reflected in official crude steel production data. However, growth in steel products - which reflect output from both official as well as illegal steel mills - has been flat (Chart 8). In addition, China's steel exports have come down significantly since last year, reflecting a domestic shortage in the steel industry. November data shows a 34% yoy contraction, and exports for the first 11 months of the year are down more than 30% from the same period last year. We expect Chinese steel production to remain anemic until the end of 1Q18, as mandated winter capacity cuts cap production in major steel-producing provinces. The near-term cutback in production will keep steel prices elevated. The spread between steel and iron ore prices during this period will remain wide as lower steel production translates into muted demand for the ore. This is also consistent with China's inventory data which shows that after falling since August, iron ore stocks have been building up since mid-October - in conjunction with the start of winter steel-capacity cuts. Indonesian Nickel Exports Bearish In Long Run, Not So Much In Near Term Ever since Indonesia's ban on nickel ore exports in 2014, worldwide production has been on the downtrend. In the previous two years, shrinking supply from China - which makes up about a quarter of global output - was the culprit of reduced world output, offsetting increases from the rest of the globe, and causing global production to contract by 0.2% and 0.5%, respectively (Chart 9). Chart 8Falling Exports And Flat Steel Products##BR##Output Reflect Closures In Steel Chart 9Deficit And Inventory##BR##Drawdowns Dominate Nickel... However, at 2.5%, the contraction in global output is significantly larger for the first three quarters of this year. What is noteworthy is that it is caused by shrinking production both from China - down ~ 7.5% - as well as from the rest of the world, where output is down ~ 1%. Nevertheless, a decline in demand from China - which accounts for almost half of global consumption - has softened the impact of withering production. Chinese demand for semi refined nickel shrunk 22% in the first three quarters of the year, more than offsetting the 9% growth in demand from the rest of the world. However, there has been a recovery in global demand since June. A 15% yoy growth in the third quarter from consumers ex-China drove a 5% yoy gain in global growth. Despite weak demand in 1H17, the nickel market recorded a deficit in the first three quarters of the year. In fact, nickel has been in deficit for the past two years. Going forward, Indonesia's gradual lifting of the export ban will prop up production. In fact, global yoy production growth has been in the green since June. However, while Indonesian ores are slowly returning to the global market, they remain a fraction of their pre-ban levels. Thus, prices will likely remain under upside pressure in the near term. Record Deficit And Significant Inventory Drawdowns Dominate Aluminum... Aluminum has been in deficit for the past three years. In fact, at 100k MT, the deficit in the first three quarters of 2017 is the largest on record for that period. This is reflected in LME inventory data which has been experiencing drawdowns since April 2014 - Falling from more than 5mm MT to ~ 1mm MT (Chart 10). Strong growth from Chinese producers - which account for more than half the world's primary production - kept global output growth strong, despite a decline from other top producers. However, falling Chinese production in August and September compounded the fall in output from the rest of the world, leading to a 3.5% yoy decline for those two months. In fact, September's Chinese output data marks the lowest production figure since February 2016. On the demand side, global consumption is up 6.2% yoy in the first seven months of 2017, reflecting a general uptrend in both Chinese consumption and, to a lesser extent, a greater appetite for the metal from the rest of the world. However, there has been some weakness from China recently. Chinese demand contracted by 2.9% and 9.6% yoy in August and September. While an 8.2% yoy increase in consumption from the rest of the world offset the August weakness from China, global demand shrunk by 5.8% in September. As with steel, supply-side reforms will dominate and keep aluminum prices elevated in the near term. ... Along With Zinc Demand Global zinc production has been more or less flat this year. The 2.7% decline from Chinese producers, which supply 46% of global zinc slab, was offset by a 2.4% increase in production from the rest of the world. On the demand side, although Chinese consumption - which accounts for almost half of global zinc slab demand - has been flat, strength from the rest of the world supported global demand, which is up 2.3% yoy for the first three quarters of the year (Chart 11). Chart 10...As Well As Aluminum... Chart 11...And Zinc Static supply coupled with increased demand has led the zinc market to a deficit of 500k MT - a record for the first three quarters of 2017. The deficit has continued to eat up zinc stocks, which have been in free-fall, since early 2013.   