Asia
According to BCA Research’s Emerging Markets Strategy service, the Indian rupee is about 7% cheaper than its fair value versus the US dollar. The concept of purchasing power parity (PPP) theorizes that the currency of an economy with higher inflation will…
Highlights The Indian rupee is about 7% cheaper than its fair value versus the US dollar. Expanding capital expenditures will boost India’s productivity and raise returns on capital. That will attract higher capital inflows, propelling the rupee. India also has a better inflation outlook compared to the US because of the government’s prudent fiscal policy and muted wage pressures. Foreign bond investors should stay overweight India in an EM local currency bond portfolio. Equity investors should upgrade India from neutral to overweight in view of receding pandemic-related disruptions. Feature The outlook for the Indian rupee over the medium term (six months to three years) is positive. In this report we will identify the two primary drivers of the rupee/US dollar exchange rate over this time horizon. The first is the relative purchasing power in the two economies. The second is return on capital; more specifically, relative return on capital in the two countries. Both indicate that the rupee will likely benefit from a tailwind over the next few years. The robust currency outlook also supports our bullish view on Indian local currency bonds versus their EM peers and US Treasuries. In this report, we will explain how this context, and the Indian market’s own idiosyncrasies, warrants favoring Indian bonds in a global fixed-income portfolio. Finally, we are upgrading Indian stocks back to overweight in an EM equity portfolio. Relative Purchasing Power Chart 1The Indian Rupee Is Below Its Fair Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The concept of “purchasing power parity (PPP)” theorizes that the currency of an economy with higher inflation will adjust lower (i.e., depreciate) relative to the currency of an economy that has lower inflation. The upshot is that the relative inflation dynamics of the two countries could provide insight into their exchange rate outlook. The top panel of Chart 1 shows that the rupee is currently cheap when measured against what would be its “fair value”. The latter has been derived from a regression analysis between the manufacturers’ relative producer prices of the two countries and the exchange rate. Notably, a deviation from the fair value has also been a good predictor of where the nominal exchange rate will head in the years to come. Whenever the rupee appeared cheap relative to its fair value, it tended to appreciate over the next few years. The opposite has also been true. The current deviation from the fair value implies that the rupee could appreciate by 7% in the coming years (Chart 1, bottom panel). A deeper look into the inflation dynamics reveals that almost all significant directional moves in the rupee-dollar exchange rate over the past 25 years can be explained by movements in the relative inflation differential between the two economies. The rupee typically depreciates versus the dollar when Indian inflation is rising relative to that of the US; and appreciates when the relative inflation is falling. The only times they briefly diverged were during or in the immediate aftermath of a crisis, such as the global financial crisis or the COVID-19 pandemic. However, they were quick to return to their long-term correlations. Relative Inflation Outlook Going forward, the relative inflation outlook favors the rupee. This is because the fiscal and monetary policies in India will likely be tighter in India than in the US for the foreseeable future. Incidentally, India’s core inflation has fallen significantly relative to that of the US in the past decade (Chart 2). India’s inflation is driven mainly by two factors. The first is food prices; more specifically, the “minimum support price” that the Indian government pays to the farmers to procure food grains. Since the government is by far the single largest purchaser, the price it pays usually sets the floor in the market. The ebbs and flows of this procurement price have had a telling impact on the country’s inflation over the past few decades (Chart 3, top panel). Chart 2India's Inflation Has Fallen Significantly In The Past Decade
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
Chart 3Notwithstanding The Temporary Pandemic-Era Surge In Fiscal Spending …
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
In recent years, however, the authorities have been careful and did not hike the procurement prices over much. That has helped to keep headline CPI in check. Further, the government legislated new farm laws last year, which will usher in private capital in the agriculture sector. This will help improve farm productivity and keep food prices under control1 in the future. Chart 4...Fiscal Policy Has Been Very Prudent Since The GFC
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The other driver of Indian inflation is fiscal expenditure. The rise and fall in government spending leads core inflation by about a year (Chart 3, bottom panel). Notably, even though fiscal spending has swelled over the past year to provide relief to a pandemic-stricken economy, this one-off surge is offset by collapse in output and demand. Besides, the odds are high that the government will revert to a tighter stance as soon as the pandemic is brought under control. Indeed, such a fiscal splurge represents a departure rather than a fixture in India’s fiscal policy. Ever since the global financial crisis, successive Indian governments adopted a rather prudent fiscal stance. Chart 4 shows that fiscal spending steadily declined from 17% of GDP in 2009 to 12% by 2019. The conservative stance was implemented by both the previous UPA government and the current NDA government which came to power in 2014. Such a stance not only helped to substantially reduce the country’s fiscal and primary deficits but was also instrumental to the steady decline in inflationary pressures. The wage pressures in the economy are also rather muted. In rural areas, both farm and non-farm wages have been growing at a slow pace and have often remained below consumer inflation for the past six years (Chart 5, top panel). A similar picture is seen in the central banks’ (RBI) industrial outlook surveys. The assessment for salary and remuneration shows a subdued outlook; in fact, the indicator is below zero (Chart 5, bottom panel). This implies that wage pressures in the industrial sector have also been very low since 2017. Going forward, as tens of millions of young people continue to join the work force every year, the broader picture is unlikely to change. Overall, subdued wage pressures will also keep a tab on general inflation in the economy. Relative Return On Capital The other important driver of the rupee versus the dollar over the medium term is the direction of Indian companies’ return on capital relative to those of the US. When the return on capital rises, especially relative to that of the US, foreign capital flows into India in search of higher profits. Those capital inflows help boost the rupee. Chart 6 shows that over the past 25 years the rupee strengthened versus the dollar during those periods when return on assets of Indian non-financial corporates rose. The rupee depreciated when this ratio dropped. Chart 5Inflation Outlook Remains Sanguine As Wage Pressures Are Muted
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
Chart 6Rupee Strengthens When Relative Return On Capital In India Rises...
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The same holds true when Indian firms’ return on assets are compared relative to those of the US. All major moves in rupee strength and weakness largely coincided with the relative rise and fall in return on assets (Chart 6, bottom panel). Chart 7...As Foreign Capital Inflows Into India Boosts The Rupee
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
Thus, relative profitability clearly has a major influence on the exchange rate. And as alluded to earlier, the link is via capital inflows. The ebbs and flows of capital into India have a very explicit impact on the rupee (Chart 7). Going forward, a pertinent question is in which way will India’s return on capital be headed. Our bias is that, beyond the pandemic-related disruptions, it is heading higher over the medium term. We have the following observations: A sustainable rise in return on capital is highly contingent on productivity gains. And the latter depends on capital investment in new plants, machinery, technology, as well as on infrastructure. Thus, a meaningful and sustained rise in capital expenditures could be a harbinger of higher returns in the future. Firms, on their part, would engage in new capital expenditures once they are sanguine of future demand as well as profits. Notably, both gross and net profits of India’s non-financial sector have rebounded rather strongly. Capital expenditure has recovered in tandem (Chart 8). The latter indicates that companies do not consider profit recovery a fluke and are confident demand will remain upbeat. Corroborating the above, imports of capital goods have skyrocketed. This is also a precursor to higher capex down the road (Chart 9). Chart 8Rebounding Profits Have Encouraged Firms To Resume Capex...
