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Commodities & Energy Sector

The Tactical Asset Allocation model can provide investment recommendations which diverge from those outlined in our regular weekly publications. The model has a much shorter investment horizon - namely, one month - and thus attempts to capture very tactical opportunities. Meanwhile, our regular recommendations have a longer expected life, anywhere from 3-months to a year (or longer). This difference explains why the recommendations between the two publications can deviate from each other from time to time. Highlights In February, the model underperformed global equities and the S&P 500 in USD and local-currency terms. For March, the model slightly increased its allocation to stocks and cut its weighting in bonds (Chart 1). Within the equity portfolio, the allocation to Europe was increased. The model boosted its weightings to French and Australian bonds at the expense of Canadian and Swedish paper. The risk index for stocks, as well as the one for bonds, deteriorated in February. Feature Performance In February, the recommended balanced portfolio gained 2.1% in local-currency terms, and 0.2% in U.S. dollar terms (Chart 2). This compares with a gain of 3% for the global equity benchmark and a 3.3% gain for the S&P 500. Given that the underlying model is structured in local-currency terms, we generally recommend that investors hedge their positions, though we provide suggestions on currency risk exposure from time to time. The high allocation to bonds continued to hold back the model's performance. Chart 1Model Weights Model Weights Model Weights Chart 2Portfolio Total Returns Portfolio Total Returns Portfolio Total Returns Weights The model increased its allocation to stocks from 53% to 57%, and cut its bond weighting from 47% to 43% (Table 1). Table 1Model Weights (As Of February 23, 2017) Tactical Asset Allocation And Market Indicators Tactical Asset Allocation And Market Indicators The model increased its equity allocation to Dutch and Swedish equities by 4 points each, Germany and New Zealand by 2 points each, and France and Emerging Asia by 1 point each. Weightings were cut in Italy by 4 points, Latin America by 3 points, Spain by 2 points, and Switzerland by 1 point. In the fixed-income space, the allocation to Australia was boosted by 8 points, France by 6 points, and Germany by 4 points. The model cut its exposure to Swedish bonds by 9 points, Canadian bonds by 6 points, U.S. and U.K. bonds by 3 points each, and Kiwi bonds by 1 point. Currency Allocation Local currency-based indicators drive the construction of our model. As such, the performance of the model's portfolio should be compared with the local-currency global equity benchmark. The decision to hedge currency exposure should be made at the client's discretion, though from time to time, we do provide our recommendations. The most recent bout of dollar depreciation was halted in February. Our Dollar Capitulation Index is below neutral levels. However, it is not extended, meaning that it does not preclude renewed dollar weakness in the near term. That said, assuming no major negative economic surprises, a relatively more hawkish Fed versus its peers should provide support for the dollar (Chart 3). Chart 3U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar* And Capitulation U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar* And Capitulation U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar* And Capitulation Capital Market Indicators The risk index for commodities was little changed in February. The model continues to avoid this asset class (Chart 4). The risk index for global equities rose to its highest level since early 2010, mostly on the back of deteriorating value. Despite this, the model slightly increased its allocation to equities (Chart 5). Chart 4Commodity Index And Risk Commodity Index And Risk Commodity Index And Risk Chart 5Global Stock Market And Risk Global Stock Market And Risk Global Stock Market And Risk The rally in U.S. stocks - driven by optimism about the economic outlook - pushed the value component of the risk index into expensive territory. The model kept a small allocation in U.S. equities. A change in the perception about the ability of the new U.S. administration to boost growth remains a risk for this market (Chart 6). The risk index for euro area equities continues to deteriorate. However, it remains lower than its U.S. counterpart. The continued flow of solid economic data and a weaker currency should bode well for euro area stocks, although political uncertainty is a potential headwind (Chart 7). Chart 6U.S. Stock Market And Risk U.S. Stock Market And Risk U.S. Stock Market And Risk Chart 7Euro Area Stock Market And Risk Euro Area Stock Market And Risk Euro Area Stock Market And Risk All three components of the risk index for Dutch equities are close to neutral levels. As a result, despite the recent deterioration in the overall risk index, it remains one of the lowest among the markets the model covers (Chart 8). The risk index for Swedish stocks worsened. However, the model increased its allocation to this bourse. Swedish equities would be a beneficiary of the continued risk-on environment (Chart 9). Chart 8Netherlands Stock Market And Risk Netherlands Stock Market And Risk Netherlands Stock Market And Risk Chart 9Swedish Stock Market And Risk Swedish Stock Market And Risk Swedish Stock Market And Risk The momentum indicator for global bonds is less stretched in February. Meanwhile, despite its latest decline, the cyclical indicator continues to signal that the positive global economic backdrop is firmly bond-bearish. Taken all together, the risk index for bonds deteriorated in February, although it still remains in the low-risk zone (Chart 10). U.S. Treasury yields moved sideways in February as investors await more guidance from the Fed on the timing of the next hike. A bond-negative cyclical indicator coupled with the unwinding of oversold conditions - as per the momentum measure - led to a deterioration in the risk index for U.S. Treasurys. The latter is almost back to neutral levels. The model trimmed the allocation to this asset class (Chart 11). Chart 10Global Bond Yields And Risk Global Bond Yields And Risk Global Bond Yields And Risk Chart 11U.S. Bond Yields And Risk U.S. Bond Yields And Risk U.S. Bond Yields And Risk The momentum indicator remains the main driver of the risk index for Canadian bonds. As a result, the less extreme momentum reading translated into an increase in the risk index for this asset class. (Chart 12). The risk index for Australian bonds moved lower in February, reflecting improvements in all three of its components. The model included the relatively high-yielding Aussie bonds in the portfolio. (Chart 13). Chart 12Canadian Bond Yields And Risk Canadian Bond Yields And Risk Canadian Bond Yields And Risk Chart 13Australian Bond Yields And Risk Australian Bond Yields And Risk Australian Bond Yields And Risk The cyclical indicator for euro area bonds is near expensive levels, and the momentum indicator shows heavily oversold conditions. These two measures are offsetting the cyclical one that is sending a bond-bearish message. While the overall risk index for euro area bonds is in the low-risk zone, the country allocation is concentrated in French paper (Chart 14). The risk level for French bonds is seen as low thanks to oversold momentum. French presidential elections are probably the most important political event in Europe this year. Whether the models' heavy allocation to this asset pans out hinges to a certain extent on the reduction of investor anxiety about this political risk (Chart 15). Chart 14Euro Area Bond Yields And Risk Euro Area Bond Yields And Risk Euro Area Bond Yields And Risk Chart 15French Bond Yields And Risk French Bond Yields And Risk French Bond Yields And Risk The 13-week momentum measure for the dollar broke below the zero line, and is currently sitting on its upward-sloping trendline, drawn from the 2010 lows, that has been broken only once before. Meanwhile, the 40-week rate of change measure is still suggesting that the dollar bull market has more legs on a cyclical horizon. Monetary divergences should lend support to the dollar over the cyclical horizon, although the new administration's attempts to talk down the dollar as well as heightened policy uncertainty could translate into more volatility (Chart 16). The weakening trend in the yen hit a snag two months ago, as the 13-week momentum measure reached the lows that previously foreshadowed a consolidation phase after sharp depreciations. This short-term rate-of-change measure has bounced smartly this year reaching a critical level. Meanwhile, the 40-week rate-of-change measure is not warning of a major change in the underlying trend which remains dictated by BoJ's dovish bias (Chart 17). EUR/USD has been gravitating towards 1.05 over the course of February. The short-term rate-of-change measure seems to be holding at the neutral level, while the 40-week rate-of-change measure is in negative territory, but hardly stretched. Political uncertainty has the potential to drive the euro in near term, but the longer-term outlook is mostly a function of the monetary policy divergence between the ECB and the Fed (Chart 18). Chart 16U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar* U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar* U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar* Chart 17Yen Yen Yen Chart 18Euro Euro Euro Miroslav Aradski, Senior Analyst miroslava@bcaresearch.com
Highlights Gold volatility is trending lower, suggesting unresolved economic and political issues are diminishing, and investors' confidence in the global economy is improving. This is a false positive. Uncertainty is elevated. "Known unknowns" loom large: U.S. and Chinese fiscal policy, which drive USD dynamics and commodity supply and demand, are unresolved; The outcome of French and Italian elections could shock the euro zone; The reaction functions of systemically important central banks as they navigate these risks remain opaque. Given gold's exquisite sensitivity to political and policy nuances globally, our attention naturally turns to it when we look for ways to position in the face of this political and policy-related uncertainty. Our analysis suggests the low volatility in gold markets is the result of traders and investors being driven to the sidelines, where they await clarity re politics and policy. This is keeping trading volumes low: No one wants to be long or short lacking critical information necessary to take a view on the evolution of asset-price paths. Lower trading volumes, therefore, reflect a paucity of information in the price-discovery process, which, all else equal, will tend to keep commodity prices range bound until new information arrives to propel them in one direction or the other. With fewer prints going up across markets, realized and implied volatilities remain low ... for the moment. Energy: Overweight. We are taking profits basis today's close on our WTI Dec/17 vs. Dec/18 backwardation spread initiated February 9 at -$0.11/bbl. We also will be taking profits on our Dec/19 WTI vs. Brent spread, elected February 6 at +$0.07/bbl, after WTI traded premium to Brent in anticipation a U.S. border-adjusted tax would be enacted. Base Metals: Neutral. Copper remains well bid amid transitory supply outages. Workers resumed their strike at BHP's Escondida mine in Chile, while Anglo American temporarily suspended work at its El Soldado mine in a regulatory dispute, according to Metal Report. Freeport-McMoRan declared force majeure on Grasberg deliveries. Precious Metals: Neutral. We are withdrawing our gold buy-stop, and are recommending long gold options spreads to position for higher volatility (see below). Ags/Softs: Underweight. Corn and wheat came under selling pressure over the past week, but still are holding trend-line support from end-2016. We continue to monitor these markets for signs of a short-term rally. We remain strategically bearish, however. Feature While we believe the Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) holds most of the time - at least in semi-strong form (i.e., all public information is fully reflected in prices) - traders and investors now find themselves in something of a quandary.1 Much of the information needed to assess future paths for asset prices and form expectations for returns has yet to be revealed. In other words, there are large parts of markets' information sets made up of "known unknowns," which, once resolved, will be of enormous consequence to the paths taken by different asset prices. This is particularly true for gold. Our analysis suggests this lack of information is keeping trading volumes in gold markets low. As a result, the price-discovery process is stymied, which, all else equal, tends to keep prices range bound until new information arrives to propel them in one direction or the other. With fewer prints going up across markets, realized and implied volatilities remain low. Investors accustomed to viewing low volatility as an indication unresolved economic and political issues are diminishing therefore have to adapt to a new reality, one in which low volatility actually is the product of heightened uncertainty (Chart of the Week). Granted, financial stress is low. This contributes to lower volatility, particularly in gold, which is highly sensitive to U.S. real rates and USD levels. However, we find low trading volumes in gold markets also are responsible for the lower-trending realized and implied volatility prevailing in in gold markets (Chart 2).2 Chart of the WeekVolatility Is Low, Despite Uncertainty Being High Volatility Is Low, Despite Uncertainty Being High Volatility Is Low, Despite Uncertainty Being High Chart 2Realized And Implied Gold Vols Are Trending Lower Realized And Implied Gold Vols Are Trending Lower Realized And Implied Gold Vols Are Trending Lower This suggests there is an opportunity to position ahead of the resolution of these "known unknowns" in the gold market, given the low volatility levels we see. This is driven largely by our view that there are numerous risks in near- and longer-term price distributions, which imply much fatter tails than markets are pricing in at the moment.3 Indeed, the CBOE Gold VIX is running at ~ 13.5% presently vs. a post-Global Financial Crisis (GFC) average of 18.8% p.a.4 First, The Fat Left Tail There are a number of risks pumping up the left tails of many commodity price distributions - e.g., how long China will continue to tighten fiscal policy (Chart 3), and the effect this will have on the prices of base metals and bulk commodities like iron ore and steel. And, of course, markets will continue to hang on every utterance of Federal Reserve officials, attempting to discount rate-hike probabilities and their implications for the USD and real rates, the critical drivers of gold prices (Chart 4). Chart 3China Fiscal Stimulus Grinds To A Halt China Fiscal Stimulus Grinds To A Halt China Fiscal Stimulus Grinds To A Halt Near term, these risks will continue to loom large, but they are dwarfed by a possible border-adjusted tax (BAT) being imposed in the U.S. In our estimation, this is the largest left-tail risk we've identified for commodity markets over the near term. It is being championed by Republican leaders in the U.S. House of Representatives - led by Speaker Paul Ryan and Ways and Means Chairman Kevin Brady.5 A BAT would raise the price of commodities subject to the tax in the U.S. Domestically, producers of commodities subject to the tax would benefit from this increase in prices, since it would boost their revenues and incentivize increased domestic production. This would be used to displace imports and take market share from exporters to the U.S. Once the domestic market has been saturated with the higher domestic output, U.S. producers would turn to export markets to sell their increased output. A BAT would shrink the U.S. trade deficit, which would, all else equal, raise the trade-weighted value of the USD. Our expectation is there is a 50:50 chance a BAT is enacted, but that it will exclude oil and apparel. We expect the USD would appreciate ~ 10% on the back of this scheme, on top of the 5% increase in the value of the dollar we already were expecting from the Fed's continued push to normalize monetary policy. On the back of this 15% appreciation in the USD over the next year or so, commodity prices ex U.S. would increase in local-currency terms, which would crimp demand in EM and DM economies. On the supply side, the cost of producing commodities ex U.S. would fall in local-currency terms, which would increase supply at the margin. Net, net: A BAT would cause global commodity demand to fall and supply to increase, which would, all else equal, send a deflationary impulse back to the U.S., and DM and EM economies. Fat Right Tails Permanent and transitory commodity supply losses constitute large right-tail risks for investors, in our estimation, as does stronger-than-expected demand. Chief among these are ongoing losses in copper markets in the near term, which we believe to be transitory. The massive $1 trillion+ capex cuts registered in the oil markets in the wake of the price collapse induced by OPEC's market share war leave us with low confidence our oil-price expectation of $55/bbl will prevail beyond 2018. Near term, however, the timing and type of infrastructure projects that will be funded under the Trump administration's forthcoming fiscal roadmap, and whether Congress will be supportive represent the largest right-tail risk for gold markets. Highly expansive fiscal stimulus could spur inflation in the U.S., given this stimulus will be hitting an economy that already is at or near full employment. Given the synchronized global economic recovery currently underway, we believe an inflationary impulse could percolate into near-term inflation realizations, and into inflation expectations longer term. Chart 4Markets Will Continue To Hang On Every Fed Utterance Market-Implied Rate Hike Probabilities: March Looks Too High Markets Will Continue To Hang On Every Fed Utterance Market-Implied Rate Hike Probabilities: March Looks Too High Markets Will Continue To Hang On Every Fed Utterance This elevated inflation risk will be bullish for gold, as we showed in recent research.6 Indeed, we noted, "All else equal, with the U.S. labor market at or close to full employment, and the Trump administration signaling its desire for stimulative fiscal policy, we would be inclined to look for inflation hedges within commodities that are highly sensitive to rising inflation." Topping that list is gold, in our estimation. Taking A View On Volatility Chart 5Gold Provides A Good Hedge For Equity Volatility Gold Provides A Good Hedge For Equity Volatility Gold Provides A Good Hedge For Equity Volatility Volatility is trading-market shorthand for the annualized standard deviation of expected returns for an underlying asset. It is a parameter used to price options. Options markets are unique in that they allow investors to take a view on the dispersion of the expected returns of the asset against which the option is written.7 Volatility is a calculated value, whereas the other components of an option's price - i.e., the underlying asset's price, the strike price, time to expiration, and interest rates - all are known inputs. Volatility, like the price of the underlying asset, therefore is "discovered" when a trade occurs. After an option trades and its premium becomes known, an option-pricing model - e.g., the Black-Scholes-Merton model - can be run backwards, so to speak, to see what level of volatility solves the pricing model for the value that cleared the market. This is known as the option's implied volatility, because it is the expected standard deviation of returns implied by the price at which the option clears the market. One reason investors and traders buy and sell options is to express a view on implied volatility. Option buyers who think the market is underestimating the likelihood of sharply higher or sharply lower returns can express this view by buying out-of-the-money options - calls or call spreads on the upside, puts or put spreads on the downside. This can arise for any number of reasons, but they all boil down to one essential point: Option buyers think there is a higher probability returns will be higher or lower during the life of an option than what is being priced in the options market presently.8 Option sellers, on the other hand, are expressing the opposite view. We believe the fat-tail risks we've discussed in this article are not being fully reflected in the options markets most sensitive to this information, among them the gold market. Our own assessment of these risks implies much fatter tails than we currently observe in the out-of-the-money gold options, as noted above. For this reason, we are recommending investors consider buying put spreads and call spreads against June-delivery gold. We will look to get long Jun/17 $1,200/oz puts vs. selling $1,150/oz puts, and getting long $1,275/oz calls vs. selling $1,325/oz calls, basis tonight's closing levels for the underlying contract. This is a low-risk strategic recommendation, with the put and call spreads roughly equidistant from where the Jun/17 gold contract is trading. The motivation for this recommendation is simple: We believe volatility is low, given the "known unknowns" and their associated fat tails, which are not being accounted for in options prices. This makes these options cheap. Gold Can Hedge Equity Risk As Well Our analysis reveals gold provides a good edge against rising equity volatility, as measured by the CBOE's equity volatility index (CBOE VIX).9 From 1995 to the present, gold's monthly percentage returns outperformed those of the S&P 500 61% of the time when the VIX was increasing, and 36% of the time when the VIX was decreasing (Chart 5). Over the entire sample, gold outperformed the S&P 500 in average by 2.25% in periods of increasing equity volatility as measured by the VIX. However, if we focus only on sub-sample periods where the VIX was increasing but from an already-elevated level (20% or above), gold returns outperformed S&P 500 returns by 4.57% on average. Given our assessment that current volatility is abnormally low, particularly for gold, we believe the gold options exposure recommended here will provide investors protection against increasing equity volatility, as well. Moreover, if market sentiment changes and volatility begins to increase significantly, our analysis provides evidence that gold's volatility-risk-mitigation properties increase even more when the VIX is already at a high level. Bottom Line: Markets lack sufficient information to fully price the risks in potential fat-tail events on the down- and up-side of commodity price distributions. We believe gold options - particularly put and call spreads - offer a low-risk way to position for the eventual resolution of this uncertainty. Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger, Research Assistant hugob@bcaresearch.com 1 For an excellent discussion of the EMH, please see Timmermann, Allan, and Clive W.J. Granger (2004), "Efficient market hypothesis and forecasting," in the International Journal of Forecasting, Vol. 20, pp. 15 - 27. 2 When we regress CBOE gold volatility on first-nearby gold futures volume using daily data over January 2016 to February 2017 using an error-correction model, we find trading volume explains ~ one-third of the CBOE implied gold volatility's level. 3 Many of these risks are geopolitical in nature, which our colleague Marko Papic considers at length in "A Fat-Tails World," published February 22, 2016, in BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 We mark the post-GFC period as Jan/10 to present. 5 A BAT essentially would tax imports coming in to the U.S. and subsidize exports, using proceeds to reduce corporate taxes. We are not ready to pronounce the BAT dead, as some pundits already have. We think the market's 20% probability that such a tax becomes law is too low: We give it a 50:50 chance of passage, albeit in a watered down form likely calling for a 10% tax on imports, which likely will not include oil or apparel. Base metals and agricultural imports likely would be taxed under this scheme. We analyzed the commodity impacts of this proposed scheme in "Taking a BAT To Commodities," which was published in the January 26, 2017, issue of BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see issue of BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Gold Will Perform...," dated February 2, 2016, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 7 Call options give the buyer the right to go long an underlying asset at the price at which an option contract is struck - i.e., the option's strike price. Puts give option buyers the right to go short the underlying asset at the price at which the contract is struck. While an option buyer is not required to ever exercise an option, option sellers must take the other side of the deal if the buyer chooses to exercise. Option buyers pay a premium for the put or call they purchase. 8 This probability also can be expressed in terms or price levels, which allows investors to take an explicit view on the likelihood of a particular price being realized during the life of the option being purchased. Please see Ryan, Bob and Tancred Lidderdale (2009), "Energy Price Volatility and Forecast Uncertainty," published by the U.S. Energy Information Administration, for a discussion of options markets and implied volatility. "Appendix II: Derivation of the Cumulative Normal Density for Futures Prices" beginning on p. 22 shows how to transform the returns distribution into a price distribution. It is available at https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/steo/special/pdf/2009_sp_05.pdf. 9 Our results are similar to those reported in "Gold is still a good hedge when volatility rises," by Russ Koesterich, CFA, published by Blackrock on its Blackrock Blog September 9, 2016. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed In 2017 Summary of Trades Closed in
Highlights Price inflation is paradoxically deflationary for European consumers, because there is no feedthrough from price inflation to wage inflation. Whenever price inflation has risen towards the ECB's highly-misguided 2% target, euro area real wages have gone into recession. The same is true in the U.K. Do not expect a structural sell-off in high-quality bonds. Go overweight the broad-based Eurostoxx600 versus the bank-heavy Eurostoxx50. Stay overweight the international dollar-earning FTSE100 versus the more domestic pound-earning FTSE250. Feature We have a love-hate relationship with inflation. Love, if the inflation refers to our wages. Hate, if the inflation refers to our weekly grocery bill. Put another way, inflation is good for our purchasing power when wages are going up faster than prices; it is bad when prices are going up faster than wages. Unfortunately, recent inflation has been unequivocally bad for European purchasing power. Through the past 7 years, euro area nominal wages have been growing at a remarkably steady 1-2% clip. Whereas price inflation has swung between -0.5% and 3% (Chart I-2). Therefore, whenever price inflation has stayed close to 0% (the true definition of price stability), real wages have grown very healthily. But whenever inflation has risen towards the ECB's highly-misguided 2% target, euro area real wages have gone into recession (Chart of the Week). Chart I-1The Inflation Paradox: When Price Inflation Rises to 2%, Real Wages Go Into Recession The Inflation Paradox: When Price Inflation Rises to 2%, Real Wages Go Into Recession The Inflation Paradox: When Price Inflation Rises to 2%, Real Wages Go Into Recession Chart I-2Nominal Wages Have Been Growing At A Remarkably Steady 1-2% Nominal Wages Have Been Growing At A Remarkably Steady 1-2% Nominal Wages Have Been Growing At A Remarkably Steady 1-2% The same is true in the U.K. There has been no feedthrough from price inflation to wage inflation (Chart I-3 and Chart I-4). If anything, an inverse relationship has existed. Hence, whenever inflation has declined, it has boosted real wages. And whenever inflation has risen, it has choked real wages (Chart I-5 and Chart I-6). Chart I-3Very Little Connection... Very Little Connection... Very Little Connection... Chart I-4...Between Price Inflation And Wage Inflation ... Between Price Inflation And Wage Inflation ... Between Price Inflation And Wage Inflation Chart I-5When Price Inflation Has Declined,##br## It Has Boosted Real Wages When Price Inflation Has Declined, It Has Boosted Real Wages When Price Inflation Has Declined, It Has Boosted Real Wages Chart I-6When Price Inflation Has Increased,##br## It Has Choked Real Wages When Price Inflation Has Increased, It Has Choked Real Wages When Price Inflation Has Increased, It Has Choked Real Wages Households Dislike 2% Price Inflation An argument we frequently hear is that highly indebted economies need higher inflation to 'inflate away their high debts'. But this logic only works if inflation is boosting the incomes of those burdened with the high debt, such as households. The problem, as we have just seen, is that there has been very little connection between the price inflation that central banks are targeting and the wage inflation that eases households' debt burdens. To its credit, the Bank of England recognises this paradox. "Continued moderation in pay growth and higher import prices following sterling's depreciation are likely to mean materially weaker household real income growth over the coming few years" 1 Inflation is ultimately a transfer of resources from those paying the higher prices to those receiving them. In a closed economy, the winners and losers might balance out. However, Europe is a large net importer of food and energy, whose demand is inelastic and whose prices are denominated in dollars. Therefore, currency weakness transfers resources from domestic consumers to foreign producers. As the BoE goes on to say: "Over the next few years, a consequence of weaker sterling is that the higher imported costs resulting from it will boost consumer prices... and the hitherto resilient rates of household spending growth will slow as real income gains weaken." Exactly the same dynamic applies to the euro area as a consequence of the weaker euro. The difference is that sterling's Brexit-induced slump was out of the BoE's control, whereas the euro's weakness is a direct consequence of the ECB's extreme and experimental monetary easing. The ECB is keen to tell us about the benefits of its extreme monetary easing; it is less keen to tell us about the costs. However, we believe that the benefits have diminished while the costs are rapidly rising. And absent a major shock, the ECB should end its risky experiment. What's Up With Wage Growth? The intriguing question is: why has there been little connection between price inflation and wage inflation? The BoE observes that pay growth has remained persistently subdued by historical standards - strikingly so in light of the decline in the rate of unemployment to below 5%. This outcome is likely to reflect a substantial decline in the 'equilibrium unemployment rate', the point at which wage pressures start to bubble up. The explanation comes from the type of jobs created in recent years. ECB research points out that the dynamics of wages not only reflect changes in wages at the individual level, but are also influenced by changes in the composition of employment. "The structure of recent employment creation may have contributed to low wage growth in the euro area. Since the second quarter of 2013, employment creation in the euro area has been stronger in sectors associated with relatively lower wage levels and wage growth rates. This employment composition effect puts a drag on average wage growth." 2 Automation and Artificial Intelligence (AI) are major drivers of this composition effect. Moreover, as we argued in The Superstar Economy: Part 2,3 the effect has much further to run. "Many of the jobs that AI will destroy - like credit scoring, language translation, or managing a stock portfolio - are regarded as skilled, have limited human competition and are well-paid. Conversely, many of the jobs that AI cannot (yet) destroy - like cleaning, gardening, or cooking - are relatively unskilled and are low-paid." With well-paid jobs being displaced by low-paid jobs, job creation itself might still seem very healthy and the unemployment rate might be falling to levels associated with 'full employment' - prompting some people to warn that wage inflation is about to take off. Except it won't, for two reasons: first, the AI-displaced formerly well-paid workers are downshifting to lower-paid work; second, the added supply of labour competing for the lower-paid work keeps a lid on the wages for that lower-paid work. In the U.S., the Federal Reserve Board of San Francisco points out that: "As long as employers can keep their wage bills low by replacing or expanding staff with lower-paid workers, labour cost pressures for higher price inflation could remain muted for some time." 4 A further point is that if employment creation is in jobs with lower wages, wage growth, and job security, then it will also constrain credit growth. Lacking income growth or security, households will be unwilling to borrow and banks will be unwilling to lend. Absent strong credit growth, we subscribe to a monetarist conclusion: a generalised and sustained inflation - a wage-price spiral - cannot take hold. Some Investment Considerations For the foreseeable future, there will be little feedthrough from price inflation to wage inflation. So whenever price inflation picks up - as is now happening in the U.K. and the euro area - it will choke real wages. Therefore paradoxically, price inflation will be deflationary for European consumers. This will prevent a structural sell-off in high-quality bonds. For a U.K. equity portfolio at this juncture, it means tilting towards international exposure. Stay overweight the international dollar-earning FTSE100 versus the more domestic pound-earning FTSE250 - especially given that sterling could come under renewed pressure after the U.K. formally files for its divorce from the EU (Chart I-7). For a broader European equity portfolio, prefer non-financials over financials. A very easy way to implement this is to go overweight the broad-based Eurostoxx600 versus the bank-heavy Eurostoxx50 (Chart I-8). Chart I-7Overweight The International Dollar-Earning ##br##FTSE100 Versus The FTSE250 Overweight The International Dollar-Earning FTSE100 Versus The FTSE250 Overweight The International Dollar-Earning FTSE100 Versus The FTSE250 Chart I-8Overweight The Broad Eurostoxx600##br## Versus The Bank-Heavy Eurostoxx50 Overweight The Broad Eurostoxx600 Versus The Bank-Heavy Eurostoxx50 Overweight The Broad Eurostoxx600 Versus The Bank-Heavy Eurostoxx50 Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President European Investment Strategy dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 From the Bank of England Monetary Policy Summary and minutes of the Monetary Policy Committee meeting on February 1, 2017. 2 From the ECB Economic Bulletin, Issue 3 / 2016: Recent wage trends in the euro area. 3 Published on January 19, 2017 and available at eis.bcaresearch.com 4 From the FRBSF Economic Letter March 7, 2016: What's Up with Wage Growth? Fractal Trading Model* This week's recommendation is a commodity pair-trade: long tin / short copper. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-9 Long Tin / Short Copper Long Tin / Short Copper * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Global manufacturing inventories are low but this does not guarantee higher share prices for global cyclical stocks. If an increase in inventories is accompanied by strengthening final demand, it will be very bullish for the global business cycle. If final demand growth falters, global cyclical plays will relapse amid rising inventories. China's inventory depletion has been due to the large fiscal and credit impulse in the past 12 months - i.e., improving final demand has been instrumental to inventory shedding. Looking forward, the mainland's aggregate credit and fiscal impulse seems to have topped out raising the odds of a reversal in EM/China plays sooner than later. The risk/reward of EM/China plays remains unattractive. Feature Global Manufacturing Inventories Global manufacturing inventories have been depleted over the past 12 months, and inventory levels are generally low (Chart I-1 and Chart I-2). Chart I-1Global Manufacturing Inventories Are Low Global Manufacturing Inventories Are Low Global Manufacturing Inventories Are Low Chart I-2Global Manufacturing Inventories Are Low Global Manufacturing Inventories Are Low Global Manufacturing Inventories Are Low Could inventory re-stocking extend the current manufacturing cycle recovery worldwide? Will low inventories and re-stocking in China lengthen the nation's business cycle upswing? Chart I-3 demonstrates inventory cycles and manufacturing production within manufacturing-intensive economies. The correlation is not stable. Currently, this entails that low manufacturing inventories and a potential rise in inventories over the course of this year do not guarantee acceleration in industrial output growth. Having reviewed manufacturing inventory cycles and their correlation with share prices, we conclude that the key to share prices is final demand - not inventory swings. Manufacturing inventories have dropped in the past 12 months because final demand has been robust (Chart I-4). Historically, periods of re-stocking have often coincided with poor equity market performance. Indeed, Taiwanese, Korean, Japanese and German non-financial share prices have no stable correlation with their respective manufacturing inventory cycles (Chart I-5). In short, manufacturing inventories could rise in the months ahead, but this does not guarantee higher share prices in cyclical industries. Chart I-3Inventories And Production ##br##Are Not Always Correlated Inventories And Production Are Not Always Correlated Inventories And Production Are Not Always Correlated Chart I-4Robust Demand Has Led ##br##To Inventory Depletion Robust Demand Has Led To Inventory Depletion Robust Demand Has Led To Inventory Depletion Chart I-5Non-Financial Share Prices And##br## Inventories: Little Correlation Non-Financial Share Prices And Inventories: Little Correlation Non-Financial Share Prices And Inventories: Little Correlation By and large, the outlook for corporate profits is contingent on final demand rather than re-stocking. All of the above confirms that inventories are a residual of demand and supply. Stronger-than-expected demand is bullish for share prices, though it also often coincides with declining inventories. By contrast, rising inventories typically reflect demand falling behind output growth (one can define it as involuntary re-stocking) and these periods are not favorable for share price gains in cyclical industries. One caveat is that there could be a re-stocking cycle amid strengthening demand or, in other words, voluntary re-stocking. If this transpires in the coming months, it will be extremely bullish for share prices as it will supercharge output growth. While the latter scenario - inventory re-stocking amid strengthening final demand - could very well occur within the advanced economies this year, odds of such positive dynamics are low in EM/China. Bottom Line: Share prices in global cyclical sectors are driven by swings in final demand - not in inventories. Going forward, global manufacturing inventories will rise. If this rise is accompanied by strengthening demand, it will be very bullish for the global business cycle. Otherwise, global cyclical plays will relapse as inventories rise. What Drives China's Inventory Cycles Chart I-6 shows that China's manufacturing inventories typically deplete when the credit and fiscal impulse is rising, and vice versa. China's manufacturing inventories have been exhausted because demand has been strong in the past 12 months. In turn, demand strength has originated from the country's massive fiscal and credit stimulus push from the first half of 2016. Chart I-6China: Strong Policy Stimulus Led To Manufacturing Inventories Reduction China: Strong Policy Stimulus Led To Manufacturing Inventories Reduction China: Strong Policy Stimulus Led To Manufacturing Inventories Reduction That said, China's aggregate fiscal and credit impulse seems to have recently rolled over, pointing to a top in its manufacturing mini-cycle and commodities prices (Chart I-7). This signals a potential deceleration in final demand. On the whole, the ongoing modest tightening by the People's Bank of China and by the bank regulator (the China Banking Regulatory Commission) amid a lingering credit bubble is raising the odds of a moderate credit slowdown in the months ahead. Even modest credit growth deceleration will result in a negative credit impulse (Chart I-8, top panel). Meanwhile, the mainland's fiscal impulse has already dropped (Chart I-8, bottom panel). Chart I-7China: Aggregate Credit And Fiscal##br## Stimulus Has Topped Out China: Aggregate Credit And Fiscal Stimulus Has Topped Out China: Aggregate Credit And Fiscal Stimulus Has Topped Out Chart I-8China: A Breakdown Of Credit ##br##And Fiscal Impulses China: A Breakdown Of Credit And Fiscal Impulses China: A Breakdown Of Credit And Fiscal Impulses On the whole, these developments are leading us to maintain our negative bias toward EM risk assets and China plays. What has gone wrong in our view/analysis on China in the past 12 months is that the nation's credit growth has stayed much stronger than we expected. In our April 13, 2016 report,1 we did a scenario analysis and argued that China's large fiscal stimulus push would be offset by a negative credit impulse if credit growth slowed from 11.5% to below 10%. In reality, credit growth has been between 11.5-12.5%, producing a positive credit impulse. Barring tightening by the central bank or bank regulators, mainland banks can continue originating loans/money at a double-digit pace, as they have been doing for many years (Chart I-9). In general, commercial banks do not need savings to create money/loans and there are few limits on Chinese banks originating loans "out of thin air," as we argued in our Trilogy of Special Reports on money/loan creation, savings and investment.2 Chart I-9China's Credit/Money Growth##br## Remains Rampant China's Credit/Money Growth Remains Rampant China's Credit/Money Growth Remains Rampant Therefore, if credit growth does not slow, our negative view on China's growth will be off-the-mark again. The pressure point in such a case will be the exchange rate. Unlimited money creation/oversupply of local currency is bearish for the value of the RMB. The RMB will continue depreciating, but it is not certain if it will hurt EM risk assets. It is a major consensus view nowadays that the Chinese authorities will not allow growth to suffer ahead of the Party Congress in autumn of this year. Yet, the PBoC and bank regulators are modestly tightening to "normalize" credit growth. Some clients may wonder why we are placing so much emphasis on the rollover of credit and fiscal impulses now, while placing little emphasis on these same indicators in 2016 when they were recovering. The rationale is as follows: when there is a credit bubble - as there is in China now - we tend to downplay the importance of policy easing and put more significance on policy tightening. The opposite also holds true: when the credit/banking system is healthy, we tend to downplay the impact of moderate policy tightening and put greater emphasis on policy easing. In a credit bubble, it does not take much tightening to trigger a downtrend that unwinds excesses. Similarly, moderate tightening in a healthy credit system should not be feared. From a big picture perspective, we turned bearish on China's growth several years ago due to the formation of a credit bubble. The bubble has only gotten larger and an adjustment has not yet even started. This does not justify altering our fundamental assessment of China's growth outlook. It would have been ideal to turn positive tactically on EM/China plays a year ago. Unfortunately, we did not do that. Presently, chasing the market higher might not be the best investment idea. Based on all this and given: the sharp rally in EM/China plays and widespread investor complacency and consensus that "everything" will be fine before the end of this year; modest tightening in Chinese monetary policy amid lingering credit and asset (property and the corporate bond market) bubbles; our outlook for higher U.S. bond yields and a stronger U.S. dollar; the fact that financial markets are forward looking, and timing is impossible; We believe the risk/reward of EM/China plays remains unattractive. In regard to EM ex-China, as we documented in last week's report, domestic demand in the developing economies has not recovered at all, or is mixed at best. DM final demand strength and global manufacturing inventory rebuilding will certainly help Korea and Taiwan, but not other emerging economies. The most important variables for other EM economies including China are domestic demand and/or commodities prices. If commodities prices relapse along with China's credit and fiscal impulse (Chart I-7, bottom panel), EM financial markets will suffer regardless of the growth trends within advanced economies. In fact, strong U.S. growth could lead to higher U.S. interest rate expectations and prop up the U.S. dollar. This will also be a bad omen for EM and commodities. Bottom Line: China's inventory depletion has been due to the large fiscal and credit impulse in the past 12 months - i.e., improving final demand has been instrumental to inventory shedding. Looking forward, the mainland's aggregate credit and fiscal impulse seems to have topped out, raising the odds of a reversal in EM/China plays sooner than later. Industrial Metals Inventories And Prices There is no good data reflecting industrial metals inventories globally. London Metal Exchange and Shanghai Futures Exchange data are likely not indicative of global metals stockpiles. China accounts for close to 50% of global demand for industrial metals, and its demand is critical to prices. Given that the large spike in metals prices in the past several months has coincided with improving Chinese economic data, one would expect the mainland to be the driving force behind the rally. However, Chart I-10 demonstrates that China's imports of industrial metals actually contracted in 2016. This is puzzling, but we have to take it at face value. The top panel of Chart I-11 depicts that traders' net long positions in copper are at a six-year high. This might partially explain the rally in copper in the recent months. Chart I-10China's Import Of Base Metals##br## And Base Metals Prices China's Import Of Base Metals And Base Metals Prices China's Import Of Base Metals And Base Metals Prices Chart I-11Traders Are Long ##br##Copper And Oil Traders Are Long Copper And Oil Traders Are Long Copper And Oil Clearly, China has been depleting its stock of industrial metals, and is likely primed to increase its imports. Nevertheless, periods of metals re-stocking by the mainland have historically not entailed higher industrial metals prices (Chart I-10). On the contrary, rising Chinese imports of metals have actually coincided with falling prices. One can interpret this relationship as China buying industrial metals when prices are falling. This is consistent with China attempting to buy commodities on dips. As to metals inventories in China, the picture is as follows: Steel inventories have plummeted and are low (Chart I-12). One can safely argue that there will be an inventory re-stocking cycle in China. Nevertheless, it is highly uncertain if this will be bullish for steel prices and steel stocks. In fact, there has been a mild negative correlation between steel prices and inventories; historically, when inventories have risen, prices declined (Chart I-12, top panel). This confirms that inventory levels are a residual of demand and supply, and prices are often driven by final demand - not inventories. This is also corroborated by the bottom panel of Chart I-12, which illustrates that share prices of global steel companies are sometimes negatively correlated with China's steel inventories. Stock prices occasionally sell off when inventories rise, and rally when inventories are shrinking. In contrast to steel and steel products, iron ore inventories have risen, and it seems the re-stocking cycle is well advanced (Chart I-13). Chart I-12China: Steel Inventories And Prices China: Steel Inventories And Prices China: Steel Inventories And Prices Chart I-13China: Iron Ore Inventories And Prices China: Iron Ore Inventories And Prices China: Iron Ore Inventories And Prices Yet, again there is no strong correlation between inventories and prices of iron ore (Chart I-13). In our discussions with clients, investors often attribute the rally in industrial metals in general and steel prices in particular over the past 12 months to supply cutbacks in China. While supply reductions have helped in the case of certain metals, it is also evident that the rally in industrial commodities has been driven by rising demand globally and in China. First, China's aggregate credit and fiscal impulse was positive until very recently, implying strengthening demand and thereby higher metals prices. Second, if there were only production cutbacks in steel and other commodities and not demand recovery, the mainland's manufacturing PMI would not have risen (Chart I-14). Finally, steel production has risen both in China and the rest of the world (Chart I-15). Hence, world steel supplies have expanded in the past 12 months. Given this has coincided with rising steel prices, it confirms there has been notable improvement in demand for steel. Chart I-14China: Steel Prices Are Up ##br##Because Of Strong Demand China: Steel Prices Are Up Because Of Strong Demand China: Steel Prices Are Up Because Of Strong Demand Chart I-15Chinese And Global ##br##Steel Production Chinese And Global Steel Production Chinese And Global Steel Production We are not experts in the ebbs and flows of commodities supplies, but it seems the Chinese government's mandated steel capacity cutbacks have not prevented rising steel output in China. In the meantime, rising prices amid rising production and falling inventories are indicative of robust final demand for many metals. Bottom Line: Industrial metals prices have risen because demand in the real economy and among financial investors has been strong. That said, a rollover in China's fiscal and credit impulse and a strong U.S. dollar will likely create headwinds for industrial metals prices over the course of this year. A Word About Oil Inventories OECD oil product inventories have continued to rise, despite supply cuts (Chart I-16, top panel). At the same time, our proxy for change in China's oil inventories has been very elevated for a while, depicting strategic and/or commercial inventory building on the mainland (Chart I-16, bottom panel). It is true that supply curtailments have been instrumental to the rally in oil prices, but the continued inventory buildup also indicates that supply is still outpacing demand. Besides, traders' net long positions in crude have spiked close to their 2014 highs (Chart I-11, bottom panel). This corroborates that demand for crude, like for copper, has partially been financial rather than from final consumers. Finally, U.S. rig counts have recovered somewhat, which may be indicative of a continued rise in America's oil output (Chart I-17). Chart I-16Oil Inventories Keep On Rising Oil Inventories Keep On Rising Oil Inventories Keep On Rising Chart I-17U.S. Rig Counts And Oil Production U.S. Rig Counts And Oil Production U.S. Rig Counts And Oil Production Bottom Line: While we do not have expertise to follow or forecast oil supply dynamics, we are biased in believing that the risk-reward for oil prices is unattractive because of a strong U.S. dollar and potentially weak EM/China asset prices, which could trigger a reduction in net long positions in crude. Investment Conclusions Complacency reigns in the global financial markets. EM equity volatility has fallen close to its cycle lows, the U.S. VIX is depressed, U.S. equity investor sentiment is very elevated and EM corporate credit spreads have plummeted to a ten-year low (Chart I-18). While the timing of a reversal is impossible, the risk-reward profile of EM financial markets is greatly unattractive. The U.S. trade-weighted dollar has consolidated recently, and might be primed for another upleg. As the U.S. dollar resumes its uptrend, EM risk assets will likely sell off. Finally, EM share prices have failed to outperform the developed bourses much, despite the rally in commodities and amelioration in Chinese growth (Chart I-19). Chart I-18Complacency Reigns Complacency Reigns Complacency Reigns Chart I-19EM Equities Have Not Yet Outperformed EM Equities Have Not Yet Outperformed EM Equities Have Not Yet Outperformed Remarkably, analysts' net earnings revisions for EM stocks have so far failed to turn positive (Chart I-20). Either analysts' EPS expectations were originally still too high, or companies are failing to deliver profits. Whatever the reason, the implication is that the consensus is more bullish on EM than is suggested by the underlying fundamentals. Within an EM equity portfolio, our overweights remain Taiwan, Korea, India, China, Thailand, Russia and central Europe. Our underweights are Malaysia, Indonesia, Turkey, Brazil and Peru. We are neutral on other bourses. Finally, the EM equity benchmark is at a critical technical resistance level (Chart I-21) but odds do not favor a sustainable breakout. Chart I-20EM EPS Net Revisions Are Still Negative EM EPS Net Revisions Are Still Negative EM EPS Net Revisions Are Still Negative Chart I-21EM Stocks: A Breakout Attempt EM Stocks: A Breakout Attempt EM Stocks: A Breakout Attempt Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please refer to the Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report titled, "Revisiting China's Fiscal And Credit Impulses", dated April 13, 2016, available at ems.bcaresearch.com 2 Trilogy of Special Reports on money/loan creation, savings and investment, titled, "Misconceptions About China's Credit Excesses" dated October 26, 2016, "China's Money Creation Redux And The RMB", dated November 23, 2016 and "Do Credit Bubbles Originate From High National Savings?", dated January 18, 2017, available at ems.bcaresearch.com Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights We expect the high level of compliance with the OPEC - non-OPEC production agreement engineered by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and Russia will endure, leading to significant reductions in global oil inventories this year and next. All else equal, this should backwardate WTI and Brent forward curves later this year. However, recent developments in the North American pipeline market - i.e., U.S. President Donald Trump's orders to revive development of the Keystone XL (KXL) and completion of the Dakota Access (DAPL) pipelines - could send as much as 1mm barrels/day (bbl/d) of crude south from Canada and the Bakken, which would boost inventories at Cushing and other Midwest storage facilities later in this decade. Depending on when these pipelines are completed - likely by 2020 in the case of KXL - the WTI forward curve could return to a sustained contango.1 The expanded flows of heavy crude via KXL, and light-tight oil south via the DAPL could undo a subtle benefit arising from the backwardation induced by the KSA - Russia production pact, which we uncovered in our modeling. Energy: Overweight. At Tuesday's close, our short Dec/19 WTI vs. long Dec/19 Brent spread elected last week at $.07/bbl (WTI over) was up 700%. Our long Dec/17 WTI vs. short Dec/18 WTI front-to-back spread, entered into at -$0.11/bbl on Feb 9/17, was up 263%. Base Metals: Neutral. BHP declared force majeure at its Escondida mine, which accounts for ~ 5% of global supply, after workers voted to strike. Union leaders agreed to another round of government-mediated talks with BHP management. Precious Metals: Neutral. Fed Chair Yellen's Senate Banking Committee testimony was more hawkish than expected, which rallied the USD and muted gold's overnight strength. We continue to look to get long gold at $1,180/oz. Ags/Softs: Underweight. The USDA revised grain and soybean supply/demand estimates last week, showing markets tightening slightly, with ending stocks for the 2016/17 crop year expected to be a touch lower. We remain bearish. Feature Chart of the WeekStorage Drawdowns Should Accelerate ##br##As U.S. Oil Imports Slow Storage Drawdowns Should Accelerate As U.S. Oil Imports Slow Storage Drawdowns Should Accelerate As U.S. Oil Imports Slow Regular readers of BCA's Commodity & Energy Strategy service will not be surprised by the very high compliance levels seen in the wake of the OPEC - non-OPEC production Agreement engineered by KSA and Russia late last year.2 Because the stakes are so high for KSA and Russia - and their respective oil-producing allies - we expect compliance to remain high into June, resulting in a drawdown of global oil storage, the stated goal of the deal. We believe the pact will result in both WTI and Brent forward curves returning to backwardation, as global storage levels fall some 300mm bbl (Chart of the Week). We are positioned for this outcome by being long Dec/17 WTI vs. short Dec/18 WTI. We are expecting to see the last of the Persian Gulf export surge to the U.S. this month, as the 45- to 50-day sailing time from the Gulf to the U.S. implies the last of these vessels will be arriving this week or next. This backwardation will, in all likelihood, restrain the rate at which U.S. shale-oil producers return rigs to the market next year. Chart 2Curve Shape Can Affect Rig Counts Curve Shape Can Affect Rig Counts Curve Shape Can Affect Rig Counts WTI Term Structure And Rig Counts: It's Complicated Recent modeling we've completed suggests curve shape can affect rig counts in the U.S. light-tight oil fields. When we regress U.S. rig count on the WTI forward curve, we find rig counts can be expected to increase when the forwards are in contango, and to decline when the market is backwardated. A flat forward curve can be expected to keep rig counts fairly constant (Chart 2).3 Obviously, the starting point for these outcomes is critical. We simulated rig counts by assuming Monday's closing prices for March through June WTI futures, then assumed different levels for July WTI futures as a starting point for estimating rig counts to end-2018. We used $50, $55 and $60/bbl in July as our starting point. All else equal, with the July/17 WTI at ~ $55/bbl and the forward curve backwardated by 10% 18 months out, we would expect to see average rig counts fall by 4.38 rigs/month in 2018, given the three-to-four month lag between rigs actually being deployed and the price signal being sent by the futures market. A contango term structure produces the opposite result. With the July/17 WTI at ~ $55/bbl and the forward curve in a contango of 10% 18 months out, we would expect to see rig counts increase by 4.57 rigs/month in 2018. There obviously is a price threshold from which the forward curve originates in this analysis, which we believe to be between $50 and $55/bbl. Below this level, we would expect shale producers to retreat back to their core production areas, and await a price signal to increase their rig counts. Above $60/bbl, backwardation and contango matters for rig counts over the next 2 to 2.5 years. A backwardated forward curve will, all else equal, incentivize a slightly lower level of rigs being deployed than a contango. For example, a 10% contango with a $60/bbl starting point results in 5.24 rigs/month being deployed, while 10% backwardation would lead us to expect 5.02 rigs/month being deployed. Sustaining Backwardation Will Be Difficult A sustained backwardation will be threatened later in this decade by the expansion of the North American pipeline grid, following U.S. President Trump's orders to revive the Keystone XL (KXL) pipeline's development and the completion the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). The KXL and DAPL buildouts, if approved, will expand U.S. midcontinent crude deliveries by 1mm bbl/d, according to Genscape's tally.4 The KXL volumes would add close to 600k bbl/d to Canadian exports, and would flow directly into Cushing, OK. Another 400k bbl/d of light-tight oil from the Bakken LTO fields will flow to the midcontinent refining market via the DAPL. "Increased flows into Cushing due to the addition of Keystone XL could lead to a bottleneck of inventories at the hub, which would put downward pressure on crude prices," Genscape notes. Work on the KXL could start this year, and be completed before 2020. The DAPL is ~ 95% complete, and should be done in 6 months or less. Genscape believes the DAPL could be built and line fill could be in place in less than three months. Indeed, "drilling under Lake Oahe in southern North Dakota for Energy Transfer Partner's Bakken-to-Patoka, IL, Dakota Access (DAPL) crude pipeline began immediately upon receiving an easement from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on February 8, according to a company spokesman. It is expected to take 83 days for construction and linefill... ." We will monitor these pipeline buildouts closely, given the profound implications they have for U.S. midcontinent and Gulf Coast refiners, who could once again find themselves benefiting from a widening of the Brent vs. WTI differential, and Canadian E&Ps, who can be expected to increase production into this KXL buildout. The key market to watch as these pipelines are under construction will be the WCS vs. WTI spreads (Chart 3). As pipeline capacity opens up, exports of heavy crude from Canada will increase and the WCS - WTI differential will narrow, which will benefit Canadian E&Ps (Chart 4). A return of contango following the opening of these pipelines would benefit U.S. refiners, who can be expected to increase exports. Chart 3Expanding the N. American Pipeline Network##br## Will Widen WTI Differentials Expanding the N. American Pipeline Network Will Widen WTI Differentials Expanding the N. American Pipeline Network Will Widen WTI Differentials Chart 4Crude Differentials Will##br## Adjust To Pipeline Buildouts Crude Differentials Will Adjust To Pipeline Buildouts Crude Differentials Will Adjust To Pipeline Buildouts Bottom Line: The backwardation of the WTI and Brent forwards should accelerate as the last of the surge in exports from the Persian Gulf arrives in the U.S. President Trump's decision to expedite KXL and the completion of the DAPL in 6 months or less will have a profound impact on crude movements and storage levels in the U.S. later in the decade. Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com 1 President Trump's decision to revive KXL was endorsed by House and Senate leaders in the U.S. last month, which greatly raises the odds it will go ahead. In addition, the DAPL received an easement from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to complete construction. 2 Please see issue of BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report "Raising The Odds Of A KSA-Russia Oil-Production Cut," dated November 3, 2016, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 3 Our previous modeling indicates Granger causality goes from WTI prices to rig counts - i.e., E&P companies drilling decisions are driven by price levels and curve shape. We believe this relationship arises from the hedging behavior of shale-oil producers, many of whom hedge their forward revenues in the futures markets over a two-year interval. 4 Please see "Keystone XL, Dakota Access Could Cause Bottlenecks at U.S. Mid-Continent Storage Hubs, Shift Crude Prices," published on Genscape's blog February 14, 2017. Genscape is a near-real-time pipeline, storage and shipping monitoring service. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed In 2017 Summary of Trades Closed in
Highlights Weekly swings in U.S. inventories notwithstanding, we believe global storage is on track to draw ~ 10% by early- to mid-3Q17, which will have achieved the goal of the OPEC - Russia production Agreement negotiated late last year. This will not require an extension of the pact beyond June, based on our modeling. Unexpectedly high compliance by OPEC producers to agreed cuts is being offset somewhat by increased production in those states exempted from the deal. Strong oil consumption on the back of a synchronized global uptick in GDP growth, which started to emerge late last year, provides the impetus for sustained storage draws. Markets are overestimating offshore production's resilience, particularly in the U.S. Gulf, where we see material declines beginning to set in next year. Backwardation likely persists in 2018, absent a U.S. policy-induced USD rally that crimps EM demand and spurs production ex U.S. Energy: Overweight. The return of contango in the WTI forward curve gives us the opportunity to reset our strategic front-to-back position (long Dec/17 vs. short Dec/18) at tonight's close. Our balances assessment supports our view backwardation will return in the deferred part of the curve. Our Dec/19 short WTI vs. long Brent spread buy stop was elected at $0.07/bbl. Base Metals: Neutral. We remain neutral base metals, but are keeping a close watch on copper. Unions working at BHP's Escondida mine, the world's largest, are set to strike today. Negotiations resumed this week, following BHP's request for government mediation. Precious Metals: Neutral. We continue to look to get long gold at $1,180/oz. Ags/Softs: Underweight. Grain fundamentals remain unsupportive for a rally. We remain underweight. Feature Chart of the WeekGlobal Oil Storage On Track For 10% Drop Global Oil Storage On Track For 10% Drop Global Oil Storage On Track For 10% Drop Global oil storage levels remain on track to hit the ~ 10% draw targeted in last year's OPEC - Russia production Agreement by early- to mid-3Q17, weekly gyrations in U.S. inventories notwithstanding. This means an extension of the agreement beyond its June expiry will not be required. Early reports suggest compliance with the deal is unexpectedly high by OPEC states that agreed to cut production by up to 1.2mm b/d - exceeding 80% by various accounts. However, OPEC states not required to cut - Libya, Nigeria, and Iran - have increased production and partially offset those declines, which took total reductions in OPEC output to ~ 840k b/d, based on a Bloomberg tally last week.1 This brought total Cartel compliance to ~ 60% of the agreed cuts, which, as we noted in our 2017 Commodity Outlook in December, would be sufficient to achieve the Agreement's goal of pulling inventories in the OECD down by ~ 10% by 3Q17.2 Non-OPEC producers also appear to be complying with the Agreement. Notable among them is Russia, which is ahead of its commitment with cuts of close to 120k b/d in January, due partly to extreme cold in Siberian fields. We expect cuts in Russia to average 200k b/d in 1Q17, going to 300k b/d in 2Q17. These cuts will allow demand to outstrip supply in 1H17 and into year-end. By early- to mid-3Q17, draws to OECD storage of 300mm bbl can be expected, without extending the OPEC - Russia production agreement (Chart of the Week). We expect to see these cuts show up in OECD inventory data this month and next and continue into the end of 2017. For non-OECD states, the draws will show up in JODI data beginning in March.3 The physical deficits - i.e., supply less than demand - will force storage to draw, backwardating the WTI forward curve later this year (Chart 2).4 If markets are not surprised by a policy-induced rally in the USD on the back of a U.S. border-adjustment tax (BAT), or a too-aggressive tightening by the Fed as it seeks to normalize monetary policy, we expect the drawdown in inventories to continue keeping markets backwardated. Even with production returning to pre-Agreement levels in 2H17 in states with the capacity to expand and reliably sustain production - Gulf Arab producers, Russia and U.S. shales - we expect storage to continue to draw through the year and into 2018 (Chart 3). Chart 2We Continue To Expect Backwardation We Continue To Expect Backwardation We Continue To Expect Backwardation Chart 3Storage Drawdown On Track Storage Drawdown On Track Storage Drawdown On Track In 4Q16 the impact of the higher Kuwaiti and UAE output is apparent, along with higher Russian production. This put more crude on the market, which found its way into storage late in 4Q16 and early 1Q17, reversing the trend in draws seen earlier in 2H16. This put the market back in a temporary surplus condition, with the result being more storage will have to be worked off in 1H17 than our earlier estimates indicated. But these draws will occur, following the implementation of the production accord. Extending The KSA - Russia Deal Beyond June Is Unnecessary In our estimates, OPEC crude production increases by ~ 850k b/d in 2H17 versus 1H17 levels. Despite this recovery, the storage drawdown continues. Our modeling assumes Gulf OPEC will account for slightly more than +1mm b/d growth, and non-Gulf OPEC will see production continue to fall by 170k b/d. Russia's total liquids production goes from 10.95mm b/d in 1H17 to 11.34mm b/d in 2H17. We estimate U.S. shale production grows at an average rate of ~ 300k b/d in 2H17, while total U.S. liquids production increases 720k b/d over the same interval. Setting aside the possibility of a policy-induced rally in the USD on the back of too-aggressive Fed tightening or a border-adjusted tax becoming the law of the land, both of which would depress demand and raise production ex U.S., we expect the crude-oil market to remain backwardated next year. The globally synchronized upturn in GDP will keep demand robust, with growth coming in close to even with this year's rate of ~ 1.50mm b/d. We have global liquids production and OPEC crude output growing less than 1.0% next year. We believe the market is overestimating the resilience of offshore production next year, particularly in the U.S. Gulf, based on the stout performance put in last year and expected for this year. Our colleague Matt Conlan notes in BCA's Energy Sector Strategy, U.S. production growth since October has almost exclusively been from the Gulf of Mexico's new projects. Output in the Gulf continues to increase due to the lagged effect of final investment decisions made during 2012 - 2014, when WTI prices were consistently trading above $100/bbl. GOM production will peak in 2017 then decline in 2018 due to lack of new investments made since 2014. Indeed, as "increasing decline rates overwhelm a shrinking inventory of new projects, GOM production should peak sometime in 2017 and then start decreasing. The EIA's estimate for another 200,000 b/d increase in GOM production in 2017 seems overly-optimistic."5 Once this becomes apparent to the market, we believe backwardation will reassert itself and persist into 2018. The backwardation of the forward curve structure will affect U.S. shale production economics in 2018. However, our base case is for U.S. shale-oil production in the "Big Four" basins - Permian, Eagle Ford, Bakken and Niobrara - to grow 700k b/d next year, given the current structure of the WTI forwards, which were taken higher along with the WTI price rally at the front of the curve. This triggered the revival of rig counts; however, we want to point out that different curve shapes at different price levels produce different expected rig-count responses.6 Chart 4Barring a Policy Shock Demand Will Remain Robust bca.ces_wr_2017_02_09_c4 bca.ces_wr_2017_02_09_c4 Global Demand Firing On All Cylinders Robust demand growth - ~ +1.50mm b/d in 2017 and 2018 in our modeling - provides the impetus for the continued draws in storage this year and next (Chart 4). We revised our demand estimates for 2015 - 16 in line with the IEA's just-revised assessment of global consumption published in its January 2017 Oil Market Report.7 The IEA brought 2016 oil demand growth up to 1.50mm b/d, in line with our earlier estimates, but significantly revised 2015 demand growth upward to 2.0mm b/d. The Agency expects higher prices to crimp demand this year, taking it to 1.30mm b/d; our estimate, however, is higher, largely on the back of the first global synchronized growth we've seen since the Global Financial Crisis, which will be supported by accommodative monetary conditions worldwide, all else equal.8 Investment Implications Our analysis suggests there will be no need to extend the OPEC - Russia production accord into 2H17. In addition, it reinforces our view markets will backwardate later this year and stay backwardated in 2018, provided we do not see a BAT-induced rally in the USD, or an overly aggressive Fed normalization trajectory. As we noted in previous research, a BAT would lift the value of the USD, which would lower demand ex U.S. and raise supply at the margin.9 We make the odds of a BAT becoming the law of the land in the U.S. this year 50:50, so this is a non-trivial risk. This would be unambiguously bearish for oil prices. While we do not expect oil to be included among the imported commodities subject to a BAT, we do, nonetheless, expect the imposition of a BAT to lift the USD by 10%. This, coupled with the 5% increase in the greenback we'd already penciled in due to the Fed's monetary-policy normalization, will lift the USD 15% if it goes through. Should this occur, we would be preparing for prices to again fall below $50/bbl and push back to the $40/bbl area, which would cause supply and capex to once again contract significantly. That said, we are reinstating our long front-to-back WTI recommendation (long Dec/17 WTI vs. short Dec/18 WTI), given our updated balances assessment. Our expectation for inventories to continue to draw after the OPEC - Russia production-cutting agreement expires in June supports this recommendation. In addition, if we do see a BAT in the U.S., we believe markets will take the deferred WTI curve significantly lower in expectation of reduced demand and higher marginal supplies that almost surely will ensue in 2018. While the Dec/17 contract also will trade lower, more damage to prices will occur in 2018 contracts. Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see "OPEC Cuts Oil Output, But More Work Needed to Fulfill Deal," published by Bloomberg February 2, 2017. Iraq stands out among OPEC producers agreeing to cut, but apparently not following through as diligently as the rest of the Gulf Arab states; we are assuming production of 4.5mm b/d for 1H17, going to 4.6mm b/d in 2H17 for Iraq. 2 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy "2017 Commodity Outlook: Energy," dated December 8, 2016, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 3 JODI refers to the Joint Organisations Data Initiative, a supranational producer-consumer oil-market data provider headquartered in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. 4 "Backwardation" describes a forward price curve in which the price for a commodity for prompt delivery (e.g., tomorrow) exceeds the price of a commodity delivered in the future (e.g., next year). It is the opposite of a contango curve structure. 5 Please see issue of BCA Research's Energy Sector Strategy "Gulf Of Mexico Oil Production Likely To Peak In 2017," dated January 11, 2017, available nrg.bcaresearch.com. 6 In next week's report, we will present scenario analysis of shale-oil production as a function of WTI forward curve shape - i.e., the implications of backwardation for shale rig counts. This will update our assessments of price sensitivities to interest rates and USD movements. 7 Please see the IEA's Oil Market Report of 19 January 2017. 8 We discuss this in last week's Commodity & Energy Strategy feature article entitled "Gold Will Perform...," dated February 2, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy "Taking A BAT To Commodities," dated January 26, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed In 2017 Summary of Trades Closed in 2016
Gold mining shares look increasingly attractive, at least as a portfolio hedge. We took profits on our overweight position in the middle of last summer, just prior to the share price crunch, because tactical sentiment and positioning had gotten too stretched. Overzealousness no longer exists, and a revival in market volatility and intensification in policy uncertainty have created an attractive re-entry point in gold shares. The last playable rally began when the yield curve started to flatten, signaling doubts about the longevity of the business cycle. More recently, the yield curve stopped steepening when the Fed raised interest rates last month and may be signaling the start of another move up in gold shares. Importantly, sentiment toward the yellow metal is no longer overheated, as evidenced by both surveys and investor behavior. Flows into gold ETFs have been trending lower, reversing last summer's buying frenzy. Speculative positions have also been unwound. Against a positive structural backdrop for gold, we recommend reestablishing overweight positions in gold mining stocks as a portfolio hedge. Please see yesterday's Weekly Report for more details. Gold Shares: Moving Back To Overweight Gold Shares: Moving Back To Overweight
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Food price deflation bodes well for increased volumes, and by extension, packaging stocks. Upgrade to overweight. Prospects for intensifying market and economic volatility argue for reestablishing a portfolio hedge in gold shares. The tech sector underperforms when there is upward pressure on inflation, and the next twelve months is unlikely to prove an exception. Stay clear. Recent Changes S&P Containers & Packaging - Upgrade to overweight from neutral. Gold Mining Shares - Upgrade to overweight from neutral. Table 1 Bridging The Gap Bridging The Gap Feature Equity markets finally took a breather last week, as investors digested spotty earnings and began to discount the possible economic downside of U.S. isolationism. While profits should dictate the trend in stocks over the long haul, equity valuations have soared since the election, it is critical to consider the durability of this trend and other influences at this juncture. The recent string of positive economic surprises raises the risk that monetary conditions will tighten further, especially amidst rising inflation pressures and a tight labor market. As such, the broad market remains in a dangerous overshoot phase, predicated on hopes for a sustained non-inflationary global economic mini-boom. The risk is that these hopes are dashed by nationalistic policy blunders (i.e. protectionism and trade barriers) or a more muted and drawn out improvement in global economic growth than double-digit earnings growth forecasts would imply. There appears to be full buy-in to a durable bullish economic/profit outcome. We have constructed a 'Complacency-Anxiety' Indicator (CAI), using a number of variables that gauge investor positioning, sentiment and risk on/off biases (Chart 1). The CAI is at its highest level ever, signaling extreme confidence/conviction in the outlook for equities. While timing market peaks is difficult, because momentum can persist for longer than seems rational, the level of investor complacency is disturbingly high given that policy uncertainty is such a large economic threat. Global economic growth has never accelerated when global economic policy uncertainty has been this high (Chart 2, shown inverted). Chart 1Complacency Reigns Complacency Reigns Complacency Reigns Chart 2Uncertainty Is A Growth Impediment Uncertainty Is A Growth Impediment Uncertainty Is A Growth Impediment If rhetoric about anti-globalization measures turns into reality, that will deal a serious blow to burgeoning economic confidence before it translates into actual economic growth. Thus, the risk of sudden market downdrafts has risen to its highest level of this bull market. Chart 3 shows that positive economic surprises remain primarily sentiment/confidence driven, rather than from upside in hard economic data. To be sure, the stock market trades off of 'soft data' given its leading properties, but the size of the current gap is unusually large and reinforces that a big jump in 'hard data' surprises is already discounted. This gap represents a latent risk, as it did in the spring of 2011 just before the summertime equity market swoon. Chart 3A Big Gap Means Big Shoes To Fill A Big Gap Means Big Shoes To Fill A Big Gap Means Big Shoes To Fill Worryingly, the behavior of corporate insiders suggests that their confidence does not match their share price valuations. According to Barron's1, the insider sell/buy ratio has soared to an extremely bearish level for markets. For context, their gauge is close to 60; anything over 20 is deemed bearish while less than 12 falls into the bullish zone. Chart 4An Increasing Supply Of Stock An Increasing Supply Of Stock An Increasing Supply Of Stock The spike in secondary issuance corroborates insider selling (Chart 4). Insiders would not be unloading their shares if they felt earnings prospects would outperform what is discounted in current valuations. Even the pace of share buybacks has slowed considerably, to the point where the number of shares outstanding (excluding financials) has moved higher for the first time in 6 years (Chart 4). An increase in the supply of shares, from sources that have incentive to sell when the reward/risk tradeoff is unattractive, is a yellow flag. All of this argues for maintaining a capital preservation mindset rather than chasing market euphoria in the near run. Elevated complacency suggests that the consensus is focused solely on return rather than risk. It will be more constructive to put money to work when anxiety levels are higher than at present. This week we recommend adding a defensive materials sector gem, buying some portfolio insurance and we update our tech sector views. Packaging Stocks Are Gift Wrapped While our materials sector Cyclical Macro Indicator is hitting new lows, this is often a sign that the countercyclical S&P containers & packaging index deserves a second look. We have shown in past research that its strongest relative performance phases often occur when the overall materials sector is struggling. This group offers a more attractively valued alternative to play a transportation recovery than either rails or air freight, as discussed in last week's Report. From a macro perspective, deflation in global export prices should provide a strong tailwind. Why? Low prices spur volume growth. Global export volumes have begun to rebound, consistent with the increase in U.S. port traffic and intermodal (consumer) goods shipments (Chart 5). Any increase in global trade would bolster sentiment toward this high volume industry. Companies in this index are also highly exposed to the food and beverage business since the bulk of consumable non-durable goods products require packaging materials. As such, its fortunes rise and fall with swings in food prices. When food inflation is rising, consumers spend less in real terms, undermining the volume of food packaging demand. The opposite is also true. The current contraction in the food CPI has spawned a boom in food consumption, as measured by the surge in real (volumes) personal outlays on food & beverage products (Chart 6). This phenomenon is also true on a global basis, as food exports are booming (Chart 6, bottom panel), a remarkable development given U.S. dollar appreciation. Chart 5Stealth Play On Volume Growth Stealth Play On Volume Growth Stealth Play On Volume Growth Chart 6Booming Food Demand... Booming Food Demand... Booming Food Demand... Chart 7... Should Drive Up Multiples ... Should Drive Up Multiples ... Should Drive Up Multiples If food and beverage consumption stays robust, then the relative valuation expansion in packaging stocks will persist (food demand shown advanced, Chart 7). Increased demand for packaging products has become evident in the budding rebound in pricing power (Chart 8). The producer price index for containers has picked up nicely on a 6-month rate of change basis, albeit it is still low in annual growth terms. Nevertheless, any increase in pricing power would support profit margins if volume expansion persists, given the industry's disciplined productivity focus. Headcount remains in check, likely reflecting automation and investment, and is falling decisively relative to overall employment (Chart 8). The implication is that profit margins have a chance to outperform, particularly if energy prices stay range-bound (Chart 8). U.S. protectionism, and/or a continued rise in bond yields on the back of improving global economic momentum constitute relative performance risks to this position. Chart 9 shows that relative performance is mostly inversely correlated with global bond yields, given that it is a disinflationary winner. Chart 8Productivity Gains Productivity Gains Productivity Gains Chart 9A Risk Factor A Risk Factor A Risk Factor However, the global economy has already been through a phase of upside surprises. Moreover, now that China has moved to cool housing, investors should temper expectations for more stimulus to cause Chinese growth to accelerate. Conversely, economic disappointment could materialize before midyear if financial conditions tighten further. In sum, packaging stocks offer attractive exposure within an otherwise unattractive S&P materials sector. Bottom Line: Raise the S&P containers & packaging index to overweight. Gold: Back To Overweight As A Portfolio Hedge Gold mining shares look increasingly attractive, at least as a portfolio hedge. We took profits on our overweight position in the middle of last summer, just prior to the share price crunch, because tactical sentiment and positioning had gotten too stretched. Thereafter, the equity risk premium melted, dimming appetite for portfolio insurance (Chart 10). Moreover, bond yields rose in response to firming economic expectations, increasing the opportunity cost of holding an income-free asset like gold. However, in the absence of a global economic boom, which seems unlikely, and if trade barriers are erected and policy uncertainty continues to escalate, there is a limit to how high real rates can rise. Potential GDP growth remains low throughout the world, weighed down by excessive debt, weak productivity and deflationary demographics (Chart 11, second panel). Chart 10End Of Correction? End Of Correction? End Of Correction? Chart 11Structurally Bullish Structurally Bullish Structurally Bullish A revival in market volatility and an unwinding of previously frothy technical conditions have created an attractive re-entry point in gold shares. The yield curve stopped steepening when the Fed raised interest rates last month (Chart 12). The last playable rally began when the yield curve started to flatten, signaling doubts about the longevity of the business cycle. If the yield curve does not steepen anew, and interest rate expectations move laterally, then the U.S. dollar is less likely to be a barrier to gold price gains. Sentiment toward the yellow metal is no longer overheated, as evidenced by both surveys and investor behavior. Flows into gold ETFs have been trending lower in recent months, reversing last summer's buying frenzy (Chart 12). Speculative positions have also been unwound (Chart 12). Netting it out, the surge in U.S. policy uncertainty, prospects for economic disappointment relative to increasingly elevated expectations and any pause in the U.S. dollar rally support reestablishing overweight positions in gold mining stocks as a portfolio hedge, especially now that overbought conditions have been unwound (Chart 13). Chart 12No Longer Frothy No Longer Frothy No Longer Frothy Chart 13Time To Buy Hedges Time To Buy Hedges Time To Buy Hedges Bottom Line: Return to an overweight position in gold mining shares, using the GDX as a proxy. A Tec(h)tonic Shift Our Special Report published in early-December showed that the tech sector underperforms when inflation pressures accelerate. Companies in the S&P technology sector are typically mature and have shifted from reinvesting for growth to paying dividends and buying back stock. Thus, the rise in bond yields and headline inflation imply higher discount rates and by extension, lower valuations, all other things equal, for the long duration tech sector (Chart 14). Tech companies exist in a deflationary business model mindset. While relative pricing power had been in an uptrend since 2011, it has recently relapsed into the deflationary zone (Chart 15, middle panel). As shown in last Monday's Weekly Report, the tech sector is one of the few suffering from deteriorating pricing power. Chart 14Stiff Headwinds Stiff Headwinds Stiff Headwinds Chart 15Pricing Power Disadvantage Pricing Power Disadvantage Pricing Power Disadvantage Among the broad eleven sectors, tech stocks have the highest international sales exposure, so a higher dollar is also a net negative for exports, revenues and by extension profit growth, relative to the broad market. Industry sales growth is nil, significantly trailing the S&P 500's recent pick up in top line growth rate. History shows that tech relative performance is negatively correlated with the U.S. dollar in the latter stages of a currency bull market. While the temptation to position for an increase in capital spending via the tech sector is high, data do not show any demand improvement. Tech new order growth is decelerating. The tech new orders-to-inventories ratio is on the verge of contracting, and further weakness would herald downward pressure on forward earnings estimates (Chart 16). Net earnings revisions have swung violently downward recently. Any prolonged de-rating would warn of negative share price momentum given the tight correlation between the two (Chart 16). Meanwhile, the loss of tech sector competitiveness and a retreat from globalization via protectionism de-globalization pose serious headwinds to the industry's longer-term prospects. Return on equity is already ebbing, reflecting more intense profit margin pressure from the surge in wage growth and a lack of revenue gains. As a result, EBITDA growth has been non-existent (Chart 17). Chart 16Momentum Is Fading Momentum Is Fading Momentum Is Fading Chart 17Growth Remains Elusive Growth Remains Elusive Growth Remains Elusive Chart 18Profits Set To Underperform Profits Set To Underperform Profits Set To Underperform All of these factors are encapsulated in our S&P technology operating profit model, which has an excellent record in forecasting tech earnings. Chart 18 shows that tech profits are likely to contract as the year progresses, a far cry from what is expected for the broad market and the 450bps of profit outperformance embedded in analyst forecasts in the coming 12 months. Bottom Line: Reducing tech exposure on price strength is a prudent strategy. Stay underweight. 1 http://www.barrons.com/public/page/9_0210-instrans.html Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps. Favor growth over value (downgrade alert).
Highlights In line with our House view, we expect the USD will weaken near term, and are recommending a tactical long gold position if the metal trades to $1,180/oz. Longer term, the Trump administration's presumed fiscal-policy goals - e.g., lighter regulation, lower taxes - will be hitting an economy at or near full employment, and will run smack up against deflationary pressures if a border-adjusted tax (BAT) scheme is implemented. Expect higher volatility. Energy: Overweight. Fundamentals continue to point toward global oil storage drawing by ~ 300mm bbl by 3Q17. Brent was backwardated going to press in the Dec/17 vs. Dec/18 spread, while WTI is in contango.1 Our WTI backwardation trade (long Dec/17 vs. short Dec/18) stopped out at -$0.05/bbl. Markets appear reluctant to take 2018 prices below 2017 levels, but we still like the position and will look to put it on again. Base Metals: Neutral. A weaker USD and marginally softer real rates will support base metals short term. We remain neutral. Precious Metals: Neutral. We are going tactically long gold, and are bracing for more ambiguity in U.S. fiscal-policy. This will keep the Fed on hold till 2H17. Ags/Softs: Underweight. Grains and beans will remain under pressure with Argentine growing conditions improving. High stocks-to-use levels will remain a headwind. Feature Gold prices will get a short-term bounce from financial markets' recalibration of when fiscal stimulus in the U.S. actually will start contributing to growth. With nothing for the Fed to react to in terms of fiscal policy other than sundry indications the Trump administration favors lighter regulation, lower taxes and higher infrastructure spending, we believe the U.S. central bank will remain on the sidelines until mid-year before it starts guiding toward a rate hike. In the meantime, synchronized global growth (Chart of the Week) will continue to fan medium-term inflation expectations (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekSynchronized Global Growth... Synchronized Global Growth... Synchronized Global Growth... Chart 2...Is Lifting Inflation Expectations ...Is Lifting Inflation Expectations ...Is Lifting Inflation Expectations At this point in the cycle, it is unlikely the Fed or other systematically important central banks will tighten policy to arrest the emerging growth. Besides, the U.S. central bank is, for all intents and purposes, on hold until it sees the outlines of the fiscal policy to be proposed by the Trump administration, which has indicated strong preferences for lighter regulation, lower taxes and infrastructure spending. The market is putting the odds of a Fed rate hike by March at just over 20% (Chart 3). The odds of seeing a hike by June, on the other hand, increase to 64%. Chart 3Fed Most Likely On Hold Until June Fed Most Likely On Hold Until June Fed Most Likely On Hold Until June Given the constraints on the Fed for now, and indications of synchronized global growth, we expect some inflation pickup near term. This will lower real rates and weaken the USD over the short term, which will, in turn, support gold prices. Given this expectation, we are recommending a tactical long gold position if the spot contract trades to $1,180/oz. Because this is a tactical position, we will use a 5% stop-loss. Ambiguous Inflation Signals For 1H17, we expect inflation and inflation expectations to remain buoyant, given the synchronized global upturn we are seeing and the prospect - and so far it is only a prospect - for stimulative fiscal policy in the U.S. All else equal, with the U.S. labor market at or close to full employment, and the Trump administration signaling its desire for stimulative fiscal policy, we would be inclined to look for inflation hedges within commodities that are highly sensitive to rising inflation. The top candidates here would be gold and oil (WTI, in particular). But all else is not equal. President Trump and officials within the administration have floated the idea of a border-adjusted tax (BAT) scheme, which would tax imports into the U.S. and subsidize U.S. exports, and replace the existing corporate income tax. Our House view on the BAT is it has a 50% chance of becoming law. Even so, we believe there is a greater-than-50% chance apparel and energy products would be exempt from a BAT, if it became the law of the land, but we obviously cannot be sure this will occur. The first-round effects of a BAT would be felt domestically. U.S. inflation and inflation expectations would increase after it is rolled out, as prices on taxed imports rose by the inverse of (1 - Tax Rate). As an indication, a 10% BAT would lift domestic prices of taxed items by ~ 11%. If the BAT were extended to oil, the domestic price lift there would incentivize higher domestic oil production, which also would find its way to export markets. Taken together, these domestic effects arising from the imposition of a BAT would cause the U.S. trade deficit to contract, which would rally the USD, in addition to lifting domestic inflation. As we noted last week, even under the assumption a somewhat watered down version of a BAT is passed, our colleagues at BCA's Global Investment Strategy service anticipate the USD would rally another 10%.2 The second-round effects on the back of such an increase in the USD would be felt globally, particularly in oil markets and EM economies. In addition to the broad trade-weighted dollar rallying by 10%, we expected a 5% rise in the greenback prior to the discussion of the BAT. So, overall, we'd expect a 15% appreciation in toto following the implementation of a BAT in the U.S. This would stifle EM commodity demand, particularly for oil and base metals, given the stronger USD would make these commodities more expensive in local-currency terms ex U.S. In addition, it would encourage higher commodity production in the U.S. (if a BAT were to be imposed on oil imports) and ex U.S., where local-currency drilling costs once again would fall, leading to increased supplies at the margin. The possibility of deflationary blowback to the U.S. is high in this scenario. Positioning In Ambiguous Markets Investors seeking to profit from rising inflation, which we would expect in the U.S. in the first round of adjustment to a BAT, or to hedge against it often turn to commodities expecting they will rally as inflation increases. They typically do this via index exposure or individual commodity exposure, e.g., going long gold or oil. In the current environment, we believe gold offers the best commodity alternative for participating in a rising inflation environment, or hedging against it, which is why we recommend a tactical long position if the market corrects to $1,180/oz. We compared the one-year return performance of gold and oil as inflation hedges by regressing annual returns of both commodities against annual core PCE and the broad trade-weighted USD returns (Chart 4).3 The R2 goodness-of-fit statistics for both were extremely close - 0.88 (oil) vs. 0.85 (gold), indicating core PCE and USD returns do a good job of explaining oil and gold returns. However, the volatility of the gold regression (its standard error) was half that of the oil regression (0.06 vs. 0.12), indicating gold's relationship is more stable vis-à-vis core PCE inflation and the USD (i.e., subject to less dispersion). This would indicate returns for an inflation hedge using gold would be less volatile than a hedge employing oil futures.4 These tests indicate both gold and oil are well suited to hedging inflation, and that gold hedges will perform as well as an oil hedge with far less volatility in the returns. Longer term, we're concerned with the second-round effects attending a stronger USD on the back of the BAT discussed above - i.e., lower commodity demand and higher commodity supply. Over the medium to longer term, the above dynamic suggests oil and gold volatility will increase (Chart 5). Chart 4Gold Hedges Inflation And USD Risk ##br##As Well As Oil, With Lower Volatility Gold Hedges Inflation And USD Risk As Well As Oil, With Lower Volatility Gold Hedges Inflation And USD Risk As Well As Oil, With Lower Volatility Chart 5Oil And Gold Vol Likely Rise Oil And Gold Vol Likely Rise Oil And Gold Vol Likely Rise Besides being an inflation hedge, gold, unlike oil, also functions as a store of value. In the event of deflationary blowback arising from the imposition of a BAT, we believe gold also would hedge investor portfolios against the possibility of currency debasement. That is to say, it would hold its value while central banks and governments rolled out fiscal and monetary policy responses to deflation. It is worthwhile recalling nominal gold prices held fairly steady during the Great Depression, while real gold prices appreciated. We believe the optimal vehicle for such a hedge would be call options, but we await clarity the likelihood of a BAT and its provisions before recommending such a position. Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger, Research Assistant hugob@bcaresearch.com 1 Backwardation and contango are terms describing the shape of commodity forward curves. When a curve is backwardated, prompt-delivery prices (e.g., oil delivered next week) exceed deferred-delivery prices (e.g., oil delivered next year), indicating supplies are tight. A contango curve describes a market in which deferred-delivery prices exceed prompt-delivery prices, which indicates supplies are relatively more abundant. 2 We discussed the implications of a possible border-adjusted tax scheme in last week's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, in an article entitled "Taking A Bat To Commodities", dated January 26, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. See also BCA Research's Global Investment Strategy Special Report entitled "U.S. Border Adjustment Tax: A Potential Monster Issue For 2017" dated January 20, 2017, which examined the BAT in depth, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 3 We ran a simple regression of the percent returns of gold and oil against core PCE and USD annual returns over the 2001 - 2016 interval to assess the performance of each as inflation hedges. By using one-year returns, we were able to regress stationary variables and use an AR(1) model. 4 Along similar lines, the sum of squared residuals for the oil returns was almost 4x that of the gold returns, indicating far less dispersion in the errors and a tighter fit with gold vs. core PCE once again. The Durbin-Watson statistic measuring the degree of autocorrelation in the errors is was slightly > 2.0 for the gold regression, for the oil regression the DW statistic was < 2.0. This suggests the gold regression is better behaved in that the error terms more closely conform to the assumptions for them in the type of regression we're running. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed In 2017 Gold Will Perform... Gold Will Perform...