Currencies
Highlights Three tail risks will continue to dominate the FX market narrative in the coming weeks: The upcoming November elections, Brexit, and the new wave of COVID-19 infections. As such, markets remain vulnerable in the near term and the dollar will continue to benefit from safe-haven flows. That said, most sentiment and technical indicators suggest the dollar is undergoing a countertrend bounce rather than entering a new bull market. Stay short USD/JPY as a core holding. Look to rebuy a basket of Scandinavian currencies versus the USD and EUR at a trigger point of -2%. Overall, the DXY should continue to face significant headwinds in the 94-96 zone, as we have witnessed recently. Feature US political risk remains the key “white swan” risk for currency markets. Unfortunately for investors, this week’s US presidential debate was full of theatrics and low on content. CNN polling showed that former Vice President Joe Biden was the preferred candidate going into the debate, and emerged as the interim winner. To be sure, the CNN polls are biased, with more contribution from Democratic voters compared to Republican ones. That said, it certainly helped that despite President Donald Trump’s constant jawboning, the former Vice President appeared unfazed and managed to slip in some of the key points of his political campaign. A Debate Post-Mortem Chart I-1The Dollar And Political Uncertainty
The Dollar And Political Uncertainty
The Dollar And Political Uncertainty
The political theater is likely to continue in the coming days. In terms of timelines, we have the Vice-Presidential debate on October 7 and the second and third Presidential debates on October 15 and October 22. But the most important dilemma for currency markets is not whether we have a Democratic or Republican victory, but if the US becomes the source of political uncertainty compared to the rest of the world. For almost two decades, the most important political driver of the dollar was whether uncertainty in the US was rising or falling relative to the rest of the world (Chart I-1). As markets begin to digest the political outcomes, the ultimate conclusion could be dollar bearish. Let’s start with what is priced in. Political uncertainty in the US has surged relative to the rest of the world as mentioned above. Part of the reason is that betting markets now expect a “blue wave” (Chart I-2). This was reinforced by the Presidential debates where former VP Biden was the preferred candidate (Chart I-3). A blue wave implies that Bidens wins the White House while Democrats gain control of the Senate, and retain the House. Chart I-2ABetting Markets Expect A Blue Wave
Tail Risks In FX Markets
Tail Risks In FX Markets
Chart I-2BBetting Markets Expect A Blue Wave
Tail Risks In FX Markets
Tail Risks In FX Markets
Chart I-3AFormer Vice President Joe Biden Was A Favorite
Tail Risks In FX Markets
Tail Risks In FX Markets
Chart I-3BFormer Vice President Joe Biden Was A Favorite
Tail Risks In FX Markets
Tail Risks In FX Markets
Such a victory will lead to massive fiscal stimulus, since Democratic leaders have been more aggressive in their demands for a greater government role in the economy. Bigger fiscal spending will lead to a higher US debt burden, widen the twin deficits and be only modestly positive for bond yields given that the Federal Reserve will anchor short term rates at zero. If US inflation takes off from increased aggregate demand, foreign bond investors are likely to continue fleeing the US market as real rates become even more negative, driving down the dollar in the process. Admittedly, there has been a small uptick in political uncertainty in the world relative to the US. President Donald Trump’s approval rating is closely correlated to the state of the economy and the US has been in a V-shaped recovery since the second quarter of this year. But as Chart I-2 shows, the probability of a Republican victory from betting markets has fallen recently. A Trump victory will ensure that the policies that have been favorable for markets since 2016 remain in place. Vice President Joe Biden’s hawkish tax policies, which he stuck with in the debate, will also be off the table. In terms of calculus, Senate Republicans may have to give in to more stimulus before the election to grease the wheels of the economy and support asset prices, which will otherwise fall and torpedo their chances. The most favorable outcome for markets could potentially be for Biden to clinch the White House and the Republicans to maintain control of the Senate. For one, it is likely that taxes will not go up as aggressively as Biden is proposing to raise them, while the likelihood of a global trade war will also fall. The dollar’s safe-haven bid will also fade, as capital starts to gravitate from the US towards other cheaper and beaten-up markets. What, then, are the bullish scenarios for the dollar? Chart I-4Swing State Wages Turning Up
Swing State Wages Turning Up
Swing State Wages Turning Up
First, a failure to pass a stimulus bill will boost the dollar, hijack the recovery, and cause a setback to risk assets. Second, big swings in Trump’s approval ratings will raise the prospect of a contested election. According to our Chief Geopolitical Strategist Matt Gertken, his in-house quantitative election model now pins the probability of a Trump victory at almost 50%. Remarkably, Michigan has risen to the ranks of a toss-up state, as economic indicators have drastically improved. In a nutshell, a V-shaped recovery in wages for the swing states that voted for President Trump boost his chances (Chart I-4). However, these are likely short-term hiccups that will ultimately be resolved. The base case is still for a Democratic win, according to Matt. Either way, we will know who the US President is by December (or, worst case, by January) and a new fiscal bill is likely to be passed, regardless of who sits in the White House. Forward-looking financial markets, by then, will have stopped discounting political uncertainty as they currently are. Therefore, as we argued last week, we continue to pay heed to both sentiment and technical indicators that suggest the dollar is in a counter-trend bounce, rather than a renewed bull market. What About The COVID-19 Saga? Unfortunately for markets, the US presidential election is not the only source of uncertainty. As we approach the winter season in the northern hemisphere, the potential for a new wave of infections is rising. As we approach the winter season in the northern hemisphere, the potential for a new wave of infections is rising. We are already in full lockdown in Montreal, Quebec, where BCA Research's headquarters are located. Around the G10, a second wave is taking hold in the euro area, UK, and Canada. Even Norway and Switzerland, which had managed to keep the virus under wraps for most of the summer, are seeing a resurgence in cases. Infection trends remain favorable in Australia, Japan, New Zealand, and Sweden, probably due to previous localized lockdowns in most of these countries (Chart I-5). Chart I-5A New COVID-19 Wave
A New COVID-19 Wave
A New COVID-19 Wave
The most direct impact for currency markets is relative economic growth. For much of the summer months, the US was under siege from a second wave while the Eurozone, and many other countries, were well into their reopening phases. This affected currency markets (Chart I-6). Specifically, the dollar declined as economic momentum was higher outside the US. More recently, improving relative economic performance between the US and other G10 countries has been a key catalyst behind the dollar’s recent strength (Chart I-7). Chart I-6Rising US Cases And A Fiscal Logjam
Rising US Cases And A Fiscal Logjam
Rising US Cases And A Fiscal Logjam
Chart I-7The Dollar And Relative Growth
The Dollar And Relative Growth
The Dollar And Relative Growth
Going forward, the potential impact from COVID-19 is likely to be much less than what many economies endured for the first half of 2020. There are a few reasons for this. The virus has become less deadly, as mortality rates across many countries have come down. This could be due to a higher incidence of infections among younger people, who are also healthier, or due to the widespread wearing of masks, which has helped mitigate the viral load. Governments are unlikely to introduce the kind of widespread lockdowns we saw during the onset of the outbreak. More likely are localized lockdowns, such as what we are experiencing here in Quebec, and stringent rules on sanitation and social distancing. We are closer to a vaccine than we were at the start of the year. According to Bio, an association of biotechnology and health care companies, there are currently 739 unique active compounds in development spanning the range from vaccines and antivirals to treatments for COVID-19. Almost 20 of these are in Phase 4 trial. Overall, there are 189 vaccines under trial, a big jump up from nil at the start of the year. Chart I-8Lots Of Fiscal Stimulus In Canada
Tail Risks In FX Markets
Tail Risks In FX Markets
The big risk is that governments fail to provide fiscal help to bridge economies until the widespread availability of a vaccine. However, outside the US, that does not appear to be the case. For example, during his Throne Speech last week, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau vowed to do “whatever it takes” to support people and businesses throughout the crisis. The Liberal government has just followed up with a C$10 billion infrastructure spending plan. Fitch Ratings estimates that the budget deficit in Canada will still remain wide going into 2022 (Chart I-8). In Australia, the Liberal-National coalition government has also been very proactive, especially with the “Job Seeker” and “Job Keeper” scheme, which has provided a valuable cushion for domestic economic conditions. The IMF estimates the fiscal thrust in Australia will be positive in 2021. In the euro area, there is still a 750 billion euro stimulus package to be deployed, while France announced a 100 billion euro plan last month. The bottom line is that while the pandemic is likely to induce more shockwaves into markets, spending gridlock appears to be concentrated within the US. At a minimum, this will limit any upside bounce in the dollar, since it will hurt US economic growth relative to its G-10 peers. An Update On Brexit Chart I-9EUR/GBP Bets Are Lopsided
EUR/GBP Bets Are Lopsided
EUR/GBP Bets Are Lopsided
As the pandemic returns in full force again in the UK, political uncertainty is also rising. Brussels is suing the UK on the new “internal market bill” that violates the Brexit withdrawal agreement. The key issue is still Northern Ireland. Last year, the agreement was that Ireland would remain bound to the EU’s customs and trade regime. The UK is seeking an amendment to be able to intervene, if there is “inconsistency or incompatibility with international or domestic law.” As we posited two weeks ago, it provided for UK discretion in state aid and the movement of goods to and from Northern Ireland, which the EU argues is a clear breach of the last year’s treaty. From the UK point of view, if there is no trade deal, why would it allow a division to emerge within its own national borders? It is remarkable that despite the ramp up in tensions, the GBP/USD remains well bid above 1.28. Odds of a “hard” Brexit have usually been associated with cable near 1.20. This suggests two things: Either we are in a new paradigm, where the dollar is winning the “ugly contest,” or the market is underestimating the potential for a hard Brexit. Fitch estimates that the budget deficit in Canada will still remain wide going into 2022. We subscribe to the former view. First, because the British government has nothing to gain from failing to agree to a trade deal, since the recession would only deepen, while it has much to lose, since the Scottish independence movement would likely gain steam. Second, risk reversals between cable and the euro are close to the post-referendum lows. This means that investors have already built significant put options on the pound, and call options on the euro (Chart I-9). Our base case remains that a deal will ultimately be reached. The UK side has a more resurgent pandemic to deal with, and will need to offer some concessions to ease economic volatility. Trade links between the two are also quite large. In terms of targets, cable will trade between 1.35-1.40 over the next six months. In an optimistic scenario, the pound could go 20%-25% higher. The pound is also cheap versus the euro — another sign that the market is not underestimating the no-deal exit risk. Ergo, shorting EUR/GBP (or being long EUR/GBP volatility) should be a good short-term bet on an eventual resolution. Investment Implications We continue to advocate for a prudent strategy when trading foreign exchange markets over the next few weeks: Hold some portfolio protection. Our preferred vehicle is the Japanese yen, which is cheap, although the pricier Swiss franc also make sense. Focus on trades at the crosses. We are short the NZD/CAD and EUR/GBP as a play on relative fundamentals, but are also looking to buy EUR/CHF on weakness and sell CAD/NOK on strength. We will discuss our CAD strategy in the coming weeks. Buy Scandinavian currencies if they drop another 2% versus an equal weighted basket of the euro and USD (Chart I-10). We initially took profits on this trade a fortnight ago, booking solid gains. Stay short the gold/silver ratio but tighten stops to 84. Chart I-10The Scandinavian Currencies Remain Cheap
The Scandinavian Currencies Remain Cheap
The Scandinavian Currencies Remain Cheap
Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
Chart II-2USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
Recent data from the US have been mostly positive: The ISM Manufacturing PMI marginally declined from 56 to 55.4 in September. The new orders component slipped but remained elevated at 60.2. The Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index increased from 8 to 13.6 in September. The Chicago Manufacturing Index surged from 51.2 to 62.4 in September. Durable goods orders increased by 0.4% month-on-month in August. Initial jobless claims increased by 837K for the week ending on September 25. The DXY index fell by 0.6% this week. Market uncertainty continues as the election draws closer and the number of COVID cases keeps rising. The New York Fed Staff Nowcast revised Q4 GDP downward to 5.05% from 7.28% earlier this month. While risks remain tilted to the downside, any positive news on a vaccine and stimulus could revive risk sentiment, which is negative for the US dollar. Report Links: The Message From Dollar Sentiment And Technical Indicators - Sept. 25, 2020 Addressing Client Questions - Sept. 4, 2020 A Simple Framework For Currencies - July 17, 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 mixed: The Economic Sentiment Indicator increased from 87.5 to 91.1 in September. The Producer Price Index declined by 2.5% year-on-year in August. The unemployment rate ticked slightly up from 8 to 8.1% in August. The euro rebounded by 0.7% against the US dollar this week. The latest EU Economic Sentiment Indicator suggests that the economy continues to recover, albeit at a slower speed than expected. The resurgence of COVID cases might also lead to downward revisions to the Q4 growth outlook, which could trigger further stimulus from the ECB. Report Links: Addressing Client Questions - September 4, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 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 improving: Tokyo’s headline inflation declined from 0.3% to 0.2% year-on-year in September. Core inflation remained negative at -0.2% year-on-year. Vehicle sales contracted by 15.6% year-on-year in September. August saw a contraction of -18.5%. Industrial production rose by 1.7% month-on-month in August, while construction orders surged by 28.5% year-on-year in August. The Japanese yen has been flat against the US dollar this week. Japan’s Q3 Tankan Survey released this Thursday suggests that manufacturers’ sentiment has improved for the first time in three years, showing signs of a recovery supported by pent-up demand. The Japanese yen remains our favorite safe-haven hedge. Report Links: The Near-Term Bull Case For The Dollar - February 28, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 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 from the UK have been positive: The current account deficit narrowed from £20.8 billion to £2.8 billion in Q2. Nationwide housing prices increased by 5% year-on-year in September. Mortgage approvals surged by 84.7K in August. The British pound appreciated by 0.3% against the US dollar this week. The chief economist from the BoE, Andy Haldane, downplayed the possibility of negative interest rates in the UK in a speech on Wednesday. According to the speech, current conditions don’t warrant any further lowering of interest rates, which is positive for the British pound. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 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 from Australia have been positive: Building permits fell by 1.6% month-on-month in August, following a 12.2% surge in the previous month. On a year-on-year basis, the August figure grew by 0.6% compared to the same month last year. The AiG Manufacturing PMI slipped from 49.3 to 46.7 in September. However, the final Markit Manufacturing PMI ticked up from 53.6 to 55.4. The Australian dollar increased by 1.6% against the US dollar this week. COVID-19 cases in Australia remain at low levels. As such, the Aussie has benefitted tremendously from the reflation trade. We remain positive on the Aussie both at the crosses as well as versus the USD. 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 from New Zealand have been positive: Building permits increased by 0.3% month-on-month in August. The ANZ Business Confidence Index declined slightly from -26 to -28.5 in September, while the ANZ Activity Outlook Index improved from -9.9 to -5.4. The New Zealand dollar appreciated by 1.4% against the US dollar this week. While the New Zealand dollar might outperform the US dollar as the growth outlook improves, it remains likely to underperform at the crosses due to a more dovish RBNZ. Moreover, our FX model downgraded the kiwi to neutral for the month of October. Tactically, we are also short NZD/CAD. 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 positive: GDP expanded by 3% month-on-month in July. Building permits increased by 1.7% month-on-month in August. The Bloomberg Nanos confidence Index slightly ticked up from 53.1 to 53.2 for the week ending on September 25. The Canadian dollar increased by 0.7% against the US dollar this week. According to Statistics Canada, the economy expanded for a third consecutive month in July as more sectors reopened in the summer. Notably, all 20 industrial sectors posted gains in July. We continue to favor the Canadian dollar against the US dollar and will discuss the loonie more in-depth in the coming weeks. Report Links: Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
Recent data from Switzerland have been mixed: The KOF Leading Indicator increased from 110.2 to 113.8 in September. Headline inflation increased from -0.9% to -0.8% year-on-year in September but remains deep in negative territory. Real retail sales increased by 2.5% year-on-year in August. Total sight deposits increased from CHF 703.9 billion to CHF 704.5 billion for the week ending on September 25. The Swiss franc appreciated by 1% against the US dollar this week. The KOF survey highlighted that Switzerland is in a V-shaped recovery. However, deflation remains pervasive, suggesting a strong franc could torpedo the recovery. We continue to expect the SNB to step up the pace of intervention, and are buyers of EUR/CHF on weakness. Report Links: On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 Portfolio Tweaks Before The Chinese New Year - January 24, 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 positive: Real retail sales expanded by 8.2% year-on-year, following a 13.8% surge the previous month. The Norwegian krone rose by 2.2% against the US dollar this week. The latest data from Statistics Norway showed strength in retail sales across various categories, especially in household equipment, recreational goods, food and beverages. We remain NOK bulls based on our positive energy price outlook, the resilience in domestic demand and a less dovish central bank. 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 positive: The Swedbank Manufacturing PMI increased from 53.4 to 55.3 in September. Retail sales grew by 3% year-on-year in August. Consumer confidence increased from 85.1 to 88.3 in September. The trade balance shifted from a surplus of SEK 4 billion to a deficit of 1.6 billion in August. The Swedish krona rebounded by 1.6% against the US dollar this week. We continue to like the Swedish krona along with the Norwegian krone. We are looking to purchase the Nordic basket again at a 2% discount relative to last week’s price levels. Stay tuned. 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 Kelly Zhong Research Analyst Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
In recent weeks, we have repeatedly warned that since March, the dollar had fallen too quickly and risked staging a countertrend bounce. As a corollary, the euro was expected to undergo a temporary correction that could see it revisit the 1.14-1.15 zone. …
BCA Research is positive on equities on a cyclical basis. However, the easiest part of the rally is behind us and while stocks will climb over the next 12 to 18 months, violent episodes of correction will punctuate this rise. Since yields have little downside…
Highlights Near-Term Uncertainties: Investors have grown a bit more nervous in recent weeks, amid signs of a second wave of the coronavirus in Europe and with the contentious US presidential election only five weeks away. The pro-growth cyclical investment backdrop, however, remains unchanged. From a strategic perspective (6-12 months), maintain an overall neutral stance on interest rate duration, with a moderate overweight to global spread product versus government bonds while staying up in quality. EM USD-Denominated Debt: The main drivers of the emerging market hard currency debt rally since March – a weakening US dollar, improving global growth momentum, and massively accommodative global monetary policies – remain in place. Valuations, however, appear more attractive for EM USD-denominated corporates relative to USD-denominated sovereigns. Favor the former over the latter, within an overall neutral strategic allocation to EM hard currency debt. Feature Chart of the WeekMarkets Starting To Get Cautious
Markets Starting To Get Cautious
Markets Starting To Get Cautious