Roukaya Ibrahim, Associate Editor Commodity & Energy Strategy RoukayaI@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Research's China Investment Strategy Weekly Report titled "Chinese Real Estate: Which Way Will The Wind Blow?," dated September 28, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report titled "Copper's Getting Out Ahead Of Fundamentals, Correction Likely," dated August 24, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see "Chinese Copper Smelter Halts Capacity to Ease Winter Pollution," published on December 7, 2017, available at Bloomberg.com. 4 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report titled "Slow-Down in China's Reflation Will Temper Steel, Iron Ore in 2018,' dated September 7, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2017 Summary of Trades Closed in 2016
Special Report Dear Client, I am currently traveling in Europe visiting clients. This week, in lieu of a regular report, I am sending along a research report written by my colleague at BCA Global Asset Allocation. The topic covers one of the more fascinating "alternative" parts of the fixed income universe - catastrophe bonds. I trust that you will find this report insightful and useful. Best regards, Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy Highlights Catastrophe bonds ("cat bonds") have recently been receiving a lot of investor attention because, after this summer's large hurricanes, they are now attractively priced. We explain the mechanics of this market, and analyze cat bonds' historic risk-return characteristics. Cat bonds have historical annualized returns of 7.4%, with volatility of only 3.0%, making them an attractive risk-adjusted investment. However, they are exposed to "cliff risk", creating a return distribution with negative skew and large excess kurtosis. But cat bonds offer interesting portfolio diversification benefits, since financial and economic shocks have minimal impact on cat bond returns. The reinsurance market tends to be cyclical, with premiums rising following a catastrophe and decreasing during a period of calm. Feature Introduction In 1992, Hurricane Andrew caused $17 billion in losses, more than twice the value of the insured property, and forced many insurers into bankruptcy. As the global economy has grown in size since then, the monetary value of insured events has risen steadily. However, increasing regulatory hurdles in the form of higher reserve requirements have led to capacity constraints (Chart 1) in the traditional insurance industry. In 2005, Hurricane Katrina, which caused $108 billion in losses, strengthened the case for the introduction of catastrophe bonds and other insurance-linked securities that helped ease financial burdens in the insurance industry, for several reasons. First, catastrophe bonds give access to the deepest, most liquid, and efficient sources of capital. Second, the securitization of reinsurance capital has created a secondary market where risk exposures can be transferred within the investor community. Third, insurance firms have the ability to move some exposures off their books, thereby allowing them to underwrite larger risks that they would otherwise lack the capacity to cover. According to S&P Global Ratings, the market for cat bonds and other insurance-linked securities is estimated to be about $86 billion. Other insurance-linked securities include industry loss warranties (ILW), collateralized reinsurance contracts, and reinsurance sidecars. Cat bonds are the only insurance-linked securities that publicly trade on a secondary market. The recent increase in natural catastrophes has led to surging supply in the cat bond market. Record issuance in the first and second quarters of 2017 has pushed the size of the outstanding cat bond market to over $30 billion (Chart 2) for the first time. This comes after a period prior to this year with fewer catastrophes and where bond pricing has been stable, which led to increased deal sizes. In this Special Report, we run through the mechanics of the cat bond structure and market. We analyze historical risk-return characteristics (Chart 3) and compare them to other major asset classes. Since insurance-linked securities are known to have very low correlation with other assets, we test their potential diversification benefits within a traditional portfolio. Finally, we analyze their historical performance in periods of financial market stress and rising interest rate environments, which are two of the biggest worries for investors. Our conclusions are that: Chart 1Capacity Constraints Chart 2Record Issuance In 2017 Chart 3Risk-Return Profile The reinsurance market is cyclical, with premiums increasing following a catastrophe and decreasing following a period of calm. Realized volatility in the cat bond market is low. However, returns have a negative skew with an extremely fat-tailed distribution relative to other traditional assets. The addition of cat bonds to a traditional multi-asset portfolio has tremendous diversification benefits. The largest improvement to risk-adjusted returns comes from substituting equities with cat bonds. Financial crises have minimal impact on cat bond returns. However, depending on the magnitude of catastrophe losses, there could be varied regional impacts. Investors can customize the risk-return profile by altering the attachment and exhaustion points, and also by diversifying across trigger types. Mechanics Of Cat Bonds Despite the increasing popularity of cat bonds, their non-conventional structure is understood by only a limited number of investors. A better understanding of the characteristics of this financial instrument makes analyzing risk and return more straightforward. The key features (Chart 4) of a catastrophe bond are as follows. An insurer looking to reduce certain exposures will create a special purpose vehicle (SPV), also known as the issuer, to assist with the transaction. The issuer/SPV sells reinsurance protection to the sponsoring firms and simultaneously issues a cat bond to the investor. The proceeds from the bond sale are managed in a segregated collateral account to generate the floating-rate component of the coupon payable to investors. The fixed component of the coupon is financed through reinsurance premiums paid by the sponsoring firm to the issuer or SPV. Traditionally, cat bonds used a total return swap where a counterparty guaranteed the liquidity and performance of a collateral account. This forced investors and sponsors to rely on the creditworthiness of the swap provider. In 2007, two cat bonds that used Lehman Brothers as a swap counterparty were forced into default because of illiquid collateral assets and mismatched maturities. Nowadays, the assets managed in the collateral account are invested only in U.S. Treasury money market funds or structured notes from the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD). The final settlement of the bond is binary: 1) if no trigger event occurs before the bond maturity, the SPV returns the principal to investors along with the final coupon; 2) if a catastrophe hits and the bond is triggered, the principal in the collateral account is used to settle the claims of the sponsoring firms. Cat bonds are typically used to cover a piece of risk exposure in the sponsor's book. For example, a cat bond could cover indemnities exceeding $1 billion up to $1.2 billion, making the bond issue size equal to $200 million. The $1 billion is called the attachment point, and the $1.2 billion is called the exhaustion point, at which point the principal is exhausted and investors are not liable for any further claims. The tranche with the higher attachment point will be of higher quality, but with a lower rate of return. The reinsurance industry is cyclical, which makes contract pricing more volatile than investors might expect. The Rate on Line (Chart 5) index can be seen as a yield on the insurance contracts underwritten in the industry. Market conditions can be split into two phases: Chart 4Mechanics Of Cat Bonds Chart 5Cyclical Reinsurance Premiums Soft Market: Following many years of limited or minor catastrophes, reinsurance premiums are pressured downward and bond prices rise. In these circumstances, demand for cat bonds will be limited as coupon income will be less attractive. Hard Market: A major catastrophe will significantly erode the capital available in the insurance industry, thereby creating a supply shortage that pushes up reinsurance premiums. In these conditions, cat bond issuance will rise, driven by attractive coupon income. Investors can manage the premium cycle by slightly increasing risk at the portfolio level in a softening market (falling premiums) and reducing risk in hardening market (rising premiums). The recent catastrophes should drive up reinsurance premiums, but the sheer weight of money searching for yields in the current environment might make the uplift surprisingly modest compared to the past. Given that cat bonds have a binary payout feature, investors need to understand the trigger type (Table 1) used in the contract. In the early days, most bonds were issued with an indemnity trigger, but the type of trigger (Chart 6) has become more varied over time. The type of trigger used in the cat bond has the following impacts: If the trigger used in the bond takes longer to settle, the investor can be involved in a long drawn-out legal battle with the sponsoring firm looking to settle claims. This could in turn force the bond beyond maturity and keep investor funds locked up at significantly lower rates of return. Table 1Understanding Trigger Types Chart 6Choosing The Right Trigger Type Investors also need to understand the level of basis risk sponsoring firms are exposed to with different trigger types. In the context of cat bonds, basis risk is when the settlement payout from cat bonds differs from the actual portfolio losses incurred by sponsoring firms. If they have basis risk, investors will have to deal with moral hazard, where sponsoring firms will have incentive to underwrite excessive risks. Historical Risk & Return Investing in catastrophe bonds is essentially a "short gamma" strategy, where investors are selling insurance and collecting premium with the hope of options not being triggered during the maturity of the bond. Attractive historical returns (Table 2) have been the result of lower-than-expected principal write-downs given limited catastrophes. In the early years, cat bonds as an asset class were not fully understood by the broader market, creating a "novelty premium" up until 2010. Subsequently, low interest rates have had a profound impact on all traditional assets, making cat bond yields relatively attractive. Realized volatility has been extremely low since the investor collects regular coupons in the absence of a catastrophe that triggers a payout. This makes risk-adjusted returns very attractive compared to other major assets. However, because of the extreme tail risk, there exists a big negative skew along with high excess kurtosis. Cat bonds are exposed to "cliff risk" - the likelihood that the tranche's notional value will be exhausted once settlement claims reach the attachment point. The two main sources of risk that investors need to be mainly concerned about, however, are: 1) insurance risk that cat bonds assume, and 2) credit risk associated with the collateral account. An attractive feature of cat bonds is that poor performance tends to be self-correcting, as seen in the reinsurance cycle. Following a particularly destructive natural disaster, a number of factors such as increased insurance demand, the reduced capacity of insurance firms, and upward revisions to probability models serve to increase insurance premiums and potential returns to insurance-linked securities. For example, after the 2011 Japanese Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, insurance premiums were pushed up by around 50% for earthquake risk and 20% for other catastrophe risk. The likelihood of incurring negative returns is far lower than the chance of benefitting from positive returns. Cat bonds have achieved positive monthly returns 92% of the time (Table 3). The recent hurricane season in the U.S. was the first time returns turned negative on a 12-month basis. Table 2Historical Risk-Return Analysis (January 2002 - November 2017) Table 3Only Fifteen Months Of Negative Returns Finally, there have been many comparisons between cat bonds and high-yield credit. While high-yield debt performance is tied to market and economic cycles lasting about 10 years, that of cat bonds is tied to low probability catastrophes. Frequency of loss in junk bonds is greater than it is for cat bonds. However, the potential principal loss is greater for cat bonds, because they have almost zero recovery value. Diversification & Portfolio Impact Cat bonds' performance is linked to factors such as natural disasters, longevity risk, or life insurance mortality, and not to broader financial market risks. However, in periods of economic stress, markets experience a flight to quality and correlations between risk assets increase. Therefore, the benefits of portfolio diversification dissolve when they are needed most. This is not the case with cat bonds, however, as correlations with other assets (Table 4) have remained stable over time. This makes them a potentially useful diversification instrument in multi-asset portfolios. Table 4Cross-Asset Correlation (January 2002 - November 2017) To test this, we perform a typical portfolio analysis whereby we add cat bonds to a conventional portfolio and investigate the impact on the return and risk of the portfolio (Chart 7). Starting with the most traditional allocation of 60% equities and 40% bonds, we augment the portfolio with a 10% allocation to cat bonds and come up with the following results: Replacing equities with cat bonds leads to the largest reduction in portfolio volatility, and a small decrease in annualized returns. This new portfolio generates equity-like returns, but with a smaller correlation with stocks. Replacing traditional fixed income with cat bonds leads to a large increase to annualized returns, while the impact on volatility is virtually non-existent. The largest positive impact on risk-adjusted returns occurs when cat bonds replace equities, because the reduction in volatility is substantially greater than the increase in returns when cat bonds replace traditional bonds. We also ranked the MSCI All-Country World equity and Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Bond indices from worst to best monthly returns and then overlaid the corresponding cat bond returns for each ranked month (Chart 8). This technique removes randomness from the time series in order to view the relative randomness of the other. We have the following findings: Cat bonds have had only three months that delivered a return less than -2%. These were -2.1% in September 2005 during Hurricane Katrina, -3.6% in March 2011 during the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan, and -5.8% in September 2017 after the severe hurricanes in Texas, Florida and the Caribbean. Other than catastrophe-related events, cat bond returns have been stable. Cat bonds displayed no reaction when equities had their most negative months. But they tend to have relatively stronger returns when equities also have positive months. Cat bonds performed well in both good and bad months for traditional fixed income. This shows that causes of traditional bond market losses and cat bond principal loss have little or no bearing on one another. Since cat bonds have a large negative skew and high excess kurtosis, investors can potentially lose all their capital if the bonds are triggered. When allocating to cat bonds, investors need to maintain a well-diversified position in order to minimize the risk of complete capital wipeout. This can be done by carefully picking bonds covering different perils (i.e. earthquakes, wind, extreme mortality), regions and trigger types (Chart 9). As a broader range of perils come to the market, investors will find increasing avenues for diversification within the asset class. Investors can also benefit from very low correlations within the cat bond universe, where returns from cat bonds covering a specific peril have no bearing on returns from cat bonds covering another peril. Chart 7Portfolio Diversification Chart 8Attractive Monthly Returns Chart 9Diversifying Across Perils, Coupon Rate And Expected Loss Financial Market Stress Having established that underlying market developments have no bearing on cat bond performance, we want to address two further important questions: 1) do financial crises affect cat bond returns? 2) do natural catastrophes trigger financial crises? Looking at previous global market crisis scenarios dating back to 2008 (Chart 10), we see that cat bonds had positive absolute returns during all crisis periods. The only period with negative cat bond returns was during the 2008 Lehman Brothers' collapse, when the bank was the swap counterparty for two bonds that defaulted. Large natural catastrophes do not affect broader capital markets, but do tend to have a large local impact. In August 2005, Hurricane Katrina, with damages totaling $108 billion, became the costliest hurricane to date in the U.S. The hurricane triggered a cat bond, and the index was down 2.1%, but there was no noticeable lingering impact on the U.S. economy. On the other hand, the earthquake and tsunami in Tohoku on March 11, 2011 had devastating effects. With damages exceeding $300 billion (approximately 5% of Japanese GDP), the cat bond index dropped 3.6%, and Japanese equities collapsed 7.3%. Moreover, a big earthquake in a major city or region such as Tokyo or California could have the capacity to trigger a global recession. Finally, looking at past major catastrophes (Chart 11), we see that existing cat bond prices do not fully recover to their pre-catastrophe levels. Accordingly, picking up bonds at a discount may not generate the expected return as price levels struggle to fully recover. Chart 10Outperformance Across The Board Chart 11Not A Full Recovery Interest Rate & Inflation Hedge Traditional bonds with fixed coupon payments underperform in a rising rate environment. Since cat bonds receive a floating-rate coupon along with the fixed premium, they are largely immune to rising rates. When central banks hike rates, the principal of the bonds invested in money market assets will produce a higher return, thereby offering investors a powerful shield against possible inflation, as well. Since the total coupon received by investors includes a fixed and floating component, cat bonds have a lower modified duration relative to similar maturity traditional bonds. Conclusion Despite their abnormal return distributions, we recommend investors allocate capital from their "alternatives" bucket toward cat bonds. Against a backdrop of low yields and investor complacency, cat bonds are highly attractive given their potential for consistently robust returns and, perhaps most importantly, tremendous diversification benefits. Still, allocations should be relatively small given the illiquid nature of the cat bond market, and diversification among bonds and issuers is critical due to the potential for large losses in the event that a cat bond is triggered. Aditya Kurian, Research Analyst Global Asset Allocation adityak@bcaresearch.com