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
Chart 9...As Evidenced In Accelerating Capital Goods Imports
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
Chart 10Capital Goods Imports Have Been Rising For The Past Several Years
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
Markedly, India’s import profile has been encouraging in recent years. The share of capital goods in total imports and non-oil imports have been rising (Chart 10). This indicates that firms have not been averse to capital expenditure. This also shows that unlike in some other EM countries, imported consumer goods did not overwhelm India’s capital goods imports. The last time India saw a surge in capital goods imports was in the 2000s, a period when the country’s capex and profits also surged. That period coincided with a multi-year bull run in the rupee and stocks. The early 2010s, on the other hand, saw a deceleration in capex and capital goods imports – and was followed by a period of sub-par return on capital. Now, the tides are turning again. Finally, the quality of capital inflows has also improved over the past decade. India has been receiving ever higher amounts of FDI compared to portfolio inflows (Chart 11). The former is a much more efficient form of capital and are also more likely to boost capital expenditures enhancing productivity in the economy. Incidentally, India’s real gross fixed capital formation has hovered between 30% and 35% of GDP since 2008 – easily the highest rate globally, save China (Chart 12). Hence, if a new capex cycle ensues, which seems likely, it will happen over and above the base built over the past decades. That should help drive labor productivity and profits up by a notch. Chart 11...Along With Steady Growth In FDI
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
Chart 12A New Capex Cycle On Top Of The Previous Base Will Boost Productivity
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
All in all, odds are that Indian productivity will improve going forward, which in turn will boost firms’ profitability metrics. That should help propel the rupee. Bond Bullish The combination of a stable currency, prudent fiscal policy, and a benign inflation outlook make Indian bonds highly desirable to foreign investors. Notably, thanks to some systemic factors, Indian bonds are not as sensitive to bouts of fiscal profligacy and/or inflation in India: Over the past 20 years or so, ten-year bond yields hovered in a rather narrow band of 6%- 9%. A crucial reason for that stability is very limited foreign holdings: only about 2% of Indian government bonds are held by foreign investors. This has reduced yield volatility substantially. In many EM countries, where foreign holdings are much higher, a negative growth shock usually leads to both rising bond yields and a depreciating currency – which perpetuate each other – as foreign investors head for the exit. In the case of India, a negative shock is tempered by falling bond yields, as domestic investors switch from riskier assets to government bonds. Not only are the foreign holdings in India too small to push up yields but the falling yields also encourage them to stay invested. That explains why bond yields in India fell during each of the crises: in 2008-09, 2014-15 and more recently in 2020. A second reason is the existence of captive domestic bond investors: commercial banks. As per the Reserve Bank of India mandate, all banks in India are obligated to hold a certain percentage (currently 18%) of their total deposits in government securities (called Statutory Liquidity Ratio, or SLR). These mandatory holdings have also helped reduce yield volatility. The impact of the above factors can often be seen at play. For one, a surge in India’s fiscal expenditure does not necessarily cause a spike in bond yields. This is because, devoid of any fear of dumping by foreign bond holders, India can and does ramp up government spending when growth is very weak. Those are the times when domestic investors shed riskier assets and move to the safety of government bonds. Hence, we see accelerating fiscal spending coinciding with low and falling bond yields, unlike in many other EM countries (Chart 13, top panel). For a similar reason, a surge in India’s fiscal deficit does not necessarily cause a spike in bond yields either. If anything, widening budget deficits usually coincide with falling bond yields; and shrinking deficits with rising bond yields (Chart 13, bottom panel). The explanation for this apparent anomaly is as follows: periods of stronger growth bring in more fiscal revenues and thus reduce the deficit. But strong growth and rising inflationary pressures also lead to higher interest rate expectations reflected in higher bond yields. The opposite happens when growth slows. Even though fiscal deficit goes up as revenues drop, decelerating inflationary pressures pave the way for lower bond yields. A pertinent question here is, given the idiosyncrasies of Indian bond markets, what then drives Indian bond yields? The simple answer is the business cycle. This is why rising bond yields coincide with stronger bank credit growth and falling yields with weaker credit growth (Chart 14). Chart 13A Surge In Fiscal Spending Or Deficits Doesn't Mean A Spike In Bond Yields
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
Chart 14The Business Cycle Is The Ultimate Driver Of Indian Bond Yields
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
What is also notable is that the impact of any spike in consumer and/or producer price inflation on bond yields is not very pronounced (Chart 14, bottom panel). A crucial reason for that is again the SLR. Because of it, regardless of commercial banks’ own inflation expectations, they cannot dump government bonds. That puts a cap on bond yields even when inflation is rising. Besides, a rise in inflation usually coincides with accelerating bank credit and bank deposits. The latter causes higher demand for government bonds from banks (to maintain SLR). That in turn helps keep the bond yield lower than it otherwise would be. Chart 15The Spike In Public Debt Is Temporary, And Bond Investors Are Not Worried
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
Bottom Line: The absence of foreign investors, the presence of large captive domestic investors and a long-held orthodox fiscal stance have turned the Indian bond market into a different ball game than many other EM local currency bond markets. One takeaway from this idiosyncrasy is that the current steep, but temporary, fiscal deficit should not be a matter of concern for bond investors. For a similar reason, the recent rise in the public debt-to-GDP ratio should have little impact on bond yields (Chart 15). Finally, a moderate rise in inflation is also unlikely to cause Indian bond yields to soar. Investment Conclusions The medium-term outlook for the Indian rupee is positive. It is also quite competitive, especially when compared to the currencies of India’s major competitors vying for multinationals to establish their manufacturing capacity (Chart 16). This means the rupee has some room for nominal appreciation without hurting its competitiveness. Chart 16The Indian Rupee is Quite Competitive
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
This emphasizes our view that investors should continue to overweight India in an EM fixed-income portfolio. While strong growth and higher US bond yields can drive up Indian government bond yields, the former will also push up the rupee – as detailed in a previous section. The currency returns will offset any possible capital loss owing to rising yields, while a positive carry will boost total returns. Notably, because of the latter, a similar rise in yields (say, 100 basis points) in India and US bonds will have a much less negative impact on total return terms for Indian bonds than in the case of US Treasurys. The long end of the Indian yield curve offers value: the 10-year bond yield is 200 basis points above the policy rate. The spread of India’s 5-year bond over that of the US is an impressive 550 basis points (Chart 17, top panel). Given the sanguine rupee outlook, odds are that Indian government bonds will continue to outpace US treasuries in total return terms – even when Indian growth accelerates and inflation rises modestly (Chart 18). Chart 17Indian Bonds Offer Value Relative To US And EM Counterparts
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
Chart 18Higher Carry And A Stronger Currency Will Lead To Total Return Outperformance
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
When compared to the same-duration JP Morgan GBI-EM bond index, India offers a spread of 100 basis points. India has steadily outperformed that index in US dollar total return terms over the past several years (Chart 17, bottom panel). That is unlikely to change in future, thanks to the high carry and a relatively more stable currency. As such, investors should stay on with our recommendation of overweighting India in an EM local currency bond portfolio (Chart 18). Chart 19Go Overweight Indian Stocks In An EM Equity Portfolio
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
The Rupee Has A Tailwind, And Bonds Offer Good Value
Several factors that make the outlook for the rupee positive also argue for a positive outlook for Indian stocks. Like most other EM currencies, the rupee is pro-cyclical, and it tends to move with Indian share prices. Notably, Indian stocks have broken out of their previous highs (Chart 19). On a separate note, as the number of daily COVID-19 cases in the country have subsided, so have the chances of debilitating lockdowns. As such, economic activity is slated to gather steam. We had tactically downgraded India from overweight to neutral in an EM equity portfolio on April 22 in view of skyrocketing COVID-19 cases and deaths back then. Even though the pandemic situation had deteriorated considerably after our downgrade, share prices have staged a nice rebound to our surprise. It’s time to upgrade this bourse back to overweight (Chart 19, bottom panel). Investors should also stick with our sectoral recommendation of long Indian Banks and short EM banks. As we elaborated in our report on Indian banks, a recovery in the business and capex cycles would be very positive for Indian private sector banks (that make up 90% of the MSCI India Banks index) – given that they have aggressively cleansed their balance sheets of NPLs and have thereby already taken the hit in their earnings. Fixed-income investors should close the trade of receiving 10-year swap rates in India. We had recommended it along with other EM local rates back in April 2020 as a play on lower interest rates in EM. India’s 10-year swap rates have risen by 166 basis points since then. Rajeeb Pramanik Senior EM Strategist rajeeb.pramanik@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 For more details see our report India’s Reform Drive: How Momentous (Part 1) dated 19 November 2020.
