Currencies
Highlights An uninterrupted advance in reflation trades will be possible if the FOMO (fear of missing out) evolves into a full-blown mania. This scenario cannot be ruled out especially with retail investors around the world continuing to flock into equity markets. EM equity valuations are neither cheap in absolute terms nor relative to Europe and Japan. EM is cheap only versus the S&P 500. US relative equity outperformance in common currency terms is breaking down. Go long EM stocks / short the S&P 500. The Blue Wave in the US is very bearish for the greenback and has reduced our expectations of the magnitude and duration of any near-term US dollar rebound. It has in fact reinforced our medium- to long-term negative US dollar view. Feature Financial markets are at a crossroad. On the one hand, the reflation trades have already rallied a great deal and might be at a point of exhaustion. On the other hand, gigantic monetary and fiscal support from authorities worldwide, and the US in particular, could push global share prices into a no gravity zone where major overshoots and manias are possible. The bullish view is well-known: DM central banks’ easy monetary and fiscal policies will endure. Moreover, the global economy will continue its recovery as vaccines are made accessible by mid-year to a large share of the population in advanced economies. Markets will ignore any growth disappointment stemming from the expansion and/or extension of lockdowns as they are forward-looking and expect widespread vaccine deployment to eventually allow for a reopening of the economies. We agree with these points. The negative view is also well-recognized: investor sentiment on global equities in general and EM in particular is very elevated and reflation trades have become overbought. These are valid and correct points as well. Chart I-1 illustrates that the Sentix investor sentiment1 on EM equities is at an all-time high. In the past, when sentiment reached these levels EM share prices experienced either a correction or a bear market. Chart I-1Investor Sentiment On EM Equities Is At A Record High
Investor Sentiment On EM Equities Is At A Record High
Investor Sentiment On EM Equities Is At A Record High
Further, the December issue of the Bank of America/Merrill Lynch survey noted that investor overweights in EM stocks and commodities are the highest since November 2010 and February 2011, respectively. These proved to be the major (structural) tops in EM equities and commodities. Certainly, positioning in EM is even more crowded now than it was four weeks ago. Are EM equities at a point of exhaustion – where the rally runs out – or at a point of no gravity – where nothing will stop them from marching higher? In the near term, either is possible. It truly depends on investor behavior which is impossible to forecast with any high degree of certainty. Chart I-2Korean Stocks Have Benefited From Local Retail Mania
Korean Stocks Have Benefited From Local Retail Mania
Korean Stocks Have Benefited From Local Retail Mania
For instance, retail mania has been happening not only in the US but also in many developing countries. In particular, the astonishing rally in Korean stocks has been propelled not by foreign investors but by local retail investors (Chart I-2). That is why traditional yardsticks of investment analysis have not been useful. In the medium and long term, the trend in global share prices, and thereby EM, will likely be shaped by issues where there is no consensus among investors. In our opinion, there are two subjects upon which investors disagree: (1) whether global and EM equity valuations are too expensive, and (2) whether US inflation will rise sufficiently so that the Federal Reserve abandons its super-easy monetary policy stance, and when markets will begin to price this in. EM equity valuations are not at all cheap. An uninterrupted advance will be possible if the FOMO (fear of missing out) evolves into a full-blown mania. This scenario cannot be ruled out especially with retail investors around the world continuing to flock into equity markets. Concerning US inflation, the odds are that it will rise sooner and faster than is expected by the market and the Fed. Although the Fed is unlikely to singlehandedly spoil the party, fixed-income markets could start pricing in rate hikes sooner rather than later with ramifications for share prices. We will discuss equity valuations in this report and devote a separate report in the coming weeks to the inflation outlook in the US and China. Market Implications Of The Blue Wave Chart I-3US Consumption Of Industrial Metals Is Too Small
Reflation Trades: Exhaustion Or No Gravity?
Reflation Trades: Exhaustion Or No Gravity?
We expected US Republicans to maintain their majority in the Senate after Georgia’s Senate elections, thus dimming the likelihood of more large-scale fiscal stimulus. If realized, that would have triggered a rebound in the US dollar from very oversold levels. US Democrats effectively gaining control of the Senate has major implications for financial markets: America’s fiscal policy will be looser than otherwise. Swelling government spending will boost domestic demand and will produce a wider trade deficit and higher inflation. Yet, the Fed is unlikely to tighten policy anytime soon and real interest rates will remain negative. This is very bearish for the US dollar. Any rebound in the greenback, which is possible given its oversold conditions, should be faded. According to our Chief Geopolitical Strategist Matt Gertken, odds are that Democrats will partially repeal the corporate tax cuts enacted during Trump’s administration. This is negative for both the US dollar and for Wall Street. One of the main campaign promises of Democrats has been to address income inequality. Actions on this front are good for Main Street but these policies will weigh on corporate profitability. Big Tech faces a greater threat of taxes from a united Congress as opposed to a divided Congress, but Biden’s executive decrees will not be too harsh given that these companies are a major source of support for Democrats. US nominal interest rates will rise but so will nominal GDP growth. The negative impact of higher US bond yields on EM will be more than offset by two forces: a weaker US dollar and stronger exports to the US. Finally, the shift in US fiscal policy is clearly inflationary. However, the impact on commodities prices will be modest. The US accounts for only 8% of global industrial metals consumption compared to China’s 57% share (Chart I-3). So, a slowdown in China commencing in H2 2021 will more than offset the rise in US metals consumption. Concerning oil, the US is the world’s largest crude consumer. Hence, higher household income and spending are positive for oil prices. However, a forceful Democrat push toward green energy is structurally negative for US oil consumption. These two forces might offset each other leaving oil prices to be determined by other factors. Bottom Line: Democrat control of both houses of Congress is positive for US nominal GDP and, hence, for corporate revenues but is bearish for the US dollar and corporate profit margins. Net-net, this reinforces our view that US relative equity outperformance in common currency terms has already passed its secular top and is breaking down (Chart I-4, top panel). By contrast, this US policy shift is positive for EM financial markets (Chart I-4, bottom panel). We recommend a new trade/strategy: go long EM stocks / short the S&P 500. EM Equity Valuations In our opinion, global stocks, especially US ones, are expensive and EM equities are far from being cheap. Let’s begin with EM equity valuations: Chart I-5 shows our Composite Valuation Indicator (CVI) for the MSCI EM equity benchmark. It is an average of four individual valuation indicators: market cap-weighted, equal-weighted, trimmed mean, and median. Chart I-4US Equity Outperformance Is Over
US Equity Outperformance Is Over
US Equity Outperformance Is Over
Chart I-5EM Equities: Good News Are Fully Priced In
EM Equities: Good News Are Fully Priced In
EM Equities: Good News Are Fully Priced In
In turn, each of these four indicators incorporates five multiples: forward P/E, trailing P/E, price-to-cash EPS, price-to-book value and price-to-dividend ratios. According to Chart I-5, EM equities are expensive. Not only are trailing P/E and price-to-cash EPS ratios extremely elevated but also the forward P/E ratio is the highest and the dividend yield is the lowest it has been in 18 years (Chart I-6). Even though EM stocks do not appear to be expensive based on a price-to-book value (PBV) ratio, a structural decline in EM return on equity (RoE) entails that the fair value range for the PBV ratio has downshifted over the past decade and the current reading should be taken with a grain of salt. Chart I-7 demonstrates that the RoEs for the entire MSCI EM universe, equal-weighted MSCI EM equity index and MSCI non-financial EM companies have deteriorated structurally. Hence, a decline in return on equity is widespread among EM-listed companies, i.e. it is not a feature unique to only large caps. Chart I-6EM Equity Multiples
EM Equity Multiples
EM Equity Multiples
Chart I-7A Structural Drop In EM RoE Heralds Lower Multiples
A Structural Drop In EM RoE Heralds Lower Multiples
A Structural Drop In EM RoE Heralds Lower Multiples
In brief, the structural decline in EM RoE justifies a lower PBV ratio for EM equities (Chart I-7, bottom panel). Relative to DM, EM equities are not cheap. They are cheap versus their US peers but expensive versus European and Japanese stocks. Chart I-8 exhibits the relative Composite Valuation Indicator for EM relative to DM. For EM, it is the same as in Chart I-5 and for DM we use an identical measure. When discussing equity valuations, one should now distinguish between growth and value stocks. EM growth stocks are grossly overvalued as shown in the top panel of Chart I-9. EM value stocks are close to their fair value, i.e., they are not cheap (Chart I-9, bottom panel). Chart I-8EM Versus DM: Relative Equity Multiples
EM Versus DM: Relative Equity Multiples
EM Versus DM: Relative Equity Multiples
Chart I-9Multiples For EM Growth And Value Stocks
Multiples For EM Growth And Value Stocks
Multiples For EM Growth And Value Stocks
A caveat is in order: all of these CVIs do not incorporate interest rates into valuation models. We look at equity multiples in the context of low interest rates in the sections that follow. Incorporating Interest Rates Into Equity Valuations Chart I-10EM Earnings Yields Adjusted For Local Bond Yields
EM Earnings Yields Adjusted For Local Bond Yields
EM Earnings Yields Adjusted For Local Bond Yields
There are various ways to incorporate interest rates/the discount factor into equity valuations. One way is to calculate the difference between forward earnings yield (EY) and long-term bond yields. We use forward EY because trailing EPS is still depressed by the pandemic-induced economic crash, i.e., trailing P/Es do not provide a true valuation picture. Chart I-10 demonstrates the gap between EM forward EY and 10-year US bond yields (on the top panel) and the same forward EY and EM local bond yields (Chart I-10, bottom panel). Both measures are not far from their historical means. Hence, adjusted for bond yields, EM stocks are fairly valued. That said, there are two pertinent questions that follow from this: (1) how do EM equities compare to their DM peers; and (2) how well have these interest rate-adjusted valuation measures worked in markets where interest rates had dropped to zero. In other words, do near-zero interest rates warrant a secular bull market? We address this last topic in the section below. As to the first question, Chart I-11 presents the forward EY-local interest rate differential for major equity markets. A higher differential presage cheaper equity valuation relative to lower numbers. Chart I-11US And EM Equities Have Been Chronically Expensive Versus European And Japanese Ones
US And EM Equities Have Been Chronically Expensive Versus European And Japanese Ones
US And EM Equities Have Been Chronically Expensive Versus European And Japanese Ones
According to this measure, Japanese and Euro Area equities have been and remain cheaper than US and EM equities. Chart I-12 ranks all individual EM equity benchmarks as well as major DM bourses based on the differential between forward EY and local nominal bond yields. Stocks in India, Indonesia, South Africa, Turkey, Mexico and Colombia are expensive, adjusted for local bond yields. Chart I-12Cross Country Valuation Ranking: Forward Earnings Yield Minus Local Bond Yields
Reflation Trades: Exhaustion Or No Gravity?
Reflation Trades: Exhaustion Or No Gravity?
By contrast, equity markets in Central Europe, core Europe and Russia offer better value, relative to domestic bonds. The EM aggregate index, the Chinese investable benchmark and the S&P 500 fall in the middle of this valuation ranking. Bottom Line: Based on equity multiples, EM equities are expensive. However, when adjusted for interest rates, absolute valuation of EM equities is neutral. Relative to DM, the EM equity benchmark is not cheap. In fact, they are more expensive compared to European and Japanese stocks. Equity Valuation When Rates Are At Zero No doubt, equity prices should be re-rated as interest rates drop. However, what should the equilibrium P/E multiple be when interest rates are close to zero? Japan, the euro area and Switzerland offer a roadmap. Chart I-13Japanese And European Stocks Have Not Entered Structural Bull Markets Despite Negative Rates
Japanese and European Stocks Have Not Entered Structural Bull Markets Despite Negative Rates
Japanese and European Stocks Have Not Entered Structural Bull Markets Despite Negative Rates
For some time now, these markets have had to process many of the same features that US and global markets are currently facing. Specifically: They have had negative policy rates and 10-year government bond yields for many years. Their central banks have been conducting some sort of QE programs. The Bank of Japan and the Swiss National Bank have been purchasing equities and the ECB has been buying corporate bonds. Finally, onward from 2012 until the eruption of the pandemic, economic growth in Japan, the euro area and Switzerland was decent. Despite negative interest rates, their broad equity markets have failed to break out into a structural bull market. Their stocks have re-rated, but the upside was capped (Chart I-13). Critically, the forward EY differential with their local government bond yields have stayed wide (Chart I-14). Chart I-14Japanese, Euro Area And Swiss Equities Have Not Re-Rated Despite Negative Bond Yields
Japanese, Euro Area And Swiss Equities Have Not Re-Rated Despite Negative Bond Yields
Japanese, Euro Area And Swiss Equities Have Not Re-Rated Despite Negative Bond Yields
In sum, the experiences of Japanese, Swiss and other European markets show that zero or negative interest rates alone did not compel a secular bull market in share prices. Rather, equity re-rating in these bourses has been relatively moderate. Investment Considerations The Blue Wave is very bearish for the greenback as we argued above. This development has reduced our conviction regarding the magnitude and duration of any near-term US dollar rebound. It has in fact reinforced our medium- to long-term negative US dollar view. Potential EM currencies that investors should consider buying on a dip versus the US dollar are MXN, SGD, KRW, TWD, CNY, INR and CZK. For now, we continue to recommend a neutral allocation to EM equities and credit within global equity and credit portfolios, respectively. However, we note that odds of EM outperformance have risen with the Blue Wave in the US and ensuing US dollar depreciation. Yet, Europe and Japan presently offer a better risk/reward profile than EM. However, to reflect our strong conviction of a breakdown in US relative performance and a more upbeat view on EM versus US stocks, we recommend the following trade/strategy: long EM stocks / short the S&P 500, currency unhedged. Concerning the absolute performance of EM and DM stocks, they are very overbought, reasonably expensive and sentiment is very bullish. In normal times, this would argue for a pullback. For example, Chart I-15 shows that a rollover in the inverted US equity put-call ratio typically heralds a setback in the S&P500. Chart I-15A Red Flag? Do Indicators No Longer Work?
A Red Flag? Do Indicators No Longer Work?
A Red Flag? Do Indicators No Longer Work?
However, if global stocks are moving from a FOMO stage to a mania phase, many traditional relationships and indicators might not work. This and the fact the EM equity index is at a critical juncture entails its outlook is currently highly uncertain – odds of a breakout (FOMO evolving into a mania) and a potential setback are equal. Finally, some housekeeping, we are closing the long Chinese Investable stocks / short Korean stocks recommendation. This trade has generated a massive loss of 33.5% as the KOSPI has taken off in recent weeks. We continue to overweight both Chinese and Korean equities within an EM equity portfolio. We will likely make changes to our recommended country allocations within equity and fixed-income portfolios in the coming weeks. Stay tuned. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The Sentix Asset Classes Sentiment Emerging Markets Equities Index is polled among 5,000 European individual and institutional investors. In the survey, investors are asked about their medium-term price expectations for the asset class. Source: SENTIX. Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
Dear Client, I am writing as the US Capitol goes under lockdown to tell you about a new development at BCA Research. Since you are a subscriber of Geopolitical Strategy, we wanted you to be the first to know. This month we are launching a new sister service, US Political Strategy, which will expand and deepen our coverage of investment-relevant US domestic political risks and opportunities. Over the past decade, we at Geopolitical Strategy have worked hard to craft an analytical framework that incorporates policy insights into the investment process in a systematic and data-dependent way. We have learned a lot from your input and have refined our method, while also building new quantitative models and indicators to supplement our qualitative, theme-based coverage. While our method served us well in 2020, the frantic US election cycle often caused clients to lament that US politics had begun to crowd out our traditional focus on truly global themes and trends. We concurred. Therefore we have decided to expand our team and deepen our coverage. With a series of new hires, we are now better positioned to provide greater depth on US markets in US Political Strategy while redoubling our traditional global sweep in the pages of Geopolitical Strategy. Going forward, US Political Strategy will cover executive orders, Capitol Hill, federal agencies, regulatory risk, the Supreme Court, emerging socioeconomic trends, and their impacts on key US sectors and assets. It will be BCA Research’s newest premium investment strategy service and will include the full gamut of weekly reports, special reports, webcasts, and client conferences. Meanwhile Geopolitical Strategy will return to its core competency of geopolitics writ large – including the US in its global impacts, but diving deeper into the politics and markets of China, Europe, India, Japan, Russia, the Middle East, and select emerging markets. Both strategies will utilize our proprietary analytical framework, which relies on data-driven assessments of the “checks and balances” that shape policy outcomes (i.e. comparing constraints versus preferences). As you know best, we are agnostic about political parties, transparent about conviction levels and scenario probabilities, and solely focused on getting the market calls right. To this end, we offer you a complimentary trial subscription of US Political Strategy. We aim to become an integral part of your work flow – separating the wheat from the chaff in the political and geopolitical sphere so that you can focus on honing your investment process. We know you will be pleased to see Geopolitical Strategy return to its roots – and we hope you will consider diving deeper with us into US politics and markets. We look forward to hearing from you. Happy New Year! All very best, Matt Gertken, Vice President BCA Research The outgoing Trump administration is powerless to stop the presidential transition and the US military and security forces will not participate in any “coup.” Investors should buy the dip if social instability affects the markets between now and President-elect Joe Biden’s Inauguration Day. Democrats have achieved a sweep of US government with two victories in Georgia’s Senate election. The Biden administration is no longer destined for paralysis. Investors no longer need fear a premature tightening of US fiscal policy. Fiscal thrust will expand by around 6.9% of GDP more than it otherwise would have in FY2021 and contract by 12.3% of GDP in FY2022. Democrats will partly repeal the Trump tax cuts to pay for new spending programs, including an expansion and entrenchment of Obamacare. Big Tech is the most exposed to the combination of higher corporate taxes and inflation expectations. Investors should go long risk assets and reflation plays on a 12-month basis. We recommend value over growth stocks, materials over tech, TIPS over nominal treasuries, infrastructure plays, and municipal bonds. The special US Senate elections in Georgia produced a two-seat victory for Democrats on January 5 and have thus given the Democratic Party de facto control of the Senate.Financial markets have awaited this election with bated breath. The “reflation trade” – bets on economic recovery on the back of ultra-dovish monetary and fiscal policy – had taken a pause for the election. There was a slight setback in treasury yields and the outperformance of cyclical, small cap, and value stocks, which rallied sharply after the November 3 general election (Chart 1). The Democratic victory ensures that US corporate and individual taxes will go up – triggering a one-off drop in earnings per share of about 11%, according to our US Equity Strategist Anastasios Avgeriou (Table 1). But it also brings more proactive fiscal policy. Since the Democrats project larger new spending programs financed by tax hikes, the big takeaway is that the US economic recovery will gain momentum and will not be undermined by premature fiscal tightening. Chart 1Markets Will Look Through Unrest To Reflation
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Table 1What EPS Hit To Expect?
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Chart 2Democrats Won Georgia Seats, US Senate
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Republicans Snatch Defeat From Jaws Of Victory The results of the Georgia runoffs, at the latest count, are shown in Chart 2. Republican Senator David Perdue has not yet officially lost the race, as votes are still being tallied, but he trails his Democratic challenger Jon Ossoff by 16,370 votes. This is a gap that is unlikely to be changed by subsequent vote disputes or recounts (though it is possible and the results are not yet declared as we go to press). President-elect Joe Biden only lost 1,274 votes to President Trump when ballots were recounted by hand in November. The Democratic victory offers some slight consolation for opinion pollsters who underestimated Republicans in the general election in certain states. Opinion polls had shown a dead heat in both of Georgia’s races, with Republican Senators Perdue and Kelly Loeffler deviating by 1.4% and 0.4% respectively from their support rate in the average of polls in December. Democratic challengers Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock differed by 1.3% and 2.3% from their final polling (Charts 3A & 3B). Chart 3AOpinion Pollsters Did Better …
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Chart 3B… In Georgia Runoffs
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
By comparison, in the November 3 general election, polls underestimated Perdue by 1.3% and overestimated Warnock by 5.3% (Chart 4). On the whole, the election shows that state-level opinion polling can improve to address new challenges. Our quantitative Senate election model had given Republicans a 78% chance of winning Georgia. This they did in the first round of the election, but conditions have changed since November 3, namely due to President Trump’s refusal to concede the election after the Electoral College voted on December 14.1 Our model is based on structural factors so it did not distinguish between the two Senate candidates in the same state. For the whole election, the model predicted that Democrats would win a net of three seats, resulting in a Republican majority of 51-49. Today we see that the model only missed two states: Maine and Georgia. But Georgia has made all the difference, with the result to be 50-50, for Vice President Kamala Harris to break the tie (Chart 5). Chart 4Ossoff In Line With Polls, Warnock Slightly Beat
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Chart 5Our Quant Model Missed Maine And Georgia – And Georgia Carries Two Seats To Turn The Senate
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
COVID-19 likely took a further toll on Republican support in the interim between the two election rounds. The third wave of the COVID-19 pandemic has not peaked in the US or the Peach State. While the number of cases has spiked in Georgia as elsewhere, the number of deaths has not yet followed (Chart 6). Chart 6COVID-19 Surged Since November
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Lame Duck Trump Risk Before proceeding to the policy impacts of the apparent Democratic sweep of both executive and legislative branches, a word must be said about the presidential transition and President Trump’s final 14 days in office. First, the Joint Session of Congress to count the Electoral College ballots to certify the election of the new US president has been interrupted as we go to press. There is zero chance that protesters storming the proceedings will change the outcome of the election. The counting of the electoral votes can be interrupted for debate; it will be reconvened. Disputes over the vote could theoretically become meaningful if Republicans controlled both the House and the Senate, as the combined voice of the legislature could challenge the legitimacy of a state’s electoral votes. But today the Republicans only control the Senate, and while some will press isolated challenges, based on legal disputes of variable merit, these challenges will not gain traction in the Senate let alone in the Democratic-controlled House. What did the US learn from this controversial election? US political polarization is reaching extreme peaks which are putting strain on the formal political system, but Trump lacks the strength in key government bodies to overturn the election. Second, there was no willingness of state legislatures to challenge their state executives on the vote results. This has to do with the evidence upon which challenges could be lodged, but there is also a built-in constraint. Any state legislature whose ruling party opposes the popular result will by definition put its own popular support in jeopardy in the next election. Third, the Supreme Court largely washed its hands of state-level disputes settled by state-level courts. Historically, the Supreme Court never played a role in presidential elections. The year 2000 was an exception, as the high court said at the time. The 2020 election has established a high bar for any future Supreme Court involvement, though someday it will likely be called on to weigh in. Hysteria regarding the conservative leaning on the court – which is now a three-seat gap – was misplaced. The three Supreme Court justices appointed by Trump took no partisan or interventionist role. Nevertheless, the court’s conservative leaning will be one of the Trump administration’s biggest legacies. The marginal judge in controversial cases is now more conservative and will take a larger role given that Democrats now have a greater ability to pass legislation by taking the Senate. President Trump is still in office for 14 days. There is zero chance of a successful military coup or anything of the sort in a republic in which institutions are strong and the military swears allegiance to the constitution. Attempts to oppose the Electoral College and Congress will be opposed – and ultimately they will be met with an overwhelming reassertion of the rule of law. All ten of the surviving secretaries of defense of the United States have signed an open letter saying that the election results should no longer be resisted and that any defense officials who try to involve the military in settling electoral disputes could be criminally liable.2 With Trump’s options for contesting the election foreclosed, he will turn to signing a flurry of executive orders to cement his legacy. His primary legacy is the US confrontation with China, so he will continue to impose sanctions on China on the way out, posing a tactical risk to equity prices. The business community will be slow to comply, however, so the next administration will set China policy. There is a small possibility that Trump will order economic or even military action against Iran or any other state that provokes the United States. But Trump is opposed to foreign wars and the bureaucracy would obstruct any major actions that do not conform with national interests. Basically, Trump’s final 14 days may pose a downside risk to equities that have rallied sharply since the November 9 vaccine announcement but we are long equities and reflation plays. Sweeps Just As Good For Stocks As Gridlock The balance of power in Congress is shown in Chart 7. The majorities are extremely thin, which means that although Democrats now have control, there will remain high uncertainty over the passage of legislation, at least until the 2022 midterm elections. Investors can now draw three solid conclusions about the makeup of US government from the 2020 election: The White House’s political capital has substantially improved – President-elect Joe Biden no longer faces a divided Congress. He won by a 4.5% popular margin (51.4% of the total), bringing the popular and electoral vote back into alignment. He will have a higher net approval rating than Trump in general, and household sentiment, business sentiment, and economic conditions will improve from depressed, pandemic-stricken levels over the course of his term. The Senate is evenly split but Democrats will pass some major legislation – Thin margins in the Senate make it hard to pass legislation in general. However, the budget reconciliation process enables laws to pass with a simple majority if they involve fiscal matters. Hence, Democrats will be able to legislate additional COVID relief and social support that they were not able to pass in the end-of-year budget bill. They can pass a reconciliation bill for fiscal 2022 as well. They will focus on economic recovery followed by expanding and entrenching the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). We fully expect a partial repeal of Trump’s Tax Cut and Jobs Act, if not initially then later in the year. Democrats only have a five-seat majority in the House of Representatives – Democrats will vote with their party and thus 222 seats is enough to maintain a working majority. But the most radical parts of the agenda, such as the Green New Deal, will be hard to pass. Chart 7Democrats Control Both Houses
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
With the thinnest possible margin, the Senate has a highly unreliable balance of power. Table 2 shows top three Republicans and Democrats in terms of age, centrist ideology, and independent mentality. Four senators are above the age of 85 – they can vote freely and could also retire or pass away. Centrist and maverick senators will carry enormous weight as they will provide the decisive votes. The obvious example is Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia, who has opposed the far-left wing of his party on critical issues such as the Green New Deal, defunding the police, and the filibuster. Table 2The Senate Will Hinge On These Senators
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
The Democrats could conceivably muster the 51 votes to eliminate the filibuster, which requires a 60-vote majority to pass most legislation, but it will be very difficult. Senators Dianne Feinstein (D, CA), Angus King (I, ME), Kyrsten Sinema (D, AZ), Jon Tester (D, MT), and Manchin are all skeptical of revoking this critical hurdle to Senate legislation.3 We would not rule it out, however. The US has reached a point of “peak polarization” in which surprises should be expected. By the same token, Republican Senators Lisa Murkowski and Susan Collins often vote against their party. Collins just won yet another tough race in Maine due to her ability to bridge the partisan gap. There are also mavericks like Rand Paul – and Ted Cruz will have to rethink his populist strategy given his thin margins of victory and the Trump-induced Republican defeat in the South. Not shown are other moderates who will be eager to cross the political aisle, such as Senator Mitt Romney of Utah. None of the above means Democrats will fail to raise taxes. All Democrats voted against Trump’s Tax Cut and Jobs Act, which did not end up being popular or politically beneficial for the Republicans. The Democratic base is fired up and mobilized by Trump to pursue its core agenda of increasing the government role in US society and the economy and redressing various imbalances and disparities. This requires revenue, especially if it is to be done with only 51 votes via the budget reconciliation process. The two Democratic senators from Arizona are vulnerable, but they will toe the party line because Trump and the GOP were out of step with the median voter. Moreover, Arizonians voted for higher taxes in a state ballot measure in November. Since 1980, gridlocked government has resulted in higher average annual returns on the S&P500. But since 1949, single-party sweeps have slightly edged out gridlocked governments in stock returns, though the results are about the same (Chart 8). The point is that gridlock makes it hard for government to get big things done. Sometimes that is positive for markets, sometimes not. The macro backdrop is what matters. The Federal Reserve is unlikely to start tightening until late 2022 at earliest and fiscal thrust in 2021-22 will be more expansionary now that the Democrats have control of the Senate. This policy backdrop is negative for the dollar and positive for risk assets, especially equity sectors that will suffer least from impending corporate tax hikes, such as energy, industrials, consumer staples, materials, and financials. Chart 8Sweeps Don’t Always Underperform Gridlock
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Meanwhile, Biden will have far less trouble getting his cabinet and judicial appointments through the Senate (Appendix). His appointees so far reflect his desire to return the US to “rule by experts,” as opposed to Trump’s disruptive style of personal rule. Investors will cheer the return to technocrats and predictable policymaking even if they later relearn that experts make gigantic mistakes too. Fiscal Policy Outlook The critical feature of the Trump administration was the COVID-19 pandemic, which sent the US budget deficit soaring to World War II levels relative to GDP. In the coming years, the change in the budget deficit (fiscal thrust) will necessarily be negative, dragging on growth rates (Chart 9). Fiscal policy determines how heavy and abrupt that drag will be. Chart 9US Budget Deficit Surged – Pace Of Normalization Matters
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Chart 10 presents four scenarios that we adjusted based on data from the Congressional Budget Office. The baseline would see an extraordinary 6.7% of GDP contraction in the budget deficit that would kill the recovery, which the Georgia outcome has now rendered irrelevant. The “Republican Status Quo” scenario is now the minimum. Chart 10Democratic Sweep Suggests Big Fiscal Thrust In FY2021 And Less Contraction FY2022
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
The “Democratic Status Quo” scenario assumes that the $600 per household rebate will be increased to $2,000 per family and that the remaining $2.5 trillion of the Democrats’ proposed HEROES Act will be enacted. The “Democratic High” scenario adds Biden’s $5.6 trillion policy agenda on top of the Democratic status quo, supercharging the economic recovery with a fiscal bonanza. Biden will not achieve all of this, so the reality will lie somewhere between the solid blue and dotted blue lines. This Democratic status quo implies a 6.9% of GDP expansion of the deficit in FY2021. It also implies that the deficit will contract by 12.3% of GDP in FY2022, instead of 13.5% in the Republican status quo scenario. The economic recovery will be better supported. So, too, will the Fed’s timeline for rate hikes – but the Fed’s new strategy of average inflation targeting shows that it is targeting an inflation overshoot. So the threat of Fed liftoff is not immediate. The longer the extraordinary fiscal largesse is maintained, the greater the impact on inflation expectations and the more upward pressure on bond yields (Chart 11). Big Tech will be the one to suffer while Big Banks, industrials, materials, and energy will benefit. Chart 11Bond Bearish Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Our US Political Risk Matrix There is no correlation between fiscal thrust and equity returns. This is true whether we consider the broad market, cyclicals/defensives, value/growth stocks, or small/large caps (Chart 12). Normally, fiscal thrust surges when recessions and bear markets occur, leading to volatility in asset prices. However, in the new monetary policy context, the risk is to the upside for the above-mentioned sectors, styles, and segments. Looking at sector performance before and after the November 3 election and November 9 vaccine announcement, there has been a clear shift from pandemic losers to pandemic winners. Big Tech and Consumer Discretionary (Amazon) thrived during the period before the vaccine, while value stocks (industrials, energy, financials) suffered the most from the lockdowns. These trends have reversed, with energy and financials outperforming the market since November (Chart 13). The Biden administration poses regulatory risks for Big Oil and arguably Big Banks, but these will come into play after the market has priced in economic normalization and the emerging consensus in favor of monetary-fiscal policy coordination, which is very positive for these sectors. Chart 12Fiscal Thrust Not Correlated With Stocks
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Chart 13Energy And Financials Turned Around With Vaccine
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
In the case of energy, as stated above, the Biden administration will still struggle to get anything resembling the Green New Deal approved in Congress. Nevertheless, environmental regulation will expand and piecemeal measures to promote research and development, renewables, electric vehicles, and other green initiatives may pass. Large cap energy firms are capable of adjusting to this kind of transition. Coal companies are obviously losers. In the case of financials, Biden’s record is not unfriendly to the financial industry. His nominee for Treasury Secretary, former Fed Chair Janet Yellen, approved of the relaxation of some of its more stringent financial regulations under the Trump administration. Big Banks are no longer the target of popular animus like they were after the 2008 financial crisis – in that regard they have given way to Big Tech. Our US Investment Strategist Doug Peta argues that the Democratic sweep will smother any gathering momentum in personal loan defaults, which would help banks outperform the broad market. Biden’s regulatory approach to Big Tech will be measured, as the Obama administration’s alliance with Silicon Valley persists, but tech stands to suffer the most from higher taxes, especially a minimum corporate tax rate. With a unified Congress, it is also now possible that new legislation could expand tech regulation. There is a bipartisan consensus emerging on tech regulation so Republican votes can be garnered. Tech thrives on growth-scarce, disinflationary environments whereas the latest developments are positive for inflation expectations. In the recent lead-up to the Georgia vote, industrials, financials, and consumer discretionary stocks have not benefited much, even though they should (Chart 14). These are investment opportunities. Chart 14Upside For Energy And Financials Despite Regulatory Risk
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
In our Political Risk Matrix, we establish these views as our baseline political tilts, to be applied to the BCA Research House View of our US Equity Strategy. The results are shown in Table 3. When equity sectors become technically stretched, the political impacts will become more salient. Table 3US Political Risk Matrix
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Investment Takeaways Over the past few years our sister Geopolitical Strategy has written extensively about “Civil War Lite,” “Peak Polarization,” and contested elections in the United States. We will dive deeper into these themes and issues in forthcoming reports, but for now suffice it to say that extremist events will galvanize the majority of the nation behind the new administration while also driving politicians of both stripes to use pork-barrel spending to try to stabilize the country. Congress will err on the side of providing too much fiscal stimulus just as surely as the Fed is bent on erring on the side of providing too much monetary stimulus. That means reflation, which will ultimately boost stocks in 2021. We also expect stocks to outperform government bonds, at least on a tactical 3-6 month timeframe. As the above makes clear, we prefer value stocks over growth stocks. Specifically we favor cyclical plays like materials over the big five of Google, Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, and Facebook. An infrastructure bill was one of the few legislative options for the Biden administration under gridlock, now it is even more likely. Infrastructure is popular and both presidential candidates competed to see who could offer the bigger plan. Moreover, what Biden cannot achieve under the rubric of climate policy he can try to achieve under the rubric of infrastructure. The BCA US Infrastructure Basket correlates with the US budget deficit as well as growth in China/EM and we recommend investors pursue similar plays. In the fixed income space, Treasury inflation protected securities (TIPS) are likely to continue outperforming nominal, duration-matched government bonds. Our US Bond Strategist Ryan Swift is on alert to downgrade this recommendation, but the change in US government configuration at least motivates a tactical overweight in TIPS. The chances of US state and local governments receiving fiscal support – previously denied by the GOP Senate – has increased so we will also go long municipal bonds relative to treasuries. Matt Gertken Vice President US Political Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Appendix Table A1Biden’s Cabinet Position Appointments
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Footnotes 1 Perdue defeated Ossoff on November 3 but fell short of the 50% threshold to avoid a second round; meanwhile the cumulative Republican vote in the multi-candidate special election outnumbered the cumulative Democratic vote on November 3. 2 Ashton Carter, Dick Cheney, William Cohen, et al, “All 10 living former defense secretaries: Involving the military in election disputes would cross into dangerous territory,” Washington Post, January 3, 2021, washingtonpost.com. 3 Jordain Carney, “Filibuster fight looms if Democrats retake Senate,” The Hill, August 25, 2020, thehill.com.
Dear Client, The US Capitol is going on lockdown as we write to introduce BCA Research’s newest investment service, US Political Strategy, in this inaugural report. US Political Strategy will provide timely and actionable policy insights for US-dedicated, multi-asset investors. It grew naturally out of our successful Geopolitical Strategy service, which has become an industry leader in combining geopolitical and market analysis over the past decade. By client demand, we are expanding our policy team and deepening our coverage of policy-induced macro and market themes and trends. US Political Strategy will delve deep into domestic US politics: executive orders, Capitol Hill, regulatory risk, the Supreme Court, emerging socioeconomic trends, and their impacts on key US sectors and assets. Meanwhile, Geopolitical Strategy will redouble its focus on truly global and geopolitical risks and opportunities, including US foreign and trade policy but more especially China, Europe, and other major markets. Both strategies utilize our proprietary analytical framework, which relies on data-driven assessments of the “checks and balances” that shape policy outcomes. As with all our research, we are agnostic about political parties, transparent about our conviction levels and scenario probabilities, and solely focused on actionable investment advice. For more information please visit the US Political Strategy webpage. For a free trial please reach out to your BCA Research account manager or email contactbca@bcaresearch.com. We trust you will find this enhancement of coverage insightful and profitable. Happy New Year! All very best, Matt Gertken Vice President BCA Research The outgoing Trump administration is powerless to stop the presidential transition and the US military and security forces will not participate in any “coup.” Investors should buy the dip if social instability affects the markets between now and President-elect Joe Biden’s Inauguration Day. Democrats have achieved a sweep of US government with two victories in Georgia’s Senate election. The Biden administration is no longer destined for paralysis. Investors no longer need fear a premature tightening of US fiscal policy. Fiscal thrust will expand by around 6.9% of GDP more than it otherwise would have in FY2021 and contract by 12.3% of GDP in FY2022. Democrats will partly repeal the Trump tax cuts to pay for new spending programs, including an expansion and entrenchment of Obamacare. Big Tech is the most exposed to the combination of higher corporate taxes and inflation expectations. Investors should go long risk assets and reflation plays on a 12-month basis. We recommend value over growth stocks, materials over tech, TIPS over nominal treasuries, infrastructure plays, and municipal bonds. The special US Senate elections in Georgia produced a two-seat victory for Democrats on January 5 and have thus given the Democratic Party de facto control of the Senate.Financial markets have awaited this election with bated breath. The “reflation trade” – bets on economic recovery on the back of ultra-dovish monetary and fiscal policy – had taken a pause for the election. There was a slight setback in treasury yields and the outperformance of cyclical, small cap, and value stocks, which rallied sharply after the November 3 general election (Chart 1). The Democratic victory ensures that US corporate and individual taxes will go up – triggering a one-off drop in earnings per share of about 11%, according to our US Equity Strategist Anastasios Avgeriou (Table 1). But it also brings more proactive fiscal policy. Since the Democrats project larger new spending programs financed by tax hikes, the big takeaway is that the US economic recovery will gain momentum and will not be undermined by premature fiscal tightening. Chart 1Markets Will Look Through Unrest To Reflation
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Table 1What EPS Hit To Expect?
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Chart 2Democrats Won Georgia Seats, US Senate
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Republicans Snatch Defeat From Jaws Of Victory The results of the Georgia runoffs, at the latest count, are shown in Chart 2. Republican Senator David Perdue has not yet officially lost the race, as votes are still being tallied, but he trails his Democratic challenger Jon Ossoff by 16,370 votes. This is a gap that is unlikely to be changed by subsequent vote disputes or recounts (though it is possible and the results are not yet declared as we go to press). President-elect Joe Biden only lost 1,274 votes to President Trump when ballots were recounted by hand in November. The Democratic victory offers some slight consolation for opinion pollsters who underestimated Republicans in the general election in certain states. Opinion polls had shown a dead heat in both of Georgia’s races, with Republican Senators Perdue and Kelly Loeffler deviating by 1.4% and 0.4% respectively from their support rate in the average of polls in December. Democratic challengers Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock differed by 1.3% and 2.3% from their final polling (Charts 3A & 3B). Chart 3AOpinion Pollsters Did Better …
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Chart 3B… In Georgia Runoffs
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
By comparison, in the November 3 general election, polls underestimated Perdue by 1.3% and overestimated Warnock by 5.3% (Chart 4). On the whole, the election shows that state-level opinion polling can improve to address new challenges. Our quantitative Senate election model had given Republicans a 78% chance of winning Georgia. This they did in the first round of the election, but conditions have changed since November 3, namely due to President Trump’s refusal to concede the election after the Electoral College voted on December 14.1 Our model is based on structural factors so it did not distinguish between the two Senate candidates in the same state. For the whole election, the model predicted that Democrats would win a net of three seats, resulting in a Republican majority of 51-49. Today we see that the model only missed two states: Maine and Georgia. But Georgia has made all the difference, with the result to be 50-50, for Vice President Kamala Harris to break the tie (Chart 5). Chart 4Ossoff In Line With Polls, Warnock Slightly Beat
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Chart 5Our Quant Model Missed Maine And Georgia – And Georgia Carries Two Seats To Turn The Senate
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
COVID-19 likely took a further toll on Republican support in the interim between the two election rounds. The third wave of the COVID-19 pandemic has not peaked in the US or the Peach State. While the number of cases has spiked in Georgia as elsewhere, the number of deaths has not yet followed (Chart 6). Chart 6COVID-19 Surged Since November
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Lame Duck Trump Risk Before proceeding to the policy impacts of the apparent Democratic sweep of both executive and legislative branches, a word must be said about the presidential transition and President Trump’s final 14 days in office. First, the Joint Session of Congress to count the Electoral College ballots to certify the election of the new US president has been interrupted as we go to press. There is zero chance that protesters storming the proceedings will change the outcome of the election. The counting of the electoral votes can be interrupted for debate; it will be reconvened. Disputes over the vote could theoretically become meaningful if Republicans controlled both the House and the Senate, as the combined voice of the legislature could challenge the legitimacy of a state’s electoral votes. But today the Republicans only control the Senate, and while some will press isolated challenges, based on legal disputes of variable merit, these challenges will not gain traction in the Senate let alone in the Democratic-controlled House. What did the US learn from this controversial election? US political polarization is reaching extreme peaks which are putting strain on the formal political system, but Trump lacks the strength in key government bodies to overturn the election. Second, there was no willingness of state legislatures to challenge their state executives on the vote results. This has to do with the evidence upon which challenges could be lodged, but there is also a built-in constraint. Any state legislature whose ruling party opposes the popular result will by definition put its own popular support in jeopardy in the next election. Third, the Supreme Court largely washed its hands of state-level disputes settled by state-level courts. Historically, the Supreme Court never played a role in presidential elections. The year 2000 was an exception, as the high court said at the time. The 2020 election has established a high bar for any future Supreme Court involvement, though someday it will likely be called on to weigh in. Hysteria regarding the conservative leaning on the court – which is now a three-seat gap – was misplaced. The three Supreme Court justices appointed by Trump took no partisan or interventionist role. Nevertheless, the court’s conservative leaning will be one of the Trump administration’s biggest legacies. The marginal judge in controversial cases is now more conservative and will take a larger role given that Democrats now have a greater ability to pass legislation by taking the Senate. President Trump is still in office for 14 days. There is zero chance of a successful military coup or anything of the sort in a republic in which institutions are strong and the military swears allegiance to the constitution. Attempts to oppose the Electoral College and Congress will be opposed – and ultimately they will be met with an overwhelming reassertion of the rule of law. All ten of the surviving secretaries of defense of the United States have signed an open letter saying that the election results should no longer be resisted and that any defense officials who try to involve the military in settling electoral disputes could be criminally liable.2 With Trump’s options for contesting the election foreclosed, he will turn to signing a flurry of executive orders to cement his legacy. His primary legacy is the US confrontation with China, so he will continue to impose sanctions on China on the way out, posing a tactical risk to equity prices. The business community will be slow to comply, however, so the next administration will set China policy. There is a small possibility that Trump will order economic or even military action against Iran or any other state that provokes the United States. But Trump is opposed to foreign wars and the bureaucracy would obstruct any major actions that do not conform with national interests. Basically, Trump’s final 14 days may pose a downside risk to equities that have rallied sharply since the November 9 vaccine announcement but we are long equities and reflation plays. Sweeps Just As Good For Stocks As Gridlock The balance of power in Congress is shown in Chart 7. The majorities are extremely thin, which means that although Democrats now have control, there will remain high uncertainty over the passage of legislation, at least until the 2022 midterm elections. Investors can now draw three solid conclusions about the makeup of US government from the 2020 election: The White House’s political capital has substantially improved – President-elect Joe Biden no longer faces a divided Congress. He won by a 4.5% popular margin (51.4% of the total), bringing the popular and electoral vote back into alignment. He will have a higher net approval rating than Trump in general, and household sentiment, business sentiment, and economic conditions will improve from depressed, pandemic-stricken levels over the course of his term. The Senate is evenly split but Democrats will pass some major legislation – Thin margins in the Senate make it hard to pass legislation in general. However, the budget reconciliation process enables laws to pass with a simple majority if they involve fiscal matters. Hence, Democrats will be able to legislate additional COVID relief and social support that they were not able to pass in the end-of-year budget bill. They can pass a reconciliation bill for fiscal 2022 as well. They will focus on economic recovery followed by expanding and entrenching the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). We fully expect a partial repeal of Trump’s Tax Cut and Jobs Act, if not initially then later in the year. Democrats only have a five-seat majority in the House of Representatives – Democrats will vote with their party and thus 222 seats is enough to maintain a working majority. But the most radical parts of the agenda, such as the Green New Deal, will be hard to pass. Chart 7Democrats Control Both Houses
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
With the thinnest possible margin, the Senate has a highly unreliable balance of power. Table 2 shows top three Republicans and Democrats in terms of age, centrist ideology, and independent mentality. Four senators are above the age of 85 – they can vote freely and could also retire or pass away. Centrist and maverick senators will carry enormous weight as they will provide the decisive votes. The obvious example is Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia, who has opposed the far-left wing of his party on critical issues such as the Green New Deal, defunding the police, and the filibuster. Table 2The Senate Will Hinge On These Senators
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
The Democrats could conceivably muster the 51 votes to eliminate the filibuster, which requires a 60-vote majority to pass most legislation, but it will be very difficult. Senators Dianne Feinstein (D, CA), Angus King (I, ME), Kyrsten Sinema (D, AZ), Jon Tester (D, MT), and Manchin are all skeptical of revoking this critical hurdle to Senate legislation.3 We would not rule it out, however. The US has reached a point of “peak polarization” in which surprises should be expected. By the same token, Republican Senators Lisa Murkowski and Susan Collins often vote against their party. Collins just won yet another tough race in Maine due to her ability to bridge the partisan gap. There are also mavericks like Rand Paul – and Ted Cruz will have to rethink his populist strategy given his thin margins of victory and the Trump-induced Republican defeat in the South. Not shown are other moderates who will be eager to cross the political aisle, such as Senator Mitt Romney of Utah. None of the above means Democrats will fail to raise taxes. All Democrats voted against Trump’s Tax Cut and Jobs Act, which did not end up being popular or politically beneficial for the Republicans. The Democratic base is fired up and mobilized by Trump to pursue its core agenda of increasing the government role in US society and the economy and redressing various imbalances and disparities. This requires revenue, especially if it is to be done with only 51 votes via the budget reconciliation process. The two Democratic senators from Arizona are vulnerable, but they will toe the party line because Trump and the GOP were out of step with the median voter. Moreover, Arizonians voted for higher taxes in a state ballot measure in November. Since 1980, gridlocked government has resulted in higher average annual returns on the S&P500. But since 1949, single-party sweeps have slightly edged out gridlocked governments in stock returns, though the results are about the same (Chart 8). The point is that gridlock makes it hard for government to get big things done. Sometimes that is positive for markets, sometimes not. The macro backdrop is what matters. The Federal Reserve is unlikely to start tightening until late 2022 at earliest and fiscal thrust in 2021-22 will be more expansionary now that the Democrats have control of the Senate. This policy backdrop is negative for the dollar and positive for risk assets, especially equity sectors that will suffer least from impending corporate tax hikes, such as energy, industrials, consumer staples, materials, and financials. Chart 8Sweeps Don’t Always Underperform Gridlock
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Meanwhile, Biden will have far less trouble getting his cabinet and judicial appointments through the Senate (Appendix). His appointees so far reflect his desire to return the US to “rule by experts,” as opposed to Trump’s disruptive style of personal rule. Investors will cheer the return to technocrats and predictable policymaking even if they later relearn that experts make gigantic mistakes too. Fiscal Policy Outlook The critical feature of the Trump administration was the COVID-19 pandemic, which sent the US budget deficit soaring to World War II levels relative to GDP. In the coming years, the change in the budget deficit (fiscal thrust) will necessarily be negative, dragging on growth rates (Chart 9). Fiscal policy determines how heavy and abrupt that drag will be. Chart 9US Budget Deficit Surged – Pace Of Normalization Matters
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Chart 10 presents four scenarios that we adjusted based on data from the Congressional Budget Office. The baseline would see an extraordinary 6.7% of GDP contraction in the budget deficit that would kill the recovery, which the Georgia outcome has now rendered irrelevant. The “Republican Status Quo” scenario is now the minimum. Chart 10Democratic Sweep Suggests Big Fiscal Thrust In FY2021 And Less Contraction FY2022
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
The “Democratic Status Quo” scenario assumes that the $600 per household rebate will be increased to $2,000 per family and that the remaining $2.5 trillion of the Democrats’ proposed HEROES Act will be enacted. The “Democratic High” scenario adds Biden’s $5.6 trillion policy agenda on top of the Democratic status quo, supercharging the economic recovery with a fiscal bonanza. Biden will not achieve all of this, so the reality will lie somewhere between the solid blue and dotted blue lines. This Democratic status quo implies a 6.9% of GDP expansion of the deficit in FY2021. It also implies that the deficit will contract by 12.3% of GDP in FY2022, instead of 13.5% in the Republican status quo scenario. The economic recovery will be better supported. So, too, will the Fed’s timeline for rate hikes – but the Fed’s new strategy of average inflation targeting shows that it is targeting an inflation overshoot. So the threat of Fed liftoff is not immediate. The longer the extraordinary fiscal largesse is maintained, the greater the impact on inflation expectations and the more upward pressure on bond yields (Chart 11). Big Tech will be the one to suffer while Big Banks, industrials, materials, and energy will benefit. Chart 11Bond Bearish Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Our US Political Risk Matrix There is no correlation between fiscal thrust and equity returns. This is true whether we consider the broad market, cyclicals/defensives, value/growth stocks, or small/large caps (Chart 12). Normally, fiscal thrust surges when recessions and bear markets occur, leading to volatility in asset prices. However, in the new monetary policy context, the risk is to the upside for the above-mentioned sectors, styles, and segments. Looking at sector performance before and after the November 3 election and November 9 vaccine announcement, there has been a clear shift from pandemic losers to pandemic winners. Big Tech and Consumer Discretionary (Amazon) thrived during the period before the vaccine, while value stocks (industrials, energy, financials) suffered the most from the lockdowns. These trends have reversed, with energy and financials outperforming the market since November (Chart 13). The Biden administration poses regulatory risks for Big Oil and arguably Big Banks, but these will come into play after the market has priced in economic normalization and the emerging consensus in favor of monetary-fiscal policy coordination, which is very positive for these sectors. Chart 12Fiscal Thrust Not Correlated With Stocks
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Chart 13Energy And Financials Turned Around With Vaccine
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
In the case of energy, as stated above, the Biden administration will still struggle to get anything resembling the Green New Deal approved in Congress. Nevertheless, environmental regulation will expand and piecemeal measures to promote research and development, renewables, electric vehicles, and other green initiatives may pass. Large cap energy firms are capable of adjusting to this kind of transition. Coal companies are obviously losers. In the case of financials, Biden’s record is not unfriendly to the financial industry. His nominee for Treasury Secretary, former Fed Chair Janet Yellen, approved of the relaxation of some of its more stringent financial regulations under the Trump administration. Big Banks are no longer the target of popular animus like they were after the 2008 financial crisis – in that regard they have given way to Big Tech. Our US Investment Strategist Doug Peta argues that the Democratic sweep will smother any gathering momentum in personal loan defaults, which would help banks outperform the broad market. Biden’s regulatory approach to Big Tech will be measured, as the Obama administration’s alliance with Silicon Valley persists, but tech stands to suffer the most from higher taxes, especially a minimum corporate tax rate. With a unified Congress, it is also now possible that new legislation could expand tech regulation. There is a bipartisan consensus emerging on tech regulation so Republican votes can be garnered. Tech thrives on growth-scarce, disinflationary environments whereas the latest developments are positive for inflation expectations. In the recent lead-up to the Georgia vote, industrials, financials, and consumer discretionary stocks have not benefited much, even though they should (Chart 14). These are investment opportunities. Chart 14Upside For Energy And Financials Despite Regulatory Risk
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
In our Political Risk Matrix, we establish these views as our baseline political tilts, to be applied to the BCA Research House View of our US Equity Strategy. The results are shown in Table 3. When equity sectors become technically stretched, the political impacts will become more salient. Table 3US Political Risk Matrix
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Investment Takeaways Over the past few years our sister Geopolitical Strategy has written extensively about “Civil War Lite,” “Peak Polarization,” and contested elections in the United States. We will dive deeper into these themes and issues in forthcoming reports, but for now suffice it to say that extremist events will galvanize the majority of the nation behind the new administration while also driving politicians of both stripes to use pork-barrel spending to try to stabilize the country. Congress will err on the side of providing too much fiscal stimulus just as surely as the Fed is bent on erring on the side of providing too much monetary stimulus. That means reflation, which will ultimately boost stocks in 2021. We also expect stocks to outperform government bonds, at least on a tactical 3-6 month timeframe. As the above makes clear, we prefer value stocks over growth stocks. Specifically we favor cyclical plays like materials over the big five of Google, Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, and Facebook. An infrastructure bill was one of the few legislative options for the Biden administration under gridlock, now it is even more likely. Infrastructure is popular and both presidential candidates competed to see who could offer the bigger plan. Moreover, what Biden cannot achieve under the rubric of climate policy he can try to achieve under the rubric of infrastructure. The BCA US Infrastructure Basket correlates with the US budget deficit as well as growth in China/EM and we recommend investors pursue similar plays. In the fixed income space, Treasury inflation protected securities (TIPS) are likely to continue outperforming nominal, duration-matched government bonds. Our US Bond Strategist Ryan Swift is on alert to downgrade this recommendation, but the change in US government configuration at least motivates a tactical overweight in TIPS. The chances of US state and local governments receiving fiscal support – previously denied by the GOP Senate – has increased so we will also go long municipal bonds relative to treasuries. Matt Gertken Vice President US Political Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Appendix Table A1Biden’s Cabinet Position Appointments
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep
Footnotes 1 Perdue defeated Ossoff on November 3 but fell short of the 50% threshold to avoid a second round; meanwhile the cumulative Republican vote in the multi-candidate special election outnumbered the cumulative Democratic vote on November 3. 2 Ashton Carter, Dick Cheney, William Cohen, et al, “All 10 living former defense secretaries: Involving the military in election disputes would cross into dangerous territory,” Washington Post, January 3, 2021, washingtonpost.com. 3 Jordain Carney, “Filibuster fight looms if Democrats retake Senate,” The Hill, August 25, 2020, thehill.com.
Feature Chart 1Stock Prices Are Struggling To Break Out Of Their Recent Highs
Stock Prices Are Struggling To Break Out Of Their Recent Highs
Stock Prices Are Struggling To Break Out Of Their Recent Highs
Stock prices in China's onshore and offshore markets rallied into the New Year (Chart 1). Despite the strong performance in the last couple of days, as we pointed out in our 2021 Outlook Report, the biggest obstacle that Chinese stock prices face is their elevated valuations against tightening macro policy. Recent liquidity injections by the PBoC have prompted a sharp drop in the 7-day repo rate. However, slightly loosened liquidity conditions in the interbank system do not signify a shift in monetary policy, i.e. financial conditions will continue to tighten in 2021, albeit at a slower rate than in the second half of 2020. The Central Economic Work Conference (CEWC) wrapped up its December meeting with a pledge to maintain continuity, stability and sustainability in macroeconomic policy without making any “sudden turns”. The conference release also stated that China “must use the valuable time window to focus on reform and innovation — achieving a good start for the 14th five-year plan in terms of high-quality development.” The CEWC’s messages align with our baseline view that Chinese policymakers are not yet in a deleveraging mood. The country’s macro leverage level should be kept stable in 2021 and the growth of credit creation will decelerate gradually (Chart 2, Scenario 1). The pullback in this year’s fiscal support will also be gentle: we expect newly issued special purpose bonds (SPBs) to reach 3.2-3.5 trillion in 2021, about 10% less than the 3.75 trillion issued in 2020. This will put the 2021 SPB quota in the same range as in 2016, but higher than in 2017, 2018 or 2019 (Chart 3). Chart 2Credit Growth Will Decelerate In 2021
Credit Growth Will Decelerate In 2021
Credit Growth Will Decelerate In 2021
Chart 3Fiscal Cliff In 2021 Unlikely
China Macro And Market Review
China Macro And Market Review
A credit or fiscal cliff is unlikely this year. Instead, we expect the authorities to accelerate key reforms such as a clampdown on market monopolies and housing speculation in large cities, heavier penalties on capital market violations and a reduction in carbon emissions. In the long run, these reforms may help to rebalance China’s economic structure, but in the near term, a more stringent policy backdrop will probably hinder investors’ appetites for Chinese risk assets. In early December, we downgraded Chinese equities from overweight to neutral for the next 0-3 months, in both absolute and relative terms. We will evaluate our cyclical call on Chinese stocks in the coming weeks. Qingyun Xu, CFA Senior Analyst qingyunx@bcaresearch.com Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com Below is a set of market relevant charts along with our comments: The PBoC has injected large amounts of liquidity into the interbank system since mid-November, helping to sharply lower the short-term interbank repo rate. We pointed out previously that policy rates had breached their pre-pandemic levels by November while the economy had barely expanded from the end of 2019. Thus, we expected the PBoC to slow the pace of interest rate normalization in Q4. Recent liquidity injections likely were related to preventing a year-end cash crunch in the financial system, not a change in the PBoC’s planned pace of policy tightening. While the 7-day interbank repo rate is back to its June 2020 level, the 3-month SHIBOR (the de facto policy rate) has only slightly moderated. The divergence between the 7-day and the 3-month interbank rates was also apparent during the monetary tightening cycle in 2017-2018. During that cycle, the jump in the 3-month SHIBOR pushed up government bond yields and bank lending rates, while the 7-day repo rate remained stable. As shown in a previous report, the 3-month SHIBOR more tightly correlates with bond yields and is a better measure of China’s monetary policy stance. Chart 4The Short-Term Interbank Repo Rate Dropped Sharply Since Mid-November …
The Short-Term Interbank Repo Rate Dropped Sharply Since Mid-November
The Short-Term Interbank Repo Rate Dropped Sharply Since Mid-November
Chart 5… But The Declines In The 3-Month SHIBOR And Bond Yields Have Been Much Milder
But The Declines In The 3-Month SHIBOR And Bond Yields Have Been Much Milder
But The Declines In The 3-Month SHIBOR And Bond Yields Have Been Much Milder
Chinese onshore stock prices trended sideways for most of December, even as the PBoC loosened interbank liquidity conditions in mid-November. Chinese offshore stocks have also failed to break out from highs reached in November, as tech giants such as Alibaba and Tencent have come under tough scrutiny from regulators. Chinese stocks will continue to experience a tug-of-war between tailwinds and headwinds in the next three months. The relatively well-contained domestic pandemic and improving economic growth will support investors’ sentiments towards Chinese risk assets. At the same time, stock prices will face headwinds such as elevated valuations, a more restrictive policy environment and wider corporate credit spreads. For now, the downside risks to Chinese stocks prevail. Chart 6ADomestic Stocks Are No Longer Cheap
China Macro And Market Review
China Macro And Market Review
Chart 6BElevated Valuations In Investable Stocks
China Macro And Market Review
China Macro And Market Review
Tailwinds Supporting Chinese Stocks: Economic Recovery To Continue In 1H21 Chart 7China’s EPS Recovery To Continue In 1H21
China EPS Recovery To Continue In 1H21
China EPS Recovery To Continue In 1H21
China’s business cycle will remain resilient in the first half of 2021 while existing stimulus measures continue to work their way into the real economy. In the next six months, some laggards in the economic recovery, such as the service sector and household consumption, will likely pick up momentum, while the manufacturing and export sectors remain robust. China’s export sector should maintain strong growth momentum in the first half of the year. A rising RMB exchange rate may eventually impede the price competitiveness of some labor-intensive export goods , but Chinese manufacturers will continue to fill the gap between global demand and supply before the COVID-19 vaccines are widely distributed and the global supply chains are fully recovered. Moreover, China’s global share of exports gradually rose in both 2018 and 2019 despite the Sino-US trade war. Data from Q4 show that Chinese exports have been robust beyond pandemic-related goods. As the global economy and demand growth pick up next year, Chinese exports should also benefit from the trade recovery. Chart 8The Strength In Chinese Exports Has Expanded Beyond Pandemic-Related Goods …
The Strength In Chinese Exports Has Expanded Beyond Pandemic-Related Goods
The Strength In Chinese Exports Has Expanded Beyond Pandemic-Related Goods
Chart 9… And Will Benefit From Recovering Global Demand In 2021
And Will Benefit From Recovering Global Demand In 2021
And Will Benefit From Recovering Global Demand In 2021
Chart 10The Acceleration In Completed Housing Will Support Construction In 1H21
The Acceleration In Completed Housing Will Support Construction In 1H21
The Acceleration In Completed Housing Will Support Construction In 1H21
An acceleration in completing existing projects should support the construction sector in the first half of 2021, despite a slower expansion rate in new development projects. Floor space completed has significantly lagged floor space started and sold during the past two years, while real estate developers rushed to acquire new projects, land and down payments to expand their market share. Property developers will need to speed up the completion process of existing projects to bring leverage in line with the “three red lines” imposed since August 2020 (housing presales need to be excluded from the liability-to-asset ratio calculation). Hence, we expect the growth in real estate investment and construction activities to remain stable through the first half. Chart 11Smaller Cities Face Less Upward Price Pressure on Housing Prices Than Big Cities
Smaller Cities Face Less Upward Price Pressure on Housing Prices Than Big Cities
Smaller Cities Face Less Upward Price Pressure on Housing Prices Than Big Cities
Chart 12Housing Restrictions Will Be Most Stringent In Top-Tier Cities
Housing Restrictions Will Be Most Stringent In Top-Tier Cities
Housing Restrictions Will Be Most Stringent In Top-Tier Cities
Chart 13The Laggards In The Economy Are Firming Up
The Laggards In The Economy Are Firming Up
The Laggards In The Economy Are Firming Up
The laggards in the economy are firming up. Recent economic data show that growth momentum is shifting from leaders in the economic recovery, especially old-economy sectors such as infrastructure and real estate, to the coincident and lagging sectors such as manufacturing and consumer sectors. While an increase in these sectors is positive for the economy and the growth of corporate profits, it also implies that the economic recovery has entered a late phase and a peak in the business cycle is near. Therefore, the improvements do not necessarily provide enough impetus for stock prices to trend higher, and prices may be at risk from a policy overkill. Chart 14Household Consumption Still Has Room To Improve
Household Consumption Still Has Room To Improve
Household Consumption Still Has Room To Improve
Chart 15Sales Of Discretionary Goods Have Surged
Sales Of Discretionary Goods Have Surged
Sales Of Discretionary Goods Have Surged
Downside Risks To Chinese Equity Prices China’s domestic policy environment has turned less favorable for risk assets. A new round of policy tightening is well underway as suggested by a slew of events, ranging from the recent SOE bond payment defaults to regulators suspending the Ant Group IPO and cracking down on market monopolies. Investors will likely be risk averse in the near term. Chart 16Stringent Scrutiny On Tech Companies Hammered Their Stock Performance …
Stringent Scrutiny On Tech Companies Hammered Their Stock Performance
Stringent Scrutiny On Tech Companies Hammered Their Stock Performance
Chart 17… Bringing Down Their Sector Performance
Bringing Down Their Sector Performance
Bringing Down Their Sector Performance
Rising corporate bond yields in China’s onshore bond market are not an impediment to increasing Chinese share prices as long as forward EPS net revisions are also climbing. Not only have onshore corporate bond yields recently risen, but forward EPS net revisions have rolled over. Such a combination does not bode well for Chinese equities. Chart 18Red Flag For Chinese Equities
Red Flag For Chinese Equities
Red Flag For Chinese Equities
The impact from stricter lending regulations in the real estate sector may start impeding home sales and new real estate investment into the second half of the year. Effective January 1, 2021, China imposed caps on bank loans to real estate developers. Loans will be capped at 40% for the largest state-owned lenders, while banks’ mortgage lending should be no more than 32.5% of their outstanding credit. The regulations are even more rigorous for smaller banks.1 The new rules highlight the authorities’ determination to curb financial risks derived from the housing market and are a step up from the existing deleveraging pressures faced by property developers. Bank loan quotas under the new rules are in line with ones used in 2020.2 However, based on our projections that overall credit growth will decelerate by at least 2 percentage points in 2021 compared with 2020, there will be a corresponding decrease in real estate sector’s borrowing from banks. Bank loans account for roughly 14% of real estate developers’ total funding sources and household mortgages accounted for 16% in 2020. When deleveraging pressures are on and financing resources are capped from both the supply and demand sides, real estate investment growth will likely peak no later than mid-2021. Chart 19The New Rules May Exacerbate The Downward Trend In Bank Loans To The Real Estate Sector This Year
The New Rules May Exacerbate The Downward Trend In Bank Loans To The Real Estate Sector This Year
The New Rules May Exacerbate The Downward Trend In Bank Loans To The Real Estate Sector This Year
Deflationary pressures may resurface in the second half, which would be a downside risk to China’s corporate profit growth. The producer prices contraction will continue to narrow and even turn mildly positive in the next six months, supported by the uptrend in the business cycle and a low base factor in 1H20. However, both consumer and producer prices may face renewed downward pressures in the second half of 2021 when the business cycle is expected to peak and the effects of stimulus gradually fade. Moreover, the RMB appreciation will add to headwinds faced by producer prices in 2021. Chart 20While The Ongoing Economic Recovery Will Support Prices In 1H21 …
While The Ongoing Economic Recovery Will Support Prices In 1H21
While The Ongoing Economic Recovery Will Support Prices In 1H21
Chart 21… Lower Money Growth And Higher RMB Value May Start To Hurt Prices In 2H21
Lower Money Growth And Higher RMB Value May Start To Hurt Prices In 2H21
Lower Money Growth And Higher RMB Value May Start To Hurt Prices In 2H21
Chart 22Resurfaced Deflationary Pressure Will Create Downside Risk To China’s Corporate Profit Growth In 2H21
Resurfaced Deflationary Pressure Will Create Downside Risk To China Corporate Profit Growth In 2H21
Resurfaced Deflationary Pressure Will Create Downside Risk To China Corporate Profit Growth In 2H21
Chart 23The Outperformance In Cyclical Stocks Versus Defensives Has Rolled Over
The Outperformance In Cyclical Stocks Versus Defensives Has Rolled Over
The Outperformance In Cyclical Stocks Versus Defensives Has Rolled Over
The outperformance in cyclical stocks relative to defensives in the investable stocks recently rolled over. Historically, there is a strong link between forward earnings and stock price performance of cyclical sectors, while defensives have a low equity return beta and are market neutral. A switch in outperformance from cyclicals to defensives usually corresponds with the economy shifting from an expansionary to contractionary phase. Therefore, the recent rollover in the outperformance of cyclical stocks versus defensives may be an early sign that Chinese stock performance has lost its momentum in the current cycle. In relative terms, as breakthroughs in vaccines make the pandemic less threatening to the global economy, cyclical stocks outside of China will start to benefit from improvements in business activities. This will make Chinese risk assets relative to global ones less appealing. Table 1China Macro Data Summary
China Macro And Market Review
China Macro And Market Review
Table 2China Financial Market Performance Summary
China Macro And Market Review
China Macro And Market Review
Footnotes 1For second-tier banks, including state-owned Agricultural Development Bank of China and Exim Bank of China, and 12 joint-stock holding commercial banks, caps on loans to developers and mortgage loans are 27.5% and 20% respectively. Meanwhile, the ratios are capped at 22.5% and 17.5% respectively for smaller city and rural commercial banks, rural cooperative banks and credit cooperatives. The strictest limits apply to small village banks, which can lend only 12.5% of their portfolios to real estate developers and 7.5% to homeowners. 2Currently, outstanding loans to the real estate sector (including household mortgage loans) account for about 29% of total loans from China’s financial institutions, while the ratio of housing mortgage loans is 22%. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
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Dear client, This is our final publication of the year. We thank you very much for your continued readership, and extend our best wishes for a safe and prosperous new year. Chester Ntonifor, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy Highlights Brexit risk is properly priced in the EUR/GBP cross but not in the GBP/USD cross. As such, the best way to position for an eventual trade deal between the EU and the UK is to go short the EUR/GBP cross. A no-deal Brexit could see the pound undershoot to 1.25 in the very short term. This could also coincide with a broad-based technical bounce in the dollar. However, the pound is moderately undervalued on a longer-term basis. GBP/USD should touch 1.45 by the end of 2021. Feature Chart I-1An Asymmetry In Pricing
An Asymmetry In Pricing
An Asymmetry In Pricing
Two weeks before the close of a very momentous year, the EU-UK Brexit imbroglio is still in a stalemate. Our base case remains that a deal will be struck at the 11th hour. However, there is a non-negligible probability that the UK will exit the EU without a trade deal on December 31. In this high-stakes standoff, a clear interpretation of the possible outcomes is important for investors, not only from an economic perspective, but specifically for cable positioning in the coming year. In a nutshell, our conclusion is that Brexit risk is properly priced in the EUR/GBP cross, but not in the GBP/USD exchange rate (Chart I-1). Where Are We Today? There has been progress made on negotiations between the EU and UK. The three main issues that were intractable from both sides included: fishing rights over British waters; a level-playing field clause that ensures British compliance in future EU competition rules; and the diplomatic resolution of disputes. On all issues, we have had a few key developments: The issues surrounding fishing are not relevant economically but are a strong sticking point politically. Economically, fishing constitutes 0.3% of British GDP and 0.5% of exports (Chart I-2). Therefore, it is an economic red herring. Politically, however, the whole Brexit debate is one about sovereignty. And there is no better way for the British to cement this sovereignty than by taking control over their waters, where over 50% of the catch on England’s shores is by non-British firms.1 The EU recognizes this sticking point and is just demanding “predictability and stability” in future relations. In the end, the UK should be able to negotiate an agreement with larger control over what happens along their coastlines. Surprisingly, there seems to be more of an agreement on the level-playing field clause, though our initial assumption was that this would be the major stumbling block. Agreement to adhere to future EU rules on environmental and labor standards seemed almost impossible on the surface of any sovereignty deal. But the issues of domestic subsidies (and their impact on competition) appear now largely resolved. State aid was a fulcrum of the discussion on open and fair trade between the EU and UK. In retrospect, both the UK and EU appear very aligned on critical issues such as climate change, with the UK even ahead of the EU on matters such as clean energy (Chart I-3). Chart I-2Fishing Is An Economic Red Herring
Fishing Is An Economic Red Herring
Fishing Is An Economic Red Herring
Chart I-3The UK Has Reformed Power Generation
The UK Has Reformed Power Generation
The UK Has Reformed Power Generation
There also appears to be progress made on the issue of dispute resolution, and this will especially be the case if a strong and independent arbitration system can be agreed upon. It is a good sign that none of the parties on either the EU or UK side are suggesting this as a roadblock. UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson is preparing for an emergency session of the House of Commons next week, to approve a trade deal. This points to rising odds of a deal being sealed by the weekend. A Decision Tree For GBP Chart 1 shows that while EUR/GBP is trading near the highs of the decade, GBP/USD has significantly appreciated from the March lows. From this simple comparison, there appears to be more of a Brexit discount in GBP/EUR compared to GBP/USD. This view is corroborated by the options market: Out-of- the-money calls on GBP/EUR are trading at the biggest discount to puts since the Brexit referendum (Chart I-4). Prior to the broad-based dollar decline this year, the hard floor for cable was 1.20. This was the low hit after the Brexit referendum and after Boris Johnson was elected prime minister of the UK. Both events underscored maximum pessimism on the pound from Brexit. While EUR/GBP is trading near the highs of the decade, GBP/USD has significantly appreciated from the March lows. From this simple comparison, there appears to be more of a Brexit discount in GBP/EUR compared to GBP/USD. However, since March of this year, we now have had a broad-based dollar decline. Intuitively, that has raised the floor for the pound in the case of a no-deal Brexit. A simple back-of-the-envelope calculation suggests that the new floor for cable is just under 1.30, rather than the 1.20 that prevailed before the dollar downtrend.2 That is the good news for holders of cable. The bad news is that the pound could well undershoot this level, since the dollar is technically ripe for a rebound and global stocks are technically due for a reset. As our colleagues in the European Investment Strategy service have pointed out,3 a huge part of the rally in the pound has also been driven by improving risk sentiment (Chart I-5). A reversal of this, completely unrelated to Brexit, will hurt the pound. Chart I-4Lots Of EUR/GBP Bulls
Lots Of EUR/GBP Bulls
Lots Of EUR/GBP Bulls
Chart I-5The Pound And The Stock Market
The Pound And The Stock Market
The Pound And The Stock Market
As such, the pound faces two risks: One from a no-deal Brexit and the other from a broad-based dollar rebound. Our conclusion is that if both happen simultaneously, this could knock GBP/USD towards 1.25. GBP Fair-Value Models Chart I-6Cable Is Cheap
Cable Is Cheap
Cable Is Cheap
With the pound near 1.36, the next natural question is how high can it rise? Our contention is towards 1.45 by the end of 2021. The reason is that the pound is still undervalued according to many of our models. On a real effective exchange rate basis, the pound is about 1.5 standard deviations below the mean. This pins the pound lower than where it was after the UK exited the ERM in 1992 (Chart I-6). Over time, the pound will converge towards the mid-point of this historical range, pushing it above 1.50. Our in-house PPP models suggest the pound is undervalued by 12%. Our models take on average three years to revert to the mean, pushing cable above 1.50 in the next couple of years. As a reminder, our in-house PPP models adjust the weights of components in the consumer basket, so that we get a more apples-to-apples comparison across countries (Chart I-7).4 Chart I-7The Pound Is Undervalued
The Pound Is Undervalued
The Pound Is Undervalued
Our intermediate-term timing model suggests the pound will also gravitate towards 1.50 over the next year or two. This model is much quicker at reverting to the mean, and incorporates risk variables such as corporate spreads and commodity prices that drive near-term fluctuations in the pound (Chart I-8). Our in-house PPP models suggest the pound is undervalued by 12%. One model, based on relative productivity, is signaling a red flag for cable (Chart I-9). A major drag on UK economic growth over the past four years has been the collapse in business confidence and the associated contraction in capital spending. Since the UK’s EU referendum – that is, prior to the actual withdrawal of the UK from the EU – Brexit has left a lasting mark on the UK economy through elevated uncertainty, severe weakness in business investment spending, and anemic productivity. The net result is an economy with lower trend growth and a structurally weak exchange rate.5 Chart I-8GBP/USD Could Hit 1.45 Next Year
GBP/USD Could Hit 1.45 Next Year
GBP/USD Could Hit 1.45 Next Year
Chart I-9The UK Needs To Boost Its Productivity
The UK Needs To Boost Its Productivity
The UK Needs To Boost Its Productivity
As such, we expect a knee-jerk rally in the pound towards 1.45 in the event that we get a Brexit deal. For a rally towards 1.50 and beyond, it will require that UK growth, and especially productivity growth, begins to outpace that of its trading partners. EUR/GBP And Relative Economic Fundamentals Beyond the issue of Brexit, how is the UK economy faring on a cyclical basis? The answer is better than its trading partners: The manufacturing PMI of the UK has been improving relative to that of the Eurozone. With the population already getting inoculated in the UK, relative economic fundamentals will continue to favor the UK (Chart I-10). Chart I-10UK Is Outperforming The Eurozone
UK Is Outperforming The Eurozone
UK Is Outperforming The Eurozone
Similarly, consumption is doing better in the UK than in the euro area. Thanks to the furlough scheme, UK households are getting much needed income to sustain spending. Historically, this has been negative for EUR/GBP (Chart I-11). Chart I-11Consumption In The UK Holding Up Well
Consumption In The UK Holding Up Well
Consumption In The UK Holding Up Well
The cheapness of the pound has allowed the UK to close the gap in its current account deficit (Chart I-12). As such, weakness in GBP/EUR is no longer justified by current account imbalances. Going forward, whether the UK is able to outperform the Eurozone will depend on the willingness of businesses to put capital to work and revive capital spending. It is arguable that with so much pent-up investment demand in the UK, the room for a mini-boom in capital spending is quite large. It is therefore encouraging that money velocity in the UK has been outpacing that in the Eurozone, suggesting a revival in animal spirits (Chart I-13). Chart I-12The Benefits Of A Cheap Pound
The Benefits Of A Cheap Pound
The Benefits Of A Cheap Pound
Chart I-13The UK Needs A Revival Of Animal Spirits
The UK Needs A Revival Of Animal Spirits
The UK Needs A Revival Of Animal Spirits
In a nutshell, relative fundamentals already favor being short the EUR/GBP cross. And, as we have argued above, the best way to position for an eventual trade deal between the EU and UK is also to short the EUR/GBP cross. In the FX portfolio, we are short EUR/GBP with a target of 0.8 and a stop loss at 0.96. On AUD/GBP And GBP/JPY The performance of the pound on other crosses will be mixed. A ranking model shows that the pound sits at par relative to the aussie, but is less attractive relative to the yen and the Scandinavian currencies (Chart I-14). As such, we are neutral on the AUD/GBP at current levels. However, on a 12-month horizon, we expect AUD/GBP to hit 0.60. Chart I-14The Scandinavian Currencies Are Very Attractive
Thoughts On The British Pound
Thoughts On The British Pound
First, real interest rates are a key driver of the AUD/GBP exchange rate. In the very near term, Australia is benefiting greatly from the faster reopening of the Chinese economy. But Britain is also profiting from pent-up demand that has developed since the Brexit referendum. As such, both economies should see upward momentum in 2021. We do not expect either the Reserve Bank of Australia nor the Bank of England to fight these trends. This will keep relative bond yields tempered and will result in a wash for the cross (Chart I-15). Rising commodity prices are usually bullish for AUD/GBP. On a longer-term basis, the aussie should outperform the pound. This will be driven by a terms of trade boost to Australian growth that will start to lift longer-term relative bond yields. Rising commodity prices are usually bullish for AUD/GBP (Chart I-16). Chart I-15AUD/GBP And Real Interest Rates
AUD/GBP And Real Interest Rates
AUD/GBP And Real Interest Rates
Chart I-16AUD/GBP And Commodity Prices
AUD/GBP And Commodity Prices
AUD/GBP And Commodity Prices
On GBP/JPY, the path will highly depend on who benefits the most from rising global trade in 2021. Real interest rates are higher in Japan, which favors the yen (Chart I-17). But the UK’s trade deficit with Japan has also been shrinking in recent years. With a new UK-Japan trade deal in place, this trend could continue and allow GBP/JPY to bottom towards the middle of next year. Chart I-17Wait To Buy GBP/JPY
Wait To Buy GBP/JPY
Wait To Buy GBP/JPY
Concluding Thoughts Our currency positions as we enter 2021 largely reflect our expectation for the dollar to keep declining. A full list of our active positions is available on page 12. On both cable and the euro, our recommendations are two-fold: Remain short EUR/GBP and buy GBP/USD if it hits 1.25. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Oliver Barnes and Chris Morris, "Brexit trade deal: Who really owns UK fishing quotas?" BBC News, dated December 7, 2020 2 GBP/USD has appreciated by about 18% since the March lows, while the DXY has depreciated by about 13%. The difference of 5% is roughly the premium embedded in cable from a Brexit deal. 3 Please see European Investment Strategy Strategy Report, "Exhausted? Brexit, The ECB And Tech Stocks," dated December 10, 2020. 4 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Strategy Report, "Updating Our PPP Models," dated November 13, 2020. 5 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "United Kingdom: Cyclical Slowdown Or Structural Malaise," dated September 20, 2019. 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 from the US have been soft: The Markit Manufacturing PMI was little changed at 56.5 in December, while the services PMI fell to 55.3 from 58.4. The Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index increased from 76.9 to 81.4 in December. Initial jobless claims jumped to 885,000 for the week ending on December 11. Retail sales declined by 1.1% month-on-month in November. The DXY index plunged by 1.5% this week. On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve kept its interest rate unchanged and vowed to maintain bond purchases until we see “substantial progress” in economic recovery. Moreover, the US Congress could vote on a $900 billion COVID-19 aid bill. The massive liquidity injections continue to provide a backdrop for the multi-year decline in the dollar, consistent with our USD bearish view. 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 been solid: The Markit Manufacturing Index increased from 53.8 to 55.5 in December. The Services PMI also jumped from 41.7 to 47.3. Both headline and core consumer price inflation were unchanged at -0.3% and 0.2% year-on-year, respectively in November. The trade surplus expanded from €23.7 billion to €25.9 billion in October. Industrial production increased by 2.1% month-on-month in October. The euro appreciated by 1.3% against the US dollar this week. The ECB continued to urge the banking sector to preserve capital ahead of a default surge when governments wind down loan guarantees. That said, we expect the European growth to outperform, especially relative to the US, and we expect EUR/USD to march higher in coming years. 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 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 have been mostly positive: The Jibun Bank Manufacturing PMI marginally increased from 49 to 49.7 in December. Both exports and imports declined by 4.2% and 11.1% year-on-year, respectively in November. The adjusted trade surplus increased from ¥314.3 billion to ¥570.2 billion. Industrial production increased by 4% month-on-month in October. The Japanese yen appreciated by 1.5% against the US dollar this week. The December “Tankan Survey” released this week showed that the all industry index jumped to -15 from -28 in the previous survey. The manufacturing component recovered from -37 to -20, and the non-manufacturing component also increased from -21 to -11. Notably, the recovery is broad-based with improvement in both supply and demand conditions. 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 mostly positive: The Markit Manufacturing PMI increased from 55.6 to 57.3 in December. The services index also increased from 47.6 to 49.9. The unemployment rate slightly increased from 4.8% to 4.9% in October. However, average earnings increased by 2.7% year-on-year for the 3 months to October. Headline retail price inflation fell from 1.3% to 0.9% year-on-year in November. The British pound surged by 2.4% this week. The Bank of England kept its interest rate on hold at 0.1% this week, unanimously voted by the monetary policy committee. The Bank’s bond-buying program will also stay unchanged at £895 billion. While Brexit uncertainty persists, we believe that the pound is still undervalued and has room to appreciate. 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: The Commonwealth Bank Manufacturing PMI slightly increased from 55.8 to 56 in December. The Services PMI also increased from 55.4 to 57.4. On the employment front, the unemployment rate declined from 7% to 6.8% in November. 90,000 positions were added last month, including 84,200 full-time jobs and 5,800 part-time jobs. The Australian dollar appreciated by 1.8% against the US dollar this week. In the RBA meeting minutes released this week, the RBA lifted the GDP growth expectations for the last quarter of 2020. The RBA noted that recovery had established reasonable momentum and that employment had recovered faster than anticipated. We continue to favor the Australian dollar amid the brighter economic outlook. 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
Recent data in New Zealand have been positive: GDP grew by 14% quarter-on-quarter in Q3, or 0.4% year-on-year. The current account deficit narrowed to NZ$3.5 billion in Q3, from a NZ$6.7 billion deficit in the same quarter last year. Year to date, the current account deficit represents only 0.8% of GDP, the lowest over the past 19 years. The New Zealand dollar appreciated by 1.5% against the US dollar this week. The Westpac Survey showed that New Zealand’s consumer confidence index rebounded significantly from 95.1 in September to 106 in December. Both present and expected conditions have greatly improved. With the government having controlled the spread of Covid-19, the services sector is expected to recover heading into the new year. 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 solid: Headline consumer price inflation increased from 0.7% to 1% year-on-year in November. Core inflation also jumped from 1% to 1.5% year-on-year. ADP employment recorded an increase of 40,800 jobs in November. Housing starts rose by 14.4% month-on-month to 246,033 units in November. The Canadian dollar appreciated by 0.7% against the US dollar this week, lagging other currencies. During a speech this week, Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem warned against another coronavirus wave during the holiday season. He also mentioned that “the economic recovery from the pandemic is at a very difficult stage.” We expect the BoC to passively fight additional currency strength. 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 mostly positive: Exports rose by 4.8% month-on-month to CHF 18.8 billion in November. Imports were up 4.2% month-on-month to CHF 15.7 billion. The trade surplus widened to CHF 3.1 billion from CHF 2.9 billion the previous month. Producer and import prices fell by 2.7% year-on-year in November. The Swiss franc appreciated by 0.7% against the US dollar this week. On Thursday, the SNB kept its interest rate unchanged at -0.75%, the lowest worldwide. Moreover, SNB Chairman Thomas Jordan acknowledged that the Bank has made “considerable FX purchases” this year and that interventions were necessary to stabilize the franc, given large safe-haven inflows during the economic crisis. We are long EUR/CHF in our FX portfolio and are currently 1.6% in the money. 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
Recent data from Norway have been soft: The trade surplus narrowed from NOK 2.7 billion to NOK 0.2 billion in December. The Norwegian krone surged by 3% against the US dollar this week. This Thursday, the Norges Bank kept its interest rate at 0% as expected, while implying that it may be able to raise rates earlier than expected. In the latest “Economic Trends for Norway and Abroad” report, Statistics Norway also noted that “vaccination is likely to push up interest rates next year,” as the impact of the pandemic diminishes. The Norges Bank is among the central banks that are likely to gradually raise rates early. Long NOK remains our high-conviction view. 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 negative: The unemployment rate increased to 7.7% in November, up 0.9% from the same month last year. The Swedish krona surged by 2.5% against the US dollar this week amid broad dollar weakness. The latest “Labor Force Survey” released this Thursday noted that Sweden’s labor market recovery remains subdued. In November 2020, there were 5,062,000 employed people, which is 78,000 less than the same month last year. The average number of hours worked in November also fell by 3.9% year-on-year. That said, the Swedish krona remains one of the most attractive G10 currencies based on its cheap valuation and positive growth outlook. Kelly Zhong Research Analyst 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
This is our last report of this year. We will resume publications in January. The EM strategy team wishes you a happy holiday season and a prosperous new year. Chart Of The weekFiscal Thrust Is A Major Negative In 2021
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Emerging market equities, currencies and credit markets are facing crosscurrents. On the positive side, their business cycle will continue to improve, albeit from very low levels, and there is too much money chasing fewer securities globally. On the other hand, several factors argue for a shakeout in EM financial markets: (1) peak investor sentiment and positioning, (2) peak stimulus and continued regulatory tightening in China and (3) the negative fiscal thrust in the US as well as in EM ex-China, Korea and Taiwan. Our Chart of the Week illustrates that the aggregate fiscal thrust in EM ex-China, Korea and Taiwan will be -2.7% of GDP in 2021. The charts on the following pages illustrate these positives and negatives. With such factors in mind, EM risk assets should price in those negatives and work out excesses before resuming their uptrend. Hence, our best hunch is that a potential shakeout is likely to occur before a breakout. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com EM ex-China: Fiscal Thrust And New Covid Cases In many emerging economies, the good news about the vaccines could be offset by a negative fiscal thrust in 2021. Brazil, Peru, Poland and Hungary stand out as those economies facing the most negative fiscal thrust in 2021. Brazil is in an especially precarious position and is facing a dilemma: financial markets might sell off in the wake of fiscal stimulus or the economy will relapse again if fiscal policy is not eased substantially. Chart 1
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 2EM ex-China: Fiscal Thrust And New Covid Cases
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 3EM ex-China: Fiscal Thrust And New Covid Cases
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Will EM Share Prices Break Out? EM equity prices have risen back to their highs of the last decade. Will they break out and enter a secular bull market? In our outlook report for 2021, for the first time in the past 10 years we suggested that odds of a breakout next year are more than 50%. Nevertheless, it could be preceded by a shakeout. The following pages contain many indicators and charts that highlight both upside and downside risks. Watching emerging Asian credit markets is essential: if the excess return on high-yield corporate bonds breaks out above investment grade bonds, odds of a breakout will rise. Chart 4Will EM Share Prices Break Out?
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 5Will EM Share Prices Break Out?
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 6Will EM Share Prices Break Out?
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Outside The US, Global Equities Have Not Broken Out Yet Only US stocks have had a broad-based breakout – both large and small caps as well as the equal-weighted index. Global ex-US equity indexes have not yet broken out above their previous highs. Chart 7Outside The US, Global Equities Have Not Broken Out Yet
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 8Outside The US, Global Equities Have Not Broken Out Yet
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 9Outside The US, Global Equities Have Not Broken Out Yet
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 10Outside The US, Global Equities Have Not Broken Out Yet
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Too Much Money Chasing Fewer Securities One major reason to expect breakouts in global ex-US share prices is too much money chasing fewer securities. The current round of QEs is producing ballooning broad money supply worldwide. Such a powerful boost to broad money supply is a major departure for QE programs from those of the last decade. We discussed those differences in the following special report: Dissecting The Impact Of QE Programs On Asset Prices And Inflation. Chart 11Too Much Money Chasing Fewer Securities
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 12Too Much Money Chasing Fewer Securities
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 13Too Much Money Chasing Fewer Securities
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 14Too Much Money Chasing Fewer Securities
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
EM/China EPS Recovery To Continue In H1 2021 As previous stimulus packages continue to work their way through the Chinese economy, its business cycle will remain robust in H1 2021. Reviving business and consumer confidence will reinforce it. EM corporate profits will continue recovering in H1 2021. Chart 15EM/China EPS Recovery To Continue In H1 2021
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 16EM/China EPS Recovery To Continue In H1 2021
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 17EM/China EPS Recovery To Continue In H1 2021
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 18EM/China EPS Recovery To Continue In H1 2021
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Global Business Cycle And Investor Expectations Global trade and manufacturing have staged a strong comeback but investor/analyst expectations are already very elevated. Chart 19Global Business Cycle And Investor Expectations
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 20Global Business Cycle And Investor Expectations
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 21Global Business Cycle And Investor Expectations
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 22Global Business Cycle And Investor Expectations
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Growth In EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan In EM ex-China, Korea and Taiwan, the economic activity will continue to improve, albeit from very low levels. Chart 23Growth In EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 24Growth In EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 25Growth In EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 26Growth In EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Investor Sentiment On Stocks The latest Bank of America Merrill Lynch survey noted that investor overweights in EM stocks and commodities are the highest since November 2010 and February 2011, respectively. Overall investor "risk on" optimism is the highest since early 2011. Our charts corroborate extremely bullish investor sentiment. Chart 27Investor Sentiment on Stocks
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 28Investor Sentiment on Stocks
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 29Investor Sentiment on Stocks
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Red Flag For Chinese Equities Rising corporate bond yields in China’s onshore bond market are not an impediment to rising Chinese share prices as long as forward EPS net revisions are also rising. Recently, not only have onshore corporate bond yields risen but also forward EPS net revisions have rolled over. Such a combination does not bode well for Chinese equities. Chart 30Red Flag For Chinese Equities
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
China’s Monetary Conditions Have Tightened In China, monetary conditions have tightened as real (inflation-adjusted) interest rates have risen considerably and the RMB has appreciated. Such tightening has historically heralded a shakeout in the domestic A-share market and industrial metals prices. Chart 31China's Monetary Conditions Have Tightened
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 32China's Monetary Conditions Have Tightened
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Message From Chinese Equities Chinese cyclical equity sectors and small cap stocks have paused or have had a small setback despite strong economic numbers. This could be a roadmap for DM and EM share prices in the coming months. Chart 33Message From Chinese Equities
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 34Message From Chinese Equities
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Message From Chinese Equities China’s A-share index and relative performance of Chinese cyclical stocks versus defensive ones point to a halt in the EM and commodities rallies. Chart 35Message From Chinese Equities
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 36Message From Chinese Equities
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
China: Peak Stimulus The PBoC has been withdrawing liquidity from the banking system — the seasonally-adjusted excess reserves ratio has been trending lower. This points to a peak in the credit impulse. Reduced central and local government bonds issuance entails a crest in the fiscal stimulus. Chart 37China: Peak Stimulus
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 38China: Peak Stimulus
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 39China: Peak Stimulus
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 40China: Peak Stimulus
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
China Stimulus And EM Stocks And Commodities Cycles in the adjusted Total Social Financing (TSF) lead fluctuations in EM equity and industrial metals prices. Can EM and commodities break out despite the peak stimulus in China? They have not been able to do so in the past 10 years. Stay tuned. Chart 41China Stimulus and EM Stocks And Commodities
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 42China Stimulus and EM Stocks And Commodities
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
The US Dollar Is Very Oversold And Is Due For A Rebound Following the 2016 US elections, the US dollar rallied strongly for several weeks before selling off violently. It seems that the broad trade-weighted dollar is now following a reverse pattern. The US dollar in 2016 is shown inverted in this chart. The greenback was selling off before the 2020 US elections and has since continued to weaken. If this reverse pattern is to play out, the US dollar will near its bottom soon and then stage a playable rebound. Chart 43The US Dollar Is Very Oversold and Is Due For A Rebound
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 44The US Dollar Is Very Oversold and Is Due For A Rebound
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Several Indicators Herald A US Dollar Rebound The relative outperformance of the US equal-weighted equity index against its global peers and the recent relapse in a cyclical European currency (the Swedish krona) versus a defensive currency (the Swiss franc) point to a potential rebound in the US dollar. Chart 45Several Indicators Herald A US Dollar Rebound
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 46Several Indicators Herald A US Dollar Rebound
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 47Several Indicators Herald A US Dollar Rebound
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Commodities Prices Have Surged Recently Many commodities prices have recently spiked after the notable rally from their March/April lows. Is the latest spike the final climax phase of the cyclical rally? If yes, China-related plays might have approached a major peak. Chart 48Commodities Prices Have Surged Recently
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 49Commodities Prices Have Surged Recently
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
The Latest Rebound In Oil Prices Is Unsustainable The US and European mobility index points to lower gasoline consumption. Critically, the rise in US oil inventories (shown inverted) points to a drop in crude prices. Chart 50The Latest Rebound In Oil Prices Is Unsustainable
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 51The Latest Rebound In Oil Prices Is Unsustainable
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 52The Latest Rebound In Oil Prices Is Unsustainable
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
The Long-Term Oil Outlook Global oil demand will rise next year, as the deployment of the coronavirus vaccines revives mobility and travel. However, greater demand will be offset by higher crude production in 2021. The long-term oil outlook is dismal as the OPEC+ arrangement of suppressing crude output will likely prove unsustainable. In turn, oil consumption will be suppressed by green policies. Notably, long-term (three- and five-year) oil price forwards have failed to advance. Chart 53The Long-Term Oil Outlook Chinese Oil Imports Have Slowed
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 54The Long-Term Oil Outlook Oil Production Will Rise For Major Producers
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 55The Long-Term Oil Outlook Long-Term Oil Prices Remain Depressed
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 56The Long-Term Oil Outlook
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
EM Fixed-Income Markets EM sovereign and corporate credit spreads (shown inverted on the chart) move in tandem with commodities prices and EM exchange rates. We continue to recommend receiving 10-year swap rates in Mexico, Colombia, Russia, Malaysia, India and China. In the long run, EM currencies are attractive versus the US dollar. Investors should consider buying cash bonds on potential EM currency weakness. Chart 57EM Fixed-Income Markets
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 58EM Fixed-Income Markets
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 59EM Fixed-Income Markets
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 60EM Fixed-Income Markets EM Currencies Are Cheap
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
A Peak In Copper And Iron Ore Prices Copper and iron ore prices are vulnerable going into 2021 due to various factors elaborated in our two recent in-depth special reports. Chart 61A Peak In Copper And Iron Ore Prices
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 62A Peak In Copper And Iron Ore Prices
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 63A Peak In Copper And Iron Ore Prices
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Five High-Conviction Strategies / Trades Long global value / short Chinese value stocks; Stay neutral on EM versus DM equities; Continue receiving select EM 10-year swap rates (please refer page 21); Stay short a basket of high-beta EM currencies versus an equal-weighted basket of the euro, CHF and JPY; Stay long EM consumer staples / short EM bank stocks. Chart 64Five High-Conviction Strategies/Trades
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 65Five High-Conviction Strategies/Trades
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 66Five High-Conviction Strategies/Trades
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Chart 67Five High-Conviction Strategies/Trades
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Charts That Matter: Crosscurrents
Footnotes Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
Feature Feature ChartEconomies Have Already Snapped Back
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
In this final report of a tumultuous 2020, we present our key views for 2021 in the form of ten questions and answers during a recent conversation with a client. 1. Let’s begin with a blunt question. How can your views ever anticipate a shock such as this year’s once-in-a-century pandemic? Nobody can predict when, where, or how a shock will come. But what we can, and should, always do is gauge the fragility of the market to an incoming shock, whatever that unknown shock might be. Before the pandemic struck, both our 2020 key views and our first report of this year, Markets Are Fractally Fragile, pointed out that a fragile market was vulnerable to “the tiniest of straws that could break its back.” Right now, markets are close to a similar point of fragility. 2. What is the specific source of market fragility right now? The fragility is that tech stock valuations have become hyper-dependent on low bond yields in a so-called ‘rational bubble’. Specifically, the (earnings) yield premium on tech stocks versus the 10-year bond yield is at its 2.5 percent lower threshold that has signalled four previous fragilities in February 2018, October 2018, April 2019, and January 2020 (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Tech Stock Valuations Are Fragile
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
These previous fragilities resulted in an exhaustion, or worse, a correction, in tech stocks, and by extension in the overall market. The upshot is that a meaningful rise in bond yields could once again undermine the stock market. 3. But I thought that higher bond yields were good for stocks, if the higher bond yields imply that growth is accelerating? Not necessarily. Yes, a stock price is proportional to growth, but it is also inversely proportional to the discount rate, which is the required return that investors demand to hold it. If the discount rate increases by more than growth, then the stock price will fall, not rise. The discount rate equals the bond yield plus the equity risk premium. At ultra-low yields, the two components move together. This is because when the bond yield declines towards its lower bound, the bond price carries less upside versus downside and thereby more risk. Meaning that in relative terms, equities require a smaller risk premium. When bond yields increase, the opposite is true – both the bond yield and the equity risk premium rise together (Chart I-3). Chart I-3AUltra-Low Bond Yields Have Created The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Chart I-3BUltra-Low Bond Yields Have Created The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
The result is that growth would have to increase very sharply to counter the large rise in the bond yield plus equity risk premium. 4. But 2021-22 are likely to be years of very strong growth just like the post-recession years 2009-10, right? Wrong. You see, after a slump the strongest growth occurs in the sharp snapback of lost output, and most of this sharp snapback has already happened. In 2008-09, the US and German economies shrank for four quarters. It then took five quarters of strong growth to recover two-thirds of this lost output. But in 2020, everything has happened at quintuple-speed. It has taken just one quarter to recover two-thirds of the lost output, and by the end of this year US GDP will be almost back to its pre-pandemic level (Feature Chart and Chart I-4). Chart I-4Economies Have Already Snapped Back
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
This is because we quickly realised that even in a full-scale pandemic, 90 percent of economic activity can continue with face masks and social distancing. The activities that are most disrupted – retail, hospitality, and transport – account for just 10 percent of output. Meanwhile, China, which on some measures is the world’s largest economy, is already ‘back to normal’ because its effective track-and-trace system has circumvented the need for face masks and social distancing. The upshot is that, as far as global economic output is concerned, most of the powerful snapback has already happened. 5. But if economic output has largely recovered, why does it not feel like it has? For three reasons. First, the most disrupted activities comprise so-called ‘social consumption’ such as going to bars and restaurants, having friends round for dinner, and going on holiday. In other words, all the fun things in life. Although these activities account for just 10 percent of economic output, they likely account for a much bigger proportion of our happiness. Second, we are producing and consuming the 90 percent of undisrupted output differently. For example, working from home, doing business meetings virtually, and doing our shopping on-line. Crucially, much of this ‘new-normal’ is here to stay even when the pandemic ends. Third, although the disrupted activities account for just 10 percent of output, they account for a very significant 25 percent of all jobs. Meaning that the jobs market has not snapped back to the same extent as output. Indeed, permanent unemployment continues to rise (Chart I-5). Chart I-5Permanent Unemployment Continues To Rise
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Alas, the jobs market will take a long time to fully recover even when the pandemic ends. This is because the new-normal way of producing and consuming will permanently scar traditionally high-employment sectors such as retail and hospitality. Constituting a major economic fragility in the new-normal (Table I-1). Table I-1Retail And Hospitality Employ 25 Percent Of All Workers
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
6. All of which means inflation stays below the 2 percent target, right? Right. But your question should be framed differently. You see, inflation is a non-linear system with two states: price stability and price instability. You can shift an economy between these two states, but you cannot hit an arbitrary target like 2 percent, 3 percent, or 5 percent. So, your question should be, will developed economies stay in the state of price stability? And the answer is yes, because it is the much better state to be in, and it took decades of blood, sweat and tears to achieve. Nevertheless, any government can flip its economy into the state of price instability if it so desires. Just look at Turkey. A warning sign is that the central bank loses its independence, enabling it to monetise government debt. That’s the warning sign to look out for. 7. Talking of fragility in a new-normal, hasn’t the double whammy of Brexit and the pandemic weakened the EU? No, quite the contrary. As Jean Monnet, a founding father of the EU, said: “Europe will be forged in crises.” And he was right. Each of the last three crises has strengthened the EU’s architecture. The euro debt crisis added the missing ‘lender of last resort to sovereigns’ weapon into the ECB armoury – a weapon whose mere presence means it has never had to be used. Brexit removed the most troublesome member from the EU fold, as well as demonstrating how costly it is to exit. And the pandemic has allowed the EU to smash two major taboos: explicit fiscal transfers across countries, and the large-scale issuance of common EU bonds. All of which means that the yield spreads on euro area ‘periphery’ bonds over Germany and France will continue to tighten, and ultimately disappear altogether (Chart I-6). Chart I-6The Yield Spread On Euro Periphery Bonds Will Vanish
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
8. What about the prospects for the UK outside the EU? Like all divorces, Brexit is a gain of self-determination for a loss of wealth. Hence, since the Brexit vote in 2016, the UK economy has flipped from outperformer to underperformer (Chart I-7). Chart I-7The UK Economy Has Flipped From Outperformer To Underperformer
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
The UK economy will continue to underperform until it forges a fresh purpose and role as a newfound singleton on the world stage. 9. Turning to investments, will the 2020 losers become the 2021 winners, and vice-versa? No, that’s an over-simplification. For example, for bonds to lose their 2020 winnings, yields would have to back up a lot. But as we’ve already discussed, that would burst the ‘rational bubble’ in tech stocks, undermine the stock market, and put renewed downward pressure on bond yields. In which case, banks will struggle to sustain any outperformance (Chart I-8). Meaning that ‘value’ will struggle to sustain any outperformance. Hence, a much smarter strategy is to switch between winners and losers within ‘growth’ and within ‘value’. Specifically, overweight healthcare versus tech, and overweight utilities versus banks. Chart I-8Bank Relative Performance Tracks The Bond Yield
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Of course, sector allocations always carry implications for regional and country equity allocation. The main implications are to overweight Europe versus Emerging Markets (Chart I-9), and to overweight Developed Markets versus Emerging Markets. Chart I-9Europe Vs. EM = Healthcare Vs. Tech
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
10. Finally, what about your long-term recommendations? This brings us full circle to the first question. While we could not predict the pandemic, all our four mega-themes for the 2020s proved to be successful, and in some cases very successful. A hypersensitivity to higher interest rates. Overweight equities versus bonds. Europe conquers its disintegration forces. Overweight European currencies. Non-China exposed investments outperform. Underweight materials and resources. The rise of blockchain and alternative energy. Overweight alternative energy, underweight oil and gas, and underweight financials. Given their long-term nature, these structural recommendations are as appropriate today as they were a year ago. And with that, it is time to sign off on a tumultuous 2020 and usher in 2021, a year which we define as Fragility In A New-Normal. We wish you and your families a safe and healthy holiday season, and a less tumultuous 2021. Fractal Trading System* This week’s recommended trade is to go long US utilities (XLU) versus US materials (XLB). Set the profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 5.7 percent. In other trades, short European retail (EXH8) versus the market (STOXX) achieved its 4.2 percent profit target at which it was closed. The rolling 12-month win ratio now stands at 61 percent. Chart I-10
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
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 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-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views
Fragility In A New-Normal: 2021 Key Views