Currencies
The Turkish central bank surprised investors with a 100-basis point rate cut on Thursday, bringing the one-week repo rate down to 18%. The decision comes despite rising inflation. Headline CPI has been steadily climbing since late-2019 and reached 19.25% in…
The Bank of England kept policy unchanged at its meeting on Thursday. Instead, it revised down its Q3 growth outlook to 2.1% from last month’s 2.9%. However, it highlighted that this revision largely reflects the dampening effect of supply constraints on…
The Fed’s policy normalization process is likely to produce a slight hawkish surprise. The central bank will probably raise interest rates earlier and faster than current market expectations (see Country Focus). We do not expect this process to be a source of…
As expected, Sweden’s central bank maintained a dovish tone and kept policy unchanged following its meeting on Tuesday. The Riksbank acknowledged that Swedish inflation surprised to the upside relative to its July forecast. As anticipated by our European…
Highlights We cannot predict how China will manage Evergrande precisely but we have a high conviction that it will do whatever it takes to prevent contagion across the property sector. However, China’s stimulus tools are losing their effectiveness over time. The country is due for a prolonged struggle with financial and economic instability regardless of whether Evergrande defaults. A messy default would obviously exacerbate the problem. China’s regulatory crackdowns target private companies and will continue to weigh on animal spirits in the private sector. The government will be forced to use fiscal policy to compensate. The US’s and China’s switch from engagement to confrontation poses a persistent headwind for investor sentiment toward China. The new consensus that investors should buy into China’s “strategic sectors” to avoid arbitrary regulatory crackdowns is vulnerable to its own logic and to sanctions by the US and its allies. Feature China poses a unique confluence of domestic and foreign political risks and global markets are now pricing them. Property giant Evergrande could default on $120 million in onshore and offshore interest payments as early as September 23, or next month, prompting investors to run for cover. Is this crisis fleeting or part of a larger systemic failure? It is a larger systemic failure. We expect a slow-motion, Japanese-style crisis over the coming decade, marked with periodic bailouts and stimulus packages. We recommend investors stay the course: steer clear of China and stay short the renminbi and Taiwanese dollar. Tactically, stick with large caps, defensive sectors, and developed markets within the global equity universe. Strategically, prefer emerging markets that benefit from forthcoming Chinese (and American) stimulus. 1. A “Minsky Moment” Cannot Be Ruled Out The chief fear is whether the approaching default of Evergrande marks China’s “Minsky Moment.” Hyman Minsky’s financial instability hypothesis held that long periods of stable revenues lead to risky financial deals and large accumulations of systemic risk that are underpriced. When revenues cannot cover interest payments, a crash ensues followed by deleveraging. Minsky’s hypothesis speaks to debt crises in an entire economy, yet nobody knows for sure whether China’s economy has reached such a breaking point. China’s national savings rate stands at 45.7% of GDP and nominal growth exceeds the long-term government bond yield. However, a sharp drop in asset prices, especially in the property sector, could change everything, as it could lead to balance sheet recession among corporates and a fall in national income. Evergrande is supposed to make an $84 million interest payment on offshore debt and a $36 million payment on onshore debt this week, and after 30 days it would default. It owes $37 billion in debt payments over the next 12 months but only has $13 billion cash on hand (as of June 30, 2021). Authorities can opt for a full bailout or a partial bailout, in which the company defaults on offshore bonds but not onshore. They could even let the company fail categorically, though that would produce exactly the kind of precipitous drop in property asset prices that would lead to wider financial contagion. State intervention to smooth the crisis is more likely – and the government can easily pressure other companies into acquiring Evergrande’s assets and business divisions. Chart 1Yes, This Could Be China's Minsky Moment
Yes, This Could Be China's Minsky Moment
Yes, This Could Be China's Minsky Moment
Chart 1 shows that China’s corporate debt-to-GDP ratio stands head and shoulders above other countries that experienced financial crises in recent decades, courtesy of our Emerging Markets Strategy. While China can undoubtedly bear large debts due to its savings, the implication is that China has large enough financial imbalances to suffer a full-fledged financial crisis, even if the timing is hard to predict. Household credit is also elevated at 61.7% of GDP, and the household debt-to-disposable-income ratio is now higher than in the United States. About two-thirds of China’s corporate debt is held by state-owned or state-controlled entities, prompting some investors to dismiss the gravity of the risk. However, financial crises often involve the transfer of debt from the state to private sector or vice versa. 59% of bond defaults in H1 2021 have involved state companies. Total debt is the main concern. Don’t take our word for it: China’s Communist Party has warned for the past decade about the danger of “implicit guarantees” and “moral hazard” that encourage financial excesses in the corporate sector. The Xi Jinping administration has tried to induce a deleveraging process since it came to power in 2012-13. Xi’s “three red lines” for the property sector precipitated the current turmoil. Even if Evergrande’s troubles are managed, China’s systemic risks will continue to boil over as its potential growth rate slows and the government continues trying to wring out financial excesses. Chart 2Policy Uncertainty, Financial Stress Can Rise Higher
Policy Uncertainty, Financial Stress Can Rise Higher
Policy Uncertainty, Financial Stress Can Rise Higher
More broadly China is experiencing an unprecedented overlap of economic and political crises: The population is aging and labor force is shrinking; The economic model since 2009 has been changing from export-manufacturing to domestic-oriented, investment-driven growth; Indebtedness is spreading from corporates to households and ultimately the government; The governance model is shifting from “single-party rule” to “single-person rule” or autocracy; The population is reaching middle class status and demanding better quality of life; The international trade environment is turning from hyper-globalization to hypo-globalization; The geopolitical backdrop is darkening with the US and its allies attempting to contain China’s ambitions of regional supremacy. Almost all of these changes bring more risks than opportunities to China over the long haul. The need for rapid policy shifts provides the ostensible reasoning for President Xi Jinping’s decision not to step down but to remain president for the foreseeable future. He will clinch this position at the twentieth national party congress in fall 2022. The implication is that policy uncertainty will continue climbing up to at least 2019 peaks while offshore equity markets will continue to trend lower, as they have done since the onset of the US trade war (Chart 2). Credit default swap rates have so far been subdued but they are showing signs of life. A sharp rise in policy uncertainty and property sector stress would pull them up. Domestic equities (A-shares) have rallied since 2019 but we would expect them to fall back given China’s historic confluence of structural and cyclical challenges, which will create further negative surprises (Chart 2, bottom panel). 2. Beijing Will Provide Bailouts And Stimulus Ad Nauseum Evergrande’s future may be in doubt but Beijing will throw all its power at stopping nationwide financial contagion. True, a policy miscalculation is possible. A tardy or failed intervention cannot be ruled out. However, investors should remember that a clear pattern of bailouts and stimulus has emerged over the course of the Xi Jinping administration whenever a “hard landing” or financial collapse loomed. The government tightens controls on bloated sectors until the financial fallout threatens to undermine general economic and social stability, at which point the government eases policy. It is often forced to stimulate the economy aggressively. Chart 3 shows these cycles in two ways: China’s control of credit through the state-controlled banks, and the frequency of news stories mentioning important terms associated with financial and economic distress: defaults, layoffs, and bankruptcies. These three terms used to be unheard of among China watchers. Under the Xi administration, a higher tolerance of creative destruction has served as the way to push forward reform. The current rise in distress is not extended, suggesting that more bad news is coming, but it also shows that the government has repeatedly been forced to provide stimulus even under the Xi administration. Chart 3Xi Jinping Has Bailed Out System Three Times Already
