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The chart above provides confirmation that trade talks have been the primary driver behind the rally in China-related assets. Both the BCA Market-Based China Growth Indicator and the diffusion index of its 17 components began to improve when the prospect of a…
Highlights Korean stocks are facing downside risks over the next several months. Exports will continue to contract on falling semiconductor prices and retrenching global demand. Growth deceleration and low inflation will lead the central bank to cut rates in 2019. Within an EM equity portfolio, we are downgrading Korean tech stocks from overweight to neutral but remain overweight the non-tech sector. We are booking gains on our strategic long positions in EM tech versus both the broader EM equity benchmark and materials. The KRW/USD exchange rate is at a critical technical juncture. Investors should wait to buy on a breakout and/or sell on a breakdown of the tapering wedge pattern. Feature   Decelerating and lately contracting South Korean exports have been a major drag on the economy and stock market (Chart I-1). The country is heavily reliant on manufacturing, with exports of goods contributing to nearly half of real GDP. Chart I-1Korean Stocks: Unsustainable Rebound? Korean Stocks: Unsustainable Rebound? Korean Stocks: Unsustainable Rebound? Although exports are currently shrinking, Korean domestic stock prices still rebounded. The rebound has mostly been driven by the information technology (tech) sector (Chart I-2). Chart I-2 Is this recent rally justified by underlying fundamentals? Will share prices continue to rise in 2019? Our inclination is ‘no’ to both questions. There are still dark clouds on the horizon for both Korea’s business cycle and stock market. We are downgrading Korean tech stocks to neutral from overweight within a dedicated EM equity portfolio. However, we are maintaining our overweight in non-tech stocks relative to the EM equity benchmark. Lingering Risks In The Semiconductor Industry Korea’s dependence on the semiconductor sector has risen considerably in the past several years: Semiconductor exports have risen from under 10% to slightly above 20% of total goods exports (Chart I-3). As such, the outlook for semiconductor exports is a critical factor for future economic growth. Chart I-3Korea: Increasing Reliance On The Semiconductor Sector Korea: Increasing Reliance On The Semiconductor Sector Korea: Increasing Reliance On The Semiconductor Sector Table 1 lists the top 10 major exported goods from Korea, together contributing about 72% of total exports. Semiconductors are by far the largest component. Last year, overseas sales of semiconductors alone contributed to some 90% of growth in Korean exports, and about one-third of the country’s nominal GDP growth. Chart I- Notably, Korea produces the largest quantity of DRAM and NAND memory chips in the world. Last year, Korean semiconductor companies accounted for about 70% of global DRAM and 50% of NAND flash global sales revenue. In 2019 Korean semiconductor exports will likely contract due to further deflation in DRAM and NAND memory prices (Chart I-4). Chart I-4Memory Prices Are Plunging Memory Prices Are Plunging Memory Prices Are Plunging The 2016-2017 surge in DRAM and NAND flash prices was due to supply shortages relative to demand. Last year, NAND prices plunged and DRAM prices began to fall as their supply-demand balances shifted to oversupply. This year, the glut will worsen. Demand Global demand for DRAM and NAND memory is slowing. Memory demand from the global smartphone sector – one important end-user market for DRAM and NAND memory chips – is contracting. According to the International Data Corporation (IDC), the global mobile phone sector is the biggest end-market for both DRAM and NAND memory chips, with nearly 40% market share in each. As major markets like China and advanced economies have entered the saturation phase of mobile-phone demand, global smartphone shipments are likely to decline further in 2019 (Chart I-5, top panel). Chart I-5Global Memory Demand Is Slowing Global Memory Demand Is Slowing Global Memory Demand Is Slowing DRAMeXchange1 expects global smartphone production volume for 2019 to fall by 3.3% from last year. In addition, the significant surge in bitcoin prices greatly boosted cryptocurrency mining activity in 2016-‘17 as miners quickly expanded their computing power. This contributed to strong DRAM demand and in turn higher semiconductor prices between June 2016 and May 2018. With the bust of bitcoin prices, this demand has vanished, which will further weigh on prices (Chart I-5, bottom panel). Supply High semiconductor prices in 2016-2017 boosted global production capacity expansion of DRAM and NAND memory chips. Based on data compiled by the IDC, global DRAM and NAND flash capacity expanded by 5.7% and 4.3% respectively in 2018 from a year earlier. As most of the global new capacity was added in the second half of 2018, the output of DRAM and NAND in 2019 will be higher than last year. Moreover, DRAM capacity will grow an additional 4% this year. Because of rising supply and slowing demand, both DRAM and NAND markets are in excess supply and have high inventories. DRAMeXchange forecasts that average DRAM prices will drop by at least another 20% in 2019, while NAND flash prices will fall another 10% from current levels. DRAM and NAND flash memory are the largest components of Korean tech producers. Yet they also sell many other tech products such as analog integrated circuits, LCD drivers, discrete circuits, sensors, actuators, and so on. Apart from the negative impact of declining global DRAM and NAND flash prices, the country’s semiconductor exports will also suffer from slowing demand in China in 2019. China, the biggest importer of Korean semiconductor products, has already shown waning demand. Its imports of electronic integrated circuits and micro-assemblies have contracted over the past two months in both value and volume terms (Chart I-6, top and middle panels). This mirrors a similar contraction in Korean semiconductor exports over the same period (Chart I-6, bottom panel). Chart I-6Weakening Chinese Semiconductor Demand Weakening Chinese Semiconductor Demand Weakening Chinese Semiconductor Demand Bottom Line: Korean semiconductor producers will likely face a contraction in their sales in 2019 due to weakening demand and deflating semiconductor prices. Diminishing Competitive Advantage Korea has been losing its competitive edge in key sectors like automobiles and smartphones. Even though the country remains highly competitive in the global semiconductor industry, it is beginning to show early signs of losing competitiveness there too. Improving competitiveness among other producers as well as a slowing pace of technological improvement and rising production costs are major reasons underlying Korea’s diminishing global competitiveness. Automobiles Korean auto manufacturers have lost market share in the global auto market. In China, the world’s biggest auto market, Korean brands’ market share has declined significantly in the past four years, losing out to both Japanese and German brands (Chart I-7, top three panels). Chart I-7Korea: Losing Market Shares In China's Auto Market Korea: Losing Market Shares In China's Auto Market Korea: Losing Market Shares In China's Auto Market Korean car companies have established auto manufacturing plants in China over the past decade. As a result, all Korean cars sold in China are produced within China, and automobile exports to China from Korea have fallen to zero (Chart I-7, bottom panel). Due to Korean auto manufacturers’ diminishing competitive advantage, Korean automobile production and exports peaked in 2012 in terms of volumes, and have been on a downtrend over the past seven years (Chart I-8, top panel). Chart I-8Further Decline In Korean Auto Output And Exports Is Possible Further Decline In Korean Auto Output And Exports Is Possible Further Decline In Korean Auto Output And Exports Is Possible While demand for Korean cars in the EU remains resilient, sales volumes in the U.S., China and the rest of world have been on a downward trajectory (Chart I-8, bottom three panels). Smartphones In the global smartphone market, Korea’s major smartphone-producing company – Samsung – has been in fierce competition with Chinese brands, and it seems to be losing the battle. Chart I-9 shows that while Samsung’s smartphone sales declined 8% year-on-year last year, smartphone sales from major Chinese smartphone producers (Huawei, Xiaomi, Oppo and Vivo) continued to grow at a pace of 20%. Chart I-9Korea: Losing Market Shares In Global Smartphone Market Korea: Losing Market Shares In Global Smartphone Market Korea: Losing Market Shares In Global Smartphone Market From 2012 to 2018, China’s share of global smartphone shipments rose from 6% to 39%. By comparison, Samsung’s share declined from 30% to 21% over the same period. Semiconductors Korean semiconductor companies – notably Samsung and SK Hynix – will likely remain the biggest producers in the memory market, given their advanced technology. However, there are still signs that Korean semiconductor companies will face increasing challenges in protecting their market share. Based on IDC data, Korean semiconductor companies’ share of global DRAM capacity will inch lower to 65% in 2019 from 65.4% in 2017, while their share of NAND capacity will decline to 53.8% from 57.5% during the same period. Meanwhile, China is focusing on boosting its self-sufficiency in terms of semiconductor production. At the moment there is still a three- to four-year technological gap between China and Korea in DRAM and NAND mass production, though the gap is likely to narrow. In the meantime, the U.S. will continue to create obstacles to prevent the rise of the Chinese semiconductor sector. However, these factors will only delay – not avert – the sector’s development and growth. We believe China will remain firmly committed to develop its semiconductor sector, particularly memory products, irrespective of the cost of investment necessary to do so. Similar to what has transpired in both automobile and smartphone production (Chart I-10), China will slowly increase its penetration in the semiconductor market with increasing capacity and a narrower technology gap over the next five to 10 years. After all, the world’s biggest semiconductor demand is in China. Chart I-10China: A Rising Star In Global Auto And Smartphone Market China: A Rising Star In Global Auto And Smartphone Market China: A Rising Star In Global Auto And Smartphone Market Significant increase in labor costs = falling export competitiveness for all sectors Korean President Moon Jae-in’s flagship economic policy, “income-led growth,” has resulted in dramatic increases in minimum wages since he took office in 2017, further damaging Korea’s competitiveness. The nation’s minimum wage was hiked by 7.3% in 2017, 16.4% in 2018 and will rise by another 11% to 8,350 KRW or $7.40 an hour, in 2019. As the president remains committed to meeting his campaign pledge of lifting the minimum wage to 10,000 KRW an hour, or about $8.90, this would require a further 20% increase in the next year or two. In addition, the government has also limited the maximum workweek to 52 hours since last July for businesses with more than 300 workers. Last month, the Cabinet further approved a revision bill whereby workers are eligible to receive an additional eight hours of wages every weekend for 40 hours of work that week. The new wage regulations have become a substantial burden on employers in all industries. The impact is more severe on small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). According a recent survey, about 30% of SMEs have been unable to pay workers due to the state-set minimum wage. It is also affecting large manufacturers. According to a joint statement released in late December by the Korea Automobile Manufacturers Association and the Korea Auto Industries Cooperative Association, local automakers’ annual labor cost burdens will increase by at least 700 billion won (US$630 million) a year. As for auto parts manufacturers, a skyrocketing financial burden due to the new policy may threaten their survival. In addition, despite the KORUS FTA agreement reached between Korea and the U.S. last September, Korean auto manufacturers still fear they will be subject to new tariffs in 2019. On February 17, the U.S. Commerce Department submitted a report about imposing tariffs on imported automobiles and auto parts to U.S. President Donald Trump, who will make a decision by May 18. Our Geopolitical Strategy Service (GPS) team believes the odds of U.S. administration imposing auto tariffs on imported cars from Korea are small as this will be against the KORUS FTA agreement.2 Our GPS team also believes Japan is less likely to suffer a tariff than the EU, and even if Japan suffers a tariff along with the EU, Japan will negotiate a waiver more quickly than the EU. In both cases, Korea is likely to sell more cars in the U.S., but it will continue to face strong competition from Japan. Bottom Line: In addition to weakening global demand, a deterioration in Korea’s competitive advantage, due in large part to improving competitiveness among other producers and rising domestic wages, will negatively affect Korean exports. What About Domestic Demand? Record fiscal spending in 2019 will boost public sector consumption considerably, offsetting weakening consumption in the private sector. As the new wage policy will likely result in more layoffs and additional shuttering of businesses, domestic retail sales growth will remain under pressure (Chart I-11). Hence, an unintended consequence of the government’s higher income policy will be weaker aggregate income and consumer spending growth. Chart I-11KOREA The New Wage Policy May Trigger More Layoffs And Weaken Retail Sales KOREA The New Wage Policy May Trigger More Layoffs And Weaken Retail Sales KOREA The New Wage Policy May Trigger More Layoffs And Weaken Retail Sales Manufacturing and service sector jobs, including wholesale and retail trade and hotels and restaurants, account for 17% and 23% of total employment, respectively. Of all sectors, these two lost the most employees in January from a year ago. Meanwhile, due to the government’s deregulation of loans in 2014, Korean household debt has increased at a much faster pace than nominal income growth (Chart 12, top panel). As a result, Korea’s household debt has rapidly risen to 86% of its GDP as of the end of the third quarter of last year, from 72% four years ago – (Chart I-12, bottom panel). Elevated household debt at a time of rising layoffs will increase consumer anxiety and weigh on household spending. Chart I-12High Household Debt Will Weigh On Spending High Household Debt Will Weigh On Spending High Household Debt Will Weigh On Spending In order to combat an economic downturn, the government last month approved a record 467 trillion won ($418 billion, 26.5% of the country’s 2018 GDP) budget for 2019, up 9.5% from last year. The last time the budget increased by such a big scale was in 2009, when spending rose 10.7% in the wake of the global financial crisis. In addition, the government will front-load spending – with 61% of the budget to be spent in the first half of 2019. Household spending and government expenditures account for 48% and 15% of real GDP, respectively, while exports equal about 50% of real GDP. Hence, the increase in fiscal spending will not entirely offset the contraction in exports and slowdown in consumer spending. This entails a considerable slowdown in economic growth in 2019. Bet On Monetary Easing With growth disappointing and both headline and core inflation well below 2% (Chart I-13), the central bank will cut rates in 2019. Chart I-13Bet On A Rate Cut Bet On A Rate Cut Bet On A Rate Cut So far, economic growth has decelerated in the past 10 months, and recent data shows no signs of recovery. The country’s manufacturing sector is in contraction, with manufacturing PMI holding below the 50 boom-bust line in January (Chart I-14). Meanwhile, South Korea's unemployment rate rose to a nine-year high in January, with most of the job losses in the manufacturing and construction sectors. Chart I-14Manufacturing Sector: Still In Contraction Manufacturing Sector: Still In Contraction Manufacturing Sector: Still In Contraction Saramin, a South Korean job search portal, surveyed 906 firms in South Korea last month, 77% of which expressed unwillingness to hire new employees due to higher labor costs and negative business sentiment. Retail sales volume growth recently tumbled to 2-3%, pointing to faltering domestic demand (Chart I-11 above, bottom panel). The fixed-income market is not pricing in a rate cut in 2019. Therefore, investors should consider betting on lower interest rates. Shrinking exports and rate cuts will likely undermine the Korean won. Bottom Line: Economic deceleration and low inflation will lead the central bank to cut interest rates in 2019. Investment Implications The following are our investment recommendations: Downgrade the Korean tech sector from overweight to neutral within the EM space. We are reluctant to downgrade to underweight because many other emerging markets and sectors within the EM universe have poorer structural fundamentals than Korean tech. The tech sector accounts for 38% of the MSCI Korea Index, and 27% of the KOSPI in terms of market value. The stock with the largest weight in the MSCI Korea equity index is Samsung Electronics, with a share of 25%, followed by SK Hynix, with a ~5% share. Both are very sensitive to semiconductor prices. Specifically, semiconductor sales accounted for 31% of Samsung’s revenue, but contributed 77% of Samsung’s operating profit last year (Table I-2). Chart I- Falling prices reduce producers’ profits by more than falling volumes.3 Hence, profits of semiconductor producers in Korea and globally will shrink in 2019. This will lead to a substantial selloff in Korean tech stocks (Chart I-15). Chart I-15Falling Memory Prices Will Trigger A Sell-Off In Korean Tech Stocks Falling Memory Prices Will Trigger A Sell-Off In Korean Tech Stocks Falling Memory Prices Will Trigger A Sell-Off In Korean Tech Stocks Meanwhile, China accounts for 33% of Samsung’s revenue, making it the largest market (Chart I-16). The ongoing economic slump in China’s domestic demand implies weaker demand for Korean shipments to China, which account for 28% of its exports and 14% of its GDP. Chart I-16 ​​​​​​​ We are booking gains on our strategic long position in the Korean tech sector versus the EM benchmark index first instituted on January 27, 2010. This trade resulted in a 136% gain (Chart I-17, top panel). Chart I-16Taking Profits On Our Overweight Tech Positions Taking Profits On Our Overweight Tech Positions Taking Profits On Our Overweight Tech Positions Consistently, we are also taking profits on our long EM tech / short EM materials stocks trade, a strategic recommendation initiated on February 23, 2010 that has yielded a 186% gain (Chart I-17, second panel). The basis for this strategic position was our broader theme for the decade of being long what Chinese consumers buy and short plays on Chinese construction, which we initiated on June 8, 2010.4 Stay overweight non-tech equities within the EM space. The fiscal stimulus will have a considerable positive impact on the economy. Besides, Korean non-tech stocks have been weak relative to the EM equity benchmark, and in a renewed EM selloff they could act as a low-beta play (Chart I-17, bottom panel). We initiated our long Korean non-tech sector versus the EM benchmark index on May 31, 2018, which has so far been flat. The KRW/USD exchange rate is at a critical technical juncture. Investors should wait and buy on a breakout or sell on a breakdown of the tapering wedge pattern. The KRW/USD has been in a tight trading range over the past eight months (Chart I-18) and is approaching a major breaking point – i.e., any move will be significant, which we expect will largely depend on the movement of the RMB/USD. Chart I-18Tapering Wedge Patterns Tapering Wedge Patterns Tapering Wedge Patterns The natural path for the RMB would have been depreciation versus the U.S. dollar. However, China may opt for a flat exchange rate versus the U.S. dollar given its promises to the U.S. within the framework of forthcoming trade agreements. We have been shorting the KRW versus an equally weighted basket of USD and yen since February 14, 2018. We continue to hold this trade for the time being. Investors should augment their positions if the KRW/USD breaks down or close this trade and go long the won if the KRW/USD breaks out of its tapering wedge pattern. With respect to fixed income, we continue to receive Korean 10-year swap rates as we expect interest rates to fall meaningfully. Local investors should overweight bonds versus stocks.   Ellen JingYuan He, Associate Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy ellenj@bcaresearch.com     Footnotes 1 DRAMeXchange, the memory and storage division of a technology research firm TrendForce, has been conducting research on DRAM and NAND Flash since its creation in 2000. 2 Please see the Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Trump's Demands On China", published April 4, 2018. Available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see the Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report “Corporate Profits: Recession Is Bad, Deflation Is Worse”, dated January 28, 2016, available at www.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see the Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report “How To Play Emerging Market Growth In The Coming Decade”, dated June 8, 2010, available at www.bcaresearch.com. Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights Trade talks have been the primary driver of the rally in Chinese stocks and China-related assets over the past five months. While trade is important to China’s economy, Chinese domestic demand is the primary driver of China-related asset fundamentals, meaning that the recent equity rally has occurred on the back of a largely false narrative. The January surge in credit has brought the first concrete sign that Chinese domestic demand will eventually bottom, but the current pace of money & credit growth suggests that investable earnings are facing a “catch up” period of potentially material weakness. The need for a stabilization in the outlook for earnings argues against an immediate shift to overweight, but we agree that investors should put Chinese investable stocks on upgrade watch for the coming few months. Feature Chart 1 reviews the recent performance of the Chinese investable equity market, and highlights two important facts: Chinese equity performance bottomed in both absolute and relative terms at the end of October, and The relative performance trend versus global stocks has now retraced roughly 40% of the decline that occurred in 2018 Chart 1A Sizeable Retracement, Based On A (Largely) False Narrative A Sizeable Retracement, Based On A (Largely) False Narrative A Sizeable Retracement, Based On A (Largely) False Narrative For investors looking for an appropriate allocation to Chinese stocks and China-related assets more generally over the coming 6-12 months, it is important to understand what has driven this post-October outperformance. In our view, it is only the January surge in credit growth that has brought the first concrete sign that Chinese domestic demand will eventually bottom, meaning that China plays have been rallying for the past five months on a largely false narrative. This significantly complicates the cyclical investment outlook, even under the assumption of an imminent trade deal with the U.S. As we will detail below, several factors argue against an immediate shift to overweight, but we agree that investors should put Chinese investable stocks on upgrade watch. We will be watching closely over the next few months for confirmation that above-average credit growth will be sustained, and that the outlook for Chinese earnings is stabilizing. Dissecting The Rally: Mostly Driven By Trade Optimism, Not Easing During the week of October 29th, the equity market was buoyed somewhat by a statement emerging from the late-October politburo meeting. The statement cited the need for the government to take “more timely steps” to counter increasing downward pressure on the economy, which catalyzed a 6% bounce in investable stocks (3% for the domestic market) by Thursday, November 1st. However, to most investors, news of a much more significant event came on Friday, November 2nd: President Trump was looking to make a deal with China at the late-November G20 meeting in Argentina, and had asked key officials to begin drafting potential terms.1 The investable market rallied over 3% on the day in response to the news, and continued to rise until Monday December 3rd, the day after the 3-month trade talk agreement was struck. Chart 1 shows that while investible stocks nearly hit a new 2018 low in December, this was due to a significant sell off in global stocks: relative performance was flat during this period, and resumed its uptrend once global stocks began to rise. Chart 2 provides confirmation that trade talks have been the primary driver behind the rally in China-related assets as well. The chart shows the BCA Market-Based China Growth Indicator alongside a diffusion index of its 17 components, with the vertical line denoting the point where the prospect of a deal became public. The Fed’s shift to a more dovish posture following its December rate hike has certainly helped propel the global rally in risky assets, but Chart 2 makes it clear that a shift in the outlook for trade between the U.S. and China has been the more important factor driving the prices of China-related assets over the past few months. Chart 2Trump's Desire For A Deal Was The Turning Point For The Market Trump's Desire For A Deal Was The Turning Point For The Market Trump's Desire For A Deal Was The Turning Point For The Market In terms of its relative importance for the Chinese economy, the focus of investors on trade is mostly wrongheaded. Trade is important to China’s economy, but the domestic demand trend is a far more important driver for the fundamental performance of China-related assets. We have highlighted over the past year that investor attention has been focused on the wrong factor, underscoring the rally in Chinese stock prices over the past few months has been driven by a largely false narrative. From Trade, To Credit Chart 3 compares our leading indicator for the Chinese economy with a measure of coincident economic activity, and highlights that the sharp slowdown in growth that has occurred over the past few months represents a reversion to a level that would be more consistent with that of our leading indicator (which has been pointing to weaker economic activity for the better part of the past 18 months). In fact, Chart 3 implies that actual growth is still stronger than what monetary conditions, money, and credit growth would imply, meaning that a further slowdown should be expected over the coming several months. Chart 3Economic Activity Is Recoupling With Our Leading Indicator Economic Activity Is Recoupling With Our Leading Indicator Economic Activity Is Recoupling With Our Leading Indicator However, judging by January’s credit release, this further slowdown in growth may occur against the backdrop of a durable uptrend in our leading indicator. Our calculation of adjusted total social financing grew by nearly 5 trillion RMB in January, a very substantial rise that has seldom occurred over the past few years (Chart 4). Legitimate questions about the seasonal effects of the Lunar New Year remain, but Chart 5 shows that the January data was large enough to cause a visible tick higher in the YoY growth rate, caused a sharp rise in our ratio of new credit to GDP, and occurred alongside an easing in the contraction of shadow credit as a percent of total credit. These are clear signs that reluctant policymakers are responding to the need to stabilize a weak economy. Chart 4A Very Strong Surge In January Credit... A Very Strong Surge In January Credit... A Very Strong Surge In January Credit... Chart 5...Has Led To A Visible Uptick In Annual Growth ...Has Led To A Visible Uptick In Annual Growth ...Has Led To A Visible Uptick In Annual Growth The magnitude of the January surge suggests that there is now a legitimate basis to forecast an eventual bottom in Chinese domestic demand. Our December 5 Weekly Report outlined our key views for 2019,2 and in it we noted that “our base case view is that growth will modestly firm in the second half of 2019, which would provide a somewhat stronger demand backdrop for commodities and emerging economies that sell goods to China”. The odds of a firming in growth have certainly gone up as a result of January’s data, although it remains unclear how strong the upturn in credit growth will ultimately be over the course of 2019. This, along with the desynchronizing effect of trade front-running and a truce-driven rally in Chinese stocks, significantly muddles the 6-12 month investment strategy outlook. From Credit, To Investment Strategy We noted in our December key views report that a tactical overweight stance towards Chinese stocks was probably warranted over the coming three months, in recognition of the fact that investors could bid up the market in the lead-up to a possible trade deal with the U.S. We argued that the conditions for a cyclical overweight stance (6-12 months) were not yet present but could emerge sometime this year, particularly if money & credit growth begin to pick up. Is the January surge in adjusted total social financing a sign that investors should increase their allocation to Chinese equities today? We agree that investors should put Chinese investable stocks on upgrade watch for the next few months, but three factors continue to argue against an immediate shift: Investors appear to have bid up Chinese stocks assuming not only that the trade deal with the U.S. will occur, but that it will result in a durable resolution to the dispute (including, presumably, the rolling back of all tariffs that have been imposed). Even under the assumption that a deal does occur, it may be less comprehensive than investors are assuming and could still cause some lasting negative implications for global trade. While the odds of a credit overshoot have legitimately risen,3 January’s credit number is only one data point and the month-over-month change in credit is always abnormally strong in the first month of the year. At a minimum, investors should wait until the February credit data is released in mid-March to judge whether a higher pace of credit growth will be sustained over the course of the year. The recent quarrel between Premier Li Keqiang and the PBOC over whether the January credit spike represented “flood irrigation-style” stimulus suggests that policymakers are still somewhat reluctant to significantly boost credit,4 underscoring the need to monitor whether the recent pace of growth will be sustained. As first highlighted in Chart 3 above, the inflection point in credit growth implies that economic activity will improve at some point in the months ahead, but the current pace of money & credit growth suggests that both activity and, crucially, the level of earnings are facing a “catch up” period of potentially material weakness before they durably bottom. Chart 6 illustrates this potential weakness by comparing the current circumstance of our leading economic indicator, our measure of coincident economic activity, and the level of forward earnings to the 2015/2016 episode. The chart shows that by comparison to today, the 2015/2016 episode had clearer sequencing: our leading indicator fell, coincident activity followed, and stock prices bottomed only once forward earnings had contracted materially. Chart 6In 2015/2016, Our Leading Indicator Led Activity, Earnings, And Relative Stock Performance In 2015/2016, Our Leading Indicator Led Activity, Earnings, And Relative Stock Performance In 2015/2016, Our Leading Indicator Led Activity, Earnings, And Relative Stock Performance This time around, our leading indicator peaked in Q1 2017, but activity remained stronger than our indicator would have suggested even though it peaked relatively soon afterwards. Incoming data over the past three months suggest that economic activity is now catching up to the downside, and forward earnings remain elevated. Chart 7 shows that Chinese net earnings revisions remain firmly in negative territory, at levels that have been historically been associated with contracting forward earnings growth. Chart 7Earnings Weakness Looks Set To Continue Earnings Weakness Looks Set To Continue Earnings Weakness Looks Set To Continue Panel 4 of Chart 6 is emblematic of the fact that the recent rally in Chinese relative performance, driven largely by a false narrative, has significantly complicated the cyclical investment outlook. If the January improvement in credit had instead come in late October when Chinese relative performance was near its low, it would have been much easier for us to recommend that investors move to an overweight stance in response to a legitimate fundamental improvement and to take the risk of being somewhat too early. Now, a razor sharp focus on the earnings outlook is necessary, and we are unlikely to recommend an increased allocation to Chinese stocks unless that outlook stabilizes. Table 1 presents one of the tools that we will be using to judge the outlook for earnings, based on a model that we presented in two recent reports.5 The table shows a series of earnings recession probabilities that are based on a variety of credit and exchange rate scenarios and conditional on a material improvement in Chinese exporter sentiment. Light colored cells represent an earnings recession probability of less than 1/3rd, and the circled cell shows roughly where we would be today if the new export order component of the NBS manufacturing PMI were to rise sharply back to its June 2018 level. Table 1Credit Needs To Rise Further And RMB Appreciation Needs To Slow For The Earnings Outlook To Stabilize Dealing With A (Largely) False Narrative Dealing With A (Largely) False Narrative The table makes two key points. First, even given January’s surge, new credit will have to improve relative to GDP over the coming months in order to stabilize the earnings outlook. Second, the more that China’s currency appreciates in response to a trade deal with the U.S., the higher the hurdle rate for credit. Chart 8 shows that CNY-USD is already deviating quite significantly from the level implied by interest rate differentials, suggesting that significant further currency appreciation may not be in the cards. But the bottom line for investors is that a rising currency has the potential to negate some of the reflationary effects of stronger credit, and is a risk that must be monitored alongside the effort to gauge the sustainable rate of credit growth. Chart 8While Policymakers Or Rate Differentials Drive CNY-USD Over The Coming Year? While Policymakers Or Rate Differentials Drive CNY-USD Over The Coming Year? While Policymakers Or Rate Differentials Drive CNY-USD Over The Coming Year? Stay tuned!   Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com     Footnotes 1 Please see “Trump Said To Ask Cabinet To Draft Possible Trade Deal With Xi”, dated November 2, 2018, available at Bloomberg News 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report “2019 Key Views: Four Themes For China In The Coming Year”, dated December 5, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see China Investment Strategy and Geopolitical Strategy Special Report “China: Stimulating Amid The Trade Talks”, dated February 20, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see “Chinese Premier In Rare Spat With Central Bank”, Financial Times. 5 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report “Six Questions About Chinese Stocks”, dated January 16, 2019, and Weekly Report “A Gap In The Bridge”, dated January 30, 2019 available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
On Monday Chinese A-shares surged by nearly 6%, their best daily performance in three years. In many corners of the investment community, EM assets and China related assets have interpreted these developments as a positive omen. Nobody can deny that not…
Regarding the European luxury goods sector, we often get following question: is it, just like the basic resources sector, a direct play on China’s growth cycle? The answer is no. Recently, the connection between the fortunes of ‘soft’ luxury goods brands like…
The chart above shows the short-term credit impulses, expressed in USD terms, for the euro area, U.S., and China through the past twenty years. The comparison reveals that the dominant short-term impulse – the one with the highest amplitude – illustrates the…
Highlights A sooner-than-anticipated end to the Federal Reserve’s balance-sheet runoff should give a welcome boost to international liquidity conditions. Moreover, reflationary efforts in China, cautious global central banks, and easing global financial conditions all point to a rebound in economic surprises. This will support pro-cyclical versus defensive currencies and argues against a strong USD. At this point, it is too early to tell how long a pro-cyclical FX stance will be warranted. Sell NZD/CAD. Feature Since the turn of the year, this publication has argued that a correction in the dollar was increasingly likely, and that the main beneficiaries of this move should be the more pro-cyclical currencies. Because U.S. domestic fundamentals remain much stronger than the rest of the G10’s, our preference has been to favor commodity currencies versus the yen instead of playing dollar weakness outright. This theme remains in place for now. However, we are increasingly concerned about the dollar and think the outperformance of commodity currencies could last longer than originally expected. Essentially, an end to the Federal Reserve’s balance-sheet runoff, more cautious central banks, and easier global financial conditions could set the stage for a significant rebound in commodity currencies. U.S. Excess Reserves Vs. Commodity Currencies Whether it is from Governor Lael Brainard, Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester, or the FOMC minutes, the message is clear: The days of the Fed’s balance sheet runoff are numbered. Ryan Swift, BCA’s Chief U.S. Bond Strategist, has written at length that the Fed’s balance sheet attrition has had a limited direct impact on U.S. growth. However, Ryan and the FOMC members both agree that a smaller balance sheet impacts the ability of the Fed to control the level of the fed funds rate.1 With less excess reserves in the banking system, the New York Fed has to intervene more often to keep the policy rate below its ceiling. This might seem like a very technical point, but it is an important one for many FX markets. Prior to the financial crisis, expanding excess reserves on U.S. commercial banks would coincide with improving dollar-based liquidity. Moreover, since 2011, reserves even lead our financial liquidity index (Chart I-1). Since there is 14 trillion of USD-denominated foreign-currency debt around the world, these fluctuations in U.S. excess reserves, and thus global liquidity, can have an impact on the price of assets most levered to global growth conditions. Chart I-1U.S. Excess Reserves Contribute To The Global Liquidity Backdrop U.S. Excess Reserves Contribute To The Global Liquidity Backdrop U.S. Excess Reserves Contribute To The Global Liquidity Backdrop Chart I-2 illustrates that commodity currencies are indeed very responsive to changes in U.S. excess reserves, particularly when these pro-cyclical currencies are compared to counter-cyclical ones like the JPY. Meanwhile, the trade-weighted dollar tends to move in the opposite direction of excess reserves, reflecting the dollar’s countercyclical nature (Chart I-3). This relationship, however, is not as tight as the one between commodity currencies and the reserves. Chart I-2Improving Growth In Excess Reserves Leads To Stronger Commodity Currencies... Improving Growth In Excess Reserves Leads To Stronger Commodity Currencies... Improving Growth In Excess Reserves Leads To Stronger Commodity Currencies... Chart I-3...And To A Weaker Greenback ...And To A Weaker Greenback ...And To A Weaker Greenback A corollary to the growing consensus within the FOMC to end the balance-sheet runoff sooner than later is that the contraction in excess reserves will end. A bottoming in the rate of change of the reserves is consistent with a rebound in commodity currencies, especially against the yen, and with a correction in the dollar. Gold prices are very sensitive to global liquidity conditions. Today, not only is the yellow metal moving closer to the US$1350-US$1370 zone that marked its previous highs in 2016, 2017, and 2018, but also, the gold rally is broadening, as exemplified by the advance / decline line of gold prices versus nine currencies, which is making new highs (Chart I-4, top panel). This indicates that the precious metal could punch above this resistance level. Gold is probably sniffing out an improvement in global liquidity conditions. Since rising gold prices tend to lead EM high-yield bond prices higher (Chart I-4, bottom panel), investors need to monitor this move closely. Chart I-4A Broadening Gold Rally Is Consistent With Easing Liquidity Conditions A Broadening Gold Rally Is Consistent With Easing Liquidity Conditions A Broadening Gold Rally Is Consistent With Easing Liquidity Conditions Bottom Line: The growing chorus among FOMC members singing the praises of the end of the Fed’s balance-sheet runoff points toward a significant slowdown in U.S. excess reserves attrition. While this may not be a significant development for U.S. domestic economic variables, it should help liquidity conditions outside the U.S. While this could weigh on the greenback, the probability is higher that it will help commodity currencies in the short run, especially against the yen. Global Policy And Commodity Currencies In China, new total social financing hit CNY 4.6 trillion in January, well above the normal seasonal strength. Accordingly, the Chinese fiscal and credit impulse is starting to improve (Chart I-5). While this rebound is currently embryonic, our Geopolitical Strategy team has argued that a massive increase in Chinese credit this January would indicate a change in Beijing’s economic priorities.2 The Chinese government may be trying to limit the downside to growth, and reflation may expand. This would result in a further pick-up in the credit impulse. Chart I-5The Chinese Credit Impulse May Be Bottoming The Chinese Credit Impulse May Be Bottoming The Chinese Credit Impulse May Be Bottoming Easing EM financial conditions – courtesy of rebounding EM high-yield bond prices – and rising Chinese credit flows should ultimately lead to improving growth conditions across EM. As a result, our diffusion index of EM economic activity – which tallies improvements across 23 EM economic variables – should bounce from currently very depressed levels. Such a recovery is normally associated with a weaker trade-weighted dollar, a stronger euro, rising commodity prices and rising commodity currencies – both against the USD and the JPY (Chart I-6). Chart I-6IF EM Growth Conditions Improve, This Will Have A Profound Impact On the FX Market IF EM Growth Conditions Improve, This Will Have A Profound Impact On the FX Market IF EM Growth Conditions Improve, This Will Have A Profound Impact On the FX Market We can expand this line of thinking to the global economy. Our Leading Economic Indicator Diffusion Index, which compares the number of countries with a rising LEI versus those with a falling LEI, already rebounded five months ago. Historically, this signals an upcoming rebound in the BCA global LEI. Additionally, other major central banks are also sounding an increasingly cautious tone. This should accentuate the easing in global financial conditions that began in late December, creating another support for global growth. However, global investors remain very pessimistic on global growth, as exemplified by this week’s very poor global growth expectations computed from the German ZEW survey (Chart I-7). This dichotomy between depressed growth expectations and burgeoning green shoots suggests that risk asset prices have room to rally further in the coming quarter or two. Chart I-7Investors Remain Pessimistic About Growth, Yet Green Shoots Are Popping Up Investors Remain Pessimistic About Growth, Yet Green Shoots Are Popping Up Investors Remain Pessimistic About Growth, Yet Green Shoots Are Popping Up These dynamics are positive for commodity currencies and negative for the dollar. This cycle, the pattern has been for the trade-weighted dollar to correct and hypersensitive pro-cyclical currencies like the AUD and the NZD to perk up only after our Global LEI diffusion index has trough, and around the same time as risk asset prices rebound (Chart I-8). Chart I-8Thinking About Growth, Asset Prices, The Dollar, And Commodity Currencies Thinking About Growth, Asset Prices, The Dollar, And Commodity Currencies Thinking About Growth, Asset Prices, The Dollar, And Commodity Currencies Treasury yields will most likely also be forced higher by improving risk asset prices and economic activity, especially as bond market flows suggest T-notes currently are a coiled spring. The U.S. Treasury International Capital System data released at the end of last week was very revealing. The press emphasized the large-scale selling of Treasurys from the Cayman Islands – interpreted as selling by hedge funds. Missing from the picture was the enormous buying from these same players over the past 12 months, which corresponded with falling yields and a rallying trade-weighted dollar (Chart I-9). It was a sign of growing fear that pushed up the price of bonds. Chart I-9Hedge Funds Have Room To Liquidate Their Treasury Holdings Hedge Funds Have Room To Liquidate Their Treasury Holdings Hedge Funds Have Room To Liquidate Their Treasury Holdings If, as we expect, global growth beats dismal expectations and risk assets rebound further, the countercyclical dollar should correct. This will further ease global financial conditions and justifying even more a wholesale liquidation of stale bond holdings by hedge funds and further pushing the Fed toward resuming its hiking campaign faster than the market is currently anticipating. This combination is highly bond bearish. Unsurprisingly, this means that the yen, which normally trades closely in line with U.S. Treasury yields, is likely to weaken. Hence, USD/JPY and EUR/JPY could experience significant upside over the coming months (Chart I-10). Chart I-10A Bond Bearish Backdrop Is Also Bad For The Yen A Bond Bearish Backdrop Is Also Bad For The Yen A Bond Bearish Backdrop Is Also Bad For The Yen Bottom Line: Global growth conditions are evolving away from a dollar-bullish, commodity currency-bearish backdrop. Not only is the dollar-based liquidity set to improve, but China is also releasing the proverbial brake. Additionally, a generally more cautious tone among global central banks will contribute to easing global financial conditions. These developments are likely to result in a period of positive global economic surprises – and an environment where the greenback weakens and where pro-cyclical currencies outperform. But For How Long? It remains a question mark as to how long this pro-growth cycle will last. Parts of the dynamics described above are very self-defeating. If global growth conditions and asset prices rebound strongly, the Fed will be in a better position to increase rates once again. This could quickly curtail the improvement in global financial conditions and favor a strong dollar. Additionally, it is not clear how far Beijing will go in terms of pushing reflation through the Chinese economy. Chinese policymakers are worried about too-pronounced a slowdown but are equally worried about too much debt in their economy, and do not want to repeat the debt binge witnessed in 2010 and 2016. Therefore, they may be much quicker to lift their foot off the gas pedal. This conflicting attitude is best illustrated by recent opposing remarks made by Chinese policymakers. On the one hand, Premier Li-Keqiang expressed concerns regarding the January credit surge, suggesting that some Chinese policymakers are already trying to dampen expectations that stimulus will be substantial. On the other hand, the PBoC sounded utterly unconcerned.  Moreover, as our Emerging Markets Strategy service highlights, EM earnings are likely to continue to suffer from the lagged effect of China’s previous tightening. This creates the risk that even if global growth rebounds, EM stock prices, EM FX and all related plays do not follow. This would maintain the dollar-bullish environment and hurt pro-cyclical commodity currencies while supporting the yen. Despite these risks, it is nonetheless too early to tell how short-lived this period of dollar softness and commodity currency strength will be.  After all, the dollar is a momentum currency. If the dollar weakness gathers steam, a virtuous cycle could emerge: improving global growth begets a weaker dollar, a weaker dollar begets easier global financial conditions, easier global financial conditions beget stronger growth, and so on.          Gold prices may hold the key to cut this Gordian knot. If gold cannot maintain its recent gains, then the pro-cyclical positioning will not be valid for more than three months. However, if gold prices can remain at elevated levels or even rally further, then this pro-cyclical positioning will stay appropriate for at least six to nine months. What is clear is that for now, buying risk in the FX space makes sense. Bottom Line: At this point, too many crosscurrents are at play to evaluate confidently the length of any rally in pro-cyclical currencies relative to defensive ones. Since easier financial conditions ultimately force the Fed to resume hiking and since it is far from clear how committed to reflation Chinese policymakers are, our base case remains that this move will last a quarter or so. However, the fact that a falling dollar further eases global financial conditions, fomenting greater global growth in the process, suggests that a virtuous circle that create additional dollar downside can also emerge. Gold may provide early signals as to when investors should once again adopt a defensive posture. Sell NZD/CAD Something exceptional happened three months ago. For the second time in 25 years, Canadian policy rates fell in line with New Zealand’s. As Chart I-11 shows, this last happened from 1998 to 1999, when NZD/CAD subsequently depreciated 26%. However, today Canada’s and New Zealand’s current accounts are roughly in line while back then New Zealand had a substantially larger deficit, such a decline is unlikely to repeat itself. Nonetheless, we posit that NZD/CAD possesses ample downside. Chart I-11Bad News For NZD/CAD Bad News For NZD/CAD Bad News For NZD/CAD First, like in 1998-‘99, the real trade-weighted NZD exhibits a larger premium to its fair value than the real trade-weighted CAD (Chart I-12). In fact, the relative premium of the NZD to the CAD is roughly comparable as it was back then. Moreover, our Intermediate-Term Timing Model for NZD/CAD reinforces this message as it suggests that short-term valuations are also stretched (Chart I-13). Chart I-12NZD/CAD Is Pricey... NZD/CAD Is Pricey... NZD/CAD Is Pricey... Chart I-13...And Our Short-Term Valuation Metric Agrees ...And Our Short-Term Valuation Metric Agrees ...And Our Short-Term Valuation Metric Agrees Second, the New Zealand economy is currently weaker than that of Canada. Relative consumer confidence and business confidence have been in a downward trend for three years. Historically, while NZD/CAD can deviate from such dynamics, ultimately this cross tends to revert toward relative growth trends. The recent collapse in New Zealand’s economic surprises relative to Canada’s suggests that the timing for such a reversion is increasingly ripe, as there is currently scope for investors to discount a more hawkish Bank of Canada than Reserve Bank of New Zealand. Indeed, 1-year/1-year forward yields in Canada have fallen much more relative to the BoC overnight rate than similar forwards have fallen relative to the RBNZ policy rate. Third, New Zealand real bond yields have collapsed relative to Canada’s. As Chart I-14 illustrates, NZD/CAD tends to follow real yield differentials. So far, NZD/CAD has been less-weak than the real-yield gap would imply, but from late 2003 to early 2005 this cross also managed to defy gravity for an extended time, only to ultimately succumb to the inevitable. Chart I-14Falling Real Yield Spreads Will Weigh On NZD/CAD Falling Real Yield Spreads Will Weigh On NZD/CAD Falling Real Yield Spreads Will Weigh On NZD/CAD Fourth, as the top panel of Chart I-15 illustrates, the performance of kiwi stocks relative to Canadian equities tend to lead NZD/CAD, especially at tops. While tentative, the ratio of New Zealand to Canadian stocks seems to have peaked in early 2016. Supporting this judgment, kiwi profits have fallen relative to their Canadian counterparts and relative net earnings revisions are following a similar path – a move normally associated with a weaker NZD/CAD (Chart I-15, bottom panel). Chart I-15Relative Stock Market Dynamics Look Poor Relative Stock Market Dynamics Look Poor Relative Stock Market Dynamics Look Poor Fifth, terms of trades are becoming a growing headwind for NZD/CAD (Chart I-16). The price of agricultural commodities relative to energy products drives this pair, reflecting the comparative advantages of the two countries. BCA’s Commodity & Energy service is currently much more positive on the outlook for the energy complex than the agricultural complex. NZD/CAD is a perfect instrument to implement this view, especially now that the NZD suffers from a very rare negative carry against the CAD. Chart I-16A Negative Tems-Of-Trade Shock For NZD/CAD A Negative Tems-Of-Trade Shock For NZD/CAD A Negative Tems-Of-Trade Shock For NZD/CAD Bottom Line: NZD/CAD is set to experience an important fall. The NZD currently suffers from a very rare negative carry against the CAD. The last time this happened, a large depreciation ensued. Moreover, valuations and economic trends argue in favor of shorting this pair. Finally, relative bond yields, equity dynamics and term-of-trade outlooks also point to a lower NZD/CAD. Sell at 0.900, with a stop at 0.927 for a target of 0.800.     Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, titled “Caught Offside”, dated February 12, 2019, and the U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, titled “The Great Unwind”, dated September 19, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report titled “China: Stimulating Amid The Trade Talks,” dated February 20, 2019 available at gps.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.S. has been mixed: Capacity Utilization underperformed expectations, coming in at 78.2%. However, Michigan Consumer Sentiment outperformed expectations, coming in at 95.5. Finally, the NAHB Housing Market Index also surprised to the upside, coming in at 62. The DXY has fallen by 0.2% this week. We remain bullish on the U.S. dollar on a cyclical basis, given that the Fed will end up hiking rates more than expected. However, the current easing of monetary conditions by Chinese authorities should tactically hurt the dollar and help commodity currencies. Moreover, the fact that the Fed announced that it might bring about an end to the balance sheet runoff sooner than expected will further help global liquidity conditions. The real question now is how long the coming dollar correction will last? Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Global Liquidity Trends Support The Dollar, But... - January 25, 2019 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 Recent data in the euro area has been mixed: The annual growth in construction output underperformed expectations, coming in at 0.7%. The current account balance also surprised to the downside, coming in at 33 billion euros. However, the Zew Survey – Economic sentiment, though negative, surprised to the upside, coming in at -16.6. EUR/USD has risen by 0.4% this week. We remain bearish on EUR/USD on a cyclical basis; given that, we expect real rates to rise much faster in the U.S. than in the euro area. This is because we think that the U.S. economy  will remain stronger than Europe’s, a consequence of the fact that the former has experienced a significant private sector deleveraging since 2008 while the latter has not. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 2019 Key Views: The Xs And The Currency Market - December 7, 2018 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan has been mixed: Machinery orders yearly growth outperformed to the upside, coming in at 0.9%. Hurt by a very sharp contraction in shipments to China, the yearly growth of Japanese exports also surprised to the downside, coming in at -8.4%. However, imports yearly growth outperformed to the upside, coming in at -0.6%. USD/JPY has risen by 0.2% this week. We are bearish towards the yen on a tactical basis as the current upturn in liquidity conditions should hurt safe haven currencies. Moreover, reflationary efforts by Chinese Authorities should provide a boon to risk assets and make low yield currencies like the yen even less attractive. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Yen Fireworks - January 4, 2019 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. has been strong: Retail sales and retail sales ex-fuel yearly growth both outperformed expectations, coming in at 4.2% and 4.1%. Moreover, the yearly growth of average hourly earnings excluding bonus also surprised positively, coming in at 3.4%. GBP/USD has risen by 0.9% this week. We expect that a soft Brexit deal remains the most probable outcome out of Westminster. Thus, this factor, along with how cheap the pound is, make us bullish on the pound on a long-term basis. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Deadlock In Westminster - January 18, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 Recent data in Australia has been mixed: The wage price index yearly growth underperformed expectations, coming in at 0.5%. However, the employment change surprised to the upside, coming in at 39.1 thousand in January. The participation rate also surprised positively, coming in at 65.7%. AUD/USD has fallen 0.7% this week. We are positive on the AUD on a tactical basis. Global monetary conditions have eased thanks to the rising Chinese credit and more cautious global central banks. Moreover, the announcement that the Fed is looking to halt its balance sheet reduction sooner than expected has provided further relief. However, the fundamentals of Australia remain poor, and thus long-term investors should continue to avoid this currency, Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 CAD And AUD: Jumping Higher To Plunge Deeper - February 1, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 The recent data in New Zealand has been mixed: The business PMI in January fell to 53.1. However, the input of the producer price index on a quarter-over-quarter basis surprised to the upside, coming in at 1.6%. NZD/USD depreciated by 0.7% this week. While NZD/USD might have some upside in the short term, we remain bearish on the NZD/USD on a cyclical basis. Both the short-term and long-term interest rates in New Zealand are lower than in the U.S., while the real trade-weighted NZD is trading at 7% premium to its fair value. Thus, the kiwi is relatively overvalued which means that any tactical upside of NZD won’t have legs.  Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 The recent data in Canada has been neutral: The December new housing price index stays unchanged at 0%, on both month-over-month and year-over-year basis. The CAD has risen by 0.2% against USD this week. As BCA anticipates oil prices to strengthen more, we also expect the CAD to outperform the AUD and the NZD over the next few months. However, we remain bearish on CAD/USD on a structural basis. The unhealthy housing market in Canada could be a potential risk to the Canadian financial industry and the economy as a whole. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 CAD And AUD: Jumping Higher To Plunge Deeper - February 1, 2019 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 CHF Technicals 1 CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 CHF Technicals 2 CHF Technicals 2 The recent data in Switzerland has been positive: The December exports increased to 19,682 million, while the imports increased to 16,639 million. The trade balance in December thus increased to 3,043 million, surprised to the upside. EUR/CHF has been flat this week. We are bullish on EUR/CHF on a cyclical basis. Easy global financial conditions should hurt safe haven currencies like the franc. Moreover, we believe that the SNB will continue to play a heavily dovish bias in order to counteract the fall in inflation caused by the surge in the franc last year. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Waiting For A Real Deal - December 7, 2018 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 Recent data in Norway has been positive: January trade balance increased to 28.8 million, from previous 25 billion. USD/NOK was flat this week. In general, we are overweight the krone, since we believe the pickup in oil prices will help the Norwegian economy, ultimately boosting the performance of NOK against the EUR,  the SEK, the AUD and the NZD. Moreover, the NOK is undervalued and currently trading at a large discount to its fair value, which could further lift the performance of the NOK on a cyclical basis. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Global Liquidity Trends Support The Dollar, But... - January 25, 2019 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 Recent data in Sweden has been negative: January unemployment rate has increased to 6.5%. Moreover, the monthly inflation rate comes in at -1%, surprising to the downside. USD/SEK rallied by more than 1% this week. We remain bearish on EUR/SEK since the SEK is currently trading at a discount to its long-term fair value. Moreover, there are many signs pointing to a Swedish economy rebound. The negative rate in the country and easy financial conditions could stimulate the domestic demand and if global growth perks up, the weak inflation readings will prove transitory. The Riksbank has already abandoned it pledge to suppress the krona and it will move this year to lift rates again. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Global Liquidity Trends Support The Dollar, But... - January 25, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights Please note that analysis on India is published below. Even if the recent upturn in the Chinese credit impulse is sustained, there will likely still be a six- to nine-month lag between the impulse’s trough and the bottom in the mainland’s business cycle. EM corporate earnings cycles typically lag Chinese stimulus efforts by about nine months. Therefore, EM profits will be contracting in the first three quarters of 2019. This will short-circuit the current rebound in EM share prices. EM equity valuations are not cheap enough to shield stocks from profit contraction. Feature China’s credit growth was very strong in January. We contend that even if the upturn in the credit impulse proves to be persistent, there will likely be a six- to nine-month lag between its low point and the bottom in the mainland’s business cycle. Chart I-1 demonstrates that the credit impulse leads both nominal manufacturing output growth and the manufacturing PMI’s import subcomponent by roughly nine months. Chinese imports are the most pertinent variable to gauge China’s economic impact on the rest of the world. Chart I-1China: Credit Impulse Leads Business Cycle By Nine Months China: Credit Impulse Leads Business Cycle By Nine Months China: Credit Impulse Leads Business Cycle By Nine Months In the meantime, will financial markets exposed to Chinese growth look through the valley of the ongoing growth deceleration and continue to rally? Or will they experience a major relapse in the coming months? In our opinion, corporate profits will be the key to broader financial market performance. So long as corporate profits do not shrink, investors will likely look beyond weak macro data, and any weakness in stocks will be minor. However, if corporate profits contract in the next nine months, then share prices will plummet anew. EM Profits Are Heading Into Contraction Chart I-2 illustrates that China’s credit impulse leads both EM and Chinese corporate earnings per share (EPS) by at least nine months and that it currently foreshadows EPS contraction in the first three quarters of 2019. Even if the recent upturn in the credit impulse is sustained, EM and Chinese EPS growth will likely bottom only in August – while they are in negative territory. Chart I-2EM EPS Is Beginning To Contract EM EPS Is Beginning To Contract EM EPS Is Beginning To Contract EM corporate earnings growth has already dropped to zero and will turn negative in 2019. Chart I-3A reveals that EPS in U.S. dollar terms are already contracting in six out of 10 sectors – industrials, consumer staples, consumer discretionary, telecom, utilities and health care. Chart I-3AEM EPS By Sector EM EPS By Sector EM EPS By Sector Chart I-3BEM EPS By Sector EM EPS By Sector EM EPS By Sector EPS growth has not yet turned negative for financials, technology, energy and materials (Chart I-3B). Notably, corporate earnings within these four sectors collectively account for 70% of EM total corporate earnings, as shown in Table I-1. Chart I- Over the course of 2019, these sectors’ EPS are also set to shrink: Technology (accounts for 20% of MSCI EM corporate earnings): NAND semiconductor prices have been plunging for some time, and DRAM prices are also beginning to drop (Chart I-4). This reflects broad-based weakness in global trade – global auto sales are shrinking for the first time since the 2008 global financial crisis, global semiconductor sales are relapsing and global mobile phones shipments are falling (Chart I-5). Chart I-4Semiconductor Prices Are Falling Semiconductor Prices Are Falling Semiconductor Prices Are Falling Chart I-5Broad-Based Weakness In Global Trade Broad-Based Weakness In Global Trade Broad-Based Weakness In Global Trade Semiconductors accounted for 77% of Samsung’s operating profits in the first three quarters of 2018, suggesting the potential drop in DRAM prices will be devastating for its profits. Next week we will publish a Special Report on Korea and discuss the outlook for both semiconductors and Korean profits in more detail. In addition, the ongoing contraction in Taiwanese exports of electronics parts confirms downside risks to EM tech earnings (please refer to top panel of Chart I-3B). In brief, the ongoing decline in semiconductor prices will bring about EPS contraction in the EM technology sector. Financials/Banks (financials make up 31% of EM corporate earnings): Banks’ profits often correlate with fluctuations in economic activity, because the latter drive non-performing loan (NPL) cycles (Chart I-6). NPL cycles outside Brazil, Russia and India – where the banking systems have already gone through substantial NPL recognition and provisioning – will deteriorate, and push banks to increase their provisions. The latter will be a major drag on EM banks’ profits. Chart I-6EM Banks EPS And Economic Activity EM Banks EPS And Economic Activity EM Banks EPS And Economic Activity Regarding Chinese banks in particular, if the credit revival in January is sustained, it would strongly suggest that the government is resorting to its old, credit-driven growth playbook. Following 10 years of an enormous credit frenzy and a 20-year capital spending boom, it is currently difficult to find many financially viable projects. Hence, a renewed credit binge will once again be associated with further capital misallocation and more NPLs. Many of these projects will fail to generate sufficient cash flow to service debt. NPLs will thus rise considerably and the need to raise capital will dilute the banks’ existing shareholders. Of course, this will happen with a time lag. Chart I-7 shows that the gap between Chinese banks’ EPS and non-diluted profits has once again widened, and that EPS are beginning to contract. Chart I-7Chinese Banks: Earnings Dilution Chinese Banks: Earnings Dilution Chinese Banks: Earnings Dilution Chinese banks could issue perpetual bonds – discussed in great detail in last week’s report – to recapitalize themselves. Nevertheless, this will be negative for existing shareholders. In a nutshell, despite low multiples, share prices of Chinese banks will drop because more credit expansion amid the lingering credit bubble is negative for existing shareholders. The basis is that it will ultimately lead to their dilution. Chinese banks make up 4.5% of the MSCI’s EM equity market cap and 10% of aggregate EM profits. Hence, their EPS contraction will have a non-trivial impact on overall EM EPS. Resource sectors (energy and materials together make 20% of EM corporate earnings): The ongoing slowdown in China will exert renewed selling pressure in commodities markets. As shown in Chart I-9 on page 8, base metals prices lag the turning points in the Chinese credit impulse by several months and are still at risk of renewed price decline. Hence, profits of firms in the materials sector are at risk. Energy companies’ trailing EPS growth is still positive because the late-2018 carnage in oil prices has not yet filtered through to corporate earnings announcements (Chart I-3B on page 3). More importantly, the recent oil price rebound can be attributed to both Saudi Arabia’s output cuts as well as stronger demand – in the form of a surge in Chinese imports of oil and petroleum products. Chart I-8 illustrates that growth rates of China’s intake of oil and related products approached zero when crude prices were rising but has dramatically accelerated following their plunge. This is consistent with China’s pattern of buying commodities on dips. The point is that the upside in oil prices will be capped by China, which will likely moderate its oil purchases going forward, as crude prices have recently rallied. Chart I-8China And Oil bca.ems_wr_2019_02_21_s1_c8 bca.ems_wr_2019_02_21_s1_c8 Bottom Line: EM profit cycles lag Chinese’s stimulus by about nine months. EM profits will be contracting in the first three quarters of 2019. This will short-circuit the current rebound in EM share prices. China’s Credit Cycles And Financial Markets What has been the relationship between China’s credit cycle and related financial markets over the past 10 years? The time lag between turning points in China’s credit impulse and relevant financial markets can be anywhere from zero to 18 months. Chart I-9 illustrates historical time lags between the Chinese credit impulse on the one hand and EM share prices, base metals prices and the global manufacturing PMI on the other. The time lag has not been consistent over time. Chart I-9Chinese Credit Impulse And Financial Markets: Understanding Time Lags Chinese Credit Impulse And Financial Markets: Understanding Time Lags Chinese Credit Impulse And Financial Markets: Understanding Time Lags In late 2015-early 2016, the rebound in China’s credit impulse led financial markets by six months. At the recent market peak in January 2018, the credit impulse led financial markets and the global manufacturing PMI by about 18 months. In the meantime, in the 2012-13 mini cycle, EM share prices and commodities markets did not rally much, despite the meaningful upturn in China’s credit impulse. Finally, at the 2010-2011 peak, the credit impulse led EM stocks and base metals prices by 12 months. In short, the credit impulse led those financial markets by a few months to as much as a year and a half. Further, not only do time lags to the stimulus vary, but the impact on both economic activity and financial markets varies as well. This is because both economic activity and financial markets are driven by human psychology and behavior; iterations in stimulus, economic activity and financial markets are chaotic and complex in nature and do not follow well-defined patterns. Given the poor state of sentiment among Chinese consumers, business managers and entrepreneurs, more stimulus and more time may be required to turn the mainland’s business cycle this time around. Besides, unlike in previous episodes, there has not been any stimulus for the property market and no tax reductions on auto sales. Finally, although China and the U.S. may strike a deal on trade, it is unlikely to be a comprehensive agreement that is sustainable in the long run. This would be consistent with our Geopolitical Strategy team’s view that China and the U.S. are in a long-term and broad geopolitical confrontation – not a trade war. The trade war and tariffs are just one dimension of this. Hence, Chinese consumers and businesses, as well as the global business community may well look through this potential deal and not significantly alter their cautious behavior, at least for some time. In other words, the genie of geopolitical confrontation is out of the bottle, and the presidents of the U.S. and China are unlikely to succeed in putting it back. Bottom Line: Turning points in China’s credit impulse generally lead financial markets exposed to Chinese growth by several months. Given that the improvement in the credit impulse is both very recent and modest, odds are that China-related plays including EM risk assets will go through a major selloff before putting in a durable bottom.1 EM Equity Valuations In terms of the ability of EM stocks to withstand profit contraction, would cheap valuations not shield share prices from a considerable drop? We do not think EM equities are cheap; their valuations are neutral. Hence, there is no real valuation cushion in EM stocks to help them endure a period of negative EPS growth. We have written frequently about valuations and will touch on the topic only briefly here. Market cap-based multiples indeed appear very low. However, some segments of the EM universe such as Chinese banks and state-owned companies in Russia, Brazil, China and India have had low multiples for years. In other words, they are a value trap and their multiples are low for a reason. We elaborated above why Chinese banks are chronically “cheap”. For many other companies, low multiples are due to structural issues such as the lack of focus on profitability and shareholder value, or the high cyclicality of profits. Many of these stocks have large market caps, which pull down the EM index’s aggregate multiple. To remove market-cap bias, we have calculated 20% trimmed-mean multiples by ranking 50 MSCI EM industry groups (sub-sectors) and cutting off the top and bottom 10%. Then, we calculate the equal-weighted average of the remaining 80% of the sub-sectors. We did this calculation for the following five ratios: trailing P/E, forward P/E, price-to-cash earnings, price-to-book value and price-to-dividend. Then, we combined them into a composite valuation indicator (Chart I-10, top panel). This indicator shows that EM equity valuations are neutral. Chart I-10EM Equity Valuations In Absolute Terms bca.ems_wr_2019_02_21_s1_c10 bca.ems_wr_2019_02_21_s1_c10 In addition, we calculated the median and equal-weighted composite valuation indicators (Chart I-10, middle and bottom panels). They also remove market cap bias and tell the same message: EM stocks are trading close to their fair value. EM equities are also close to their historical average relative to developed markets (DM). Chart I-11 illustrates relative EM versus DM valuation indicators based on 20%-trimmed mean, median and equal-weighted metrics. Chart I-11EM Equity Valuations Versus DM bca.ems_wr_2019_02_21_s1_c11 bca.ems_wr_2019_02_21_s1_c11 In sum, EM valuations are not cheap neither in absolute terms, nor relative to DM. According to both measures, valuations are neutral. Hence, valuations will not prevent share prices from falling as profits begin to contract. This is why we continue to recommend a defensive strategy for absolute-return investors, and we continue to underweight EM versus DM within a global equity portfolio. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com India: Beware Of Rural Growth Lapse Indian share prices are weak and are underperforming the emerging markets benchmark in U.S. dollar terms (Chart II-1, top panel). Small cap stocks are in a full-fledged bear market (Chart II-1, bottom panel). Chart II-1Indian Stocks Are Weak Indian Stocks Are Weak Indian Stocks Are Weak The latest earnings season turned out to be disappointing. Many companies missed their earnings estimates. Chart II-2 shows that net profit margins of listed non-financial companies have turned down and overall EPS growth is weakening. Chart II-2Indian Corporate Profits Are Sluggish Indian Corporate Profits Are Sluggish Indian Corporate Profits Are Sluggish Disappointing corporate earnings are confirmed by macro data as well. Chart II-3A shows that manufacturing production is decelerating and intermediate goods production is contracting. Further, sales of two-wheelers, three-wheelers, passenger and commercial vehicles, as well as tractors, are either slowing or contracting (Chart II-3B). Chart II-3ACyclical Spending Is Decelerating Cyclical Spending Is Decelerating Cyclical Spending Is Decelerating Chart II-3BCyclical Spending Is Decelerating Cyclical Spending Is Decelerating Cyclical Spending Is Decelerating This weakness emanates from rural areas. The basis is that food prices have been falling since the summer of 2018 – and are deflating for the first time since the early 2000s. This is hurting rural incomes. Several indicators confirm considerable weakness in rural income growth and the latter’s underperformance versus urban income and spending: The top panel of Chart II-4 illustrates that our proxy for spending in rural areas relative to urban areas has deteriorated massively along with the decline in Indian food prices. Chart II-4Rural Spending Is Weaker Than Urban One Rural Spending Is Weaker Than Urban One Rural Spending Is Weaker Than Urban One This measure is calculated as revenue growth of four rural-exposed listed companies minus the revenue growth of four urban-exposed listed companies. In both cases, the companies largely operate in the consumer goods space. Credit growth in rural areas has lagged that of urban areas, explaining the underperformance of rural spending (Chart II-4, bottom panel). Corroborating this, stock prices of these urban-exposed companies have outperformed their rural peers substantially (Chart II-5). Chart II-5Urban-Exposed Stocks Have Outperformed Rural Ones Urban-Exposed Stocks Have Outperformed Rural Ones Urban-Exposed Stocks Have Outperformed Rural Ones Such a slump in rural income is posing a challenge to Modi’s re-election in May. His government – which lost three key state elections in late 2018 – is aware of these ominous trends and is acting boldly to revive income growth in rural areas. The government announced an expansionary budget that appeases rural voters. In particular, the budget aims to strengthen farmers’ support schemes, cut taxes for low- and middle-income earners and introduce a pension scheme for social security coverage of unorganized labor. However, there is a significant risk that the authorities’ fiscal and monetary stimulus are too late to lift growth before May’s elections. According to the past relationship between fiscal spending and India’s business cycle, higher government expenditure growth will only begin to have an effect on the economy in the second half of this year – i.e. after the elections are held (Chart II-6). Hence, the BJP could lose its majority, meaning it would either rule in a minority government or be forced to turn over power to the Congress Party and its allies. Chart II-6Government Expenditures To Lift Growth In H2 2019 Government Expenditures To Lift Growth In H2 2019 Government Expenditures To Lift Growth In H2 2019 Beyond the elections, food prices might be approaching their lows. Well-below average rain will likely result in weak agricultural production and, hence, higher food prices in the second half of 2019 (Chart II-7). Chart II-7Below Trend Monsoon = Food Prices Will Likely Rise Below Trend Monsoon = Food Prices Will Likely Rise Below Trend Monsoon = Food Prices Will Likely Rise Therefore, in the second half of 2019, both fiscal easing and higher food prices will revive rural incomes and spending. In the meantime, monetary easing and credit growth acceleration will support demand in urban areas. Overall, Indian financial markets will likely remain in a risk zone until the elections as economic growth and corporate profits will continue to disappoint. If the opposition Congress Party’s alliance wins the election, Indian stocks and the currency will initially sell off. After this point, Indian assets could offer a buying opportunity because growth will likely revive in the second half of 2019. Bottom Line: For now, we continue to recommend an underweight position in Indian equities relative to the EM equity benchmark. Weakening growth, the very low interest rate differential versus U.S. rates and political uncertainty ahead of the general elections, pose risks of renewed rupee depreciation. A weaker rupee will continue to benefit India’s export-oriented software companies. Therefore, we also reiterate our long Indian software / short EM stocks recommendation. Finally, fixed-income investors should stay with the yield curve steepening trade. The central bank could further cut rates in the near term. However, long-term bond yields will not fall substantially and will likely start drifting higher sooner than later. The widening fiscal deficit, expectations of growth revival in the second half of 2019, and eventually higher food prices and inflation expectations, will all lead to a continuous steepening in the local yield curve. Ayman Kawtharani, Associate Editor ayman@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1      This is the view of BCA’s Emerging Markets Strategy team and it is different from BCA’s house view on China-related assets and the global business cycle. The primary source of the difference is the outlook for China’s growth.   Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
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