Commodities & Energy Sector
Highlights Copper prices will continue to rally, following a surge this week to highs not seen since early 2013 on the back of falling inventories, particularly in China, where physical demand has taken stocks to their lowest levels in almost 10 years (Chart of the Week). Physical premiums for the copper cathodes delivered to off-exchange bonded warehouses in China this week are up almost 60% since November – to $73/MT – providing further evidence of market tightness. Mine output in Peru, the second largest producer behind Chile, was down 12.5% to 2.15mm MT last year in the wake of COVID-19 containment measures. Given this large decline in output, the multi-year flattening of supply growth will continue. Upside demand pressure is building, as COVID-19 vaccination rates rise. Funding for the build-out of renewable energy generation is ramping up, and now includes expected US fiscal stimulus focused on renewables. Recovering global GDP, and China’s metals-intensive Five-Year Plan also will contribute to demand growth. We continue to expect COMEX copper to trade above $4/lb this year, but the likelihood this occurs in 1H21 (vs 2H21 as we earlier forecast) is increasing. Forward curves will become more backwardated, as markets continue to tighten. Feature Copper prices will continue to surge on the back of unexpected strength in Chinese demand, which has taken inventory levels to near-decade lows. This is something of an anomaly going into a Lunar New Year – the year of the Metal Ox – when activity typically slows. The big draw from global stocks that went into China’s inventories last year means global stocks will remain tight as the rest of the world continues its recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic (Chart 2). Particularly noteworthy are the huge drops in copper inventories held in the Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE, panel 3), and the London Metal Exchange (LME, panel 5), which are driving global drawdowns. Away from the commodity-exchange inventories, premiums for delivery of copper cathodes from bonded warehouses into China surged close to 60% from November levels to $73/MT earlier this week, as demand for physical material surges, according to reuters.com. Cathodes are used to make wire, tubes, for melting stock and in copper alloys. Demand for cathodes is rising outside China, which indicates they will retain a physical premium, even with exports from Chile restored to normal following weather-related disruptions. Chart of the WeekCopper Prices Surge As Global Storage Draws
Copper Prices Surge As Global Storage Draws
Copper Prices Surge As Global Storage Draws
Chart 2Falling Global Inventories Support Copper Prices
Falling Global Inventories Support Copper Prices
Falling Global Inventories Support Copper Prices
Chart 3Sources of Copper Demand Strength
Sources of Copper Demand Strength
Sources of Copper Demand Strength
This year’s departure from a seasonal demand downturn in Chinese copper demand likely is due to government efforts to limit travel to contain COVID-19 contagion, which means workers remain available to meet stronger demand for manufactured goods domestically and abroad. In addition, domestic demand – from electrification and infrastructure to housing – is particularly robust, which has kept pressure on inventories (Chart 3). Longer-Term Copper Demand Strength Baseline industrial, construction and infrastructure demand for copper – what’s already in place and continues to grow in line with the expansion of global GDP – will be augmented by the global build-out of renewables-based electricity generation, as the world moves toward a low-carbon future (Chart 4). Chart 4Incremental Renewables Demand Requires Significant Capex
Copper Surge Welcomes Metal Ox Year
Copper Surge Welcomes Metal Ox Year
While this will not tax existing resources to the extent other materials will – e.g., copper demand from renewables will require less than 20% of existing identified reserves to meet cumulative demand to 2050 vs. the more than 100% of reserves required to meet cobalt demand by 2050 – this is still significant in a market requiring large capex increases to battle declining ore quality (Chart 5).1 Chart 5Higher Prices Needed To Spur Mining CAPEX
Higher Prices Needed To Spur Mining CAPEX
Higher Prices Needed To Spur Mining CAPEX
Copper Supply Side Remains Challenged Short- and long-term challenges to global copper supply abound. Peru’s mine output was down 12.5% last year – to 2.15mm MT – in the wake of COVID-19 containment measures (Chart 6). Given Peru’s unexpectedly large decline in output, the multi-year flattening of supply growth we highlighted last month will continue.2 Indeed, we expect mined and refined output to show little or no growth this year, as was the case last year. This can partly be blamed on a lethargic recovery in mining capex, which hit a 10-year low in 2017. Longer term, as the continued global inventory drawdowns illustrate, the rate of growth in mined and refined production is far below the rate of growth in consumption globally. This is occurring as the pace of China’s recovery from COVID-19 aggregate demand destruction can be expected to start winding down later this year and growth ex-China ramps up (Chart 7). Chart 6Peru Posts Sharply Lower Output
Peru Posts Sharply Lower Output
Peru Posts Sharply Lower Output
Prices for ore and refined copper will have to move higher to incentivize new production over the near term just to meet existing demand, to say nothing of new demand coming on from the global buildout in renewable-energy generation.3 Chart 7Supply Growth Lags Demand Growth
Supply Growth Lags Demand Growth
Supply Growth Lags Demand Growth
Investment Implications As the rates of COVID-19 infection, hospitalization and deaths continue to fall globally, markets will begin to see evidence of an organic recovery in aggregate demand globally taking hold (Chart 8). We also expect this will remove a significant amount of the embedded risk premium in the broad trade-weighted USD, which will be bullish for commodities generally. The combination of organic growth and a weaker USD will boost the level of copper demand globally, even if China is slowing in 2H21, as our China Investment Strategy expects. This will put the weak y/y production growth in mined and refined copper in sharp perspective vis-à-vis copper demand, and will push copper prices higher. These fundamentals also will deepen the backwardation in CME COMEX copper futures for high-grade refined metal, as inventories continue to draw, and markets continue to tighten. We remain long the PICK ETF, and December 2021 COMEX copper futures, which are up 8.42% and 21.7% respectively since their inception dates on December 10, 2020 and September 10, 2020. Chart 8As COVID-19 Receeds Copper Demand Will Increase
As COVID-19 Receeds Copper Demand Will Increase
As COVID-19 Receeds Copper Demand Will Increase
Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish The US EIA estimates December and January LNG exports will hover close to 10 BCF/d, continuing a trend noted at the end of last year (Chart 9). November and December LNG exports last year were at record levels – 9.4 BCF/d and 9.8 BCF/d. In January, LNG exports were 9.8 BCF/d, another record for that month. Below-normal temperatures in Asia have spurred demand for US LNG at a time when spot outages at other exporting states reduced global supplies. The EIA expects US LNG exports to average 8.5 BCF/d and 9.2 BCF/d this year and next. Working natural gas stocks at the end of January were 2.7 BCF, up 2% y/y and 8% over the rolling five-year average inventory level. Base Metals: Bullish The European Commission estimates EV nickel demand will be the “single-largest growth sector for nickel demand over the next twenty years.” In a study released by the Commission, global nickel demand is expected to increase by 2.6mm tons by 2040, versus 92k tons in 2020. Internal supply will be sufficient to meet demand for the 27 EU states to 2024/25, according to the study, and thereafter physical deficits will follow. The study notes that without an end-of-life recycling buildout, this deficit will persist, as mining.com noted in its report on the study. Precious Metals: Bullish After sustaining a triple bottom in at ~ $840/oz, platinum prices have rallied almost $400/oz since November (Chart 10). Lower supplies and investor demand drove the rally. Going forward, we expect increasing auto demand – first in China, and then, later, in the rest of the world as organic growth revives – will support demand for platinum-group metals, particularly for platinum and palladium. Platinum posted a 390k-ounce deficit in 2020, while palladium demand exceeded supply by just over 600k oz, according to Johnson Matthey, the PGM refiner. The world consumes ~ 10mm ounces of palladium and ~ 7mm ounces of platinum p.a. Ags/Softs: Neutral Corn, wheat and soybeans were trading 2 – 3% lower, following the USDA’s February 2021 World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE) released on Tuesday. Markets drastically overestimated the amount by which the USDA would cut ending stocks for the 2020/21 crop year, with the Department trimming corn stocks to 1.5mm bushels (vs a 1.4mm bushel estimate of analysts), according to farmprogress.com. Chart 9
Copper Surge Welcomes Metal Ox Year
Copper Surge Welcomes Metal Ox Year
Chart 10
Platinum Price Rally USD 400 Since November
Platinum Price Rally USD 400 Since November
Footnotes 1 Please see Table 13, p. 27 in Dominish, E., Florin, N. and Teske, S., 2019, Responsible Minerals Sourcing for Renewable Energy. Report prepared for Earthworks by the Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney. 2 Please see Pandemic Uncertainty Will Fall, Weakening USD, Boosting Metals, published 28 January 2021. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see Renewables, China's FYP Underpin Metals Demand, published 26 November 2020. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Summary of Closed Trades
Higher Inflation On The Way
Higher Inflation On The Way
Overweight Last April following the massacre in oil prices and the consequent slam in the S&P oil & gas exploration & production (O&G E&P) group, we created the USES Crash Indicator to try to forecast a likely recovery path in this index; today we update our analysis. After a hiccup in late-2020, the relative share price ratio is back on track and will likely continue its ascent, especially given crude oil supply/demand dynamics. Odds are high that oil prices will remain upward-sloping as the EIA forecasts demand outpacing supply growth over the course of 2021 and 2022 (not shown). Oil oversupply has been a major drag on oil prices to the point that E&P companies had to put artificial breaks on production. Should these breaks remain in place at the same time as the global economy reopens as we continue to expect, oil prices have further to run. The implication is that rising crude oil prices will pave the way for sustained gains in the S&P O&G E&P relative share price ratio. Bottom Line: Stay overweight the S&P O&G E&P index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the index are: BLBG: S5OILP – COP, EOG, HES, COG, MRO, APA, PXD, DVN, FANG. Chart 1How It Started...
Back On Track
Back On Track
Chart 2...How It Is Going
Back On Track
Back On Track
Highlights For the month of February, our trading model recommends shorting the US dollar versus the euro and Swiss franc. While we agree a barbell strategy makes sense, we would rather hold the yen and the Scandinavian currencies. In the near term, we recommend trades at the crosses, given the potential for the dollar rally to run further. An opportunity has opened up to short the AUD/MXN cross. We are tightening the stop on our short EUR/GBP position to protect profits. We believe EUR/CHF still has upside. While the US has been labelling Switzerland a currency manipulator, the real culprit is Europe. Precious metals remain a buy. We are placing a limit sell on the gold/silver ratio at 70, after our initial target of 65 was touched. Platinum should also outperform in 2021. Remain long AUD/NZD, as the key drivers (relative terms of trade and cheap valuation) remain intact. Feature Currency markets are at a crossroads. On the one hand, news on the vaccine front continues to progress, raising the specter that we might return to normalcy sometime in the second half of this year. On the other hand, the current lockdowns are slowing down economic activity across the developed world, which is bullish for the dollar. With the DXY index up 1.4% this year, it appears near-term economic weakness is dominating the currency market narrative. Our long-term trade basket is centered on a dollar-bearish theme, but we have been shifting much focus in the near term to non-US dollar opportunities. Central to this has been our conviction that the dollar is due for a countertrend bounce, in an order of magnitude of 2%-4%.1 It appears we are already halfway there (Chart I-1). For the month of January, our trade recommendations outperformed the model allocation. Notable trades were being short gold versus silver and being short EUR/GBP. Silver in particular was a big winner in January (Chart I-2). Most emerging market currencies saw weakness, especially the Korean won, Russian ruble, and Brazilian real Chart I-1The Dollar Has Been Strong In 2021
Portfolio And Model Review
Portfolio And Model Review
Chart I-2Our FX Portfolio Did Well In January
Portfolio And Model Review
Portfolio And Model Review
For the month of February, our trading model recommends shorting the US dollar, mostly versus the euro and Swiss franc (Chart I-3 and Chart I-4). The model gets its signal from three variables: Relative interest rates (both levels and rates of change), valuation, and sentiment.2 While some of these variables have moved in favor the dollar, the magnitude of these moves has not been sufficient to trigger a model shift. We agree a barbell strategy makes sense. That said, we would rather hold the yen (as the safe haven, compared to the CHF) and the Scandinavian currencies (compared to the EUR). These are our two strategic positions, and we made the case for yen long positions last week. Chart I-3Our FX Model Remains ##br##Short USD...
Our FX Model Remains Short USD...
Our FX Model Remains Short USD...
Chart I-4...Especially Versus The Euro And Swiss Franc
...Especially Versus The Euro And Swiss Franc
...Especially Versus The Euro And Swiss Franc
Circling back to our trades at the crosses, we maintain that they should continue to perform well in February and beyond. We revisit the rationale behind these trades, as well as introduce a new idea: Short the AUD/MXN cross. Go Short AUD/MXN A tactical opportunity has opened up to go short the AUD/MXN cross. Central to this thesis are three catalysts: relative economic activity, valuation, and sentiment. The Australian PMI has rebounded quite strongly relative to that in Mexico, driven by the performance of the Chinese economy, versus that of the US economy. Australia exports mostly to China, while Mexico is heavily tied to the US economy. With the Chinese credit impulse rolling over, the US economy has been outperforming of late. If past is prologue, this will herald a lower AUD/MXN exchange rate (Chart I-5). Correspondingly, oil prices are outperforming metals prices. China is the biggest consumer of metals, while the US is the biggest consumer of oil. A higher oil-to-metal ratio is negative for AUD/MXN. Terms of trade between Australia and Mexico have been an important driver of the exchange rate (Chart I-5). China had a massive restocking of metals last year, much more than oil and natural gas. This implies that the destocking phase (should it occur) will be most acute among metal inventories (Chart I-6), suggesting oil imports into China could fare better than metals. On a real effective exchange rate basis, the Aussie is expensive relative to the Mexican peso. Historically, this has heralded a lower exchange rate (Chart I-7). Chart I-5AUD/MXN And Terms Of Trade
Portfolio And Model Review
Portfolio And Model Review
Chart I-6Chinese Destocking: From Crude Oil To Metals?
Chinese Destocking: From Crude Oil To Metals?
Chinese Destocking: From Crude Oil To Metals?
Chart I-7AUD/MXN Is ##br##Expensive
AUD/MXN Is Expensive
AUD/MXN Is Expensive
Back in 2020, when everyone was short the Aussie and long the MXN, being a contrarian paid off handsomely. Now, speculators are roughly neutral both crosses. Should the trends we are highlighting carry on into the next few months, this will be a powerful catalyst for speculators to jump on the bandwagon. We recommend opening a short AUD/MXN trade today, with a stop loss at 16.50 and an initial target of 13. Stay Short EUR/GBP Chart I-8An Asymmetry In Pricing
An Asymmetry In Pricing
An Asymmetry In Pricing
Our short EUR/GBP position is performing well, amidst a more hawkish Bank of England this week. Technically, there remains room for much downside on the cross. Real interest rates in the UK are rising relative to those in the euro area. The Brexit discount has not been fully priced out of the EUR/GBP cross, whereas broad US dollar weakness has eroded the discount in cable (Chart I-8). From a technical perspective, speculators are still very long the EUR/GBP, even though our intermediate-term indicator is nearing bombed-out levels (Chart I-9). Chart I-9EUR/GBP Still Has Downside
EUR/GBP Still Has Downside
EUR/GBP Still Has Downside
Finally, short EUR/GBP tends to benefit from an outperformance of oil prices. We will be revisiting the fair value of the pound in upcoming reports given the fundamental shifts that are happening in the post-EU relationship. For now, we are tightening stops on our short EUR/GBP position to 0.89, in order to protect profits. Remain Long NOK And SEK Chart I-10NOK Follows Oil Prices
NOK Follows Oil Prices
NOK Follows Oil Prices
The Scandinavian currencies are extremely cheap and an attractive bet for 2021. As such, we believe the recent relapse in their performance provides an opportunity for fresh long positions. For the NOK, a rising oil price is bullish, both against the EUR and USD (Chart I-10). Meanwhile, superior handling of the pandemic has buoyed domestic economic data in Norway. Both retail sales and domestic inflation have been perking up, pushing the Norges Bank to dial forward expectations of a rate lift-off. Sweden is also holding up relatively well this year. Part of the reason for this is that over the years, the drop in the Swedish krona, both against the US dollar and euro, has made Sweden very competitive. With our models showing the Swedish krona as undervalued by 13% versus the USD, there is much room for currency appreciation before financial conditions tighten significantly. The bottom line is that both Norway and Sweden are well positioned to benefit from a global economic recovery, with much undervalued currencies that will bolster their basic balances. We expect both the SEK and NOK to remain the best performers versus the USD in the coming year. Stay Long EUR/CHF While the US has been labelling Switzerland a currency manipulator, the real culprit is the euro area. To be clear, the SNB has been actively intervening in the currency markets. However, when one looks at relative monetary policy, the expansion in the ECB’s balance sheet far outpaces that of the SNB (Chart I-11). With the correlation between balance sheet policy and the exchange rate shifting, it may embolden Switzerland to intervene even more strongly in currency markets. Historically, the Swiss franc was buffeted by the global environment (improving global trade) and rising productivity in Switzerland. As a result, the SNB had no alternative but to try to recycle those excess savings abroad by lifting its FX reserves, or see even stronger appreciation of its currency. With global trade much more muted, intervention in the FX market could be a more potent headwind for the franc. Chart I-11The SNB Is More Hawkish Than The ECB
The SNB Is More Hawkish Than The ECB
The SNB Is More Hawkish Than The ECB
Chart I-12EUR/CHF And The Global Cycle
EUR/CHF And The Global Cycle
EUR/CHF And The Global Cycle
In the near-term, the risk to this trade is that safe-haven flows reaccelerate, as investors re-price risk. However, this will be a short-term hiccup. EUR/CHF is a procyclical cross and will benefit from improvement in the Eurozone economy relative to the rest of the world (Chart I-12). Meanwhile, by many measures, the Swiss franc remains expensive versus the euro. Stay Long AUD/NZD Chart I-13RBA QE Will Hurt AUD/NZD
RBA QE Will Hurt AUD/NZD
RBA QE Will Hurt AUD/NZD
The rally in the kiwi has provided an exploitable opportunity to lean against it. We remain long the AUD/NZD cross, despite the RBA stepping up the pace of QE at its latest meeting. The rationale is as follows: The balance sheet of the RBA was already lagging that of the RBNZ, so the latest move is simply catch up (Chart I-13). It has no doubt been negative for the cross, as Australia-New Zealand rates have compressed. However, when the program expires, the AUD will be subject to external forces once again. The Australian bourse is heavy in cyclical stocks, notably banks and commodity plays, while the New Zealand stock market is the most defensive in the G10. Should value outperform growth, this will favor the AUD/NZD cross. The kiwi has benefited from rising terms of trade, as agricultural prices have catapulted higher. Should a correction ensue, as we expect, this will favor NZD short positions. Our conviction on long AUD/NZD has clearly been hit with the RBA’s latest move. As such, we are tightening stops to 1.05 for risk management purposes. Stay Long Precious Metals, Especially Silver And Platinum We are placing a limit sell on the gold/silver ratio at 70, after our initial 65 target was hit. The rationale for the trade remains intact: In a world of ample liquidity and a falling US dollar, gold and precious metals are bound to benefit. However, silver has underperformed the rise in gold. The long-term mean for the gold/silver ratio is 50, providing ample alpha for this trade (Chart I-14). Chart I-14The Case For Short Gold Versus Silver
The Case For Short Gold Versus Silver
The Case For Short Gold Versus Silver
Silver is heavily used in the electronics and renewable energy industries, which are capturing the new manufacturing landscape. Silver faced resistance near $30/oz. However, this will be a temporary hiccup. The next important level for silver will be the 2012 highs near $35/oz. After this, silver could take out its 2011 highs that were close to $50/oz, just as gold did. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see our Foreign Exchange Strategy report, "Sizing A Potential Dollar Bounce," dated January 15, 2021. 2 Please see our Foreign Exchange Strategy report, "Introducing An FX Trading Model," dated April 24, 2020. Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Highlights US inflation expectations will continue to grind higher as commodity markets tighten, and financial markets price to an ultra-accommodative Fed over the next 2-3 years. The US stock-market rally is reducing equity yields and squeezing equity risk premiums, which acts as a drag on gold prices. Higher earnings, lower stock prices or both are needed to reduce this effect. Pandemic uncertainty continues to fuel safe-haven demand for the USD, which remains a headwind for gold and silver. Vaccination availability needs to reach a level that convinces markets global contagion risk has been minimized. Until then, this remains the dominant downside risk to gold and commodities. The balance of risks continues to favor gold: US real rates will remain weak as the Fed remains behind the inflation-vs-rates curve, and the USD will be pushed lower (Chart of the Week). We continue to expect gold prices to push to $2,000/oz. We remain bullish silver, and view the recent retail-spec price blip as transitory. Fundamentally, silver supply growth is weakening, and demand is strengthening as the renewable-energy buildout accelerates and consumer spending revives. We expect silver's price to trade back to $30/oz. Feature US inflation expectations will continue to grind higher, as tightening markets for industrial commodities push oil and base metals prices higher (Chart 2).1 As is apparent in Chart 2, these real-economy factors feed directly into five-year inflation expectations, which are important to policy makers and portfolio managers managing risk in trading markets.2 Continued Fed accommodation of massively expansive US fiscal policy also will stoke inflation expectations, and keep real rates negative or weak at low positive levels as realized inflation and inflation expectations increase. These real and financial effects will be positive for gold prices, as the Chart of the Week illustrates. Chart of the WeekRising Inflation Expectations vs. Falling Risk Premiums Restrain Gold
Rising Inflation Expectations vs. Falling Risk Premiums Restrain Gold
Rising Inflation Expectations vs. Falling Risk Premiums Restrain Gold
Chart 2Tightening Commodity Markets Push Inflation Expectations Higher
Tightening Commodity Markets Push Inflation Expectations Higher
Tightening Commodity Markets Push Inflation Expectations Higher
Battling against this tailwind is the historic US equity rally, which has crushed stock yields and the equity risk premium vs bond yields.3 Gold prices are positively correlated with equity risk premiums – the positive economic forces that push dividend yields higher also tend to push gold and commodity prices higher – which means the falling risk premiums are acting as a headwind to gold prices (Chart 3).4 If, as the global economy recovers, the rate of growth in earnings is greater than that of equity prices, stock yields will expand, which will be supportive of gold prices. That said, we do not expect the contraction of the equity risk premium to dominate the evolution of gold prices. Tightening fundamentals in the real economy and continued monetary accommodation at the Fed will dominate gold- and silver-pricing dynamics. Chart 3Falling Stock Yields Pressure Equity Risk Premiums
Falling Stock Yields Pressure Equity Risk Premiums
Falling Stock Yields Pressure Equity Risk Premiums
Balance of Risks Favors Gold Fed policy pronouncements point to continued accommodation of massive fiscal stimulus in the US, with the central bank strongly indicating it will, as a matter of policy, remain behind the inflation-vs-rate-hikes curve for at least another 2-3 years. Taking the Fed at its word, this means US real rates will remain weak, and the USD will be pushed lower as the central bank continues to accommodate higher US budget deficits at the federal level. However, as we have repeatedly noted, the broad trade-weighted USD has found strong support at current levels following a precipitous fall from its COVID-19-induced highs in 1Q20: As pandemic uncertainty feeds into global policy uncertainty, USD safe-haven demand remains elevated (Chart 4).5 While we concentrate on five-year inflation expectations in our modeling, indications of price pressures are showing up in the manufacturing sector in the US (Chart 5), as our colleagues in BCA Research’s US Bond Strategy note in their report this week.6 This confirms that the price strength seen in commodity markets for raw materials used in manufacturing are showing up in the economy as a whole. Chart 4Lower USD, Stronger GDP Bullish For Copper Prices
Lower USD, Stronger GDP Bullish For Copper Prices
Lower USD, Stronger GDP Bullish For Copper Prices
Chart 5Inflation Indicators Hook Up
Inflation Indicators Hook Up
Inflation Indicators Hook Up
Our price target for gold remains $2,000/oz. The sooner vaccines are deployed globally – so that markets can reasonably assign lower odds to a resurgence of COVID-19 and its more insidious variants forcing new lockdowns – the sooner the pandemic uncertainty keeping the USD well bid will dissipate as a fundamental factor restraining a continuation of gold’s rally. Silver Is Not GameStop The Reddit-powered surge in retail silver trading this past week, which lifted silver prices some ~ 11% on Monday to $30/oz, is all but a memory now that the white metal is again pricing in line with fundamentals. We turned bullish silver in July of last year, arguing fundamentals suggested silver could outperform gold in 2H20, which it did.7 Supportive fundamentals remain in place, with total supply (mine output and recycling) falling, demand rising and balances tightening (Chart 6). We expect the supply side of the market to remain under pressure this year and the next, given the physical deficits we are forecasting for the copper market over the next two year: The supply side of silver is a function of copper, zinc and lead mine output (i.e., silver largely is a byproduct). On the demand side, continued recovery of consumer spending and the decade-long buildout of renewable-energy generation – which is heavily reliant on copper and silver to a lesser degree – will force prices higher. We remain bullish silver. However, given our expectation its price will trade again to $30/oz, we do not expect any dramatic tightening of the gold/silver ratio this year (Chart 7). Chart 6Silver Market Tightens, Along With Other Commodities
Higher Inflation Expectations Battle Lower Risk Premia In Gold Markets
Higher Inflation Expectations Battle Lower Risk Premia In Gold Markets
Chart 7Expect Gold/Silver Ratio To Continue To Narrow
Expect Gold/Silver Ratio To Continue To Narrow
Expect Gold/Silver Ratio To Continue To Narrow
Bottom Line: Tightening commodity fundamentals and continued monetary accommodation at the Fed will dominate gold- and silver-pricing dynamics this year and the next. The contraction of the equity risk premium will not dominate the evolution of gold prices. At the margin, if earnings growth exceeds equity-price increases, equity yields will expand, which will support gold prices. We expect gold and silver to trade to $2,000/oz and $30/oz this year – i.e., close to ~ 10% gains for both. Therefore, we do not expect much movement in the gold/silver ratio this year Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish OPEC 2.0’s Joint Technical Committee (JTC) lowered its estimated demand growth for 2021 to 5.6mm b/d from its 5.9mm b/d estimate last month, at its Tuesday meeting. The JTC also is expecting the oil market to be in a deficit this year, which will, by the Committee’s estimate, peak at 2mm b/d in May 2021, according to reuters.com. This is in line with our maintained hypothesis that the producer coalition led by Saudi Arabia and Russia will continue to calibrate production in line with demand to keep global storage levels drawing. The JTC was not expected to recommend any change in production policy to oil ministers on Wednesday when they met. We expect OECD oil inventories to hit their rolling five-year average in 1H21, largely because of OPEC 2.0’s production discipline and production losses outside the coalition (Chart 8). Base Metals: Bullish Battery-grade lithium carbonate soared 40% y/y in January in China to $9,450/MT, according to mining.com. The reporting service noted strong demand for lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries used to power subsidized short-range autos, public transport infrastructure electrification, and power generation. Precious Metals: Bullish COVID-19-induced demand destruction pushed gold demand down 14% y/y in 2020, to just under 3,760 tons, according to the World Gold Council’s 2020 supply-demand tallies. At 4,633 tons, gold supply lost 4% y/y, the most since 2013, according to the WGC. Supplies were disrupted by COVID-19 as well. (Chart 9). Ags/Softs: Neutral Despite poor weather conditions in South America, US farmers are beginning to worry about record or near-record crops in the current growing season, according to farmprogress.com. grains are trading lower following recent rallies on concerns the upcoming harvest could be better than expected. Tomorrow’s USDA WASDE report will be eagerly awaited for the Department’s latest assessments. Chart 8OPEC 2.0 Keeps Supply Growth Below Demand Growth
OPEC 2.0 Keeps Supply Growth Below Demand Growth
OPEC 2.0 Keeps Supply Growth Below Demand Growth
Chart 9Gold Below 200 Day Moving Average
Gold Below 200 Day Moving Average
Gold Below 200 Day Moving Average
Footnotes 1 Our most recent reports on copper and oil prices – Copper's Supply Challenges and Brent Forecast: $63 This Year, $71 Next Year published 10 December 2020 and 21 January 2021 – highlight the tightening of industrial-commodity markets globally. 2 While we do find strong relationships between gold prices and 5- and 10-year US real rates, we do not find any relationship with the slope of the US rates forward curve. 3 For a discussion of equity risk premiums, please see Asness, Clifford S. (2000) “Stocks versus Bonds: Explaining the Equity Risk Premium.” Financial Analysts Journal. March/April 2000: pp. 96-113. 4 In the post-GFC period 2010-2020, the S&P 500 equity risk premium is borderline insignificant in a cointegrating regression that includes other real and financial variables (i.e., copper prices, US Fed Funds, and global economic policy uncertainty). We therefore to not treat it as determinant to the evolution of gold prices in the same way as the real and financial variables we use as regressors. 5 We expect this pandemic uncertainty to break, but not until markets are convinced sufficient supplies of vaccines will be available globally to control COVID-19 infections, hospitalizations and deaths. Please see Pandemic Uncertainty Will Fall, Weakening USD, Boosting Metals, which we published last week, for further discussion. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 6 For the first time 2011, the Prices Paid component in last month’s ISM Manufacturing PMI came in above 80, signaling for the first time since 2011. Please see No Tightening In 2021, published by BCA’s US Bond Strategy 2 February 2021. It is available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see Silver Likely Outperforms Gold In 2H20, which we published 2 July 2020. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. We recommended a long silver position then at $18.51/oz and closed it 23 September 2020 at $26/oz. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Summary of Closed Trades
Higher Inflation On The Way
Higher Inflation On The Way
The recent oil rally will have consequences for asset prices beyond the energy market. While higher oil prices benefit oil exporters, they hurt the economies of oil importers, often with a lag. A great example of these dynamics is China. The Chinese…
Silver has recently grabbed the headlines, with a rapid move to $30/oz. Silver has significant cyclical upside, but the near-term outlook remains nebulous, and consolidation under the $30/oz resistance is likely. The long-term positive factors for…
Highlights Pandemic uncertainty is keeping the USD well bid by raising global economic policy uncertainty. When this breaks – i.e., as higher vaccination rates push contagion rates down – the USD will resume its bear market. Renewable-energy output surpassed fossil-fuel generation in Europe for the first time in 2020. With the Biden administration re-committing to renewables, and China and Europe continuing their build-outs, copper demand will rise to meet grid-expansion needs. Copper mine output fell 0.5% in Jan-Oct 2020. Treatment and refining charges – already at 10-year lows – will remain depressed as supplies tighten. Major exchanges’ refined copper inventories were down 17% y/y in December, suggesting weak mine output continued into end-2020. Stocks will continue to fall this year, backwardating the COMEX's copper forward curve (Chart of the Week). Based on the World Bank’s forecast for real global GDP growth of 4% this year, and our expectation for a weaker USD, COMEX copper prices will likely breach $4.00/lb by 2H21. COVID-19 uncertainty drives metals: If infection and hospitalization rates outpace vaccinations, additional lockdowns in the US and Europe will stymie the recovery. Success in expanding vaccinations will push economic activity higher. We expect the latter outcome. Feature Pandemic uncertainty is driving global economic policy uncertainty, which is keeping a safe-haven bid under the USD (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekPhysical Copper Deficit Signals Continued Inventory Draws
Physical Copper Deficit Signals Continued Inventory Draws
Physical Copper Deficit Signals Continued Inventory Draws
This continues to stymie the recovery in industrial commodity prices, particularly oil and base metals.1 The uncertainty caused by the COVID-19 pandemic feeds directly into global economic policy uncertainty, which drives USD safe-haven demand. Chart 2USD Remains In The Thrall Of Pandemic Uncertainty
USD Remains In The Thrall Of Pandemic Uncertainty
USD Remains In The Thrall Of Pandemic Uncertainty
Pandemic uncertainty will not abate until vaccination distribution is sufficient to put infection, hospitalization and death rates on a clear downward trajectory, and remove the threat of widespread lockdowns, which once again are required to deal with rampant contagion rates and the possible spread of vaccine-resistant COVID-19 mutations locally and globally. As markets see empirical evidence of falling COVID-19-related infection, hospitalization and mortality, safe-haven demand for USD will weaken. Massive fiscal and monetary support will continue to support GDP globally, until organic growth takes off after sufficient populations are vaccinated, per the World Bank’s assumptions (Chart 3).2 Fiscal stimulus in the US exceeds 25% of GDP, and will continue to expand as the Biden administration rolls out additional spending measures. With the Fed remaining willing and able to accommodate this massive fiscal profligacy in the US, the USD will face increasing pressure on the downside as normalcy returns. Chart 3Massive Fiscal Support Globally Will Be Replaced By Organic Growth
Pandemic Uncertainty Will Fall, Weakening USD, Boosting Metals
Pandemic Uncertainty Will Fall, Weakening USD, Boosting Metals
A weaker USD and stronger economic growth would boost copper prices this year and the next. A 5% decline in the broad trade-weighted USD this year would push spot COMEX copper prices above $4.30/lb, all else equal, while a 4% boost in world GDP – in line with the World Bank’s forecast for real growth this year – would lift prices to just under $4.05/lb, based on our modeling (Chart 4).3 Chart 4Lower USD, Stronger GDP Bullish For Copper Prices
Lower USD, Stronger GDP Bullish For Copper Prices
Lower USD, Stronger GDP Bullish For Copper Prices
Renewable Generation Will Boost Copper Demand In addition to these stronger fundamentals, base metals demand – particularly for copper – will continue to benefit from the build-out of renewable-energy electricity generation globally, particularly in Europe and China. The return of the US to the Paris Agreement to combat climate change, and a renewed effort by the Biden administration to fund expanded renewable-energy resources will add to the increase in base-metals demand accompanying this global build-out (Chart 5).4 Europe is moving out ahead of the US in its deployment of renewable electricity generation, which, for the first time ever, surpassed fossil-fuel generation in 2020.5 S&P Global Market Intelligence this week reported renewable energy sources accounted for 38% of electricity generation in the EU vs 37% for fossil fuels. Renewables also surpassed fossil-fuel generation in the UK last year. Wind, solar and hydro all saw strong gains. Chart 5Copper Is Indispensible For A Low-Carbon Future
Pandemic Uncertainty Will Fall, Weakening USD, Boosting Metals
Pandemic Uncertainty Will Fall, Weakening USD, Boosting Metals
Copper Supply Continues To Tighten It is important to once again note that all of these, and other renewable technologies, will require higher base metals output, none moreso than copper, which spans all renewable technologies. With copper-mining capex still weak and ore qualities falling in the mines that are producing, the supply side remains challenged (Chart 6). Over the past two years, p.a. supply growth on the mining side has been close to flat. The International Copper Study Group (ICSG) this week reported copper mine output fell 0.5% in the first 10 months of 2020. Refined copper output was up 1.5% over the same interval. Treatment and refining charges – already at 10-year lows – will remain depressed as supplies tighten. We expect full-year mined and refined output to fall on either side of zero growth for 2020, and 2021 (Chart 7).6 Major exchanges’ refined copper inventories were down 17% y/y in December, according to the ICSG, suggesting weak mine output continued into end-2020. An apparent increase in refined copper consumption of 2% noted by the ICSG also contributed to lower inventories. The Group estimates global refined copper balances adjusted for changes in Chinese bonded stocks, which are believed to have increased 105k tons y/y in the Jan-Dec 2020 interval, posted a physical deficit of ~ 380k tons. Chart 6Weak Capex, Lower Copper Ore Quality Remain Chief Supply-Side Challenges
Weak Capex, Lower Copper Ore Quality Remain Chief Supply-Side Challenges
Weak Capex, Lower Copper Ore Quality Remain Chief Supply-Side Challenges
Chart 7Mined, Refined Copper Supply Growth Remains Weak
Mined, Refined Copper Supply Growth Remains Weak
Mined, Refined Copper Supply Growth Remains Weak
We expect inventories will continue to fall this year – as seen in the Chart of the Week – as demand strengthens and supply growth remains weak, which will backwardate the COMEX copper forward curve. Metal Ox Year Brings Short-Term Uncertainties The approach of the Chinese New Year beginning 12 February 2021 normally would herald massive travel and celebration, which, all else equal, would dampen economic growth until festivities ended. This year, however, reports of a re-emergence of COVID-19 infections is casting doubt on this year’s celebrations. In addition, winter industrial curtailments to reduce pollution also should reduce short-term demand for metals generally. These transitory factors should show up in lower levels of economic activity on the industrial side. For this reason, we expect seasonal weakness to show up in 1Q21 activity, to be followed in 2Q21 by higher growth y/y. Bottom Line: Copper fundamentals continue to paint a bullish price picture, particularly on the supply side. Although risks abound on both sides of the market, we expect the massive support being provided by fiscal and monetary policy globally to transition to organic growth in 2H21, in line with the World Bank’s expectations. The enormous fiscal stimulus being unleashed by the US – coupled with an ultra-accommodative Fed – will result in a weakening of the USD that will provide a tailwind to copper prices in 2H21 and next year. We remain long the PICK ETF, expecting copper miners and traders to benefit from this bullish backdrop, which we expect to persist for the next decade. The recommendation is up 6.4% since inception December 10, 2020. We also remain long December 2021 copper, which is up 19.6% since it was recommended on September 10, 2020. Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish After falling 11% in 2020 due to COVID-19-induced demand destruction, US energy-related CO2 emissions will rebound this year and next, according to the Energy Information Administration (Chart 8). The EIA forecasts US energy-related CO2 emissions this year and next will be 4.8 and 4.9 billion MT, which would amount to a 4.7% and 3.2% gains, respectively. The EIA tracks emissions from coal, petroleum and natural gas usage in the US in its estimates. Petroleum accounts for ~ 46% of total emissions in 2021 and 2022, while natgas contributes ~ 33% of all energy-related emissions in both years, on average. Reflecting its market-share loss in the power-generation market, coal accounts for ~ 21% of total US energy-related CO2 emissions in 2021 and 2022. Base Metals: Bullish Globally, crude steel production was down 0.9% y/y at 1.864 billion MT, the World Steel Association reported this week. China’s steel production was up 5.2% last year, to 1.053 billion MT, the country a market share of 56.5%, up from 2019’s level of 53.3%. Output in all of Asia totalled 1.375 billion MT, up 1.5% y/y, with India’s production falling close to 11% to 99.6 billion MT. China’s iron-ore imports set a record last year on the back of its strong steel-making performance, reaching 1.2 billion tonnes, a 9.5% increase y/y. Higher infrastructure spending was the primary driver of increased steel demand last year. Iron ore delivered to the Chinese port of Tianjin (62% Fe) closed just above $169/MT on Tuesday, up ~ 9% YTD. Precious Metals: Bullish Gold continues to trade ~ $1,850/oz, down more than $100/oz from its highs earlier this month on the back of persistent USD strength (Chart 9). The pandemic uncertainty feeding into global economic policy uncertainty is the proximate cause of dollar strength. COVID-19 vaccine rates are increasing, and governments remain committed to widespread distribution, which likely will be visible to markets during 1H21. Once this occurs, we expect gold to rally along with other commodities, as the safe-have bid is priced out of the USD. Ags/Softs: Neutral US corn prices rallied on the back of stronger China purchases of the grain on Tuesday. Farm Futures reported a 53.5mm-bushel order out of China on Tuesday was responsible for the gain earlier this week. Farmers continue to expect Chinese buying to remain strong, given falling corn stocks in China. Chart 8
Pandemic Uncertainty Will Fall, Weakening USD, Boosting Metals
Pandemic Uncertainty Will Fall, Weakening USD, Boosting Metals
Chart 9
Gold Trading Lower On The Back of A Strong Dollar
Gold Trading Lower On The Back of A Strong Dollar
Footnotes 1 At the margin, this increases the cost of purchasing commodities and lowers the cost of producing them ex-US in local-currency terms, both of which depress prices. Pandemic uncertainty and global economic policy uncertainty (GEPU) are cointegrated; the USD and GEPU also are cointegrated. We discussed the effects of pandemic uncertainty on the USD and its impact on oil prices in last week’s balances and price forecast update entitled Brent Forecast: $63 This Year, $71 Next Year. This report is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see the Bank's Global Economic Prospects released 5 January 2021 entitled Subdued Global Economic Recovery. The IMF upgraded its global growth outlook to 5.5% this year and 4.2% next year, in its World Economic Outlook Update released this week. We continue to use the more conservative World Bank forecasts. The Israeli economy is providing something of a natural experiment vis-à-vis the rate of COVID-19 vaccination and economic growth. According to reuters.com, the country got an early start on vaccinations, and has one of the highest rates in the world. If maintained, this will result in GDP growth of 6.3% in 2021 and 5.8% next year. Without these early and intensive vaccination rates, 2021 growth likely would be 3.5%. 3 The models in Chart 4 use the broad trade-weighted USD and global copper stocks as common regressors, and estimate copper prices given the World Bank estimates for World, EM ex-China, China and DM real GDPs. In the discussion above, we use elasticities from the World GDP model to highlight the impact of changes in copper prices from the different variables. 4 Please see Renewables, China's FYP Underpin Metals Demand, which we published 26 November 2020. We discuss the implications of essentially rebuilding the global electric-generation grid to accommodate more renewable energy resources vis-à-vis base metals demand. Copper, in particular, spans all technologies that will be deployed to achieve a low-carbon generation pool globally, as Chart 5 illustrates. 5 Please see For 1st time, renewables surpass fossil fuels in EU power mix published by S&P Global Market Intelligence 25 January 2021. 6 Benchmark treatment and refining fees charged by smelters to refine raw ore fell to 5.9 cent/lb this year, down from 6.2 cent/lb last year, according to reuters.com. This 10-year low reflects an abundance of smelting capacity relative to concentrates on the supply side needing to be refined. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Summary of Closed Trades
Higher Inflation On The Way
Higher Inflation On The Way
As the economy is transitioning from liquidity to growth, the oil-to-gold price ratio has caught our attention again this year. As a reminder, last year we successfully traded this high-octane pair using the S&P oil & gas exploration & production (O&G E&P) index on the long side and the global gold miners index on the short side. We pocketed gains of 10% in early May of 2020, only to reinstate the trade again and to scoop a further 32% in gains. This year, the latest ISM manufacturing survey release painted a bright picture for this intra-commodity price ratio once again (see chart), and while we are not reinstituting the pair trade just yet, it is now flashing on our radar screen; we are patient and await a better entry point. Reopening of the economy and related energy demand recovery will underpin oil prices and producers going forward, at the same time as rising real yields will weigh on the shiny metal and gold mining stocks. Bottom Line: Put a stop buy on long S&P O&G E&P/short global gold miners via the XOP/GDX exchange traded funds at a ratio of 1.2.
From Liquidity To Growth
From Liquidity To Growth
Highlights Pandemic uncertainty and global economic policy uncertainty likely will rebound with increasing COVID-19 infection, hospitalization and death rates, which will keep the USD well bid as a safe haven, and continue to stymie the near-term revival of oil demand globally (Chart of the Week). OPEC 2.0 will continue to calibrate production with demand, which will keep the rate of supply growth in check, keeping inventories on a downward trajectory. US shale-oil production is holding up a bit better than expected, suggesting rig productivity is improving. This is lifting our output forecast slightly this year and next. In line with the World Bank’s forecast, we expect global growth to expand by 4% this year and 3.8% next year.1 These estimates drive our expectation global oil demand will rise by 6.9mm b/d this year and 2.6mm b/d next year (Chart 2). Our 2021 Brent forecast remains $63/bbl; our 2022 forecast is for Brent to average $71/bbl. We expect greater vaccine availability will power demand higher, but COVID-19-related risks remain elevated. Feature Our maintained hypothesis for oil prices – i.e., OPEC 2.0 will keep the rate of growth in production below that of consumption – continues to work. Chart of the WeekPandemic Fuels Global Uncertainty
Brent Forecast: $63 This Year, $71 Next Year
Brent Forecast: $63 This Year, $71 Next Year
Chart 2Global Recovery Drives Oil Demand Growth
Global Recovery Drives Oil Demand Growth
Global Recovery Drives Oil Demand Growth
Our maintained hypothesis for oil prices – i.e., OPEC 2.0 will keep the rate of growth in production below that of consumption – continues to work, as was demonstrated earlier this month when the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) unilaterally announced it would cut 1mm b/d of output in February and March.2 This keeps inventories drawing in this month’s balances estimates, and continues to power prices out of the nadir reached in April 2020. We expect the USD to resume its bear market as soon as safe-haven demand driven by disappointing vaccine distribution is addressed. This will reduce global economic policy uncertainty, which will reduce safe-haven demand for the USD. The other powerful fundamental supporting our expectation of higher oil prices this year and next – i.e., USD weakness – keeps getting interrupted by bouts of renewed global economic policy uncertainty, which can largely be laid at the feet of the uneven progress in combating the COVID-19 pandemic. This is amply demonstrated in the Chart of the Week. As we have shown in previous research, safe-haven demand for the USD moves in lock-step with economic policy uncertainty (Chart 3). The sporadic success in distributing COVID-19 vaccines, particularly in the US, will keep the dollar well bid. This is occurring at a time when massive fiscal stimulus – exceeding 25% of GDP in the US as the Biden administration takes the reins of government – and fulsome support for ultra-accommodative monetary policy by the Fed could be expected to push the USD sharply lower (Chart 4). Chart 3Global Policy Uncertainty Fuels USD Safe-Haven Demand
Global Policy Uncertainty Fuels USD Safe-Haven Demand
Global Policy Uncertainty Fuels USD Safe-Haven Demand
Chart 4Massive Fiscal, Monetary Stimulus Should Push USD Lower
Brent Forecast: $63 This Year, $71 Next Year
Brent Forecast: $63 This Year, $71 Next Year
We expect the USD to resume its bear market as soon as safe-haven demand driven by disappointing vaccine distribution is addressed. This will reduce global economic policy uncertainty, which will reduce safe-haven demand for the USD. Our high-conviction view is that once markets get tangible proof the distribution problems have been addressed, commodity prices – but most especially oil – will move sharply higher. Oil Supply Growth Will Remain Subdued From its inception, OPEC 2.0’s goal has been to drain unintended inventory accumulations OPEC 2.0 remains the determinant force on the supply side’s response to COVID-19. We expect continued adherence to the coalition’s overall production management strategy, which is directed toward draining global storage levels and targeting a price level acceptable to both KSA and its allies and Russia and its allies. We treat the coalition as the oil market’s dominant supplier, and those outside OPEC 2.0 as a price-taking cohort. We believe a range of $60 to $70/bbl for Brent is consistent with meeting these disparate market views – KSA wants a higher price to fund its diversification and is willing to forego some market share, while Russia appears to be more focused on market share particularly vis-à-vis the US shales. Russia's production could be higher, as it is not recouping the totality of the decline in its market share (Chart 5). From its inception, OPEC 2.0’s goal has been to drain unintended inventory accumulations following the brief market-share war launched by Russia in March of last year; the COVID-19 demand destruction of 2020, which still lingers; and residual unintended inventories left over from OPEC’s 2014-16 market-share war. If successful, this will backwardate the forward curve. We have shown in prior research how this backwardation will develop. OPEC 2.0’s massive spare capacity, judicious inventory and shipping management and forward guidance – i.e., reminding the market its low-cost capacity can be brought to market quickly – should allow it to respond to changes in demand on the downside and the upside, and keep the rate of growth in production below that of consumption (Chart 6). Chart 5OPEC 2.0 Leaders Expected Market Shares
OPEC 2.0 Leaders Expected Market Shares
OPEC 2.0 Leaders Expected Market Shares
Chart 6OPEC 2.0 Keeps Supply Growth Below Demand Growth
OPEC 2.0 Keeps Supply Growth Below Demand Growth
OPEC 2.0 Keeps Supply Growth Below Demand Growth
This will drain inventories, which will backwardate the forward curve (Chart 7). If the coalition is successful in reaching this goal, its members’ term contracts, which are indexed to spot prices, will realize the highest price on the forward curve when they sell their oil. By 2H22, OPEC 2.0 will have to raise production to keep Brent from exceeding $80/bbl. OPEC 2.0 still has to navigate the return of unstable supply sources, chiefly from Libya and Iran, which we expect to increase production next year (Chart 8). We believe the coalition will be able to accommodate these states’ increasing volumes, as they have shown in years past (Table 1). Chart 7...Which Allows Inventories To Draw
...Which Allows Inventories To Draw
...Which Allows Inventories To Draw
Chart 8Sporadic Producers Will Be Accomodated
Sporadic Producers Will Be Accomodated
Sporadic Producers Will Be Accomodated
Table 1BCA Global Oil Supply - Demand Balances (MMb/d, Base Case Balances)
Brent Forecast: $63 This Year, $71 Next Year
Brent Forecast: $63 This Year, $71 Next Year
US Shale Production Improving Slightly The marginal producer in the price-taking cohort – exemplified by the US shale producers – will be hedging at lower prices closer to their marginal costs, which will limit the amount of oil they are able to produce. The price-taking cohort is further limited by a lack of access to capital, which will only be reversed if this group is able to demonstrate it is capable of generating returns in excess of their cost of capital. Unless and until they can return capital to shareholders via stock buybacks, or maintain and increase dividends, most of their growth will come from retained earnings. EIA data suggests shale production is holding up better than expected, likely due to higher rig productivity, which caused us to revise our output estimate. However, output will remain far from its 2019 peak (Chart 9). In our latest estimates, we increased the number of drilled-but-uncompleted (DUC) wells completed over the next few months, which marginally increases our production estimate. For 2022, we have production recovering, but believe this will be restrained because of (1) a possible fracking ban on federal lands imposed by the incoming Biden administration, which could depress sentiment in the industry and reduce drilling, and (2) capital discipline continues, which reduces the elasticity of oil prices vs rig counts, which, in our models, is based on the historical relationships reflecting a higher sensitivity to price levels. For this year, we expect US Lower 48 crude production to be at 8.64mm b/d (vs. 8.88mm b/d for the EIA) and at 9.35mm b/d (vs. 9.27mm b/d) next year. Chart 9US Shale Production Will Be Slightly Higher
US Shale Production Will Be Slightly Higher
US Shale Production Will Be Slightly Higher
Stronger GDP Growth Boosts Demand The World Bank expects global growth in real GDP (constant 2010 USD) of 4% this year and 3.8% next year, which we show in Chart 2. In our modeling, we have revealed a strong relationship between real GDP and oil consumption, which has persisted despite the demand-destruction brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic. The Bank’s estimates drive our overall expectation global oil demand will rise by 6.9mm b/d this year and 2.6mm b/d next year. Of that, 3.8mm b/d comes from EM economies in 2021, and 3.1mm b/d comes from DM economies. Next year, EM demand is expected to increase 1.3mm b/d, with DM accounting for 1.4mm b/d. Global demand is being stymied by a strong dollar, which, given the massive fiscal stimulus already deployed in the US – with more expected from the Biden administration – and the Fed’s oft-repeated insistence it is in no rush to taper or tighten doesn’t make sense to us. Particularly given the high likelihood the Fed will tolerate lower rates even as inflation moves higher, which will keep real rates negative into the foreseeable future. USD Safe-Haven Bid Is Back The strengthening of the USD in the wake of higher global economic policy uncertainty is being fueled by higher pandemic uncertainty. This has stymied the oil-price rally over the past few weeks. Based on the USD’s performance these past few weeks as lockdowns have proliferated in response to, more potent variants of COVID-19 spreading around the globe, markets are once again concerned the public-health response to the pandemic – particularly in the US – is faltering. This has re-introduced safe-haven demand into FX markets, which is keeping the USD well bid. This can be seen in the Chart of the Week. Systematically important governments are now racing to vaccinate as many people as possible in a relatively short period so as to not fall behind the accelerated spread of these new variants, and the risk that additional mutations of the COVID-19 virus become more virulent. We highlighted this risk last week.3 While we believe odds favor an effective public-health response that arrests the spread of the COVID-19 virus, these risks remain elevated. This is what is showing up in the Pandemic Uncertainty Index, which feeds into the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty Index. Bottom Line: Our Brent forecast for 2021 remains at $63/bbl, based on our latest assessment of global supply-demand fundamentals. For next year, we expect OPEC 2.0’s production-management strategy, limited recovery in the US shales and in provinces outside the OPEC 2.0 member states and continued recovery in demand to lift prices to $71/bbl (Chart 10). The strengthening of the USD in the wake of higher global economic policy uncertainty is being fueled by higher pandemic uncertainty. This has stymied the oil-price rally over the past few weeks. We expect the public-health response to get out ahead of the pandemic, which will reduce policy uncertainty and reduce the safe-haven bid for dollars. This will allow the USD bear market to resume. But this is not without risk. Chart 10USD71 Brent Expected in 2021
USD71 Brent Expected in 2021
USD71 Brent Expected in 2021
Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger Associate Editor Commodity & Energy Strategy HugoB@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish Canadian oil production has recovered most of its pull back due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which sent WCS prices down to $3.8/bbl in April. Western Canadian production fell by close to 1mm b/d amid the crisis reaching a low of 3.4mm b/d in May 2020. Production has now almost fully rebounded and is expected to reach record levels this year. Still, recent news the Biden administration is considering revoking the presidential permit required to build the Keystone XL pipeline could pressure the WCS-WTI spread (Chart 11). With production on the rise in Alberta, transportation constraints could emerge over the next few years and deter investors sentiment and willingness to deploy capital to the sector. Base Metals: Bullish A fire at a Vale loading pier could reduce exports of the Brazilian iron-ore producer over coming weeks. According to mining.com, the Ponta da Madeira maritime terminal (TPPM) in Maranhão state is “one of the most important iron ore and manganese loading terminals in the world.” The loss of the pier could remove ~ 32mm MT of Vale’s export capacity of high-grade (65% Fe) ore from an already-tight market this year. Precious Metals: Bullish Gold prices remain flat since last week at ~ $1,840/oz after falling earlier this month from above $1,950/oz. Inflows to gold-backed ETFs moved up in the last week of December following close to 2 months of outflows (Chart 12). We expect investors will continue allocating capital to gold markets as supportive monetary and fiscal policies keep pressuring the USD and real yields down and pushing inflation expectations up. The US fiscal policy’s stimulative stance was further established earlier this week by Janet Yellen – Joe Biden’s nominee to run the Treasury Department – which said the US must act big with its next relief package to boost its economy. Ags/Softs: Neutral Rains in Brazil earlier this week resulted in lower corn prices, as fear of drought diminished. Separately, China’s grain imports set records last year, as reuters.com reported the country imported 11.3mm MT of corn, exceeding its previous import record by a factor of two. Chart 11
Recovering Canadian Oil Production Pushes WCS Prices Lower
Recovering Canadian Oil Production Pushes WCS Prices Lower
Chart 12
Brent Forecast: $63 This Year, $71 Next Year
Brent Forecast: $63 This Year, $71 Next Year
Footnotes 1 Please see the Bank's Global Economic Prospects released 5 January 2021 entitled Subdued Global Economic Recovery. 2 Please see our January 7, 2021 report KSA Output Cut, Weak Dollar Support Oil. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see Higher Inflation On The Way, which highlighted an MIT Technology Review article entitled We may have only weeks to act before a variant coronavirus dominates the US published 13 January 2021. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Summary of Closed Trades
Higher Inflation On The Way
Higher Inflation On The Way
Highlights Policy Responses: Australian policymakers have responded forcefully to the COVID-19 pandemic through massive fiscal stimulus and unprecedented monetary easing measures. The dovish pivot of the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) could last for longer given persistent inflation undershoots and an Australian dollar fundamentally supported more by an improving terms of trade and less by interest rate differentials. Bond Market Strategy: Maintain a below-benchmark strategic (6-12 months) stance on Australian duration exposure, as local bond yields will not be immune to the continued cyclical rise in global yields that we expect. Stay neutral on the country allocation to Australia in dedicated global bond portfolios, however, until there is greater clarity that the RBA’s recent dovish shift is indeed more lasting – an outcome that would turn Australia into a “low-beta” bond market that outperforms when global yields rise. FX Strategy: External conditions will likely dominate the trajectory of the Australian dollar in 2021. This argues for a modestly higher Aussie, which remains fundamentally undervalued. Beyond then, perceptions of the RBA’s policy bias should once again become an important driver for the trade-weighted currency when global reflation pressures begin to fade. Feature For investors with a global focus, Australia has always had a well-understood role within their portfolios. Australian bonds typically offer high yields relative to their developed market peers, largely due to a more inflationary economy that requires relatively higher central bank policy rates. The Australian dollar (AUD) is a commodity currency that benefits from stronger global growth but is also a “risk-on/risk-off” currency that performs better when uncertainty and volatility are low. Like all market correlations, however, there is no guarantee these will persist if the fundamental backdrop shifts. In this Special Report, jointly written by BCA Research’s Global Fixed Income Strategy and Foreign Exchange Strategy services, we discuss the cyclical outlook for bond yields and the currency in Australia. Our conclusion: the nature of both may have fundamentally changed as a result of the policy responses, both globally and within Australia, to the COVID-19 pandemic amid persistently low inflation Down Under. This Is Not Your Parents’ RBA 2020 was an exceptional year for global bond markets as yields collapsed due to the negative COVID-19 shock to global growth and dramatic easing of monetary policies. Australian sovereign debt, however, was a market laggard, delivering a total return of 4.4% (in USD-hedged terms) that underperformed much of the Bloomberg Barclays Global Treasury index universe (Chart 1). This occurred even with the RBA cutting its policy interest rate to near 0% and introducing large-scale quantitative easing (QE), while also maintaining a yield target on 3-year government bonds. Chart 1Australian Government Bonds Were A Global Underperformer In 2020
Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields & The Currency?
Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields & The Currency?
The decline in Australian interest rates was not solely related to the pandemic. The process of interest rate compression of Australia versus the other developed economies dates back to the 2008 Global Financial Crisis. The RBA Cash Rate was over 400bps higher than a GDP-weighted average of policy rates in the major developed markets before the Lehman default. That rate advantage is now gone, with the reduced interest rate support weighing heavily on the Australian dollar over the past decade (Chart 2). Chart 2Australia Is No Longer A High-Yielder
Australia Is No Longer A High-Yielder
Australia Is No Longer A High-Yielder
Chart 3RBA Policy Is Reflationary
RBA Policy Is Reflationary
RBA Policy Is Reflationary
Something has shifted, however, since the trough in Australian economic growth in mid-2020. Our RBA Monitor, designed to measure cyclical pressure for monetary policy changes, is indicating a substantially reduced need for additional RBA easing. Inflation expectations have also recovered from the pandemic lows, with the 5-year/5-year forward Australian CPI swap rate now up to 2.5% - right in the middle of the RBA’s 2-3% inflation target band (Chart 3). The Australian dollar has also rallied solidly, up 22.4% from the 2020 low on a trade-weighted basis. All of this has occurred with virtually no support from higher Australian interest rates or even the threat of a more hawkish RBA. This is a common theme seen in other countries over the past several months. Markets are pricing in the reflationary aspects of recovering global growth and, potentially, an end to the pandemic as vaccines are now being distributed globally. At the same time, investors are taking the highly dovish forward guidance of the major central banks at face value, pricing in very moderate increases in policy rates over the next few years. Inflation expectations are rising as a result, as markets see central bankers taking more inflationary risks than in years past. This is most evident in the US where the Federal Reserve has changed its inflation targeting strategy while also signaling that monetary tightening would not begin before US inflation returned sustainably to the Fed’s 2% target. In Australia, the RBA has suggested no such change to how it approaches its 2-3% inflation target. The central bank, however, has also indicated that it will not consider any premature rate hikes without actual inflation (and inflation expectations) returning sustainably to the target band. Markets have taken the RBA’s message to heart, with the Australian overnight index swap (OIS) curve pricing in only 25bps of rate increases by the end of 2023 (Chart 4). The result has been a steady increase in Australian inflation expectations, and a decline in real bond yields, as markets discount a continued economic recovery but without any offsetting response from the RBA. Chart 4Markets Expect A Dovish RBA
Markets Expect A Dovish RBA
Markets Expect A Dovish RBA
Thus, the RBA’s next policy moves remain critical to the outlook for Australian bond yields. If the RBA continues on this highly dovish path, keeping rates on hold while rapidly expanding its balance sheet via QE even as global growth recovers, then Australian bonds will continue to behave in the “low-beta” fashion seen over the past year. That means Australian yields will be less sensitive to changes in the overall movements of global bond yields compared to years past, because of a less active RBA – especially if the Australian dollar continues to strengthen without the support of higher interest rates (more on that later). It is still unclear if the RBA has permanently changed its “reaction function” such that investors should perceive of Australian government bonds as having a lower beta to global yields. One way to assess if such a shift is occurring is to compile a list of indicators that would likely put pressure on the RBA to turn less dovish, and then monitor them versus the RBA’s policy guidance. Introducing Our RBA Checklist The RBA’s extraordinary policy measures taken over the past year have been undertaken to help the Australian economy deal with the disinflationary shock of the COVID-19 pandemic. Any attempt to begin unwinding that policy accommodation would therefore require evidence that the impacts of the pandemic on economic growth, inflation and financial stability were evolving such that aggressive monetary stimulus was no longer required. The most important things for the central bank to monitor, described below, comprise what we will call our “RBA Checklist". 1. The Vaccination Process Goes Smoothly And Quickly Australia has been one of the more fortunate countries during the entire COVID-19 pandemic with case numbers being a tiny fraction of what has taken place in the US or UK (Chart 5A). A big reason for this is that the Australian government has been aggressive on border control and international travel restrictions. This has limited the potential for outbreaks being “imported” into the country, while also reducing the need for the kind of draconian restrictions now in place in Europe and parts of the US like California (Chart 5B). Chart 5AAustralia Has Handled The Pandemic Well...
Australia Has Handled The Pandemic Well...
Australia Has Handled The Pandemic Well...
Chart 5B...With Fewer Restrictions
...With Fewer Restrictions
...With Fewer Restrictions
Australia has been very prudent in planning for the distribution of COVID-19 vaccines. Federal authorities have purchased 10 million doses of the Pfizer vaccine and 54 million doses of the Astra-Zeneca vaccine. For a country with a population of just over 25 million, this means that there are enough doses of the vaccine available to inoculate the entire nation. The government plans to begin the vaccine rollout in February. If the distribution can take place smoothly and efficiently, herd immunity could be achieved in Australia by the fourth quarter of 2021. That could prompt the RBA to begin planning to withdraw some of the extraordinary monetary accommodation measures. 2. Private Sector Demand Accelerates Alongside Fiscal Stimulus The Australian government’s fiscal stimulus response to the pandemic was one of the largest in the world, equal to A$267 billion (14% of GDP) through the 2023-24 fiscal year according to the IMF.1 A good portion of those measures have been in the form of wage subsidies and hiring credits for businesses, as well as personal income tax cuts and other household income support measures. The latter has been particularly effective at helping boost consumer confidence – the Westpac-Melbourne Institute index of consumer sentiment hit a ten-year high in December. Business confidence also rebounded in the latter half of 2020, but remains at relatively subdued levels according to the National Australia Bank survey (Chart 6). Chart 6Consumers Are Very Optimistic, Businesses Less So
Consumers Are Very Optimistic, Businesses Less So
Consumers Are Very Optimistic, Businesses Less So
Part of the most recent rebound in economic confidence is related to the positive news on COVID-19 vaccines, as well as the lack of a surge of new COVID cases in Australia. Chart 7Government Income Support Is Fuel For A Consumer Rebound
Government Income Support Is Fuel For A Consumer Rebound
Government Income Support Is Fuel For A Consumer Rebound
Chart 8No Fiscal Tightening Expected In 2021
Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields & The Currency?
Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields & The Currency?
The consumer confidence response has been much larger than the business confidence response, however, as the income boosting measures for households have been massive. The JobKeeper wage subsidy program alone was equal to nearly 5% of Australian GDP. The net result of that income support on household finances was impressive. Over the first three quarters of 2020, real household disposable income growth accelerated by 5 percentage points while the household savings ratio rose by a whopping 14 percentage points (Chart 7). This provides a strong base for a recovery in consumer spending, especially if the vaccine rollout is successful and existing economic restrictions can be eased. Australia is one of the rare countries that is not projected to suffer a fiscal drag on growth in 2021, even when compared to the massive stimulus measures introduced in 2020 (Chart 8). A sharper than expected rebound in consumer spending, coming on top of sustained fiscal stimulus, may embolden the RBA to consider a less dovish mix of monetary policies. 3. China Reins In Policy Stimulus By Less Than Expected Australia’s economy is inextricably linked to export demand from China, which is by far the country’s largest trading partner. BCA Research’s China strategists expect Chinese policymakers to begin tightening up on some of their own COVID-19 policy stimulus measures, with the “credit impulse” expected to peak by mid-2021 (Chart 9). Chart 92020 China Stimulus Will Boost 2021 Australian Exports
2020 China Stimulus Will Boost 2021 Australian Exports
2020 China Stimulus Will Boost 2021 Australian Exports
The China credit impulse leads the growth rate of Australian exports to China by about twelve months. Thus, Australia’s economy should continue to benefit from the lagged impact of China stimulus throughout 2021, but then see some pullback in 2022 as Chinese import demand slows. It is still uncertain how large of a pullback in credit expansion will take place, but our China strategists think it could be between 1.5% and 3% of Chinese GDP. If Chinese policymakers opt for the former, and Australian export demand is projected to remain solid in 2022, then the RBA could be prompted to begin taking its foot off the monetary policy accelerator. 4. Inflation, Both Realized And Expected, Returns To The RBA’s 2-3% Target Range The RBA will obviously need to reconsider its current policy stance if Australian inflation were to sustainably return to the RBA's 2-3% target range. The key word there is “sustainably”, as the last time Australian headline CPI inflation was even as high as 2.3% was 2014. A major reason for the underwhelming performance of Australian inflation has come from the lack of domestically generated price pressures. For example, the RBA wage price index, a measure of employment costs, has been in a structural decline for most of the past decade (Chart 10). The 2020 recession resulted in a sharp rise in Australian unemployment that further pushed down wage inflation. The sharp snapback in the under-employment rate - which measures employment in terms of hours worked and is much more strongly correlated to Australian wage inflation than the headline unemployment rate - in the latter half of 2020 suggests that wage growth could bottom faster than the RBA currently expects (bottom panel). The RBA’s own inflation forecasts call for headline CPI inflation, and more smoothed measures like the trimmed mean inflation rate, to remain below 2% through the end of 2022 (Chart 11). The RBA also expects the unemployment rate to remain nearly one full percentage point above the pre-COVID low by the end of next year. Chart 10Is The RBA Too Pessimistic On Employment?
Is The RBA Too Pessimistic On Employment?
Is The RBA Too Pessimistic On Employment?
Chart 11No Inflationary Trigger For A Less Dovish RBA...Yet
No Inflationary Trigger For A Less Dovish RBA...Yet
No Inflationary Trigger For A Less Dovish RBA...Yet
Any upside surprise in the Australian labor market that boosts wage growth would likely coincide with some improvement in the non-tradables component of Australian CPI inflation (bottom panel). This could trigger a more hawkish response from the RBA, as even the tradables component of inflation appears to be bottoming out despite a stronger Australian dollar. 5. House Price Inflation Begins To Accelerate The RBA may become concerned that its monetary policy settings are too stimulative if there are signs of asset price inflation that could endanger financial stability. The biggest concern, as always in Australia, is the housing market and the pace of house price inflation. The latest data on house prices at the national level show that annual growth rate slowed from a pre-COVID high of 8.1% to 5.0% in Q3/2020 (Chart 12). While building approvals picked up over that same period, this appeared to be entirely related to demand for owner-occupied homes rather than houses purchased as a speculative investment. The relative trends in housing loans to both groups of buyers shows steady growth for owner-occupied lending and no growth for investor-related loans (bottom panel). The lack of evidence of a speculative push higher in house price inflation should diminish RBA concerns that its near-0% interest rate policy was fueling a new housing bubble. More generally, there is little evidence of a pickup in credit growth outside of housing, even with money supply aggregates soaring in a likely response to fiscal support measures that are boosting household liquidity (Chart 13). Chart 12RBA Policy Has Not Boosted House Prices...Yet
RBA Policy Has Not Boosted House Prices...Yet
RBA Policy Has Not Boosted House Prices...Yet
Chart 13Monetary/Fiscal Policy Mix Boosting Liquidity, Not Credit
Monetary/Fiscal Policy Mix Boosting Liquidity, Not Credit
Monetary/Fiscal Policy Mix Boosting Liquidity, Not Credit
If house price inflation started to pick up alongside a rebound in investor-related home loans, the RBA may feel that its low-rate policy is starting to become a problem for financial stability, requiring some monetary tightening. Summing it all up, none of the elements in our RBA Checklist are signaling an imminent need for the RBA to consider withdrawing any of its extraordinary policy measures or signal future rate hikes. More likely, there is a greater chance that the RBA extends some of the programs that are set to expire in the next few months. The latest round of QE bond purchases, equal to A$100 billion, is set to expire in April. Also, the Term Funding Facility that has provided cheap funding for banks to continue lending during the pandemic is scheduled to end by mid-year. We think it is more likely that the RBA will look to extend those programs, while also maintaining the yield curve control target on 3-year government bond yields at 0.1%, until the end of 2021. This would give the central bank more time to evaluate the progress on vaccine distribution, while also giving some policy flexibility to offset the impact of a stronger Aussie dollar. The Australian Dollar: External Conditions Are Now The Main Driver The benign reading from our RBA Checklist suggests that Australian bond yields are likely to maintain their recent lower beta to global bond yields. At first blush, this suggests the Australian dollar’s high-beta status in currency markets might also ebb. The key will be whether the RBA is successful in steering the currency on a path that eases financial conditions for domestic concerns. This is especially important since the AUD has diverged from its traditional relationship with relative interest rates. Instead, an improving terms of trade, fueled by rising commodity prices, has become the more important driver of the Aussie’s performance and will remain so over the next 6-12 months as the cyclical commodity bull market is set to continue. While there are signs that the sharp rally in industrial commodity prices could be approaching an exhaustion point in the near-term, our bias is that this will be a buying opportunity for the Aussie. There are five key reasons for this. First, Australia’s basic balance remains very wide, even if it is rolling over from fresh secular highs (Chart 14). There is anecdotal evidence that some of the imports of Australia’s key commodities in 2020 were driven by restocking, rather than final demand. However, even if restocking hits an air pocket sometime this year, the supply side remains sufficiently tight to prevent a collapse in prices. As an example, global inventories for copper are hitting new cycle lows (Chart 15). Chart 14AUD Has Underperformed The Improvement In The Basic Balance
AUD Has Underperformed The Improvement In The Basic Balance
AUD Has Underperformed The Improvement In The Basic Balance
Chart 15Supply-Side Constraints On Key Commodities Like Copper
Supply-Side Constraints On Key Commodities Like Copper
Supply-Side Constraints On Key Commodities Like Copper
Second, Chinese stimulus is slated to peak this year as discussed earlier. The impact on Chinese demand will be felt long after liquidity injections ease, due to the lag between monetary policy and economic activity. Assuming Chinese bond yields are a proxy for domestic policy settings, Chart 16 shows that Chinese domestic imports are tracking the easing in financial conditions we saw last year. As a result, imports of key raw materials such as copper, iron ore, steel, and crude oil should remain strong in 2021, even if growth rates subside. These will continue to benefit Australian export volumes. Third, there has been increasing relative competitiveness in the types of raw materials that China needs and wants. For example, Australian exporters produce higher-grade ore, which is more expensive, but pollutes less and is in high demand in China. Recent supply disruptions in South America are also helping Australian commodity exporters gain a greater share of Chinese commodity demand. Fourth, the Aussie will continue to benefit from the long-term tailwind of liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports. This is primarily driven by a tectonic shift in China: an energy policy shift away from coal and towards natural gas. Given that reducing, if not outright eliminating pollution is a long-term strategic goal in China, this will provide a multi-year tailwind to Australian LNG demand. Chart 16Easy Financial Conditions Should Support Chinese Spending And Imports
Easy Financial Conditions Should Support Chinese Spending And Imports
Easy Financial Conditions Should Support Chinese Spending And Imports
Finally, the Aussie dollar is not yet expensive. It is undervalued by 3% on a purchasing power parity (PPP) basis and by 11% relative to its terms of trade (Chart 17). At a minimum, the Aussie could bounce by this magnitude, and not derail the domestic recovery. Chart 17The AUD Remains Undervalued, Relative To Terms Of Trade
The AUD Remains Undervalued, Relative To Terms Of Trade
The AUD Remains Undervalued, Relative To Terms Of Trade
Beyond the near term, as Chinese stimulus peaks and the impulse of commodity demand relapses, most likely sometime in 2022, the RBA will regain more control over the direction of the Aussie. This will be the point where relative interest rates become increasingly important. Should the RBA continue to maintain a more dovish bias, then the Aussie will become a lower-beta currency, relative to history. Investment Conclusions The goal of this report was to determine if bond yields and the currency in Australia now trade under a “new set of rules” compared to previous years. We conclude that there has indeed been a change in how Australian bond yields behave relative to movements in global bond yields. It is not yet clear, however, if the lower yield beta of Australian government debt is a lasting change or merely a cyclical response to the RBA’s emergency pandemic related monetary policies. We will monitor our RBA Checklist in the months ahead to determine if the central bank’s reaction function has changed in such a way as to make the shift in the yield beta more permanent. This will also have ramifications for the Australian dollar when the fundamental support from soaring commodity prices begins to fade. Our analysis leads us to make the following investment conclusions on a strategic (6-12 months) investment horizon. Duration: We recommend maintaining a below-benchmark stance for dedicated Australian fixed income portfolios. Yields are only now starting to respond to improving domestic and global growth prospects, and a growing “risk-on” mentality in financial markets fueled by COVID-19 vaccine optimism. Even though the RBA has plenty of scope to increase its QE buying of government debt compared to the experience of other countries (Chart 18), this will only limit, and not prevent, additional increases in Australian bond yields. Country allocation: We recommend maintaining a neutral allocation to Australian government debt within global bond portfolios. The uncertainty over the RBA’s reaction function, and the future path of the Australian yield beta, makes it unclear how to position Australian bonds within a dedicated bond portfolio. We do have more conviction that Australian government debt will outperform US Treasuries, however, as the yield beta of the former to the latter has clearly declined (Chart 19). Chart 18The RBA Has Room To Expand QE, If Necessary
The RBA Has Room To Expand QE, If Necessary
The RBA Has Room To Expand QE, If Necessary
Chart 19Australian Bond Strategy For 2021
Australian Bond Strategy For 2021
Australian Bond Strategy For 2021
Yield Curve: We recommend positioning for a steeper Australian government bond yield curve. The RBA is anchoring the short-end of the government bond yield curve, which is likely to be maintained until at least year-end. This leaves the slope of the curve to be driven more by longer-term inflation expectations that should continue drifting higher as the Australian economy continues its post-pandemic recovery. Currency: We recommend positioning for additional gains in the Australian dollar. Supportive external conditions will likely dominate the trajectory of the currency in 2021. This argues for a modestly higher Aussie, which remains fundamentally undervalued. Inflation-linked bonds: This is admittedly a trickier call to make, as our valuation model suggests 10-year inflation breakevens have overshot relative to their main drivers – the trend of realized inflation and the growth rate of oil prices denominated in AUD – by a substantial amount (Chart 20). As discussed earlier in this report, we see the sharp run-up in Australian inflation breakevens (and CPI swap rates) as a sign that markets view the RBA’s policy stance as highly reflationary. This suggests that real yields should continue moving lower, and breakevens should continue drifting higher, until the RBA begins to signal a shift to a less dovish policy stance (Chart 21). Our RBA Checklist should also prove useful in timing the peak in breakevens. Chart 20Australian Inflation Breakevens Are Overvalued
Australian Inflation Breakevens Are Overvalued
Australian Inflation Breakevens Are Overvalued
Chart 21Markets Discounting Negative Real Policy Rates For Longer
Markets Discounting Negative Real Policy Rates For Longer
Markets Discounting Negative Real Policy Rates For Longer
Chart 22Downgrade Australian Corporates To Neutral Vs Government Debt
Downgrade Australian Corporates To Neutral Vs Government Debt
Downgrade Australian Corporates To Neutral Vs Government Debt
Corporate bonds: We recommend downgrading Australian corporate bonds to neutral from overweight. This is purely a valuation-based recommendation, as there is limited scope for additional yield compression after the massive tightening since the spring of 2020 (Chart 22). Corporates will likely turn into a pure carry trade at tight spreads, which no longer justifies an overweight position even in a cyclical Australian growth upturn. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Full details of policy responses to COVID-19 at the country level can be found here: https://www.imf.org/en/Topics/imf-and-covid19/Policy-Responses-to-COVID-19.