Xi Jinping Has Bailed Out System Three Times Already
Xi Jinping Has Bailed Out System Three Times Already
Could this time be different? Not likely. The American experience and the pandemic will also force China’s government to ease policy: China learns from US mistakes. The US lurched from Lehman’s failure into a financial crisis, an impaired credit channel, a sluggish economic recovery, a spike in polarization, policy paralysis, a near-default on the national debt, a surge in right- and left-wing populism, the tumultuous Trump presidency, widespread social unrest, a contested leadership succession, and a mob storming the nation’s capitol (Chart 4). This is obviously the nightmare of any Chinese leader and a trajectory that the Xi administration will avoid at any cost. Chart 4Lehman Brothers A Powerful Disincentive For China To Let Evergrande Fail
Lehman Brothers A Powerful Disincentive For China To Let Evergrande Fail
Lehman Brothers A Powerful Disincentive For China To Let Evergrande Fail
Chinese households store their wealth in the property sector, so any attempt at policy restraint or austerity faces a massive constraint. Only a few countries are comparable to China with respect to the share of non-financial household wealth (property and land) within total household wealth. All of them are hosts of property sector bubbles, including the bubbles in Spain and Ireland back in 2007 (Chart 5). A property collapse would destroy the savings of the Chinese people over four decades of prosperity. Chart 5Property Is The Bedrock Of Chinese Households
Five Points On China’s Crisis
Five Points On China’s Crisis
Social instability is already flaring up. Almost all China experts agree that “social stability” is the Communist Party’s bottom line. But note that the Evergrande saga has already led to protests, not only at the company’s headquarters in Shenzhen but also in other cities such as Shenyang, Guangzhou, Chongqing. Protests were filmed and shown on social media (posts have been censored). Protesters demanded repayment for wealth management products gone sour and properties they are owed that have not been built. This is only a taste of the cross-regional protests that would emerge if the broader property sector suffered. The lingering COVID-19 pandemic is still relevant. Investors should not underrate the potential threat that the pandemic poses to the regime. Severe epidemics have occurred about 11% of the time over the course of China’s history and they often have major ramifications. Disease has played a role in the downfall of six out of ten dynasties – and in four cases it played a major role. It would be suicidal for any regime to add self-inflicted economic collapse to a lingering pandemic (Table 1). Table 1Disease Threatens Chinese Dynasties – Not A Time To Self-Inflict A Recession
Five Points On China’s Crisis
Five Points On China’s Crisis
Easing policy does not necessarily mean bringing out the “bazooka” and splurging on money and credit growth, though that is increasingly likely as the crisis intensifies. Notably the July Politburo statement specifically removed language that said China would “avoid sharp turns in policy.” In other words, sharp turns might be necessary. That can only mean sharp reflationary turns, as there is very little chance of doubling down on policy tightening. A counterargument holds that the Chinese government is now exclusively focused on power consolidation to the neglect of financial and economic stability. Perhaps the leadership is misinformed, overconfident, or thinks a financial collapse will better purge its enemies – along the lines of the various political purges under Chairman Mao Zedong. Wealthy tech magnates and property owners could conceivably challenge the return of autocracy. After all, the US political establishment almost “fell” to a rich property baron – why couldn’t China’s Communist Party? Political purges should certainly be expected ahead of next year’s party congress. But not to the point of killing the economy. The government would not be trying to balance policy tightening and loosening so carefully if it sought to induce chaos. It must be admitted, however, that the change to autocracy means that the odds of irrational or idiosyncratic policy have gone up substantially and permanently. Of course, the high likelihood that Beijing will provide bailouts and stimulus should not be read as a bullish investment thesis, even though it would create a pop in oversold assets. The Chinese system is saturated with money and credit, which have been losing their effectiveness in driving growth. Financial imbalances get worse, not better, with each wave of credit stimulus. Beijing is caught between a rock and a hard place. Hence stimulus comes only reluctantly and reactively. But it does come in the end because a financial crash would threaten the life of the regime and preclude all other policy priorities, domestic and foreign. 3. Yes, China’s Regulatory Crackdown Targets The Private Sector Global growth and other emerging economies will get most of the benefit once China stimulates, since China’s own firms will still face a negative domestic political backdrop. Bullish investors argue that the government’s regulatory tightening is misunderstood and overblown. The claim is that China is not targeting the private sector generally but only isolated sectors causing social problems. Costs need to be reduced in property, education, and health to improve quality of life. China shares the US’s and EU’s desire to rein in tech giants that monopolize their markets, abuse consumer data and privacy, and benefit from distorted tax systems. Most of these arguments are misleading. China does not have a strong record on data privacy, equality, social safety nets, rule of law, or “sustainable” growth (as opposed to “unsustainable,” high-debt, high-polluting growth). China actively encourages state champions that monopolize key sectors. Many developed markets have better records in these areas, notably in Europe, yet China is eschewing these regulatory models in preference for an approach that is arbitrary and absolutist, i.e. negative for governance. As for the private sector, animal spirits have been in a long decline throughout the past decade. This is true whether judging by money velocity – i.e. the pace of economic activity relative to the increase in money supply – or by households’ and businesses’ marginal propensity to save (Chart 6). The 2015-16 period shows that even periodic bouts of government stimulus have not reversed the general trend. Regulatory whack-a-mole and financial turmoil will not improve the situation. Chart 6Private Sector Animal Spirits Depressed Throughout Xi Era
Private Sector Animal Spirits Depressed Throughout Xi Era
Private Sector Animal Spirits Depressed Throughout Xi Era
Chart 7Even Official Data Shows Consumer Confidence Flagging
Even Official Data Shows Consumer Confidence Flagging
Even Official Data Shows Consumer Confidence Flagging
Surveys of sentiment confirm that the latest developments will have a negative effect (Chart 7). Cumulatively, the changes in China’s domestic and international policy context are being interpreted as negative for business, entrepreneurship, and economic freedom – notwithstanding the government’s claims to expand opportunity in its “common prosperity” plan. 4. The Withdrawal Of US Friendship Is A Headwind For China Chart 8Other Asians Sought US Friendship, Not Conflict, When Export Models Expired
Other Asians Sought US Friendship, Not Conflict, When Export Models Expired
Other Asians Sought US Friendship, Not Conflict, When Export Models Expired
All of the successful Asian economies – including China for most of the past forty years of prosperity – have tried to stay on the good side of the United States. By contrast, China and the US today are shifting from engagement to confrontation and breaking up their economic ties (Chart 8). This is a problem for China because the US and to some extent its allies will seek to undermine China’s economy and its autocratic model as part of this great power competition. The rise in geopolitical risk is underscored by the Australia-UK-US (AUKUS) agreement, by which the US will provide Australia with nuclear submarines over the next decade. This was a clear demonstration of the US’s “pivot to Asia” and the fact that the US and China are preparing for war – if only to deter it. China’s return to autocracy and clash with the US and Asian neighbors is also leading to a deterioration of its global image, particularly over issues of transparency and information sharing. The dispute over the origins of COVID-19 is a major source of division with the US and other countries. Transparency is important for investors. The World Bank has discontinued its “Ease of Doing Business” rankings after a scandal was revealed in which China’s ranking was artificially bumped up. The last-published trend is still downward (Chart 9). Most recently China has stepped up censorship of its financial news media amid the current market turmoil, which makes it harder for investors to assess the full extent of property and financial risks.1 The US political factions agree on China-bashing if nothing else. The Biden administration has little political impetus to eschew tariffs and export controls. One important penalty will come from the Securities and Exchange Commission, which is likely to ban Chinese firms from US stock exchanges unless they conform to common accounting standards. Hence the dramatic fall in the share prices of Chinese companies listed via American Depository Receipts (ADRs), in both absolute and relative terms (Chart 10, top panel). This threat prompted China’s recent crackdown on its own firms that were attempting to hold initial public offerings on US exchanges. Chart 9US Conflict Exposes China’s Global Influence Campaign
Five Points On China’s Crisis
Five Points On China’s Crisis
The Quadrilateral Forum – the US, Japan, Australia, and India – has agreed to link the semiconductor supply chain to human rights standards, foreclosing China’s participation in that supply chain. US semiconductor firms are among the most exposed to China but they have not suffered over the course of the US-China tech war, suggesting that US vulnerabilities are limited (Chart 10, bottom panel). Chart 10US Regulators Will Kick Chinese Firms While They Are Down
US Regulators Will Kick Chinese Firms While They Are Down
US Regulators Will Kick Chinese Firms While They Are Down
The point is not to exaggerate the strength of the US and its allies but rather the costs to China of actively opposing them. The US has a difficult enough time cobbling together a coalition of states to impose sanctions on Iran over its nuclear program, not to mention forming any coalition that would totally exclude and isolate China. China is far more important to US allies than Iran – it is irreplaceable in the global economy (Chart 11). The EU and China’s Asian neighbors will typically restrain the US’s more aggressive impulses so as not to upset the global recovery or end up on the front lines of a war.2 Chart 11No Substitute For China In Global Economy
Five Points On China’s Crisis
Five Points On China’s Crisis
This diplomatic constraint on the US is probably positive for global growth but not for China per se. American allies are still able to increase the costs on China for pursuing its own state-backed development path and geopolitical sphere of influence. Japan, Australia, and others are likely to veto China’s application to join the Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), while the UK and eventually the US are likely to join it. Investors should view US-China ties as a headwind at least until the two powers manage to negotiate a diplomatic thaw, i.e. substantial de-escalation of tensions. A thaw is unlikely in the lead-up to Xi Jinping’s consolidation of power and the US midterm elections in fall 2022. Presidents Biden and Xi are still working on a bilateral summit, not to mention a more substantial improvement in ties. We doubt a diplomatic thaw would be durable anyway but the important point is that until it happens China will face periodic bouts of negative sentiment from the emerging cold war. Other Asian economies thrived under US auspices – China is sailing in uncharted waters. 5. Global Investors Cannot Separate Civilian From State And Military Investments The word on Wall Street is that investors should align their strategies with those of China’s leaders so as not to run afoul of arbitrary and draconian regulators. For example, instead of “soft tech” or consumer-oriented companies – like those that give people rides, deliver food, or make creative video games – investors should invest in “hard tech” or strategic companies like those that make computer chips, renewable energy, biotechnologies, pharmaceuticals, and capital equipment. There is no question that the trend in China – and elsewhere – is for governments to become more active in picking winners and losers. Industrial policy is back. Investors have no choice but to include policy analysis in their toolbox. However, for global investors, an investment strategy of buying whatever the government says is far from convincing. The most basic investment strategy in keeping with the Xi administration’s goals would be to invest in state-owned enterprises in domestic equity markets. So SOEs should have outperformed the market, right? Wrong. They were in a downtrend prior to the 2015 bubble, the burst of which caused a further downtrend (Chart 12, top panel). Similarly, the preference for “hard tech” over “soft tech” is promising in theory but complicated in practice: hard tech is flat-to-down over the decade and down since COVID-19 (Chart 12, middle panel). It has underperformed its global peers (Chart 12, bottom panel). China’s policy disposition should be beneficial for industrials, health care, and renewable energy. First, China is doubling down on its manufacturing economy. Second, the population is aging and health care is a critical part of the common prosperity plan. Third, green energy is a way of diversifying from dependency on imported oil and natural gas. However, the profile of these sectors relative to their global counterparts is only unambiguously attractive in the case of industrials, which began to outperform even during the trade war (Chart 13). Chart 12State Approved' Trades Still Bring Risks
State Approved' Trades Still Bring Risks
State Approved' Trades Still Bring Risks
Chart 13Beware 'State Approved' Trades
Beware 'State Approved' Trades
Beware 'State Approved' Trades
In Table 2 we outline the valuations and political risks of onshore equity sectors. Valuations are not cheap. Domestic and foreign risks are not fully priced. Table 2China Onshore Equities, Valuations, And (Geo)Political Risks
Five Points On China’s Crisis
Five Points On China’s Crisis
There is a bigger problem for global investors, especially Americans: investing in China’s strategic sectors directly implicates investors in the Communist Party’s domestic human rights practices, state-owned enterprises, and national security goals. “Civil-military fusion” is a well-established doctrine that calls for the People’s Liberation Army to have access to the cutting-edge technology developed by civilians and vice versa. These investments will eventually be subject to punitive measures since the US policy establishment believes it can no longer afford to let US wealth buttress China’s military and technological rise. Investment Takeaways China may or may not work out a partial bailout for Evergrande but it will definitely provide state assistance and fiscal stimulus to try to prevent contagion across the property sector and financial system. Bad news in the coming weeks and months will be replaced by good news in this sense. However, the fact that China will eventually be forced to undertake traditional stimulus yet again will increase its systemic financial risks, in a well-established pattern. The best equity opportunities will lie outside of China, where companies will benefit from global recovery yet avoid suffering from China’s unique confluence of domestic and foreign political risks. We prefer developed markets and select emerging markets in Latin America and Asia-ex-China. Chinese households and businesses are downbeat. This behavior cannot be separated from the historic changes in the economy, domestic politics, and foreign policy. It is hard to see an improvement until the government boosts growth and the 2022 political reshuffle is over. American opposition is a bigger problem for China than global investors realize. Not only are the two economies divorcing but other democracies will distance themselves from China as well – not because of US demands but because their own manufacturing, national security, and ideological space is threatened by China’s reversion to autocracy and assertive foreign policy. Investing in China’s “hard tech” and strategic sectors with government approval is not a simple solution. This approach will directly funnel capital into China’s state-owned enterprises, domestic security forces, and military. As such the US and West will eventually impose controls. Investments may not be liquid since China would suffer if capital ever fled these kinds of projects. Both American and Chinese stimulus is looming this winter but the short run will see more volatility. We are closing our long JPY-KRW tactical trade for a gain of 4.4% Matt Gertken Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 We have often noted in these pages over the past decade that multilateral organizations overrated improvements in China’s governance based on policy pronouncements rather than structural changes. 2 Still, tensions among the allies should not be overrated since they share a fundamental concern over China’s increasing challenge to the current global order. The EU is pursuing trade talks with Taiwan, and there are ways that the US can compensate France over the nullification of its submarine sales to Australia (most of which are detrimental to China’s security).
BCA Research’s Foreign Exchange strategists maintain a bearish outlook for the US dollar. US growth momentum is starting to rotate away from the US to other economies. Meanwhile, central banks are beginning to shift towards policy normalization. Several DM…
BCA Research’s Global Investment Strategy service upgraded its rating on EM equities and currencies to strong overweight After lagging the global indices, EM stocks are set to outperform during the remainder of this year and into 2022. Five factors will…
Highlights Global growth is peaking, but US growth is losing momentum relative to its peers. This has historically been negative for the greenback. Chinese monetary policy is no longer on a tightening path, and might ease going forward. As discounting mechanisms, cyclical currencies should outperform. Our bias is that non-US growth will outperform growth in the US over the next 12-18 months. This will lead to capital reallocation away from the US dollar. While US bond yields could rise towards 2%, real interest rates will remain low compared to history. Our recommendations remain the same: the DXY will struggle to punch above the 94-95 level, but will ultimately touch 80. Feature Chart I-1US Growth Momentum And The Dollar
US Growth Momentum And The Dollar
US Growth Momentum And The Dollar
The DXY index is up for the year, but has twice failed to punch the 94 level. The first leg of the rally from January to March occurred within a context of rising global yields, led by the US. The second leg, starting in June was triggered by a perceived hawkish shift from the Federal Reserve. The common denominator for both legs of the rally was that US growth was outperforming growth in the rest of the world. But that is beginning to change. Bloomberg consensus forecasts show a sharp reversal in US growth momentum, relative to its peers (Chart I-1). Historically, this has put a firm ceiling on the greenback. Cycles And The US Dollar The dollar tends to fare worse early in the cycle when growth is rising but inflation is falling (Chart I-2). Admittedly, inflation prints in some developed markets like the US and Canada have been rather strong. But to the extent that these prints reflect transitory factors, it should allow global central banks to remain accommodative, supporting growth. The remarkable thing about Chart I-1 is that the rotation in growth from the US towards other countries has been broad based. Countries such as Canada, New Zealand, Brazil and Mexico are seeing a bottoming in growth momentum relative to the US (Chart I-3). Chart I-2The Dollar Fares Poorly Early In The Cycle
Why The Ultimate Low In The Dollar Is Nigh
Why The Ultimate Low In The Dollar Is Nigh
Chart I-3A Rotation Of Growth From The US
A Rotation Of Growth From The US
A Rotation Of Growth From The US
This bottoming in growth momentum is occurring at the same time as local central banks are becoming more orthodox about monetary policy. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand has ended quantitative easing. The Bank of Canada has cut asset purchases in half. Brazil, Mexico and Russia, among other emerging market countries are hiking interest rates. While it is true that inflation in some developed and emerging markets like Canada, the UK, Brazil and Russia is perking up, for most developed markets as a whole, inflation is actually surprising to the upside in the US (Chart I-4). China has been tightening policy amidst very low inflation. Currencies tend to be driven by real rates. A growth rotation away from the US, in addition to more orthodox monetary policies outside the US, will be negative for the greenback. Chart I-4US Relative Inflation And The Dollar
US Relative Inflation And The Dollar
US Relative Inflation And The Dollar
What About Chinese Growth? Chinese growth expectations are still cratering relative to the US. The fiasco around the China Evergrande Group has also led to speculation that this could become a systemic event. For developed market currencies, especially those linked to China like the Australian dollar, this is a market-relevant event. Admittedly, offshore markets have started discounting a bigger depreciation in the RMB (Chart I-5). That said, the RMB has been rather resilient against the dollar suggesting that the risk of this becoming a systemic event is rather low (Chart I-6). Chart I-5The Evergrande Risk Is Not Yet Systemic
The Evergrande Risk Is Not Yet Systemic
The Evergrande Risk Is Not Yet Systemic
Chart I-6Chinese Equities And The RMB Have Decoupled.
Chinese Equities And The RMB Have Decoupled.
Chinese Equities And The RMB Have Decoupled.
We believe currency markets are sending the right signal. For one, the Evergrande debacle is occurring at a time when China is no longer tightening monetary policy. Chart I-7 shows that cyclical currencies in developed markets tend to be coincident with the Chinese credit impulse. As such, any easing in monetary policy will put a bottom in these currencies. Over the years, the Chinese bond market has become more and more liberalized. This two-way risk implies that zombies companies should be allowed to fail while unicorns flourish. It is true that regulatory control has been front and center in the current Chinese equity market malaise. That said, our bias is that liberalization is a reason why portfolio inflows into China continue to accelerate, as the economy moves closer to market-determined prices (Chart I-8). This has supported the RMB, a big weight in the Fed trade-weighted dollar. Chart I-7Chinese Policy And DM Currencies
Chinese Policy And DM Currencies
Chinese Policy And DM Currencies
Chart I-8An Unrelenting Increase In Chinese Inflows
An Unrelenting Increase In Chinese Inflows
An Unrelenting Increase In Chinese Inflows
A lot of EM debt is denominated in US dollars, which could be reprised for default risk. But on this basis, the Fed is ahead of the curve. This was the very reason the Federal Reserve introduced swap lines in 2020 with foreign emerging market central banks and made swapping FX reserves for dollars a permanent facility in its toolkit for monetary policy this year. Non-US domestic authorities have ample ability to decide which entities they allow to fail, and which they bail out from their USD obligations. Cross-currency basis swaps, a proxy for the cost of obtaining dollars offshore, remain well behaved (Chart I-9). Chart I-9No USD Funding Stress So Far In Developed Markets
No USD Funding Stress So Far In Developed Markets
No USD Funding Stress So Far In Developed Markets
For developed market currencies, the implication is that China risks are currently overstated, while any upside surprise has not been meaningfully discounted. Gauging Investor Positioning The dollar tends to be a momentum currency. But at turning points, it pays to be a contrarian. Let’s begin with what is priced in. First, the overnight index swap curve (OIS) suggests that markets expect the Fed to hike interest rates faster than other G10 central banks (Chart I-10). This will not occur in a world where growth is stronger outside the US, and other central banks are well ahead in their tapering of asset purchases, pursuing much more orthodox monetary policy. Chart I-10The Market Remains Bullish On Fed Rate Hikes
The Market Remains Bullish On Fed Rate Hikes
The Market Remains Bullish On Fed Rate Hikes
Chart I-11Speculators Are Bullish On ##br##The Dollar
Speculators Are Bullish On The Dollar
Speculators Are Bullish On The Dollar
Second, at the beginning of this report, we highlighted the fact that the dollar is up this year. Part of the reason has been a pilling in of speculators into long greenback positions (Chart I-11). As a trading rule, it has usually been profitable to wait for net speculative positioning and moving averages to roll over before entering fresh dollar short positions (Chart I-12). On this basis, tactical investors might be a bit early, but its is also the case that the macroeconomic environment is moving against the dollar. Once markets start paying attention to the fact that global growth will rotate from the US, pinning the Fed into a more dovish stance, the dollar will quickly depreciate. Chart I-12A Sentiment Trading Rule Will Wait For The Dollar To Roll Over More Broadly
A Sentiment Trading Rule Will Wait For The Dollar To Roll Over More Broadly
A Sentiment Trading Rule Will Wait For The Dollar To Roll Over More Broadly
Often forgotten is that the dollar has tended to move in long cycles, usually 10 years between bull and bear markets. The US trade deficit (excluding oil) is hitting new fresh highs this year. These deficits need to be financed by foreign purchases of US securities, either by debt issued or equity raised. Investors could demand a discount to keep financing these deficits. Should the Congressional Budget Office estimates of the current trajectory of US deficits hold true, the dollar has about 10-15% downside from current levels (Chart I-13). Chart I-13Balance Of Payments Bode Negatively For The Greenback
Balance Of Payments Bode Negatively For The Greenback
Balance Of Payments Bode Negatively For The Greenback
Our geopolitical strategists assign 80% odds to the passage of a bipartisan infrastructure bill, and 65% odds to the passage of a reconciliation bill. Either way, the US fiscal picture is set to deteriorate at a time when the Fed is comtemplating scaling back Treasury purchases. Interestingly, 10-15% downside in the US dollar is exactly what is needed to realign the currency competitively (Chart I-14). Consumer prices have been rising globally, but this has been especially pronounced in the US. To the extent that we live in a globalized world with flexible exchange rates, this should allow more competitive countries to see an increase in their trade balances. This is exactly what is occurring, with the US trade deficit hitting new lows. Chart I-14The Dollar Is Expensive On A PPP Basis
The Dollar Is Expensive On A PPP Basis
The Dollar Is Expensive On A PPP Basis
Risks To The View Currency forecasts are obviously fraught with risks. The biggest risk to the view is a broad-based equity market correction, that reinvigorates inflows into US safe-haven bonds. We are cognizant that this is a risk worth monitoring. For example, investors are preferring to park cash in US Treasurys over gold, two competing safe-haven assets (Chart I-15). This has usually been positive for the greenback. But it also suggests investors view the Fed is going to be orthodox in monetary settings, tightening policy faster than the market expects. This boils down to a judgment call. The US market is much more vulnerable to rate changes than other markets (Chart I-16). As such, a hawkish shift by the Federal Reserve could significantly tighten financial conditions (through a stock market correction), setting the stage for an ultimate low in the dollar equity outflows. Chart I-15Safe-Haven Dollar Flows Face Technical Resistance
Safe-Haven Dollar Flows Face Technical Resistance
Safe-Haven Dollar Flows Face Technical Resistance
Chart I-16Higher Bond Yields Will Be Negative For The US Market.
Higher Bond Yields Will Be Negative For The US Market.
Higher Bond Yields Will Be Negative For The US Market.
Given this two-way risk, we are reintroducing our long CHF/NZD position that correlates well with currency volatility (Chart I-17). We are also long the yen on this basis. In terms of housekeeping, our long AUD/NZD trade was stopped out for a loss. As we iterated in our Aussie report, a lot of pessimism is embedded in the AUD, making it a potent candidate for a powerful mean-reversion rally. We recommend reinstating this position at current levels (a nudge above our stop loss). Chart I-17Buy CHF/NZD As A Hedge
Buy CHF/NZD As A Hedge
Buy CHF/NZD As A Hedge
Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
Chart II-2USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
Data out of the US this week was strong: PPI continues to accelerate in the US, rising 8.3% year on year in August while CPI also remains strong at 5.3% on the headline print. Pricing pressures remain acute in the US. The empire manufacturing survey surprised to the upside in September. The headline number was 34.2 versus expectations of a 17.9 reading. Admittedly, this was driven by an increase in selling prices. Retail sales were surprisingly strong in August, with the control group rising 2.5% month on month versus expectations of a flat number. The US dollar DXY index was relatively flat this week. The markets are at a crossroads, gauging whether strong US data will maintain momentum or revert to a lower equilibrium. Our bias is towards the latter, but admittedly, there are two-way risks to this view. Report Links: Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears - March 19, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar? - February 19, 2021 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
Euro area data remains robust: Industrial production printed a solid 7.7% year-on-year growth in July. The trade surplus for July rose to €20.7 bn. The euro fell by 0.6% this week. The ECB has engineered a dovish tapering of asset purchases, but it remains the case as the interest rate expectations between the euro area and the US are at bombed out levels. This should support positive euro area surprises. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 The Euro Dance: One Step Back, Two Steps Forward - April 2, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
Recent Japanese data has been on the weak side: Core machinery orders rose 11.1% year on year in July. Exports were strong in August, rising 34% while imports rose 40%. The yen was flat against the dollar this week. Currency volatility is currently depressed, and Japan has been performing poorly economically. To the extent that this is pandemic related, it sets the JPY up for a playable coil spring rebound. Report Links: The Case For Japan - June 11, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
UK data remains on the mend: Industrial production came in at 3.8% year on year, above expectations. Average weekly earnings, including bonus payments, are rising 8.3% year on year as of July. Job gains continue. The July report pushed the unemployment rate from 4.7% to 4.6%. CPI and RPI remain rather sticky around the 3-5% level. House prices rose 8% year on year in July. The pound fell by 0.4% this week. The broad trend in the pound will now be dictated by what happens to both the dollar and the euro. The BoE is more hawkish than the Fed and the ECB should support gilt yields and the pound. A slowing in US economic momentum is also bullish for the sterling. Report Links: Why Are UK Interest Rates Still So Low? - March 10, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Thoughts On The British Pound - December 18, 2020 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
Australian data was slated to slow as we expected, and recent numbers highlight this: There were 146K job losses in August. This was well split between part time and full time. NAB business confidence and current conditions moderately improved in August. House price inflation is tracking the global wave, rising 16.8% year on year in Q2. The AUD fell 1% this week. We discussed the AUD at length in our report two weeks ago and believe current weakness is unwarranted. We are reinstating our long AUD/NZD trade this week. Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields & The Currency? - January 20, 2021 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
The was scant data out of New Zealand this week: The current account deficit widened in Q2 to -3.3% of GDP. Q2 GDP was an upside surprise but will likely be torpedoed in Q3 by COVID-19. The NZD was down 0.25% this week. We continue to believe the NZD will fare well cyclically, likely touching 75 cents, but our bias remains that hawkish expectations from the RBNZ are already well priced. This will make the kiwi lag other commodity currencies like the Aussie. We are reinstating our long AUD/NZD trade. Report Links: How High Can The Kiwi Rise? - April 30, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
Data out of Canada this week has been robust: The labor report was strong. Hiring came in at 90K, with a favorable tilt towards full-time work. The unemployment rate fell from 7.5% to 7.1%. The CPI report was equally robust. Core CPI was at 3.5% year on year with most measures of the BoC’s underlying gauge inching higher. Housing starts remained strong in August at 260K, a slight dip from July’s 271K. The CAD was up by 0.44% this week. Last week’s currency report was dedicated to the loonie. With strong oil prices, a relatively hawkish central bank, and easing on tightening pressures from China, the loonie should remain well bid. A minority government will also be bullish for the loonie, as we highlighted last week. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? - February 12, 2021 The Outlook For The Canadian Dollar - October 9, 2020 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
There was scant data out of Switzerland this week: PPI came in at 4.4% in August, an increase from July. The Swiss franc was down 0.22% this week. We are going long CHF/NZD as a hedge against rising currency volatility. Being long the yen also makes sense in this environment. However, given our view that risk sentiment will stay ebullient, the franc will lag the bounce in other cyclical currencies on a longer-term horizon. Report Links: An Update On The Swiss Franc - April 9, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
Norwegian data is surprising to the upside: CPI was 3.4% year on year in August, above expectations. PPI rose 50% year on year in August. The trade balance posted a healthy surplus of NOK 42.6bn in August. The NOK was up 0.5% this week. We continue to be bullish Scandinavian currencies as a cyclical play on a lower US dollar. The NOK benefits from bombed-out valuations and a more orthodox central bank. Report Links: The Norwegian Method - June 4, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
The most important data from Sweden this week was the CPI report: CPI rose from 1.7% to 2.1% in August. CPIF, the Riksbank’s preferred measure, accelerated to 2.4%. The SEK was flat this week. A bottoming in the Chinese credit impulse will be a positive impact on growth-sensitive Sweden. Meanwhile, this week’s positive CPI report should pare back expectations of more stimulus from the Riksbank. We are short both EUR/SEK and USD/SEK as reflation plays. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 Sweden Beyond The Pandemic: Poised To Re-leverage - March 19, 2020 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Strategic Holdings Tactical Holdings Limit Orders Closed Trades
Several key financial assets are failing to send a strong signal and instead have been in a state of stasis. Abstracting from day-to-day moves, Treasury yields, the LMEX, and EUR/USD have not been on a clear trajectory since the beginning of July. Similarly,…
Please note that next Friday September 24 at 10am EDT, we will host a webcast featuring a debate between my colleague Peter Berezin and me. The topic of debate is whether investors should overweight EM in a global portfolio. Please join us by registering via this link. Highlights Chinese internet companies’ ROE will drop, warranting lower equity valuations. However, their ROE and equity multiples will not fall to the levels of listed state-owned enterprises (SOEs). Evergrande’s partial default on its liabilities will likely reinforce credit tightening that has been underway in China over the past 12 months. EM ex-TMT stocks also remain vulnerable. Continue underweighting EM in global equity and credit portfolios. Feature This is the September issue of Charts That Matter. We begin by addressing the issues concerning Chinese internet companies that have been subject to intense debate among investors. We then present key charts on overall EM and various asset classes along with brief commentary. Are Chinese Internet Stocks Investable? There is an ongoing debate in the investment community as to whether Chinese equities in general and Chinese TMT stocks in particular will remain investable. Our short answer is: they will remain investable but mind their valuations. In our opinion, “investable” means that they will from time to time offer medium- and long-term investment opportunities. Our hunch is that they may do so in the future. Nevertheless, we do not think that Chinese TMT stocks presently offer a good buying opportunity. In fact, their share prices have material downside from current levels. In our recent report and webcast, we identified the primary risks to Chinese platform companies: Higher uncertainty about their business model = a higher equity risk premium. Government regulating their profitability like those of mono- and oligopolies = low multiples. These companies performing their social duties in the form of redistributing profits from shareholders to Chinese peoples. Beijing’s involvement in their management and in the prioritization of national and geopolitical objectives over shareholder interests. Risks of delisting from US stock exchanges. Although these companies will remain investable, investors should bear these risks in mind and give careful consideration to what multiples they pay for such stocks. Going forward, Chinese platform companies’ return on equity will be considerably lower than they have been or what their current multiplies imply. A lower return on equity warrants a lower equity multiple. Chart 1Chinese Growth Stocks Are Not Cheap
Chinese Growth Stocks Are Not Cheap
Chinese Growth Stocks Are Not Cheap
On the whole, the current valuations of Chinese internet stocks are still high. Chart 1 shows trailing and 12-month forward P/E ratios for Chinese MSCI Growth Investable Index at 34 and 31, respectively. A downshifting return on equity and high uncertainty around these businesses herald lower equity valuations to come. Besides, in the case of several companies, there are also political underpinnings of this regulatory crackdown. In the case of Alibaba, a mainland government official has recently noted that Alibaba’s chairman, Jack Ma, has been acquiring media companies across the country, and now owns nearly 30 provincial-level media companies, as well as the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong. Beijing will not tolerate the control of or influence over domestic media from anyone outside the inner leadership circle. In this context, it is probable that Alibaba’s businesses will remain subject to severe regulatory pressures. How much lower should these companies’ multiples drop to become attractive? Meaningfully lower, but not to the level of multiples of listed state-owned enterprises (SOEs). Here are two reasons why these platform companies will not trade at multiples of SOEs in China: First, many existing SOEs operate in cyclical industries – commodities, industrials, autos, and banks – that structurally have low equity multiples. By contrast, platform companies operate in non-cyclical sectors that structurally have lower business cycle volatility and, therefore, should trade at higher equity multiples than cyclical industries. Second, many SOEs often had losses because they operated in non-oligopolistic industries. Faced with intense competition they had to cut prices to support volumes and employment. By contrast, platform companies’ profitability will be suppressed and capped by new government policies, but they will remain profitable because they operate in oligopolistic industries. In short, platform companies’ ROEs will be higher than those of traditional/”old-economy” SOEs. All in all, our bias is that platform companies’ valuation multiples will contract further but will not be as low as Chinese, Russian, or Brazilian SOEs have been. Bottom Line: Investors should be mindful of further de-rating in Chinese TMT/platform company stocks. These stocks are not yet out of woods. On Property Market Clampdown And Evergrande's Default Evergrande will likely default on some of its liabilities but there will be a bailout or roll-over of its other debt. Is the partial default by Evergrande, a very large Chinese property developer, a sign of a bottom in Chinese offshore equity and bond markets or will it produce a full-blown credit crisis in China? This is a valid question because both outcomes are possible: a partial bankruptcy can be a culmination of all existing negatives and can trigger policy stimulus that will produce an economic recovery and a major rally (an example of this is the LTCM crisis in the US in 1998); or a partial bankruptcy can lead to a credit crunch escalation becoming a systemic event. An example of this is Lehman Brothers’ bankruptcy in 2008. We will assign the highest probability to a third scenario: the well-telegraphed Evergrande default might not create a systemic crisis or crash. However, it will likely reinforce chronic credit tightening that has been underway in China over the past 12 months. This is negative for China and EM risk assets. Predicting the trajectory and speed of market adjustments – a crisis (wholesale selloff) versus a regular bear market interrupted by short-term rebounds – is impossible. That said, investors should stay put for now. On another note, during our webcast last week, a client asked whether restrictions on property developers’ leverage will hinder their ability and willingness to build. In turn, limited property supply will likely push up property prices, which is contrary to Beijing’s goals of curbing property price inflation. So, why are authorities pursuing this clampdown on property developers? Chart 2Property Starts And Prices Are Positively Correlated
Property Starts And Prices Are Positively Correlated
Property Starts And Prices Are Positively Correlated
This is a very good question, and we have the following observations. In our view, authorities are clamping down on property developers’ leverage because historically there was a strong positive correlation between property starts and house prices (Chart 2). The basis for this positive correlation is that when property developers start more projects, they raise expectations via aggressive marketing of higher prices in future. As a result, people become more inclined to buy houses. In fact, more supply has not precluded property prices from surging and vice versa, as shown in Chart 2. Provided housing valuations (the house price-to-income ratios) are exceptionally high in China and high-income households have been buying multiple apartments, we can argue that (speculative) expectations for higher prices in the future have often been an important driver of demand. So, authorities are probably hoping to break this speculative cycle where higher prices breed higher prices. Aggressive marketing on the part of property developers – creating an atmosphere of euphoria around new property launches – has been an essential driver for surging house price expectations. Hence, authorities’ reasoning is that curbing property developers’ relentless debt financed expansion activity is essential for both (1) to restrain excessive house prices inflation (a social stability goal) and (2) to reduce risks of a future credit crisis (a financial stability goal). Finally, with many households/investors who own multiple properties (that are vacant rather than rented out), authorities hope that diminished expectations for future house price appreciation will bring some of these vacant properties to the market. If this occurs, the supply of residential properties for sale and rent will not drop dramatically despite lower starts by property developers. It is also critical to assess the implications of the ongoing carnage in Chinese offshore corporate bonds, where the epicenter of the selloff is property companies. The fact that property developers are experiencing a credit crunch and will be forced to deleverage has implications for China’s business cycle and other EM economies. Chart 3 illustrates that the periods of rising emerging Asian USD corporate bond yields (shown inverted on the chart) coincide with lower emerging Asian ex-TMT share prices. The link is as follows: the ongoing credit stress and deleveraging by mainland property developers means less construction and diminished demand for raw materials and industrial goods as well as possibly household white goods. There are thus negative implications not only for emerging Asian non-TMT stocks but also for overall EM. Bottom Line: Property construction in China will continue contracting (Chart 4). This will weigh on raw materials and industrial goods demand in China and beyond it. Chart 3Rising Emerging Asian Corporate Bond Yields Point To Lower Asian ex-TMT Stocks
Rising Emerging Asian Corporate Bond Yields Point To Lower Asian ex-TMT Stocks
Rising Emerging Asian Corporate Bond Yields Point To Lower Asian ex-TMT Stocks
Chart 4Chinese Housing: Sales And Starts Are Contracting
Chinese Housing: Sales And Starts Are Contracting
Chinese Housing: Sales And Starts Are Contracting
Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Have EM Stocks Bottomed? Investor sentiment on EM equities has plunged close to its previous lows. However, this is a necessary but not sufficient condition to issue a buy recommendation. Critically, EM narrow money growth points to EPS deceleration in the next nine months. Yet, analysts’ net EPS revisions remain elevated and have not yet dropped to negative levels. Our bias is that EM net EPS revisions will be downgraded in the coming months. From a technical perspective, the EM equity index has failed to break above its 200-day moving average. This is a negative technical signal. Chart 5
Have EM Stocks Bottomed?
Have EM Stocks Bottomed?
Chart 6
Have EM Stocks Bottomed?
Have EM Stocks Bottomed?
Chart 7
Have EM Stocks Bottomed?
Have EM Stocks Bottomed?
Chart 8
Have EM Stocks Bottomed?
Have EM Stocks Bottomed?
EM Underperformance Is Broad-Based Not only have EM TMT stocks massively underperformed their global peers, but also EM ex-TMT stocks have been underperforming their global counterparts. Besides, the EM equal-weighted stock index has failed to break above its previous highs. Failure to break above a resistance line is often a bad omen. Finally, EM ex-TMT share prices correlate with the average of AUD, NZD and CAD, and the latter remains in a corrective phase. Chart 9
EM Underperfomance Is Broad-Based
EM Underperfomance Is Broad-Based
Chart 10
EM Underperfomance Is Broad-Based
EM Underperfomance Is Broad-Based
Chart 11
EM Underperfomance Is Broad-Based
EM Underperfomance Is Broad-Based
Red Flags For EM Periods of rising EM USD corporate bond yields coincide with lower EM share prices. EM corporate USD bond yields are rising (shown inverted below) and we expect more upside. Either US Treasury bond yields will rise and EM corporate spreads will stay broadly constant, or EM credit spreads will widen and US Treasury yields will stay range-bound. Either of these scenarios will produce higher EM corporate bond yields and, thereby, herald lower EM equity prices. Further, a breakdown in platinum prices is also raising a red flag for EM risk assets. Chart 12
Red Flags For EM
Red Flags For EM
Chart 13
Red Flags For EM
Red Flags For EM
Have Chinese And Asian Stocks Hit An Air Pocket? Relative performance of emerging Asian equities versus the global stock index has broken below its previous lows. Technically, this entails a protracted period of underperformance. Neither emerging Asian ex-TMT nor Chinese investable ex-TMT share prices have been able to break above their major resistance lines. Failure to break above a resistance line is often a bad omen. Meantime, Chinese onshore stocks and corporate bonds have not sold off enough so that authorities panic and stimulate aggressively. Chart 14
Have Chinese And Asian Stocks Hit An Air Pocket?
Have Chinese And Asian Stocks Hit An Air Pocket?
Chart 15
Have Chinese And Asian Stocks Hit An Air Pocket?
Have Chinese And Asian Stocks Hit An Air Pocket?
Chart 16
Have Chinese And Asian Stocks Hit An Air Pocket?
Have Chinese And Asian Stocks Hit An Air Pocket?
Chart 17
Have Chinese And Asian Stocks Hit An Air Pocket?
Have Chinese And Asian Stocks Hit An Air Pocket?
The US Dollar As A Litmus Test EM risk assets negatively correlate with the US dollar. The broad trade-weighted US dollar is holding above its 200-day moving average. Plus, investor sentiment on the greenback remains negative. Finally, the US dollar moves inversely with relative performance of global cyclical sectors versus global defensives (the dollar is shown inverted on chart below). The ongoing slowdown in China is bullish for the US dollar because the US economy is the least vulnerable to China’s economy. Overall, we expect the US dollar to continue firming in the coming months. Chart 18
The US Dollar As A Litmus Test
The US Dollar As A Litmus Test
Chart 19
The US Dollar As A Litmus Test
The US Dollar As A Litmus Test
Chart 20
The US Dollar As A Litmus Test
The US Dollar As A Litmus Test
Global Mining Stocks, Commodity Currencies And Commodity Prices The share prices of BHP and Rio Tinto have fallen dramatically in absolute terms. This reflects the plunge in iron ore prices and might also be a harbinger of a broader selloff in industrial metals. Further, the average of AUD, NZD and CAD also signals a correction in the broad commodities price index. Chart 21
Global Mining Stocks, Commodity Currencies And Commodity Prices
Global Mining Stocks, Commodity Currencies And Commodity Prices
Chart 22
Global Mining Stocks, Commodity Currencies And Commodity Prices
Global Mining Stocks, Commodity Currencies And Commodity Prices
Chart 23
Global Mining Stocks, Commodity Currencies And Commodity Prices
Global Mining Stocks, Commodity Currencies And Commodity Prices
Is This Decoupling Sustainable? Industrial metals prices were historically correlated with the Chinese business cycle but have decoupled since early this year. Several commodity prices – like coal, steel and aluminum – have shot up due to production shutdowns as a part of the Chinese government’s decarbonization policies. However, it will be extraordinary if commodity prices continue advancing amid a protracted slowdown in China’s old economy. Chart 24
Is This Decoupling Sustainable?
Is This Decoupling Sustainable?
Chart 25
Is This Decoupling Sustainable?
Is This Decoupling Sustainable?
Chinese Commodity Imports Have Contracted Reflecting a demand slowdown and the government’s willingness to dampen commodity price inflation, China has been shrinking its imports of several commodities. It has also released some of its strategic reserves for oil and certain industrial metals. High commodity prices are hurting profit margins of manufacturing and industrial companies leading them to lower output. Beijing is determined to curb and bring down key commodity prices to lessen the negative impact on overall growth and employment. Chart 26
Chinese Commodity Imports Have Contracted
Chinese Commodity Imports Have Contracted
Chart 27
Chinese Commodity Imports Have Contracted
Chinese Commodity Imports Have Contracted
Chinese Stimulus: How Fast And How Large? In recent months, China has been injecting more liquidity into the banking system. Rising commercial banks’ excess reserves at the PBOC point to a bottom in the credit impulse in Q4 of this year. However, the credit impulse leads the business cycle by about nine months. This implies that the economy will not revive before Q2 next year at best. In fact, the aggregate building floor area started and the installation of electricity transmission lines are already contracting and will continue shrinking till Q2 next year. Chart 28
Chinese Stimulus: How Fast And How Large?
Chinese Stimulus: How Fast And How Large?
Chart 29
Chinese Stimulus: How Fast And How Large?
Chinese Stimulus: How Fast And How Large?
Chart 30
Chinese Stimulus: How Fast And How Large?
Chinese Stimulus: How Fast And How Large?
Chart 31
Chinese Stimulus: How Fast And How Large?
Chinese Stimulus: How Fast And How Large?
An Inflation Dichotomy Between China And The US In China, consumer price inflation remains largely contained. However, in the US core consumer price inflation measures are still rising and are above 2%. An optimal exchange rate adjustment to redistribute inflation pressures from the US into China will require a stronger US dollar and a weaker RMB. Chart 32
An Inflation Dichotomy Between China And The US
An Inflation Dichotomy Between China And The US
Chart 33
An Inflation Dichotomy Between China And The US
An Inflation Dichotomy Between China And The US
Inflation And Monetary Tightening In EM ex-China Core measures of inflation have been rising in many Eastern European and Latin American economies. Their central banks will hike interest rates further. This will hurt their domestic demand at a time when the recovery in these economies has been underwhelming. Monetary and fiscal tightening will offset benefits from reopening as their vaccination rates ameliorate. Chart 34
Inflation And Monetary Tightening In EM ex-China
Inflation And Monetary Tightening In EM ex-China
Chart 35
Inflation And Monetary Tightening In EM ex-China
Inflation And Monetary Tightening In EM ex-China
Chart 36
Inflation And Monetary Tightening In EM ex-China
Inflation And Monetary Tightening In EM ex-China
Chart 37
Inflation And Monetary Tightening In EM ex-China
Inflation And Monetary Tightening In EM ex-China
What Drives EM Credit Markets? We downgraded our allocation to EM credit, currencies and equities from neutral to underweight on March 25, 2021. This strategy remains intact. The outlook for the key drivers of EM credit – EM/China business cycles and EM exchange rates – remains downbeat. In fact, EM credit markets – both investment grade and high-yield – have been underperforming their US counterparts and this trend will persist. Chart 38
What Drives EM Credit Markets?
What Drives EM Credit Markets?
Chart 39
What Drives EM Credit Markets?
What Drives EM Credit Markets?
Chart 40
What Drives EM Credit Markets?
What Drives EM Credit Markets?
Chart 41
What Drives EM Credit Markets?
What Drives EM Credit Markets?
Our Relative Equity Value Strategies We have been recommending investors go long Chinese A shares / short Chinese investable stocks since March 4, 2021 and this strategy has been extremely profitable. The same is true for the short Chinese property developers / long overall index and short Chinese investable value stocks versus global value stocks strategies. Finally, our recommendation to be long global industrials / short global materials has so far been flat but we expect it to play out for the reasons elaborated in the linked report. Chart 42
Our Relative Equity Value Strategies
Our Relative Equity Value Strategies
Chart 43
Our Relative Equity Value Strategies
Our Relative Equity Value Strategies
Chart 44
Our Relative Equity Value Strategies
Our Relative Equity Value Strategies
Chart 45
Our Relative Equity Value Strategies
Our Relative Equity Value Strategies
Retail Equity Mania In Korea And Taiwan The retail mania continues in the Korean and Taiwanese stock markets. Retail investors are the main buyers while foreign investors and domestic institutional investors have been scaling back their exposure. Surging margin loans and equity trading volumes in Korea confirm ongoing equity euphoria. We continue overweighting Korean stocks and are neutral on Taiwanese stocks within an EM equity portfolio. The difference in our strategy is due to the potential geopolitical risks that Taiwan is facing. Chart 46
Retail Equity Mania In Korea And Taiwan
Retail Equity Mania In Korea And Taiwan
Chart 47
Retail Equity Mania In Korea And Taiwan
Retail Equity Mania In Korea And Taiwan
Chart 48
Retail Equity Mania In Korea And Taiwan
Retail Equity Mania In Korea And Taiwan
Chart 49
Retail Equity Mania In Korea And Taiwan
Retail Equity Mania In Korea And Taiwan
The Semi Cycle And Risks To The Absolute Performance Of Korean And Taiwanese Stocks DRAM and NAND prices have rolled over. This is a near-term risk to the absolute performance of Korean tech stocks. However, if global industrial stocks outperform, as we expect, Korean share prices will outperform the EM equity benchmark because the KOSPI is a good proxy play on global industrials within the EM universe. Although global semiconductor shortages remain widespread, the 6-month outlook for Taiwanese technology companies has rolled over too. Chart 50
The Semi Cycle And Risks To The Absolute Performance Of Korean And Taiwanese Stocks
The Semi Cycle And Risks To The Absolute Performance Of Korean And Taiwanese Stocks
Chart 51
The Semi Cycle And Risks To The Absolute Performance Of Korean And Taiwanese Stocks
The Semi Cycle And Risks To The Absolute Performance Of Korean And Taiwanese Stocks
Chart 52
The Semi Cycle And Risks To The Absolute Performance Of Korean And Taiwanese Stocks
The Semi Cycle And Risks To The Absolute Performance Of Korean And Taiwanese Stocks
Chart 53
The Semi Cycle And Risks To The Absolute Performance Of Korean And Taiwanese Stocks
The Semi Cycle And Risks To The Absolute Performance Of Korean And Taiwanese Stocks
Footnotes Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations