Consumer Discretionary
Highlights A no-deal Brexit which did not cause pain pour encourager les autres would be the much graver existential threat for the EU. A U.K. parliamentary vote to extend Article 50 by a few months would not be a game changer in itself, because it just delays the day of judgement. The real denouement will only happen when a workable route to a benign Brexit option commands a majority in the U.K. parliament. This is the point at which U.K. exposed risk-assets would outperform sustainably. Investors should then buy: the pound, the FTSE250, FTSE Small Cap, and U.K. homebuilders. Feature Chart of the WeekU.K. Homebuilders Is The Best Equity Sector To Play Brexit The Article 50 process that governs Brexit is fast approaching its two-year time limit, and the question naturally arises as to what will happen when the clock strikes midnight on March 29.1 To answer this question, it is worth stepping back to ask something even more fundamental: what was the purpose of the two-year time limit in the first place? The EU Must Protect The Integrity Of The Union The two-year time limit in Article 50 was designed to disadvantage the exiting country relative to the EU, and this disadvantage has now become abundantly clear. After the two years have run down, a no-deal or ‘cliff edge’ exit would be bad for the EU27, but it would be far worse for the U.K. This balance of power has put the EU27 very much in the driving seat of the Brexit process, and there is no reason to presume that the EU27 will do anything other than prioritise and protect its own interests. For the EU27, the priority right now is to protect the unity and integrity of the Union in the face of a growing existential threat from populists and nationalists. Unfortunately, much of this has been overlooked in the Brexiteer rhetoric, with arguments like "they need to sell us their BMWs and Prosecco". Clearly, frictionless and barrier-less trade is in the economic interests of both parties, but the economic reality is that less than a tenth of EU27 exports go to the U.K. while something approaching half of U.K. exports go to the EU27 (Chart I-2 and Chart I-3). Chart I-2Less Than A Tenth Of EU27 Exports Go To The U.K. ... Chart I-3...While Almost Half Of U.K. Exports Go To the EU27 Brexit is essentially a huge economic gamble in the name of an overarching political aim to ‘take back control’ (Chart I-4). Remember that the case for Brexit largely hinged on the desire to regain political sovereignty: specifically, controlling migration and ending the supremacy of the European Court of Justice. That’s fine, we have no qualms about that. But if the case for Brexit was largely political, it’s a bit rich to presume that the EU27 will not also prioritise its own overarching political aims – even if these political aims come at the cost of a short-term setback to the European economy. Chart I-4U.K. House Prices Have Stagnated Since The Brexit Negotiations Started Brexit Is The Litmus Test For Optimality Of The EU A catastrophic no-deal Brexit would undoubtedly hurt the EU27, and be particularly painful for the member states most exposed to U.K. trade, notably Ireland and the Netherlands. But here’s the paradox: a no-deal Brexit which did not cause pain pour encourager les autres would be the much graver existential threat for the EU. If membership of the EU and its institutions is supposedly an optimal economic and political structure for European states, then Brexit is the litmus test for the sub-optimality of exiting, and especially the heavy cost of exiting abruptly. If, after the two-year notice of Article 50, the U.K. abruptly left the EU with negligible disruption and then quickly thrived outside the EU, it would galvanize the European nationalists and populists to emulate a newly confident and resurgent U.K.’s quick and painless divorce. As this could be the death knell of the European project, the paradox is highlighted in our mischievous title: why a catastrophic no-deal might be good… for the EU. Brexit can take three ultimate shapes: The U.K. revokes its intention to withdraw the EU and remains a full member of the Union. A long transition to a new and negotiated trading relationship between the U.K. and the EU27. A sharp cliff-edge in which the U.K. abruptly becomes a third country to the EU27. The U.K. population now clearly favours option 1 – remain – over the two alternatives (Chart I-5). Meanwhile, the U.K. parliament has expressed its opposition, albeit not yet legally binding opposition, to option 3 – the no-deal Brexit. As for the EU27, the best outcome is for the U.K. to revoke its intention to withdraw and thrive within the club; the next best outcome is a long transition to Brexit, during which and after which the U.K. economy underperforms its European peers to illustrate the sub-optimality of exiting. But if Brexit is a cliff-edge, it has to be demonstrably painful. Hence, the EU27 will want to put off the day it has to confront this paradox if there is any chance of avoiding it. Article 50 does allow for this delay. The specific wording of paragraph 3 states: The Treaties shall cease to apply to the State in question from the date of entry into force of the withdrawal agreement or, failing that, two years after the notification referred to in paragraph 2, unless the European Council, in agreement with the Member State concerned, unanimously decides to extend this period. But a close reading suggests that if there is still a real possibility of finalising a withdrawal agreement, or if withdrawal is an outcome that the State no longer desires, then this would not represent ‘failing’. Meaning that the period of negotiation of a withdrawal agreement could be extended beyond March 29, or indeed Article 50 could be entirely revoked. A Short Delay Is Not A Game Changer, But A Second Referendum Would Be Looking at the desired outcomes of the U.K. population, the U.K. parliament, and the EU27, Brexit should rationally end up as benign options 1 or 2. The trouble is that rational outcomes can be thwarted if there is no mechanism to implement them. Although the U.K. parliament has expressed its desire to avoid a no-deal, it has not yet coalesced a majority around how exactly to avoid the cliff-edge outcome. A parliamentary vote to extend Article 50 by a few months would not be a game changer in itself because it just delays the day of judgement, though a longer extension would be more significant. But if the extension facilitated a second referendum or a general election, then that would be a game changer – as there would be the potential for the U.K. population to overturn the decision to leave. It