Currencies
AUD/USD is rapidly approaching 0.8, however, the Aussie is likely to correct before breaching above this important level. Technically, 0.8 has historically been such an important support or resistance that its proximity will generate a lot of activity.…
BCA Research’s Foreign Exchange Strategy service concludes that over the next one to three months, a garden-variety 5-10% correction in the S&P 500 will coincide with a 2-4% bounce in the DXY. An equity market correction is a potential catalyst that…
Dear client, In lieu of our regular report next Friday, we will be sending you a special report on Australia next Tuesday, co-authored with our Global Fixed Income colleagues. We hope you will find the report insightful. Kind regards, Chester Highlights Any tactical bounce in the dollar should be limited to 2-4%. A barbell strategy is the most attractive positioning in the next one to three months: a basket of the cheapest currencies and some safe havens. Remain short the gold/silver ratio. Feature Chart I-1Dollar Downside Hits Q1 Forecasts
Dollar Downside Hits Q1 Forecasts
Dollar Downside Hits Q1 Forecasts
The market narrative towards the dollar is turning more bullish. Fundamental analysts point to the recent rise in US interest rates, relative to countries like Germany or the United Kingdom, as a serious cause for concern. A rules-based technical approach certainly warned that the dollar was getting much oversold last year, and the recent bounce is reinvigorating the possibility of a more powerful countertrend move. Being in the dollar-bearish camp, the key question is: how large could a potential dollar bounce be, and for how long can it last? According to Bloomberg forecasters, the dollar has already exhausted any potential decline penciled in for the first quarter of this year. Q1 consensus forecasts for the DXY index sit at 90, exactly where the index level rests today (Chart I-1). Bloomberg has consistently lowballed the level of the dollar since 2018, making the current forecast unduly bullish. This dovetails with recent market commentary that the decline in the dollar is largely done, and powerful catalysts for a countertrend move could take hold. Risks From The Reflation Trade Chart I-2A Stock Market Rout Could Derail The Dollar
A Stock Market Rout Could Derail The Dollar
A Stock Market Rout Could Derail The Dollar
An equity market correction could be one of the potential catalysts that pushes the dollar higher. We showed last week that the dollar and the S&P 500 have had a near-perfect inverse correlation (Chart I-2). When a stock market and its currency exhibit an inverse correlation, it means that foreign investors have been hedging their equity purchases by selling the currency forward. This is not usually the norm (equity relative performance and currencies tend to move together), but was especially the case last year as inflows into US equities surged, but the dollar declined. Should any profit taking ensue, this will trigger a knee-jerk rally in the dollar, as forward shorts are closed. A few equity indicators warn that we could be at the cusp of such a counter-trend move: The put/call ratio in the US is extremely depressed. This warns that positioning is lopsided and could easily topple the equity market rally. A rising put / call ratio has been synonymous with a higher dollar over the past few years (Chart I-3). This will be consistent with foreign investors unwinding their dollar hedges (as they take profits on equities) and/or safe-haven inflows into the dollar. Chart I-3Both Puts And The Dollar Offer Protection
Both Puts And The Dollar Offer Protection
Both Puts And The Dollar Offer Protection
Cyclical stocks continue to outperform defensive ones of late, but the cracks are beginning to emerge, specifically in the industrials space. Industrials share prices have been relapsing of late (Chart I-4). The dollar tends to weaken when cyclical stocks are outperforming defensive ones, and vice versa. This is because non-US equity markets have a much higher concentration of cyclical stocks in their bourses. The huge correction in the relative performance of the global tech sector also warns that the tech-heavy US bourse might benefit from any bounce in tech equities. Global earnings revisions are heading higher, but the momentum of US earnings has regained the upper hand, especially relative to the euro area. Bottom-up analysts are usually too optimistic about the level of earnings, but are generally spot on about their direction. Relative earnings revisions between the US and other markets have led the dollar by about nine to 12 months (Chart I-5). Should cyclical earnings hit a soft patch as the pandemic engulfs much of the developing world, the more defensive US market might prove resilient. Chart I-4A Red Flag From Global Industrials
A Red Flag From Global Industrials
A Red Flag From Global Industrials
Chart I-5Earnings Revisions And The Dollar
Earnings Revisions And The Dollar
Earnings Revisions And The Dollar
In a nutshell, corrections in equity markets are usually a healthy reset for the bull market to resume. In similar fashion, a washing out of stale US dollar short positions will ensure the bear market for 2021 unfolds with higher conviction. A garden-variety 5-10% cyclical correction in the S&P 500 has usually coincided with a 2-4% bounce in the DXY, as can be seen from Chart I-2. This could be the story over the next one to three months. The Signal From Currency Markets Our dollar capitulation index hit a nadir in July last year and has since been rebounding from very oversold levels. It has been very rare that a drop in this index below the 1.5 level did not trigger a rebound in the dollar (Chart I-6). Part of the reason this did not happen this time around has been concentration. Dollar short positions since 2020 have mostly been against the euro, yen and Swiss franc, with positioning in currencies such as the Australian dollar and Mexican peso more neutral. This will limit the extent to which the broad dollar index could rise from a flushing out of stale shorts. Chart I-6BCA Dollar Capitulation Index Suggests Some Upside
BCA Dollar Capitulation Index Suggests Some Upside
BCA Dollar Capitulation Index Suggests Some Upside
For example, the exchange rate that best signals whether we are in a reflationary/deflationary environment is the AUD/JPY rate. Since the Great Recession, the yen has been the best performer during equity drawdowns, while the Aussie has been the worst. As a result, the AUD/JPY cross has consistently tracked the drawdown of the broad equity market (Chart I-7). As the bottom panel shows, exuberance in the AUD/JPY cross has also coincided with equity market peaks. That exuberance hardly exists today. The AUD/JPY cross has consistently tracked the drawdown of the broad equity market. That said, speculators are very short the dollar, even if the currencies used to implement these views are very concentrated. Sentiment towards the dollar is the lowest in over a decade and our intermediate-term indicator is at bombed-out levels (Chart I-8). Chart I-7AUD/JPY As A Risk On Gauge
AUD/JPY As A Risk On Gauge
AUD/JPY As A Risk On Gauge
Chart I-8The Dollar Is Oversold
The Dollar Is Oversold
The Dollar Is Oversold
In a nutshell, the message from technical indicators is that a bounce in the dollar is to be expected. However, the magnitude will be smaller than prior episodes. Ever since the dollar peaked in March 2020, counter-trend moves have been in the order of 2-3%. We expect this time to be no different. The Dollar And Commodities Commodity prices across the board have been on a tear. This has usually been an environment where the dollar is in a broad-based decline. Commodity prices hold a special place as FX market indicators, since they are both driven by final demand and financial speculation. More importantly, rising commodity demand can signal an improving FX trend between commodity producing (Australia, Canada, Mexico, Colombia, Russia) and importing (Euro area, India, Turkey, or even China) countries. We will buy the currencies of commodity producers on weakness as the bull market continues. Metals prices have exploded higher on strong demand, especially from China (Chart I-9). Not surprisingly, speculative positioning in copper options and futures is also extremely elevated. If investors have been betting on higher copper prices, based on the expectation of a lower dollar, then a relapse in the red metal will be synonymous with a higher greenback. That said, commodity bull markets have tended to last over a decade, with the recent rise in prices also driven by deficient supply. As such, we will buy the currencies of commodity producers on weakness, rather than sell on strength, as the bull market continues. This also argues for a fleeting technical bounce in the dollar. Chart I-9A Bull Market In Metals
A Bull Market In Metals
A Bull Market In Metals
Chart I-10The Gold/Silver Ratio is Rebounding
The Gold/Silver Ratio is Rebounding
The Gold/Silver Ratio is Rebounding
Within the commodity space, watching the gold/silver ratio (GSR) is instructive. The GSR tends to track the US dollar (Chart I-10). This is because it has usually rallied on safe-haven demand and relapsed once there is a pickup in economic (or manufacturing) activity. Gold benefits from plentiful liquidity and very low real rates, while silver benefits from rising industrial demand. It is possible the surge in global infections dampens economic activity and lifts demand for safe havens. This will be good for the dollar. However, as vaccinations take hold and the economy reopens, silver will surge. Relative Interest Rates Interest rates are moving in favor of the dollar, and there has been a long-standing relationship between relative real rates and the US currency. The question is whether the rise in US interest rates has been sufficient to compensate investors for the higher budget deficits they will need to finance. To answer this, it is always instructive to look at the relationship between gold and US Treasuries. Remarkably, the ratio of the total return in US government bonds-to-gold prices has tracked the dollar pretty well since the end of the Bretton Woods system in the early 1970s. The bond-to-gold ratio is an important signal for the dollar, since both US Treasuries and gold are safe-haven assets and thus, by definition, are competing assets (Chart I-11). The ratio of the US bond ETF (TLT)-to-gold (GLD) is an important proxy for investor sentiment on the dollar (Chart I-12). Ultimately, investors are driven by real rates. Positive real returns will favor Treasuries, while negative real returns will favor gold. The latter appears to have the upper hand for now. Remarkably, the ratio of the total return in US government bonds-to-gold prices has tracked the dollar pretty well since the end of the Bretton Woods system in the early 1970s. Chart I-11Gold and Treasurys Are Competing Assets
Gold and Treasurys Are Competing Assets
Gold and Treasurys Are Competing Assets
Chart I-12Watch The Bond-To-Gold Ratio
Watch The Bond-To-Gold Ratio
Watch The Bond-To-Gold Ratio
The implication is that the rise in US interest rates has not yet convinced investors that a significant margin of safety exists for possible runaway inflation. This augurs badly for the dollar, beyond the near term. Investment Implications Our investment strategy is simple: hold a basket of the cheapest currencies and, some safe havens that will benefit if the dollar bounces. Opportunities at the crosses also make sense. On safe-haven currencies, our preferred vehicle is the Japanese yen, which sports an attractive real rate relative to the US. Relative value is particularly attractive on short CAD/NOK, long AUD/NZD, short EUR/GBP and long EUR/CHF. Stick with them. Stay short USD/JPY and long the Scandinavian currencies as a core holding. Remain short the gold/silver ratio. 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
Recent data in the US have been resilient: The headline 140K job loss last Friday was not as dire, looking into the details. There was a net two-month revision of +135K jobs. Core CPI came in line at 1.6% year-on-year, while average weekly earnings surged by 4.9%. MBA mortgage applications came in at a blockbuster 16.7% week-on-week, for the week ending on January 8. The DXY rose by 0.3% this week. There was some element of consolidation in markets earlier this week, with a few equity bourses softening and the dollar catching a bid. However, that has been overwhelmed by the reflation trade as we go to press. We expect any dollar bounce to be technical in nature, and in order of magnitude of around 2-4%. Report Links: The Dollar In A Blue Wave - January 8, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 The Dollar In A Market Reset - October 30, 2020 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
Recent data from the euro area have help up: The unemployment rate in the euro area fell from 8.4% to 8.3% in November. Sentix investor confidence remains resilient at 1.3 in January, versus -2.7 the previous month. Industrial production in the euro area is recovering, as signaled by the PMI releases. The euro fell by 0.5% against the US dollar this week. The unfolding political crisis in Italy warns that the euro might be due for a setback, as European peripheral bond spreads rise. We remain bullish the euro longer-term, but short-term trades are at risk from lopsided positioning. Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Addressing Client Questions - September 4, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 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 data from Japan has been better than expected: The expectations component of the Eco Watchers Survey rose from 36.5 to 37.1, versus expectations of 30.5 in December. Machine tool orders continued to inflect higher in December, to the tune of 8.7% year-on-year. Bank lending remained around a robust 6% in December. The Japanese yen was flat against the US dollar this week. Japanese fixed income investors are in a quagmire, since nominal rates are better in the US, but real rates are more favorable in Japan. The yen could remain caught in a tug of war between these forces, with a slight advantage to Japanese rates. We remain long the yen as a portfolio hedge. Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 The Near-Term Bull Case For The Dollar - February 28, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
There was scant data out of the UK this week: BRC like-for-like sales rose by 4.8% year-on-year in December. The British pound rose by 0.8% against the US dollar this week. Vaccinations continue to progress smoothly in the UK, but cracks are already starting to emerge in the post Brexit UK-EU relationship. There are mounting food shortages in Northern Ireland and a hiccup in fish exports from the UK, as the necessary paperwork adds a layer of bureaucracy. As investors digest the potential impact to the pound, it will add to volatility. Ultimately, a cheap pound should outperform both the dollar and euro. Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
There was little data out of Australia this week: The final retail sales print was 7.1% month-on-month in November. The Australian dollar appreciated by 0.4% against the US dollar this week. Base metals, especially copper and iron ore have been on a tear this year. This is boosting Australian terms of trade. More importantly, a shortage of ships has catapulted Asian LNG prices to all-time highs as a cold spell hits countries like Japan and Korea. This should be beneficial for Australian energy producers. We are currently long AUD/NZD. Report Links: An Update On The Australian Dollar - September 18, 2020 On AUD And CNY - January 17, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 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
There was scant data out of New Zealand this week: REINZ house sales rose by 36.6% year-on-year in December. Building permits rose 1.2% month-on-month in November. The New Zealand dollar fell by 0.3% against the US dollar this week. The release of the US WASDE report confirmed a looming agricultural shortage, as production forecasts were slashed on weather worries. This is NZD bullish. That said, technically, agricultural prices are stretched, and so some consolidation will deflate air off the high-flying kiwi. In a commodity basket, we prefer the Aussie that is underpinned by more structural factors. Report Links: Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Place A Limit Sell On DXY At 100 - November 15, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
Recent data from Canada have been disappointing: Employment fell by 62.6K jobs in December. However, this was driven by 99K part-time job losses, with full-time job gains of 36.5K. The sales outlook in the BoC survey improved from 39 to 48 in 4Q 2020. The Canadian dollar appreciated by 0.5% against the US dollar this week. Oil prices are dominating commodity gains this year, given the shift from Saudi Arabia and the prospect of higher transport demand. This bodes well for the loonie. Report Links: Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 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
Recent data from Switzerland have been mixed: The unemployment rate was flat at 3.4% in December. FX reserves increased from CHF 876 billion to CHF 891 billion. The Swiss franc fell by 0.2% against the US dollar this week. The biggest risk to Switzerland and the SNB authorities is a potential correction in the euro, which encourages safe-haven flows into the franc. This will also be a risk to our long EUR/CHF position. Our bias is that the valuation cushion on the cross provides an ample margin of safety. Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 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
The data out of Norway has been robust: Headline CPI came in at 1.4% year-on-year, while underlying CPI was a whopping 3%. House prices rose 2.9% quarter-on-quarter in Q4. Industrial production came in at -0.9% in November, an improvement from -2.7% the previous month. The Norwegian krone is the best performing currency this year at +1.5%. Good management of the COVID-19 situation as well as rising oil prices have been positive catalysts. We expect the krone to keep outperforming for the rest of the year. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 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
Recent data from Sweden has been rather disappointing: Private sector production fell by 1% year-on-year in November. We would expect this to reverse with the improvement in the December PMIs. Industrial orders rose 5.7% year-on-year in November. Household consumption fell 5% year-on-year in November. The Swedish krona has been the worst performing currency this year, falling by 0.7% against the US dollar this week. That said, it might be a case of profit taking. The Swedish krona remains cheap and should benefit from an upshot in the global manufacturing cycle. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Highlights Long-term investors should remain in the stock market – because central banks’ explicit commitment to financial stability will force them to crush bond yields in response to any major pullback in the $500 trillion worth of risk-assets. Given that stock market valuations are an inverse and exponential function of bond yields, crushing bond yields can give stock prices a massive boost. Hence, the structural bull market in stocks will end only when long-dated US bond yields approach zero. Nevertheless, expect a near-term exhaustion within the bull market, given stretched tech valuations and a fragile 65-day fractal structure of stocks versus bonds. Maintain a near-term tilt towards defensive sectors such as healthcare and utilities, and stock markets with a high exposure to these sectors, such as Switzerland and Portugal. Expect a countertrend rally in the dollar. Fractal trade: underweight Korea. Feature Chart I-1AStocks Became Unhinged From The Economy...
Stocks Became Unhinged From The Economy...
Stocks Became Unhinged From The Economy...
Chart I-1B...And Became Hinged To The Bond Yield, Inversely And Exponentially
...And Became Hinged To The Bond Yield, Inversely And Exponentially
...And Became Hinged To The Bond Yield, Inversely And Exponentially
Investment strategy is about a lot more than macroeconomics. As my colleague Garry Evans points out, the best investors seek wisdom from many other disciplines: statistics, psychology, organizational theory, geopolitics, history, climate science etc. In 2020 the list added three new subjects: virology, epidemiology, and immunology. The lesson is that investors need to be heterodox. To this end, Garry has published a list of non-finance books that are essential reading for all investors, available here https://www.bcaresearch.com/reports/view_report/31160/gaa. Yet despite the multi-disciplinarian inputs to an investment outcome, most investment strategy is not heterodox, it remains stubbornly orthodox – placing primacy on macroeconomics. The canonical form is, here is my outlook for economy X, so here is my outlook for stock market X. This primacy of macroeconomics is dangerous, because stock markets have become increasingly unhinged from the economy. How Stocks Became Unhinged From The Economy… Stock markets have become increasingly unhinged from the economy for three reasons. Stock markets have become increasingly unhinged from the economy. The first reason is that, to varying degrees, the composition of a stock market has become very different to the composition of the economy. Consider Denmark. Its stock market has a 41 percent weighting to healthcare and biotechnology, of which 21 percent is in the multinational pharmaceutical company, Novo Nordisk.1 Suffice to say, with such a heavy skew to global pharma and biotech, the Danish stock market has absolutely no connection with the Danish economy (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Denmark = Long Biotech
Denmark = Long Biotech
Denmark = Long Biotech
Now consider the much larger UK stock market. The oil sector contributes less than 1 percent to UK GDP, yet it contributes almost 20 percent to the sales of UK listed companies (because of the £0.5 trillion multinational sales of BP and Royal Dutch). Add in all the other multinational revenues and you will find little connection between UK listed companies’ sales and the UK economy (Chart I-3). Chart I-3Oil And Gas Is Overrepresented In The UK Stock Market Versus The UK Economy
Oil And Gas Is Overrepresented In The UK Stock Market Versus The UK Economy
Oil And Gas Is Overrepresented In The UK Stock Market Versus The UK Economy
A similar story holds true for the largest stock market of all, the US stock market. The tech sector contributes less than 5 percent to US GDP, yet it contributes 12 percent to the sales of the US listed companies. This significant overexposure to tech means that the aggregate sales of US listed companies are not representative of the US economy (Chart I-4). Chart I-4Tech Is Overrepresented In The US Stock Market Versus The US Economy
Tech Is Overrepresented In The US Stock Market Versus The US Economy
Tech Is Overrepresented In The US Stock Market Versus The US Economy
But what about the global stock market? The global stock market also has different sector skews compared with the global economy. This explains why, in 2015, the sales of global listed companies unhinged from a growing global economy, and suffered a severe and ‘hidden’ -11 percent recession, worse even than that suffered during the global financial crisis of 2008-09 (Chart I-5). Chart I-5Stock Market Revenues Suffered A Severe 'Hidden' Recession In 2015
Stock Market Revenues Suffered A Severe 'Hidden' Recession In 2015
Stock Market Revenues Suffered A Severe 'Hidden' Recession In 2015
The second reason that stocks are unhinged from the economy is the obvious point that the stock market is a discounting mechanism. Stocks are priced off the economy not as it is now, but as the market expects it at some future date. But what future date? The answer is: it varies. The market is composed of investors with many different time-horizons, ranging from day traders to multi-year horizon pension funds. In practice though, the long-term horizons tend to be fluid, sometimes compressing to focus on market momentum, sometimes re-expanding and reconnecting to a valuation anchor such as expected sales or profits. The shorter that the average time horizon of the stock market is, the more unhinged the market becomes from the valuation anchor. When the time horizon ultimately re-expands, the stock market reconnects with its valuation anchor, sometimes violently. Hence, it is crucial to monitor the average time horizon of the market using fractal analysis. And beware if the time horizon has compressed too far. The third reason that stocks can unhinge from the economy is that valuation extremes can dominate the price. To the extent that a weaker economy depresses the bond yield, and that valuation is an inverse exponential function of the bond yield, the paradox is that a much weaker economy can cause much higher stock prices. That was the story of 2020 (Chart of the Week). The corollary is that the perception of a stronger economy, by pushing up the bond yield, can depress stock and other risk-asset prices. This is a big worry because the total worth of global risk-assets, at $500 trillion, dwarfs the $90 trillion global economy by more than five to one.2 To their credit, central banks now understand this major risk, evidenced by the explicit addition of ‘financial stability’ to their mandates. Put simply, if stock and risk-asset prices fell far enough, central banks would be forced to crush bond yields. …And What To Do About It Having gone through the three reasons why stocks are unhinged from the economy, we can now advise on three ways that investors should respond. Avoid the canonical form, here is my outlook for economy X, so here is my outlook for stock market X. First, avoid the canonical form, here is my outlook for economy X, so here is my outlook for stock market X. In a few cases of X, such as Germany and Norway, there is a reasonable connection between the economy and stock market, but these are the exceptions. Mostly, the connection is either non-existent, as in Denmark and the UK, or tenuous, as in the US (Chart I-6 and Chart I-7). Chart I-6Little Connection Between GDP And Stock Market Revenues In The UK...
Little Connection Between GDP And Stock Market Revenues In The UK...
Little Connection Between GDP And Stock Market Revenues In The UK...
Chart I-7...And ##br##Europe
...And Europe
...And Europe
Instead, think in terms of the composition of the stock market. It is the sectors and stocks that dominate the stock market, rather than the local economy, that will drive its performance. Second, always monitor the average time horizon of the market (or any investment), and beware if it compresses too far. This is identified by the fractal structure breaking down, warning of a potential instability. For example, as we presaged last week in Stocks Are Vulnerable… And So Is Bitcoin, the reason that bitcoin has just suffered a 20 percent pullback was that the time horizons of its investors had compressed too far. Specifically, bitcoin’s 130-day fractal structure had collapsed, just as it had before previous pullbacks in late 2017 and mid-2019 (Chart I-8). Chart I-8Bitcoin's Investor Time Horizons Compressed Too Far
Bitcoin's Investor Time Horizons Compressed Too Far
Bitcoin's Investor Time Horizons Compressed Too Far
Third, swings in stock market valuations swamp the changes in the economic fundamentals. And the driver of these valuation swings is the bond yield, inversely and exponentially. Hence, if you get just one thing right, that one thing must be the bond yield. Some Investment Conclusions The most important conclusion is that investors who can ride out pullbacks should remain in the stock market. The simple reason is that central banks’ explicit commitment to financial stability will force them to crush bond yields in response to any major pullback in the $500 trillion worth of risk-assets. Given that stock market valuations are an inverse and exponential function of bond yields, crushing bond yields can give stock prices a massive boost – as we witnessed last year during the sharpest economic contraction in a century. One important takeaway is that the structural bull market in stocks will end only when bond yields can no longer be crushed. As bond yields in Europe and Japan are already close to their lower bound, this effectively means that bull market in stocks will end only when long-dated US bond yields approach zero. Long-term investors should stay in stocks until then. Nevertheless, as we detailed last week, we anticipate a near-term exhaustion within the bull market, for two reasons. First, the (earnings) yield premium on tech stocks versus the 10-year bond yield is at its 2.5 percent lower threshold that has presaged four previous market exhaustions. Second, the average time horizon of stocks versus bonds has compressed too far, evidenced by a fragile 65-day fractal structure (Chart I-9). Chart I-9Stock Versus Bond Investor Horizons Have Compressed Too Far
Stock Versus Bond Investor Horizons Have Compressed Too Far
Stock Versus Bond Investor Horizons Have Compressed Too Far
Hence, for the near-term, maintain a tilt towards defensive sectors such as healthcare and utilities, and stock markets with a high exposure to these sectors, such as Switzerland and Portugal. Expect a countertrend rally in the dollar. Finally, expect a countertrend rally in the dollar, given that in the short term the dollar is just the perfect mirror-image of the stock market (Chart I-10). Chart I-10The Dollar Has Been The Perfect Mirror-Image Of The Stock Market
The Dollar Has Been The Perfect Mirror-Image Of The Stock Market
The Dollar Has Been The Perfect Mirror-Image Of The Stock Market
Fractal Trading System* The near-vertical rally in the Korean stock market is vulnerable to a setback given that both the 130-day and 65-day fractal structures have collapsed. Accordingly, underweight MSCI Korea versus MSCI AC World, setting a profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 10.6 percent. Chart I-11MSCI Korea Vs. MSCI All-Country World
MSCI Korea Vs. MSCI All-Country World
MSCI Korea Vs. MSCI All-Country World
In other trades, long XLU versus XLB was closed at its stop-loss. The rolling 12-month win ratio now stands at 60 percent. 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. * 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 Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Based on Datastream indexes. 2 The $500 trillion comprises $300 trillion in real estate plus $200 trillion in other risk-assets such as equities, corporate bonds, and EM debt. Fractal Trading System Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Strong/weak productivity growth leads to secular bull/bear markets in both equities and the currency. We illustrate why and how robust productivity gains can engender a virtuous self-reinforcing cycle that can run for many years. Detecting productivity for macro strategists is akin to doctors diagnosing a patient – it entails more art than science. Inflation, the real trade balance, and company profit margins constitute a litmus test for assessing productivity growth. Feature By far, the most critical variable determining long-term economic growth is a country’s productivity. This report presents why productivity matters for investors and examines how to gauge productivity growth given it is practically impossible to measure accurately. We use the framework presented in this report to analyze long-term trends in individual EM economies. In a follow-up piece, we will present a practical application of this framework by ranking developing economies according to their productivity and long-term growth potential. This report does not discuss what is needed to boost productivity because the policy prescriptions are well known and are widely available in economic literature. That said, we have outlined some of these in Box 1. BOX 1 The Basic Formula For Long-Term Growth For any economy, the potential growth rate is what can be achieved and sustained in the very long run. It can be expressed as follows: Potential (real) growth rate = productivity growth + labor force growth Given that we can use demographic data to approximate the number of people entering and exiting the labor force for each year over the next 18 years, the labor force growth variable can be easily estimated. Hence, the key unknown in the above formula is productivity growth. In a developing economy, it is difficult to measure productivity accurately (Chart 1). That is why when analyzing the long-term outlook, we first assess whether the country has effectively implemented the structural reforms needed to achieve faster productivity growth – some of which are listed below. We combine these observations with symptoms associated with either strong or weak productivity growth in order to assess an economy’s potential growth trajectory. Chart 1Productivity Growth Estimates For EM/China
Productivity Growth Estimates For EM/China
Productivity Growth Estimates For EM/China
Recommended policies to raise productivity growth typically include: building hard and soft infrastructure, improving education and training, investing in new technologies and equipment, promoting entrepreneurship and formation of new businesses, promoting competition, augmenting R&D spending, importing foreign “know how,” and fostering industry clusters that specialize in certain products or processes. Why Does Productivity Matter For Investors? Following are the investment implications of productivity growth: 1. Productivity is the sole driver of growing prosperity, which is reflected in rising per capita real incomes (Chart 2). Productivity = output per employee per hour = (real GDP or output) / (number of employees x number of hours worked) Rising productivity creates more income that is shared between employees and shareholders. If productivity rises by 5% and hourly wages increase by 2.5% in a year, unit labor costs will drop by 2.5%. In such a case, the 5% increase in productivity is shared equally between shareholders and employees. A lack of productivity gains and resulting stagnant income for both employees and business owners might lead to rising socio-political tensions and ultimately to political instability. 2. Strong productivity gains allow an economy to grow faster without experiencing high inflation (Chart 3). The upshot is reduced cyclicality in economic activity, i.e., business cycles are characterized by longer expansions and shallow and less frequent downturns. Equity investors will thus likely pay higher equity multiples due to the reduced cyclicality of corporate profits. Chart 2Productivity Is Ultimately Reflected In Rising Real Income Per Capita
Productivity Is Ultimately Reflected In Rising Real Income Per Capita
Productivity Is Ultimately Reflected In Rising Real Income Per Capita
Chart 3China: Strong Productivity Growth Has Kept A Lid On Inflation
China: Strong Productivity Growth Has Kept A Lid On Inflation
China: Strong Productivity Growth Has Kept A Lid On Inflation
The rationale is that robust productivity advances allow the economy to expand with low inflation with no need for monetary tightening. The relationship between productivity and inflation is discussed in detail below. A structurally low inflation environment allows policymakers to promptly deploy large monetary and fiscal stimulus when faced with economic downturns. In addition, low interest rates are also associated with higher equity valuations. On the contrary, a lack of productivity growth makes business cycles short-lived. Inflation will rise faster during a business cycle expansion in an economy with low productivity growth. In turn, interest rates will rise more rapidly in those economies, short-circuiting the expansion. Equity investors will be reluctant to pay high multiples for companies operating in such environments. 3. On a microeconomic level, high productivity gains are typically associated with higher profit margins and vice versa (Chart 4). Shareholders assign higher equity multiples to enterprises with higher profit margins and return on capital. Chart 4Faster Productivity Growth = Wider Corporate Profit Margins
Faster Productivity Growth = Wider Corporate Profit Margins
Faster Productivity Growth = Wider Corporate Profit Margins
Besides, wider profit margins allow companies to tolerate higher real interest rates. High real interest rates attract foreign fixed-income capital supporting the nation’s exchange rate. Given that labor costs make up a large share of costs in many companies, unit labor costs are a critical determinant of corporate profitability. Meanwhile, selling prices, sales as well as input prices are often beyond management control. Therefore, raising productivity (output per hour of an employee) is one of the few ways to lift corporate profitability and, by extension, return on capital. Unit labor costs = (wage per person per hour) / productivity 4. Rapid productivity advances allow companies to become more competitive without currency depreciation (Chart 5and Chart 6). Exchange rates of countries that achieve faster productivity growth typically appreciate in the long run. Chart 5Switzerland: High Productivity Has Sustained Competitiveness/Export Volumes Despite Currency Appreciation
Switzerland: High Productivity Has Sustained Competitiveness/Export Volumes Despite Currency Appreciation
Switzerland: High Productivity Has Sustained Competitiveness/Export Volumes Despite Currency Appreciation
Chart 6China and Vietnam: Rising Export Market Share Reflects Productivity Gains
China and Vietnam: Rising Export Market Share Reflects Productivity Gains
China and Vietnam: Rising Export Market Share Reflects Productivity Gains
Enterprises with higher productivity can drop their selling prices with limited impact on their profitability. By doing so, they can undercut their competitors and gain market share. Hence, solid productivity gains also entail a competitive currency, eliminating the need for central banks to hike interest rates in order to defend the exchange rate. 5. High indebtedness – in both public and private sectors – is easier to manage amid brisk productivity gains because the latter generate strong economic growth and relatively low nominal interest rates. Robust income gains among businesses and households, as well as for the government via taxation, enable indebted agents to service higher debt loads. Besides, nominal GDP growth above nominal interest rates arithmetically implies a drop in the public debt-to-GDP ratio. In brief, the economy could “grow into its debt” with robust productivity gains. In sum, strong/weak productivity growth leads to secular bull/bear markets in both equities and the currency. Rapid Productivity Gains Lead To A Virtuous Circle The following illustrates how robust productivity gains can engender a virtuous self-reinforcing cycle that can run for many years. Fast productivity gains allow for either fast wage or rapid corporate profit growth or a combination of the two. As income per capita rises, consumer spending grows and capital owners are willing to invest. New investments create new jobs and income and could also boost future productivity if substantial capital misallocation is dodged. The economy expands at a rapid rate, but inflation and, thereby, interest rates remain capped because the economy’s productive capacity grows in line with demand. Strong income and profit growth as well as stable borrowing costs lead to more credit demand from both households and businesses. Bank and non-bank credit expand but rapid household income gains and healthy enterprise profitability as well as growing government tax revenues support the private or public sectors’ debt servicing capacity. Robust economic growth, elevated real interest rates and high profitability attract foreign capital and foreign inflows lead to currency appreciation. Yet, such currency appreciation should not undermine the competitiveness of local producers – both exporters and those competing with imported goods. As discussed above, sizable productivity gains could reduce unit labor costs and allow domestic companies to drop their prices, sustaining their market shares in both export markets and domestically. Consequently, the trade balance does not deteriorate structurally despite a rapid expansion in domestic demand. Healthy balance of payments support the currency, i.e., the central bank does not need to hike interest rates or draw down reserves to defend the exchange rate. Finally, rapid corporate profit and household income growth as well as reasonably low nominal interest rates sustain high asset (equity and property) valuations for longer. Such a virtuous circle can persist until something breaks or major excesses – for example, capital misallocation, credit or property bubbles – emerge and then unravel. Meager Productivity Gains Lead To A Vicious Circle The following demonstrates how stagnant productivity can set in motion a vicious self-reinforcing circle. With no productivity gains, a business cycle recovery will likely lead to higher inflation sooner than later. The latter will short circuit the economic expansion as the central bank is forced to hike interest rates. If the central bank does not hike interest rates despite rising inflation, real (inflation-adjusted) interest rates will fall and could become negative. Low real rates are bearish for the currency. Either the central bank will be forced eventually to hike interest rates substantially or the exchange rate will continue depreciating. There are two reasons why low real interest rates are negative for the exchange rate: (1) low real borrowing costs will encourage more borrowing, spending, and investment. Such very strong domestic demand in the context of limited domestic productive capacity will lead to a ballooning trade deficit; and/or (2) low real interest rates will discourage foreign fixed-income capital inflows and weigh on the currency. With no productivity gains, any increase in wages will lead to rising unit labor costs and shrinking profit margins; corporate profitability and return on capital will plunge. The sole way to protect profitability amid rising unit labor costs is to raise selling prices. The latter could spur a wage-inflation spiral. Rising unit labor costs and resulting shrinking corporate profit margins leave domestic producers no room to reduce their selling prices to compete in export markets and with imports. The result is less exports, less import substitution and a deteriorating trade balance. In such a case, the only way to restore the competitiveness of domestic producers is to devalue the exchange rate. Declining or low returns on capital will discourage business investment, in general, and foreign direct investment (FDI) in particular with negative ramifications for future productivity. A worsening trade balance as well as diminishing foreign equity and FDI inflows also entail currency depreciation. This feeds into inflation and leads inevitably to monetary policy tightening. Such tightening prompts weaker growth, lower profitability and more foreign capital outflows. This vicious circle can persist until a major regime shift occurs: a dramatically devalued currency that stays very cheap or corporate restructuring and structural reforms that lead to higher productivity. Commodity Prices And Productivity A critical question to address regarding productivity in commodity producing countries is the issue of rising and falling commodity prices. Higher commodity prices lead to improved prosperity and vice versa. Does this mean that high commodity prices should be treated as productivity improvements? There is some ambiguity in regard to this but our preference is not to treat fluctuations in commodity prices as changes in the nation’s structural productivity. Let us consider the examples of Nigeria, which produces and exports oil, and Vietnam, which manufactures and ships smartphones in large quantities. Let us assume that smartphone exports are as important to Vietnam in generating income per capita as oil exports are to Nigeria. A doubling in oil prices amid flat oil export volumes would generate windfall oil revenues which would lift Nigeria’s income per capita. If smartphone prices remain constant but smartphone production and shipments (volumes) double, income per capita in Vietnam would rise as much as in Nigeria.1 The difference between these two scenarios in Nigeria and Vietnam is as follows: Nigeria would be made richer due to the price increases: it would be producing and exporting the same number of barrels of oil but a doubling in crude prices would augment income per capita in Nigeria. The problem is that Nigeria does not control oil prices. If oil prices decline, the nation’s income per capita would also drop substantially. Hence, there would have been no genuine (structural) productivity gains and Nigeria’s prosperity would be at the mercy of the global oil market. In the case of Vietnam, its productivity will have risen as it has succeeded in producing twice as many smartphones as it did last year. The country has built capacity, acquired technology and developed human skills to double smartphone production. This increased capacity, technology acquisition and skills cannot be taken away from Vietnam. This is a case of genuine productivity advancement. In fact, Vietnam could build on these skills and start producing other, more value-added goods. What if Nigeria doubled its oil output and export volume due to more investment and new technologies (as the US succeeded in doing with shale oil)? This scenario would qualify as genuine productivity gains. At any oil price scenario, Nigeria’s oil export revenues would double. The sole caveat is that the new oil production should have reasonably low breakevens, i.e., oil production should be viable even if oil prices decline. The same caveat is applicable to Vietnam. The difference between Nigeria (oil) and Vietnam (smartphones) is that commodities prices are much more volatile than manufactured goods prices. Bottom Line: In commodity producing countries, rising commodities prices have the same effect on income per capita as productivity gains. However, per capita income gains originating from higher commodities prices are reversable, i.e., not sustainable in the very long run. Consequently, higher commodity prices should not be treated as structural productivity gains. By contrast, productivity advancements – like Vietnam doubling its capacity to produce smartphones or Nigeria doubling its oil production volume – are non-reversable, i.e., they cannot be taken away. Hence, these constitute genuine productivity gains. Detecting Productivity Is Akin To Doctors Diagnosing A Patient Even in advanced countries, productivity is hard to measure accurately. Hence, any measure of productivity in developing economies should be used with a grain of salt. How do we carry out long-term analysis of developing economies when the key variable – productivity growth – is hard to measure? How do we make projections about productivity growth going forward? We see structural macro analysis as analogous to the work of doctors. When diagnosing a patient, doctors cannot necessarily observe what is happening in the patient’s body. Doctors conduct various tests and then analyze those results in the context of the symptoms. Putting it all together, they make a diagnosis and prescribe the necessary treatment. Similar to the manner in which doctors rely on symptoms and medical tests to determine where there is sufficient evidence of a disease, macro strategists do not see what is really occurring in their “patient’s” body, i.e., economies. Data for macro strategists is akin to medical tests for doctors. In developing countries, the quantity of economic data available to macro strategists is limited and of poor quality. Therefore, observing symptoms of economies under consideration and interpreting them correctly is crucial to the job of macro strategists for emerging economies. As they can count less on hard data and instead rely more on symptoms, their analysis is more of an art than a science. Symptoms Associated With Productivity: How To Detect Productivity At a country level, robust productivity gains are ceteris paribus typically associated with: A structurally improving real trade balance (exports minus import volumes), which is not due to a cheapened currency or a relapse in domestic demand but is due to domestic producers achieving the following: Becoming more competitive and gaining market share in global trade Succeeding in import substitution (imported products are crowded out by locally produced ones) Low inflation during an extended period of business cycle expansion Corporate profit margins expanding simultaneously with higher wages amid low inflation. A lack of productivity gains are ceteris paribus normally attendant with: A structurally deteriorating real trade balance as: Domestic producers lose market share in global exports Domestic producers lose market share to importers in local markets Rising inflation amid a moderate recovery in domestic demand Lingering downward pressure on corporate profit margins i.e., a modest rise in wage growth leads to a drop in corporate profit margins. On the whole, inflation, the real trade balance, and company profit margins constitute a litmus test for assessing productivity growth. A widening real trade deficit is a form of hidden inflationary pressure and a sign of lackluster productivity growth. The rationale is as follows: In a closed economy, when expanding demand outpaces the productive capacity of that economy, i.e., productivity gains do not keep up with thriving domestic demand, inflation will rise considerably. In short, rising inflation will be a symptom of paltry productivity gains. In an open economy, when domestic demand outpaces the productive capacity of that economy, inflation might not rise as demand could be satisfied by imports of foreign goods and services. In such a scenario, even though the trade balance will deteriorate, the currency might stay firm for a while because of foreign capital inflows or rising export (commodities) prices. As a result, inflation will stay low for some time. Eventually, when tailwinds from foreign capital inflows or high export prices cease, the currency will nosedive. Importers will have to raise prices in local currency causing a spike in inflation. Why would foreign capital inflows halt? Lackluster productivity gains amidst solid wage increases would cause a corporate profit margin squeeze and profitability will plummet. As a result, both FDI and equity inflows will dry up and the currency will depreciate. The latter will push up inflation considerably. In a nutshell, in an open economy poor productivity growth might not necessarily lead to high inflation where domestic demand can be satisfied by imports. In these cases, we can say that a widening real trade deficit is a form of hidden inflation. The only exception is when the real trade balance deteriorates due to imports of capital goods and/or new technologies that will be used to build new productive capacity. In such a case, a ballooning trade deficit should not be viewed as a form of hidden inflation and poor productivity growth. If consumer goods dominate imports, this would signify low chances of sizable productivity gains in a given country. If capital goods dominate imports, there are higher odds of future productivity gains. If these imported equipment and technologies are properly utilized, they will make the nation productive and competitive in the coming years. Higher productivity stemming from imports of these capital goods/new technologies, i.e., enlarged capacity to produce goods and services at lower costs, will cap inflation as well as expand exports and result in significant import substitution. A Checklist For Detecting Productivity Diagram 1 presents macro signposts that can be used to diagnose whether an economy is experiencing strong or weak productivity growth (these do not include traditional metrices such as education, R&D spending, strong governance, soft- and hard-infrastructure, etc.): Diagram 1A Checklist For Detecting Productivity
A Primer On Productivity
A Primer On Productivity
Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 We assume here that all inputs for smartphones are produced domestically, in Vietnam. This is not a realistic assumption, but we use it only to illustrate a macro point about productivity.
Highlights US Reflation: The Georgia senate victories for the Democratic Party have returned the bond-bearish “Blue Sweep” scenarios to the forefront. More fiscal stimulus and an easy Fed will extend the policy-driven reflation of the US economy and financial markets. US Treasury Strategy: Stay underweight US Treasuries, with below-benchmark duration exposure, in global bond portfolios. Stay overweight TIPS versus nominal US Treasuries and continue to position for more bear-steepening of the Treasury curve. Global Corporate Sector Valuation: Developed market investment grade corporate spread valuations look stretched. Maintain only neutral levels of spread risk for higher-quality corporates while targeting sectors that look undervalued across the majority of regions, such as Energy and Financials. Avoid universally expensive consumer sectors such as Retailers, Restaurants, and Food & Beverages. Feature Chart of the WeekUS Policy Reflation Is Negative For USTs
US Policy Reflation Is Negative For USTs
US Policy Reflation Is Negative For USTs
In a week of stunning US political events, the most important one for financial markets was not the mob invasion of the US Capitol. The Georgia senate runoff votes completed the unfinished business of the 2020 US elections, with Democratic Party candidates winning both seats. This effectively delivered a change in party control of the US Senate to the Democrats, with a 50/50 seat split that would give incoming Vice-President Kamala Harris the potential tiebreaking vote. With the Democratic Party now in control of the US House of Representatives, the Senate and the White House, the bond-bearish “Blue Sweep” scenario that we discussed in our pre-election Special Report last October – with greater odds that the highly expansionary Biden policy agenda can be more fully implemented - is now coming to fruition.1 The benchmark 10-year US Treasury yield broke above 1% after the election results, continuing to climb to 1.13% yesterday. The overall US Treasury market action has continued the reflationary trends seen in the latter half of 2020, with a bear-steepening of the Treasury curve and wider inflation breakevens in the TIPS market (Chart of the Week). Treasuries continue to underperform other developed economy government bond markets (in USD-hedged terms), continuing a move that started back in the spring of 2020. We expect these trends to remain in place over the next several months, given the current and likely future monetary and fiscal policy mix in D.C. The Biden Boost To US Treasury Yields BCA Research’s newest service, US Political Strategy, launched last week with a discussion of the US fiscal policy outlook after the Georgia senate elections.2 The conclusion was that the most radical parts of the Democratic Party agenda will be difficult to pass given their narrow majorities in the House and Senate, but some sizeable fiscal stimulus is still likely. In the near term, an expansion of the COVID relief passed in the December stimulus bill, such as boosting monthly checks to individuals from $600 to $2000, is likely to come relatively quickly after Biden is inaugurated via a “reconciliation bill”. Additional stimulus measures could also be enacted, partially funded by some rollback of the Trump tax cuts. Beyond that, the Biden administration will attempt to push through some of the more expansionary parts of incoming president’s campaign platform related to items like infrastructure spending. In the end, the expectation is that the US fiscal drag (a reduction in the deficit) that was set to occur in 2021 after the massive stimulus measures enacted in 2020 will be much smaller with full Democratic control in D.C. This will help boost US GDP growth this year. A greater implementation of the Biden agenda would have a more lasting impact on US economic growth in the following years. Last September, Moody’s published a report that compared the policy platforms of Candidate Biden and President Trump, running the details of the agendas into the Moody’s US economic model.3 The analysts concluded that under realistic assumptions about how much of the Biden platform would be implemented under a “Blue Sweep” scenario, US real GDP growth would average 6% in 2021 and 2022 under President Biden, a full two percentage points higher than the baseline scenario (Chart 2). This would also drive the US unemployment rate back toward pre-pandemic levels more quickly. Moody’s concluded that the Fed would start hiking rates in 2023 under the Democratic sweep scenario, similar to the current pricing in the US overnight index swap (OIS) curve, but with a more aggressive pace of tightening expected over the subsequent two years (bottom panel) – a bond bearish outcome that would push the 10-year Treasury yield back to 2% by the end of 2022 and 3% by the end of 2023. We expect the Fed to normalize US monetary policy at a slower pace than Moody’s, but we do agree on there is still plenty of upside potential for Treasury yields over the next 1-2 years. This will initially come more from rising inflation breakevens than real yields. Currently, US TIPS breakevens are drifting steadily higher, even as realized US inflation is starting to cool off a bit (Chart 3). The 10-year breakeven is now up to 2.1%, a level last seen in 2018 but still below the 2.3-2.5% level we deem consistent with the market expecting that the Fed’s 2% inflation target will be sustainably achieved. The idea that inflation breakevens can widen without higher realized inflation may seem odd on the surface, but it is not unprecedented. In the years immediately after the 2008 financial crisis, when the Fed kept rates at 0% while the economy recovered from the Great Recession, TIPS breakevens rose alongside very weak US inflation. Chart 2How 'Bidenomics' Can Be Bond-Bearish
How 'Bidenomics' Can Be Bond-Bearish
How 'Bidenomics' Can Be Bond-Bearish
Chart 3Fed Policy Stance Favors Wider TIPS Breakevens
Fed Policy Stance Favors Wider TIPS Breakevens
Fed Policy Stance Favors Wider TIPS Breakevens
With the Fed having shifted to an Average Inflation Targeting framework last year, we don’t expect the Fed to turn more hawkish too quickly. We expect the Fed to keep the funds rate well below US realized inflation for at least the next couple of years and likely longer, keeping real US interest rates negative and preventing an unwanted flattening of the Treasury curve (Chart 4). The Fed’s low interest rate policies will also make it easier to service the growing stock of US government debt during the Biden Administration (Chart 5). Net-net, we continue to see additional upside for US Treasury yields in the aftermath of the “Blue Sweep”. Chart 4US Policy Mix Favors UST Curve Steepening
US Policy Mix Favors UST Curve Steepening
US Policy Mix Favors UST Curve Steepening
Net-net, we continue to see additional upside for US Treasury yields in the aftermath of the “Blue Sweep”. We expect the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield to rise to the 1.25-1.5% range over the next six months, with higher yields possible if the market begins to question the Fed’s commitment to keeping the funds rate anchored at 0% - an outcome that could occur by year-end if the Fed starts to consider a slower pace of Treasury purchases via quantitative easing (Chart 6). Chart 5Low Interest Rates Help Service Rising Debt
Low Interest Rates Help Service Rising Debt
Low Interest Rates Help Service Rising Debt
Chart 6More Upside Room For UST Yields
More Room Upside For UST Yields
More Room Upside For UST Yields
We continue to recommend an overall US Treasury investment strategy that will perform well as yields rise. Stay underweight US Treasuries, with below-benchmark duration exposure, in global bond portfolios. Stay overweight TIPS versus nominal US Treasuries and continue to position for more bear-steepening of the Treasury curve. Bottom Line: The odds of a major US fiscal spending boost from the incoming Biden Administration, both in the short-run and over the medium term, are now much higher after the Georgia senate elections. More fiscal stimulus and an easy Fed will extend the policy-driven reflation of the US economy and financial markets. Maintain positions that will benefit from higher Treasury yields. Finding Value In Global Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors As we discussed in our 2021 Model Bond Portfolio Update published last week,4 the strong performance of global spread product in H2/2020 has led to an across-the-board narrowing of credit spreads, with investment grade spreads hovering close to, or below, pre-COVID levels in developed markets (Chart 7). Predictably, this has stretched valuations to historically expensive levels across developed economy investment grade corporate bond markets. Our preferred measure of spread valuation, the 12-month breakeven spread, measures how much spread widening is required over a one-year horizon to eliminate the yield advantage of owning corporate bonds versus duration-matched government debt. We then show those breakeven spreads as a percentile ranking versus its own history, to allow comparisons over periods with differing underlying spread volatility. These breakeven spread percentile rankings for investment grade corporates are now at the bottom percentile in the US and below the 25th percentile level in the euro area, UK, Australia, and Canada, indicating that there is limited potential for additional spread tightening from current levels (Chart 8). Chart 7Investment Grade Spreads At Or Below Pre-Covid Lows
Investment Grade Spreads At Or Below Pre-Covid Lows
Investment Grade Spreads At Or Below Pre-Covid Lows
As the gains from the “beta” of owning corporate credit have been largely exhausted, it now makes sense to pay more attention to the “alpha” in corporate debt markets by looking at relative valuations across sectors. To accomplish this, we return to our cross-sectional relative value framework, which we last discussed in the summer of 2020.5 Readers should refer to that report for details on our framework methodology. In this report, we apply our relative value framework to investment grade corporate bond markets in the US, euro area, UK, Canada and Australia. Chart 8Valuations Look Stretched On A Breakeven Spread Basis
Valuations Look Stretched On A Breakeven Spread Basis
Valuations Look Stretched On A Breakeven Spread Basis
US In Table 1, we present the latest output from our US investment grade sector valuation model. In keeping with the framework used by BCA Research US Bond Strategy, we use the average credit rating, duration, and duration-squared (convexity) of each sector as the model inputs. As the gains from the “beta” of owning corporate credit have been largely exhausted, it now makes sense to pay more attention to the “alpha” in corporate debt markets by looking at relative valuations across sectors. Table 1US Investment Grade Corporate Sector Valuation & Recommended Allocation
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
To determine our US sector recommendations, we not only need to look at the spread valuations from the relative value model, but we must also consider what level of overall US spread risk, which we measure as duration-times-spread (DTS), to target. With valuations for US investment grade looking stretched, we are looking to target only a neutral DTS at or around that of the benchmark index. Investors willing to take on a greater amount of spread risk should look at the beaten-up Airlines sector, which offers the most attractive risk-adjusted valuation in US investment grade within our model. The sweet spot, therefore, is the upper half of Chart 9, around the dotted horizontal line denoting the benchmark DTS. Given the large amount of spread narrowing seen since we last published these models, there are fewer obvious overweight candidates, with most sectors priced close to our model-implied fair value. However, Finance Companies, Lodging, and REITs are interesting opportunities that fit our “risk budget”. Investors willing to take on a greater amount of spread risk should look at the beaten-up Airlines sector, which offers the most attractive risk-adjusted valuation in US investment grade within our model. Sectors to avoid, meanwhile, are Restaurants, Environmental, and Other Utilities. Chart 9US Investment Grade Corporate Sectors: Risk Vs. Reward
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Euro Area In Table 2, we present the results of our euro area investment grade sector valuation model. The independent variables in this model are each sector’s duration, trailing 12-month spread volatility, and credit rating. Note that we will be using the same independent variables in our UK model. Table 2Euro Area Investment Grade Corporate Sector Valuation & Recommended Allocation
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
In keeping with our neutral stance on euro area investment grade, we will be targeting an overall level of spread risk at or around the benchmark. Therefore, we are interested in overweighting sectors in the upper half of Chart 10 that are close to the overall index DTS. Chart 10Euro Area Investment Grade Corporate Sectors: Risk Vs. Reward
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
On that basis, Subordinated Debt, Brokerage Asset Managers, and Integrated Energy seem appealing overweight candidates while Airlines, Independent Energy, and Building Materials are ones to avoid. UK In Table 3, we present the latest output from our UK relative value spread model. We are currently overweight UK investment grade, one of the best performers in our model bond portfolio universe last year. Although investment grade spreads are below pre-pandemic lows, the major factor to watch is how the economy adjusts to the Brexit trade deal. Table 3UK Investment Grade Corporate Sector Valuation & Recommended Allocation
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
As with other regions, our ideal overweight candidates here are those with positive risk-adjusted residuals and a relatively neutral DTS—represented in the upper half of Chart 11 near the dotted line. The best overweight candidates are concentrated within Financials, with Brokerage Asset Managers, REITs and Insurance appearing attractive. Tobacco and Railroads also fit our criteria. Meanwhile, Metals and Mining, Aerospace, and Restaurants are sectors to avoid. Chart 11UK Investment Grade Corporate Sectors: Risk Vs. Reward
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Canada Table 4 shows the output from our Canadian relative value spread model. The independent variables in this model are: sector duration, one-year ahead default probability (as calculated by Bloomberg) and credit rating. While we do not have an allocation to Canadian corporate debt in our model bond portfolio, our key insight regarding other markets also applies here—historically expensive valuations for the overall market mean that we recommend keeping exposure to spread risk neutral while finding pockets of value where available. Table 4Canada Investment Grade Corporate Sector Valuation & Recommended Allocation
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
On that basis, some of the most appealing overweight candidates, shown in the top half of Chart 12, are Finance Companies, Office and Healthcare REITs, Brokerage Asset Managers, Life Insurance, and Other Industrials. Meanwhile, we are staying away from Cable Satellite, Media Entertainment, and Environmental sectors. Chart 12Canada Investment Grade Corporate Sectors: Risk Vs. Reward
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Australia Table 5 shows the output from our new Australia relative value spread model. The independent variables in this model are sector credit rating, one-year ahead default probability (as calculated by Bloomberg), and yield-to-maturity. Due to the relatively small size of the Australian corporate bond market, we are focusing our analysis on Level 3 sectors within the Bloomberg Barclays Classification System (BCLASS) rather than the more granular Level 4 analysis we have employed for other markets. Table 5Australia Investment Grade Corporate Sector Valuation & Recommended Allocation
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
As with Canada, we have no exposure to this market in our model bond portfolio but are looking to maintain a neutral level of recommended overall spread risk while looking at sectors in Chart 13 that show positive risk-adjusted valuations and have a DTS close to the Australian corporate benchmark. On that basis, Finance Companies and Insurance appear attractive while Energy, Technology, and REITs should be avoided. Chart 13Australia Investment Grade Corporate Sectors: Risk Vs. Reward
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Comparing Sector Valuations Across Regions The above analyses have allowed us to paint a picture of sector valuation within regions. However, there is added benefit in looking at risk-adjusted valuations across the three major corporate bond markets—the US, euro area and UK—with the intent of spotting broader sector level trends in the global investment grade universe that are not limited to just one market. Table 6 allows us to highlight some clear trends: Table 6Valuations Across Major Corporate Bond Markets
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Industrials such as Chemicals, Capital Goods, and Diversified Manufacturing look overvalued across the board. These cyclicals, which are deeply sensitive to the health of business investment and confidence, rallied strongly on vaccine optimism but now look overbought. On the consumer side, there is weakness in cyclicals such as retailers and restaurants, and non-cyclicals like consumer products and food & beverages. The new round of lockdowns instituted in Europe and the UK are a major risk for these sectors as we head into the final stretch before mass vaccination. Energy looks undervalued in all three regions. This result is supported by the outlook from our BCA Research Commodity & Energy strategists, who are bullish on oil and believe that Brent prices will average at $63/bbl in 2021 as demand continues to grow and OPEC 2.0 keeps a tight grip on supply. Financials look to be a bastion of value, with finance companies/institutions and insurance looking cheap across the board. These sectors have obviously benefited from the steepening in yield curves we have already seen but there is still remaining upside as inflation expectations continue to rise and push up nominal yields at the long-end of the curve. Financials look to be a bastion of value, with finance companies/institutions and insurance looking cheap across the board. Bottom Line: Developed market investment grade corporate spread valuations look stretched. Maintain only neutral levels of spread risk for higher-quality corporates while targeting sectors that look undervalued across the majority of regions, such as Energy and Financials. Avoid universally expensive consumer sectors such as Retailers, Restaurants, and Food & Beverages. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Shakti Sharma Research Associate ShaktiS@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy / Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "Beware The Bond-Bearish Blue Sweep", dated October 20, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see US Political Strategy Report, "Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep", dated January 6, 2021, available at usps.bcaresearch.com. 3 The full report can be found here: https://www.moodysanalytics.com/-/media/article/2020/the-macroeconomic-consequences-trump-vs-biden.pdf 4 Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy Report, "Our Model Bond Portfolio Strategy For 2021: Leaning Into Reflation", dated January 6, 2021, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy Report, "Hunting For Alpha In The Global Corporate Bond Jungle", dated May 27, 2020, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
According to BCA Research’s Foreign Exchange Strategy service, a blue wave will likely supercharge the dollar’s downtrend in 2021. The US political landscape is becoming more dollar bearish. This is because a blue wave will likely supercharge fiscal…
Highlights A blue wave will likely supercharge the dollar’s downtrend in 2021. The key beneficiaries of this decline will be the much undervalued Scandinavian currencies, as well as those of commodity-producing countries. The initial knee-jerk reaction from the dollar could be positive as inflation lags the improvement in aggregate demand. Our trading model continues to recommend shorting the dollar. This simple three-factor model has outperformed the DXY index by over 300% since 1980. We were stopped out of our short NZD/CAD trade. This is a portfolio hedge. Look to reinstate. Feature The US political landscape is becoming more dollar bearish. This is because a blue wave will likely supercharge fiscal spending and allow for a partial repeal of the Trump tax cuts. Both will boost aggregate demand, without an equivalent offset from higher US interest rates. As we explain below, this is negative for the greenback. As a key reflator for the global economy, a lower US dollar will lead to an outperformance of non-US bourses, lifting animal spirits abroad and in a virtuous cycle, pressuring the dollar even lower. From a technical perspective, the dollar remains very oversold, having declined in almost a straight line since last March. While we continue to expect a dollar bounce, we had initially highlighted in previous reports it will be technical in nature, capped at around 2%-4%. Given this week’s news, chances of a technical bounce remain high, but the amplitude will be much more muted than we initially expected. This dovetails nicely with our trading model, which is politically agnostic, and continues to recommend shorting the dollar for the month of January. Implications Of A Blue Sweep It has been clear since the US election campaign began that Democratic leaders have been more aggressive in their demands for a greater government role in the economy. As such, a blue wave should widen the US budget deficit by much more than was expected under a Republican Senate. All things equal, a wider budget deficit is negative for the greenback. All things equal, a wider budget deficit is negative for the greenback (Chart I-1).1 Higher aggregate demand (via higher government spending) should allow the US output gap to close faster than would have otherwise been the case. This should begin to put upward pressure under domestic inflation. If the Federal Reserve chooses to allow an inflation overshoot, this will depress US real rates further and hurt the dollar in the process. There is a well-established relationship between real interest rate differentials and the greenback (Chart I-2). Chart I-1The Dollar And Budget Deficits
The Dollar And Budget Deficits
The Dollar And Budget Deficits
Chart I-2The Dollar And Real Interest Rates
The Dollar And Real Interest Rates
The Dollar And Real Interest Rates
The US continues to run a large current account deficit, meaning domestic savings have been insufficient to finance investment. A higher budget deficit is likely to widen the current account deficit, assuming private-sector savings do not rise significantly. To finance the shortfall in spending, foreign investors might require a higher risk premium on US assets via higher yields and/or a lower exchange rate. With the Federal Reserve effectively capping nominal yields, a lower exchange rate will be needed to entice foreign investors. A reason behind the dollar’s decline last year has been a stampede out of the Treasury market by foreign investors (Chart I-3). Chart I-3A Dearth Of Foreign Investors
A Dearth Of Foreign Investors
A Dearth Of Foreign Investors
Part of the Biden campaign pledge has also been to raise both corporate and personal income taxes. The US currently enjoys favorable corporate taxes relative to its G10 and BRICS peers (Chart I-4). Higher taxes would lower the return on capital for US investments. Our US Equity Strategists reckon the hit to the technology and health care sectors from a change in the tax rate will be particularly acute, in an order of magnitude of about 13.5% and 13.1% of earnings-per-share, respectively. Inflows into US equities exploded higher last year on the back of low rates and the higher weighting of technology and health care sectors in US bourses (Chart I-5). A reversal of these flows will hurt the dollar. This will occur at a time when expected returns on US equities are particularly low, compared to those in Europe and Japan (Chart I-6). Chart I-4Biden's Tax Plan In Perspective
The Dollar In A Blue Wave
The Dollar In A Blue Wave
Chart I-5US Equity Inflows Have Been Strong
US Equity Inflows Have Been Strong
US Equity Inflows Have Been Strong
Chart I-6ALow Expected Return On US Equities
The Dollar In A Blue Wave
The Dollar In A Blue Wave
Chart I-6BBetter Expected Returns On Eurozone Equities
The Dollar In A Blue Wave
The Dollar In A Blue Wave
Chart I-6CBetter Expected Returns On Japanese Equities
The Dollar In A Blue Wave
The Dollar In A Blue Wave
Is COVID-19 A Red Herring? Chart I-7A Covid-19 Growth Scare?
A Covid-19 Growth Scare?
A Covid-19 Growth Scare?
The analysis above suggests the outlook for the dollar should be bearish. Then why has the greenback been rebounding since the unveiling of a blue sweep? There are two reasons. First, the dollar was already very oversold, suggesting the short-term reward/risk from shorting the currency was not very favorable. Second, inflation is a lagging economic variable, so any impact from fiscal stimulus will first be on real growth, with inflation rising much later. Therefore, fiscal stimulus in the US will likely boost US economic performance relative to its peers in the short term. Meanwhile, as we navigate the winter season in the northern hemisphere, a new wave of infections has taken root. This will likely lead to a widespread deterioration in economic conditions, as economies enter more stringent lockdowns. Around the G10, various measures of lockdowns are being implemented, with particularly restrictive measures in the UK and Canada where new cases are close to record highs. Infection trends remain favorable in Australia and New Zealand, probably due to previous localized lockdowns (Chart I-7). However, with new, more infectious strains being first spotted in the UK and then South Africa, the bar is very low for a worldwide-renewed infection wave. The impact on currency markets is two-fold. First, the dollar is a counter-cyclical currency and so will benefit from safe-haven flows that will erupt with any renewed relapse in growth. With the dollar having traded inversely neck-in-neck with the S&P 500, any equity correction will provide a much healthy catalyst for a dollar bounce (Chart I-8). Any bounce in the USD should be faded as robust global growth in 2021 is expected. More directly, the impact for currency markets will be through relative economic growth. The improvement in the December Purchasing Managers’ Index was more favorable outside the US, particularly in Sweden, Canada, and the UK. That said, the greenback has undershot the trend dictated by the relative economic performance between the US and the rest of the G10 (Chart I-9). Should the US quickly bridge the gap between herd immunity (through vaccinations) and the spread of the virus, US economic growth could gain the upper hand. Chart I-8The Dollar And Markets
The Dollar And Markets
The Dollar And Markets
Chart I-9The Dollar And Relative Growth
The Dollar And Relative Growth
The Dollar And Relative Growth
Ultimately, the near-term potential impact from COVID-19 will be much less than economies endured in the first half of 2020. The main reason is that the vaccine rollout is accelerating, with many other candidates in the pipeline. This will allow for robust global growth in 2021, which will ease safe-haven flows into the US dollar. Thus, any bounce in the USD should be faded rather than leaned into, as we have been arguing since October of last year.2 FX Trading Model Chart I-10BCA FX Trading Model
BCA FX Trading Model
BCA FX Trading Model
How does our trading model feel about a blue sweep? It is agnostic, given that none of the inputs are directly driven by US politics. The one area where US politics could affect the model is through real rates, but as we have argued, this is a slow-moving process. More importantly, the model serves as a rules-based approach in trading foreign exchange. In short, three criteria drive the model:3 A macroeconomic variable that captures the most important relative price between any two currencies: the real interest rate. A valuation measure that captures dislocation in a currency pair relative to its own history. A key assumption is stationarity, meaning the currency cross will mean-revert back to fair value over time. A sentiment indicator. The key assumption here is that the dollar is a momentum currency. This very simplistic approach has outperformed a buy-and-hold DXY portfolio by 325% since 1980 (Chart I-10). Given the encouragement from this initial result, we will be releasing part two of the model in the coming weeks. The FX market is likely to become more volatile and provide more opportunities. For now, the model recommends shorting the DXY for the month of January, driven by long positions in the Swedish krona, Swiss franc, and Japanese yen. Less favorable currencies are the Australian and New Zealand dollars (Chart I-11). Such a barbell strategy of some high-beta currencies, together with some safe havens, might be just what the doctor ordered. In our FX portfolio, we prefer to stick with trades at the crosses. So far, our trading recommendations have benchmarked favorably against the model recommendations (Chart I-12). We will build on this success in future iterations. Chart I-11Long = Greater Than 0; Short = Less Than 0
The Dollar In A Blue Wave
The Dollar In A Blue Wave
Chart I-12Man Versus BCA Machine
The Dollar In A Blue Wave
The Dollar In A Blue Wave
Housekeeping Our portfolio has benefited tremendously from the overall short dollar position we have been recommending since 2019. However, in light of possible volatility in the coming weeks, we are tightening stop-losses on a few of our profitable trades. We hold a basket of Scandinavian currencies against both the dollar and the euro. Tighten the stop loss to a 2% loss from initiation, given recent gains. Stay long silver versus gold but tighten the stop loss to 75 to lock in some profits. Our long yen portfolio hedge has performed quite well. Tighten the stop loss from 110 to 105. We were stopped out of our short NZD/CAD trade for a loss of 1.8%. Stand aside for now, with a view to re-establish later. We are still short NZD versus AUD. Tighten the stop loss to 1.02. In our view, the FX market is likely to uncover many macro opportunities as the year unfolds. Stay tuned. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, “The Dollar And The Budget Deficit: From Theory To Practice,” dated August 14, 2020. 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, “Tail Risks In FX Markets,” dated October 2, 2020. 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, “Building A Protector Currency Portfolio,” dated February 7, 2020. 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
Recent data in the US have been robust: The final read of the Markit Manufacturing PMI was 57.1 in December, compared to a prior reading of 56.5. The ISM manufacturing index came in at a very robust 60.7 for the month of December, well above expectations. The trade balance in the US remained near cycle lows at -$68.1bn for November. The DXY index fell slightly this week. It is becoming quite clear that December was a robust month for economic data, both in the US and abroad. As a result, the US dollar, which is a counter-cyclical currency, depreciated modestly. With the prospect of higher fiscal stimulus in the US, but an accommodative Federal Reserve, lower real rates should keep a cap on the dollar. Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 The Dollar In A Market Reset - October 30, 2020 A Few Market Observations - October 23, 2020 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
Recent data from the euro area have held up: The Markit Manufacturing Index remained at the 55 level for the month of December (from 55.5 to 55.2). Producer prices continue to deflate at 2% per year, but the November decline compares favorably to the 5% year-on-year drop in May last year. Core CPI remained flat at 0.2% in December. The euro appreciated by 0.2% against the US dollar this week. The dominant theme in markets remains a broad-based dollar decline, with the euro being the key liquid beneficiary of this move. Most of Europe has managed to flatten the infection curve for Covid-19, which should allow economic momentum to improve further. Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Addressing Client Questions - September 4, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 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 data from Japan has been quite disappointing: Cash earnings fell by 2.2% for the month of November. The key driver was a 10.3% decline in overtime pay and 22.9% decline in bonus payments. The Jibun manufacturing PMI was relatively flat at the 50 boom/bust level in December. On a positive note, vehicle sales improved by 7.4% year-on-year in December. It is becoming more evident that a replacement cycle in Japanese autos in underway. The Japanese yen depreciated by 0.7% against the US dollar this week. The key theme this week was a rise in US bond yields, which made the allure of Japanese fixed income less attractive. With Japanese yields anchored at 0%, rising global yields make Japan fixed income returns attractive, but the currency a short in a global portfolio. We are long the Japanese yen and are tightening stops to protect profits. Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 The Near-Term Bull Case For The Dollar - February 28, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
Recent data in the UK have been mixed: The Markit Manufacturing PMI printed a final 57.5 for December. Mortgage approvals continue to inflect higher, with 105K submissions absorbed in November. UK services remain in recession. The Markit services PMI came in at 49.4 in December, from 49.9 last month. The British pound was flat this week. The Brexit imbroglio is now behind us, and the UK must now contend with the uncomfortable combination of rising Covid-19 cases and a new relationship with the EU. This has prevented the pound from fully celebrating an end to uncertainty. Our roadmap remains valuation, as we see the pound as cheap versus both the dollar and euro, hence our short EUR/GBP position. Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
Recent data in Australia have been solid: Building approvals improved 2.6% month-on-month in November. The trade balance remains at a healthy surplus of A$5bn in November. While imports expanded 10% month-on-month, exports remained a healthy 3% over the October print. The Australian dollar appreciated by 1.2% against the US dollar this week. The AUD continues to benefit from favorable terms-of-trade, not only from high iron ore prices, but from the looming shortage of readily available liquefied natural gas (LNG) as Japan and Korea enter unusually cold weather. This is bullish the AUD. Report Links: An Update On The Australian Dollar - September 18, 2020 On AUD And CNY - January 17, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 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
There was scant data out of New Zealand this week: CoreLogic house prices expanded by 11.1% year-on-year in December. The New Zealand dollar appreciated by 1.1% against the US dollar this week. The kiwi has been on fire in recent weeks, driven not only by the unwinding of expectations of negative rates by the RBNZ, but also by rising terms of trade as agricultural prices recover. We have been fading the kiwi rally, and were offside on our short NZD/CAD trade for a cumulative loss 1.8% loss this week. We are standing aside for now. Report Links: Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Place A Limit Sell On DXY At 100 - November 15, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
Recent data from Canada have held up: The Markit manufacturing PMI came in at 57.9 in December, an increase from the prior read of 55.8. The trade balance remains in a deficit of $C3.34bn for November, in line with the previous month. The Canadian dollar appreciated by 0.8% against the US dollar this week. There was good news on the oil front that boosted the loonie. Saudi Arabia agreed to absorb cuts of 1 million barrels a day, allowing a more fervent rebalancing of the oil market. This boosted petrocurrencies, including the loonie. Report Links: Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 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
Recent data from Switzerland have been mixed: The manufacturing PMI came in at 58 in December, well above expectations of 54.3 and a prior reading of 55.2. Switzerland remains in deflation. Core CPI came in at -0.4% in December versus expectations of -0.2%. Headline CPI was even more negative at -0.8%. The Swiss franc depreciated by 0.4% against the US dollar this week. There is no doubt that the strong franc is exerting deflationary pressures into the Swiss economy. This is evident not only from tradeable prices, but also from domestic inflation. Encouragingly, the manufacturing sector is picking up, which is providing a valve for less intervention by the SNB. We are long EUR/CHF on grounds that the franc is too strong versus the euro. Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 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
There was scant data out of Norway this week: The DNB/NIMA manufacturing PMI was flat at 51.9 in December. The Norwegian krone surged by 1.44% against the US dollar this week as the best performing G10 currency. Given the lack of economic data, the key narrative was the oil deal where the Saudis curtailed production. As our top pick for currency outperformance this year, this is much welcomed news. Stay long NOK versus both the USD and EUR. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 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
Recent data from Sweden have been robust: The Swedbank/Silf manufacturing PMI surged from 59.1 to 64.9. The Swedish krona rose by 0.7% against the US dollar this week. Sweden is in a sweet spot, where low interest rates are emboldening risk taking and a robust global manufacturing cycle is keeping Swedish supply chains busy. With this virtuous cycle slated to continue, this would continue to be a boost for the krona. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Highlights Markets largely ignored the uproar at the US Capitol on January 6 because the transfer of power was not in question. Democratic control over the Senate, after two upsets in the Georgia runoff, is the bigger signal. US fiscal policy will become more expansive yet the Federal Reserve will not start hiking rates anytime soon. This is a powerful tailwind for risk assets over the short and medium run. Politics and geopolitics affect markets through the policy setting, rather than through discrete events, which tend to have fleeting market impacts. The current setting, in the US and abroad, is negative for the US dollar. The implication is positive for emerging market stocks and value plays. Go long global stocks ex-US, long emerging markets over developed markets, and long value over growth. Cut losses on short CNY-USD. Feature Chart 1Market's Muted Response To US Turmoil
Market's Muted Response To US Turmoil
Market's Muted Response To US Turmoil
Scenes of mayhem unfolded in the US Capitol on January 6 as protesters and rioters flooded the building and temporarily interrupted the joint session of Congress convened to count the Electoral College votes. Congress reconvened later and finished the tally. President-elect Joe Biden will take office at noon on January 20. Financial markets were unperturbed, with stocks up and volatility down, though safe havens did perk up a bit (Chart 1). The incident supports our thesis that the US election cycle of 2020 was a sort of “Civil War Lite” and that the country is witnessing “Peak Polarization,” with polarization likely to fall over the coming five years. The incident was the culmination of the past year of pandemic-fueled unrest and President Trump’s refusal to concede to the Electoral College verdict. Trump made a show of force by rallying his supporters, and apparently refrained from cracking down on those that overran Congress, but then he backed down and promised an orderly transfer of power. The immediate political result was to isolate him. Fewer Republicans than expected contested the electoral votes in the ensuing joint session; one Republican is openly calling for Trump to be forced into resignation via the 25th amendment procedure for those unfit to serve. The electoral votes were promptly certified. Vice President Mike Pence and other actors performed their constitutional duties. Pence reportedly gave the order to bring out the National Guard to restore order – hence it is possible that Pence and Trump’s cabinet could activate the 25th amendment, but that is unlikely unless Trump foments rebellion going forward. Vandals and criminals will be prosecuted and there could also be legal ramifications for Trump and some government officials. Do Politics And Geopolitics Affect Markets? The market’s lack of concern raises the question of whether investors need trouble themselves with politics at all. Philosopher and market guru Nassim Nicholas Taleb tweeted the following: If someone, a year ago, described January 6, 2021 (and events attending it) & asked you to guess the stock market behavior, admit you would have gotten it wrong. Just so you understand that news do not help you understand markets.1 This is a valid point. Investors should not (and do not) invest based on the daily news. Of course, many observers foresaw social unrest surrounding the 2020 election, including Professor Peter Turchin.2 Social instability was rising in the data, as we have long shown. When you combined this likelihood with the Fed’s pause on rate hikes, and a measurable rise in geopolitical tensions between the US and other countries, the implication was that gold would appreciate. So if someone had told you a year ago that the US would have a pandemic, that governments would unleash a 10.2% of global GDP fiscal stimulus, that the Fed would start average inflation targeting, that a vaccine would be produced, and that the US would have a contested election on top of it all, would you have expected gold to rise? Absolutely – and it has done so, both in keeping with the fall in real interest rates plus some safe-haven bonus, which is observable (Chart 2). Chart 2Gold Price In Excess Of Fall In Real Rates Implies Geopolitical Risk
Gold Price In Excess Of Fall In Real Rates Implies Geopolitical Risk
Gold Price In Excess Of Fall In Real Rates Implies Geopolitical Risk
The takeaway is that policy matters for markets while politics may only matter briefly at best. Which brings us back to the implications of the Trump rebellion. What Will Be The Impact Of The Trump Rebellion? We have highlighted that this election was a controversial rather than contested election – meaning that the outcome was not in question after late November when the court cases, vote counts, and recounts were certified. This was doubly true after the Electoral College voted on December 14. The protests and riots yesterday never seriously called this result into question. Whatever Trump’s intentions, there was no military coup or imposition of martial law, as some observers feared. In fact the scandal arose from the President’s hesitation to call out the National Guard rather than his use of security forces to prevent the transfer of power, as occurs during a coup. This partially explains why the market traded on the contested election in December 2000 but not in 2020 – the result was largely settled. The Biden administration now has more political capital than otherwise, which is market-positive because it implies more proactive fiscal policy to support the economic recovery. Trump’s refusal to concede gave Democrats both seats in the Georgia Senate runoffs, yielding control of Congress. Household and business sentiment will revive with the vaccine distribution and economic recovery, while the passage of larger fiscal stimulus is highly probable. US fiscal policy will almost certainly avoid the mistake of tightening fiscal policy too soon. Taken with the Fed’s aversion to raising rates, greater fiscal stimulus will create a powerful tailwind for risk assets over the next 12 months. The primary consequence of combined fiscal and monetary dovishness is a falling dollar. The greenback is a counter-cyclical and momentum-driven currency that broadly responds inversely to global growth trends. But policy decisions are clearly legible in the global growth path and the dollar’s path over the past two decades. Japanese and European QE, Chinese devaluation, the global oil crash, Trump’s tax cuts, the US-China trade war, and COVID-19 lockdowns all drove the dollar to fresh highs – all policy decisions (Chart 3). Policy decisions also ensured the euro’s survival, marking the dollar’s bottom against the euro in 2011, and ensuring that the euro could take over from the dollar once the dollar became overbought. Today, the US’s stimulus response to COVID-19 – combined with the Fed’s strategic review and the Democratic sweep of government – marked the peak and continued drop-off in the dollar. Chart 3Euro Survival, US Peak Polarization, Set Stage For Rotation From USD To EUR
Euro Survival, US Peak Polarization, Set Stage For Rotation From USD To EUR
Euro Survival, US Peak Polarization, Set Stage For Rotation From USD To EUR
Chart 4China's Yuan Says Geopolitics Matters
China's Yuan Says Geopolitics Matters
China's Yuan Says Geopolitics Matters
The Chinese renminbi is heavily manipulated by the People’s Bank and is not freely exchangeable. The massive stimulus cycle that began in 2015, in reaction to financial turmoil, combined with the central bank’s decision to defend the currency marked a bottom in the yuan’s path. China’s draconian response to the pandemic this year, and massive stimulus, made China the only major country to contribute positively to global growth in 2020 and ensured a surge in the currency. The combination of US and Chinese policy decisions has clearly favored the renminbi more than would be the case from the general economic backdrop (Chart 4). Getting the policy setting right is necessary for investors. This is true even though discrete political events – including major political and geopolitical crises – have fleeting impacts on markets. What About Biden’s Trade Policy? Trump was never going to control monetary or fiscal policy – that was up to the Fed and Congress. His impact lay mostly in trade and foreign policy. Specifically his defeat reduces the risk of sweeping unilateral tariffs. It makes sense that global economic policy uncertainty has plummeted, especially relative to the United States (Chart 5). If US policy facilitates a global economic and trade recovery, then it also makes sense that global equities would rise faster than American equities, which benefited from the previous period of a strong dollar and erratic or aggressive US fiscal and trade policy. Trump’s last 14 days could see a few executive orders that rattle stocks. There is a very near-term downside risk to European and especially Chinese stocks from punitive measures, or to Emirati stocks in the event of another military exchange with Iran (Chart 6). But Trump will be disobeyed if he orders any highly disruptive actions, especially if they contravene national interests. Beyond Trump’s term we are constructive on all these bourses, though we expect politics and geopolitics to remain a headwind for Chinese equities. Chart 5Big Drop In Global Policy Uncertainty
Big Drop In Global Policy Uncertainty
Big Drop In Global Policy Uncertainty
US tensions with China will escalate again soon – and in a way that negatively impacts US and Chinese companies exposed to each other. Chart 6Geopolitical Implications Of Biden's Election
Geopolitical Implications Of Biden's Election
Geopolitical Implications Of Biden's Election
The cold war between these two is an unavoidable geopolitical trend as China threatens to surpass the US in economic size and improves its technological prowess. Presidents Xi and Trump were merely catalysts. But there are two policy trends that will override this rivalry for at least the first half of the year. First, global trade is recovering– as shown here by the Shanghai freight index and South Korean exports and equity prices (Chart 7). The global recovery will boost Korean stocks but geopolitical tensions will continue to brood over more expensive Taiwanese stocks due to the US-China conflict. This has motivated our longstanding long Korea / short Taiwan recommendation. Chart 7Global Economy Speaks Louder Than North Korea
Global Economy Speaks Louder Than North Korea
Global Economy Speaks Louder Than North Korea
Chart 8China Wary Of Over-Tightening Policy
China Wary Of Over-Tightening Policy
China Wary Of Over-Tightening Policy
Chart 9Global Stock-Bond Ratio Registers Good News
Global Stock-Bond Ratio Registers Good News
Global Stock-Bond Ratio Registers Good News
Second, China’s 2020 stimulus will have lingering effects and it is wary of over-tightening monetary and fiscal policy, lest it undo its domestic economic recovery. The tenor of China’s Central Economic Work Conference in December has reinforced this view. Chart 8 illustrates the expectations of our China Investment Strategy regarding China’s credit growth and local government bond issuance. They suggest that there will not be a sharp withdrawal of fiscal or quasi-fiscal support in 2021. Stability is especially important in the lead up to the critical leadership rotation in 2022.3 This policy backdrop will be positive for global/EM equities despite the political crackdown on General Secretary Xi Jinping’s opponents will occur despite this supportive policy backdrop. The global stock-to-bond ratio has surged in clear recognition of these positive policy trends (Chart 9). Government bonds were deeply overbought and it will take several years before central banks begin tightening policy. What About Biden’s Foreign Policy? Chart 10OPEC 2.0 Cartel Continues (For Now)
Accommodative US Monetary Policy, Tighter Commodity Markets Will Stoke Inflation OPEC 2.0 Cartel Continues (For Now)
Accommodative US Monetary Policy, Tighter Commodity Markets Will Stoke Inflation OPEC 2.0 Cartel Continues (For Now)
Iran poses a genuine geopolitical risk this year – first in the form of an oil supply risk, should conflict emerge in the Persian Gulf, Iraq, or elsewhere in the region. This would inject a risk premium into the oil price. Later the risk is the opposite as a deal with the Biden administration would create the prospect for Iran to attract foreign investment and begin pumping oil, while putting pressure on the OPEC 2.0 coalition to abandon its current, tentative, production discipline in pursuit of market share (Chart 10). Biden has the executive authority to restore the 2015 nuclear deal (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action). He is in favor of doing so in order to (1) prevent the Middle East from generating a crisis that consumes his foreign policy; (2) execute an American grand strategy of reviving its Asia Pacific influence; (3) cement the Obama administration’s legacy. The Iranian President Hassan Rouhani also has a clear interest in returning to the deal before the country’s presidential election in June. This would salvage his legacy and support his “reformist” faction. The Supreme Leader also has a chance to pin the negative aspects of the deal on a lame duck president while benefiting from it economically as he prepares for his all-important succession. The problem is that extreme levels of distrust will require some brinkmanship early in Biden’s term. Iran is building up leverage ahead of negotiations, which will mean higher levels of uranium enrichment and demonstrating the range of its regional capabilities, including the Strait of Hormuz, and its ability to impose economic pain via oil prices. Biden will need to establish a credible threat if Iran misbehaves. Hence the geopolitical setting is positive for oil prices at the moment. Beyond Iran, there is a clear basis for policy uncertainty to decline for Europe and the UK while it remains elevated for China and Russia (Chart 11). Chart 11Relative Policy Uncertainty Favors Europe and UK Over Russia And China
Relative Policy Uncertainty Favors Europe and UK Over Russia And China
Relative Policy Uncertainty Favors Europe and UK Over Russia And China
The US international image has suffered from the Trump era and the Biden administration’s main priorities will lie in solidifying alliances and partnerships and stabilizing the US role in the world, rather than pursuing showdown and confrontation. However, it will not be long before scrutiny returns to the authoritarian states, which have been able to focus on domestic recovery and expanding their spheres of influence amid the US’s tumultuous election year. Chart 12GeoRisk Indicators Say Risks Underrated For These Bourses
GeoRisk Indicators Say Risks Underrated For These Bourses
GeoRisk Indicators Say Risks Underrated For These Bourses
The US will not seek a “diplomatic reset” with Russia, aside from renegotiating the New START treaty. The Democrats will seek to retaliate for Russia’s extensive cyberattack in 2021 as well as for election interference and psychological warfare in the United States. And while there probably will be a reset with China, it will be short-lived, as outlined above. This situation contrasts with that of the Atlantic sphere. The Biden administration is a crystal clear positive, relative to a second Trump term, for the European Union. The EU and the UK have just agreed to a trade deal, as expected, to conclude the Brexit process, which means that the US-UK “special relationship” will not be marred by disagreements over Ireland. European solidarity has also strengthened as a result of the pandemic, which highlighted the need for collective policy responses, including fiscal. Thus the geopolitical risks of the new administration are most relevant for China/Taiwan and Russia. Comparing our GeoRisk Indicators, which are market-based, with the relative equity performance of these bourses, Taiwanese stocks are the most vulnerable because markets are increasingly pricing the geopolitical risk yet the relative stock performance is toppy (Chart 12). The limited recovery in Russian equities is also at risk for the same reason. Only in China’s case has the market priced lower geopolitical risk, not least because of the positive change in US administration. We expect Biden and Xi Jinping to be friendly at first but for strategic distrust to reemerge by the second half of the year. This will be a rude awakening for Chinese stocks – or China-exposed US stocks, especially in the tech sector. Investment Takeaways Chart 13Global Policy Shifts Drive Big Investment Reversals
Global Policy Shifts Drive Big Investment Reversals
Global Policy Shifts Drive Big Investment Reversals
The US is politically divided. Civil unrest and aftershocks of the controversial election will persist but markets will ignore it unless it has a systemic impact. The policy consequence is a more proactive fiscal policy, resulting in virtual fiscal-monetary coordination that is positive both for global demand and risk assets, while negative for the US dollar. The Biden administration will succeed in partially repealing the Trump tax cuts, but the impact on corporate profit margins will be discounted fairly mechanically and quickly by market participants, while the impact on economic growth will be more than offset by huge new spending. Sentiment will improve after the pandemic – and Biden has not yet shown an inclination to take an anti-business tone. The past decade has been marked by a dollar bull market and the outperformance of developed markets over emerging markets and growth stocks like technology over value stocks like financials. Cyclical sectors have traded in a range. Going forward, a secular rise in geopolitical Great Power competition is likely to persist but the macro backdrop has shifted with the decline of the dollar. Cyclical sectors are now poised to outperform while a bottom is forming in value stocks and emerging markets (Chart 13). We recommend investors go strategically long emerging markets relative to developed. We are also going long global value over growth stocks. We are not yet ready to close our gold trade given that the two supports, populist fiscal turn and great power struggle, will continue to be priced by markets in the near term. We are throwing in the towel on our short CNY-USD trade after the latest upleg in the renminbi, though our view continues to be that geopolitical fundamentals will catch yuan investors by surprise when they reassert themselves. We also recommend preferring global equities to US equities, given the above-mentioned global trends plus looming tax hikes. Matt Gertken Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 January 6, 2020, twitter.com. 2 See Turchin and Andrey Korotayev, "The 2010 Structural-Demographic Forecast for the 2010-2020 Decade: A Retrospective Assessment," PLoS ONE 15:8 (2020), journals.plos.org. 3 Not to mention that 2021 is the Communist Party’s 100th anniversary – not a time to make an unforced policy error with an already wobbly economy.
The Swedish PMIs have been extraordinarily strong in December, jumping near 65, or levels normally associated with maximum output growth for the manufacturing sector. Historically, the momentum in the Swedish krona relative to the Swiss franc closely tracks…