Taiwanese export orders and South Korean exports are sending a warning about the state of Asia’s manufacturing cycle. Korean exports in the first 20 days of June slowed to 29.5% y/y from 53.3%. Similarly, Taiwan’s export orders slowed to 34.5% y/y,…
According to BCA Research’s Geopolitical Strategy service, the macro and geopolitical outlook is darkening for China’s communist party. The “East Asian miracle” phase of Chinese growth has ended. Potential GDP growth is slowing and it will be harder for…
Singapore trade data is flagging a small warning about the state of the global manufacturing cycle. The country’s non-oil domestic exports (NODX) declined 0.1% m/m in May, disappointing expectations of a 4.5% m/m increase. On a year-over-year basis, NODX is…
Highlights Oil demand expectations remain high. Realized demand continues to disappoint. This means OPEC 2.0's production-management strategy – i.e., keeping the level of supply below demand – will continue to dictate oil-price levels. US producers will remain focused on consolidation via M&A and on returning capital to shareholders, in line with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia's (KSA) expectation. Going forward, shale producers will focus on protecting and growing profit margins. The durability of OPEC 2.0's tactical advantage arising from its enormous spare capacity – ~ 7mm b/d – is difficult to gauge: Tightening global oil markets now in anticipation of Iran's return as a bona fide exporter benefits producers globally, and could accelerate the return of US shales if that return is delayed or re-opening boosts demand more than expected. We are raising our average Brent forecast for 2021 to $66.50 vs. $63/bbl earlier, with 2H21 prices averaging $70/bbl. We are moving our 2022 and 2023 forecasts up slightly to $74 and $81/bbl (Chart of the Week). WTI will trade $2-$3/bbl lower. We remain long the S&P GSCI Dynamic Roll Index ETF (COMT) and the S&P GSCI, expecting tight supply-demand balances to further steepen backwardations in forward curves. Feature While the forecasted rebound in global oil demand continues to drive expectations for higher prices, it is the production discipline of OPEC 2.0 and capital discipline imposed on US shale producers that has and will continue to super-charge the recovery of prices. Continued monetary accommodation and fiscal stimulus notwithstanding, realized global oil demand has mostly flatlined at ~ 96mm b/d following its surge in February, as uncertainty over COVID-19 containment keeps governments hesitant about reopening their economies too quickly. Stronger demand in Asia, led by China, has been offset by weaker demand in India and Japan, where COVID-19 remains a deterrent to re-opening and recovery. The recovery in DM demand generally stalled over this period even as vaccine availability increased (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekOPEC 2.0 Comfortable With Higher Prices
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Chart 2Global Demand Recovery Stalled
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
That likely will change in 2H21, but it is not a given: The UK, which has been among the world leaders in COVID-19 containment and vaccinations, delayed its full reopening by a month – to July 19 – in an effort to gain more time to bolster its efforts against the Delta variant first identified in India. In the US, New York state lifted all COVID-19-induced restrictions and fully re-opened this week. Still, even in the US, unintended inventory accumulation in the gasoline market – just as the summer driving season should be kicking into high gear – suggests consumers remain cautious (Chart 3). Chart 3Unintended Inventory Accumulation in US Gasoline Market
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
We continue to expect the re-opening of the US and Europe (including the UK) will boost DM demand in 2H21, and wider vaccine availability will boost EM oil demand later in the year and in 2022. For all of 2021, we have lifted our demand-growth estimate slightly to 5.3mm b/d from 5.2mm b/d last month. We expect global demand to grow 4.1mm b/d next year and 1.6mm b/d in 2023. Our 2021 estimates are in line with those of the US EIA and the IEA. OPEC is more bullish on demand recovery this year, expecting growth of 6mm b/d. We continue to believe the risk on the demand side remains to the upside; however, given continued uncertainty around global COVID-19 containment, we remain circumspect. Supply-Side Discipline Drives Oil Prices OPEC 2.0 remains committed to its production-management strategy that is keeping the level of supply below demand. Compliance with production cuts in May reportedly was at 115%, following a 114% rate in April.1 Core OPEC 2.0 – i.e., states with the capacity to increase production – is holding ~ 7mm b/d of spare capacity, according to the IEA, which will allow it to continue to perform its role as the dominant supplier in our modeling (Chart 4). Earlier this year, KSA's Energy Minister Abdulaziz bin Salman correctly recognized the turn in the market that likely ensures OPEC 2.0's dominance for the foreseeable future – i.e., the shift in focus of the US shale-oil producers from production for the sake of production to profitability.2 This is a trend that has been apparent for years as capital markets all but abandoned US shale-oil producers. Chart 4OPEC 2.0 Remains Dominant
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Producers outside OPEC 2.0 – what we refer to as the "price-taking cohort" – have prioritized shareholder interests as a result of this market pressure, and remain focused on sometimes-forced consolidation via M&A, which we have been expecting.3 The significance of this evolution of shale-oil production is difficult to overstate, particularly as the survivors of this consolidation will be firms with strong balance sheets and a focus on profitability, as is the case with any well-run manufacturing firm. We also expect large producers to opportunistically shed production assets to reduce their carbon footprints, so as to come into compliance with court-ordered emission reductions and shareholder demands to reduce pollution.4 With the oil majors like Shell, Equinor and Oxy divesting themselves of shale properties, production increasingly will be in the hands of firms driven by profitability.5 We expect US shale-oil production to end the year at 9.86mm b/d and to average 9.57mm b/d next year; however, as the shales become the marginal global supply, production could become more volatile (Chart 5). The consolidation of US production also will alter the profitability of firms continuing to operate in the shales. We expect breakeven costs to fall as acquired production by stronger firms results in high-grading of assets – only the most profitable will be produced given market-pricing dynamics – while less profitable acreage will be mothballed until prices support development(Chart 6). Chart 5US Producers Focus On Profitability
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Chart 6Shale Breakevens Likely Fall As Consolidation Picks Up
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Supply-Demand Balances Tightening The current round of M&A consolidation and OPEC 2.0's continued discipline lead us to expect continued tightening of global oil supply-demand balances this year and next (Chart 7). This will allow inventories to continue to draw, which will keep forward oil curves backwardated (Chart 8). Chart 7Supply-Demand Balances Will Continue To Tighten
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Chart 8Tighter Markets, Lower Stocks
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
The critical factor here will be OPEC 2.0's continued calibration of supply in line with realized demand and the return of Iran as a bona fide exporter, which we expect later this year. OPEC 2.0's restoration of ~ 2mm b/d of supply will be done by the beginning of 3Q21, when we expect Iran to begin restoring production and visible exports (i.e., in addition to its under-the-radar sales presently). The return of Iranian supply – and a possible increase in Libyan output – will present some timing difficulties for OPEC 2.0's overall strategy, but they will be short-lived. We continue to monitor output to assess the evolution of balances (Table 1). Table 1BCA Global Oil Supply - Demand Balances (MMb/d, Base Case Balances)
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Investment Implications Oil demand will increase over the course of 2H21, as vaccines become more widely distributed globally, and the massive fiscal and monetary stimulus deployed worldwide kicks economic activity into high gear. On the supply side, markets will tighten on the back of continued restraint until Iranian barrels return to the market. The balance of risk is to the upside, particularly if the US and Iran are unable to agree terms that restore Iran as a bona fide exporter. In that case, the market tightening now under way will result in sharply higher prices. That said, realized demand growth has stalled over the past three months, which can be seen in unintended inventory accumulation in the US gasoline markets just as the summer driving season opens. We are raising our average Brent forecast for 2021 to $66.50 vs. $63/bbl earlier, with 2H21 prices averaging $70/bbl. We are moving our 2022 and 2023 forecasts up slightly as well to $74 and $81/bbl (Chart of the Week). WTI will trade $2-$3/bbl lower. We remain long the S&P GSCI Dynamic Roll Index ETF (COMT) and the S&P GSCI, expecting tight supply-demand balances to further steepen backwardations in forward curves. The big risk, as highlighted above, remains an acceleration of COVID-19 infections, hospitalizations and deaths, which force governments to delay re-opening or impose localized lockdowns once again. In this regard, KSA's strategy of calibrating its output to realized – vice forecasted – demand likely will remain in place. Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Ashwin Shyam Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish China's refinery throughput surged 4.4% to 14.3mm b/d in May, a record high that surpassed November 2020's previous record of 14.26mm b/d, according to S&P Platts Global. The increased runs were not unexpected, and were largely accounted for by state-owned refiners, which operated at 80% of capacity after coming out of turnaround season. Turnarounds will fully end in July. In addition, taxes on niche refined-product imports are due to increase, which will bolster refinery margins as inventories are worked down. China's domestic crude oil production was just slightly more than 4mm b/d. Base Metals: Bullish China's Standing Committee approved the release an undisclosed amount of its copper, aluminum and zinc stockpiles via an auction process in the near future, according to reuters.com. The government disclosed its intent on the website of National Food and Strategic Reserves Administration on Wednesday; however, specifics of the auction – volumes and auction schedule, in particular – were not disclosed. Prices had fallen ~ 9% from recent record highs in the lead-up to the announcement, which we flagged last month.6 Prices rallied from lows close to $4.34/lb on the COMEX Wednesday (Chart 9). Precious Metals: Bullish After a worse-than-expected US employment report, we do not expect the Federal Reserve to lift nominal interest rates in Wednesday’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting. The Fed will only raise rates once the US economy reaches a level consistent with its definition of "maximum employment." Wednesday’s interest rate decision will be crucial to gold prices. If the Fed does not mention asset tapering or an interest-rate hike, citing current inflation as a transitory phenomenon, gold demand and prices will rise. On the other hand, if the Fed indicates an interest rate hike sooner than the previously stated 2024, this will weigh on gold prices (Chart 10). Ags/Softs: Neutral As of June 13, 96% of the US corn crop had emerged vs. the five-year average of 91%, according to the USDA. 68% of the crop was rated in good to excellent condition, slightly below the five-year average. In the bean market, 94% of the crop was planted as of 13 June, vs. the five-year average of 88%. The Department reported 86% of the crop had emerged vs. the five-year average of 74%. According to the USDA, 52% of the bean crop was in good-to-excellent condition vs the five-year average of 72%. Chart 9
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Chart 10
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Balance Of Risks Tilts To Higher Oil Prices
Footnotes 1 Please see OPEC+ complies with 115% of agreed oil curbs in May - source published by reuters.com on June 11, 2021. 2 Please see Saudis raise U.S. and Asian crude prices for April delivery published by worldoil.com on March 8, 2021. 3 Please see US shale consolidation continues as Independence scoops up Contango Oil & Gas published by S&P Global Platts on June 8, 2021. 4 We discuss this in A Perfect Energy Storm On The Way, published on June 3, 2021. Climate activism will become increasingly important to the evolution of oil and natural gas production, and likely will lead to greater concentration of supply in the hands of OPEC 2.0 and privately held producers that do not answer to shareholders. 5 Please see Interest in Shell's Permian assets seen as a bellwether for shale demand published by reuters.com on June 15, 2021. 6 Please see Less Metal, More Jawboning, which we published on May 27, 2021. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2021 Summary of Closed Trades
Image
The May economic data confirm that China’s domestic demand recovery has passed its peak strength. Most of the macro indicators released yesterday are below the consensus and growing at a slower rate (on both a year-on-year and month-to-month basis) than last…
Dear Client, Next week, in lieu of our regular weekly report, I will be hosting two webcasts where I will discuss the outlook for China’s economy and financial markets, a year into policy normalization. The webcasts will be held on Tuesday, June 22 at 10:00 am EDT (English), and Thursday, June 24 at 9:00 am HKT (Mandarin). We will return to our regular publishing schedule on Wednesday, June 30. Best regards, Jing Sima, China Strategist Feature China’s onshore stocks rebounded in the past two months on the back of a rapidly appreciating RMB versus the US dollar and accelerating foreign capital inflows (Chart 1). However, in our view, China’s domestic policy backdrop and economic fundamentals do not support a sustained rally in Chinese stocks in the next six months. The RMB’s rise vis-à-vis the US dollar will likely falter in the second half of the year as China’s growth weakens. A narrowing in real yields later this year between China’s government bonds and US Treasuries will also discourage foreign flows into Chinese assets. Performance of Chinese cyclical stocks versus defensives failed to decisively breakout in both the onshore and offshore equity markets. An underperformance in cyclical stocks relative to defensives has historically pointed to waning market sentiment towards the Chinese economy (Chart 2). Chart 1Rapid Appreciation In The RMB Buoyed A Recent Rebound In A-Shares
Rapid Appreciation In The RMB Buoyed A Recent Rebound In A-Shares
Rapid Appreciation In The RMB Buoyed A Recent Rebound In A-Shares
Chart 2Cyclical Stocks Continued To Underperform Defensives
Cyclical Stocks Continued To Underperform Defensives
Cyclical Stocks Continued To Underperform Defensives
The number of onshore stocks with prices rising versus falling remains low, even though there has been a slight improvement this year from Q4 2020. The narrow breath in the equity market implies that recent rebound in A-share stocks has been largely driven by a handful of companies (Chart 3). Such narrow breadth suggests that the rebound in Chinese stock prices will not sustain (Chart 4). Chart 3A Narrow-Based Market Rally in A-Shares
A Narrow-Based Market Rally in A-Shares
A Narrow-Based Market Rally in A-Shares
Chart 4Narrowing Market Breadth Has Historically Led To Price Pullbacks
Narrowing Market Breadth Has Historically Led To Price Pullbacks
Narrowing Market Breadth Has Historically Led To Price Pullbacks
A tightened monetary and credit environment has created obstacles for Chinese equities since early this year. Credit numbers released last week show that credit growth deceleration has gathered speed in May, raising the risk of policy overtightening, i.e. credit growth undershooting the government’s 2021 targets. We could see some moderation in the credit growth deceleration into 2H21. A delay in the rollout of local government (LG) bonds and LG special purpose bonds (SPBs) in the first five months of the year means the pace of LG bond issuance between June and October will escalate, which will help to stabilize credit growth. However, weak corporate bond net financing and contracting shadow banking will cap the upside in credit expansion. Chart 5The Economy Could Surprise The Market To The Downside In Q3
The Economy Could Surprise The Market To The Downside In Q3
The Economy Could Surprise The Market To The Downside In Q3
Additionally, if more LG bonds come onto the market in Q3, then we could see tighter interbank liquidity conditions and higher bond yields. This, in turn, would partially offset the positive effects on the economy and equity market from a slower pace in credit growth deceleration. For the next six months, we continue to hold an underweight position in Chinese onshore and investable stocks, in both absolute terms and within a global equity portfolio. Policy tightening has not reversed course and there is an escalating risk that economic data will surprise the market to the downside in Q3 (Chart 5). Qingyun Xu, CFA Associate Editor qingyunx@bcaresearch.com Macro Policy Conditions Are Still Unfavorable For Risk Assets A further deterioration in the credit impulse in May reflects Chinese authorities’ efforts to reduce local government leverage and shadow banking activities. Net corporate bond financing contracted for the first time since early 2018, driven by shrinking local government financing vehicle (LGFV) bonds (Chart 6). Meanwhile, the pace of contraction in shadow-bank loans climbed. At this rate of deceleration, credit growth will undershoot the government’s 2021 target, which is expected to be in line with this year’s nominal GDP growth. The pace in credit expansion on a year-over-year basis has dropped to its previous cycle’s trough (Chart 7). Moreover, the speed of the deceleration in credit growth has outpaced the 2017/18 tightening cycle. It has been seven months since Chinese credit growth peaked (October 2020), which is significantly less than the 13 months it took for credit to decline from top to bottom in 2017/18. Chart 6Contraction In Net Corporate Bond Financing And Shadow Banking Dragged Down Credit Growth In May
Contraction In Net Corporate Bond Financing And Shadow Banking Dragged Down Credit Growth In May
Contraction In Net Corporate Bond Financing And Shadow Banking Dragged Down Credit Growth In May
Chart 7Credit Growth Has Decelerated To Its Trough Reached In 2017/18 Tightening Cycle
Credit Growth Has Decelerated To Its Trough Reached In 2017/18 Tightening Cycle
Credit Growth Has Decelerated To Its Trough Reached In 2017/18 Tightening Cycle
Chart 8Most Of LG Bonds Issued In The First Five Months Are Refinancing Bonds
The Stars Are Not Yet Aligned For Chinese Stocks
The Stars Are Not Yet Aligned For Chinese Stocks
So far this year, LG bond issuance is also behind schedule. About 63% of LG bonds issued in the first five months are refinancing bonds (Chart 8). The new LG bonds and LG SPBs issued to date account for only 21% and 16.5%, respectively, of their 2021 quotas. A delay in LG bond issuance in the first five months means that much more bonds will be on the market between June and October, which may help to stabilize credit growth in Q3. However, weak corporate bond financing and an acceleration in contracting shadow banking activities will cap the upside on broad credit. We do not expect a reversal in policy tightening. Instead, credit growth will likely hover near current levels for the rest of the year. In the past, Chinese policymakers eased when the global manufacturing backdrop faltered. Given that global growth is robust, Chinese policymakers will not feel any urgency to reverse policy setting and will likely use the strong external environment as an opportunity for domestic deleveraging. Chinese Exports Will Face Challenges In The Second Half Of The Year Chart 9A Broad-Based Moderation In China's Exports to DMs
A Broad-Based Moderation In China's Exports to DMs
A Broad-Based Moderation In China's Exports to DMs
Export growth slowed in May with a broad-based moderation in the country’s exports to developed markets (DMs), albeit from a very elevated level (Chart 9). The easing in exports reflects an ongoing demand shift in the DMs away from goods to services as economic activity normalizes (Chart 10). China’s robust exports, which have been driven by strong and partly pandemic-induced global demand for goods, will likely gradually lose strength in the second half of the year. China’s weakening new export orders component in the May manufacturing PMI reflects this trend (Chart 11). Chart 10Global Consumption Recovery In Services Will Likely Outpace Goods
Global Consumption Recovery In Services Will Likely Outpace Goods
Global Consumption Recovery In Services Will Likely Outpace Goods
Chart 11China's Softening New Export Orders Signal Further Export-Sector Weakness
China's Softening New Export Orders Signal Further Export-Sector Weakness
China's Softening New Export Orders Signal Further Export-Sector Weakness
An appreciating RMB versus the US dollar is also a headwind for Chinese exports. The USD/CNY historically has led Chinese new export orders by around six months, with the exception of the pandemic-hit outlier in 2020 (Chart 12). The recent sharp RMB appreciation is starting to weight on Chinese exports. Moreover, BCA’s Geopolitical strategists do not expect that China will principally benefit from US President Biden’s $2.4 trillion infrastructure and green energy plan . US explicitly aims to diminish China’s role as a supplier of US goods and materials. The widening divergence between US’s trade deficit with China and the rest of world already shows evidence (Chart 13). Chart 12The RMB's Rapid Rise Creates Headwinds For Chinese Exports
The RMB's Rapid Rise Creates Headwinds For Chinese Exports
The RMB's Rapid Rise Creates Headwinds For Chinese Exports
Chart 13China's Exports May Not Benefit From Biden's Infrastructure Plan
China's Exports May Not Benefit From Biden's Infrastructure Plan
China's Exports May Not Benefit From Biden's Infrastructure Plan
Still No Inflation Pass-Through Chart 14Chinese Producers Are Unable To Pass Rising Input Costs On To Consumers
Chinese Producers Are Unable To Pass Rising Input Costs On To Consumers
Chinese Producers Are Unable To Pass Rising Input Costs On To Consumers
Chinese surging producer prices overstate domestic inflationary pressures. Inflation in the Producer Price Index (PPI) surged by 9.0% year-over-year in May, jumping to its highest level since 2009. High PPI inflation reflects rising commodity prices and a low base effect. Meanwhile, inflationary pressures are much more muted for consumer goods and services. The gap between producer and consumer prices widened to the highest level since 1990, highlighting the absence of price inflation pass-through from producers to consumers (Chart 14). We expect soaring PPI inflation to be transitory; it will ease when low-base factors from last year and global supply constraints are removed later this year. CPI inflation will remain tame through the year. As such, Chinese authorities are unlikely to tighten monetary policy in response to high PPI readings. Instead, Beijing will continue to use regulatory measures to curb speculation in the commodity market and window-guide industries to readjust material inventories to help ease the pace of rising commodity prices. Historically, PPI inflation’s impact on consumer prices has been weak when prices on producer goods were pushed up by supply shocks rather than mounting domestic demand. The sharp uptick in the PPI during the 2017/18 cycle was mostly due to China’s supply-side reforms and a rapid consolidation in the upstream industries. Global supply constraints linked to the pandemic have also resulted in a sharp upturn in the Chinese PPI since mid-2020. Moreover, Chart 15 shows that the pass-through from PPI inflation to consumers is closely correlated to household income growth. The pass-through has weakened significantly since 2011 when household income growth subdued along with a declining Chinese working population (Chart 16). Chart 15Subdued Household Income Growth Since 2011 Has Suppressed CPI Inflation
Subdued Household Income Growth Since 2011 Has Suppressed CPI Inflation
Subdued Household Income Growth Since 2011 Has Suppressed CPI Inflation
Chart 16Income Growth Decelerated After China's Working Population Peaked
Income Growth Decelerated After China's Working Population Peaked
Income Growth Decelerated After China's Working Population Peaked
Chart 17Profits Diverged Between Upstream And Mid & Downstream Industries
The Stars Are Not Yet Aligned For Chinese Stocks
The Stars Are Not Yet Aligned For Chinese Stocks
Lacking inflation pass-through from producers to consumers has led to a bifurcated profit recovery between upstream and mid & downstream industries. Since late last year, the share of upstream industries in total profits increased sharply at the expense of mid and downstream businesses (Chart 17). A deterioration in the profits of mid and downstream industries will weigh on the outlook for their capex, which in turn, will reduce the demand for upstream goods. Domestic Demand Remains China’s Weakest Link Investments and household demand remain the weakest links in China’s economy. Sluggish household consumption reflects a fragile post-pandemic recovery in manufacturing and services employment, and a rising propensity for precautionary savings (Chart 18). A PBoC survey shows that households’ preference for more saving deposits soared in 2020 (Chart 19). Although it has slightly diminished since late 2020, the reading is still much higher than its pre-pandemic level and will likely persist to year-end on the back of a subdued outlook for employment and income. Chart 18Weak Employment In Both Manufacturing And Service Industries
Weak Employment In Both Manufacturing And Service Industries
Weak Employment In Both Manufacturing And Service Industries
Chart 19Propensity For Precautionary Savings Is Still Elevated
Propensity For Precautionary Savings Is Still Elevated
Propensity For Precautionary Savings Is Still Elevated
Manufacturing investment continued its rebound in April, but the growth has not rallied to its pre-pandemic state and the recovery was more than offset by falling old-economy infrastructure and real estate investment growth (Chart 20). Although a pickup in LG SPB issuance in Q3 will provide some support to infrastructure expenditures, the effect on aggregate infrastructure investment probably will be muted. China’s Ministry of Finance has raised the requirements for approvals of new investment projects, which have decreased notably since early this year (Chart 21). Hence, growth in infrastructure investment may not significantly improve in 2H21 without a harmonized policy impetus for more bank loans and loosened regulations on local government spending. Chart 20Recovery In Manufacturing Investment Was More Than Offset By Falling Infrastructure And Real Estate Investment Growth
Recovery In Manufacturing Investment Was More Than Offset By Falling Infrastructure And Real Estate Investment Growth
Recovery In Manufacturing Investment Was More Than Offset By Falling Infrastructure And Real Estate Investment Growth
Chart 21Falling New Projects Approval
Falling New Projects Approval
Falling New Projects Approval
Real Estate Sector: Mounting Deleverage Pressure Property developers face challenges from heightened government scrutiny on bank loans and limits on the sector’s leverage ratio, along with curtailed off-balance sheet funding due to Asset Management Regulation (AMR) . Bank loans to real estate developers and household mortgages have tumbled to historical lows and will likely slow further in the next few months (Chart 22, top panel). The tightened financing policies have started to cool demand in the real estate market (Chart 22, bottom panel). Softer housing demand will start to drag down property developers’ capital spending and real estate construction activities (Chart 23). Chart 22Deteriorating Financing Starting To Cool The Property Market
Deteriorating Financing Starting To Cool The Property Market
Deteriorating Financing Starting To Cool The Property Market
Chart 23Real Estate Investments And Construction Activities May Slow Further
Real Estate Investments And Construction Activities May Slow Further
Real Estate Investments And Construction Activities May Slow Further
Table 1China Macro Data Summary
The Stars Are Not Yet Aligned For Chinese Stocks
The Stars Are Not Yet Aligned For Chinese Stocks
Table 2China Financial Market Performance Summary
The Stars Are Not Yet Aligned For Chinese Stocks
The Stars Are Not Yet Aligned For Chinese Stocks
Footnotes Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
On a month-on-month basis, Chinese credit was relatively stable in May. Aggregate financing was flat at CNY 1.92 trillion versus CNY 1.85 trillion in April. Similarly, CNY 1.5 trillion worth of new yuan loans were extended, broadly in line with April’s CNY…
Highlights Geopolitical risk is trickling back into financial markets. China’s fiscal-and-credit impulse collapsed again. The Global Economic Policy Uncertainty Index is ticking back up after the sharp drop from 2020. All of our proprietary GeoRisk Indicators are elevated or rising. Geopolitical risk often rises during bull markets – the Geopolitical Risk Index can even spike without triggering a bear market or recession. Nevertheless a rise in geopolitical risk is positive for the US dollar, which happens to stand at a critical technical point. The macroeconomic backdrop for the dollar is becoming less bearish given China’s impending slowdown. President Biden’s trip to Europe and summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin will underscore a foreign policy of forming a democratic alliance to confront Russia and China, confirming the secular trend of rising geopolitical risk. Shift to a defensive tactical position. Feature Back in March 2017 we wrote a report, “Donald Trump Is Who We Thought He Was,” in which we reaffirmed our 2016 view that President Trump would succeed in steering the US in the direction of fiscal largesse and trade protectionism. Now it is time for us to do the same with President Biden. Our forecast for Biden rested on the same points: the US would pursue fiscal profligacy and mercantilist trade policy. The recognition of a consistent national policy despite extreme partisan divisions is a testament to the usefulness of macro analysis and the geopolitical method. Trump stole the Democrats’ thunder with his anti-austerity and anti-free trade message. Biden stole it back. It was the median voter in the Rust Belt who was calling the shots all along (after all, Biden would still have won the election without Arizona and Georgia). We did make some qualifications, of course. Biden would maintain a hawkish line on China and Russia but he would reject Trump’s aggressive foreign and trade policy when it came to US allies.1 Biden would restore President Obama’s policy on Iran and immigration but not Russia, where there would be no “diplomatic reset.” And Biden’s fiscal profligacy, unlike Trump’s, would come with tax hikes on corporations and the wealthy … even though they would fall far short of offsetting the new spending. This is what brings us to this week’s report: New developments are confirming this view of the Biden administration. Geopolitical Risk And Bull Markets Chart 1Global Geopolitical Risk And The Dollar
Global Geopolitical Risk And The Dollar
Global Geopolitical Risk And The Dollar
In recent weeks Biden has adopted a hawkish policy on China, lowered tensions with Europe, and sought to restore President Obama’s policy of détente with Iran. The jury is still out on relations with Russia – Biden will meet with Putin on June 16 – but we do not expect a 2009-style “reset” that increases engagement. Still, it is too soon to declare a “Biden doctrine” of foreign policy because Biden has not yet faced a major foreign crisis. A major test is coming soon. Biden’s decision to double down on hawkish policy toward China will bring ramifications. His possible deal with Iran faces a range of enemies, including within Iran. His reduction in tensions with Russia is not settled yet. While the specific source and timing of his first major foreign policy crisis is impossible predict, structural tensions are rebuilding. An aggregate of our 13 market-based GeoRisk indicators suggests that global political risk is skyrocketing once again. A sharp spike in the indicator, which is happening now, usually correlates with a dollar rally (Chart 1). This indicator is mean-reverting since it measures the deviation of emerging market currencies, or developed market equity markets, from underlying macroeconomic fundamentals. The implication is positive for the dollar, although the correlation is not always positive. Looking at both the DXY’s level and its rate of change shows periods when the global risk indicator fell yet the dollar stayed strong – and vice versa. The big increase in the indicator over the past week stems mostly from Germany, South Korea, Brazil, and Australia, though all 13 of the indicators are now either elevated or rising, including the China/Taiwan indicators. Some of the increase is due to base effects. As global exports recover, currencies and equities that we monitor are staying weaker than one would expect. This causes the relevant BCA GeoRisk indicator to rise. Base effects from the weak economy in June 2020 will fall out in coming weeks. But the aggregate shows that all of the indicators are either high or rising and, on a country by country level, they are now in established uptrends even aside from base effects. Chart 2Global Policy Uncertainty Revives
Global Policy Uncertainty Revives
Global Policy Uncertainty Revives
Meanwhile the global Economic Policy Uncertainty Index is recovering across the world after the drop in uncertainty following the COVID-19 crisis (Chart 2). Policy uncertainty is also linked to the dollar and this indicator shows that it is rising on a secular basis. The Geopolitical Risk Index, maintained by Matteo Iacoviello and a group of academics affiliated with the Policy Uncertainty Index, is also in a secular uptrend, although cyclically it has not recovered from the post-COVID drop-off. It is sensitive to traditional, war-linked geopolitical risk as reported in newspapers. By contrast our proprietary indicators are sensitive to market perceptions of any kind of risk, not just political, both domestic and international. A comparison of the Geopolitical Risk Index with the S&P 500 over the past century shows that a geopolitical crisis may occur at the beginning of a business cycle but it may not be linked with a recession or bear market. Risk can rise, even extravagantly, during economic expansions without causing major pullbacks. But a crisis event certainly can trigger a recession or bear market, particularly if it is tied to the global oil supply, as in the early 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s (Chart 3). Chart 3Secular Rise In Geopolitical Risk Soon To Reassert Itself
Secular Rise In Geopolitical Risk Soon To Reassert Itself
Secular Rise In Geopolitical Risk Soon To Reassert Itself
While geopolitical risk is normally positive for the dollar, the macroeconomic backdrop is negative. The dollar’s attempt to recover earlier this year faltered. This underlying cyclical bearish dollar trend is due to global economic recovery – which will continue – and extravagant American monetary expansion and budget deficits. This is why we have preferred gold – it is a hedge against both geopolitical risk and inflation expectations. Tactically this year we have refrained from betting against the dollar except when building up some safe-haven positions like Japanese yen. Over the medium and long term we expect geopolitical risk to put a floor under the greenback. The bottom line is that the US dollar is at a critical technical crossroads where it could break out or break down. Macro factors suggest a breakdown but the recovery of global policy uncertainty and geopolitical risk suggests the opposite. We remain neutral. A final quantitative indicator of the recovery of geopolitical risk is the performance of global aerospace and defense stocks (Chart 4). Defense shares are rising in absolute and relative terms. Chart 4Another Sign Of Geopolitical Risk: Defense Stocks Outperform As Virus Ebbs And Military Spending Surges
Another Sign Of Geopolitical Risk: Defense Stocks Outperform As Virus Ebbs And Military Spending Surges
Another Sign Of Geopolitical Risk: Defense Stocks Outperform As Virus Ebbs And Military Spending Surges
Can The WWII Peace Be Prolonged? Qualitative assessments of geopolitical risk are necessary to explain why risk is on a secular upswing – why drops in the quantitative indicators are temporary and the troughs keep getting higher. Great nations are returning to aggressive competition after a period of relative peace and prosperity. Over the past two decades Russia and China took advantage of America’s preoccupations with the Middle East, the financial crisis, and domestic partisanship in order to build up their global influence. The result is a world in which authority is contested. The current crisis is not merely about the end of the post-Cold War international order. It is much scarier than that. It is about the decay of the post-WWII international order and the return of the centuries-long struggle for global supremacy among Great Powers. The US and European political establishments fear the collapse of the WWII settlement in the face of eroding legitimacy at home and rising challenges from abroad. The 1945 peace settlement gave rise to both a Cold War and a diplomatic system, including the United Nations Security Council, for resolving differences among the great powers. It also gave rise to European integration and various institutions of American “liberal hegemony.” It is this system of managing great power struggle, and not the post-Cold War system of American domination, that lies in danger of unraveling. This is evident from the following points: American preeminence only lasted fifteen years, or at best until the 2008 Georgia war and global financial crisis. The US has been an incoherent wild card for at least 13 years now, almost as long as it was said to be the global empire. Russian antagonism with the West never really ended. In retrospect the 1990s were a hiatus rather than a conclusion of this conflict. China’s geopolitical rise has thawed the frozen conflicts in Asia from the 1940s-50s – i.e. the Chinese civil war, the Hong Kong and Taiwan Strait predicaments, the Korean conflict, Japanese pacifism, and regional battles for political influence and territory. Europe’s inward focus and difficulty projecting power have been a constant, as has its tendency to act as a constraint on America. Only now is Europe getting closer to full independence (which helped trigger Brexit). Geopolitical pressures will remain historically elevated for the foreseeable future because the underlying problem is whether great power struggle can be contained and major wars can be prevented. Specifically the question is whether the US can accommodate China’s rise – and whether China can continue to channel its domestic ambitions into productive uses (i.e. not attempts to create a Greater Chinese and then East Asian empire). The Great Recession killed off the “East Asia miracle” phase of China’s growth. Potential GDP is declining, which undermines social stability and threatens the Communist Party’s legitimacy. The renminbi is on a downtrend that began with the Xi Jinping era. The sharp rally during the COVID crisis is over, as both domestic and international pressures are rising again (Chart 5). Chart 5Biden Administration Review Of China Policy: More China Bashing
Biden Administration Review Of China Policy: More China Bashing
Biden Administration Review Of China Policy: More China Bashing
While the data for China’s domestic labor protests is limited in extent, we can use it as a proxy for domestic instability in lieu of official statistics that were tellingly discontinued back in 2005. The slowdown in credit growth and the cyclical sectors of the economy suggest that domestic political risk is underrated in the lead up to the 2022 leadership rotation (Chart 6). Chart 6China's Domestic Political Risk Will Rise
China's Domestic Political Risk Will Rise
China's Domestic Political Risk Will Rise
Chart 7Steer Clear Of Taiwan Strait
Steer Clear Of Taiwan Strait
Steer Clear Of Taiwan Strait
The increasing focus on China’s access to key industrial and technological inputs, the tensions over the Taiwan Strait, and the formation of a Russo-Chinese bloc that is excluded from the West all suggest that the risk to global stability is grave and historic. It is reminiscent of the global power struggles of the seventeenth through early twentieth centuries. The outperformance of Taiwanese equities from 2019-20 reflects strong global demand for advanced semiconductors but the global response to this geopolitical bottleneck is to boost production at home and replace Taiwan. Therefore Taiwan’s comparative advantage will erode even as geopolitical risk rises (Chart 7). The drop in geopolitical tensions during COVID-19 is over, as highlighted above. With the US, EU, and other countries launching probes into whether the virus emerged from a laboratory leak in China – contrary to what their publics were told last year – it is likely that a period of national recriminations has begun. There is a substantial risk of nationalism, xenophobia, and jingoism emerging along with new sources of instability. An Alliance Of Democracies The Biden administration’s attempt to restore liberal hegemony across the world requires a period of alliance refurbishment with the Europeans. That is the purpose of his current trip to the UK, Belgium, and Switzerland. But diplomacy only goes so far. The structural factor that has changed is the willingness of the West to utilize government in the economic sphere, i.e. fiscal proactivity. Infrastructure spending and industrial policy, at the service of national security as well as demand-side stimulus, are the order of the day. This revolution in economic policy – a return to Big Government in the West – poses a threat to the authoritarian powers, which have benefited in recent decades by using central strategic planning to take advantage of the West’s democratic and laissez-faire governance. If the West restores a degree of central government – and central coordination via NATO and other institutions – then Beijing and Moscow will face greater pressure on their economies and fewer strategic options. About 16 American allies fall short of the 2% of GDP target for annual defense spending – ranging from Italy to Canada to Germany to Japan. However, recent trends show that defense spending did indeed increase during the Trump administration (Chart 8). Chart 8NATO Boosts Defense Spending
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
The European Union as a whole has added $50 billion to the annual total over the past five years. A discernible rise in defense spending is taking place even in Germany (Chart 9). The same point could be made for Japan, which is significantly boosting defense spending (as a share of output) after decades of saying it would do so without following through. A major reason for the American political establishment’s rejection of President Trump was the risk he posed to the trans-Atlantic alliance. A decline in NATO and US-EU ties would dramatically undermine European security and ultimately American security. Hence Biden is adopting the Trump administration’s hawkish approach to trade with China but winding down the trade war with Europe (Chart 10). Chart 9Europe Spending More On Guns
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Chart 10US Ends Trade War With Europe?
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
A multilateral deal aimed at setting a floor in global corporate taxes rates is intended to prevent the US and Europe from undercutting each other – and to ensure governments have sufficient funding to maintain social spending and reduce income inequality (Chart 11). Inequality is seen as having vitiated sociopolitical stability and trust in government in the democracies. Chart 11‘Global’ Corporate Tax Deal Shows Return Of Big Government, Attempt To Reduce Inequality In The West
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Risks To Biden’s Diplomacy It is possible that Biden’s attempt to restore US alliances will go nowhere over the course of his four-year term in office. The Europeans may well remain risk averse despite their initial signals of willingness to work with Biden to tackle China’s and Russia’s challenges to the western system. The Germans flatly rejected both Biden and Trump on the Nord Stream II natural gas pipeline linkage with Russia, which is virtually complete and which strengthens the foundation of Russo-German engagement (more on this below). The US’s lack of international reliability – given the potential of another partisan reversal in four years – makes it very hard for countries to make any sacrifices on behalf of US initiatives. The US’s profound domestic divisions have only slightly abated since the crises of 2020 and could easily flare up again. A major outbreak of domestic instability could distract Biden from the foreign policy game.2 However, American incapacity is a risk, not our base case, over the coming years. We expect the US economic stimulus to stabilize the country enough that the internal political crisis will be contained and the US will continue to play a global role. The “Civil War Lite” has mostly concluded, excepting one or two aftershocks, and the US is entering into a “Reconstruction Lite” era. The implication is negative for China and Russia, as they will now have to confront an America that, if not wholly unified, is at least recovering. Congress’s impending passage of the Innovation and Competition Act – notably through regular legislative order and bipartisan compromise – is case in point. The Senate has already passed this approximately $250 billion smorgasbord of industrial policy, supply chain resilience, and alliance refurbishment. It will allot around $50 billion to the domestic semiconductor industry almost immediately as well as $17 billion to DARPA, $81 billion for federal research and development through the National Science Foundation, which includes $29 billion for education in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, and other initiatives (Table 1). Table 1Peak Polarization: US Congress Passes Bipartisan ‘Innovation And Competition Act’ To Counter China
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
With the combination of foreign competition, the political establishment’s need to distract from domestic divisions, and the benefit of debt monetization courtesy of the Federal Reserve, the US is likely to achieve some notable successes in pushing back against China and Russia. On the diplomatic front, the US will meet with some success because the European and Asian allies do not wish to see the US embrace nationalism and isolationism. They have their own interests in deterring Russia and China. Lack Of Engagement With Russia Russian leadership has dealt with the country’s structural weaknesses by adopting aggressive foreign policy. At some point either the weaknesses or the foreign policy will create a crisis that will undermine the current regime – after all, Russia has greatly lagged the West in economic development and quality of life (Chart 12). But President Putin has been successful at improving the country’s wealth and status from its miserably low base in the 1990s and this has preserved sociopolitical stability so far. Chart 12Russia's Domestic Political Risk
Russia's Domestic Political Risk
Russia's Domestic Political Risk
It is debatable whether US policy toward Russia ever really changed under President Trump, but there has certainly not been a change in strategy from Russia. Thus investors should expect US-Russia antagonism to continue after Biden’s summit with Putin even if there is an ostensible improvement. The fundamental purpose of Putin’s strategy has been to salvage the Russian empire after the Soviet collapse, ensure that all world powers recognize Russia’s veto power over major global policies and initiatives, and establish a strong strategic position for the coming decades as Russia’s demographic decline takes its toll. A key component of the strategy has been to increase economic self-sufficiency and reduce exposure to US sanctions. Since the invasion of Ukraine in 2014, Putin has rapidly increased Russia’s foreign exchange reserves so as to buffer against shocks (Chart 13). Chart 13Russia Fortified Against US Sanctions
Russia Fortified Against US Sanctions
Russia Fortified Against US Sanctions
Putin has also reduced Russia’s reliance on the US dollar to about 22% (Chart 14), primarily by substituting the euro and gold. Russia will not be willing or able to purge US dollars from its system entirely but it has been able to limit America’s ability to hurt Russia by constricting access to dollars and the dollar-based global financial architecture. Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov highlighted this process ahead of the Biden-Putin summit by declaring that the National Wealth Fund will divest of its remaining $40 billion of its US dollar holdings. Chart 14Russia Diversifies From USD
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
In general this year, Russia is highlighting its various advantages: its resilience against US sanctions, its ability to re-invade Ukraine, its ability to escalate its military presence in Belarus and the Black Sea, and its ability to conduct or condone cyberattacks on vital American food and fuel supplies (Chart 15). Meanwhile the US is suffering from deep political divisions at home and strategic incoherence abroad and these are only starting to be mended by domestic economic stimulus and alliance refurbishment. Chart 15Cyber Security Stocks Recover
Cyber Security Stocks Recover
Cyber Security Stocks Recover
Europe’s risk-aversion when it comes to strategic confrontation with Russia, and the lack of stability in US-Russia relations, means that investors should not chase Russian currency or financial assets amid the cyclical commodity rally. Investors should also expect risk premiums to remain high in developing European economies relative to their developed counterparts. This is true despite the fact that developed market Europe’s outperformance relative to emerging Europe recently peaked and rolled over. From a technical perspective this outperformance looks to subside but geopolitical tensions can easily escalate in the near term, particularly in advance of the Russian and German elections in September (Chart 16). Chart 16Developed Markets In Europe Will Outperform Emerging Europe Unless Russian Geopolitical Risk Abates
Developed Markets In Europe Will Outperform Emerging Europe Unless Russian Geopolitical Risk Abates
Developed Markets In Europe Will Outperform Emerging Europe Unless Russian Geopolitical Risk Abates
Developed Europe trades in line with EUR-RUB and these pair trades all correspond closely to geopolitical tensions with Russia (Chart 17). A notable exception is the UK, whose stock market looks attractive relative to eastern Europe and is much more secure from any geopolitical crisis in this region (Chart 17, bottom panel). The pound is particularly attractive against the Czech koruna, as Russo-Czech tensions have heated up in advance of October’s legislative election there (Chart 18). Chart 17Long UK Versus Eastern Europe
Long UK Versus Eastern Europe
Long UK Versus Eastern Europe
Chart 18Long GBP Versus CZK
Long GBP Versus CZK
Long GBP Versus CZK
Meanwhile Russia and China have grown closer together out of strategic necessity. Germany’s Election And Stance Toward Russia Germany’s position on Russia is now critical. The decision to complete the Nord Stream II pipeline against American wishes either means that the Biden administration can be safely ignored – since it prizes multilateralism and alliances above all things and is therefore toothless when opposed – or it means that German will aim to compensate the Americans in some other area of strategic concern. Washington is clearly attempting to rally the Germans to its side with regard to putting pressure on China over its trade practices and human rights. This could be the avenue for the US and Germany to tighten their bond despite the new milestone in German-Russia relations. The US may call on Germany to stand up for eastern Europe against Russian aggression but on that front Berlin will continue to disappoint. It has no desire to be drawn into a new Cold War given that the last one resulted in the partition of Germany. The implication is negative for China on one hand and eastern Europe on the other. Germany’s federal election on September 26 will be important because it will determine who will succeed Chancellor Angela Merkel, both in Germany and on the European and global stage. The ruling Christian Democratic Union (CDU) is hoping to ride Merkel’s coattails to another term in charge of the government. But they are likely to rule alongside the Greens, who have surged in opinion polls in recent years. The state election in Saxony-Anhalt over the weekend saw the CDU win 37% of the popular vote, better than any recent result, while Germany’s second major party, the Social Democrats, continued their decline (Table 2). The far-right Alternative for Germany won 21% of the vote, a downshift from 2016, while the Greens won 6% of the vote, a slight improvement from 2016. All parties underperformed opinion polling except the CDU (Chart 19). Table 2Saxony-Anhalt Election Results
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Chart 19Germany: Conservatives Outperform In Final State Election Before Federal Vote, But Face Challenges
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Chart 20Germany: Greens Will Outperform in 2021 Vote
Germany: Greens Will Outperform in 2021 Vote
Germany: Greens Will Outperform in 2021 Vote
The implication is still not excellent for the CDU. Saxony-Anhalt is a middling German state, a CDU stronghold, and a state with a popular CDU leader. So it is not representative of the national campaign ahead of September. The latest nationwide opinion polling puts the CDU at around 25% support. They are neck-and-neck with the Greens. The country’s left- and right-leaning ideological blocs are also evenly balanced in opinion polls (Chart 20). A potential concern for the CDU is that the Free Democratic Party is ticking up in national polls, which gives them the potential to steal conservative votes. Betting markets are manifestly underrating the chance that Annalena Baerbock and the Greens take over the chancellorship (Charts 21A and 21B). We still give a subjective 35% chance that the Greens will lead the next German government without the CDU, a 30% that the Greens will lead with the CDU, and a 25% chance that the CDU retains power but forms a coalition with the Greens. A coalition government would moderate the Greens’ ambitious agenda of raising taxes on carbon emissions, wealth, the financial sector, and Big Tech. The CDU has already shifted in a pro-environmental, fiscally proactive direction. Chart 21AGerman Greens Will Recover
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Chart 21BGerman Greens Still Underrated
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
No matter what the German election will support fiscal spending and European solidarity, which is positive for the euro and regional equities over the next 12 to 24 months. However, the Greens would pursue a more confrontational stance toward Russia, a petro-state whose special relations with the German establishment have impeded the transition to carbon neutrality. Latin America’s Troubles A final aspect of Biden’s agenda deserves some attention: immigration and the Mexican border. Obviously this one of the areas where Biden starkly differs from Trump, unlike on Europe and China, as mentioned above. Vice President Kamala Harris recently came back from a trip to Guatemala and Mexico that received negative media attention. Harris has been put in charge of managing the border crisis, the surge in immigrant arrivals over 2020-21, both to give her some foreign policy experience and to manage the public outcry. Despite telling immigrants explicitly “Do not come,” Harris has no power to deter the influx at a time when the US economy is fired up on historic economic stimulus and the Democratic Party has cut back on all manner of border and immigration enforcement. From a macro perspective the real story is the collapse of political and geopolitical risk in Mexico. From 2016-20 Mexico faced a protectionist onslaught from the Trump administration and then a left-wing supermajority in Congress. But these structural risks have dissipated with the USMCA trade deal and the inability of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador to follow through with anti-market reforms, as we highlighted in reports in October and April. The midterm election deprived the ruling MORENA party of its single-party majority in the Chamber of Deputies, the lower house of the legislature (Chart 22). AMLO is now politically constrained – he will not be able to revive state control over the energy and power sectors. Chart 22Mexican Midterm Election Constrained Left-Wing Populism, Political Risk
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Chart 23Buy Mexico (And Canada) On US Stimulus
Buy Mexico (And Canada) On US Stimulus
Buy Mexico (And Canada) On US Stimulus
American monetary and fiscal stimulus, and the supply-chain shift away from China, also provide tailwinds for Mexico. In short, the Mexican election adds the final piece to one of our key themes stemming from the Biden administration, US populism, and US-China tensions: favor Mexico and Canada (Chart 23). A further implication is that Mexico should outperform Brazil in the equity space. Brazil is closely linked to China’s credit cycle and metals prices, which are slated to turn down as a result of Chinese policy tightening. Mexico is linked to the US economy and oil prices (Chart 24). While our trade stopped out at -5% last week we still favor the underlying view. Brazilian political risk and unsustainable debt dynamics will continue to weigh on the currency and equities until political change is cemented in the 2022 election and the new government is then forced by financial market riots into undertaking structural reforms. Chart 24Brazil's Troubles Not Truly Over - Mexico Will Outperform
Brazil's Troubles Not Truly Over - Mexico Will Outperform
Brazil's Troubles Not Truly Over - Mexico Will Outperform
Elsewhere in Latin America, the rise of a militant left-wing populist to the presidency in a contested election in Peru, and the ongoing social unrest in Colombia and Chile, are less significant than the abrupt slowdown in China’s credit growth (Charts 25A and 25B). According to our COVID-19 Social Stability Index, investors should favor Mexico. Turkey, the Philippines, South Africa, Colombia, and Brazil are the most likely to see substantial social instability according to this ranking system (Table 3). Chart 25AMexico To Outperform Latin America
Mexico To Outperform Latin America
Mexico To Outperform Latin America
Chart 25BChina’s Slowdown Will Hit South America
China's Slowdown Will Hit South America
China's Slowdown Will Hit South America
Table 3Post-COVID Emerging Market Social Unrest Only Just Beginning
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Joe Biden Is Who We Thought He Was
Investment Takeaways Close long emerging markets relative to developed markets for a loss of 6.8% – this is a strategic trade that we will revisit but it faces challenges in the near term due to China’s slowdown (Chart 26). Go long Mexican equities relative to emerging markets on a strategic time frame. Our long Mexico / short Brazil trade hit the stop loss at 5% but the technical profile and investment thesis are still sound over the short and medium term. Chart 26China Slowdown, Geopolitical Risk Will Weigh On Emerging Markets
China Slowdown, Geopolitical Risk Will Weigh On Emerging Markets
China Slowdown, Geopolitical Risk Will Weigh On Emerging Markets
Chart 27Relative Uncertainty And Safe Havens
Relative Uncertainty And Safe Havens
Relative Uncertainty And Safe Havens
China’s sharp fiscal-and-credit slowdown suggests that investors should reduce risk exposure, take a defensive tactical positioning, and wait for China’s policy tightening to be priced before buying risky assets. Our geopolitical method suggests the dollar will rise, while macro fundamentals are becoming less dollar-bearish due to China. We are neutral for now and will reassess for our third quarter forecast later this month. If US policy uncertainty falls relative to global uncertainty then the EUR-USD will also fall and safe-haven assets like Swiss bonds will gain a bid (Chart 27). Gold is an excellent haven amid medium-term geopolitical and inflation risks but we recommend closing our long silver trade for a gain of 4.5%. Disfavor emerging Europe relative to developed Europe, where heavy discounts can persist due to geopolitical risk premiums. We will reassess after the Russian Duma election in September. Go long GBP-CZK. Close the Euro “laggards” trade. Go long an equal-weighted basket of euros and US dollars relative to the Chinese renminbi. Short the TWD-USD on a strategic basis. Prefer South Korea to Taiwan – while the semiconductor splurge favors Taiwan, investors should diversify away from the island that lies at the epicenter of global geopolitical risk. Close long defense relative to cyber stocks for a gain of 9.8%. This was a geopolitical “back to work” trade but the cyber rebound is now significant enough to warrant closing this trade. Matt Gertken Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Trump’s policy toward Russia is an excellent example of geopolitical constraints. Despite any personal preferences in favor of closer ties with Russia, Trump and his administration ultimately reaffirmed Article 5 of NATO, authorized the sale of lethal weapons to Ukraine, and deployed US troops to Poland and the Czech Republic. 2 As just one example, given the controversial and contested US election of 2020, it is possible that a major terrorist attack could occur. Neither wing of America’s ideological fringes has a monopoly on fanaticism and violence. Meanwhile foreign powers stand to benefit from US civil strife. A truly disruptive sequence of events in the US in the coming years could lead to greater political instability in the US and a period in which global powers would be able to do what they want without having to deal with Biden’s attempt to regroup with Europe and restore some semblance of a global police force. The US would fall behind in foreign affairs, leaving power vacuums in various regions that would see new sources of political and geopolitical risk crop up. Then the US would struggle to catch up, with another set of destabilizing consequences.