As the third quarter of 2020 draws to a close, investors have developed a slight case of the jitters about the near-term outlook for global financial markets. The positives that drove risk assets higher during the spring and summer - rebounding global economic activity, fueled by aggressive policy stimulus and a slowing of the spread of COVID-19, along with a weaker US dollar – have given way to some fresh uncertainties. Economic data releases have started to disappoint versus expectations, the rapid expansion of central bank balance sheets in the major developed economies has temporarily stalled, a second wave of new COVID-19 cases appears to have started in Europe and the US, and the US dollar has strengthened by 2.7% from the 2020 lows (Chart of the Week). Risk assets have pulled back in response, with the MSCI World equity index down -6.1% from the 2020 peak and US high-yield corporate credit spreads 66bps wider from recent lows. So far, these moves appear more a correction of overbought markets, rather than a change in trend. From the perspective of our strategic (6-12 months) investment recommendations, we remain generally positive on risk assets. Within global fixed income, that means maintaining a modest overall overweight stance on spread products versus government bonds, while focusing more on relative opportunities between countries and sectors to generate alpha. A Quick Assessment Of The Cyclical Backdrop The recent in increase in market volatility has started to shake out crowded positioning in popular winning trades. For example, high-flying US tech stocks have seen deeper pullbacks than the overall US equity market, while investors yanked nearly $5 billion from US junk bond funds in the week ending last Wednesday according to the Financial Times – the highest such outflow since the apex of the COVID-19 market rout in mid-March. We prefer to judge the health of a market rally by assessing the state of macroeconomic fundamentals underpinning that particular asset class Mainstream financial pundits often dub such corrections of overheated markets as a “healthy” way to ensure the continuation of medium-term bullish trends. We prefer to judge the health of a market rally by assessing the state of macroeconomic fundamentals underpinning that particular asset class – the most important of which remain positive for risk assets, in general, and global fixed income spread products, in particular. Economic Data Chart 2Economic Data Is Mostly Optimistic
Economic Data Is Mostly Optimistic
Economic Data Is Mostly Optimistic
While data surprise indices like the widely followed Citigroup series are topping out, this is more because of an improvement in beaten-up growth expectations, rather than a sharp decline in the actual data. The global ZEW economic expectations survey continues to point in an optimistic direction, while other reliable measures of business confidence like the German IFO and the US NFIB small business surveys have also continued to improve in recent months. Our own global leading economic indicator (LEI) is firming, with a majority of countries seeing a rising LEI (Chart 2). At the same time, the preliminary release of manufacturing PMI data for September showed continued improvements in the US and Europe. While the news is not 100% upbeat – the services PMI for the overall euro area fell -2.9 points in September, possibly due to the increase in new reported cases of COVID-19 in Europe – the tone of global economic data remains consistent with improving cyclical momentum. The US Dollar Chart 3Growth And Yield Differentials Signalling Dollar Weakness
Growth And Yield Differentials Signalling Dollar Weakness
Growth And Yield Differentials Signalling Dollar Weakness
The most likely medium-term path of least resistance for the US dollar remains downward. Economic growth remains stronger outside the US, based on the differential between the US and non-US manufacturing PMI data – an indicator that our currency strategists follow closely given its strong correlation to US dollar momentum (Chart 3). Relative interest rate differentials also remain less positive for the US dollar, with the decline in real US bond yields seen in 2020 pointing to additional medium-term dollar depreciation (bottom panel). US Politics The US general election is now only 35 days away, with the latest polling data showing President Trump closing the lead on the Democratic Party candidate, Joe Biden. Our colleagues at BCA Research Geopolitical Strategy remain of the view that a Biden victory is the more probable outcome, given the more difficult time Trump will have in winning all the key swing states that gave him his narrow election victory in 2016. Chart 4A "Blue Sweep" Is Bearish For Markets
A "Blue Sweep" Is Bearish For Markets
A "Blue Sweep" Is Bearish For Markets
The recent peak in US equity markets, and trough in the VIX index, coincided with improving odds of a Democratic Party sweep of the White House, House of Representatives and Senate (Chart 4). Such an outcome would give a President Biden the power, and perceived mandate, to implement many of the more progressive elements of the Democratic Party agenda – including a hike in corporate tax rates that could damage equity market sentiment. Our political strategists think that a “Blue Sweep” would only occur if the Republican Party fails to agree with the Democrats on a new fiscal stimulus bill.1 Both sides are playing hardball in the current negotiations, which is keeping investors on edge given how much of the US economy still requires fiscal support because of the pandemic. The Republicans will not want to take the blame for a failure to reach a stimulus deal, which would likely hand the Democrats the keys to the White House and Congress. Thus, a fiscal deal of sufficient size to calm jittery markets – most likely in the $2-2.5 trillion range sought by the Democrats – should be announced within the next couple of weeks before the final run up to the election. Financial/Monetary Conditions It will take more than a corrective pullback in equity and credit markets to threaten the economic recovery from the COVID-19 recession, given how highly stimulative financial conditions have become since the spring (Chart 5). In more normal times, booming equity and credit markets would eventually lead to upward pressure on government bond yields, since all would be reflecting improving economic growth and, eventually, expectations of faster inflation and tighter monetary policy. That move higher in yields would eventually act to restrain growth and depress the value of growth-sensitive risk assets. Chart 5Financial Conditions Remain Supportive For Growth
Financial Conditions Remain Supportive For Growth
Financial Conditions Remain Supportive For Growth
As we discussed in last week’s report, government bond yields are now likely to stay very low for a period measured in years, with major central banks like the US Federal Reserve leaning dovishly to support growth during the pandemic and trigger a temporary overshoot of inflation expectations.2 Thus, loose monetary settings (including more quantitative easing) will remain a critical underpinning for keeping risk assets well supported, by eliminating the typical cyclical threat from rising bond yields. Summing it all up, the fundamental economic and political backdrop remains cyclically bullish for risk assets, despite recent investor nervousness. Of course, a major wild card could be that the latest surge in new COVID-19 cases becomes large enough to trigger renewed economic restrictions in the US or Europe. Yet any such moves would likely not be as severe as those that occurred back in the spring, given the much lower mortality rates seen during the current upturn in COVID-19 cases, which is reducing the public’s willingness to accept more economy-crushing lockdowns. Bottom Line: Investors have grown a bit more nervous in recent weeks, amid signs of a second wave of the coronavirus in Europe and with the contentious US presidential election only five weeks away. The pro-growth cyclical investment backdrop, however, remains unchanged. From a strategic perspective (6-12 months), maintain an overall neutral stance on interest rate duration, with a moderate overweight to global spread product versus government bonds while staying up in quality. EM USD-Denominated Credit: Focus On Corporates Relative To Sovereigns Chart 6An Overview of USD-Denominated EM Debt
An Overview of USD-Denominated EM Debt
An Overview of USD-Denominated EM Debt
Back in July of this year, we turned more positive on emerging market (EM) USD-denominated spread product, upgrading our recommended allocation to both EM USD sovereign and corporate debt to neutral from underweight in our model bond portfolio.3 The change was motivated by signs of rebounding global economic growth after the COVID-19 lockdowns and a loss of upward momentum in the US dollar, coming at a time when EM spreads still looked relatively cheap (wide) compared to developed market corporate debt. An underweight stance was inconsistent with that backdrop. EM credit has done well since our upgrade (Chart 6). Using Bloomberg Barclays index data, the yield on the EM USD-denominated sovereign index has fallen from 5.2% to 4.4%, while the option-adjusted spread (OAS) on that same index tightened from 447bps to 368bps. It has been a similar story for EM USD-denominated corporates, with the index yield falling from 4.1% to 3.9% and the index OAS narrowing from 361bps to 344bps.4 Given the close correlations typically exhibited between EM USD sovereign and corporate yields and spreads, we have tended to change our recommended allocations to both asset classes at the same time and in the same direction. Yet the EM credit universe is quite diverse, incorporating many different issuers of highly varying credit quality and risk (Table 1). Treating the allocations to EM USD sovereign debt and USD corporate debt separately may reveal more profitable relative return opportunities. The fundamental economic and political backdrop remains cyclically bullish for risk assets, despite recent investor nervousness. Table 1Details Of The USD-Denominated EM Sovereign And EM Corporate & Quasi-Sovereign Indices
Stay The Course
Stay The Course
A first step to analyzing the EM USD sovereigns versus corporates investment decision is to develop a list of macro factors that correlate to the relative performance of EM sovereign and corporate credit. From there, we can build a list of directional indicators that can help inform that sovereign versus corporates decision. Treating the allocations to EM USD sovereign debt and USD corporate debt separately may reveal more profitable relative return opportunities. Our colleagues at BCA Research Emerging Markets Strategy have long held the view that overall EM debt performance is mostly driven by just two important macro factors: industrial commodity prices and the US dollar. Specifically, they have shown that the broad cyclical swings in EM sovereign and corporate spreads correlate strongly to the price momentum of a simple blend of industrial metal and oil prices, as well as the price momentum of a basket of EM currencies versus the US dollar (Chart 7). Chart 7EM Credit Spreads: A Commodity And Currency Story
EM Credit Spreads: A Commodity And Currency Story
EM Credit Spreads: A Commodity And Currency Story
On that basis, the recent moderate widening of EM credit spreads is justified by the corrective pullback in industrial commodity prices and a bit of US dollar strength – trends that our EM strategists believe can continue in the near-term. Although they share our view that the medium-term trend in the US dollar is still bearish, thus any near-term EM debt selloff will represent a longer-term buying opportunity.5 The demand for industrial commodities remains largely driven by economic trends in the world’s largest commodity consumer, China. Thus, our China credit impulse (the change in overall Chinese credit relative to GDP), which leads Chinese economic activity, is a good leading indicator of industrial commodity prices. We will use the China credit impulse in our list of directional indicators to forecast EM sovereign versus corporate performance. We also will include the annual rate of change of the index of EM currencies versus the US dollar (shown in Chart 7). We also believe that a global monetary policy variable should be included in our indicator list, particularly in the current environment of super-low developed market interest rates and central bank purchase of government bonds – both of which tend to drive yield-starved investors into higher-yielding EM assets and, potentially, can influence the relative performance of EM sovereigns and corporates. To capture the global monetary policy trend in our indicator list, we use the combined annual growth rate of the balance sheets of the Fed, the ECB, the Bank of Japan and the Bank of England. The message from our indicator list is that EM USD corporates should outperform EM USD sovereign debt over the next 6-12 months. In Charts 8 & 9, we show the relative total return of the Bloomberg Barclays EM USD corporate and USD sovereign indices, expressed in year-over-year percentage terms, versus our list of three potential directional indicators of the relative total return. We have broken up the overall EM universe by broad credit quality, with index data used for investment grade issuers in Chart 8 and below investment grade (high-yield) issuers in Chart 9. For all three of our directional indicators, we have pushed them forward in the charts to look for a potential leading relationship to the relative returns. Chart 8EM Investment Grade Corporates Looking Set to Outperform ...
EM Investment Grade Corporates Looking Set to Outperform ...
EM Investment Grade Corporates Looking Set to Outperform ...
Chart 9... But The High Yield Space Tells A More Mixed Story
... But The High Yield Space Tells A More Mixed Story
... But The High Yield Space Tells A More Mixed Story
The charts show that China credit impulse leads the relative total returns of EM USD corporates versus EM USD sovereigns by between 9-18 months for investment grade and high-yield EM credit. The growth of the major central bank balance sheets also leads the relative performance of EM USD corporates versus EM USD sovereigns by one full year, both for investment grade and high-yield EM credit. Finally, the annual growth of EM currencies leads the relative return of EM USD corporates versus sovereigns by around nine months, although the correlation is the weakest of the three indicators in our list. In terms of current investment strategy, the message from our indicator list is that EM USD corporates should outperform EM USD sovereign debt over the next 6-12 months, both for investment grade and high-yield, largely due to aggressive credit stimulus in China and the rapid expansion of central bank balance sheets. In terms of the attractiveness of EM USD-denominated yields in a global fixed income portfolio, however, there is a difference between higher-rated and lower-rated EM debt. In Chart 10, we present a scatter chart that plots the yields on various global fixed income sectors, all hedged into US dollars and compared to trailing yield volatility, versus the average credit rating of each sector. Investment grade EM USD corporate and sovereign issuers offer relatively more attractive yields compared to other sectors with similar credit ratings, like investment grade corporates in the US and Europe. The same cannot be said for high-yield EM USD corporates and sovereigns, which only offer a more attractive volatility-adjusted yield compared to euro area high-yield corporates among the lower-rated global credit sectors. Chart 10EM USD-Denominated High Yield Debt Not Especially Attractive On A Risk-Adjusted Basis
Stay The Course
Stay The Course
Based on this analysis, we are making the following changes in our model bond portfolio on page 14: Upgrading EM USD corporates to overweight Downgrading EM USD sovereigns to underweight Keeping the combined EM USD credit allocation at neutral. This fits with our current overall investment theme of keeping overall spread product exposure relative close to benchmark, while taking more active risks on relative allocations between fixed income sectors. Bottom Line: The main drivers of the emerging market hard currency debt rally since March – a weakening US dollar, improving global growth momentum, and massively accommodative global monetary policies – remain in place. Valuations, however, appear more attractive for EM USD-denominated corporates relative to USD-denominated sovereigns. Favor the former over the latter, within an overall neutral strategic allocation to EM hard currency debt. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Research Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Stimulus Will Come … But May Not Save Trump", dated September 25, 2020, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "What Would It Take To Get Bond Yields To Rise Again?", dated September 23, 2020, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Selective Optimism", dated July 14, 2020, available at gfis.bcaraesearch.com. 4 Note that the index data we are using here includes both EM corporate and so-called “quasi-sovereign” debt, the latter being bonds issued by EM companies that are majority-owned by their local governments. 5 Please see BCA Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, "A Reset In The Making", dated September 24, 2020, available at ems.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
Stay The Course
Stay The Course
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Dear Client, We are sending you our Quarterly Strategy Outlook today, where we outline our thoughts on the macro landscape and the direction of financial markets for the rest of the year and beyond. We will also be hosting a webcast on Thursday, October 1st at 10:00 AM EDT (3:00 PM BST, 4:00 PM CEST, 10:00 PM HKT) where we will discuss the outlook. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights Macroeconomic outlook: Global growth faces near-term challenges from a resurgence in the pandemic and the failure of the US Congress to pass a stimulus deal. However, growth should revive next year as a vaccine becomes available and fiscal policy turns stimulative again. Global asset allocation: Favor equities over bonds on a 12-month horizon, while maintaining somewhat larger than normal cash positions in the short run that can be deployed if stocks resume their correction. Equities: Prepare to pivot from the “Pandemic trade” to the “Reopening trade.” Vaccine optimism should pave the way for cyclicals to outperform defensives, international stocks to outperform their US peers, and for value to outperform growth. Fixed income: Bond yields will rise modestly, suggesting that investors should maintain below average duration exposure. Favor inflation-protected securities over nominal bonds. Spread product will outperform safe government bonds. Currencies: The US dollar will weaken over the next 12 months. The collapse in interest rate differentials, stronger global growth, and a widening US trade deficit are all bearish for the greenback. Commodities: Rising demand and constrained supply will support oil prices, while Chinese stimulus will buoy industrial metals. Investors should buy gold and other real assets as a hedge against long-term inflation risk. I. Macroeconomic Outlook Policy And The Pandemic Will Continue To Drive Markets Going into the fourth quarter of 2020, we are tactically neutral on global equities but remain overweight stocks and other risk assets on a 12-month horizon. As has been the case for much of the year, both the virus and the policy response to the pandemic will continue to be key drivers of market returns. Coronavirus: Still Spreading Fast, But Less Deadly On the virus front, the global number of daily new cases continues to trend higher, with the 7-day average reaching a record high of nearly 300,000 this week (Chart 1). Chart 1Globally, The Number Of Daily New Cases Continues To Trend Higher
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
The number of daily new cases in the EU has risen above its April peak. Spain and France have been particularly hard hit. Canada is also seeing a pronounced rise in new cases. In the US, the number of new cases peaked in July. However, the 7-day average has been creeping up since early September, raising the risk of a third wave. On the positive side, mortality rates in most countries remain well below their spring levels. There is no clear consensus as to why the virus has become less lethal. Better medical treatments, including the use of low-cost steroids, have certainly helped. A shift in the incidence of cases towards younger, healthier people has also lowered the overall mortality rate. In addition, there is some evidence that the virus may be evolving to be more contagious but less deadly.1 It would not be surprising if that were the case. After all, a virus that kills its host will also kill itself. Lastly, pervasive mask wearing may be mitigating the severity of the disease by reducing the initial viral load that infected individuals receive.2 A smaller initial dose gives the immune system more time to launch an effective counterattack. It has even been speculated that the widespread use of masks may be acting as a form of “variolation.” Prior to the invention of vaccines, variolation was used to engender natural immunity. Perhaps most famously, upon taking command of the Continental Army in 1775, George Washington had all his troops exposed to small amounts of smallpox.3 The gamble worked. The US ended up winning the Revolutionary War, making Washington the first president of the new republic. Waiting For A Vaccine Despite the decline in mortality rates, there is still much that remains unknown about Covid-19, including the extent to which the disease will lead to long-term damage to the vascular and nervous systems. Thus, while governments are unlikely to impose the same sort of severe lockdown measures that they implemented in March, rising case counts will delay reopening plans, and in many cases, lead to the reintroduction of stricter social distancing rules. Chart 2Some States Have Started To Relax Lockdown Measures
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
This has already happened in a number of countries. The UK reinstated more stringent regulations over social gatherings last week, including ordering pubs and restaurants to close by 10pm. Spain has introduced tougher mobility restrictions in Madrid and surrounding municipalities. France ordered gyms and restaurants to close for two weeks. Canada has also tightened regulations, with the government of Quebec raising the alert level to maximum “red alert” in several regions of the province. In the US, the share of the population living in states that were in the process of relaxing lockdown measures has risen above 50% for the first time since July (Chart 2). A third wave would almost certainly forestall the recent reopening trend. Ultimately, a safe and effective vaccine will be necessary to defeat the virus. Fortunately, about half of experts polled by the Good Judgment Project expect a vaccine to become available by the first quarter of 2021. Only 2% expect there to be no vaccine available by April 2022, down from over 50% in May (Chart 3). Chart 3When Will A Vaccine Become Available?
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Premature Fiscal Tightening And The Risk of Second-Round Effects Even if a vaccine becomes available early next year, there is a danger that the global economy will have suffered enough damage over the intervening months to forestall a rapid recovery. Whenever an economy suffers an adverse shock, a feedback loop can develop where rising joblessness leads to less spending, leading to even more joblessness. Fiscal stimulus can short-circuit this vicious circle by providing households with adequate income to maintain spending. Fiscal policy in the major economies turned expansionary within weeks of the onset of the pandemic (Chart 4). In the US, real personal income growth actually accelerated in the spring because transfers from the government more than offset the loss in wage and salary compensation (Chart 5). Chart 4Fiscal Policy Has Been Very Stimulative This Year
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Chart 5Personal Income Accelerated Earlier This Year
Personal Income Accelerated Earlier This Year
Personal Income Accelerated Earlier This Year
Chart 6Drastic Drop In Weekly Unemployment Insurance Payments
Drastic Drop In Weekly Unemployment Insurance Payments
Drastic Drop In Weekly Unemployment Insurance Payments
Starting in August, US fiscal policy turned less accommodative. Chart 6 shows that regular weekly unemployment payments have fallen from around $25 billion to $8 billion since the end of July. At an annualized rate, this amounts to over 4% of GDP in fiscal tightening. While President Trump signed an executive order redirecting some of the money that had been earmarked for the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to be given to unemployed workers, the available funding will run out within the next month or so. On top of that, the funds in the small business Paycheck Protection Program have been used up, while many state and local governments face a severe cash crunch. US households saved a lot going into the autumn, so a sudden stop in spending is unlikely. Nevertheless, fissures in the economy are widening. Core retail sales contracted in August for the first time since April. Consumer expectations of future income growth remain weak (Chart 7). Permanent job losses are rising faster than they did during the Great Recession (Chart 8). Both corporate bankruptcy and mortgage delinquency rates are moving up, while bank lending standards have tightened significantly (Chart 9). Chart 7Consumer Expectations Of Future Income Growth Remain Weak
Consumer Expectations Of Future Income Growth Remain Weak
Consumer Expectations Of Future Income Growth Remain Weak
Chart 8Permanent Job Losses Are Rising Faster Than They Did During The Great Recession
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Chart 9Corporate Bankruptcy And Mortgage Delinquency Rates Are Moving Up … While Bank Lending Standards Have Tightened Significantly
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fiscal Stimulus Will Return We ultimately expect US fiscal policy to turn accommodative again. There is no appetite for fiscal austerity. Both political parties are moving in a more populist direction, which usually signals larger budget deficits. Even among Republicans, more registered voters support extending emergency federal unemployment insurance payments than oppose it (Chart 10). Chart 10There Is Much Public Support For Fiscal Stimulus
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
As long as interest rates stay low, there will be little market pressure to trim budget deficits. US real rates remain in negative territory. Despite a rising debt stock, the Congressional Budget Office expects net interest payments to decline towards 1% of GDP over the span of the next couple of years, thus reaching the lowest level in six decades (Chart 11). Outside the US, there has been little movement towards tightening fiscal policy. The UK government unveiled last week a fresh round of economic and fiscal measures to help ease the burden on both employees, by subsidizing part-time work for example, and firms, by extending government-guaranteed loan programs. At the beginning of the month, the Macron government announced a 100 billion euro stimulus plan in France. Meanwhile, European leaders are moving forward on a euro area-wide 750 billion euro stimulus package that was announced this summer. In Japan, the new Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga has indicated that he will pursue a third budget to fight the economic downturn, adding that “there is no limit to the amount of bonds the government can issue to support an economy battered by the coronavirus pandemic.” The Japanese government now earns more interest than it pays because two-thirds of all Japanese debt bears negative yields (Chart 12). At least for now, a big debt burden is actually good for the Japanese government’s finances! Chart 11Low Interest Payments Amid Skyrocketing Debt In The US
Low Interest Payments Amid Skyrocketing Debt In The US
Low Interest Payments Amid Skyrocketing Debt In The US
Chart 12Japan: Ballooning Debt And Declining Interest Payments
Japan: Ballooning Debt And Declining Interest Payments
Japan: Ballooning Debt And Declining Interest Payments
China also continues to stimulate its economy. Jing Sima, BCA’s chief China strategist, expects the broad-measure fiscal deficit to reach a record 8% of GDP this year and remain elevated into next year. The annual change in total social financing – a broad measure of Chinese credit formation – is expected to hit 35% of GDP, just shy of its GFC peak (Chart 13). Not surprisingly, the Chinese economy is responding well to all this stimulus. Sales of floor space rose 40% year-over-year in August, driven by a close to 60% jump in Tier-1 cities. Excavator sales, a leading indicator for construction spending, are up 51% over last year’s levels, while industrial profits have jumped 19%. A resurgent Chinese economy has historically been closely associated with rising global trade (Chart 14). Chart 13China Continues To Stimulate Its Economy
China Continues To Stimulate Its Economy
China Continues To Stimulate Its Economy
Chart 14Chinese Economic Rebound Has Historically Been Closely Associated With Rising Global Trade
Chinese Economic Rebound Has Historically Been Closely Associated With Rising Global Trade
Chinese Economic Rebound Has Historically Been Closely Associated With Rising Global Trade
Biden Or Trump: How Will Financial Markets React? Betting markets expect former Vice President Joe Biden to become president and for the Democrats to gain control of the Senate (Chart 15). A “blue wave” would produce more fiscal spending in the next few years. Recall that House Democrats passed a $3.5 trillion stimulus bill in May that was quickly rejected by Senate Republicans. More recently, Democratic leaders have suggested they would approve a stimulus deal in the range of $2-to-$2.5 trillion. Chart 15Betting Markets Putting Their Money On The Democrats
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
In addition to more pandemic-related stimulus, Joe Biden has also proposed a variety of longer-term spending initiatives. These include $2 trillion in infrastructure spending spread over four years, a $700 billion “Made in America” plan that would increase federal procurement of domestically produced goods and services, and new spending proposals worth about 1.7% of GDP per annum centered on health care, housing, education, and child and elder care. As president, Joe Biden would likely take a less confrontational stance towards relations with China. While rolling back tariffs would not be an immediate priority for a Biden administration, it could happen later in 2021. Less welcome for investors would be an increase in taxes. Joe Biden has proposed raising taxes by $4 trillion over ten years (about 1.5% of cumulative GDP). Slightly less than half of that consists of higher personal taxes on both regular income (for taxpayers earning more than $400,000 per year) and capital gains (for tax filers with over $1 million in income). The other half consists of increased business taxes, mainly in the form of a hike in the corporate tax rate from 21% to 28% and the introduction of a minimum 15% tax on the global book income of US-based companies. Netting it out, a blue sweep in November would probably be neutral-to-slightly negative for equities. What about government bonds? Our guess is that Treasury yields would rise modestly in response to a blue wave, particularly at the longer end of the yield curve. Additional fiscal support would boost aggregate demand, implying that it would take less time for the economy to reach full employment. That said, interest rate expectations are unlikely to rise as sharply as they did in late 2016 following Donald Trump‘s victory. Back then, the Fed was primed to raise rates – it hiked rates nine times starting in December 2015, ultimately bringing the fed funds rate to 2.5% by end-2018. This time around, the Fed is firmly on hold, with the vast majority of FOMC members expecting policy rates to stay at rock-bottom levels until at least 2023. The Fed’s New Tune In two important respects, the Fed’s new Monetary Policy Framework (MPF) represents a sharp break with the past. Chart 16The Mechanics Of Price-Level Targeting
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
First, the MPF abandons the Fed’s historic reliance on a Taylor Rule-style framework, which prescribes lifting rates whenever the unemployment rate declines towards its equilibrium level. Second, the MPF eschews the “let bygones be bygones” approach of past monetary policymaking. Going forward, the Fed will try to maintain an average level of inflation of 2% over the course of the business cycle. This means that if inflation falls below 2%, the Fed will try to engineer a temporary inflation overshoot in order to bring the price level back up to its 2%-per-year upward trend (Chart 16). Some aspects of the Fed’s new strategy are both timely and laudable. A Taylor rule approach makes sense when there is a clear relationship between inflation and the unemployment rate, as governed by the so-called Phillips curve. However, if inflation fails to rise in response to declining economic slack – as has been the case in recent years – central banks may find themselves at a loss in determining where the neutral rate of interest lies. In this case, it might be preferable to keep interest rates at very low levels until the economy begins to overheat. Such a strategy would avoid the risk of raising rates prematurely, only to discover that they are too high for what the economy can handle. Targeting an average rate of inflation also has significant merit. When investors purchase long-term bonds, they run the risk that the real value of those bonds will deviate significantly from initial expectations when the bonds mature. If inflation surprises on the upside, the bonds will end up being worth less to the lender as measured by the quantity of goods and services that they can be exchanged for. If inflation surprises on the downside, borrowers could find themselves facing a larger real debt burden than they had anticipated. An inflation targeting system that corrects for past inflation surprises could give both borrowers and lenders greater certainty about the future price level. This, in turn, could reduce the inflation risk premium embedded in long-term bond yields, leading to a more efficient allocation of economic resources. In addition, an average inflation targeting system could make the zero lower bound constraint less vexing by keeping long-term inflation expectations from slipping below the central bank’s target. This would give the central bank more traction over monetary policy. A Bias Towards Higher Inflation Despite the advantages of the Fed’s new approach, it faces a number of hurdles, some practical and some political. On the practical side, it may turn out that the Phillips curve, rather than being flat, is kinked at a fairly low level of unemployment. Theoretically, that would not be too surprising. If I have 100 apples for sale and you want to buy 60, I have no incentive to raise prices. Even if you wanted to buy 80 apples, I would have no incentive to raise prices. However, if you wanted to buy 105 apples, then I would have an incentive to raise my selling price. The point is that inflation could remain stubbornly dormant as slack slowly disappears, only to rocket higher once full employment has been reached. Since changes in monetary policy only affect the economy with a lag, the central bank could find itself woefully behind the curve, scrambling to contain rising inflation. This is precisely what happened during the 1960s (Chart 17). Chart 17Inflation Started Accelerating Quickly Only When Unemployment Reached Very Low Levels In The 1960s
Inflation Started Accelerating Quickly Only When Unemployment Reached Very Low Levels In The 1960s
Inflation Started Accelerating Quickly Only When Unemployment Reached Very Low Levels In The 1960s
Chart 18Something Has Always Happened To Preempt Overheating
Something Has Always Happened To Preempt Overheating
Something Has Always Happened To Preempt Overheating
Over the past three decades, something always happened that kept the US economy from overheating (Chart 18). The unemployment rate reached a 50-year low in 2019. Inflation may have moved higher this year had it not been for the fact that the global economy was clotheslined by the pandemic. In 2007, the economy was heating up only to be sandbagged by the housing bust. In 2000, the bursting of the dotcom bubble helped reverse incipient inflationary pressures. But just because the economy did not have a chance to overheat at any time over the past 30 years does not mean it cannot happen in the future. The Political Economy Of Higher Inflation On the political side, average inflation targeting assumes that central banks will be just as willing to tolerate inflation undershoots as overshoots. This could be a faulty assumption. Generating an inflation overshoot requires that interest rates be kept low enough to enable unemployment to fall below its full employment level. That is likely to be politically popular. Generating an inflation undershoot, in contrast, requires restrictive monetary policy and rising unemployment. More joblessness would not sit well with workers. High interest rates could also damage the stock market and depress home prices, while forcing debt-saddled governments to shift more spending from social programs to bondholders. None of that will be politically popular. If central banks are quick to allow inflation overshoots but slow to engineer inflation undershoots, the result could be structurally higher inflation. Markets are not pricing in such an outcome (Chart 19). Chart 19Markets Are Not Pricing In Structurally Higher Inflation
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
II. Financial Markets Global Asset Allocation: Despite Near-Term Dangers, Overweight Equities On A 12-Month Horizon An acceleration in the number of COVID-19 cases and the rising probability that the US Congress will fail to pass a stimulus bill before the November election could push equities and other risk assets lower in the near term. Investors should maintain somewhat larger than normal cash positions in the short run that can be deployed if stocks resume their correction. Chart 20The Decline In US Real Yields Since March Has Largely Offset The Rise In Stock Prices
The Decline In US Real Yields Since March Has Largely Offset The Rise In Stock Prices
The Decline In US Real Yields Since March Has Largely Offset The Rise In Stock Prices
Provided that progress continues to be made towards developing a vaccine and US fiscal policy eventually turns stimulative again, stocks will regain their footing, rising about 15% from current levels over a 12-month horizon. Negative real bond yields will continue to support stocks (Chart 20). The 30-year TIPS yield has fallen by over 90 basis points in 2020. Even if one assumes that it will take the rest of the decade for S&P 500 earnings to return to their pre-pandemic trend, the deep drop in the risk-free component of the discount rate has still raised the present value of future S&P 500 cash flows by nearly 20% since the start of the year (Chart 21). Chart 21The Present Value Of Earnings: A Scenario Analysis
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Thanks to these exceptionally low real bond yields, equity risk premia remain elevated (Chart 22). The TINA mantra reverberates throughout the investment world: There Is No Alternative to stocks. To get a sense of just how powerful TINA is, consider the fact that the dividend yield on the S&P 500 currently stands at 1.67%. That may not sound like much, but it is still a full percentage point higher than the paltry 0.67% yield on the 10-year Treasury note (Chart 23). Chart 22Equity Risk Premia Remain Elevated
Equity Risk Premia Remain Elevated
Equity Risk Premia Remain Elevated
Chart 23S&P 500 Dividend Yield Is Above The Treasury Yield
S&P 500 Dividend Yield Is Above The Treasury Yield
S&P 500 Dividend Yield Is Above The Treasury Yield
Imagine having to decide whether to place your money either in an S&P 500 index fund or a 10-year Treasury note. Dividends-per-share paid by S&P 500 companies have almost always increased over time. However, even if we make the pessimistic assumption that dividends-per-share remain unchanged for the next ten years, the value of the S&P 500 would still have to fall by 10% over the next decade to equal the return on the 10-year note. Assuming that inflation averages around 1.9% over this period, the real value of the S&P 500 would need to drop by 25%. The picture is even more dramatic outside the US. In the euro area, the index would have to fall by over 30% in real terms for investors to make more money in bonds than stocks. In the UK, it would need to fall by over 50% (Chart 24). Chart 24 (I)Stocks Would Need To Fall A Lot For Equities To Underperform Bonds
Stocks Would Need To Fall A Lot For Equities To Underperform Bonds Stocks Would Need To Fall A Lot For Equities To Underperform Bonds
Stocks Would Need To Fall A Lot For Equities To Underperform Bonds Stocks Would Need To Fall A Lot For Equities To Underperform Bonds
Chart 24 (II)Stocks Would Need To Fall A Lot For Equities To Underperform Bonds
Stocks Would Need To Fall A Lot For Equities To Underperform Bonds
Stocks Would Need To Fall A Lot For Equities To Underperform Bonds
A Weaker US Dollar Favors International Stocks Outside the US, price-earnings ratios are lower, while equity risk premia are higher. Cheap valuations are usually not enough to justify a high-conviction investment call, however. One also needs a catalyst. Three potential catalysts could help propel international stocks higher over the next 12 months, while also giving value stocks and economically-sensitive equity sectors a boost: A weaker US dollar; the end of the pandemic; and a recovery in bank shares. Let’s start with the dollar. The US dollar faces a number of headwinds over the coming months. First, interest rate differentials have moved sharply against the greenback (Chart 25). Second, as a countercyclical currency, the dollar is likely to weaken as the global economy improves (Chart 26). Third, the current account deficit is rising again. It jumped over 50% from $112 billion in Q1 to $170 billion in Q2. According to the Atlanta Fed GDPNow model, the trade balance is set to widened further in Q3. This deterioration in the dollar’s fundamentals is occurring against a backdrop where the currency remains 11% overvalued based on purchasing power parity exchange rates (Chart 27). Chart 25Interest Rate Differentials Have Moved Sharply Against The Greenback
Interest Rate Differentials Have Moved Sharply Against The Greenback
Interest Rate Differentials Have Moved Sharply Against The Greenback
A weaker dollar is usually good for commodity prices and cyclical stocks (Chart 28). In general, commodity producers and cyclical stocks are overrepresented outside the US. Chart 26The Dollar Is Likely To Weaken As The Global Economy Improves
The Dollar Is Likely To Weaken As The Global Economy Improves
The Dollar Is Likely To Weaken As The Global Economy Improves
Chart 27USD Remains Overvalued
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Chart 28A Weaker Dollar Is Usually Good For Commodity Prices And Cyclical Stocks
A Weaker Dollar Is Usually Good For Commodity Prices And Cyclical Stocks
A Weaker Dollar Is Usually Good For Commodity Prices And Cyclical Stocks
BCA’s chief energy strategist Bob Ryan expects Brent to average $65/bbl in 2021, $21/bbl above what the market is anticipating. Ongoing Chinese stimulus should also buoy metal prices. A falling greenback helps overseas borrowers – many of whom are in emerging markets – whose loans are denominated in dollars but whose revenues are denominated in the local currency. It is thus no surprise that non-US stocks tend to outperform their US peers when global growth is strengthening and the dollar is weakening (Chart 29). Chart 29Non-US Equities Tend To Outperform Their US Peers When Global Growth Is Improving And The Dollar Is Weakening
Non-US Equities Tend To Outperform Their US Peers When Global Growth Is Improving And The Dollar Is Weakening
Non-US Equities Tend To Outperform Their US Peers When Global Growth Is Improving And The Dollar Is Weakening
The outperformance of non-US stocks in soft dollar environments is particularly pronounced when returns are measured in common-currency terms. From the perspective of US-based investors, a weaker dollar raises the dollar value of overseas sales and profits, justifying higher valuations for international stocks. From the perspective of overseas investors, a weaker dollar reduces the local currency value of US sales and profits, implying a lower valuation for US stocks. This helps explain why European stocks tend to outperform their US counterparts when the euro is rising, even though a stronger euro hurts the European economy. It’s Value’s Turn To Shine Value stocks have often outperformed growth stocks when the US dollar has been weakening and global growth strengthening. Recall that value stocks did poorly during the late 1990s, a period of dollar strength and economic turbulence throughout the EM world. In contrast, value stocks did well between 2001 and 2007, a period during which the dollar was generally on the back foot. The relationship between value stocks, the dollar, and global growth broke down this summer. Growth stocks continued to pull ahead, even though global growth turned a corner and the dollar began to weaken. There are two reasons why this happened. First, investors were too slow to price in the windfall that growth stocks in the tech and health care sectors would end up receiving from the pandemic. Second, rather than rising in response to better economic growth data, real rates fell during the summer months. A falling discount rate benefits growth stocks more than value stocks because the former generate more of their earnings farther into the future. The tentative outperformance of value stocks in September suggests that the tables may have turned for the value/growth trade. Retail sales at physical stores are rebounding, while online sales growth is coming down from highly elevated levels (Chart 30). Bank of America estimates that US e-commerce penetration doubled in just a few short months earlier this year. Some “reversion to the trend” is likely, even if that trend does favor online stores over the long haul. Chart 30Are Brick-And Mortar Retailers Coming Back To Life?
Are Brick-And Mortar Retailers Coming Back To Life?
Are Brick-And Mortar Retailers Coming Back To Life?
Chart 31The Pandemic Has Caused Global Server And PC Shipments To Surge
The Pandemic Has Caused Global Server And PC Shipments To Surge
The Pandemic Has Caused Global Server And PC Shipments To Surge
Meanwhile, PC shipments soared during the pandemic as companies and workers rushed out to buy computer gear to allow them to work from home (Chart 31). To the extent that this caused some spending to be brought forward, it could create an air pocket in tech demand over the next few quarters. A third wave of the virus in the US and ongoing second waves elsewhere could give growth stocks a boost once more, but the benefits are likely to be short-lived. If a vaccine becomes available early next year, investors will pivot from the “pandemic trade” to the “reopening trade.” The “reopening trade” will support companies such as banks, hotels, and transports that were crushed by lockdown measures and which are overrepresented in value indices. From a valuation perspective, value stocks are cheaper now compared to growth stocks than at any point in history – even cheaper than at the height of the dotcom bubble (Chart 32). Chart 32Value Stocks Are Extremely Cheap Relative To Growth Stocks
Value Stocks Are Extremely Cheap Relative To Growth Stocks
Value Stocks Are Extremely Cheap Relative To Growth Stocks
The lofty valuations that growth stocks enjoy can be justified if the mega-cap tech companies that dominate the growth indices continue to increase earnings for many years to come. However, it is far from clear that this will happen. Close to three-quarters of US households already have an Amazon Prime account. Slightly over half have a Netflix account. Nearly 70% have a Facebook account. Google commands 92% of the internet search market. Together, sites owned by Google and Facebook generate about 60% of all online advertising revenue. While all of these companies dominate their markets, this could change. At one point during the dotcom bubble, Palm’s market capitalization was over six times greater than Apple’s. The Blackberry superseded the PalmPilot; the iPhone, in turn, superseded the Blackberry. History suggests that many of today’s technological leaders will end up as laggards. Investors looking to find the next tech leader can focus on smaller, fast growing companies. Unfortunately, picking winners in this space is easier said than done. History suggests that investors tend to overpay for growth, especially among small caps. Based on data compiled by Eugene Fama and Kenneth French, small cap growth stocks have lagged small cap value stocks by an average of 6.4% per year on a market-cap weighted basis, and by 10.4% on an equal-weighted basis, since 1970 (Table 1). Table 1Small Caps Vis-A-Vis Large Caps: Comparison of Total Returns
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Bank On Banks Financial stocks are heavily overrepresented in value indices (Table 2). Banks have made significant provisions against bad loans this year. If global growth recovers in 2021 once a vaccine becomes available, some of these provisions will end up being released, boosting profits in the process. Table 2Breaking Down Growth And Value By Sector
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Chart 33Modestly Higher Bond Yields Will Benefit Bank Shares
Modestly Higher Bond Yields Will Benefit Bank Shares
Modestly Higher Bond Yields Will Benefit Bank Shares
A stabilization in bond yields should also help bank shares. Chart 33 shows that a fall in bank stocks vis-à-vis the overall market has closely matched the decline in bond yields. While we do not think that central banks will tighten monetary policy in the next few years, nominal bond yields should still drift modestly higher as output gaps narrow. What about the outlook for bank earnings? A massive new credit boom is not in the cards in any major economy. Nevertheless, it should be noted that global bank EPS was able to return to its long-term trend in 2019, until being slammed again this year by the pandemic (Chart 34). Global bank book value-per-share was 30% higher in 2019 compared to GFC highs (even though price-per-share was 30% lower). Chart 34Global Bank EPS Was Able To Return To Its Pre-GFC Peak In 2019 Until The Pandemic Hit
Global Bank EPS Was Able To Return To Its Pre-GFC Peak In 2019 Until The Pandemic Hit
Global Bank EPS Was Able To Return To Its Pre-GFC Peak In 2019 Until The Pandemic Hit
Chart 35European Bank Earnings Estimates Have Lagged Credit Growth
European Bank Earnings Estimates Have Lagged Credit Growth
European Bank Earnings Estimates Have Lagged Credit Growth
Admittedly, the global numbers disguise a lot of regional variation. While US banks were able to bring EPS back to its prior peak, and Canadian banks were able to easily surpass it, European bank EPS was still 70% below its pre-GFC highs in 2019. The launch of the common currency in 1999 set off a massive credit boom across much of Europe, leaving European banks dangerously overleveraged. The GFC and the subsequent European sovereign debt crisis led to a spike in bad loans, necessitating numerous rounds of dilutive capital raises. At this point, however, European bank balance sheets are in much better shape. If EPS simply returns to its 2019 levels, European banks will trade at a generous earnings yield of close to 20%. That may not be such a hurdle to cross. Chart 35 shows that European bank earnings estimates have fallen far short of what would be expected from current credit growth. If, on top of all this, European banks are able to muster some sustained earnings growth thanks to somewhat steeper yield curves and further cost-cutting and consolidation, investors who buy banks today will be rewarded with outsized returns over the long haul. Fixed Income: What Is Least Ugly? As noted above, a rebound in global growth should push up both equity prices and bond yields. As such, we would underweight fixed income within a global asset allocation framework. Within the fixed income bracket, investors should favor inflation-protected securities over nominal bonds. They should underweight government bonds in favor of a modest overweight to spread product. Spreads are quite low but could sink further if economic activity revives faster than anticipated. The upper quality tranche of high-yield corporates, which are benefiting from central bank purchases, have an especially attractive risk-reward profile. EM debt should also fare well in a weaker dollar, stronger growth environment (Chart 36). Chart 36BB-Rated And EM Debt Offer Reasonable Risk-Reward Profiles
BB-Rated And EM Debt Offer Reasonable Risk-Reward Profiles
BB-Rated And EM Debt Offer Reasonable Risk-Reward Profiles
Given that some investors have no choice but to own developed economy government bonds, which countries or regions should they buy from within this category? Chart 37 shows the 3-year trailing yield betas for several major developed bond markets. In general, the highest-yielding currencies (US and Canada) also have the highest betas, implying that their yields rise the most when global bond yields are rising and vice versa. Chart 37High-Yielding Bond Markets Are The Most Cyclical
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
In economies such as Europe and Japan where the neutral rate of interest is stuck deep below the zero bound, better economic news is unlikely to lift policy rate expectations by very much. After all, the optimal policy rate would still be above its neutral level even if better economic data brought the neutral rate from say, -4% to -3%. In contrast, when the neutral rate is close to zero or even positive, better economic data can lift medium-to-long-term interest rate expectations more meaningfully. As such, we would underweight US Treasurys and Canadian bonds, while overweighting Japanese government bonds (JGBs) over a 12-month horizon. On a currency-hedged basis, which is what most bond investors focus on, 10-year JGBs yield only 20 basis points less than US Treasurys (Table 3). This lower yield is more than offset by the risk that Treasury yields will rise more than yields on JGBs. Table 3Bond Markets Across The Developed World
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
The End Game What will end the bull market in stocks? As is often the case, the answer is tighter monetary policy. The good news is tight money is not an imminent risk. The Fed will not hike rates at least until 2023, and it will take even longer than that for interest rates to rise elsewhere in the world. The bad news is that the day of reckoning will eventually arrive and when it does, bond yields will soar and stocks will tumble. Investors who want to hedge against this risk should consider owning more real assets. As was the case during the 1970s, farmland will do well from rising inflation. Suburban real estate will also benefit from more people working from home and, if recent trends persist, rising crime in urban areas. Gold should also do well. The yellow metal has come down from its August highs, but should benefit from a weaker dollar over the coming months, and ultimately, from a more stagflationary environment later this decade. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 “More infectious coronavirus mutation may be 'a good thing', says disease expert,” Reuters, August 17, 2020. 2 Nina Bai, ”One More Reason to Wear a Mask: You’ll Get Less Sick From COVID-19,” University of California San Francisco, July 31, 2020. 3 Dave Roos, “How Crude Smallpox Inoculations Helped George Washington Win the War,” History.com, May 18, 2020. Global Investment Strategy View Matrix
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Current MacroQuant Model Scores
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
Fourth Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: A Post-Pandemic Regime Shift
According to BCA Research's Foreign Exchange Strategy service, the ebbing of the reflation trades remain the dominant force affecting global markets, and the FX space in particular. The equity market downdraft this past March and the subsequent recovery since…
Highlights Most sentiment and technical indicators suggest the dollar is undergoing a countertrend bounce rather than entering a new bull market. However, the internal dynamics of financial markets remain short-term constructive for the DXY. The DXY could rise to 96 before working off oversold conditions. Stay short USD/JPY as a core holding. Look to rebuy a basket of Scandinavian currencies versus the USD and EUR at a trigger point of -2%. Go long sterling if it drops to 1.25. Remain short EUR/GBP. Feature Chart I-1The Dollar Is A Counter-Cyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Counter-Cyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Counter-Cyclical Currency
The world remains dominated by the reflation trade. The equity market downdraft this past March and the subsequent recovery since April has been a mirror image of the rise and fall of the dollar (Chart I-1). This suggests that at a minimum, the Federal Reserve’s actions and Washington’s policy decisions have served as important pillars in the global economic recovery. A falling dollar tends to reflate the global economy, so it is important to gauge whether the recent bounce is technical in nature or at risk of a more meaningful increase. From an investment perspective, the economic outlook as we enter the final stretch of 2020 is as uncertain as ever. Factors such as the potential for renewed lockdowns, a fiscal cliff in the US, political uncertainty due to Brexit, and the possibility of a contested US election all make for a very complex decision tree. As investors try to decipher the end game, we turn to the internal dynamics of financial markets for a more sober view. Sentiment and technical indicators make up an important component of our currency framework, and are usually good at gauging important shifts in financial markets. Given market action over the past few weeks, we are reviewing a few of these key indicators to help guide currency strategy into year-end and beyond. The Signal From Currency Markets The message from our currency market indicators suggests a technical bounce in the dollar rather than a renewed bear market. The exchange rate that best signals whether we are in a reflationary/deflationary environment is the AUD/JPY rate. Chart I-2DXY Is Testing Strong Resistance
The Message From Dollar Sentiment And Technical Indicators
The Message From Dollar Sentiment And Technical Indicators
From a broad perspective, the DXY index was oversold, having broken below key support levels this year. More recently, the bounce in the DXY index has brought it a nudge above the upward-sloping trend line, which had defined the bull market since the 2011 lows (Chart I-2). A significant bounce from current levels will be worrisome. More likely, the dollar will churn near current levels before resuming its downtrend. In other words, we expect that, going forward, this upward-sloped line will act as powerful overhead resistance. The exchange rate that best signals whether we are in a reflationary/deflationary environment is the AUD/JPY rate (Chart I-3). Since the Great Recession, the yen has been the best performer during equity drawdowns, while the Aussie has been the worst. As a result, the AUD/JPY cross has consistently bottomed at the key support zone of 72-74. This defensive line notably held during the European debt crisis, China’s industrial recession, and the global trade war. The frontier was clearly breached during the March drawdown this year, but we have since re-entered the safe zone (Chart I-4). Going forward, a break below 72 will be worrisome. Looking at the intra-day charts, we see a clear pattern of lower highs and lower lows since the September 10th peak. That said, speculators are still short the cross, suggesting that the level of complacency going into the February equity market drawdown is not there today (Chart I-4, bottom panel). Chart I-3The Reflation Trade
The Reflation Trade
The Reflation Trade
Chart I-4AUD/JPY: Watch The 72-24 Zone
AUD/JPY: Watch The 72-24 Zone
AUD/JPY: Watch The 72-24 Zone
High-beta carry currencies such as the RUB, ZAR, MXN, and BRL have been rather weak, even if they are still holding above their lows. These currencies are usually good at sniffing out a change in the investment landscape, specifically one becoming fertile for carry trades. Carry trades usually do well when US yields are low and the global growth environment is improving (Chart I-5). The message so far is that the drop in U.S. bond yields may not have been sufficient to make these currencies attractive again. This is confirmed by the performance of the Deutsche Bank carry ETF, DBV, which has been struggling to recover amid very low rates (Chart I-6). Chart I-5Carry Trades Are Lagging
Carry Trades Are Lagging
Carry Trades Are Lagging
Chart I-6Carry Trade ETFs Have Underperformed
Carry Trade ETFs Have Underperformed
Carry Trade ETFs Have Underperformed
Speculators are very short the dollar. Whenever the percentage of leveraged funds and overall speculators that are short the dollar is at or below 20%, a meaningful rally ensues (Chart I-7). However, because the dollar is a momentum currency, reversion-to-the-mean strategies work in the short term but not so much longer term. The dollar advance/decline line remains well below its 200-day moving average. Meanwhile, there is a death-cross formation between the 200-day and 400-day moving averages. This is a very bearish technical profile (Chart I-8). We cannot rule out rallies toward the 200-day moving average, but for now we remain well below this danger zone. Chart I-7Rising Number Of Dollar Bears
Rising Number Of Dollar Bears
Rising Number Of Dollar Bears
Chart I-8A Cyclical Bear Market
A Cyclical Bear Market
A Cyclical Bear Market
Finally, currency volatility is rising from very depressed levels. Usually, low currency volatility is a sign of complacency among traders and investors, while higher volatility signals a more balanced and healthy market rotation. Over the last three episodes where volatility rose from these oversold levels, the dollar soared and pro-cyclical currencies suffered severe losses. For example, the most significant episodes were 1997-1998, 2007-2008, and 2014-2015 (Chart I-9). The one difference this time around is that the dollar is expensive, while it was very cheap during previous riot points. This argues for a technical bounce, rather than a renewed bull market. Chart I-9Currency Volatility Has Spiked
Currency Volatility Has Spiked
Currency Volatility Has Spiked
In a nutshell, the message from technical indicators is that the bounce in the dollar was to be expected. However, we are monitoring a few worrisome developments. First, the consensus is overwhelmingly bearish on the dollar, which could make this bounce advance much further than most expect. Second, spikes in volatility, especially as the equity market corrects, are traditionally dollar bullish. The Signal From Commodity Markets Commodity prices hold a special place as FX market indicators, since they are both driven by final demand and financial speculation. Over the years, we have found that the internal dynamics of commodity prices usually send key signals for underlying FX market trends. Overall, the signals are also mixed: The copper-to-gold ratio has bottomed and is heading higher from deeply oversold levels. Together with the stabilization in government bond yields, it signifies that the liquidity-to-growth transmission mechanism might be working. This is usually dollar bearish, as rising global growth leads to capital outflows from the US (Chart I-10). The Gold/Silver ratio (GSR) tends to track the US dollar, and its recent rebound is worrisome (Chart I-11). The GSR provides important information on the battleground between easing financial conditions and a pickup in economic (or manufacturing) activity. Gold benefits from plentiful liquidity and very low real rates, while silver benefits from rising industrial demand. Therefore, the GSR rallies during periods of financial stress that forces policymakers to act, and peaks as we exit a recession into a recovery. Chart I-10The Copper/Gold Ratio Leads The Dollar
The Copper/Gold Ratio Leads The Dollar
The Copper/Gold Ratio Leads The Dollar
Chart I-11The Gold/Silver Ratio Is Rebounding
The Gold/Silver Ratio Is Rebounding
The Gold/Silver Ratio Is Rebounding
We had a limit-sell order on the GSR at 75 that was triggered this week, putting our position offside by 7%. The key driver of GSR price action over the next few weeks will be silver prices. The next important technical level for silver is the $18-to-$20-per-ounce zone. This has acted as a strong overhead resistance since 2015, which should now provide strong downside support. If silver is able to stabilize around this level, it will indicate that the precious metals bull market remains intact. We eventually expect the GSR to drop toward 50. The Signal From Fixed-Income Markets The fixed-income market is a very powerful sentiment barometer for the dollar. Both cross-border flows and global allocation to FX reserves provide important information about investor preferences for the dollar. Below, we go through the indicators that we track frequently and which constitute an integral part of our framework. The bond-to-gold ratio is an important signal for the dollar, since both US Treasurys and gold are competing assets. Chart I-12Gold And Treasurys Are Competing Assets
Gold And Treasurys Are Competing Assets
Gold And Treasurys Are Competing Assets
The bond-to-gold ratio is an important signal for the dollar, since both US Treasurys and gold are safe-haven assets and thus, by definition are competing assets (Chart I-12). As the Fed continues to increase the supply of bonds, the ratio of the US bond ETF (TLT)-to-gold (GLD) will be an important proxy for investor sentiment on the dollar (Chart I-13). For now, the ratio is sitting on the key 0.94 support zone. Remarkably, the ratio of the total return in US government bonds-to-gold prices has tracked the dollar pretty well since the end of the Bretton Woods system in the early ‘70s (Chart I-14). This makes it both a good short-term and long-term barometer. Chart I-13Watch The Bond-To-Gold Ratio
Watch The Bond-To-Gold Ratio
Watch The Bond-To-Gold Ratio
Chart I-14Competing Assets And The Dollar
Competing Assets And The Dollar
Competing Assets And The Dollar
Inflows into US government bonds are falling sharply, while those into gold are rising sharply (Chart I-15). With interest rates near zero and real rates deeply negative, this pattern is likely to continue in the near future. This should pressure the bond-to-gold ratio lower. It is remarkable that in recent days investors have begun pricing even more negative real rates in the US compared to other G10 countries (Chart I-16). Again, should this materialize, this will send gold prices higher and cause further erosion in foreign bond purchases. Chart I-15Gold And USD Inflows Diverge
Gold And USD Inflows Diverge Gold And USD Inflows Diverge
Gold And USD Inflows Diverge Gold And USD Inflows Diverge
Chart I-16Real Rate Expectations Are Relapsing
Real Rate Expectations Are Relapsing
Real Rate Expectations Are Relapsing
Overall, the signal from fixed-income markets remain US dollar bearish. The Signal From Equity Markets Equity market indicators continue to flag that the rally in the dollar has a bit further to go, but should remain a counter-trend bounce. Currencies tend to move in sync with the relative performance of their equity bourses. Chart I-17Cyclicals Have Outperformed Defensives
Cyclicals Have Outperformed Defensives
Cyclicals Have Outperformed Defensives
Cyclical stocks have been underperforming defensive ones of late, but the pattern of higher lows in place since the March bottom continues to persist (Chart I-17). The dollar tends to weaken when cyclical stocks are outperforming defensive ones. This is because non-US equity markets have a much higher concentration of cyclical stocks in their bourses. Thus, whenever cyclical sectors are outperforming defensives, it is a clear sign that the marginal dollar is rotating outside of the US. Correspondingly, currencies tend to move in sync with the relative performance of their equity bourses (Chart I-18A and I-18B). So far, non-US equity markets have relapsed relative to the US, but are not yet breaking down. Earnings revisions continue to head higher across all markets. Bottom-up analysts are usually too optimistic about the level of earnings, but are generally spot on about their direction. That said, higher earnings revisions have been concentrated in the US so far, and will need to improve in other markets for the dollar bear market to resume (Chart I-19). Chart I-18ACurrencies Follow Relative Equity Performance
Currencies Follow Relative Equity Performance
Currencies Follow Relative Equity Performance
Chart I-18BCurrencies Follow Relative Equity Performance
Currencies Follow Relative Equity Performance
Currencies Follow Relative Equity Performance
Chart I-19V-Shape Recoveries In Earnings Revisions
V-Shape Recoveries In Earnings Revisions
V-Shape Recoveries In Earnings Revisions
In a nutshell, corrections in equity markets are usually a healthy reset for the bull market to resume, but the character of this particular selloff is worth monitoring. Cyclical and value stocks that are already at historically bombed-out levels have started to underperform. This is usually dollar bullish. Whether the correction ensues or the bull market resumes, it will require a change in equity market leadership from defensives to cyclicals for the dollar bear market to resume. Investment Implications It is very difficult to gauge whether the current market shakeout will last just a few more weeks or continue into year-end. Given such a lack of clarity, our strategy is as follows: Stay long safe-haven currencies. Our preferred vehicle is the Japanese yen, which sports an attractive real rate relative to the US. Focus on relative value at the crosses rather than outright dollar bets. We are short the NZD/CAD and EUR/GBP as a play on relative fundamentals. Stick with them. We already have limit orders on a few currencies, and are adding the Nordic currency basket to this list if it drops another 2%. We initially took profits on this trade last week, when our stop loss was triggered. As Scandinavian currencies continue to fall, they are becoming more compelling buys. Chart I-20Place Stops On Short GSR At 85
Place Stops On Short GSR At 85
Place Stops On Short GSR At 85
We have been long petrocurrencies versus the euro, and the drop in the EUR/USD has helped hedge that trade against market volatility. That said our stop-loss of -5% was triggered amid market volatility. We are reinstating this trade today, and will be looking to rotate into USD shorts once there is more clarity on the economic front. Our short gold/long silver trade was triggered at 75, putting the position offside. For risk management purposes, we are implementing a tight stop at 85 (Chart I-20). Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies US 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 mixed: The current account deficit widened from $111.5 billion to $170.5 billion in Q2. The preliminary Markit Manufacturing PMI increased from 53.1 to 53.5 in September while the services PMI declined from 55 to 54.6. The Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index increased from 74.1 to 78.9 in September. Existing home sales increased by 2.4% month-on-month in August. Initial jobless claims increased by 840K for the week ending on September 19. The DXY index appreciated by 1.8% this week amid an equity market correction. While the risk-off sentiment provides a positive backdrop for the US dollar, rising twin deficits and unfavorable real rates both suggest a weaker dollar in the long term. Meanwhile, any incoming positive news on the vaccine will support cyclical currencies against the US dollar. Report Links: Addressing Client Questions - September 4, 2020 A Simple Framework For Currencies - July 17, 2020 DXY: False Breakdown Or Cyclical Bear Market? - June 5, 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 mostly generally constructive: The current account surplus narrowed from €20.7 billion to €16.6 billion on a seasonally-adjusted basis in July. While the preliminary Markit Manufacturing PMI increased from 51.7 to 53.7 in September, the services PMI dropped from 50.5 to 47.6. Consumer confidence marginally increased from -14.7 to -13.9 in September. The German Ifo Business Climate index rose to 93.4 in September. The expectations component has broken above pre-pandemic levels. The euro declined by 1.6% this week against the US dollar. The ECB Economic Bulletin released this Thursday warned that the unemployment rate will continue to rise in the euro area as current figures are skewed by job subsides. The ECB also sees little upside in demand for consumer goods and repeated that it is ready to further adjust its policies to support the economy and boost inflation. Report Links: Addressing Client Questions - September 4, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 The 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 positive: The manufacturing PMI was largely unchanged at 47.3 in September. The services PMI ticked up from 45 to 45.6. The All Industry Activity Index increased by 1.3% month-on-month in July. The Japanese yen depreciated by 1% against the US dollar this week. The latest BoJ Monetary Policy Meeting Minutes released on Thursday expects economic activity to pick up in the second half of 2020 through pent-up demand and supported by accommodative monetary policies, but it also warned about a slower recovery in the event of an upturn in COVID cases. Moreover, the Minutes said that core inflation is likely to be negative in Japan for now. Japan’s higher real rates make the yen an attractive safe-haven hedge. Report Links: The Near-Term Bull Case For The Dollar - February 28, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 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 from the UK have been mixed: The Markit Manufacturing PMI declined from 55.2 to 54.3 in September. The services PMI also dropped from 58.8 to 55.1. Retail sales increased by 2.8% year-on-year in August. House prices increased by 5% year-on-year in September. The British pound plunged by 1.9% against the US dollar this week amid broad USD strength. Besides global synchronized risks, the internal risk from Brexit uncertainties still poses a big threat to the British pound. That said, the pound is still undervalued at current levels and its year-to-date performance lags behind those of other risky G10 currencies. The pound is poised to rebound with positive vaccine and Brexit news. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 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 from Australia have been mostly positive: The manufacturing PMI increased from 53.6 to 55.5 in September. The services PMI also ticked up from 49 to 50. The ANZ Consumer Confidence index increased from 92.4 to 93.5 for the week ending on September 20. Retail sales declined by 4.2% month-on-month in August. The Australian dollar dropped by 4% against the US dollar this week, only slightly above the pre-crisis level. We continue to favor the Australian dollar due to lower domestic COVID cases and effective measures for containing the virus. Moreover, China’s data continues to surprise to the upside, which bodes well for the Australian dollar. 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 from New Zealand have been negative: Exports declined from NZ$5 billion to NZ$4.4 billion in August, while imports increased from NZ$4.6 billion to NZ$4.8 billion. The trade balance shifted from a positive NZ$447 million to a deficit of NZ$353 million. The New Zealand dollar plunged by 3.8% against the US dollar this week. On Wednesday, the RBNZ held its interest rate at 0.25%, but warned that the economy needs further support and implied further easing. The rising possibility of negative interest rates in New Zealand would hurt the kiwi especially against the Aussie dollar. Moreover, New Zealand’s services trade surplus evaporated as tourism continues to suffer. We will go long AUD/NZD at 1.05. 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 positive: Retail sales increased by 1.1% month-on-month in August. New housing prices increased by 2.1% year-on-year in August. Bloomberg Nanos Confidence edged up from 52.9 to 53.1 for the week ending on September 18. The Canadian dollar fell by 1.2% against the US dollar this week. Both retail sales and the housing market have been quite resilient so far, providing support for the Canadian dollar. We are long the Canadian dollar against the New Zealand dollar. Stay with it. 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
There have been scant data from Switzerland this week: Total sight deposit declined from CHF 704.1 billion to CHF 703.9 billion for the week ending on September 18. The Swiss franc fell by 1.4% against the US dollar this week. On Thursday, the SNB kept its interest rate unchanged at -0.75% and warned of a longer coronavirus impact on economic activity. We like the Swiss franc as a safe-haven hedge especially during a second COVID-19 wave. Moreover, if the October US Treasury Report lists Switzerland as a currency manipulator, it will limit downward pressure on the Swiss franc against the US dollar. Report Links: On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 Portfolio Tweaks Before The Chinese New Year - January 24, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
There is no significant data from Norway this week. The Norwegian krone dropped by 2.8% against the US dollar this week. The Norges Bank held its key policy interest rate on hold at a record low 0% on Thursday, as widely expected, and said no rate hike is likely within two years. That said, with core inflation at 3.7% year-on-year in August, it’s unlikely that the Norges Bank will further lower rates into negative territory. Our NOK/USD and NOK/EUR trades from the long Nordic basket were stopped out last week with profits of 18.4% and 9.5%, respectively. We continue to like the Norwegian krone in the long term. 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
There is no significant data from Sweden this week. The Swedish krona fell by 3.2% against the US dollar this week. On Tuesday, the Riksbank kept its interest rate unchanged at 0% and implied that the rate will likely remain unchanged at least through late 2023. However, the Bank is also ready to further lower the repo rate if necessary. The Swedish krona remains one of our favorite procyclical currencies among the G10 universe supported by its cheap valuation. 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 Footnotes Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Highlights While we are bearish on the US dollar in the long run, the greenback is primed for a rebound in the near term. Consistently, commodities prices will relapse and EM currencies will depreciate versus the US dollar. Global growth stocks will correct further because they are overbought/over-owned and expensive. The rest of the equity market will relapse because its fundamentals are poor, especially given the renewed rise in new infection cases across Europe and the US. Feature Global financial markets are in the process of a reset. Several segments have been through very sharp and considerable movements in recent months, and these movements are starting to partially unwind. The US dollar will rebound, commodities prices will correct and global equities will continue selling off. In brief, EM risk assets and currencies are entering a period of weakness, which will eventually lead to buying opportunities. Inter-Linkages Between Fixed-Income, Currencies And Commodities Chart I-1A Reset In US Inflation Expectations And Real Rates Is Overdue
A Reset In US Inflation Expectations And Real Rates Is Overdue
A Reset In US Inflation Expectations And Real Rates Is Overdue
US inflation expectations have risen meaningfully, and US TIPS (real) yields have plummeted since April (Chart I-1). Consistent with plunging US real rates, the US dollar has sold off sharply (Chart I-1, bottom panel). Although our bias is that US inflation will rise in the coming years, for now, the rise in inflation expectations seems excessive. Given the tight correlation between oil prices and US breakeven inflation, as illustrated in the top panel of Chart I-1, lower crude prices will cause a drop in inflation expectations. Moreover, the absence of another large US fiscal stimulus will also lead to a downgrade in growth and inflation expectations. US nominal bond yields will likely remain largely range bound, and a drop in breakeven inflation will lead to higher real yields. The latter will help the US dollar to rebound from oversold levels, and EM currencies will depreciate against the dollar. In turn, a rebound in the greenback will be associated with lower commodities prices. Notably, investors’ net long positions in copper have become very elevated (Chart I-2). Investor sentiment on commodities in general is quite positive. Hence, from a contrarian perspective, commodities prices are primed for a pullback. In addition, Chinese imports of commodities will slow in the near term, reinforcing the correction in resources prices. China has evidently been stockpiling commodities, as its commodities imports have been considerably stronger than its underlying final demand. In particular, Chart I-3 demonstrates that mainland imports of copper, crude oil, steel and iron ore have been surging. Chinese imports of crude and industrial metals are likely to drop temporarily. Chart I-2Long Copper Is A Crowded Trade
Long Copper Is A Crowded Trade
Long Copper Is A Crowded Trade
Chart I-3China Has Been Stockpiling Commodities
China Has Been Stockpiling Commodities
China Has Been Stockpiling Commodities
China’s booming intake of commodities in recent months was stipulated by the country’s previously depleted commodity inventories, low prices and the availability of cheap bank financing. Granted commodity inventories have been replenished and resource prices are no longer low, Chinese imports of crude and industrial metals are likely to drop temporarily. That said, from a cyclical perspective, China’s economic recovery will continue, and final demand for resources will expand. Thus, we will see a material correction, not a crash, in commodities prices. EM credit spreads inversely correlate with commodities prices and currencies – EM sovereign and corporate credit spreads are shown as inverted on both panels of Chart I-4. As commodities prices retreat and the US dollar rebounds, EM credit markets will sell off. Chart I-4EM Credit Markets Will Weaken As EM Currencies And Commodities Sell Off
EM Credit Markets Will Weaken As EM Currencies And Commodities Sell Off
EM Credit Markets Will Weaken As EM Currencies And Commodities Sell Off
EM local currency bond yields might slightly back up as EM currencies depreciate and US real yields rebound. However, economic conditions in many EM countries outside China remain extremely weak, and inflation is very subdued. Hence, any back up in EM domestic bond yields will be limited. Bottom Line: While we are bearish on the US dollar in the long run, the greenback is primed for a rebound in the near term. Consistently, commodities prices will relapse and EM currencies will sell off versus the US dollar. Notably, oil prices, as well as several EM and DM currencies, have rolled over at technical levels which typically herald a major reversal (Chart I-5A and I-5B). Chart I-5AFacing A Major Resistance
Facing A Major Resistance
Facing A Major Resistance
Chart I-5BFacing A Major Resistance
Facing A Major Resistance
Facing A Major Resistance
Finally, EM fixed-income markets will experience a correction that will provide a buying opportunity. The Equity Correction: More To Go The correction in global share prices has further to run. Market leaders – growth stocks – remain overbought, and it is reasonable to expect that they will at least retest their 200-day moving averages. Meanwhile, the parts of the global equity universe hardest-hit during March have failed to break above their 200-day moving average. This can be interpreted as an indication that they have not yet entered a bull market. These include: EM ex-TMT1 and global value stocks as well as the US Value Line Geometric Composite Index (Chart I-6). In short, growth stocks will correct further because they are overbought/over-owned and expensive; the rest of the equity market will relapse because its fundamentals are poor, especially given the renewed rise in new infection cases across Europe and the US. Chart I-6These Stocks Have Not Entered A Bull Market Yet
These Stocks Have Not Entered A Bull Market Yet
These Stocks Have Not Entered A Bull Market Yet
Chart I-7Downside Risks To EM Equities
Downside Risks To EM Equities
Downside Risks To EM Equities
In addition, the following indicators also point to further selloff in EM and DM share prices. Our Risk-On / Safe-Haven currency ratio2 has been falling since June and continues pointing to lower EM share prices (Chart I-7). The EM and DM advance-decline lines have relapsed below zero indicating a deteriorating equity market breadth (Chart I-8). This heralds lower stock prices. As EM corporate bond yields rise due to either weaker EM currencies or lower commodities prices, as we argued above, EM share prices will tumble (Chart I-9). Chart I-8Deteriorating Breadth Points To Lower Share Prices
Deteriorating Breadth Points To Lower Share Prices
Deteriorating Breadth Points To Lower Share Prices
Chart I-9Rising EM Corporate Bond Yields Will Reinforce EM Equity Selloff
Rising EM Corporate Bond Yields Will Reinforce EM Equity Selloff
Rising EM Corporate Bond Yields Will Reinforce EM Equity Selloff
Bottom Line: Global and EM share prices are in a correction that has not run its course. Investment Strategy A meaningful setback in their EM currencies will lead us to recommend switching from receiving long-term rates to buying their cash local currency bonds (taking currency risks as well). EM Domestic Bonds: We continue recommending receiving 10-year swap rates in Mexico, Colombia, Russia, India, China, Korea and Malaysia. A meaningful setback in their EM currencies will lead us to recommend switching from receiving long-term rates to buying their cash local currency bonds (taking currency risks as well). EM Equities: Absolute-return investors should be cautious at the moment as EM share prices are set to deflate further. Within a global equity portfolio, we continue recommending a neutral allocation to EM. Better equity valuations in EM than in the US will be offset by a rebound in the US dollar, warranting a trading range in EM versus DM relative equity performance. Our country equity allocation within the EM universe is always presented at the end of our report (please refer to page 10). EM Exchange Rates: Even though we expect a meaningful rebound in the nominal broad trade-weighted US dollar, we believe the safe-haven currencies – such as the JPY, CHF and the euro – will outperform EM currencies. As such, we reiterate our strategy of shorting a basket of EM currencies versus an equally-weighted basket of JPY, CHF and the euro. Our short EM currency basket consists of BRL, CLP, ZAR, TRY, PHP, KRW and IDR. Finally, we recommend a neutral allocation to EM credit markets (US dollar bonds) versus US corporate credit. Absolute-return investors should accumulate this asset class on a weakness. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1Technology, media and telecom stocks excluding information technology (IT) sector before December 2018 and excluding IT, media & entertainment and internet & direct marketing retail as of December 2018 2Average of CAD, AUD, NZD, BRL, IDR, MXN, RUB, CLP & ZAR total return indices relative to average of JPY & CHF; rebased to 100 at January 2000 Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
Highlights The global recovery has legs, but it will follow a stop-and-go pattern. Global fiscal policy will ultimately remain loose enough to create an appropriate counterweight to three major risks. Risk assets are still attractive on a 12-month investment horizon despite short-term dangers. The dollar cyclical downtrend will be tested, but it will prevail. 10-year Treasury yields will be range bound between 0.5% and 1%. Industrials, materials, gold and Japanese equities are attractive. Feature Chart I-1Ebbing Surprises
Ebbing Surprises
Ebbing Surprises
The S&P 500 correction remains minimal in the face of Washington’s inability to reach a much-needed fiscal compromise. This resilience reflects that economies in the G-10 and China have pleasantly surprised investors despite rolling second waves of infections across the world, fiscal policy paralysis and generalized unease (Chart I-1). Strong growth has fueled higher earnings expectations. Meanwhile, global central banks are promising to keep accommodative monetary conditions in place indefinitely, which has allowed valuations to balloon. The cyclical outlook for stocks remains attractive. Nonetheless, global equities have entered a period of heightened volatility and downside risk until year-end. The S&P 500 had overshot its fundamentals, but now the momentum of the economic surprise index is deteriorating and central banks have deployed their full arsenal. Investors are concerned by a lack of fiscal support and rising policy uncertainty created by the approaching US election in November. This nervousness will spark powerful fluctuations in stock prices. Avoid Binary Judgments The global economy is at a complex juncture, buffeted between forces that will either propel its recovery or sink it. The positives will predominate in this contest, which suggests that the business cycle remains in an upswing, albeit, a volatile one. The Good… Five main positive forces underpin the nascent economic bounce and thus, the profit outlook. Pent-up demand and the inventory cycle: The economy is making up for the collapse of both cyclical spending and production at the end of Q1 and into Q2. Inventories of finished products have sharply declined in the past six months. In the US, rapidly shrinking inventories are supercharging the uptick in the new-orders-to inventories ratio. Similar dynamics are occurring in China, Europe and Japan (Chart I-2). China’s stimulus-driven recovery will provide a crucial boost to the global business cycle. The Chinese engine is revving: An aggressive stimulus campaign followed Beijing’s swift actions to contain the domestic spread of COVID-19. China’s policies are generating economic dividends that will percolate through the global industrial and commodity sectors. Sales of floor space are already expanding by 40% annually, driven by a 60% jump in Tier-1 cities. In response, construction is forming a trough. Moreover, the large issuance of local government bonds is financing an increase in infrastructure spending. Thanks to an upturn in building activity, the equipment purchases, construction and installation components of China’s real estate investment are all bottoming (Chart I-3). Chart I-2The Inventory Adjustment Is Advanced
The Inventory Adjustment Is Advanced
The Inventory Adjustment Is Advanced
Chart I-3China: A Policy-Driven Recovery
China: A Policy-Driven Recovery
China: A Policy-Driven Recovery
BCA Research’s Emerging Markets team recently showed that the expenditure rebound is not limited to the real estate sector.1 Vehicle sales are healthier and tech infrastructure outlays are reaccelerating (Chart I-4). Retail sales also moved back into positive territory in August. Thus, China’s cyclical spending has regained its footing. China’s stimulus-driven recovery will provide a crucial boost to the global business cycle. Beijing’s unconstrained credit easing is the source for the turnaround in China’s cyclical and capital expenditures outlook. Hence, the sharp increase in China’s credit and fiscal impulse foreshadows a powerful rebound in imports and in global industrial production because Chinese capex demands plentiful commodities, industrial goods and capital goods (Chart I-5). Chart I-4More Chinese Recovery
More Chinese Recovery
More Chinese Recovery
Chart I-5Chinese Stimulus Matters Globally
Chinese Stimulus Matters Globally
Chinese Stimulus Matters Globally
Chart I-6Robust American Households
Robust American Households
Robust American Households
Consumer balance sheets are robust: Unlike the aftermath of the Great Financial Crisis (GFC), US households do not need to rebuild destroyed balance sheets. This time around, the low level of household debt and the limited hit to net worth has allowed consumers to withstand an even greater income shock than during the GFC (Chart I-6). As a result, expenditures are rebounding much quicker than most investors anticipated six months ago. An extremely vigorous policy response: Policymakers in the G-10 did not wait to deploy their economic arsenal when the economic crisis erupted. Governments have racked up their largest budget deficits since World War II (Chart I-7). Monetary authorities also moved quickly to ease financial conditions. Broad money supply growth among advanced economies has skyrocketed, global corporate bond issuance stands at a record $2.6 trillion, and excess liquidity points to continued industrial production strength. In the US, our Financial Liquidity Index is climbing higher alongside the ISM Manufacturing Index. Even the performance of EM carry trades (a financial variable that shows whether funds are flowing into EM economies) is consistent with a stabilization in global IP (Chart I-8). Chart I-7Exceptional Fiscal Stimulus
October 2020
October 2020
Chart I-8Liquidity Helps Growth
Liquidity Helps Growth
Liquidity Helps Growth
Stronger industrial production models: Our industrial production models for the major advanced economies are all moving up after experiencing massive collapses this past spring. These models encapsulate many influences and their uniformly positive message is very encouraging. In all likelihood, a virtuous cycle has been unleashed. As IP recovers, then so will income, which will fuel the demand expansion and thus, more production. We expect the models to rise even more in the coming quarters. … And The Bad Three near-term concerns still hang over the global economy. Hence, while Q3 is set to deliver stunningly strong numbers boosted by advantageous base effects, growth will recede in Q4.2 While fiscal policy was on point in late Q1 and Q2, Washington’s performance in the past three months has been questionable. Fiscal stimulus hiccups in the US: While fiscal policy was on point in late Q1 and Q2, Washington’s performance in the past three months has been questionable. The CARES Act’s expanded $600 per week unemployment benefit lapsed at the end of July. This benefit, along with one-time $1200 stimulus checks, pushed disposable income higher by 7.5% during the past five months. Thankfully, households managed to save a large proportion of the government support. Consequently, consumption remained strong in August, despite limited help from the federal government. The short-term outlook for consumption is fragile because households cannot continue to tap into their savings. In August, US retail sales disappointed. Calculations by our US fixed-income strategist show that in the coming months, Washington must spend almost $800 billion just for consumer expenditures to match its growth rate of -3% recorded at the depth of the last recession.3 Moreover, a potential wave of eviction of renters looms. Thus, the economy could relapse violently as long as Democrats and Republicans remain apart on a compromise for a new stimulus bill. The upcoming Senate confirmation process to fill the Supreme Court seat left vacant by Ruth Bader-Ginsburg’s passing only complicates the passage of these needed spending measures. Chart I-9Permanent Joblessness Is A Threat
Permanent Joblessness Is A Threat
Permanent Joblessness Is A Threat
Rising permanent job losses: The US unemployment rate has fallen from a high of 14.7% in April to 8.4% in August. This bright picture hides a negative development. The number of permanent job losses has quickly escalated, reaching 4.1 million last month (Chart I-9). Moreover, continuing unemployment insurance claims are barely declining. Mounting long-term unemployment is not associated with an economic recovery. Furthermore, permanent joblessness could easily push down consumer confidence, which would lift the household savings rate and hurt consumption. This problem is not unique to the US. In the UK, an unemployment cliff looms on October 31 when there will be an end to government schemes allowing firms to receive funds as long as they do not permanently severe their links with furloughed workers. The UK’s unemployment rate of only 4.1% is bound to surge when these support measures disappear. In continental Europe, similar stimulus programs could also be rescinded this fall. The weak health of small businesses accentuates risks to the labor market. In the US, 21% of very small firms will run out of money by the end of the year if the government does not dispense supplemental help. Closing these businesses will push up permanent joblessness even more and thus, further weaken consumption. Either weaker stock prices or a deterioration in the economy will be the catalyst for Washington to strike a deal. COVID-19 and the service sector: Many major countries are now fighting a second wave of infections, which may surpass the first wave. Many schools have re-opened and winter in the Northern Hemisphere is approaching (which will force people to congregate inside), bringing with it the regular flu season. Chart I-10The Service Sector Is The Weakest Link
The Service Sector Is The Weakest Link
The Service Sector Is The Weakest Link
This epidemiological backdrop still represents an elevated hurdle to overcome for large swaths of the service sector, especially leisure, food, hospitality and travel. While these industries account for only 10% of GDP in the US, they contribute roughly 25% of employment. If governments toughen social distancing rules and implement localized lockdowns, then the service sector will act as a drag on GDP and employment (Chart I-10). Which Side Will Win? Ultimately, we anticipate that the tailwinds supporting the economy will overcome the headwinds. On the policy front, governments will pass more stimulus. Our Geopolitical strategists believe that the following constraints will force greater spending in the US by mid-October: The Democrats face an election and they want to deliver benefits to their voters. The White House needs to prevent financial turmoil in the final month of the campaign. If the Republicans fail to agree on a second stimulus bill, there is a significant risk they will lose the White House and their majority in the Senate. Chart I-11No Constraints There
No Constraints There
No Constraints There
The package should total nearly $2 trillion. The Democrats have reduced their demands to $2.3 trillion, while the GOP has moved up its offer to $1.3 trillion. Moreover, a bi-partisan “Problem Solvers Caucus” has emerged in Congress with a $1.5 trillion bill proposal that the White House is considering. Either weaker stock prices or a deterioration in the economy will be the catalyst for Washington to strike a deal. Fiscal stimulus will also remain generous outside the US. In Europe, France is providing an attractive template. On September 3, the Macron government announced an additional EUR100 billion stimulus package, whereby 40% of the funds would come from the common bond issuance recently announced by the EU. In Japan, Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga will continue the policies of his predecessor. Finally, in emerging economies, the absence of inflation and well-behaved sovereign yields and spreads have provided room for local authorities to alleviate any economic pain created by COVID-19 (Chart I-11). Monetary policy will remain extremely stimulative. Central banks will not meaningfully ease policy further, but our monetary indicators are already at their most accommodative levels on record (see Section III). Plus, the US Federal Reserve’s switch to an average-inflation target last month raised the bar that inflation must reach before the FOMC tightens policy. The European Central Bank is contemplating a similar change. Furthermore, the continued woes of service-sector employment constitute another hurdle to clear before central banks can remove accommodation. Chart I-12US Housing Is The New Locomotive
US Housing Is The New Locomotive
US Housing Is The New Locomotive
Finally, COVID-19 currently has a limited impact on the lion’s share of cyclical spending, which will continue to recover. Cyclical sectors include residential investment, business capex and spending on consumer durable goods. In the US, they account for only 20% GDP, but they generate 70% of the variance in its fluctuations. These sectors are heavily geared toward manufacturing, which is crucial for cyclical spending. Importantly, the robustness of household balance sheets and record low borrowing costs have allowed mortgage applications for purchases to rise sharply, home sales to recover and homebuilder confidence to surge to an all-time high (Chart I-12). Hence, residential activity will remain an important driver of domestic demand, especially because residential investment also often galvanizes other forms of cyclical spending. Bottom Line: The global economy remains buffeted between five positive forces that bolster the recovery and three negatives that hamper it. Ultimately, the authorities will have no choice but to add supplementary fiscal stimulus and monetary conditions will remain extremely accommodative. The recovery will then slow from its heady Q3 pace, but cyclical spending will still power ahead next year. In a nutshell, the economy will not be weaker nor much stronger than the base case presented by the IMF. Investment Implications Our somewhat upbeat position on the global economic outlook remains consistent with a favorable stance toward risk assets in the next 12 to 18 months, because adverse economic outcomes are unlikely to materialize, not because growth will be stronger than expected. Nonetheless, we are conscious that the market place remains fraught with many risks and that growth will stay volatile. As a result, episodic violent corrections will punctuate the upward path in risk asset. We are currently in the midst of such a correction. Chart I-13The Dollar Remains Expensive
The Dollar Remains Expensive
The Dollar Remains Expensive
The Dollar We are still bearish on the dollar on a cyclical investment horizon. The USD remains expensive despite its recent weakness. Against major currencies, the dollar has climbed by 30% since 2008. On a broad, trade-weighted basis, it is up 36% in the same period. Therefore, the US currency trades 15% above its Purchasing Power Parity equilibrium, the most among the major currencies (Chart I-13).4 The US balance of payments picture is becoming increasingly problematic for the dollar. After a surge this spring, US private-sector savings are set to decline. Low interest rates and asset bubbles will increasingly incentivize consumption, while rising capex intentions point to a drop in the corporate sector’s savings. Given that we anticipate the fiscal balance to remain negative in the coming years, the national savings rate will sag, which will worsen the US current account (Chart I-14).5 In other words, the US twin deficits will balloon as the recovery progresses. Despite our bearish view on the dollar, our base case still anticipates a short-term bounce in the USD. The US capital account will not offset the impact on the dollar of a wider current account deficit. US real interest rate differentials have collapsed and foreigners have shunned the Treasury market (Chart I-15, top panel). The Fed conducts the loosest monetary policy among the major economies, which is pushing the US shadow rate lower versus the euro area. Such a trend is euro bullish (dollar bearish) because it draws capital outside of the US economy (Chart I-15, middle panel). Additionally, the USD’s counter cyclicality will be its final undoing during the global economic recovery and will create another hurdle for the US capital account. Chart I-14A Dollar-Bearish Savings Backdrop
A Dollar-Bearish Savings Backdrop
A Dollar-Bearish Savings Backdrop
Chart I-15No Love For The Greenback
No Love For The Greenback
No Love For The Greenback
Chart I-16The Dollar Is Ripe For A Rebound
The Dollar Is Ripe For A Rebound
The Dollar Is Ripe For A Rebound
Despite our bearish view on the dollar, our base case still anticipates a short-term bounce in the USD. Our dollar capitulation index is overextended and if stocks experience heightened volatility (see equities on page 32), then a safe-haven asset such as the greenback will catch a temporary bid (Chart I-16). A correction in the euro to 1.15-1.14 is a reasonable target. Government Bonds Our reluctance to overweight bonds or duration is intact. The BCA US 10-Year Government Bond Valuation index is consistent with higher yields in the next 12 months (Chart I-17). Moreover, bond prices are losing momentum, which creates a technical vulnerability for this asset class. The economy is the potential catalyst to expose the underlying valuation and technical risks of government bonds. Inflation is still a distant danger, but our BCA Pipeline Inflation indicator highlights that deflationary pressures are receding (Chart I-18, top panel). Likewise, our Nominal Cyclical Spending proxy already warns that yields have upside; and an expanding recovery implies that bond-bearish pressures will progress (Chart I-18, bottom panel). Chart I-17The Traitorous Treasury Market
The Traitorous Treasury Market
The Traitorous Treasury Market
Chart I-18Problems For Treasurys
Problems For Treasurys
Problems For Treasurys
The Fed’s switch to an average inflation target is also consistent with higher long bond yields. The Fed’s newfound tolerance for loftier inflation should lift long-term inflation expectations and medium-term inflation uncertainty, especially given current fiscal trends. Higher long-term inflation expectations and inflation uncertainty have the potential to generate a broader range of policy-rate outcomes, therefore they will also normalize the extraordinarily depressed term premium and lead to a steeper yield curve (Chart I-19). Thus, 10- and 30-year yields have room to increase even if current short rates remain anchored near their lower bounds for the next three years. Over the next 12 months, 10- and 30-year Treasury yields will be capped at 1% and 2%, respectively. The expected yield upside will be limited in the next year. While investors should anticipate some curve steepening, the most violent selloffs only take hold of the Treasury market when the Fed generates hawkish surprises, which is very unlikely in 2021 (Chart I-20). Moreover, the stock market creates its own constraints. As our European Investment strategist has reasoned, higher yields will hurt growth stocks that derive a disproportionate share of their intrinsic value from long-term cash flows.6 If bond prices fall too quickly, then these growth stocks would plunge and drag down the equity market. In essence, elevated bond yields can generate a deflationary shock that undoes the primary reason why yields would rise. Therefore, over the next 12 months, 10- and 30-year Treasury yields will be capped at 1% and 2%, respectively. Chart I-19Average-Inflation Targeting Hurts Long-Dated Bonds
Average-Inflation Targeting Hurts Long-Dated Bonds
Average-Inflation Targeting Hurts Long-Dated Bonds
Chart I-20Limited Upside For Yields
Limited Upside For Yields
Limited Upside For Yields
Equities Several factors underpin our positive stance on global equities in the next 12 months. The lack of investment alternatives or TINA (There Is No Alternative) is a crucial support under stock prices. As BCA Research’s Global Investment Strategy service recently discussed, the S&P 500’s dividend yield stands at around 100 basis points above 10-year Treasury yields.7 Conservatively assuming that dividends per share remain constant in the next 10 years and inflation averages 2%, the real value of the US equity benchmark must decline by 25% during that period before it underperforms Treasurys. Given that gaps between dividend yields and bond yields are even larger outside the US, many foreign bourses must experience deeper real depreciation before they underperform their respective bond markets (Chart I-21). Corporate pricing power is returning, which is positive for the earnings outlook. The ability of firms to boost prices will be enhanced by the combination of a weak dollar, declining deflationary forces, rebounding commodity prices and a surge in the sales-to-inventory ratio. The pickup in pricing power is broadly based; 59% of the S&P 500 groups analyzed by our US equity strategist are experiencing mounting prices.8 When higher pricing power meets mending sales volumes, operating leverage allows profit margins to expand, which lifts earnings per share and stock prices (Chart I-22). Chart I-21TINA Flatters Stocks
TINA Flatters Stocks
TINA Flatters Stocks
Chart I-22Corporate Pricing Power Is Coming Back
Corporate Pricing Power Is Coming Back
Corporate Pricing Power Is Coming Back
Chart I-23Liquidity Underpins This Rally
Liquidity Underpins This Rally
Liquidity Underpins This Rally
The global monetary environment also supports stocks. The swell in our US Financial Liquidity index is consistent with additional equity gains because it forecasts stronger economic activity (Chart I-23). Expectations of an upswing in the business cycle let earnings forecasts climb and can also improve the anticipated growth rate of long-term earnings while encouraging risk-taking, which compresses the equity risk premium. Moreover, generous liquidity limits the upside to real yields, which further boosts equity multiples. Another consequence of ample liquidity is a marked increase in corporate actions. Firms engage in greater M&A activity, which can generate gains in accounting earnings while withdrawing equity from the market. Businesses around the world have tapped the corporate bond market at a record pace this year, creating both large war chests and the capacity to deploy funds for capex. Higher capex boosts demand and cyclical spending, which creates a positive environment for earnings. Our positive cyclical view on stocks does not preclude a period of heightened volatility and further downside risk in the coming three months. The US and G-10 economic surprise indices are elevated, but they are losing momentum. This deterioration in the second derivative of activity is problematic when there is a non-trivial chance of a policy error in Washington. Importantly, the upcoming US election will raise questions about the regulatory environment for the two market heavyweights: technology and healthcare stocks. As we wrote last month, a shift of leadership away from these sectors will translate into episodic corrections for stocks at large.9 Additionally, investors must price in the risk of gridlock in Washington. If Senate Republicans are reluctant to write a check while an unpopular President Trump faces an imminent election, then their willingness to expand spending if Biden clinches the White House will be nonexistent. A complete refusal to add fiscal stimulus would nearly guarantee a double-dip recession. Equities must embed a risk premium against this scenario ahead of the election. Therefore, the S&P 500 is likely to test 3000 in the coming weeks before rebounding. Our positive cyclical view on stocks does not preclude a period of heightened volatility and further downside risk in the coming three months. Sector Considerations We are positive on the medium-term outlook for value versus growth stocks. The cheapness of value versus growth makes the former attractive, but is not enough to allocate funds to it aggressively. Instead, our bias takes root in our economic view. The forward earnings of global value stocks are very depressed relative to growth stocks. However, the ratio of value EPS to growth EPS is extremely pro-cyclical. Thus, our positive stance on global growth is consistent with a rebound in relative profits that will help value equities (Chart I-24, top panel). Moreover, higher yields correlate with a re-rating of relative equity multiples in favor of value stocks, which are less sensitive to rising discount rates than their growth counterparts (Chart I-24, bottom panel). In this context, we continue to favor industrials and materials; consumer discretionary stocks are also appealing.10 Investors should underweight the US, especially in common currency terms. Gold mining equities remain attractive long-term investments. In the near term, as long as the dollar counter-trend bounce continues, gold will purge its excess froth (Chart I-25, top panel). Nonetheless, our trend indicator remains positive for gold (Chart I-25, bottom panel). Moreover, if real yields start to stagnate at their current low levels, then gold will lose a tailwind but it will not develop a new handicap. In this context, an increase in inflation expectations will elevate gold prices (Table I-1). Other bullish cyclical forces underpinning gold include the dollar’s long-term bear market, limited supply expansion and the diversification of EM central banks away from Treasurys into gold. This positive backdrop should allow the attractive relative valuation of global gold mining firms and their improving operating metric (courtesy of rigorous cash flow management and limited expansion plans) to blossom into more equity price outperformance over the next year or so. Chart I-24Long Growth vs Value: A Cyclical Trade
Long Growth vs Value: A Cyclical Trade
Long Growth vs Value: A Cyclical Trade
Chart I-25A Shakeout For The Gold Bull Market
A Shakeout For The Gold Bull Market
A Shakeout For The Gold Bull Market
Table I-1Gold's Response To Yields
October 2020
October 2020
Finally, Japan has become our favorite equity market for the next 9 to 12 months. Japanese stocks possess the perfect equity exposure to play the themes we espouse because they greatly overweight industrials and traditional consumer discretionary stocks at the expense of tech and healthcare (Table I-2). Moreover, we like auto stocks, an industry well represented in the Japanese bourse, which will benefit from a weak trade-weighted yen.11 Lastly, Japanese stock prices incorporate a large margin of safety. Most sectors in Japan trade at a significant discount to their European and US counterparts (Chart I-26). Nevertheless, it is too early to make a structural bet on Japan because its productivity problems and persistent deflation generate a long-lasting drag on corporate profitability. Table I-2Japan Possesses An Attractive Sector Composition
October 2020
October 2020
Chart I-26Japan Is A Cheap Recovery Bet
October 2020
October 2020
Section II presents a thought experiment by our Chief US Equity Strategist, Anastasios Avgeriou, which details the feasibility of a doubling of the S&P 500 over the coming 8 years. I trust you will find this report based on historical evidences thought-provoking. Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst September 24, 2020 Next Report: October 29, 2020 II. SPX 7000 We present a thought experiment for the next eight years. 7000 constitutes a reasonable long-term target for the S&P 500. A doubling of the S&P 500 over the coming eight years is in line with the historical experience. Monetary policy is unlikely to tighten meaningfully, which will allow multiples to remain elevated Earnings per share can rise to $310 by 2028. Market technicals are also consistent with significant long-term gains for stocks. Chart II-1Prolonged ZIRP Neither Eliminates Corrections...
Prolonged ZIRP Neither Eliminates Corrections...
Prolonged ZIRP Neither Eliminates Corrections...
Our structural target is neither a joke nor a marketing ploy. And yes, it really does read SPX 7000! This is our S&P 500 target for the year 2028. A new business cycle has commenced and with it a fresh bull market. Our secular US equity market view is bullish. Our readers can fault us for our optimistic view on the world. But we live by the Buffett maxim that “there are no short sellers in the Forbes Billionaires list.” What gives us confidence in this prima facie hyperbolic market view? The Fed’s explicit acceptance that it is ready to incur inflation risk, cementing the fed funds rate near the zero-lower bound for as long as the eye see. In the last cycle, it took the Fed seven years to lift the fed funds rate from zero, a move that ended being judged as premature and forced the Yellen-led Fed to pause for another year (bottom panel, Chart II-1). Seven years. As such, there is a good chance the Fed will stay put until the year 2028, another election year. Even if it ultimately raises interest rates faster due to an overheated economy goosed up on the sweet nectar of fiscal largesse, it is highly likely to be behind the curve. Before we move on to justifying our target, some observations on ZIRP are in order. First, the Fed’s unorthodox monetary policy (QE and ZIRP) in the last cycle did not prevent stock market corrections, including a near 20% fall in 2011 (top panel, Chart II-1). In other words, we do not expect smooth sailing or a 45-degree angle line in the SPX heading to 2028. Rather, an era of volatility with a plethora of sizable corrections is upon us, but the path of least resistance will be higher. Make no mistake, we are in a “buy the dip” market now. Similar to 2008-2015, there will be a lot of fits and starts and a number of mini economic cycles will develop. Chart II-2 highlights that the ISM oscillated violently during the ZIRP years and so did equity momentum and the 10-year Treasury yield. Granted, the Fed managed to suppress economic volatility as real GDP averaged ~2%/annum in the aftermath of the GFC, but mini economic cycles and profit growth scares did not disappear (top panel, Chart II-3). Chart II-2...Nor Mini Economic Cycles
...Nor Mini Economic Cycles
...Nor Mini Economic Cycles
Chart II-3"Lowflation"/Disinflation Has Been The Story Of The Past 30 Years
"Lowflation"/Disinflation Has Been The Story Of The Past 30 Years
"Lowflation"/Disinflation Has Been The Story Of The Past 30 Years
Importantly, while the 10-year Treasury yield moved with the ebbs and flows of the ISM manufacturing survey’s readings, it remained in a downtrend and every bond market selloff proved a buying opportunity in the era of ZIRP (third panel, Chart II-2). What the Fed failed to generate was inflation – of either the CPI or PCE deflator variety. In fact, the Fed has not seen core PCE price inflation overshoot 2.5% since the early 1990s (bottom panel, Chart II-3). Another feature of the ZIRP years in the last cycle was that early on easy monetary policy coincided with easy fiscal policy, as was warranted for the first few years post the GFC. Subsequently, fiscal thrust increased starting in 2016 counterbalancing the Fed’s interest rate hikes. Despite all that fiscal easing, real GDP growth peaked at 3% in 2018 before decelerating last year, raising a question mark about the long-term health of the US economy, a question to be answered in a future Special Report. Frequent readers of US Equity Strategy know our long-held view that the two primary equity market drivers have been easy fiscal and monetary policies since the March carnage. Looking ahead, the Fed has cemented the view that easy monetary policy will stay with us for quite some time. While the jury is still out on fiscal policy, it appears at the moment that profligacy has staying power as no party in Washington is campaigning on austerity or worrying about paying down the debt (save for the lone voice of the Kentucky Senator Rand Paul). The Buenos Aires Consensus is a paradigm shift, and the most important long-term consequence will be higher inflation. The US has abandoned the guardrails on populism established by the Washington Consensus – countercyclical fiscal policy, independent central banking, free trade, laissez-faire economic policy – and has adopted something… different. A new Consensus. These are extremely potent macro forces and given that there is a lag between the time both easy monetary and loose fiscal policies hit the economy, their effects will be long lasting. Especially given that they are now synchronized – unlike for large periods of the previous cycle – and undertaken at a much greater order of magnitude than after the GFC. Table II-1
October 2020
October 2020
With that macro backdrop in mind, let us circle back to our 7000 SPX target. A fresh bull market has commenced and we consider the breakout above the previous cycle’s highs as its starting point. In August, the SPX surpassed the February 19, 2020 highs, giving birth to the new bull market. Using empirical evidence since the late-1950s we conclude that, on average, the SPX doubles from its breakout point (Table II-1). This gives us the SPX 7000 reading before the new bull is slayed in the plaza de toros of economic cycles. While this qualitative analysis is enticing, ultimately earnings have to deliver in order to justify the equity market’s appreciation. Put differently, easy fiscal and monetary policies the world over will deliver EPS inflation. On the quantitative EPS front, we first turn to the reconstructed S&P 500 earnings back to the late-1920s. On average, EPS have grown by 7.5%/annum, effectively doubling every decade (Chart II-4). Chart II-4Average Annual EPS Growth Since 1920s = 7.5%
Average Annual EPS Growth Since 1920s = 7.5%
Average Annual EPS Growth Since 1920s = 7.5%
More recently, using I/B/E/S data, there have been four distinct EPS growth periods over the past four decades with different durations. From trough-to-peak, EPS have enjoyed an average CAGR of over 10% (top panel, Chart II-5). Chart II-5EPS Can Double In Next Eight Years
EPS Can Double In Next Eight Years
EPS Can Double In Next Eight Years
The current trough in forward EPS stands just shy of $140. Applying the average CAGR until 2028 results in a $310 EPS figure. This is our starting point of our EPS sensitivity analysis. Assigning the current forward multiple equates to an SPX terminal value of over 7000. Table II-2 showcases different EPS and forward P/E multiple permutations with the grey shaded area representing our tight range of peak cycle multiples and peak EPS estimates. Table II-2SPX EPS & Multiple Sensitivity
October 2020
October 2020
With regard to what is currently priced in by sell side analysts, the 5-year forward EPS growth rate – the longest duration estimate available – is near a trough reading of 10%. The historical mean is 12% since 1985, with a range of 19% near the dotcom bubble peak and a trough of 9% at the depths of the 2016 manufacturing recession (bottom panel, Chart II-5). A few words on presidential cycles are relevant given our structural bullish equity market view. We first noticed Tables II-3 & II-4 in the WSJ in late-2016 and we have corrected some minor mistakes and updated them filling in the gaps. Drawdowns are frequent during term presidencies12 dating back to Hoover. Table II-3Every Presidency Experiences Drawdowns
October 2020
October 2020
Table II-4S&P 500 Returns During Presidential Terms
October 2020
October 2020
What is truly remarkable, however, is that since the late-1920s only three term presidencies ended up in the red. What the WSJ article did not mention was that in all three market declines GOP presidents were at the helm and had taken over at/or near all-time highs in the SPX! This represents a risk to our SPX 7000 view. If President Trump wins the upcoming election, given the recent modest recovery in the polling, he could meet the same fate as his Republican predecessors. Our sister Geopolitical Strategy service still assigns 35% probability for the incumbent to remain in office, a solid figure that suggests the race remains close. Importantly, while we believe a transition to a Democratic president will be tumultuous as we have been cautioning investors recently, a Biden presidency along with the possibility of a “Blue Wave” will bode well for the long-term prospects of the US equity market, if history at least rhymes. BCA’s Geopolitical strategist Matt Gertken assigns 65% odds to a Biden win and 55% to a Blue trifecta. Finally, on a technical note, the recent megaphone formation has stirred a lot of debate among technical analysts in the blogosphere and is eerily reminiscent of a similar formation that lasted from 1965 until 1975. Typically, these megaphone formations get resolved/completed by a diamond formation (Chart II-6). Chart II-6Of Megaphones And Diamonds
Of Megaphones And Diamonds
Of Megaphones And Diamonds
Chart II-7Diamond Base Is Long Term Bullish
Diamond Base Is Long Term Bullish
Diamond Base Is Long Term Bullish
While this points to a selloff in the broad equity market in the near-term, which is in accordance with our tactically cautious view (please see the last section of this Weekly Report), it is very bullish for the long-term, as equities catapult higher from such a diamond base formation (Chart II-7). In other words, odds are much higher that the SPX will hit 7000 first, before it ever revisits 2200. Adding it all up, we are introducing a structurally constructive US equity market view with an SPX 7000 target for year 2028 on the back of peak cycle EPS of $310 and peak cycle P/E multiple of 23. Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist III. Indicators And Reference Charts The stock market correction has begun in earnest. The S&P 500 is suffering as the economic surprise index deteriorates, the dollar rebounds and uncertainty surrounding fiscal policy takes center stage. The deteriorating performances of silver, investment grade bonds, small-cap stocks, EM currencies and the AUD/CHF cross confirm that the equity market will suffer more downside. Moreover, the number of NYSE stocks trading above their 10-week moving average is in free-fall but remain well above levels consistent with a bottom. Despite these short-term headwinds, the main pillar supporting the rally remains intact: global monetary conditions are highly accommodative. The shift to an average-inflation target by the Fed, which the ECB is also considering, buttresses this dovish stance further as inflation will have to rise even more than normally before the major global central banks tighten policy. Moreover, outside of the US, fiscal policy remains accommodative. Even in the US, we expect more stimulus to come through before the November election. Our cyclical indicators confirm the positive backdrop for stocks. Our Monetary Indicator has softened but it remains at the top of its pre-COVID-19 distribution, which balances the expensiveness of the market flashed by our Valuation Indicator. Putting those forces together, our Intermediate-Term Indicator and our Revealed Preference Indicator strongly argues in favor or staying invested in equities. When weighing the short-term negative forces against the cyclical positives, we expect the S&P 500 to find a floor around 3000. At this level, the froth highlighted by our Speculation Indicator will have dissipated. Despite the equity correction, bonds remain extremely unappealing. Our Bond Valuation Index shows Treasurys as prohibitively expensive and our Composite Technical Indicator continues to lose momentum. Moreover, our Cyclical Bond Indicator has turned higher and is now flashing an outright sell signal. In effect, with rates near their lower bound, the market understands that yields have little room to decline and thus bonds seems to be losing their ability to hedge equity risk. Thus, bonds yields are unlikely to rise as stocks correct, but their lack of downside right now suggests that when equities regain their footing, 10-year Treasury yields could quickly move higher toward 1%. The dollar countertrend rally that we expected last month has begun. So far, the dollar has still not purged its oversold conditions and the deterioration in risk sentiment around the world will likely result in additional upside for the greenback. Ultimately, this rally will be temporary. The global economic recovery has just begun, the US balance of payments picture is deteriorating and the USD trades at a large premium to its purchasing power parity equilibrium. Commodities remain in a bull market, but their current correction has further to run. As investors absorb the deterioration in economic surprises and risk sentiment declines, the overbought commodity complex will remain under downward pressure. The strength in the US dollar is creating an additional powerful headwind against commodities. Gold’s decline has been particularly noteworthy. Gold remains above its short-term fair value, hence its vulnerability to the dollar and to the decline in our Monetary Indicator is particularly pronounced. A stabilization in gold and silver prices is required before the rest of the commodity complex and stocks can find a firmer footing. Stronger precious metals would indicate that the deterioration in liquidity visible at the margin is ending. It is likely to be contemporary with the passage of a new fiscal stimulus bill in the US. EQUITIES: Chart III-1US Equity Indicators
US Equity Indicators
US Equity Indicators
Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk
Willingness To Pay For Risk
Willingness To Pay For Risk
Chart III-3US Equity Sentiment Indicators
US Equity Sentiment Indicators
US Equity Sentiment Indicators
Chart III-4Revealed Preference Indicator
Revealed Preference Indicator
Revealed Preference Indicator
Chart III-5US Stock Market Valuation
US Stock Market Valuation
US Stock Market Valuation
Chart III-6US Earnings
US Earnings
US Earnings
Chart III-7Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Chart III-8Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
FIXED INCOME: Chart III-9US Treasurys And Valuations
US Treasurys And Valuations
US Treasurys And Valuations
Chart III-10Yield Curve Slopes
Yield Curve Slopes
Yield Curve Slopes
Chart III-11Selected US Bond Yields
Selected US Bond Yields
Selected US Bond Yields
Chart III-1210-Year Treasury Yield Components
10-Year Treasury Yield Components
10-Year Treasury Yield Components
Chart III-13US Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
US Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
US Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
Chart III-14Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Chart III-15Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
CURRENCIES: Chart III-16US Dollar And PPP
US Dollar And PPP
US Dollar And PPP
Chart III-17US Dollar And Indicator
US Dollar And Indicator
US Dollar And Indicator
Chart III-18US Dollar Fundamentals
US Dollar Fundamentals
US Dollar Fundamentals
Chart III-19Japanese Yen Technicals
Japanese Yen Technicals
Japanese Yen Technicals
Chart III-20Euro Technicals
Euro Technicals
Euro Technicals
Chart III-21Euro/Yen Technicals
Euro/Yen Technicals
Euro/Yen Technicals
Chart III-22Euro/Pound Technicals
Euro/Pound Technicals
Euro/Pound Technicals
COMMODITIES: Chart III-23Broad Commodity Indicators
Broad Commodity Indicators
Broad Commodity Indicators
Chart III-24Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Chart III-25Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Chart III-26Commodity Sentiment
Commodity Sentiment
Commodity Sentiment
Chart III-27Speculative Positioning
Speculative Positioning
Speculative Positioning
ECONOMY: Chart III-28US And Global Macro Backdrop
US And Global Macro Backdrop
US And Global Macro Backdrop
Chart III-29US Macro Snapshot
US Macro Snapshot
US Macro Snapshot
Chart III-30US Growth Outlook
US Growth Outlook
US Growth Outlook
Chart III-31US Cyclical Spending
US Cyclical Spending
US Cyclical Spending
Chart III-32US Labor Market
US Labor Market
US Labor Market
Chart III-33US Consumption
US Consumption
US Consumption
Chart III-34US Housing
US Housing
US Housing
Chart III-35US Debt And Deleveraging
US Debt And Deleveraging
US Debt And Deleveraging
Chart III-36US Financial Conditions
US Financial Conditions
US Financial Conditions
Chart III-37Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Chart III-38Global Economic Snapshot: China
Global Economic Snapshot: China
Global Economic Snapshot: China
Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst Footnotes 1 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy "Charts That Matter," dated September 10, 2020, available at ems.bcaresearch.com 2 The Atlanta Fed GDPNow model already points to an annualized growth rate of 32% in Q3 in the US, but the New York Fed’s model pencils in a much more modest 5.3% expansion rate for Q4. 3 Please see US Bond Strategy "More Stimulus Needed," dated September 15, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy "Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades," dated September 11, 2020, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst "August 2020," dated July 30, 2020 and The Bank Credit Analyst "July 2020," dated June 25, 2020, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see European Investment Strategy "The Puppet Master Is The 30-Year Bond," dated August 6, 2020, available at eis.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see Global Investment Strategy "Stock Prices And Interest Rates: Can We Trust TINA?," dated September 11, 2020, available at gis.bcaresearch.com 8 Please see US Equity Strategy "Pricing Power Update," dated September 14, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com 9 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst "September 2020," dated August 27, 2020, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 10 However, in the US, investors must be careful as the sector is dominated by one firm: Amazon, which trades as a tech stock, not as a traditional consumer discretionary. 11 Please see Daily Insights "More Cars Please!" dated July 20, 2020, available at di.bcaresearch.com 12 By term presidencies we are referring to the different duration of Presidents staying in office.
