Commodities & Energy Sector
Executive Summary The Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) is flawed. This Holy Grail of financial economics assumes that investors are a homogenous bunch with identical investment horizons, when the reality is that investors have a wide spectrum of time horizons. The alternative but less well-known Fractal Market Hypothesis (FMH) recognizes that investors with different time horizons interpret the same facts and information differently. The key conclusion of the FMH is that when the different investment horizons are all active in the market, the price reflects all available information, meaning that the market is efficient, liquid, and stable. But when the different investment horizons start to converge and coalesce, the market becomes inefficient, illiquid, and vulnerable to a trend reversal. Using the FMH over the past six months, 5 structured recommendations were closed in profit: Short ILS/GBP, Short Coffee versus Cocoa, Short World Basic Resources versus Market, Long EUR/CHF, and Short Semiconductors versus Tech. Against this, 3 structured recommendations were closed in loss: Short Nickel versus Silver, Long Polish Bonds versus US Bonds, and Short World Semiconductors versus Biotech. Within the 10 open trades, 3 are in healthy profit, 4 are flat, and 3 are in loss. The Efficient Market Hypothesis Does Not Describe The Truth; The Fractal Market Hypothesis Does
Fractal Trading Update - June 2022
Fractal Trading Update - June 2022
Bottom Line: As few investors are aware of the Fractal Market Hypothesis, it gives a competitive advantage to those that use it to identify potential trend reversals. Feature For nations and societies, disagreement and conflict are unhealthy. But for financial markets, the opposite is true – it is the lack of disagreement and conflict that is unhealthy. This is because the market needs disagreement to generate liquidity, the ability to trade quickly and in large volume without destabilizing the market price. If I want to buy a share, then somebody must sell me that share. It follows that I and the seller must disagree about the attractiveness of the share at the current price. Likewise, if I and like-minded individuals want to buy ten million shares, it follows that lots of market participants must disagree with us. If lots of market participants do not disagree with us, there will be insufficient liquidity to complete the transaction without a price change. And if too many people are engaged in groupthink, the price change could be extreme. Markets Become Inefficient When There Is Not Enough Disagreement How can there be major disagreement about the attractiveness of an investment when we all have access to the same facts and information? According to the Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) there cannot be, because asset prices always reflect all available information.1 Unfortunately, the Efficient Market Hypothesis is flawed. This Holy Grail of financial economics assumes that investors are a homogenous bunch with identical investment horizons, when the reality is that investors have a wide spectrum of time horizons – ranging from the milliseconds of momentum-driven high-frequency trading (HFT) to the decades of a value-driven pension fund. The market is efficient only when a wide spectrum of investment horizons is setting the price, signified by the market having a rich fractal structure. The alternative but less well-known Fractal Market Hypothesis (FMH) recognizes the reality of different time horizons. Crucially, the FMH acknowledges that investors with different time horizons interpret the same facts and information differently. In other words, they disagree (Box I-1). Box 1-1The Efficient Market Hypothesis Does Not Describe The Truth; The Fractal Market Hypothesis Does
Fractal Trading Update - June 2022
Fractal Trading Update - June 2022
For example, the momentum-based high frequency trader might interpret a sharp one-day sell-off as a sell signal, but the value-based pension fund might interpret the same information as a buying opportunity. This disagreement will create liquidity without requiring a big price adjustment. Thereby it also fosters market stability. The key conclusion of the Fractal Market Hypothesis is that when the different investment horizons are all active in the market, the price does reflect all available information, meaning that the market is efficient, liquid, and stable. But when the different investment horizons start to converge and coalesce, the market becomes inefficient, illiquid, and vulnerable to a trend reversal. Buy and sell orders will no longer match without a price change, possibly extreme. Can we measure the loss of efficiency in a specific investment, and thereby anticipate a potential trend reversal? The answer is yes, by monitoring its fractal dimension, using the expression in the Appendix. Although many readers may find the concept of a fractal dimension intimidating, the idea is simple and intuitive. It just measures the complexity – or information content – in an object or structure. Thereby, when an investment’s fractal dimension reaches its lower limit, it warns that the information content of longer-term investors is missing from the price. When the longer-term investors do ultimately re-enter the price setting process, the question is: will they endorse the recent trend because of some major change in the fundamentals – such as the start of the Russia/Ukraine war? Or will they reject it, as an unjustified deviation from a fundamental anchor. In most cases, it is the latter: a rejection and a trend reversal. As few investors are aware of the Fractal Market Hypothesis, it gives a competitive advantage to those that use it to identify potential trend reversals. Fractal Trading Update Using the Fractal Market Hypothesis over the past six months, 5 structured recommendations were closed in profit: Short ILS/GBP, Short Coffee versus Cocoa, Short World Basic Resources versus Market, Long EUR/CHF, and Short Semiconductors versus Tech. A fragile fractal structure warns of a crowded trade. One structured recommendation was closed flat: Short Personal Goods versus Consumer Services. Against this, 3 structured recommendations were closed in loss: Short Nickel versus Silver, Long Polish Bonds versus US Bonds, and Short World Semiconductors versus Biotech. Within the 10 open trades, 3 are in healthy profit, 4 are flat, and 3 are in loss. As for the unstructured recommendations, for which we do not define profit targets or expiry dates, we are pleased to report that out of 31 recommendations, only 2 failed to experience a countertrend reversal. Wins 1) November 18th: Short ILS/GBP Achieved its profit target of 4.2 percent. 2) November 25th: Short Coffee versus Cocoa (Chart I-1) Achieved almost half of its 30 percent profit target at expiry. Chart I-1Fractal Analysis Correctly Predicted A Reversal In Coffee Versus Cocoa
Fractal Analysis Correctly Predicted A Reversal In Coffee Versus Cocoa
Fractal Analysis Correctly Predicted A Reversal In Coffee Versus Cocoa
3) January 20th: Short World Semiconductors versus Tech (Chart I-2) Achieved its profit target of 6 percent. Chart I-2Fractal Analysis Correctly Predicted A Reversal In World Semiconductors Versus Technology
Fractal Analysis Correctly Predicted A Reversal In World Semiconductors Versus Technology
Fractal Analysis Correctly Predicted A Reversal In World Semiconductors Versus Technology
4) March 10th: Long EUR/CHF Achieved its profit target of 3.6 percent. 5) April 14th: Short World Basic Resources versus Market (Chart I-3) Achieved its profit target of 11.5 percent. Chart I-3Fractal Analysis Correctly Predicted A Reversal In World Basic Resources Versus Market
Fractal Analysis Correctly Predicted A Reversal In World Basic Resources Versus Market
Fractal Analysis Correctly Predicted A Reversal In World Basic Resources Versus Market
In addition, Short World Personal Goods versus Consumer Services which was opened on December 9th reached a high-water mark of 10.5 percent but expired flat. Losses 1) December 2nd: Short World Semiconductors versus Biotech Hit its stop loss of 9.5 percent. 2) January 13th: Long Poland versus US: 10-Year Government Bonds Reached a high-water mark of 3.7 percent, but then reversed to hit its stop loss of 8 percent. In the current geopolitical crisis, Poland has been a casualty due to its lengthy border with Ukraine. 3) February 3rd: Short Nickel versus Silver (Chart I-4) Hit its stop loss at 20 percent following an explosive short-squeeze rally in the Nickel price. Chart I-4Nickel's Short-Squeeze Rally Forced A Price Trend Prolongation
Nickel's Short-Squeeze Rally Forced A Price Trend Prolongation
Nickel's Short-Squeeze Rally Forced A Price Trend Prolongation
Open Trades 1) January 27th: Long MSCI Korea versus All-Country World (Chart I-5) Open, in profit, having reached a high-water mark of 6 percent (versus an 8 percent target). Chart I-5Fractal Analysis Correctly Predicted A Rebound In Korea Versus All-Country World
Fractal Analysis Correctly Predicted A Rebound In Korea Versus All-Country World
Fractal Analysis Correctly Predicted A Rebound In Korea Versus All-Country World
2) February 24th: Long US Biotech versus US Tech Open, in profit, having reached a high-water mark of 10.5 (versus a 17.5 percent target). 3) March 3rd: Short World Banks versus Consumer Services Reached a high-water mark of 7.3 percent (versus a 12 percent target), but then reversed and is in loss. 4) March 24th: Long 5-Year T-bond Open, in modest loss. 5) April 7th: Short World Non-Life Insurance versus Homebuilders (Chart I-6) Open, in profit having reached a high-water mark of 12.4 percent (versus a 14 percent target). Chart I-6Fractal Analysis Correctly Predicted A Reversal In World Non-Life Insurance Versus Homebuilders
Fractal Analysis Correctly Predicted A Reversal In World Non-Life Insurance Versus Homebuilders
Fractal Analysis Correctly Predicted A Reversal In World Non-Life Insurance Versus Homebuilders
6) April 7th: Long JPY/CHF Reached a high-water mark of 3.4 percent versus a 4 percent target, but then reversed into modest loss. This suggests that the trade needed a narrower profit target. 7) April 28th: Short High Dividend ETF versus US 10-Year T-bond Open, in modest loss, having reached a high-water mark of 2.9 percent (versus a 6 percent target). 8) May 19th: Short FTSE 100 versus STOXX Europe 600 Open, and flat. 9) June 2nd: Long JPY/USD (Chart I-7) Open, and flat. Chart I-7The Sell-Off In JPY/USD Has Reached A Potential Turning Point
The Sell-Off In JPY/USD Has Reached A Potential Turning Point
The Sell-Off In JPY/USD Has Reached A Potential Turning Point
10) June 2nd: Short Australia Basic Resources versus World Market (Chart I-8) Open, and flat. Chart I-8The Australian Basic Resources Sector Is Vulnerable To Reversal
The Australian Basic Resources Sector Is Vulnerable To Reversal
The Australian Basic Resources Sector Is Vulnerable To Reversal
Our full watchlist of 29 investments that are at, or approaching turning points, is available on our website: cpt.bcaresearch.com Appendix: Calculating The Fractal Dimension Of A Financial Market
Fractal Trading Update - June 2022
Fractal Trading Update - June 2022
Chart 1AUD/KRW Is Vulnerable To Reversal
AUD/KRW Is Vulnerable To Reversal
AUD/KRW Is Vulnerable To Reversal
Chart 2Canada Versus Japan Is Reversing
Canada Versus Japan Is Reversing
Canada Versus Japan Is Reversing
Chart 3Canada's TSX-60's Outperformance Might Be Over
Canada's TSX-60's Outperformance Might Be Over
Canada's TSX-60's Outperformance Might Be Over
Chart 4US Healthcare Providers Vs. Software At Risk of Reversal
US Healthcare Providers Vs. Software At Risk of Reversal
US Healthcare Providers Vs. Software At Risk of Reversal
Chart 5BRL/NZD At A Resistance Point
BRL/NZD At A Resistance Point
BRL/NZD At A Resistance Point
Chart 6Homebuilders Versus Healthcare Services Has Turned
Homebuilders Versus Healthcare Services Has Turned
Homebuilders Versus Healthcare Services Has Turned
Chart 7CNY/USD Has Reversed
CNY/USD Has Reversed
CNY/USD Has Reversed
Chart 8CAD/SEK Is Vulnerable To Reversal
CAD/SEK Reversal Has Started
CAD/SEK Reversal Has Started
Chart 9Financials Versus Industrials To Reverse
Financials Versus Industrials To Reverse
Financials Versus Industrials To Reverse
Chart 10The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Biotech Has Started To Reverse
The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Biotech Has Started To Reverse
The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Biotech Has Started To Reverse
Chart 11The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Healthcare Is Vulnerable To Reversal
The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Healthcare Is Vulnerable To Reversal
The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Healthcare Is Vulnerable To Reversal
Chart 12FTSE100 Outperformance Vs. Euro Stoxx 50 Is Reversing
FTSE100 Outperformance Vs. Euro Stoxx 50 Is Reversing
FTSE100 Outperformance Vs. Euro Stoxx 50 Is Reversing
Chart 13Netherlands Underperformance Vs. Switzerland Is Ending
Netherlands Underperformance Vs. Switzerland Has Been Exhausted
Netherlands Underperformance Vs. Switzerland Has Been Exhausted
Chart 14The Sell-Off In The 30-Year T-Bond Is Approaching Fractal Fragility
The Sell-Off In The 30-Year T-Bond Is Approaching Fractal Fragility
The Sell-Off In The 30-Year T-Bond Is Approaching Fractal Fragility
Chart 15The Sell-Off In The NASDAQ Is Approaching Fractal Fragility
The Sell-Off In The NASDAQ Is Approaching Fractal Fragility
The Sell-Off In The NASDAQ Is Approaching Fractal Fragility
Chart 16Food And Beverage Outperformance Exhausted
Food And Beverage Outperformance Has Been Exhausted
Food And Beverage Outperformance Has Been Exhausted
Chart 17The Strong Trend In The 18-Month-Out US Interest Rate Future Is Fragile
The Strong Trend In The 18-Month-Out US Interest Rate Future Is Fragile
The Strong Trend In The 18-Month-Out US Interest Rate Future Is Fragile
Chart 18The Strong Trend In The 3 Year T-Bond Is Fragile
The Strong Trend In The 3 Year T-Bond Is Fragile
The Strong Trend In The 3 Year T-Bond Is Fragile
Chart 19A Potential Switching Point From Tobacco Into Cannabis
A Potential Switching Point From Tobacco Into Cannabis
A Potential Switching Point From Tobacco Into Cannabis
Chart 20Biotech Is A Major Buy
Biotech Is A Major Buy
Biotech Is A Major Buy
Chart 21Norway's Outperformance Could End
Norway's Outperformance Could End
Norway's Outperformance Could End
Chart 22Cotton Versus Platinum Is Reversing
Cotton Versus Platinum Is Reversing
Cotton Versus Platinum Is Reversing
Chart 23Switzerland's Outperformance Vs. Germany Has Ended
Switzerland's Outperformance Vs. Germany Has Started To End
Switzerland's Outperformance Vs. Germany Has Started To End
Chart 24The Rally In USD/EUR Has Ended
The Rally In USD/EUR Has Ended
The Rally In USD/EUR Has Ended
Chart 25The Outperformance Of MSCI Hong Kong Versus China Is Vulnerable To Reversal
The Outperformance Of MSCI Hong Kong Versus China Is Vulnerable To Reversal
The Outperformance Of MSCI Hong Kong Versus China Is Vulnerable To Reversal
Chart 26A Potential New Entry Point Into Petcare
A Potential New Entry Point Into Petcare
A Potential New Entry Point Into Petcare
Chart 27Czech Outperformance Near Exhaustion
Czech Outperformance Near Exhaustion
Czech Outperformance Near Exhaustion
Chart 28US REITS Are Oversold Versus Utilities
US REITS Are Oversold Versus Utilities
US REITS Are Oversold Versus Utilities
Chart 29GBP/USD At A Turning Point
GBP/USD At A Turning Point
GBP/USD At A Turning Point
Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Hadi Elzein Research Associate hadi.elzein@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Strictly speaking, the EMH assumes there is some disagreement, but that this disagreement is random and follows a standard Gaussian (bell-curve) distribution. Therefore, the EMH assumes that a share price just follows a random walk until new (unpredictable) fundamental information arrives. Fractal Trades
Fractal Trading Update - June 2022
Fractal Trading Update - June 2022
6-Month Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area
Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area
Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia
Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Listen to a short summary of this report. Executive Summary Chinese Stocks Are Relatively Cheap
Chinese Stocks Are Relatively Cheap
Chinese Stocks Are Relatively Cheap
The Chinese economy faces a trifecta of economic woes: 1) The threat of renewed Covid lockdowns; 2) Cooling export demand; 3) A floundering housing market. Trying to reflate the Chinese housing bubble would only damage the long-term prospects of China’s economy. A much better option would be to adopt measures that boost disposable income. Not only would this help offset the drag from slowing export growth and a negative housing wealth effect, but it would also take some of the sting out of China’s zero-Covid policy. With the Twentieth Party Congress slated for later this year, the political incentive to shower the economy with cash will only intensify. Chinese equities are trading at only 10-times forward earnings and about 1-times sales. A significant upward rating for equity valuations is likely if the government adopts broad-based income-support measures. Go long the iShares MSCI China ETF ($MCHI) as a tactical trade. Bottom Line: China faces a number of economic woes, but these are fully discounted by the market. What has not been discounted is a broad-based stimulus program focused on income-support measures. Dear Client, I will be visiting clients in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Abu Dhabi next week. No doubt, the outlook for oil prices will feature heavily in my discussions. I will brief you on any insights I learn in my report on June 17. In the meantime, I am pleased to announce that Matt Gertken, BCA’s Chief Geopolitical Strategist, will be the guest author of next week’s Global Investment Strategy report. Best regards, Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist Triple Threat The Chinese economy faces a trifecta of economic woes: 1) The threat of renewed Covid lockdowns; 2) Cooling export demand; 3) A floundering housing market. Let us discuss each problem in turn. Problem #1: China’s Zero-Covid Policy in the Age of Omicron Chart 1China’s Lockdown Index Remains Elevated
China: A Trifecta Of Economic Woes
China: A Trifecta Of Economic Woes
China was able to successfully suppress the virus in the first two years of the pandemic. However, the emergence of the Omicron strain is challenging the government’s commitment to its zero-Covid policy. The BA.2 subvariant of Omicron is 50% more contagious than the original Omicron strain and about 4-times more contagious than the Delta strain. While 89% of China’s population has been fully vaccinated, the number drops off to 82% for those above the age of 60. And those who are vaccinated have been inoculated with vaccines that appear to be largely ineffective against Omicron. Keeping a virus as contagious as measles at bay in a population with little natural or artificial immunity is exceedingly difficult. While the authorities are starting to relax restrictions in Shanghai, China’s Effective Lockdown Index remains at elevated levels (Chart 1). A number of domestically designed mRNA vaccines are in phase 3 trials. However, it is not clear how effective they will be. Shanghai-based Fosun Pharma has inked a deal to distribute 100 million doses of Pfizer’s vaccine, but so far neither it nor Moderna’s vaccine have been approved for use. Our working assumption is that China will authorize the distribution of western-made mRNA vaccines later this year if its own offerings prove ineffectual. The Chinese government has already signed a deal to manufacture a generic version of Pfizer’s Paxlovid, which has been shown to cut the risk of hospitalization by 90% if taken within five days of the onset of symptoms. In the meantime, the authorities will continue to play whack-a-mole with Covid. Investors should expect more lockdowns during the remainder of the year. Problem #2: Weaker Export Growth China’s export growth slowed sharply in April, with manufacturing production contracting at the fastest rate since data collection began. Activity appears to have rebounded somewhat in May, but the new export orders components of both the official and private-sector manufacturing PMIs still remain below 50 (Chart 2). Part of the export slowdown is attributable to lockdown restrictions. However, weaker external demand is also a culprit, as evidenced by the fact that Korean export growth — a bellwether for global trade — has decelerated (Chart 3). Chart 2China’s Export Growth Has Rolled Over
China's Export Growth Has Rolled Over
China's Export Growth Has Rolled Over
Chart 3Softer Export Growth Is Not A China-Specific Phenomenon
Softer Export Growth Is Not A China-Specific Phenomenon
Softer Export Growth Is Not A China-Specific Phenomenon
Spending in developed economies is shifting from manufactured goods to services. Retail inventories in the US are now well above their pre-pandemic trend, suggesting that the demand for Chinese-made goods will remain subdued over the coming months (Chart 4). The surge in commodity prices is only adding to Chinese manufacturer woes. Input prices rose 10% faster than manufacturing output prices over the past 12 months. This is squeezing profit margins (Chart 5). Chart 4Well-Stocked Shelves In The US Bode Poorly For Chinese Export Demand
Well-Stocked Shelves In The US Bode Poorly For Chinese Export Demand
Well-Stocked Shelves In The US Bode Poorly For Chinese Export Demand
Chart 5Surging Input Costs Are Weighing On The Profits Of Chinese Commodity Users
Surging Input Costs Are Weighing On The Profits Of Chinese Commodity Users
Surging Input Costs Are Weighing On The Profits Of Chinese Commodity Users
A modest depreciation in the currency would help the Chinese export sector. However, after weakening from 6.37 in April to 6.79 in mid-May, USD/CNY has moved back to 6.66 on the back of the recent selloff in the US dollar. Chart 6The RMB Tends To Weaken When EUR/USD Is Rising
The RMB Tends To Weaken When EUR/USD Is Rising
The RMB Tends To Weaken When EUR/USD Is Rising
We expect the dollar to weaken further over the next 12 months as the Fed tempers its hawkish rhetoric in response to falling inflation. Chart 6 shows that the trade-weighted RMB typically strengthens when EUR/USD is rising. Chester Ntonifor, BCA’s Chief Currency Strategist, expects EUR/USD to reach 1.16 by the end of the year. Problem #3: Flagging Property Market Chinese housing sales, starts, and completions all contracted in April (Chart 7). New home prices dipped 0.2% on a month-over-month basis, and are up just 0.7% from a year earlier, the smallest gain since 2015. The percentage of households planning to buy a home is near record lows (Chart 8). Chart 7The Chinese Property Market Has Been Cooling
The Chinese Property Market Has Been Cooling
The Chinese Property Market Has Been Cooling
Chart 8Intentions To Buy A House Have Declined
Intentions To Buy A House Have Declined
Intentions To Buy A House Have Declined
China’s property developers are in dire straits. Corporate bonds for the sector are, on average, trading at 48 cents on the dollar (Chart 9). Goldman Sachs estimates that the default rate for property developers will reach 32% in 2022, up from their earlier estimate of 19%. The government is trying to prop up housing demand. The PBoC lowered the 5-year loan prime rate by 15 bps on May 20th, the largest such cut since 2019. The authorities have dropped the floor mortgage rate to a 14-year low of 4.25%. They have also taken steps to make it easier for property developers to issue domestic bonds. BCA’s China strategists believe these measures will foster a modest rebound in the property market in the second half of this year. However, they do not anticipate a robust recovery – of the sort experienced following the initial wave of the pandemic – due to the government’s continued adherence to the “three red lines” policy.1 China is building too many homes. While residential investment as a share GDP has been trending lower, it is still very high in relation to other countries. China’s working-age population is now shrinking, which suggests that housing demand will contract over the coming years (Chart 10). Chart 9Chinese Property Developer Bonds Are Trading At Distressed Levels
Chinese Property Developer Bonds Are Trading At Distressed Levels
Chinese Property Developer Bonds Are Trading At Distressed Levels
Chart 10Shrinking Working-Age Population Implies Less Demand For Housing
Shrinking Working-Age Population Implies Less Demand For Housing
Shrinking Working-Age Population Implies Less Demand For Housing
Chinese real estate prices are amongst the highest anywhere. The five biggest cities in the world with the lowest rental yields are all in China (Chart 11). The entire Chinese housing stock is worth nearly $100 trillion, making it the largest asset class in the world. As such, a decline in Chinese home prices would generate a sizable negative wealth effect. Chart 11Chinese Real Estate Is Expensive
China: A Trifecta Of Economic Woes
China: A Trifecta Of Economic Woes
A Silver Bullet? Trying to reflate the Chinese housing bubble would only damage the long-term prospects of China’s economy. Luckily, one does not need to fill a leaky bucket through the same hole the water escaped. As long as there is enough demand throughout the economy, workers who lose their jobs in declining sectors will eventually find new jobs in other sectors. China needs to reorient its economy away from its historic reliance on investment and exports towards consumption. The easiest way to do that is to adopt measures that boost disposable income, which has slowed of late (Chart 12). Not only would this help offset the drag from slowing export growth and a negative housing wealth effect, but it would also take some of the sting out of China’s zero-Covid policy. The authorities have not talked much about pursuing large-scale income-support measures of the kind adopted by many developed economies during the pandemic. As a result, market participants have largely dismissed this possibility. Yet, with the Twentieth Party Congress slated for later this year, the political incentive to shower the economy with cash will only intensify. Chinese equities are trading at only 10-times forward earnings and about 1-times sales (Chart 13). A significant upward rating for equity valuations is likely if the government adopts broad-based income-support measures. As we saw in the US and elsewhere, stimulus cash has a habit of flowing into the stock market; and with real estate in the doldrums, equities may become the asset class of choice for many Chinese investors. With that in mind, we are going long the iShares MSCI China ETF ($MCHI) as a tactical trade. Chart 12Disposable Income Growth Has Been Trending Lower
Disposable Income Growth Has Been Trending Lower
Disposable Income Growth Has Been Trending Lower
Chart 13Chinese Stocks Are Relatively Cheap
Chinese Stocks Are Relatively Cheap
Chinese Stocks Are Relatively Cheap
At a global level, a floundering Chinese property market would have been a cause for grave concern in the past, as it would have represented a major deflationary shock. Times have changed, however. The problem now is too much inflation, rather than too little. To the extent that reduced Chinese investment injects more savings into the global economy and knocks down commodity prices, this would be welcomed by most investors. China’s economy may be heading for a “beautiful slowdown.” Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Follow me on LinkedIn Twitter Footnotes 1 The People’s Bank of China and the housing ministry issued a deleveraging framework for property developers in August 2020, consisting of a 70% ceiling on liabilities-to-assets, a net debt-to-equity ratio capped at 100%, and a limit on short-term borrowing that cannot exceed cash reserves. Developers breaching these “red lines” run the risk of being cut off from access to new loans from banks, while those who respect them can only increase their interest-bearing borrowing by 15% at most. View Matrix
China: A Trifecta Of Economic Woes
China: A Trifecta Of Economic Woes
Special Trade Recommendations Current MacroQuant Model Scores
China: A Trifecta Of Economic Woes
China: A Trifecta Of Economic Woes
Executive Summary Crude Oil Prices Will Remain High
Crude Oil Prices Will Remain High
Crude Oil Prices Will Remain High
The EU embargo on Russian seaborne oil imports will tighten global crude oil and refined-product markets further. Pipeline imports are due to phase out by year-end. This will translate to a 90% decrease in Russian crude and product exports to the EU, representing ~ 3mm b/d of lost sales. Russian crude oil production will fall to 7-8mm b/d by year-end 2023, unless the state pre-emptively cuts output before that. This would push crude oil above $140/bbl. We expect Russia to reduce natural gas exports to the EU in the wake of the oil embargo. Refined-product markets will remain tight, given refining capacity losses, tight crude oil markets and still-strong gasoline and diesel demand. OPEC 2.0 is expected to maintain its policy to nominally increase oil supply by 432k b/d at its meeting this week. Actual oil output returned to the market by the coalition is ~ 1.5mm – 1.7mm b/d below nominal levels. Bottom Line: Oil markets will continue to tighten in the wake of the EU’s embargo on Russian imports this week. Refined-product markets will remain well bid, with prices of gasoline, jet and diesel fuel close to or above record levels. We remain long oil producers and refiners via the XOP and CRAK ETFs, along with the S&P GSCI and COMT ETF, to retain exposure to higher commodity prices and backwardation. Feature Global refined-product markets are tight and getting tighter. Related Report Commodity & Energy StrategyOil, Natgas Prices Set To Surge As the Northern Hemisphere driving season gets underway, gasoline and diesel prices in the US are at record levels – up 56.55% and 70.17% respectively yoy. So are jet-fuel prices, which are up 107.97% yoy in the US. Prices are similarly robust ex-US and trading at or close to record levels. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the US permanently lost ~ 5% of total refining capacity. Currently, three of the largest refineries in the US are working on replenishing less than half of that loss by end-2023, which will take total US refining capacity to under 18.5mm b/d. US gasoline stocks are low for this time of the year. Markets expect higher demand this driving season, which unofficially ends in early September with the Labor Day weekend in the US. The US went into the Memorial Day Weekend – the start of the summer driving season – with record high motor gas prices (Chart 1). Gasoline stocks normally build in the off-season winter months. However, this year inventories are depleted (Chart 2) because of relatively high distillate “crack spreads” – gross refining margins – which incentivized refiners to produce more diesel, jet and marine fuels.1 This meant gasoline output was sacrificed in the process, which left markets tight going into the summer driving season.2 Chart 1High Gas Prices Bring In US Driving Season
High Gas Prices Bring In US Driving Season
High Gas Prices Bring In US Driving Season
US distillate crack spreads are at record highs, after stocks hit a 14-year low last month (Chart 3). Reduced oil refinery capacity will constrict future supply, keeping prices elevated, which will feed into inflation. Demand destruction will be required to balance markets and bring prices lower. Chart 2Depleted Stocks Due To Low Gasoline Margins
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Chart 3Low Distillate Stocks Produce Record Cracks
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Tight Supply-Demand Fundamentals, High Prices US refined-product prices have been strengthening since 2021 due to high crude oil prices, rising demand and lower refinery capacity and utilization rates. This keeps the level of demand for refined products consistently above the level of supply, which forces refiners to pull down inventories or increase imports to cover the supply-demand gaps. Higher refined-product prices ensue as inventories fell. As a result, crack spreads were pushed higher to encourage higher output, which remains problematic because of supply-side pressure in global crude-oil markets (Chart 4). Crude oil prices account for 60% of gasoline and 49% of diesel costs, respectively.3 Last year OPEC 2.0’s production-management strategy kept the level of crude oil supply below demand, but this year additional forces are constraining output. Supply disruptions following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, lower OPEC 2.0 production, and non-OPEC capital discipline, particularly from US shale-oil producers, have combined to constrain crude-oil production. We expect continued production restraint by core OPEC 2.0 (Saudi Arabia and the UAE); lower output from the rest of the coalition; falling Russian supply due to sanctions and an EU embargo on Russian oil imports; and continued capital discipline by shale producers. These factors will offset weaker global oil demand resulting from slower GDP growth in the EU and China. Chart 4Supply Will Barely Rise Despite High Margins
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Volatile supply-demand dynamics will keep crude oil prices elevated this year and next (Chart 5).4 The EU’s embargo on Russian oil, in particular, will raise oil-price volatility, and leave prices upwardly biased. Lastly, we do not expect the US and Iran to renew the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), which would allow ~ 1mm b/d of Iranian exports to return to the market. Chart 5Crude Oil Prices Will Remain High
Crude Oil Prices Will Remain High
Crude Oil Prices Will Remain High
Tighter Product Markets Will Persist Refined-product stocks in the US and the rest of the world were low prior to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, owing to strong demand growth and weak crude-oil supply growth last year, along with lower global refining capacity. US refinery utilization rates last year and earlier this year fell as refiners undertook heavier-than-usual maintenance, which was deferred during the pandemic (Chart 6). Refiners also closed ~ 1mm b/d in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, which resulted in ~ 5% of US refining capacity being shut-in at the start of 2021.5 Global refining capacity has fallen by more than 2mm b/d since the COVID-19 pandemic.6 As midterm elections approach, the Biden administration has been urging refiners to restart idle capacity to little or no avail, and has threatened to re-introduce export restrictions on crude oil in an attempt to hold down gasoline and diesel prices. Chart 6US Refiners Were Shut-In For Maintenance
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Gasoline markets are going into their first summer without COVID-19 restrictions since 2020. While US data for the first 3 months of 2022 suggest Americans’ gasoline consumption was more price-inelastic than in the past (Chart 7), a series of record-breaking gasoline prices recently may have been enough to start curbing US gasoline demand (Chart 8). All the same, US consumers appear to be willing to pay up for holiday breaks and get-aways, which will keep pressure on inventories during the summer driving season. Chart 7US Gasoline Demand Price Inelastic In Q1…
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Chart 8…But Record Breaking Prices May Change That
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Jet, Diesel Remain Tight, Especially In Europe The approval of an embargo on Russian oil imports into the EU earlier this week means member states on the continent that rely heavily on Russian distillate exports will remain exposed to higher refined-product prices (Chart 9).7 This will keep European diesel prices and crack spreads elevated this year and next (Chart 10). Chart 9EU Dependent On Russia For Diesel
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Chart 10Europe Refining Margins Will Remain Elevated
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Shipping markets also will continue to feel the pressure of higher prices, particularly for marine diesel fuel. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine forced insurance rates higher, which propelled shipping-rates higher in Europe and Russia (Chart 11). The EU is now slapping sanctions on insurers. In addition, the Ukraine war forced a re-routing of ships and port congestion, which led to massive supply-chain disruptions due to closures and blockades.8 High refined-product prices partly is the result of European refineries either permanently shutting in production or switching to renewable energy production when faced with low Covid-19-induced demand in 2020. In the first half of 2021, as product demand started to rise, the parabolic increase in prices of natgas – used as a fuel by refiners – was an additional headwind to refining margins. Chart 11Cost Of Shipping Crude, Products Surges
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
As of last December, more than 800 kb/d – or 5% of the continent’s refining capacity – was permanently taken offline during the pandemic.9 As a result, OECD Europe’s refining capacity for 2022 will be 11.4 mmb/d, ~ 0.8 mmb/d below pre-pandemic levels.10 Europe will need to look elsewhere for distillates. Attempting to substitute refined products in such tight energy markets will not be cheap. Sourcing imports from other states will tighten exporters’ domestic refined product markets and dislocate distillate supply to their traditional importers, which will tighten those states’ domestic markets as well. This could lead to something similar to what we are currently witnessing in LNG markets between Europe and Asia. The US, despite having its own tight refined products market, likely will step up as an alternate supplier to fill the Russian distillate supply void for states reliant on Russian diesel, jet and marine fuels. This can be seen in the 32-month high in Gulf Coast diesel exports from the US, which are the result of stronger imports by Europe and LatAm.11 Investment Implications The EU embargo on Russian oil imports will tighten global refined-product markets. If Russia retaliates by pre-emptively cutting crude oil production by 20-30%, prices would significantly exceed our forecast of $113/bbl this year and $122/bbl next year – reaching or surpassing $140/bbl. Refined-product markets will remain well bid, with prices of gasoline, jet and diesel fuel close to or above record levels. We remain long oil producers and refiners via the XOP and CRAK ETFs, along with the S&P GSCI and COMT ETF, to retain exposure to higher commodity prices and backwardation. Ashwin Shyam Research Analyst Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Paula Struk Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy paula.struk@bcaresearch.com Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish We continue to expect Russia to cut off natural gas exports to the EU in retaliation for the embargo on EU oil imports from Russia agreed this week. The timing of this cut-off is uncertain, however. As our colleague Matt Gertken notes in this week’s Geopolitical Strategy, Russia and the EU both would benefit if exports were maintained as long as possible and phased down slowly. This would provide Russia with revenues to wage war in Ukraine, while allowing Europe to avoid recession as it phases out Russian gas. This is not an equilibrium, however, as it leaves both sides exposed to a sudden reversal of the tacit understanding. In equilibrium – i.e., the strategies that guarantee the EU and Russia lose the least – both states reduce their energy trade immediately. Russia needs to show strength in the face of the EU’s embargo, and Europe needs to cut the revenues fueling Russia’s war in Ukraine, which also will deter similar aggression against member states in the future. As soon as the EU weans itself off Russian natgas, Russia’s leverage disappears. If Europe does not diversify immediately, Russia can punish it severely by cutting off energy before it is prepared. (Chart 12). In the meantime, the EU is moving heaven and earth to fill its natgas storage as quickly as possible (Chart 13). According to the GIE AGSI, the percent-full level was 46.68% as of May 30, 2022. Precious Metals: Bullish Gold prices pared losses last Wednesday after the Federal Open Market Committee’s (FOMC) minutes of the May meeting indicated the Fed will not raise rates by more than the half percentage points markets had priced in for June and July. Recent weakness in gold prices despite heightened geopolitical uncertainty can be attributed to the Fed’s tightening cycle. Rate hikes will increase real interest rates, the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding bullion and strengthen the USD, which competes directly with gold for safe-haven demand, and will also raise the price of gold in local currencies. Base Metals: Bullish Chile’s National Institute of Statistics reported the country’s Mining Production Index fell 10.6% year-over-year (y-o-y) in April, dragging the country’s overall Industrial Production Index lower by 3.6% y-o-y. The drop in mining was due to a 9.8% fall in copper production y-o-y. The contraction in mined copper output this month follows y-o-y contractions of 15%, 7% and 7.2% in January, February and March respectively this year. Chart 12
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Chart 13
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Footnotes 1 The “crack spread” (or “cracks”) is an industry term for gross margins. It derives its name from the literal cracking of the bonds holding the hydrocarbon molecules of crude oil together under intense heat and pressure, and reforming them into refined products like gasoline and diesel fuel and other liquids and gases. The crack spread is the difference between the price of a refined product and crude oil in USD/bbl. 2 In this report, we focus on diesel fuel and gasoline. Low stocks, high prices and high crack spreads are a feature of jet-fuel markets as well. 3 Please see the US EIA’s May 2022 Gasoline and Fuel Update. 4 Please see Oil, Natgas Prices Set To Surge published on May 19, 2022 for our latest balances and price forecasts. 5 Please see the U.S. EIA’s 30 June, 2021 edition of This Week In Petroleum. 6 Please see White House Eyes Restarting Idle Refineries, published by ttnews.com on May 26, 2022. 7 Please see Breakingviews: Oil embargo will hurt Putin more than EU, published by reuters.com on May 31, 2022. 8 For more on this, please refer to High Food Prices Drive EM Inflation, which we published on May 12, 2022. 9 Please see Viewpoint: European refiners cautious on cusp of 2022, published by Argus Media on December 30, 2021. 10 Please see the IEA’s January 2022 Oil Market Report. 11 Please see to PADD 3 diesel exports reach 32 month high as the competition for the non-Russian molecule begins, published by Vortexa on May 4, 2022. Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Trades Closed in 2022
In yesterday’s May In Review, we highlighted that last month, industrial metals generated the largest abnormal losses among the major financial assets we track. The returns on the metals index were greater than 1 standard deviation below the post-GFC average…
Executive Summary EU Embargoes Russian Oil
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
The EU imposed an embargo on 90% of Russian oil imports, which will provoke retaliation. Russia will squeeze Europe’s economy ahead of critical negotiations over the coming 6-12 months. Russian gains on the battlefield in Ukraine point to a ceasefire later, but not yet – and Russia will need to retaliate against NATO enlargement. The Middle East and North Africa face instability and oil disruptions due to US-Iran tensions and Russian interference. China’s autocratic shift is occurring amid an economic slowdown and pandemic. Social unrest and internal tensions will flare. China will export uncertainty and stagflation. Inflation is causing disparate effects in South Asia – instability in Pakistan and Sri Lanka, and fiscal populism in India. Asset Initiation Date Return Long Brazilian Financials / Indian Equities (Closed) Feb 10/22 22.5% Bottom Line: Markets still face three geopolitical hurdles: Russian retaliation; Middle Eastern instability; Chinese uncertainty. Feature Global equities bounced back 6.1% from their trough on May 12 as investors cheered hints of weakening inflation and questioned the bearish consensus. BCA’s Global Investment Strategy correctly called the equity bounce. However, as BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy service, we see several sources of additional bad news. Throughout the Ukraine conflict we have highlighted two fundamental factors to ascertain regarding the ongoing macroeconomic impact: Will the war cut off the Russia-EU energy trade? Will the war broaden beyond Ukraine? Chart 1Russian-Exposed Assets Will Suffer More
Russian-Exposed Assets Will Suffer More
Russian-Exposed Assets Will Suffer More
In this report we update our views on these two critical questions. The takeaway is that the geopolitical outlook is still flashing red. The US dollar will remain strong and currencies exposed to Russia and geopolitical risk will remain weak (Chart 1). In addition, China’s politics will continue to produce uncertainty and negative surprises this year. Taken together, investors should remain defensive for now but be ready to turn positive when the market clears the hurdles we identify. The fate of the business cycle hangs in the balance. Energy Ties Eroding … Russia Will Retaliate Over Oil Embargo Chart 2AEU Embargoes Russian Oil
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Europe is diversifying from Russian oil and natural gas. The European Union adopted a partial oil embargo on Russia that will cut oil imports by 90% by the end of 2022. It also removed Sberbank from the SWIFT banking communications network and slapped sanctions on companies that insure shipments of Russian crude. The sanctions will cut off all of Europe’s seaborne oil imports from Russia as well as major pipeline imports, except the Southern Druzhba pipeline. The EU made an exception for landlocked eastern European countries heavily dependent on Russian pipeline imports – namely Hungary, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, and Bulgaria (Chart 2A). Focus on the big picture. Germany changed its national policy to reduce Russian energy dependency for the sake of national security. From Chancellors Willy Brandt to Angela Merkel, Germany pursued energy cooperation and economic engagement as a means of lowering the risk of war with Russia. Ostpolitik worked in the Cold War, so when Russia seized Crimea in 2014, Merkel built the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. But Merkel’s policy failed to persuade Russia that economic cooperation is better than military confrontation – rather it emboldened President Putin, who viewed Europe as divided and corruptible. Chart 2BRussia Squeezes EU’s Natural Gas
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Russia’s regime is insecure and feels threatened by the US and NATO. Russia believed that if it invaded Ukraine, the Europeans would maintain energy relations for the sake of preserving overall strategic stability. Instead Germany and other European states began to view Russia as irrational and aggressive and hence a threat to their long-term security. They imposed a coal ban, now an oil ban the end of this year, and a natural gas ban by the end of 2027, all formalized under the recently announced RePowerEU program. Russia retaliated by declaring it would reduce natural gas exports to the Netherlands and probably Denmark, after having already cut off Finland, Poland, and Bulgaria (Chart 2B). As a pretext Russia points to its arbitrary March demand that states pay for gas in rubles rather than in currencies written in contracts. This ruble payment scheme is being enforced on a country-by-country basis against those Russia deems “unfriendly,” i.e. those that join NATO, adopt new sanctions, provide massive assistance to Ukraine, or are otherwise adverse. Chart 3Russia Actively Cutting Gas Flows
Russia Actively Cutting Gas Flows
Russia Actively Cutting Gas Flows
Russia and Ukraine are already reducing natural gas exports through the Ukraine and Turkstream pipelines while the Yamal pipeline has been empty since May – and it is only a matter of time before flows begin to fall in the Nord Stream 1 pipeline to Germany (Chart 3). German government and industry are preparing to ration natural gas (to prioritize household needs) and revive 15 coal plants if necessary. Europe is attempting to rebuild stockpiles for the coming winter, when Russian willingness and capability to squeeze natural gas flows will reach a peak. The big picture is demonstrated by game theory in Diagram 1. The optimal situation for both Russia and the EU is to maintain energy exports for as long as possible, so that Russia has revenues to wage its war and Europe avoids a recession while transitioning away from Russian supplies (bottom right quadrant, each side receives four points). The problem is that this solution is not an equilibrium because either side can suffer a sudden shock if the other side betrays the tacit agreement and stops buying or selling (bottom left and top right quadrants). Diagram 1EU-Russia Standoff: What Does Game Theory Say?
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
The equilibrium – the decision sets in which both Russia and the EU are guaranteed to lose the least – is a situation in which both states reduce energy trade immediately. Europe needs to cut off the revenues that fuel the Russian war machine while Russia needs to punish and deter Europe now while it still has massive energy leverage (top left quadrant, circled). Once Europe diversifies away, Russia loses its leverage. If Europe does not diversify immediately, Russia can punish it severely by cutting off energy before it is prepared. Russian energy weaponization is especially useful ahead of any ceasefire talks in Ukraine. Russia aims for Ukrainian military neutrality and a permanently weakened Ukrainian state. To that end it is seizing territory for the Luhansk and Donetsk People’s Republics, seizing the southern coastline and strategic buffer around Crimea, and controlling the mouth of the Dnieper river so that Ukraine is forever hobbled (Map 1). Once it achieves these aims it will want to settle a ceasefire that legitimizes its conquests. But Ukraine will wish to continue the fight. Map 1Russian Invasion Of Ukraine, 2022
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Russia will need leverage over Europe to convince the EU to lean on Ukraine to agree to a ceasefire. Something similar occurred in 2014-15 when Russia collaborated with Germany and France to foist the Minsk Protocols onto Ukraine. If Russia keeps energy flowing to EU, the EU not only gets a smooth energy transition away from Russia but also gets to keep assisting Ukraine’s military effort. Whereas if Russia imposes pain on the EU ahead of ceasefire talks, the EU has greater interest in settling a ceasefire. Finally, given Russia’s difficulties on the battlefield, its loss of European patronage, and potential NATO enlargement on its borders, Moscow is highly likely to open a “new front” in its conflict with the West. Josef Stalin, for example, encouraged Kim Il Sung to invade South Korea in 1950. Today Russia’s options lie in the Middle East and North Africa – the regions where Europe turns for energy alternatives. Not only Libya and Algeria – which are both inherently fertile ground for Russia to sow instability – but also Iran and the broader Middle East, where a tenuous geopolitical balance is already eroding due to a lack of strategic understanding between the US and Iran. Russia’s capabilities are limited but it likely retains enough influence to ignite existing powder kegs in these areas. Bottom Line: Investors still face a few hurdles from the Ukraine war. First, the EU’s expanding energy embargo and Russian retaliation. Second, instability in the Middle East and North Africa. Hence energy price pressures will remain elevated in the short term and kill more demand, thus pushing the EU and the rest of the world toward stagflation or even recession. War Contained To Ukraine So Far … But Russia To Retaliate Over NATO Enlargement At present Russia is waging a full-scale assault on eastern and southern Ukraine, where about half of Donetsk awaits a decision (Map 2). If Russia emerges victorious over Donetsk in the summer or fall then it can declare victory and start negotiating a ceasefire. This timeline assumes that its economic circumstances are sufficiently straitened to prevent a campaign to the Moldovan border.1 Map 2Russia May Declare Victory If It Conquers The Rest Of Donetsk
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
There are still ways for the Ukraine war to spill over into neighboring areas. For example, the Black Sea is effectively a Russian lake at the moment, which prevents Ukrainian grain from reaching global markets where food prices are soaring. Eventually the western maritime powers will need to attempt to restore freedom of navigation. However, Russia is imposing a blockade on Ukraine, has more at stake there than other powers, and can take greater risks. The US and its allies will continue to provide Ukraine with targeting information against Russian ships but this assistance could eventually provoke a larger naval conflict. Separately, the US has agreed to provide Ukraine with the M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS), which could lead to attacks on Russian territory that would prompt a ferocious Russian reaction. Even assuming that the Ukraine war remains contained, Russia’s strategic conflict with the US and the West will remain unresolved and Moscow will be eager to save face. Russian retaliation will occur not only on account of European energy diversification but also on account of NATO enlargement. Finland and Sweden are attempting to join NATO and as such the West is directly repudiating the Putin regime’s chief strategic demand for 22 years. Finland shares an 830 mile border with Russia, adding insult to injury. The result will be another round of larger military tensions that go beyond Ukraine and prolong this year’s geopolitical risk and uncertainty. Russia’s initial response to Finland’s and Sweden’s joint application to NATO was to dismiss the threat they pose while drawing a new red line. Rather than forbidding NATO enlargement, Russia now demands that no NATO forces be deployed to these two states. This demand, which Putin and other officials expressed, may or may not amount to a genuine Russian policy change. Russia’s initial responses should be taken with a grain of salt because Turkey is temporarily blocking Finland’s and Sweden’s applications, so Russia has no need to respond to NATO enlargement yet. But the true test will come when and if the West satisfies Turkey’s grievances and Turkey moves to admit the new members. If enlargement becomes inevitable, Russia will respond. Russia will feel that its national security is fundamentally jeopardized by Sweden overturning two centuries of neutrality and Finland reversing the policy of “Finlandization” that went so far in preventing conflict during the Cold War. Chart 4Military Balances Stacking Up Against Russia
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Russia’s military options are limited. Russia has little ability to expand the war and fight on multiple fronts judging by the army’s recent performance in Ukraine and the Red Army’s performance in the Winter War of 1939. This point can be illustrated by taking the military balance of Russia and its most immediate adversaries, which add up to about half of Russian military strength even apart from NATO (Chart 4). Russian armed forces already demonstrated some pragmatism in April by withdrawing from Kyiv and focusing on more achievable war aims. Unless President Putin turns utterly reckless and the Russian state fails to restrain him, Russia will opt for defensive measures and strategic deterrence rather than a military offensive in the Baltics. Hence Russia’s military response will come in the form of threats rather than outright belligerence. However, these threats will probably include military and nuclear actions that will raise alarm bells across Europe and the United States. President Dmitri Medvedev has already warned of the permanent deployment of nuclear missiles in the Kaliningrad exclave.2 This statement points to only the most symbolic option of a range of options that will increase deterrence and elevate the fear of war. Otherwise Russia’s retaliation will consist of squeezing global energy supply, as discussed above, including by opening a new front in the Middle East and North Africa. Instability should be expected as a way of constraining Europe and distracting America. Higher energy prices may or may not convince the EU to negotiate better terms with Russia but they will sow divisions within and among the allies. Ultimately Russia is highly unlikely to sacrifice its credibility by failing to retaliate for the combination of energy embargo and NATO enlargement on its borders. Since its military options are becoming constrained (at least its rational ones), its economic and asymmetrical options will grow in importance. The result will be additional energy supply constraints. Bottom Line: Even assuming that the war does not spread beyond Ukraine – likely but not certain – global financial markets face at least one more period of military escalation with Russia. This will likely include significant energy cutoffs and saber-rattling – even nuclear threats – over NATO enlargement. China’s Political Situation Has Not Normalized China continues to suffer from a historic confluence of internal and external political risk that will cause negative surprises for investors. Temporary improvements in government policy or investor sentiment – centered on a relaxation of “Zero Covid” lockdowns in major cities and a more dovish regulatory tone against the tech giants – will likely be frustrated, at least until after a more dovish government stance can be confirmed in the wake of the twentieth national party congress in October or November this year. At that event, Chinese President Xi Jinping is likely to clinch another ten years in power and complete the transformation of China’s governance from single-party rule to single-person rule. This reversion to autocracy will generate additional market-negative developments this year. It has already embedded a permanently higher risk premium in Chinese financial assets because it increases the odds of policy mistakes, international aggression, and ultimately succession crisis. The most successful Asian states chose to democratize and expand free markets and capitalism when they reached a similar point of economic development and faced the associated sociopolitical challenges. But China is choosing the opposite path for the sake of national security. Investors have seen the decay of Russia’s economy under Putin’s autocracy and would be remiss not to upgrade the odds of similarly negative outcomes in China over the long run as a result of Xi’s autocracy, despite the many differences between the two countries. China’s situation is more difficult than that of the democratic Asian states because of its reviving strategic rivalry with the United States. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken recently unveiled President Biden’s comprehensive China policy. He affirmed that the administration views China as the US’s top strategic competitor over the long run, despite the heightened confrontation with Russia.3 The Biden administration has not eased the Trump administration’s tariffs or punitive measures on China. It is unlikely to do so during a midterm election year when protectionist dynamics prevail – especially given that the Xi administration will be in the process of reestablishing autocracy, and possibly repressing social unrest, at the very moment Americans go to the polls. Re-engagement with China is also prohibited because China is strengthening its strategic bonds with Russia. President Biden has repeatedly implied that the US would defend Taiwan in any conflict with China. These statements are presented as gaffes or mistakes but they are in fact in keeping with historical US military actions threatening counter-attack during the three historic Taiwan Strait crises. The White House quickly walks back these comments to reassure China that the US does not support Taiwanese independence or intend to trigger a war with China. The result is that the US is using Biden’s gaffe-prone personality to reemphasize the hard edge (rather than the soft edge) of the US’s policy of “strategic ambiguity” on Taiwan. US policy is still ambiguous but ambiguity includes the possibility that a president might order military action to defend Taiwan. US attempts to increase deterrence and avoid a Ukraine scenario are threatening for China, which will view the US as altering the status quo and penalizing China for Russia’s actions. Beijing resumed overflights of Taiwan’s air defense identification zone in the wake of Biden’s remarks as well as the decision of the US to send Senator Tammy Duckworth to Taiwan to discuss deeper economic and defense ties. Consider the positioning of US aircraft carrier strike groups as an indicator of the high level of strategic tensions. On January 18, 2022, as Russia amassed military forces on the Ukrainian border – and the US and NATO rejected its strategic demands – the US had only one publicly acknowledged aircraft carrier in the Mediterranean (the USS Harry Truman) whereas it had at least five US carriers in East Asia. On February 24, the day of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the US had at least four of these carriers in Asia. Even today the US has at least four carriers in the Pacific compared to at least two in Europe – one of which, notably, is in the Baltics to deter Russia from attacking Finland and Sweden (Map 3). The US is warning China not to take advantage of the Ukraine war by staging a surprise attack on Taiwan. Map 3Amid Ukraine War, US Deters China From Attacking Taiwan
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Of course, strategic tensions are perennial, whereas what investors are most concerned about is whether China can secure its economic recovery. The latest data are still disappointing. Credit growth continues to falter as the private sector struggles with a deteriorating demographic and macroeconomic outlook (Chart 5). The credit impulse has entered positive territory, when local government bonds are included, reflecting government stimulus efforts. But it is still negative when excluding local governments. And even the positive measure is unimpressive, having ticked back down in April (Chart 6). Chart 5Credit Growth Falters Amid Economic Transition
Credit Growth Falters Amid Economic Transition
Credit Growth Falters Amid Economic Transition
Chart 6Silver Lining: Credit Impulse Less Negative
Silver Lining: Credit Impulse Less Negative
Silver Lining: Credit Impulse Less Negative
Bottom Line: Further monetary and fiscal easing will come in China, a source of good news for global investors next year if coupled with a broader policy shift in favor of business, but the effects will be mixed this year due to Covid policy and domestic politics. Taken together with a European energy crunch and Middle Eastern oil supply disruptions, China’s stimulus is not a catalyst for a sustainable global equity market rally this year. South Asia: Inflation Hammers Sri Lanka And Pakistan Since 2020 we have argued that the global pandemic would result in a new wave of supply pressures and global social unrest. High inflation is blazing a trail of destruction in emerging markets, notably in South Asia, where per capita incomes are low and political institutions often fragile. Chart 7South Asia: Surging Inflation
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Sri Lanka has been worst affected (Chart 7). Inflation surged to an eye-watering 34% in April and is expected to rise further. Surging inflation has affected Sri Lanka disproportionately because its macroeconomic and political fundamentals were weak to begin with. The tourism-dependent Sri Lankan economy suffered a body blow from terrorist attacks in 2019 and the pandemic in 2020-21. Then 2022 saw a power struggle between Sri Lanka’s President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and members of the national assembly including Prime Minister (PM) Mahinda Rajapaksa. The crisis hit a crescendo when the country defaulted on external debt obligations last month. These events weigh on Sri Lanka’s ability to transition from a long civil war (1983-2009) to a path of sustained economic development. While the political crisis has seemingly stabilized following the appointment of new Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, we remain bearish on a strategic time horizon. This is mainly because the new PM is unlikely to bring about structural solutions for Sri Lanka’s broken economy. Moreover, Sri Lanka holds more than $50 billion of foreign debt, or 62% of GDP. Another country that has been dealing with political instability alongside high inflation in South Asia is Pakistan, where inflation hit a three-year high in April (see Chart 7 above). The latest twist in Pakistan’s never-ending cycle of political uncertainty comes from the ousted Prime Minister Imran Khan. The former PM, who commands an unusual popular support group due to his fame as a cricketer prior to entering politics, is demanding fresh elections and otherwise threatening to hold mass protests. Pakistan’s new coalition government and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, who came to power amid parliamentary intrigues, are refusing elections and ultimatums. From a structural perspective Pakistan is characterized by a weak economy and an unusually influential military. Now it faces high inflation and rising food prices – indeed it is one of the countries that is most dangerously exposed to the Russia-Ukraine war as it depends on these two for over 70% of its grain imports. Bottom Line: MSCI Sri Lanka has underperformed the MSCI EM index by 58.3% this year to date. Pakistan has underperformed the same index by 41.6% over the same period. Against this backdrop, we remain strategic sellers of both bourses. Instability in these countries is also one of the factors behind our strategic assessment of India as a country with a growing domestic policy consensus. South Asia: India’s Fiscal Populism And Geopolitics Inflation is less rampant in India, although still troublesome. Consumer prices nearly jumped to an 8-year high in April (see Chart 7). With a loaded state election calendar due over the next 12-18 months, the jump in inflation naturally triggered a series of mitigating policy responses. Ban On Wheat Exports: India produces 14% of the world’s wheat and 11% of grains, and exports 5% and 7%, respectively. India’s exports could make a large profit in the context of global shortages. But Prime Minister Narendra Modi is entering into the political end of the business cycle, with key state elections due that will have an impact on the ruling party’s political standing two years before the next federal election. He fears political vulnerability if exports continue amid price pressures at home. The emphasis on food security is typical but also bespeaks a lack of commitment to economic reform. Chart 8India's Real Interest Rates Fall
India's Real Interest Rates Fall
India's Real Interest Rates Fall
Surprise Rate Hikes: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) increased the policy repo rate by 40 basis points at an unscheduled meeting on May 4, thereby implementing its first rate hike since August 2018. With real rates in India lower than those in China or Brazil (Chart 8), the RBI will be forced to expedite its planned rate hikes through 2022. Tax Cuts On Fuel: India’s central government also announced steep cuts in excise duty on fuel. This is another populist measure that reduces political pressures but fails to encourage the private sector to adjust. These measures will help rein in inflation but the rate hikes will weigh on economic growth while the tax cuts will add to India’s fiscal deficit. Indeed, India is resorting to fiscal populism with key state elections looming. Geopolitical risk is less of a concern for India – indeed the Ukraine war has strengthened its bargaining position. In the short run, India benefits from the ability to buy arms and especially cheap oil from Russia while the EU imposes an embargo. But over the long run its economy and security can be strengthened by greater interest from the US and its allies, recently highlighted by the fourth meeting of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad) and the launch of the US’s Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF). These initiatives are modest but they highlight the US’s need to replace China with India and ASEAN over time, a trend that no US administration can reverse now because of the emerging Russo-Chinese strategic alliance. At the same time, the Quad underscores India’s maritime interests and hence the security benefits India can gain from aligning its economy and navy with the other democracies. Bottom Line: Fiscal populism in the context of high commodity prices is negative for Indian equities. However, our views on Russia, the Middle East, and China all point to a sharper short-term spike in commodity prices that ultimately drives the world economy deeper into stagflation or recession. Therefore we are booking a 22.5% profit on our tactical decision to go long Brazilian financials relative to Indian equities. Matt Gertken Chief Geopolitical Strategist mattg@bcaresearch.com Ritika Mankar, CFA Editor/Strategist ritika.mankar@bcaresearch.com Chart 9Russia: GeoRisk Indicator
Russia: GeoRisk Indicator
Russia: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 10Other Measures Of Russian Geopolitical Risk
Other Measures Of Russian Geopolitical Risk
Other Measures Of Russian Geopolitical Risk
Chart 11China: GeoRisk Indicator
China: GeoRisk Indicator
China: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 12United Kingdom: GeoRisk Indicator
United Kingdom: GeoRisk Indicator
United Kingdom: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 13Germany: GeoRisk Indicator
Germany: GeoRisk Indicator
Germany: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 14France: GeoRisk Indicator
France: GeoRisk Indicator
France: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 15Italy: GeoRisk Indicator
Italy: GeoRisk Indicator
Italy: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 16Canada: GeoRisk Indicator
Canada: GeoRisk Indicator
Canada: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 17Spain: GeoRisk Indicator
Spain: GeoRisk Indicator
Spain: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 18Australia: GeoRisk Indicator
Australia: GeoRisk Indicator
Australia: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 19Taiwan: GeoRisk Indicator
Taiwan: GeoRisk Indicator
Taiwan: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 20Korea: GeoRisk Indicator
Korea: GeoRisk Indicator
Korea: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 21Turkey: GeoRisk Indicator
Turkey: GeoRisk Indicator
Turkey: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 22South Africa: GeoRisk Indicator
South Africa: GeoRisk Indicator
South Africa: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 23Brazil: GeoRisk Indicator
Brazil: GeoRisk Indicator
Brazil: GeoRisk Indicator
Footnotes 1 Recent diplomatic flaps between core European leaders and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reflect Ukraine’s fear that Europe will negotiate a “separate peace” with Russia, i.e. accept Russian territorial conquests in exchange for economic relief. 2 Dmitri Medvedev explicitly states ‘there can be no more talk of any nuclear-free status for the Baltic - the balance must be restored’ in warning Finland and Sweden joining NATO. Medvedev is suggesting that nuclear weapons will be placed in this area where Russia has its Kaliningrad exclave sandwiched between Poland and Lithuania. Guy Faulconbridge, ‘Russia warns of nuclear, hypersonic deployment if Sweden and Finland join NATO’, April 14, 2022, Reuters. 3 See Antony J Blinken, Secretary of State, ‘The Administration’s Approach to the People’s Republic of China’, The George Washington University, Washington D.C., May 26, 2022, state.gov. Additionally, see President Joe Biden’s remarks on China and getting involved military to defend Taiwan in a joint press conference with Japan’s Prime Minister Kishida Fumio. ‘Remarks by President Biden and Prime Minister Kishida Fumio of Japan in Joint Press Conference’, Akasaka Palace, Tokyo, Japan, May 23, 2022, whitehouse.gov. Strategic Themes Open Tactical Positions (0-6 Months) Open Cyclical Recommendations (6-18 Months) Regional Geopolitical Risk Matrix Section III: Geopolitical Calendar
Listen to a short summary of this report. Executive Summary Recession Checklist
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
US stocks were down almost 20% at their lowest point in May. Any lower and they would be pricing in recession. Central banks will raise rates to or above neutral to ensure that inflation comes back down to their targets. This will cause growth to slow. Markets will now start to worry more about faltering growth than about high inflation. In our recession checklist (see Table), no indicator is yet pointing to recession, but some may do so soon. The jury is likely to be out for some time on whether there will be a recession in the next 12-18 months. In the meantime, equities are likely to move sideways, amid high volatility.
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
Bottom Line: Investors should stay cautiously positioned for now, with only a neutral weighting in equities, and tilts towards more defensive markets and sectors. We recommend a large holding in cash to allow for funds to be redeployed quickly when there is a better entry-point. The narrative driving global markets has shifted from worries about inflation, to fretting about the risk of recession. Although headline inflation remains high (8.3% year-on-year in the US and 8.1% in the eurozone), inflation pressures have clearly peaked (for now, at least): Broad measures, such as the US trimmed-mean PCE, have started to ease significantly (Chart 1). Recommended Allocation
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
Chart 1Inflationary Pressures Are Starting To Ease
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
But now signs are emerging of a slowdown in economic growth. The Citigroup Economic Surprise Indexes in all the major regions have turned down (Chart 2), and global industrial production is falling year-on-year (albeit partly because of lingering supply-side bottlenecks) (Chart 3). Chart 2Global Growth Is Turning Down
Global Growth Is Turning Down
Global Growth Is Turning Down
Chart 3IP Growth Has Turned Negative
IP Growth Has Turned Negative
IP Growth Has Turned Negative
Equity markets – with US stocks down 19% from their peak to the May low, and global stocks 17% – are pricing in a slowdown, but not yet a recession. As we have often argued, it is almost unheard of to have a bear market (defined as a greater than 20% decline in US stocks) without a recession – the last time that happened was in 1987 (and all on one day, Black Monday) (Chart 4). Note from the chart how often stocks correct by 19-20%, on concerns about recession, without tipping into a bear market. That is where we stand today. Chart 4US Stocks Don't Fall More Than 20% Without A Recession
US Stocks Don't Fall More Than 20% Without A Recession
US Stocks Don't Fall More Than 20% Without A Recession
Table 1Recession Checklist
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
So the key question is: Will we have a recession over the next 12-18 months? We have dug out the recession checklist we last used in 2019 (Table 1). While none of the indicators are yet clearly pointing to recession, several may do so by year-end (Chart 5). And there are a number of warning signs starting to flash. The US housing market – the most interest-rate sensitive part of the economy – could soon see home prices falling, after the 200 BPs rise in the 30-year mortgage rate since the start of the year (Chart 6). Wages have failed to rise in line with inflation, which has led to retail sales falling year-on-year in real terms (Chart 7). And there are even some signs that companies are slowing their hiring, presumably on worries about the durability of the recovery: In the latest ISM surveys, the employment component fell to close to 50 (Chart 8). Chart 5Some Recession Indicators Look Worrying
Some Recession Indicators Look Worrying
Some Recession Indicators Look Worrying
Chart 6Housing Is The Most Vulnerable Sector
Housing Is The Most Vulnerable Sector
Housing Is The Most Vulnerable Sector
Chart 7Real Retail Sales Are Falling
Real Retail Sales Are Falling
Real Retail Sales Are Falling
Chart 8Signs That Companies Are Growing Wary Of Hiring?
Signs That Companies Are Growing Wary Of Hiring?
Signs That Companies Are Growing Wary Of Hiring?
The strongest argument against there being a recession is the $2.2 trillion of excess savings held by US households (and $5 trillion among households in all major developed economies). The argument is that, even if interest rates rise and real wage growth is negative, consumers can continue to spend by dipping into these accumulated savings. But there are some problems here. The savings are highly concentrated among the rich, who have a lower propensity to spend (Chart 9). Because of “mental accounting” biases, people may think only of current income, not savings, when considering how much to spend. And, as spending shifts back from goods to services, now that pandemic rules are largely over (Chart 10), spending on manufactured products is likely to fall below trend (since many purchases were brought forward). But it is hard to catch up on previously missed services spending (you can’t take three vacations this year to make up for those you missed in 2020 and 2021), and so services spending will, at best, only return to trend. Chart 9The Rich Have All The Money
The Rich Have All The Money
The Rich Have All The Money
Chart 10Can Services Take Over From Goods Spending?
Can Services Take Over From Goods Spending?
Can Services Take Over From Goods Spending?
Meanwhile, central banks will be focused on fighting inflation. All of them are expected to take rates to or above neutral over the next 12 months (Chart 11) – implying a squeeze on aggregate demand. Although inflation may be peaking, it is still well above most central banks’ comfort zones. In the US, for example, the FOMC expects core PCE to ease to 4.1% by year-end and 2.6% by end-2023, but that is still higher than its 2% target. The Fed is likely to remain focused on the upside risks to inflation: From rising services prices (Chart 12), and the risk of a price-wage spiral (Chart 13). BCA Research’s bond strategists expect the Fed to hike by 50 BPs at each of the next two meetings (in June and July), and then to revert to 25 BPs a meeting, as long as it is clear by then that inflation is trending down.1 Chart 11Rates Are Going To Or Above Neutral Everywhere
Rates Are Going To Or Above Neutral Everywhere
Rates Are Going To Or Above Neutral Everywhere
Chart 12Inflation Risks: Rising Services Prices...
Inflation Risks: Rising Services Prices...
Inflation Risks: Rising Services Prices...
Our conclusion is that the jury is out on the probability of recession – and is likely to stay out for a while. So far this year, equities and bonds have both performed poorly – with a 60:40 equity/bond portfolio producing the worst start to a year in three decades (Chart 14). Equities have wobbled because of tight monetary policy and worries about slowing growth; bonds because of inflation concerns. This is likely to remain the case until there is more clarity about the risk of recession. In this environment, we expect global equities to move sideways, with significant volatility – falling on signs of weakening growth, but rallying on hopes that the Fed may change its course.2 Chart 13...And A Price-Wage Spiral
...And A Price-Wage Spiral
...And A Price-Wage Spiral
Chart 14Nowhere To Hide This Year
Nowhere To Hide This Year
Nowhere To Hide This Year
We continue, therefore, to recommend fairly cautious portfolio positioning, with a neutral weight in global equities (and a preference for defensive country and sector allocations). Investors should keep a healthy holding in cash, giving them dry powder to use when a better entry-point into risk assets presents itself. Fixed Income: Bond yields have fallen over the past month, with the US 10-year Treasury yield slipping to 2.8% from 3.1% in early May. As per BCA Research’s Golden Rule of Bond Investing, the level of yields will be determined by whether the Fed (and other central banks) surprise dovishly or hawkishly relative to market expectations (Chart 15).3 The Fed is likely to hike slightly less this year than the market is pricing in, but may continue to raise rates beyond mid-2023, compared to a market expectation of rate cuts then (see Chart 11, panel 1 above). This points to the 10-year yield remaining broadly flat for the rest of this year, but possibly rising after that. Historically, rates tend to peak in line with trend nominal GDP growth (Chart 16). This means that, if the expansion continues for another couple of years, the 10-year yield could reach 4%. We, therefore, recommend an underweight on bonds. However, government bonds do now represent a good hedge again, with strong capital gain in the event of recession (Table 2). We recommend a neutral weight on government bonds within the fixed-income category. Chart 15The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing
The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing
The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing
Chart 16Rates Tend To Peak In Line With Trend Nominal GDP Growth
Rates Tend To Peak In Line With Trend Nominal GDP Growth
Rates Tend To Peak In Line With Trend Nominal GDP Growth
Table 2Government Bonds Now Offer Good Returns In A Recession
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
Chart 17Credit Now Offers Attractive Valuations
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
The recent rise in credit spreads has opened some opportunities. Valuations for both investment-grade (IG) and high-yield (HY) bonds are now attractive again, with all but the highest-quality bonds trading at a breakeven spread higher than the long-run median (Chart 17). The likelihood of defaults is rising, however, so we lower our weighting in HY (whilst remaining slightly overweight) and raise the weight in IG, also to a small overweight. We fund this by cutting our recommendation in Emerging Market debt to underweight. Credit, especially in the US, now offers tempting returns as long as the economy avoids recession, and is a relatively low-risk way to gain exposure to upside surprises. Chart 18US Performance Has Lagged This Year
US Performance Has Lagged This Year
US Performance Has Lagged This Year
Equities: US relative equity performance has been a little disappointing year-to-date, dragged down by the performance of the IT sector (Chart 18). Nonetheless, we stick to our overweight, given the market’s lower beta and the likely greater resilience of the US economy. Among sectors, we raise our weighting in Energy to overweight from neutral. Our energy strategists recently lifted their forecast for end-2022 Brent crude to $120 from $90, and raise the possibility of even $140 (see below for more on why). Despite the sharp outperformance of Energy stocks over the past six months, the sector has barely registered net inflows – presumably because of ESG (Chart 19). As we argued in a recent report, oil producers could be the new “sin stocks”, making the sector attractive over the next few years to investors who do not have ethical restraints on investing in it. We fund the overweight in Energy by lowering our weighting in Industrials to neutral. Capex is a late-cycle play and capital-goods makers benefited as manufacturers rushed to increase production during the recent consumer boom. But signs are now emerging that companies are becoming more cautious on capex (Chart 20). Chart 19Weak Flows Into The Energy Sector Despite Strong Performance
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
Chart 20Companies Are Becoming More Cautious On Capex
Companies Are Becoming More Cautious On Capex
Companies Are Becoming More Cautious On Capex
Commodities: China’s growth remains very weak and, although commodity prices have started to fall (with copper down 9% and iron ore 11% in Q2), they have not yet caught up with the slowdown in Chinese imports (Chart 21). The key question is whether China will now roll out a big stimulus. Given the government’s determination to persevere with the zero-Covid policy, and its need to achieve the 5.5% GDP growth target this year, it will eventually have no choice. But it is reluctant to trigger another housing boom, and there are doubts about how effective stimulus would be given the property market’s dysfunction. For now, we remain cautious on the Materials sector, and on commodities as an alternative asset – though the long-term structural story (because of the build-out of alternative energy) remains strong. Oil and natural-gas prices are likely to remain high due to disruptions in supply from Russia. Russia will probably have to shut 1.6 m b/d of production following the EU embargo on Russian oil imports. The EU is rushing to build up natural-gas inventories before the winter, in case Russia bans gas exports to Europe in retaliation (Chart 22). Higher oil prices are positive for the Energy sector, and for countries such as Canada (whose equity market we raise to neutral, funding this by trimming the overweight in the US). Chart 21Commodity Prices Dragged Down By Weak Chinese Growth
Commodity Prices Dragged Down By Weak Chinese Growth
Commodity Prices Dragged Down By Weak Chinese Growth
Chart 22The EU Will Need To Buy Lots Of Natural Gas
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
Currencies: Momentum, cyclical factors, and interest-rate differentials still favor the US dollar. Although the Fed will not raise rates quite as much as futures are pricing in, other central banks – especially the ECB and the Reserve Bank of Australia – will miss by more (Table 3). Nevertheless, the USD looks very overvalued (Chart 23) and speculators are long the currency. This means that, once global growth bottoms, there could be a sharp depreciation in the dollar. We remain neutral on the USD. Our preferred defensive currency is the CHF, since the other usual safe haven, the JPY, will remain depressed if, as we expect, the Bank of Japan persists with its yield curve control, limiting the 10-year JGB yield to 0.25%. Table 3Most Central Banks Will Not Hike As Much As Futures Predict
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
Monthly Portfolio Update: Recession Or No Recession?
Chart 23US Dollar Is Very Overvalued
US Dollar Is Very Overvalued
US Dollar Is Very Overvalued
Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Global Asset Allocation garry@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy Report, “Echoes Of 2018” dated May 24, 2022. 2 BCA Research’s US equity strategists call this a “Fat and Flat” market. Please see “What Is Next For US Equities? They Will Be Fat And Flat”. 3 Please see “Updating Our Global Golden Rule Of Bond Investing As Inflation Momentum Peaks” for an explanation of how the Golden Rule works in different countries. Recommended Asset Allocation Model Portfolio (USD Terms)
The price of lumber has collapsed by roughly 50% over the past three months, bringing it down to its lowest level since November 2021. This slump coincides with a sharp increase in mortgage rates this year, which is weighing down on the outlook for the…
Executive Summary Inflationary Pressures To Fade
Inflationary Pressures To Fade
Inflationary Pressures To Fade
The biggest problem for the European economy is surging inflation. Inflation has eroded household real disposable income and is hurting consumption. Inflation is set to roll over this summer, which should allow European economies to begin recovering in the fourth quarter of 2022. The ECB is likely to pause after exiting negative interest rates in Q3. European credit is becoming more attractive, but the risks to our view of European growth could still cause major problems for this asset class. Swiss stocks are vulnerable to a pullback relative to German ones. In France, President Emmanuel Macron is likely to get a legislative majority in June. Bottom Line: European growth should recover after inflation rolls over this summer. The peak in inflation will allow the ECB to pause after its deposit rate gets to zero. Despite this positive view, the large risks hanging over Europe suggest prudence is still warranted. European assets are rebounding in conjunction with the decline in risk aversion visible around global markets. The euro is catching a welcome bid too. However, as we wrote last week, while the conditions are falling in place to see a rally in Europe, too many risks continue to lurk in the background. Therefore, we maintain our conservative approach to European markets, and we still recommend a defensive portfolio. Related Report European Investment StrategyDon’t Be A Hero To shift to a less defensive stance, we want first to observe a peak in European inflation. Inflation represents the greatest problem for the European economy. If inflation continues to surge, the purchasing power of households will deteriorate further and the ECB will ratchet up its hawkish rhetoric, which will cause considerable mayhem in the European economy. A Reprieve For Europe? Only when the income suppressing impact of inflation recedes will European growth strengthen. Chart 1Paying More For The Same
Paying More For The Same
Paying More For The Same
Higher prices continue to hurt European consumption. As witnessed in the US, European retail sales are rising in nominal terms (Chart 1). However, households are not consuming more; they are spending more to purchase the same amount of goods, which is illustrated by the stagnation in retail sales volumes over the past twelve months. Households are not increasing the size of their consumption baskets, because their incomes are not keeping up with inflation. Unlike in the US, Eurozone households never saw their real disposable income spike during the pandemic because European governments focused on preserving jobs rather than distributing large handouts to households. As a result, European real disposable income began to lag its pre-pandemic trend (Chart 2). As the economy recovered, disposable income did not converge back to trend. Now that food and energy prices have spiked, the gap between real disposable income and its trend is only widening. Wages are not coming to the rescue either. The European labor market has been incapable of generating the same kind of wage growth that the US labor market has enjoyed. Even the recent uptick in negotiated wages is not as strong as it seems. German workers benefited from a one-off payment that caused wages to spike by 6.7%, elevating the Euro Area average to 2.8% from 1.6%. However, without that adjustment, German underlying wage growth fell from 3.9% to 1.6% (Chart 3), which means that the underlying European wage only rose by 2%. Chart 2Inflation Destroys Purchasing Power
Inflation Destroys Purchasing Power
Inflation Destroys Purchasing Power
Chart 3Not As Strong As It Seems
Not As Strong As It Seems
Not As Strong As It Seems
The distinction between one-off payments and underlying wages matters. As per Milton Friedman’s permanent income hypothesis, households are unlikely to shift their consumption pattern based on a temporary boost to income. They will save it, or in today’s case, use their one-off payment to cover their food and energy price increases. If today’s wage boost is not repeated, but inflation remains elevated, consumption will suffer. Europe’s tourism industry would be another major beneficiary from the peak in inflation. Prior to the pandemic, tourism contributed to 13%, 14% and 9% of the Italian, Spanish, and French economies, respectively. This sector was decimated during the pandemic after travel came to a halt. We are seeing positive signs emerge on this front. In the spring of 2021, nights spent at hotels were 80% below their spring 2019 levels for the Euro Area (Chart 4). As of March 2022, this variable is now between 15% and 30% below their March 2019 levels in Italy and France, respectively. Moreover, Google Mobility indices for the retail and recreation sectors have almost fully recovered (Chart 5). Thus, we can expect these trends to gather steam once inflation slows, because it will free up household disposable income. Europe’s periphery is particularly well placed to benefit from this eventual positive development. Chart 4Improving Tourism Sector
Improving Tourism Sector
Improving Tourism Sector
Chart 5Mobility Pick-Up
Mobility Pick-Up
Mobility Pick-Up
Positively, European inflation will peak soon. Commodity prices remain elevated, but commodity inflation has decelerated significantly. Hence, the commodity impulse is consistent with an imminent decline in Euro Area HICP (Chart 6). A simulation using BCA’s Commodity & Energy forecast for Brent, which also assumes that European natural gas prices will continue to hover around EUR100/MWh and that EUR/USD will hit 1.1 by year-end, confirms that energy inflation will swoon (Chart 7). Even if we assume a sudden surge in energy prices due to a Russian natural gas cutoff, energy inflation will recede in the second half of 2022 after spiking this summer. Chart 6Peak Inflation?
Peak Inflation?
Peak Inflation?
Chart 7Beware The Russia Cutoff Risk
Beware The Russia Cutoff Risk
Beware The Russia Cutoff Risk
Chart 8Less Pressure From The Consumer Of Last Resort
Less Pressure From The Consumer Of Last Resort
Less Pressure From The Consumer Of Last Resort
Beyond the energy market, global forces also point toward a peak in European inflation in the coming months. The surge in US goods consumption over the past 24 months was felt globally and generated inflationary pressures in Europe as well. However, US durable goods consumption is declining (Chart 8). As a result, this important driver of European inflation will recede. Bottom Line: European consumption will not recover until inflation peaks. Without a deceleration in inflation, household disposable income will remain weak and consumers will remain careful. The good news is that European inflation is still on track to begin its descent this summer, which will boost the prospect for consumer spending and tourism. ECB Update: A Fall Pause? In a blog post last Monday, ECB president Christine Lagarde confirmed that the central bank will lift interest rates in July and will push the deposit rate to zero by September. Chart 9Too Much Priced In
Too Much Priced In
Too Much Priced In
The economy is likely able to handle those two rate hikes. Our ECB monitor highlights the need to remove monetary accommodation in the Eurozone (Chart 9). Moreover, the German 2-/10-year yield curve has steepened this year, despite the hawkish shift in the ECB’s rhetoric, which confirms that monetary conditions are extremely accommodative. We expect the ECB to pause its rate hike campaign after exiting negative rates this fall to reassess economic conditions. Constraints on the ECB remain potent. If the central bank ignores these limiting factors, a policy mistake will ensue. Inflation is likely to decelerate by the end of the summer, which will undercut the hawks driving the consensus at the Governing Council today. Inflation is the factor pushing the ECB Monitor higher right now, not growth conditions (Chart 9, second panel). Thus, the case for lifting rates will weaken considerably when inflation slows. Growth is unlikely to have recovered enough by September to justify additional rate hikes after inflation slows. The expected improvement in consumption and household finances discussed earlier will be embryonic by the end of the summer and will not offer a clear case to lift rates further. Instead, the ECB will still have to juggle the tightening in financial conditions created by wider bond spreads in the European periphery and the impact of China’s slowdown on European exports. Meanwhile, capex is unlikely to strengthen meaningfully as long as global trade softens. As a result, we stay long the June 2023 Euribor futures. An extended pause after the September meeting will prevent the ECB from hiking rates as much as money markets expect over the coming twelve months (Chart 9, bottom panel). If the ECB goes ahead and continues to lift rates in the fall and early winter, the European economy will weaken considerably more and the previous rate hikes will have to be undone. Both scenarios are bullish for the June 2023 Euribor contract. Bottom Line: The ECB is likely to pause after pushing its deposit rate to zero in the third quarter in order to reassess economic conditions. Inflation is the main factor behind higher rates, and it will peak this summer. Meanwhile, the economy is still not strong enough to justify significantly higher interest rates. The market’s pricing in the ESTR curve is much too aggressive considering this context. Stay long June 2023 Euribor futures. Credit Update: Don’t Be A Hero Chart 10Cautious In Absolute Terms, Positive On Relative Performance
Cautious In Absolute Terms, Positive On Relative Performance
Cautious In Absolute Terms, Positive On Relative Performance
Credit markets are experiencing a second episode of spread widening this year. The first episode was triggered by the invasion of Ukraine by Russia. The current one reflects strong inflation, weaker growth prospects, and the ECB’s policy shift. Year-to-date, European investment grade and high-yield corporate bond option-adjusted spreads have widened by 74bps and 188bps, respectively (Chart 10, top panel). As we wrote last week, if the global economic situation were to stabilize, then European assets would be a buy at current levels. This is especially true for European credit. Beyond attractive valuations, corporate bond issuers’ balance sheets are in good shape and the default risk is low. However, the same risks that prevent us from being buyers of the euro and European stocks today also hang over the credit market. Specifically, a further deterioration of the energy flows between Russia and the EU and/or a policy mistake, whereby the ECB delivers the seven rate hikes priced in the overnight index swap market, would cause spreads to widen meaningfully from their current elevated levels. Therefore, we recommend investors remain on the sidelines and wait for a safer entry point over the coming weeks. Once inflation has peaked and stagflation/recession fears recede, then credit spreads will have ample room to narrow, especially if the ECB decides to pause after lifting the deposit rate to 0% (Chart 10, second panel). In the meantime, expected policy rate differentials are still supportive of an overweight on European credit relative to US credit (Chart 10, bottom panel). Bottom Line: European spreads are most likely peaking. However, the same risks that hang over EUR/USD and European equities prevent us from buying this asset class just yet. Swiss Stocks Are Getting Expensive Chart 11Swiss Stocks Getting Ahead Of Earnings
Swiss Stocks Getting Ahead Of Earnings
Swiss Stocks Getting Ahead Of Earnings
The defensive Swiss market has greatly outperformed its Euro Area counterpart this year. However, the recent bout of Swiss outperformance has been completely dissociated from the trend in Swiss EPS relative to those of the Euro Area (Chart 11). Now, Swiss equities are particularly expensive and sport multiples 45% greater than the P/E ratio of the Eurozone MSCI benchmark. This bifurcation between the relative performance of Swiss stocks and their relative earnings represents a trading opportunity. Specifically, Swiss shares look vulnerable against German ones, which have been seriously beaten down in recent years. Chart 12Priced For The Apocalypse
Priced For The Apocalypse
Priced For The Apocalypse
Swiss stocks have been re-rated on the back of many forces. First, the valuations of Swiss stocks relative to German ones have risen in tandem with the Eurozone’s headline and core inflation (Chart 12, top and second panel). Swiss relative valuations have also benefited from the significant tailwind created by higher 2-year rates in the Eurozone (Chart 12, third panel) and from the weakness in the euro (Chart 12, fourth panel). Finally, Swiss relative valuations seem to have already priced in a significant deterioration in European manufacturing activity, which would have lifted their appeal as a defensive play (Chart 12, bottom panel). We recommend selling Swiss stocks against German ones. We anticipate European inflation to peak this summer. Our ECB view is consistent with a decline in Germany’s 2-year bond yields. We also expect the euro to bottom and, even though we have written about a deterioration in European manufacturing activity, the recent explosion of Swiss multiples relative to German ones looks overdone. This trade may be seen as our first attempt to dip our toe into cyclical assets, even if we generally favor capital preservation over risk taking at this juncture. Bottom Line: The outperformance of Swiss equities is overextended and is already pricing in a dire outcome for European economies. Selling Swiss shares relative to German stocks is an attractive way to add tentatively some risk to a European portfolio. France Update: Likely Legislative Majority For Macron Chart 13French Polls Suggest Macron Will Get His Legislative Majority
Looking Beyond Europe’s Inflation Peak
Looking Beyond Europe’s Inflation Peak
President Emmanuel Macron’s political party, Renaissance (previously En Marche!), may surprise to the upside in this year’s legislative election. An aggregate of recent polls (Chart 13) suggests that the presidential coalition (which includes Renaissance and its allies) will obtain between 295 and 340 seats in the Assemblée Nationale, more than the 289 seats needed to achieve a majority. The odds of seeing an historically low voter turnout should also play in the French president’s favor. Chart 14Favor French Small-Caps & Avoid Consumer Stocks
Favor French Small-Caps & Avoid Consumer Stocks
Favor French Small-Caps & Avoid Consumer Stocks
Macron will not have to compromise to build a coalition in favor of his reform agenda, which bodes well for French productivity and trend growth. This election should not have an impact on French assets beyond that. We continue to recommend investors favor French small-caps, as they will benefit from an improvement in domestic consumer confidence and an eventual strengthening in the euro (Chart 14). Meanwhile, we still see more downside for French consumer stocks (Chart 14, bottom panel). Mathieu Savary, Chief European Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com Jeremie Peloso, Editor/Strategist JeremieP@bcaresearch.com Tactical Recommendations Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations
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