follows that the real denouement will only happen when a workable route to either of the benign Brexit options 1 or 2 above commands a majority in the U.K. parliament. From the perspective of investors, what this way forward turns out to be – permanent customs union, Common Market 2.0, second referendum, or general election – does not really matter. What matters is that a parliamentary majority exists for a positive course of action that eliminates no-deal rather than just delays it. This would be the point at which the BoE is finally liberated from its emergency policy (Chart I-6 and Chart I-7), pushing up U.K. gilt yields relative to other government bond yields (Chart I-8), and allowing a sustained rally in the pound (Chart I-9). Chart I-6Brexit Has Subdued The BoE... Chart I-7...Despite A Tight U.K. Labour Market Chart I-8Were It Not For Brexit, U.K. Interest Rates Would Be 1 Percent Higher... Chart I-9…And The Pound Would Be At $1.50 In this event, U.K. exposed risk-assets would also outperform. Note that the FTSE100 is not one of these investments. Whenever the pound strengthens, the weaker translation of the FTSE100 companies’ dollar-denominated earnings tends to weigh down this large-cap index (Chart I-10). Instead, investors should focus on: the FTSE250 (Chart I-11) and the FTSE Small Cap, but the best play is the U.K. homebuilders (Chart of the Week). Chart I-10When The Pound Rallies, The FTSE100 Underperforms... Chart I-11...So Prefer The FTSE250 Fractal Trading System* We are pleased to report that long Italy’s MIB versus Eurostoxx600 reached the end of its 3-month holding period very comfortably in profit which is now crystallised. This week, we note that the sharp underperformance of aluminium versus tin is at the limit of tight liquidity which has previously signalled a trend-reversal. Hence, the recommended trade is long aluminium versus tin. Set a profit target of 6.5 percent with a symmetrical stop-loss. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment’s fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-12 The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnote 1 Midnight British Summer Time Fractal Trading System Recommendations Asset Allocation Equity Regional and Country Allocation Equity Sector Allocation Bond and Interest Rate Allocation Currency and Other Allocation Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Underweight (High-Conviction) Home Depot, the S&P home improvement retail (HIR) index heavyweight, reported earnings yesterday that missed expectations as same store sales fell well short of estimates. The company also added guidance that this key figure would moderate in the coming year from 2018 levels. While a slower rate of top line growth this quarter was fairly predictable, given the Q4 collapse in lumber prices (recall that HIR earns a markup on lumber), the outlook does not bode well. This tough operating environment is captured by our model that, even with a modest recovery in lumber prices, still points to a significant decline in the S&P HIR index (third panel). Still, the HIR index trades at a premium to the broad index despite the headwinds facing the sector (bottom panel). A premium valuation seems misplaced and we accordingly reiterate our high-conviction underweight recommendation on the sector. We further point investors to our market neutral trade going long homebuilders/short HIR.1 The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index is BLBG: S5HOMI – HD and LOW. 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Report, “Dissecting 2019 Earnings,” dated January 22, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights Equities can continue to outperform bonds for a few months longer. The pro-cyclical equity sector stance that has worked well since last October can also continue for a few months longer. Overweight pro-cyclical Sweden versus pro-defensive Denmark. The caveat is that these short-term trends are unlikely to persist and will viciously reverse later in the year. European ‘soft’ luxury goods companies are an excellent structural investment opportunity. Take profits on the 75 percent rally in Litecoin and 50 percent rally in Ethereum. Feature Why should European investors care so much about China? The Chart of the Week provides one emphatic answer. For Europe’s $500 billion basic resources sector, the three most important things in the world are: China, China, and China. Through the past decade, the share price performance of the resource behemoths BHP, Anglo American, Rio Tinto, and Glencore have been joined at the hip to China’s short-term credit impulse (Chart I-2 and Chart I-3). Chart of the WeekFor European Basic Resources, The Three Most Important Things In the World Are: China, China, And China Chart I-2BHP, Anglo American, And Rio Tinto Have Been Rallying For Several Months Chart I-3BHP Is Joined At The Hip To China's Short-Term Credit Impulse But China has a much deeper importance to Europe. According to Mario Draghi, the recent cycle in Europe is ‘made in China’. On the euro area’s domestic fundamentals, Draghi is upbeat, citing “supportive financing conditions, favourable labour market dynamics and rising wage growth”. Yet the economic data have continued to be weaker than expected. Why? Draghi blames a “slowdown in external demand” and specifically, vulnerabilities in emerging markets. He claims that as soon as there is clarity on the exports and the trade sector, much of the euro area’s weakness will wash out. Federal Reserve Chairman, Jay Powell presented a remarkably similar narrative to justify the recent pause in the Fed’s sequential rate hikes: “The U.S. economy is in a good place… but growth has slowed in some major foreign economies.” If Powell claims that the U.S. domestic economy is in a good place and Draghi points out that the euro area domestic fundamentals are fine, then the explanation for what has happened – and what will happen – can only come from one place: China. Optimistically, Draghi adds: “everything we know says that China’s government is actually taking strong measures to address the slowdown.” The good news is that we can independently corroborate Draghi’s optimism, at least in the near-term (Chart I-4). Chart I-4China's Short-Term Credit Impulse Is Up Sharply, And Commodities Have Rebounded Why China Matters To Europe Chart I-5 shows the short-term credit impulses in the euro area, U.S., and China through the past twenty years. They are all expressed in dollars to allow an apples for apples comparison between the three major economies. The comparison reveals a fascinating transformation. The dominant short-term impulse – the one with the highest amplitude – charts the shift in global economic power and influence from Europe and the U.S. to China. Chart I-5The Shift In Global Economic Power From Europe And The U.S. To China Before 2008, the short-term impulses in the euro area and the U.S. dominated. But the global financial crisis was a major turning point: the credit stimulus from China dwarfed the responses from the western economies. Then through 2009-12 the impulse oscillations from the three major economies took it in turns to dominate. For example, the 2011-12 global downturn was definitely ‘made in Europe’. However, since 2013 China has taken on the undisputed mantle of dominant impulse. Most recently, last year’s peak to trough decline in China’s short-term impulse amounted to $1 trillion, equivalent to a 1.5 percent drag on global GDP. By comparison, the declines in the euro area and the U.S. amounted to a much more modest $200 billion. Likewise, the recent rebound in the China’s short-term impulse, in dollar terms, has been much larger than the respective rebounds in the euro area and the U.S. Credit Impulses And Speeding Tickets Clients complain that they are confused by the conflicting messages from differently calculated credit impulses. So let’s digress for a moment to present a powerful analogy which should clear the confusion once and for all. Imagine you floored the accelerator pedal of your car (analogous to a huge stimulus). After a hundred metres or so, the stimulus would become very apparent. Your speed over that short sprint would have surged, and possibly have become illegal! But your average speed measured over the previous kilometre would have barely changed. Now imagine a police officer rightfully presents you with a speeding ticket. To protest your innocence, you argue that you couldn’t have floored the accelerator pedal because your average speed over the previous kilometre had barely changed! Clearly, you would never offer such a ludicrous defence for pushing the pedal to the metal. Yet when assessing the impact of an economic stimulus, it is commonplace to make the same mistake. The crucial point is that a stimulus – like flooring the accelerator pedal of your car – will barely move the needle for a longer-term rate of change, but it will become very apparent in a short-term rate of change. For this reason, financial markets never wait for the long-term rates of change to pick up. They always move up or down on the evolution of short-term rates of change. It follows that the credit impulse calculation that is most relevant is the one that provides the best explanatory power for the cycles that we actually observe in the economic and financial market data. As we described in our Special Report, “The Cobweb Theory And Market Cycles”, both the theory and evidence powerfully identify the 6-month credit impulse as the one with the best explanatory power for the oscillations that we actually observe in the economy and markets.1 For the sceptics, the charts in this report should finally dispel any lingering doubts. China’s 6-month impulse gives a spookily perfect explanation for the industrial commodity inflation cycle, and thereby the share price performance of the basic resources sector, as well as the other classically cyclical sectors (Chart I-6 and Chart I-7). Chart I-6China's Short-Term Impulse Perfectly Explains Industrial Commodity Inflation Chart I-7Semiconductors Are A Modern Day Cyclical The good news is that China’s short-term impulse has indisputably been in a mini-upswing in recent months, and this is the reason that the classical cyclical sectors have simultaneously rebounded or, at the very least, stabilised. The bad news is that the shelf-life of such mini-upswings averages no more than eight months or so. Intuitively, this is because just as you cannot accelerate your car indefinitely, it is likewise impossible to stimulate credit growth indefinitely. The investment conclusion is that the pro-cyclical equity sector stance that has worked well since last October can continue for a few months longer. This sector stance necessarily impacts regional and country allocation. For example, it is still right to be overweight pro-cyclical Sweden versus pro-defensive Denmark (Chart I-8 and Chart I-9). Chart I-8Overweight Pro-Cyclical Sweden Versus Denmark... Chart I-9...And Versus Norway From an asset allocation perspective, it means that equities can continue to outperform bonds for the time being. But the caveat is that these short-term trends are unlikely to persist, and most likely, they will viciously reverse later in the year. Stay tuned for the signal to switch. Stay Structurally Overweight ‘Soft’ Luxuries A common question we get concerns the European luxury goods sector: is it, just like the basic resources sector, a direct play on China’s growth cycle? The answer is no. Recently, the connection between the fortunes of ‘soft’ luxury goods brands like LVMH, Hermes, and Kering and China’s growth cycle has been weak (Chart I-10). Broadly, this is also true for ‘hard’ luxury brands – for example, luxury watches – like Richemont (Chart I-11). Chart I-10European 'Soft' Luxuries Are No Longer A China Play... Chart I-11...Neither Are European 'Hard' Luxuries As we highlighted in Buying European Clothes: An Investment Megatrend, the much bigger driver for the ‘soft’ luxury brands is the structural increase in female labour participation rates, and the feminisation of consumer spending. We expect this trend to persist for the next decade.2 Hence, we are happy to buy and hold the European clothes and accessories companies with a dominant or significant exposure to women’s clothes and/or accessories; provided they have a top-end brand (or brands) giving pricing power, and mitigating the very strong deflation in clothes prices. In summary, while European basic resources are a good tactical investment opportunity, European ‘soft’ luxury goods companies are an excellent structural investment opportunity. Fractal Trading System* We are delighted to report that the fractal trading system perfectly identified the sharp recent rebound in cryptocurrencies. Our long Litecoin and Ethereum position has hit its 60 percent profit target with Litecoin up 75 percent and Ethereum up 50 percent since trade initiation on December 19. Additionally, long industrials versus utilities has also hit its profit target. With no new trades this week, the fractal trading system now has five open positions. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment’s fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-12 The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnote 1 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “The Cobweb Theory And Market Cycles” January 11, 2018 available at eis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Buying European Clothes: An Investment Megatrend” December 6, 2018 available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System Recommendations Asset Allocation Equity Regional and Country Allocation Equity Sector Allocation Bond and Interest Rate Allocation Currency and Other Allocation Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
This stunningly poor retail sales number is obviously worrisome, especially as the control group, which enters in the calculation of GDP, fell sharply as well. This catastrophic dataset, along with a poor industrial production reading this morning, caused the…
Key Portfolio Highlights The S&P 500 has started 2019 with a bang as dovish cooing from the Fed has proven a tonic for equities. While we have not entirely retraced the path to the early-autumn highs, our strategy of staying cyclically exposed, based on our view of an absence of a recession in 2019, has proven a profitable one as investor capitulation reached extreme levels (Charts 1 & 2). Chart 1CapitulationChart 2Selling Is Exhausted Importantly, risk premia have been deflating as the end-of-year spike in volatility has subsided and junk spreads have narrowed from the fear-induced heights in December (Chart 3). Chart 3Risk Premia Renormalization Nevertheless, in order for the reflex rebound since the late-December lows to morph into a durable rally, the macro/policy backdrop has to turn from a headwind to a tailwind. We are closely monitoring three potential positive catalysts: A definitively more dovish Fed, which would help restrain the greenback A continuation of the earnings juggernaut A positive U.S./China trade resolution With respect to the first of these, the S&P 500 convulsed following the December 19 Fed meeting and suffered a cathartic 450 point peak-to-trough fall two months ago. The Fed likely made a policy error, and Fed Chair Powell’s resolve is getting tested as has happened with every Chair since Volcker (Charts 4 & 5). Chart 4Powell's Resolve Getting Tested Chart 5Fed Policy Mistake The rising odds of a pause in the Fed tightening cycle, at least for the first half of the year, will likely serve as a welcome respite for equities. Our second catalyst has been gaining steam through the Q4 earnings season which has seen continuation of the double-digit earnings growth of the prior three quarters. Our earnings model points to a moderation of earnings growth in the year to come, in line with sell-side expectations (Chart 6). Our 2019 year-end target remains 3,000 for the SPX, based on $181 2020 EPS and a 16.5x multiple.1 This represents a 6% EPS CAGR, assuming 2018 EPS ends near $162. Chart 6EPS Growth > 0 In Chart 7, we show that financials, health care and industrials are responsible for 61% of the SPX’s expected profit growth in 2019 while technology’s contribution has fallen to a mere 7.2%. While the risk of disappointment encompases financials, health care and industrials, there are high odds that tech surprises to the upside as it has borne the brunt of recent negative earnings revisions (Charts 8 & 9). Chart 8Earnings Revisions... Chart 9...Really Weigh On Tech Lastly, the negativity surrounding the slowdown in China is likely fully reflected in the market (Chart 10), implying an opportunity for a break out should a positive resolution to the U.S./China trade spat be delivered. China’s reflation efforts suggests that the Chinese authorities remain committed to injecting liquidity into their economy (Chart 11). Chart 10China Slowdown Baked In The Cake Chart 11Reflating Away Already, the PBOC balance sheet, with over $5.5tn in assets, is expanding anew. Empirical evidence suggests that SPX momentum and the ebb and flow of the PBOC balance sheet are joined at the hip, and the current message is positive (Chart 12). All of these underlie our style preferences for cyclicals over defensives2 and international large caps over domestically-geared small caps. Chart 12Heed The PBoC Message Chris Bowes, Associate Editor chrisb@bcaresearch.com S&P Financials (Overweight) The divergence between the directions for our CMI and valuation indicator (VI) for S&P financials has reached stunning levels, with the former accelerating into pre-GFC territory and the latter falling to two standard deviations below fair value. Our technical indicator (TI) is sending a relatively neutral message, though this does not diminish the most bullish signal in our cyclical indicator’s history (Chart 13). Chart 13S&P Financials (Overweight) The ongoing strength of the U.S. economy is the driver of such a positive indicator, particularly with respect to the key S&P banks sub index. Our total loans & leases growth model and BCA’s C&I loan growth model (second & bottom panels, Chart 14) are in positive territory. The latter is significant given that C&I loans are the single biggest credit category in bank loan books. Importantly, C&I loans have gone vertical recently topping the 10.5% growth mark despite softening capex intentions and CEO confidence. Further, multi-decade highs in consumer confidence are offsetting the Fed’s tightening cycle and suggest that consumer loans, another key lending category, will also gain traction (third panel, Chart 14). In the context of the generationally high employment rate, the implied lower defaults should drive amplified profit improvement from this credit growth. We reiterate our overweight recommendation. Chart 14Loan Growth Drives Profits S&P Industrials (Overweight) The still-solid domestic footing has maintained our industrials CMI close to its cyclical highs, which are also some of the most bullish in the history of the indicator. However, stock prices have not responded accordingly and our VI has descended mildly from neutral to undervalued. Our TI sends a much more definitive message and stands at a full standard deviation into oversold territory (Chart 15). Chart 1515. S&P Industrials (Overweight) While their cyclical peers S&P financials are almost exclusively a domestic play, S&P industrials have been weighed down by trade flare ups for most of the past year (bottom panel, Chart 16). Accordingly, much of the benefit of positive domestic capex indicators and the more tangible capital goods orders maintaining a supportive trajectory has failed to show up in relative EPS growth (second & third panels, Chart 16), though the latter has recently hooked much higher. Chart 16Industrial Earnings Growth Has Recovered S&P Materials (Overweight) Our materials CMI has made a turn, rising off its lowest level in 20 years. This has coincided with our VI bouncing off its cyclical low, though it remains in undervalued territory. The signal is shared by our TI which has only recently recovered from a full standard deviation into the oversold zone, a level that has historically presaged S&P materials rallies (Chart 17). Chart 17S&P Materials (Overweight) When we upgraded the S&P materials sector to overweight earlier this year, we noted that China macro dominates the direction of U.S. materials stocks. On the monetary front, the Chinese monetary easing cycle continues unabated and the near 150bps year-over-year drop in the 10-year Chinese Treasury yield will soon start to bear fruit (yield change shown inverted and advanced, bottom panel, Chart 18). The renminbi also moves in lockstep with relative share prices. The apparent de-escalation in the U.S./China trade tensions has boosted the CNY/USD and is signaling that a playable reflation trade is in the offing in the S&P materials sector (top panel, Chart 18). Chart 18Chinese Data Drives Materials Performance S&P Energy (Overweight) Our energy CMI has moved horizontally for the past six quarters, though this followed a snap-back recovery from the extremely depressed levels of 2016 and 2017. Meanwhile both our VI and TI have descended steeply into buying territory with the former approaching two standard deviations below fair value (Chart 19). Chart 19S&P Energy (Overweight) As with the CMI, the relative share price ratio for the S&P energy index has moved laterally since our mid-summer 2017 upgrade to overweight. Interestingly, the integrated oil & gas energy subindex neither kept up with the steep oil price advance until the end of September, nor with the recent drubbing in crude oil prices (top panel, Chart 20). Put differently, oil majors never discounted sustainably higher oil prices, and are also refraining from extrapolating recent oil prices weakness far into the future. Chart 2020. The Stage Is Set For A Recovery In Crude Prices Nevertheless, the roughly 30% per annum growth in U.S. crude oil production is unsustainable and, were production to remain near all-time highs and move sideways in 2019, then the growth rate would fall back to the zero line. Such a paring back in the growth rate would likely balance the oil market and pave the way for an oil price recovery (oil production shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 20). This echoes BCA’s Commodity & Energy Strategy service, which continues to forecast higher oil prices into 2019, a forecast which should set the stage for a sustainable rebound next year in S&P energy profits, the opposite of what analysts currently expect (Chart 7). S&P Consumer Staples (Overweight) An improving macro environment is reflected in our consumer staples CMI that has vaulted higher in recent months. However, the strong recent relative outperformance has also shown up in our VI which, though still in undervalued territory, has recovered significantly. Our TI has fully recovered and now sends a neutral message (Chart 21). Chart 21S&P Consumer Staples (Overweight) The surging S&P household products sector has been carrying the S&P consumer staples index on its back as solid pricing efforts have been dragging results and forward guidance higher. While household product sales have been enjoying a multi-year growth phase (second panel, Chart 22), it has largely been driven by volumes. However, the recent resurgence in pricing power (third panel, Chart 22) has given volume gains an added kick, pushing sales further. Meanwhile, exports have continued their two-year ascent despite the tough currency environment and the upshot is that relative EPS growth will likely remain upbeat (bottom panel, Chart 22). In light of challenged EM consumer spending growth, this signal is very encouraging. Chart 22Household Products Is Carrying Staples S&P Health Care (Neutral) Our health care CMI has been treading water recently. Further, a recovery in pharma stocks has taken our VI from undervalued to a neutral position, while our TI sends a distinctly bearish message as health care stocks have been overbought (Chart 23). Chart 23S&P Health Care (Neutral) Healthcare stocks have outperformed in the back half of 2018. Recently a merger mania that has swept through the pharma and biotech spaces has underpinned relative share prices. The last three months have seen an explosion of deals, including the largest biopharma deal ever (Bristol-Myers Squibb buying Celgene for approximately $90 billion) with other global deals falling not too far behind (Takeda buying Shire for $62 billion mid-last year). Such exuberance has clearly confirmed that merger premia are alive and well in the S&P pharma index. It is not merely rising premia that have taken pharma higher either. Pricing power has entered the early innings of a recovery (top panel, Chart 24) while the key export channel points to increasingly bright days ahead (second panel, Chart 24). However, the rise of regulatory pressure from the Trump administration may cause better pricing to prove fleeting. Chart 24Merger Mania In Pharma Further, pharma’s consolidation phase has come at a cost to sector leverage ratios that have dramatically expanded (bottom panel, Chart 24). Such profligacy may come to haunt the sector should the pricing power recovery falter. S&P Technology (Neutral) Our technology CMI has been moving laterally for the better part of the last three years, though the S&P technology index has ignored the macro headwinds and soared higher over that time. Our VI remains on the overvalued side of neutral, despite the recent tech selloff while our TI has been retrenching into oversold territory (Chart 25). Chart 25S&P Technology (Neutral) Until the end of last year, we maintained a barbell portfolio within the sector by recommending an overweight position in the late-cyclical and capex-driven technology hardware, storage & peripherals and software indexes while recommending an underweight position in the early-cyclical semi and semi equipment indexes. However, we recently upgraded the niche semi equipment to overweight for three reasons. First, trade policy uncertainty has dealt a blow to this tech subindex. Not only are 90% of sales foreign sourced, but a large chunk is also China-related sales. Second, emerging market financial indicators are showing some signs of life, underscoring that semi equipment demand may turn out to be marginally less grim than currently anticipated (second panel, Chart 26). Third, long term semi equipment EPS growth estimates have recently collapsed to a level far below the broad market, indicating that the sell side has thrown in the towel on this niche sector (third panel, Chart 26). Chart 26A Bottom In Semi Equipment Overall, and despite our more bullish view on semi equipment, we continue to recommend a neutral weighting in S&P technology. S&P Utilities (Underweight) Our utilities CMI has recovered recently, bouncing off its 25-year low, driven by the modest easing in interest rates, (Chart 27). This has also manifested in a recovery in the S&P utilities index as this fixed income proxy has reacted to the recent fall in Treasury yields (change in yields shown inverted, top panel, Chart 28) and jump in natural gas prices. Further, utilities are typically seen as a domestic defensive play and the recent trade troubles have made utilities soar in a flight to safety. Chart 27S&P Utilities (Underweight) We think the tailwinds lifting utilities are transitory and likely to shift to headwinds. First, one of our key themes for the back half of the year is rising interest rates; a move higher in yields will have a predictably negative impact on these high-dividend paying equities. Second, a flight to safety looks fleeting; the ISM manufacturing new orders index usually moves inversely in lock step with utilities and the most recent message is negative for the S&P utilities index (ISM manufacturing new orders index shown inverted, second panel, Chart 28). Meanwhile, S&P utilities earnings estimates have continued to trail the broad market, having taken a significant step down this year (third panel, Chart 28). Chart 28Rising Rates In Late-2019 Will Be A Headwind For Utilities Our VI and TI share this bearish message as the VI is deeply overvalued and the TI is in overbought territory (Chart 27). S&P Real Estate (Underweight) Our real estate CMI has recently started to turn up, though this is off the near decade-low set last year and remains deeply depressed relative to history (Chart 29). This is principally the result of the backup in interest rates since late last year and the lift they have given to the sector, which has been a relative outperformer over the past six months (top panel, Chart 30). Much like the S&P utilities sector in the previous section, and in the context of BCA’s higher interest rate view, we continue to avoid this sector. Chart 29S&P Real Estate (Underweight) Along with the modest reprieve in borrowing rates, multi family construction continues unabated (second panel, Chart 30), likely driven by all-time highs in CRE prices (third panel, Chart 30). In the absence of an outright contraction in construction, recent weakening in occupancy (bottom panel, Chart 30) will likely prove deflationary to rents, and thus profit prospects. Chart 30Falling Occupancy Will Hurt REIT Profits Our VI suggests that REITs are modestly overvalued, though the recent outperformance has driven our TI to an overbought condition (Chart 29). S&P Consumer Discretionary (Underweight) Our consumer discretionary CMI has ticked up recently, pushed higher by resiliency in consumer data. However, the S&P consumer discretionary index has clearly responded, pushing against 40-year highs relative to the S&P 500 and taking our VI to two standard deviations above fair value (Chart 31). Much of this should be attributed to Amazon (roughly 30% of the S&P consumer discretionary index) and their exceptional 12% outperformance relative to the broad market over the past year. Chart 31S&P Consumer Discretionary (Underweight) While we have an underweight recommendation on the S&P consumer discretionary index, we have varying intra-segment preferences, highlighted by the recent inception of a pair trade going long homebuilders and short home improvement retailers (HIR). Housing starts and building permits are extremely sensitive to interest rates, depend on first time home buyers and move in lockstep with the homeownership rate. Currently, interest rates are easing, the homeownership rate is coming out of its GFC funk and first time home buyers are slated to make a comeback this spring selling season. This is a boon for homebuilders at the expense of HIR (top & middle panels, Chart 32). Further, the price of lumber is a key determinant of relative profitability: lumber represents an input cost to homebuilders whereas it is an important selling item in Big Box building & supply retailers that make a set margin on it. The recent drubbing in lumber prices should ease margin pressures on homebuilders but eat into HIR profits (momentum in lumber prices shown inverted and advanced in bottom panel, Chart 32). Chart 32Long Homebuilders / Short Home Improvement Retailers S&P Communication Services (Underweight) As the newly-minted communication services has little more than four months of existence, we do not have adequate history to create a cyclical macro indicator. However, we have created Chart 33 with a number of valuation indicators, though we caution that they too are less reliable than the other indicators presented in the preceding pages, owing to a dearth of history. Chart 33S&P Communication Services (Underweight) Rather, we refer readers to our still-fresh initiation of coverage on the sector3 and look forward to being able to deliver something more substantive in the future. Size Indicator (Favor Large Vs. Small Caps) Our size CMI has been hovering near the boom/bust line, as it has for most of the last two years (Chart 34). Despite the neutral CMI reading, we downgraded small caps in the middle of last year,4 and moved to a large cap preference, based on the diverging (and unsustainable) debt levels of small caps vs. their large cap peers (bottom panel, Chart 35). This size bias remains a high conviction call for 2019. Chart 34Favor Large Vs. Small Caps Macro data too has turned against small caps. Recent NFIB surveys have shown that small business optimism has continued to fall through the end of the year, albeit from a very high level (top panel, Chart 35). This has coincided with the continued slide of small cap stocks relative to their large cap peers. Chart 35Small Caps Have A Big Balance Sheet Problem Further, the percentage of small businesses with planned labor compensation increases continues to set new all-time highs and deviates substantially from the national trend (second panel, Chart 35). This divergence becomes more worrying when plotted against those same firms increasing prices (third panel, Chart 35), which has trailed for some time and recently flattened. The inference is that margin pressure is intensifying and likely to continue for the foreseeable future. In the context of the absence of small cap balance sheet discipline during the past five years, ongoing large cap outperformance seems ever more likely. Footnotes 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “ Catharsis,” dated January 14, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “ Don't Fight The PBoC,” dated February 4, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Daily Insight, “New Lines Of Communication,” dated October 1, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Daily Insight, “Small Caps Have A Big Balance Sheet Problem,” dated May 10, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
Domestic long-term housing prospects remain compelling, especially given that the GFC wrung out all the residential real estate excesses. Currently, household formation is still running higher than housing starts and building permits. Similarly the…
Highlights Portfolio Strategy We highlight our top seven reasons of why it pays to initiate a long materials/short utilities pair trade this week. Enticing long-term residential real estate prospects, a vibrant labor market, the recent improvement in house affordability, encouraging industry operating metrics and rock bottom valuations, all signal that a durable advance looms for the S&P homebuilding index. Recent Changes Initiate a long S&P Materials/short S&P Utilities pair trade today on a tactical (3-6 month) horizon. Table 1 Feature The S&P 500 pierced through the 50-day moving average last week and managed to hold the line above this key technical level. Stocks are still absorbing the December shock, and our sense is that it may take a while before the SPX clears 2,800 where it faced stiff resistance all last year (Chart 1). This is a ripe trading environment. Chart 12,800 Is Stiff Resistance However, in order for a breakout to materialize, we reiterate the three potential positive catalysts we identified last week: A continuation of the earnings juggernaut A positive U.S./China trade resolution A definitively more dovish Fed, which would help restrain the greenback On the earnings front, Charts 2 & 3 update our GICS1 sector EPS growth models with one caveat: due to a lack of data we continue to show telecom services instead of communications services. While most sectors are projected to decelerate following 2018’s fiscal easing-related profit growth boost, the energy sector is the one that clearly stands out. Chart 2Sector EPS Growth... Chart 3...Models Update Last week we highlighted that sell-side analysts are anticipating energy profits to contract in 2019;1 this is in line with our S&P energy EPS growth model that continues to point toward EPS contraction (third panel, Chart 2). Nevertheless, we expect upward surprises in this deep cyclical sector given BCA’s Commodity & Energy Strategy service bullish oil forecast for the year. With regard to the three profit heavyweight sectors, tech, financials and health care, our EPS growth models are more or less in line with the street’s estimates (please refer to Table 2 in last week’s Weekly Report). Tech profits in particular are kissing off the zero growth line according to our regression model (top panel, Chart 3), and we continue to recommend a barbell positioning approach, overweighting the S&P software (high-conviction) and tech hardware, storage & peripherals indexes at the expense of the S&P semiconductors index. As a reminder we are neutral the broad S&P tech sector. Beyond profit growth, looking at our S&P 500 GICS1 sector Valuation Indicator (VI) and Technical Indicator (TI) provides a more complete sector positioning picture. Chart 4 is a valuation versus technical map of the 11 sectors, using our proprietary VI and TI as inputs. The map plots the VI on the y-axis and the TI on the x-axis. Both indicators depict Z-scores (please look forward to our upcoming Cyclical Indicator Update report that will highlight long-term GICS1 sector time series of our VI and TI). The S&P utilities sector is the most stretched and simultaneously very expensive sector. Real estate is just behind utilities and we continue to dislike both of these niche interest rate-sensitive sectors. The S&P consumer discretionary sector also makes it in this top right quadrant and is the most expensive GICS1 sector; we remain underweight this early cyclical sector. On the flip side, energy, materials and financials populate the bottom left quadrant; as a reminder we are overweight all three sectors. The S&P energy sector is the most undervalued and unloved of all GICS1 sectors. Netting it all out, we continue to prefer deep cyclical to defensive sectors as we still see the most opportunity in this tilt on all three fronts: earnings, valuations and technicals. Importantly, most of the bad/negative China slowdown news is likely reflected in the downtrodden cyclical/defensive ratio and a slingshot recovery is looming (China slowdown story count shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 5). Chart 5China Slowdown Baked In The Cake In that light, this week we are initiating a new cyclical/defensive pair trade that is primed to generate alpha, and also update a niche early cyclical group. Buy Materials/Sell Utilities A playable market-neutral opportunity has resurfaced to buy materials at the expense of utilities stocks. Below we outline our top seven reasons why investors should put on this pair trade on a tactical (3-6 month) horizon. Chart 6The Dollar's Trough While global growth is decelerating, this news is last year’s story, especially now that even the IMF came out and downgraded global output growth. This is contrarily positive as cyclical stocks have more than discounted a softer growth outlook. If anything, the surprise this year would be for global growth to pick up momentum on the back of a positive U.S./China trade dispute resolution. The top panel of Chart 6 shows our Global Trade Activity Indicator (GTAI) that is making an effort to trough. Historically, the GTAI has been an excellent leading indicator of the long materials/short utilities price ratio and the current message is that the latter has bottomed. As the Fed is backing off aggressively raising interest rates this year and this has dealt a modest blow to the U.S. dollar. As a reminder, a depreciating greenback is conducive to rising global growth and vice versa. Were the U.S. dollar to complete its reverse head and shoulders technical formation courtesy of a more dovish Fed, this will prove a boon for relative share prices (middle panel, Chart 6). Related to the softening currency is a pickup in commodity price inflation. In fact, already metal prices are outpacing natural gas prices. The latter is the marginal price setter for utilities. This relative pricing power gauge is signaling that the worst is behind this pair trade ratio and a relative profit-led advance is in the offing (bottom panel, Chart 6). While the China slowdown narrative is well telegraphed to the markets (Chart 5), there is increasing pressure on the Chinese to either strike a deal with the U.S. and resolve the trade tussle or put together a comprehensive fiscal package alongside the already easing monetary backdrop in order to aid their decelerating economy. Importantly, the V-shaped recovery in the Li Keqiang index is signaling that the opening of the monetary taps and up-to-now piecemeal fiscal easing are starting to pay dividends. The upshot is that materials have the upper hand versus utilities (Li Keqiang index shown advanced, Chart 7). Chart 7...Chinese Reflation... Domestic conditions are also fertile ground for the relative share price ratio. While the ISM manufacturing survey took a beating last month, the latest release of the Philly Fed manufacturing business outlook ticked higher (both current activity and six-month forecast), reversing last month’s downbeat sentiment reading (Chart 8). BCA’s view remains that there will be no recession in 2019, which underpins materials at the expense of utilities. Chart 8...No U.S. Recession... High-frequency financial market indicators also suggest that the path of least resistance is higher for this cyclicals vs. defensives share price ratio. Inflation expectations have rebounded following an over 50bps collapse late last year, and financial conditions have also started to ease, partially reversing December’s spike (Chart 9). At the margin, materials are an inflation beneficiary/hedge and also investors shed defensive utilities stocks when financial conditions start to ease (junk bond spread shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 9). Finally, our EPS growth models do an excellent job in capturing all these relative macro drivers and underscore that a reversal in bombed out technicals and depressed valuations looms (Chart 10). Chart 9...Financial Market Indicators... Chart 10...And Compelling Valuations & Technicals Say Buy Materials/Sell Utilities In sum, a softer U.S. dollar, positive global/China growth surprises, commodity price inflation, an easing in financial conditions and no 2019 U.S. recession, all suggest that a relative earnings led advance will unlock excellent relative value and push the materials/utilities ratio higher in the coming months. Bottom Line: Initiate a new long S&P materials/short S&P utilities pair trade today on a tactical (3-6 month) horizon. Will Homebuilders Go Through The Roof? While we were admittedly a bit early in buying homebuilders in late-September, relative share prices have come full circle and are in the black since inception.2 We maintain our overweight stance in this niche consumer discretionary sub index and reiterate our long S&P homebuilding/short S&P home improvement retail pair trade that we initiated last week.3 Domestic long-term housing prospects remain compelling, especially given that the GFC wrung out all the residential real estate excesses. Currently, household formation is still running higher than housing starts and building permits (top panel, Chart 11). Similarly the homeownership ratio remains low by historical standards (it has yet to return to the long-term mean, not shown) and suggests that there is pent up housing demand. Chart 11Robust Long-term Housing Fundamentals Further, housing valuations are not pricey as both the price-to-rent and price-to-income ratios are a far cry from the 2005/06 peak (bottom panel, Chart 11). BCA’s view remains that wages will continue to rise this year and the economy will avoid recession. Historically, a vibrant labor market and residential construction are joined at the hip (unemployment rate and unemployment insurance claims shown inverted, Chart 12). Chart 12Labor Market And Residential Construction Move In Lockstep Tack on the recent fall in the 30-year fixed mortgage rate courtesy of a marginally more dovish Fed, and first-time home buyers will return this spring selling season (second panel, Chart 11). Already there is tentative evidence that potential home-owners have rushed to take advantage of the near 50bps drop in interest rates since the early November peak. The Mortgage Bankers Association's (MBA) mortgage applications purchase survey hit a multi-year high this month and signals that the there is a long runway ahead for the S&P homebuilding share price ratio (bottom panel, Chart 13). Chart 13Buyers Are Coming Back On the homebuilding operating front there are also some encouraging signs. Lumber prices, are down $300/tbf since mid-summer. This wholesale lumber liquidation phase provides profit margin relief to homebuilders given that framing lumber is a key input cost to housing construction (second panel, Chart 14). Chart 14Firming Operating Metrics Importantly, bankers are still willing extenders of residential real estate credit according to the latest Fed Senior Loan Officer survey. Indeed, mortgage credit is expanding at a healthy clip and there are high odds that this recent pick up in mortgage loan origination will remain upbeat owing to the decrease in the price of credit (third & bottom panels, Chart 14). Finally, sell-side analysts’ exuberance on homebuilding profits has returned to earth and now industry long-term profit growth is trailing the overall market. This significantly lowered profit hurdle coupled with depressed relative valuations suggest that investors seeking early cyclical equity exposure can still park capital in homebuilding stocks (Chart 15). Chart 15Homebuilders Are Still Cheap Adding it all up, enticing long-term residential real estate prospects, a vibrant labor market, the recent improvement in house affordability, encouraging industry operating metrics and rock bottom valuations, all signal that a durable advance looms for the S&P homebuilding index. Bottom Line: Maintain the overweight stance in the S&P homebuilding index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HOME – PHM, LEN, DHI. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Dissecting 2019 Earnings” dated January 22, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Indurated” dated September 24, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Dissecting 2019 Earnings” dated January 22, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps
This pair trade is levered to the swings in residential construction compared to residential investment. Right now, the former is significantly outpacing the latter, suggesting that relative share prices have ample room to run. Currently, interest rates…