Highlights Monetary Policy: The Fed will keep rates at the zero bound at least until inflation is above 2% and it will maintain an accommodative policy stance until long-dated TIPS breakeven inflation rates move above 2.3%. Remain overweight spread product versus Treasuries and stay in nominal yield curve steepeners. Bond Yields & The Dollar: US dollar weakness will be bearish for bonds during the next 6-12 months. As long as the global economic recovery is maintained, the dollar will weaken further and bond yields have room to rise. EM Sovereigns: Remain underweight USD-denominated EM Sovereigns in a US bond portfolio, with the exception of Mexico. Economy: August’s poor retail sales figures strengthen our conviction that further fiscal stimulus is required to sustain the economic recovery. Our base case outlook is that Congress will deliver that stimulus in the coming weeks, and that yields will be higher in 6-12 months. But the risk of no deal is too great to ignore. Keep portfolio duration close to benchmark for now. Fed Adopts Explicit Forward Guidance, But Leaves Many Questions Unanswered Chart 1Fed And Markets Agree: No Rate Hike Until 2024
Fed And Markets Agree: No Rate Hike Until 2024
Fed And Markets Agree: No Rate Hike Until 2024
Following last month’s adoption of an average inflation targeting regime, the next logical step was for the Fed to translate its new policy framework into more explicit forward rate guidance.1 The Fed took that step at last week’s FOMC meeting by adding the following language to its post-meeting statement: The Committee decided to keep the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to ¼ percent and expects it will be appropriate to maintain this target range until labor market conditions have reached levels consistent with the Committee’s assessments of maximum employment and inflation has risen to 2 percent and is on track to moderately exceed 2 percent for some time.2 Chart 2A Long Way From 2%
A Long Way From 2%
A Long Way From 2%
The new guidance says that the funds rate will not rise off the zero bound until three criteria are met: The labor market must be at “maximum employment” Inflation must be at or above 2% Inflation must be “on track to moderately exceed 2%” Notice that the criteria of “maximum employment” and inflation that “moderately exceeds 2%” are quite vague. In fact, Fed Chair Powell stated in his post-meeting press conference that “maximum employment” refers to a range of different labor market indicators, not just the unemployment rate. He also refused to provide more detail on how much of an inflation overshoot would qualify as “moderate”. This means that, practically, the only actionable information that the Fed gave investors is the promise that the funds rate won’t rise at least until inflation is at or above 2%. This is important info that can be easily visualized on a chart (Chart 2). We can plainly see that core inflation has a long way to go before it reaches the Fed’s target, and also that the Fed will not be making the same hawkish policy mistake it made in 2015, when it lifted rates with year-over-year core PCE inflation at 1.2%. Monetary policy will remain accommodative and supportive for risk assets until TIPS breakeven inflation rates return to well-anchored levels. For their part, FOMC participants don’t expect inflation to reach the 2% target for quite a while. The median participant doesn’t see core inflation reaching 2% until sometime in 2023, and only 4 out of 17 participants expect to lift rates before 2024. This is consistent with market pricing. The overnight index swap curve doesn’t price-in a full 25 basis point rate hike until September 2024 (Chart 1). Investment Implications We know that the Fed wants inflation to overshoot 2% for some period of time. Now, based on last week’s new guidance, we also know that no rate hikes will occur until inflation is above 2%. However, we still don’t know how much or how long of an inflation overshoot the Fed is targeting. For this reason, we think investors would be wise to keep in mind that the goal of the Fed’s new framework is to ensure that inflation expectations return to well-anchored levels. Our sense is that “well anchored” can be defined as a range of 2.3% to 2.5% for long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates (Chart 3). Chart 3Inflation Expectations: The Fed's Real Target
Inflation Expectations: The Fed's Real Target
Inflation Expectations: The Fed's Real Target
We see monetary policy staying accommodative and supportive for risk assets until TIPS breakeven inflation rates reach those levels. This argues for maintaining an overweight 6-12 month allocation to spread product versus Treasuries. This also argues for staying overweight TIPS versus nominal Treasuries, and for positioning in nominal yield curve steepeners. The Fed will maintain its firm grip on the front-end of the curve for a long time yet, but the market will eventually start to price-in liftoff at the long end. A Weaker Dollar Will Be Bearish For Bonds, Bullish For EM Sovereign Spreads The broad trade-weighted US dollar is 8% off its 2020 peak, and the BCA house view is that the dollar will weaken further during the next 12 months. This section explores what that will mean for Treasury yields and for USD-denominated Emerging Market Sovereign debt. The Dollar And Treasury Yields Bond yields and the dollar are intimately related, but the relationship is more complex than a simple coincident correlation. We like to think of the relationship as a feedback loop between the exchange rate, bond yields and global economic growth (Chart 4). Chart 4The Dollar/Bond Feedback Loop
Trading Bonds In A Dollar Bear Market
Trading Bonds In A Dollar Bear Market
Since the dollar is currently falling, let’s start at the left-hand side of the feedback loop shown in Chart 4. The dollar’s current weakness is both a reflection of improving global economic growth and a catalyst for even stronger global economic growth. It is reflective because, compared to the rest of the world, the US is a large and stable economy. Firms and investors will respond to a positive global growth environment by sending capital overseas in search of higher returns. This puts downward pressure on the dollar. Dollar weakness also boosts global economic growth by making US dollars cheaper to acquire in global markets. This is particularly important for emerging markets, where a weaker dollar gives policymakers leeway to boost domestic growth via easier monetary and fiscal policies, without sacrificing the purchasing power of their currencies. Higher yielding countries tend to have less economic slack than low yielders. Moving to the top of the loop, stronger global economic growth (aka global reflation) will obviously impart upward pressure to bond yields. What’s less obvious is that US yields will rise by more than yields in the rest of the world. Chart 5 shows 3-year trailing yield betas for several major developed bond markets. Notice that the highest-yielding countries (US and Canada) also have the highest yield betas. This means that their yields rise the most when global bond yields are rising and fall the most when global bond yields are falling. This pattern holds because higher yielding countries tend to have less economic slack than low yielders. In other words, the high yielders will be quicker to price-in eventual monetary tightening when global growth is on the upswing. The high yielders also have more room to fall when growth ebbs. Chart 5High Yielding Bond Markets Are The Most Cyclical
High Yielding Bond Markets Are The Most Cyclical
High Yielding Bond Markets Are The Most Cyclical
Initially, global reflation sends US bond yields higher. But eventually, US yields will become too high relative to the rest of the world. At that point, the US dollar will respond to wide interest rate differentials and start to appreciate. This dollar appreciation will eventually lead to slower economic growth (“global deflation”), which will cause bond yields to decline. Finally, just as US bond yields rise more than non-US yields during the global growth upswing, they also fall more during the downswing. Eventually, the tightening rate differentials lead to US dollar depreciation and the cycle repeats. Where are we situated in the cycle right now? As of today, we contend that rate differentials between the US and the rest of the world have fallen a lot, and we are at the stage of the loop where the dollar is weakening in response (Chart 6). This means that dollar weakness has further to run, and we should expect that it will eventually lead to global reflation and higher US bond yields. In fact, Chart 7 shows that sentiment toward the dollar has already soured considerably, and that increasingly bearish dollar sentiment has a habit of leading to higher bond yields. Chart 6Rate Differentials Signal More Downside For Dollar
Rate Differentials Signal More Downside For Dollar
Rate Differentials Signal More Downside For Dollar
Chart 7Bearish Dollar Sentiment Leads To Higher Bond Yields
Bearish Dollar Sentiment Leads To Higher Bond Yields
Bearish Dollar Sentiment Leads To Higher Bond Yields
Eventually, US yields will rise too much compared to the rest of the world and the dollar’s depreciation will stop. But for now, dollar weakness is bearish for bonds. The Dollar And USD-Denominated EM Sovereign Spreads USD-denominated Emerging Market Sovereigns are an obvious sector that benefits from a weaker US dollar. Since the debt is denominated in US dollars but the country collects tax revenues in its local currency, any dollar weakness makes the issuer’s debt easier to service, and presumably leads to tighter sovereign spreads. Most of the dollar’s weakness this year has come against other developed market currencies, not against EMs. Despite this relationship, we are reluctant to advocate an overweight allocation to EM Sovereigns. First, most of the dollar’s weakness this year has come against other developed market currencies, not against EMs (Chart 8). Chart 8EM Currencies Have Lagged
EM Currencies Have Lagged
EM Currencies Have Lagged
Second, an environment of US dollar depreciation and global reflation is also a good environment for US corporate bonds and, with a couple exceptions, US corporate spreads are more attractive than EM Sovereign spreads. The vertical axis of Chart 9 shows the spread differential between the USD-denominated bonds of several EMs relative to a position in US corporate bonds with identical duration and credit rating. After differences in duration and credit rating are considered, only Turkey, Colombia, South Africa, Mexico and Russia offer a spread advantage over US corporate credit. The horizontal axis of Chart 9 shows each country’s export coverage of its foreign debt obligations. Greater coverage should make that country’s currency less vulnerable to depreciation, and vice-versa. In our view, the Turkish, Colombian and South African currencies are simply too risky. But Mexico and Russia present more interesting opportunities. Chart 9EM Sovereign Spread Over US Credit Versus Currency Vulnerability
Trading Bonds In A Dollar Bear Market
Trading Bonds In A Dollar Bear Market
We recommend an overweight allocation to Mexican Sovereigns because they offer a spread advantage relative to US corporates, and because the currency has been on an appreciating trend versus the dollar that still has further to run to get back to pre-COVID levels (Chart 8, panel 3). Despite the small spread pick-up, we would avoid Russian Sovereigns, at least until after the US election. The Ruble has been depreciating versus the dollar since mid-year (Chart 8, bottom panel) and a Democratic sweep in November will likely lead to the imposition of fresh US sanctions on Russia.3 Bottom Line: Remain underweight USD-denominated EM Sovereigns in a US bond portfolio. Despite the outlook for US dollar weakness, US corporate bonds offer more value and will deliver better returns. Mexican debt is the sole exception. Mexican spreads are attractive and the peso has room to appreciate. Economic Update: Signs Of Weakness In Consumer Spending Chart 10A Warning From Retail Sales
A Warning From Retail Sales
A Warning From Retail Sales
In last week’s report, we warned that without a fresh round of fiscal stimulus, the 12-month outlook for US consumer spending is dire.4 Then, last Wednesday, we received August’s retail sales figures – the first month of spending data since the expiry of the CARES act’s income support provisions – and learned that spending contracted on the month, after having rebounded sharply in May, June and July when the CARES act was in full force (Chart 10). There had been some hope that US consumers might be able to compensate for the lack of income by deploying some of the savings they had built up in the spring, thus keeping spending at decent levels for at least a few months. But August’s weak retail sales report challenges that narrative, as does the fact that consumer sentiment surveys have not improved very much since April (Chart 10, panel 3). Still low consumer sentiment suggests that households remain cautious and that they will be reluctant to spend with the same abandon they showed prior to COVID. We also note that, while weekly initial jobless claims continue to fall, the pace of improvement has significantly tapered off during the past few weeks and initial claims are still coming in about 4 times higher than they were last year (Chart 10, bottom panel). Bottom Line: While significant strides have been made, the US economy is not out of the woods. Our base case view is that Congress will deliver sufficient household income support in the coming weeks, allowing the economic recovery to continue. But the risk that they won’t is too great to ignore. Keep portfolio duration close to benchmark for now, and position for higher yields on a 6-12 month horizon via less risky duration-neutral yield curve steepeners. Appendix A: Buy What The Fed Is Buying The Fed rolled out a number of aggressive lending facilities on March 23. These facilities focused on different specific sectors of the US bond market. The fact that the Fed has decided to support some parts of the market and not others has caused some traditional bond market correlations to break down. It has also led us to adopt of a strategy of “Buy What The Fed Is Buying”. That is, we favor those sectors that offer attractive spreads and that benefit from Fed support. The below Table tracks the performance of different bond sectors since the March 23 announcement. We will use this to monitor bond market correlations and evaluate our strategy’s success. Table 1Performance Since March 23 Announcement Of Emergency Fed Facilities
Trading Bonds In A Dollar Bear Market
Trading Bonds In A Dollar Bear Market
Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 For a more detailed examination of the Fed’s new average inflation targeting regime please see US Bond Strategy / Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, “A New Dawn For Monetary Policy”, dated September 1, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/monetary20200916a1.pdf 3 Please see Geopolitical Strategy / Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report, “US-Russia: No Reverse Kissinger (Yet)”, dated July 3, 2020, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “More Stimulus Needed”, dated September 15, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification