Currencies
Yesterday, BCA's Emerging Markets Strategy service argued that ongoing deflationary pressures in Malaysia are bearish for the MYR in the short-term. However, the Malaysian currency will sell off less than other EM currencies. Moreover, it is also close to a…
In lieu of the next weekly report I will be presenting the quarterly webcast ‘What Are The Most Attractive Investments In Europe?’ on Monday 17 February at 10.00AM EST, 3.00PM GMT, 4.00PM CET, 11.00PM HKT. As usual, the webcast will take a TED talk format lasting 18 minutes, after which I will take live questions. Be sure to tune in. Dhaval Joshi Feature The recent coronavirus scare seems to have added a fresh deflationary impulse into the world economy, at a time that central banks are already struggling to achieve and maintain inflation at the 2 percent target. Begging the question: will central banks’ ubiquitous ultra-loose monetary policy ever generate inflation? The answer is yes, but not necessarily where the central banks desire it. Universal QE, zero interest rate policy (ZIRP), and negative interest rate policy (NIRP) have already created rampant inflation. The trouble is that it is in the wrong place. Rather than showing up in consumer price indexes it is showing up in sky-rocketing asset prices. Feature Chart Ultra-Low Bond Yields Have Created The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
Feature ChartUltra-Low Bond Yields Have Created The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time Since 2014, ultra-loose monetary policy has boosted the valuation of equities by 50 percent. But that’s the small fry. The really big story is that ultra-loose monetary policy has boosted the value of the world’s real estate from $180 trillion to $300 trillion (Chart I-2).1 Chart I-2Ultra-Low Bond Yields Have Boosted The Value Of The World’s Real Estate By $120 Trillion
Ultra-Low Bond Yields Have Boosted The Value Of The World's Real Estate By $120 Trillion
Ultra-Low Bond Yields Have Boosted The Value Of The World's Real Estate By $120 Trillion
Just pause for a moment to digest those numbers. In the space of a few years the value of the world’s real estate has surged by $120 trillion, equivalent to one and half times the world’s $80 trillion GDP. Moreover, it is a broad-based boom encompassing not just Europe, but North America and Asia too. Now add in the surge in equity prices, as well as other risk-assets such as private equity, corporate bonds and EM debt and the rise in wealth conservatively equals at least two times world GDP. To the best of our knowledge, there is no other time in economic history that asset prices have risen so broadly and by so much as a multiple of world GDP in such a short space of time. Making this the greatest asset-price inflation of all time. Yet central banks seem unmoved. To add insult to injury, Europe’s central banks do not even include surging owner-occupied housing costs in their consumer price indexes. This seems absurd given that the costs of maintaining owner-occupied housing is one of the largest costs that European households face. Europe’s central banks do not include surging owner-occupied housing costs in their consumer price indexes. Including owner-occupied housing costs would lift European inflation closer to 2 percent, eliminating the need for QE and negative interest rates. But its omission has kept measured inflation artificially low (Chart I-3), forcing European central banks to double down on their ultra-loose policies. Which in turn lifts risk-asset prices even further, and so the cycle of asset-price inflation continues. Chart I-3Using The US Definition Of Inflation, The ECB Wouldn't Need Ultra-Loose Policy
Using The US Definition Of Inflation, The ECB Wouldn't Need Ultra-Loose Policy
Using The US Definition Of Inflation, The ECB Wouldn't Need Ultra-Loose Policy
European QE has spawned other major imbalances. Germany, as the largest shareholder of the ECB, now owns hundreds of billions of ‘Italian euro’ BTPs that the ECB has bought. But given the fragility of Italian banks, the Italians who sold their BTPs to the ECB deposited the cash they received in German banks. Hence, Italy now owns hundreds of billions of ‘German euro’ bank deposits. This mismatch between Germans owning Italian euro assets and Italians owning German euro assets combined with other mismatches across the euro area constitutes the Target2 banking imbalance, which now stands at a record €1.5 trillion. It means that, were the euro to ever break up, the biggest casualty would be Germany (Chart I-4). Chart I-4ECB QE Has Taken The Target2 Banking Imbalance To An All-Time High
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
Meanwhile, the US Federal Reserve, to its credit, does include surging owner-occupied housing costs in its measure of consumer prices. As a result, US inflation has been closer to the 2 percent target enabling the Fed to tighten policy when the ECB had to loosen policy. This huge divergence between euro area and US monetary policies, stemming from different treatments of owner-occupied housing costs, has depressed the euro/dollar exchange rate and thereby spawned yet another major imbalance: the euro area/US bilateral trade surplus which now stands at an all-time high. Providing President Trump with the perfect pretext to start a trade war with Europe, should he desire (Chart I-5). Chart I-5ECB QE Has Taken The Euro Area/US Trade Surplus To An All-Time High
ECB QE Has Taken The Euro Area/US Trade Surplus To An All-Time High
ECB QE Has Taken The Euro Area/US Trade Surplus To An All-Time High
What Caused The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time? Why did the past decade witness the greatest asset-price inflation of all time? The answer is that universal QE, ZIRP, and NIRP took bond yields to the twilight zone of the lower bound (Chart I-6). At which point, the valuation of all risky assets undergoes an exponential surge. Chart I-6The Past Decade Was The Decade Of Universal QE
The Past Decade Was The Decade Of Universal QE
The Past Decade Was The Decade Of Universal QE
Understand that when bond yields approach their lower bound, bonds become extremely risky assets because their prices take on an unattractive ‘lose-lose’ characteristic. As holders of Swiss government bonds discovered last year, prices can no longer rise much in a rally, but they can collapse in a sell-off (Chart I-7). Chart I-7At Low Bond Yields, Bonds Become Much Riskier
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The upshot is that all (long-duration) assets become equally risky, and the much higher prospective returns offered on formerly more risky assets – such as real estate and equities – collapses to the feeble return offered on now equally-risky bonds. Given that valuation is just the inverse of the prospective return, this means that the valuation of risk assets undergoes an exponential surge. When bond yields approach their lower bound, bonds become extremely risky assets because their prices take on an unattractive ‘lose-lose’ characteristic. An obvious question is: which valuation measure best predicts this depressed prospective return offered on equities? Most people gravitate to price to earnings (profits), but earnings are highly problematic – because even if you cyclically adjust them, they take no account of structurally high profit margins. The trouble is that earnings will face a headwind when profit margins normalise, depressing prospective returns. For this reason, price to earnings missed the valuation extreme of the 2007/2008 credit bubble and should be treated with extreme caution as a predictor of prospective returns (Chart I-8). Chart I-8Price To Earnings Missed The 2007/2008 Valuation Extreme
Price To Earnings Missed The 2007/2008 Valuation Extreme
Price To Earnings Missed The 2007/2008 Valuation Extreme
A much more credible assessment comes from price to sales – or equivalently, market cap to GDP at a global level (Chart I-9). This is because sales are quantifiable, unambiguous, and undistorted by profit margins. Using these more credible prospective returns, we can now show that the theory of what should happen to risk-asset returns (and valuations) at ultra-low bond yields and the practice of what has actually happened agree almost perfectly (Feature Chart). Chart I-9Price To Sales (Or Global Market Cap To GDP) Is The Best Predictor Of Prospective Return
Price To Sales (Or Global Market Cap To GDP) Is The Best Predictor Of Prospective Return
Price To Sales (Or Global Market Cap To GDP) Is The Best Predictor Of Prospective Return
Some Investment Conclusions It is instinctive for investors to focus first and foremost on the outlook for the real economy. After all, the evolution of the $80 trillion global economy drives company sales and profits. But the value of the world’s real estate, at $300 trillion, dwarfs the economy. Public and private equity adds another $100 trillion, while other risk-assets such as corporate bonds and EM debt add at least another $50 trillion. So even on conservative assumptions, risk-assets are worth $450 trillion – an order of magnitude larger than the world economy. Now combine this with the overwhelming evidence that risk-asset valuations are exponentially sensitive to ultra-low bond yields. A relatively modest rise in yields that knocked 20 percent off risk-asset valuations would mean a $90 trillion loss in global wealth. Even a 10 percent decline would equate to a $45 trillion drawdown. Could the $80 trillion economy sail through such declines in wealth? No way. Such setbacks would constitute a severe deflationary headwind, and likely trigger the next recession. Hence, though equities are preferable to bonds at current levels, a 50-100 bps rise in yields – were it to happen – would be a great opportunity to add to bonds. Meanwhile, the record high Target2 euro area banking imbalance means that the biggest casualty of the euro’s disintegration would not be Italy. It would be Germany. As all parties have no interest in such a mutually assured destruction, investors should go long high-yielding versus low-yielding euro area sovereign bonds. Finally, the record high euro area/US trade surplus is a political constraint to a much weaker euro versus the dollar. In any case, the ECB is close to the practical limit of monetary policy easing, while the Fed is not. Long-term bond investors should prefer US T-bonds versus German bunds or Swiss bonds. Long-term currency investors should prefer the euro versus the dollar. Fractal Trading System* This week’s recommended trade is long EUR/CHF. As this currency cross has relatively low volatility, the profit target and symmetrical stop-loss is set at a modest 1 percent. In other trades, short NZD/JPY achieved its profit target, while long US oil and gas versus telecom reached the end of its 65-day holding period in partial loss having reached neither its profit target nor its stop-loss. The rolling 1-year win ratio now stands at 61 percent. Chart I-10EUR/CHF
EUR/CHF
EUR/CHF
When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Dhaval Joshi Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Source: Savills World Research. The last data point is $281 trillion at the end of 2017, but we conservatively estimate that the value has increased to above $300 trillion in the subsequent two years. Fractal Trading System
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
The Greatest Asset-Price Inflation Of All Time
Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Malaysian businesses and households have been deleveraging and the economy risks entering a debt deflation spiral. This macro-backdrop is bond bullish. EM fixed income-dedicated investors should keep an overweight position in both local currency and US dollar government bonds. In Peru, the central bank does not want its currency to depreciate rapidly; it will therefore defend the sol at the cost of slower economic growth. The outperformance of the Peruvian sol heralds an overweight stance in domestic and US dollar government bonds versus EM peers. Malaysia: In Deleveraging Mode Malaysian businesses and households have been deleveraging. The top panel of Chart I-1 illustrates that commercial banks’ domestic claims on the private sector – both companies and households – relative to nominal GDP have been flat to down in recent years. This measure is produced by the central bank and includes both bank loans as well as securities held by banks (Chart I-1, bottom panel). It does not include borrowing from non-banks or external borrowing. Other measures of indebtedness from the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) – which includes non-bank credit as well as foreign currency borrowing – portend similar dynamics: Household and corporate debt seem to have topped out as a share of GDP (Chart I-2). Chart I-1Malaysian Banks' Claims On The Private Sector Have Rolled Over
Malaysian Banks' Claims On The Private Sector Have Rolled Over
Malaysian Banks' Claims On The Private Sector Have Rolled Over
Chart I-2Malaysia's Business And Household Total Leverage Has Peaked
Malaysia's Business And Household Total Leverage Has Peaked
Malaysia's Business And Household Total Leverage Has Peaked
Chart I-3Malaysia: The GDP Deflator Is About To Turn Negative
Malaysia: The GDP Deflator Is About To Turn Negative
Malaysia: The GDP Deflator Is About To Turn Negative
The message is that after years of an unrelenting credit boom, households’ and companies’ appetite for new borrowing has diminished, and at the same time, creditors have become less willing to finance them. At 136% of GDP, the combined total of household and company debt is non-trivial. If deleveraging among debtors intensifies, the economy risks entering a debt deflation spiral. To prevent such an ominous outcome, aggressive central bank rate cuts, sizable fiscal stimulus, some currency devaluation or a combination of all of the above is required. Not only is real growth very sluggish in Malaysia, but deflationary pressures are intensifying. Chart I-3 shows the GDP deflator is flirting with contraction. Moreover, headline and core consumer price inflation are both weak, while trimmed-mean inflation is at 1.1% (Chart I-4). Last year's spike in consumer inflation was due to low base effects from the abolishment of the country’s goods and services tax back in June 2018. Going forward, these base effects will dissipate, making deflation in consumer prices a likely threat. If prices or wages begin deflating, the highly-indebted Malaysian economy will fall into debt deflation. The latter is a phenomenon that occurs when falling level of prices and wages cause the real value of debt to rise. In such a case, demand for credit will plummet and banks could become unwilling to lend. A vicious cycle of further falling prices, income and credit retrenchment could grip the economy. Household and corporate debt seem to have topped out as a share of GDP. Nominal GDP growth has already dropped slightly below average lending rates (Chart I-5). When such a phenomenon occurs amid elevated debt levels, it can produce a lethal cocktail – namely, the debt-servicing ability of borrowers deteriorates, causing both demand for credit to evaporate and non-performing loans (NPLs) to rise. Chart I-4Malaysia: Consumer Price Inflation Is Very Low
Malaysia: Consumer Price Inflation Is Very Low
Malaysia: Consumer Price Inflation Is Very Low
Chart I-5Malaysia: Nominal GDP Growth Dipped Below Lending Rates
Malaysia: Nominal GDP Growth Dipped Below Lending Rates
Malaysia: Nominal GDP Growth Dipped Below Lending Rates
Critically, falling inflation has caused real borrowing costs to rise. Lending rates in real terms are elevated, from a historical perspective (Chart I-6, top panel).1 Not surprisingly, loan growth has been decelerating sharply, posting a 13-year low (Chart I-6, bottom panel). Even though government expenditure growth has been accelerating over the past year or so and the central bank has cut interest rates twice in the past 8 months, economic conditions remain extremely feeble: Consumer spending has been teetering. Chart I-7 shows that retail sales are dwindling in nominal terms and have plummeted in volume terms. Chart I-6Malaysia: Real Lending Rates Have Risen & Credit Has Slowed
Malaysia: Real Lending Rates Have Risen & Credit Has Slowed
Malaysia: Real Lending Rates Have Risen & Credit Has Slowed
Chart I-7Malaysia: Consumer Spending Is Teetering
Malaysia: Consumer Spending Is Teetering
Malaysia: Consumer Spending Is Teetering
Malaysian exports – which account for a 67% share of the economy – are still contracting 2.5% from a year ago, adding an additional unwelcome layer of deflation to the Malaysian economy. After years of travails, the property sector is not yet out of the woods. Residential property unit sales remain sluggish (Chart I-8, top panel). In turn, the number of unsold residential properties remains elevated and residential construction approvals are rolling over at lower levels (Chart I-8, second & third panels). As a result, residential property prices are beginning to deflate across various segments in nominal terms (Chart I-8, bottom panel). Listed companies’ earnings-per-share (EPS) in local currency terms are contracting (Chart I-9, top panel). Chart I-8Malaysia's Residential Property Market Is Struggling
Malaysia's Residential Property Market Is Struggling
Malaysia's Residential Property Market Is Struggling
Chart I-9Malaysia: Capital Spending Is Contracting
Malaysia: Capital Spending Is Contracting
Malaysia: Capital Spending Is Contracting
Chart I-10Malaysia: Weak Employment Outlook
Malaysia: Weak Employment Outlook
Malaysia: Weak Employment Outlook
All of these ominous trends have induced Malaysian businesses to cut capital spending. The bottom three panels of Chart I-9 illustrate that real gross capital goods formation, capital goods imports and commercial vehicles units sales are all contracting. Equally important, the business sector slowdown is weighing on the employment outlook (Chart I-10). This will trigger a negative feedback loop of falling household income and spending. Bottom Line: Only by bringing borrowing costs down considerably for households and businesses and introducing large fiscal stimulus measures, can the Malaysian authorities prevent the economy from slipping into a vicious debt deflation spiral. On the fiscal front, the Malaysian government is committed to reducing its overall fiscal deficit from 3.4% to 3.2% of GDP this year, further consolidating it to 2.8% of GDP by 2021. Importantly, the government is also adamant about lowering its total public debt-to-GDP ratio from 77% to below 50% in the medium term by ridding itself of the outstanding legacy liabilities and guarantees incurred by the previous government. This leaves monetary policy and some currency depreciation as the likely levers to reflate the economy. Investment Recommendations We continue to recommend EM fixed -income dedicated investors keep an overweight position in local currency bonds within an EM local currency bonds portfolio. Malaysia’s macro-backdrop is bond bullish, and the central bank will cut its policy rate further. Consumer spending has been teetering. Consistent with further rate cut expectations, we also recommend continuing to receive 2-year swap rates. We initiated this trade on October 31, 2019, and it has so far produced a profit of 29 basis points. Furthermore, fiscal discipline and the government’s resolve to reduce public debt and government liabilities as a share of GDP will help Malaysian sovereign credit – US dollar-denominated government bonds – outperform their EM peers. Chart I-11The Malaysian Ringgit Is Cheap
The Malaysian Ringgit Is Cheap
The Malaysian Ringgit Is Cheap
We recommend keeping a neutral allocation to Malaysian equities within an EM equity dedicated portfolio. In terms of the outlook for the currency, ongoing deflationary pressures are bearish for the MYR in the short-term. The basis is that the Malaysian economy needs a cheaper ringgit in order to help reflate the economy and boost exports. However, the Malaysian currency will sell off less than other EM currencies: First, foreign ownership of local bonds has declined from 36% in 2016-17 to 23% today. Likewise, foreign equity portfolios own about 31% of the stock market, which is less than in many other EMs. This has occurred because foreigners have been major net sellers of Malaysian equities. Overall, low foreign ownership of Malaysian financial assets reduces the risk of sudden portfolio outflows in case EM investors pull out en masse. Second, the current account balance is in surplus and will provide support for the Malaysian ringgit. Malaysia has become less reliant on commodities exports and more of a semiconductor exporter. We are less negative on the latter sector than on resources prices. Third, the currency is cheap, according to the real effective exchange rate, making further downside limited (Chart I-11). Finally, the ongoing purge in the Malaysian economy – deleveraging and deflation – is ultimately long-term bullish for the currency. Deflation brings down the cost structure of the economy and precludes the need for chronic currency depreciation in order to keep the economy competitive. All things considered, the risk-reward profile for shorting the MYR is no longer appealing. We are therefore closing this trade as of today. It has produced a 4% loss since its initiation on July 20, 2016. Ayman Kawtharani Editor/Strategist ayman@bcaresearch.com Peru: A Pending Policy Dilemma Investors in Peruvian financial markets are presently facing three challenging macro issues: Will the currency appreciate or depreciate? If it depreciates, will the central bank cut or hike interest rates? If policy rates drop or rise, will bank stocks rally or sell off? Chart II-1Peru: Slow Money Growth Heralds Lower Inflation
Peru: Slow Money Growth Heralds Lower Inflation
Peru: Slow Money Growth Heralds Lower Inflation
Looking forward, the central bank (also known as the BCRP) is facing a dilemma. On one hand, inflation is low and will likely drop toward the lower end of the central bank’s target band, as portrayed by narrow money (M1) growth (Chart II-1). Weak domestic demand and low and falling inflation – combined – justify additional rate cuts. On the other hand, the Peruvian currency – like most EM currencies – will likely depreciate versus the US dollar in the coming months, if our baseline view – that foreign capital will flow out of EM and industrial metals prices will drop further for a few months – transpires. In such a case, will the BCRP cut rates – i.e., will the monetary authorities choose to target the exchange rate, or inflation? If the Peruvian central bank follows its own historical footsteps, it will not cut rates, despite economic weakness and falling inflation. On the contrary, the BCRP will likely prioritize defending the nuevo sol by selling foreign currency reserves, as it has done in the past. This in turn will shrink banking system local currency liquidity and lift interbank rates (Chart II-2). Higher interbank rates will hurt the real economy as well as bank share prices. Chart II-2Peru: Selling BCRP FX Reserves Will Shrink Banking System Liquidity
Peruvian Local Rates Have Risen Peru: Selling BCRP FX Reserves Will Shrink Banking System Liquidity
Peruvian Local Rates Have Risen Peru: Selling BCRP FX Reserves Will Shrink Banking System Liquidity
Is Peru more leveraged to precious or industrial metals? Precious and industrial metals account for 17% and 40% of Peruvian exports, respectively. Hence, falling industrial metals prices will be sufficient to exert meaningful depreciation on the sol, despite high precious metals prices. Foreign investors own about 50% of both Peruvian stocks and local currency bonds. Even if a fraction of these foreign holdings flees, the exchange rate will come under significant downward pressure. Granted that Peru’s central bank does not want its currency to depreciate rapidly, it will defend the currency at the cost of the economy. All in all, the Impossible Trinity thesis is alive and well in Peru: In an economy with an open capital account, the central bank cannot target both interest rates and the exchange rate simultaneously. If the BCRP intends to achieve exchange rate stability, it needs to tolerate interest rate fluctuations. Specifically, interbank rates and other market-determined interest rates could diverge from policy rates. From a real economy perspective, it is optimal to target interest rates and allow the exchange rate to fluctuate. However, the Peruvian economy is still dollarized, albeit much less than before. Dollarization has been a motive to sustain exchange rate stability. If the Peruvian central bank follows its own historical footsteps, it will not cut rates, despite economic weakness and falling inflation. On the whole, Peru’s monetary authorities remain very mindful of exchange rate volatility. Odds are that they will sacrifice growth to avoid sharp currency fluctuations. This has ramifications for financial markets. The Peruvian sol will depreciate much less than other EM and Latin American currencies. This is why it is not in our basket of currency shorts. The central bank will not cut rates in the near term, even though the economy is weak and inflation is low. This is negative for the cyclical economic outlook. Growth will stumble further and non-performing loans (NPLs) in the banking system will rise. NPL growth (inverted) correlates with bank share prices (Chart II-3). Notably, the business cycle is already weak, as illustrated in Chart II-4. Higher interest rates and lower industrial metals prices will weigh further on the economy. Chart II-3Peru: Rising NPLs Will Depress Banks Share Prices
Peru: Rising NPLs Will Depress Banks Share Prices
Peru: Rising NPLs Will Depress Banks Share Prices
Chart II-4Peru: The Economy Is Weak
Peru: The Economy Is Weak
Peru: The Economy Is Weak
Remarkably, local currency private sector loan growth has moderated, despite the 140 basis points decline in interbank rates over the past 12 months (Chart II-5). This indicates that either interest rates are too high, or banks are reluctant to originate more loans – or a combination of both. Whatever the reason, bank loan growth will decelerate further if interest rates do not drop. Investment Recommendations The Peruvian stock market has underperformed the aggregate EM index over the past five months (Chart II-6, top panel). This underperformance has not only been due to this bourse’s large weight in mining stocks but also because of banks’ underperformance (Chart II-6, bottom panel). Chart II-5Peru: Higher Rates Will Hinder Credit Growth
Peru: Higher Rates Will Hinder Credit Growth
Peru: Higher Rates Will Hinder Credit Growth
Chart II-6Peruvian Equities Have Been Underperforming
Peruvian Equities Have Been Underperforming
Peruvian Equities Have Been Underperforming
Remarkably, bank shares have languished in absolute terms, even though their funding costs – interbank rates – have dropped significantly (Chart II-7). This is a definitive departure from their past relationship. Chart II-7Peruvian Bank Stocks Stagnated Despite Falling Interest Rates
Peruvian Bank Stocks Stagnated Despite Falling Interest Rates
Peruvian Bank Stocks Stagnated Despite Falling Interest Rates
As interbank rates rise marginally, bank share prices will be at risk of selling off. This in tandem with lower industrial metals prices warrants a cautious stance on this bourse’s absolute performance. Relative to the EM benchmark, we remain neutral on Peruvian equities. The Peruvian sol will depreciate less than many other EM currencies, which will help the stock market’s relative performance versus the EM benchmark. Currency outperformance heralds an overweight stance in domestic bonds within the EM local currency bond portfolio. Dedicated EM credit portfolios should overweight Peruvian sovereign and corporate credit as well. The key attraction is that Peru’s debt levels are low, which will make its credit market a low-beta defensive one in the event of a sell off. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Juan Egaña Research Associate juane@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Deflated by the average of (1) the GDP deflator, (2) core consumer price inflation, and (3) 25% trimmed-mean consumer price inflation. Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
The improving economic outlook for the Australian economy points to a positive outcome for the AUD/USD. This is especially true as the AUD is historically the best performing currency in the G10 when global growth rebounds but inflation remains limited. On…
Feature Everyone’s asset-allocation plans for the year have been disrupted by the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV). Our view is that, while the virus is serious and will hurt the Chinese and global economy in the short term, it does not change the 12-month structural outlook for financial markets. Once the epidemic is under control (which it is not yet), there will be an excellent buying opportunity for risk assets and for the most affected asset classes. Many commentators have pointed to the lessons from SARS in 2003. Markets bottomed around the time that new cases of the disease peaked (Chart 1). But there are risks with such a simplistic comparison. The US invasion of Iraq happened at the same time – between 19 March and 1 May 2003 – with arguably a bigger impact on global markets. The Chinese economy was much less significant: China represented only 4% of global nominal GDP in 2003 (versus 17% now), 7% of global car sales (35% now), and 10-20% of commodity demand (50-60%). And it is still unclear how similar 2019-nCoV is to SARS: it appears to be spreading more rapidly (Chart 2) but (so far, at least) is less deadly, with a mortality rate of about 2%, compared to 10% for SARS. Recommended Allocation
Monthly Portfolio Update: Going Viral
Monthly Portfolio Update: Going Viral
Chart 1The Lesson From Sars
The Lesson From Sars
The Lesson From Sars
Chart 2But Is Novel Coronavirus Different?
Monthly Portfolio Update: Going Viral
Monthly Portfolio Update: Going Viral
Nonetheless, the basic theory that markets should bottom around the time that new cases and deaths peak is likely to prove correct. With the number of deaths still growing, however, that is not yet the case. Our advice to investors would be not to sell at this point. The hedges we have in our portfolio (overweight cash and gold) should help to cushion any further downside. But, within a few weeks, assets such as EM equities, airline stocks, commodities, or the Australian dollar should look very attractive again (Chart 3). For the next few months, economic data, particularly from China, will be hard to interpret. In 2003, Chinese GDP was reduced by 1.1% because of SARS, according to estimates by the Brookings Institute.1 The global economy is likely to be more heavily impacted this time, given today’s closely integrated supply chains. On the other hand, most academic research shows that consumption and production lost during an epidemic are later made up. Additionally, the Chinese government is likely to respond with easier fiscal and monetary policy. Once the air clears, we think our thesis that the manufacturing cycle bottomed in late 2019 will remain intact. The data over the past few weeks supports this. In Asia, in particular, PMIs for the major emerging economies are back above 50 (Chart 4). Europe’s rebound has lagged a little but, in the key German economy, indicators of business and investor sentiment have bottomed. Demand in the auto sector, crucial for Europe and Japan, is clearly starting to recover. Data in Europe and EM have generally surprised to the upside recently (Chart 5). Chart 3Some Assets May Soon Look Attractive
Some Assets May Soon Look Attractive
Some Assets May Soon Look Attractive
Chart 4Asian And European Data Picking Up
Asian And European Data Picking Up
Asian And European Data Picking Up
Chart 5Positive Surprises
Positive Surprises
Positive Surprises
The theory that markets should bottom around the time that new cases and deaths peak is likely to prove correct. To a degree, the new virus gave investors an excuse to take profits in some over-bought markets. The US equity market, in particular, looked expensive at the start of the year, with a forward PE of 19x. But we would dismiss the common view that investors had become too optimistic. The bull-bear ratio is not elevated (Chart 6), with only 37% of US individual investors at the start of January believing that the stock market would go up over the next six months, not particularly high by historical standards – it has fallen now to 32%. Last year, investors took money out of equity funds, despite strong returns from stocks. In the past – for example 2012 and 2016 – when this happened, it was followed by further gains for equities, as investors belatedly bought into the rally (Chart 7). Chart 6Retail Investors Aren't So Bullish...
Retail Investors Aren't So Bullish...
Retail Investors Aren't So Bullish...
Chart 7...Indeed, They Have Been Selling Stocks
...Indeed, They Have Been Selling Stocks
...Indeed, They Have Been Selling Stocks
On a 12-month investment horizon, therefore, we remain overweight risk assets such as equities and credit, albeit with some hedges. The upside to global growth remains underestimated: the economists’ consensus is for only 1.8% GDP growth in the US and 1.0% in the euro area this year. A combination of accelerating global growth and central banks that will stay dovish should allow equities to outperform bonds over the next 12 months (Chart 8). Chart 8If PMIs Pick Up, Equities Will Outperform
If PMIs Pick Up, Equities Will Outperform
If PMIs Pick Up, Equities Will Outperform
Chart 9First Signs Of US Equity Underperformance?
First Signs Of US Equity Underperformance?
First Signs Of US Equity Underperformance?
Equities: In December, we moved underweight US equities and recommended shifting into more cyclical markets: overweight the euro zone, and neutral on EM, the UK, and Australia. Before the outbreak of 2019-nCoV, this had worked in EM, but less well in Europe (Chart 9). Once the effects of the virus have cleared, we still believe this allocation will outperform as the global manufacturing cycle picks up. But we have a couple of concerns. (1) The recent US/China trade deal will require China to increase imports from the US by a highly unrealistic 83% year-on-year in 2020 (Chart 10). Our China strategists don’t expect this target to be fully met, but think any increase will come from substitution.2 This would hurt exporters in Europe and Asia. (2) The outperformance of euro area equities is very much determined by how banks fare. The headwinds against them continue: the ECB recently decreed that six major banks fall below required capital ratios; loan growth to corporates in the euro area has fallen to 3.2% year-on-year. Much, though, depends on the yield curve (Chart 11). If it steepens, as a result of stronger growth this year, as we expect, bank stocks should outperform, especially since they remain very cheap (the average price/book ratio of euro area banks is currently only 0.65). Chart 10China’s Import Targets Are Unrealistic
Monthly Portfolio Update: Going Viral
Monthly Portfolio Update: Going Viral
Chart 11Bank Performance Depends On The Yield Curve
Bank Performance Depends On The Yield Curve
Bank Performance Depends On The Yield Curve
Once the air clears, we think our thesis that the manufacturing cycle bottomed in late 2019 will remain intact. Fixed Income: Government bond yields have fallen in recent weeks as investors sought cover, with the US Treasury 10-year yield dropping to 1.55%. While it may test last September’s low of 1.46%, we do not see much further room for global yields to fall. They tend to be highly correlated with manufacturing PMIs, which we expect to rise over the next 12 months (Chart 12). Also, we see the Fed staying on hold this year, not cutting rates twice, as the market is now pricing in. This mildly hawkish surprise should push up rates (Chart 13). We continue to prefer credit over government bonds. Our global fixed-income strategists consider that, from a valuation standpoint, US high yield, and UK investment grade and high yield are the most attractive (Chart 14).3 Chart 12Rates Move In Line With PMIs
Rates Move In Line With PMIs
Rates Move In Line With PMIs
Chart 13What If The Fed Doesn't Cut Rates?
What If The Fed Doesn't Cut Rates?
What If The Fed Doesn't Cut Rates?
Chart 14US Junk Looks Most Attractive
Monthly Portfolio Update: Going Viral
Monthly Portfolio Update: Going Viral
Currencies: Defensive currencies such as the yen, Swiss franc, and US dollar have benefitted from the recent risk-off move. We see this as temporary. Once investors refocus on growth, the US dollar should start to depreciate again (the DXY index did fall by 3% between September and early January). The dollar is a counter-cyclical currency. It is 15% overvalued relative to PPP (Chart 15). It is also very momentum-driven – and, since December, momentum has pointed to depreciation and continues to do so (Chart 16). Chart 15Dollar Is 15% Overvalued...
Dollar Is 15% Overvalued...
Dollar Is 15% Overvalued...
Chart 16...And Momentum Has Moved Against USD
...And Momentum Has Moved Against USD
...And Momentum Has Moved Against USD
Commodities: Industrial metals prices had started to pick up over the past few months, reflecting the stabilization of Chinese growth (Chart 17). How they fare from now will depend on: (1) how sharply Chinese growth slows as a result of 2019nCoV, and (2) how much stimulus the Chinese government rolls out to offset this. Given the degree of decline in some commodity prices (zinc down by 16% since mid-January, and copper by 9%, for example), there should be an attractive buying opportunity in these assets over coming weeks. Gold has proved to be a handy hedge against geopolitical risks (Iran) and unexpected tail risks (the coronavirus), rising by 4% year-to-date. We continue to believe it has a useful place in investors’ portfolios as a diversifier and hedge, particularly in a world of very low interest rates where cash is unattractive (Chart 18). The oil price has been hit by the disruption to air travel in January, but supply remains tight (and OPEC is likely to cut supply further in response to the demand shock).4 As long as economic growth picks up later this year, we see the crude oil price recovering over the coming months. Chart 17Metals Reflect Chinese Growth
Chinese Slowdown Will Weigh On Metal Prices Metals Reflect Chinese Growth
Chinese Slowdown Will Weigh On Metal Prices Metals Reflect Chinese Growth
Chart 18Gold Attractive With Bond Yields So Low
Gold Attractive With Bond Yields So Low
Gold Attractive With Bond Yields So Low
Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Chief Global Asset Allocation Strategist garry@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Globalization and Disease: The Case Of SARS, Jong-Wha Lee and Warwick J. McKibbin, Brookings Discussion Paper No. 156, available at https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/20040203-1.pdf 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report “Managing Expectations,” dated 22 January 2020, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report “How To Find Value In Corporate Bonds,” dated 21 January 2020, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report “Expect OPEC 2.0 To Cut Supply In Response to Demand Shock,” dated 30 January 2020, available at ces.bcaresearch.com GAA Asset Allocation
Highlights Collective market signals suggest a low but non-negligible probability of a dollar spike due to the coronavirus. Stay long the yen as a portfolio hedge. Short CHF/JPY bets also make sense. Our limit sell on the gold/silver ratio was triggered at 90. Place a stop at 95, with an initial target of 80. Feature Chart I-1Watching Market Signals
Watching Market Signals
Watching Market Signals
Investors can generally be classified in two camps. There are those who are predisposed to being risk averse. As such, capital preservation trumps the desire for outsized returns. For such investors, defensive equities such as staples and utility stocks, fixed-income assets, or even gold tend to be the favored vehicles over time. At the opposite end of the spectrum are the investors who desire hopping on and riding the next growth unicorn. Their favored investment universe can include technology and biotech concerns, but can also span industries such as automotive and food. The key, however, is that their inherent disposition is to multiply returns rather than preserve capital. There is a crucial difference between this bias and a risk-on/risk-off environment. For example, in a risk-on environment, the more prudent investor might choose high-yielding government bonds, while the high flyer will be in the S&P 500 or private equity. In the currency world, the “preservationist” might choose the euro as an anti-dollar play despite negative yields, while the “high flyer” would rather be in the New Zealand dollar or the Norwegian krone. The oscillation between these two bipolar universes can be measured in various ways, but one that has been prescient in gauging the direction for currency markets is the ratio between the S&P 500 index and gold prices. In general, whenever the S&P 500 has been outperforming gold, the dollar has tended to soar, and vice versa (Chart I-1). As a closed economy, US markets are generally more defensive. So even in a risk-off environment, this ratio can capture the preference for capital preservation versus growth. The collective signals from financial markets suggest there is a low probability of a dollar spike. The SPX/Gold ratio hit a peak of 2.5 in the last quarter of 2018 and has since been exhibiting a bearish pattern of lower highs, with the latest rise peaking a nudge below 2.2. Our belief is that it is less a story of greed versus fear, and more an indication of a powerful underlying preference for investors being revealed in asset prices. Gauging FX Market Signals The coronavirus outbreak has been dominating market headlines in recent weeks. We are not infectious disease specialists, so cannot provide any insight on the potential impact on growth and/or the probability for the virus to become much more widespread. However, the collective signals from financial markets suggest there is a low probability of a dollar spike. The rise in the dollar has been relatively on par with the SARS experience of 2002 (Chart I-2A and Chart I-2B). Back then, the Chinese economy had a much smaller effect on global growth, and so far, the number of reported cases is outpacing the SARS experience. So, it is possible that given the dollar bull market of the last decade or so, there is a dearth of new buyers in the greenback. Chart I-2ARun Of The Mill Virus ? (1)
Run Of The Mill Virus ? (1)
Run Of The Mill Virus ? (1)
Chart I-2BRun Of The Mill Virus ? (2)
Run Of The Mill Virus ? (2)
Run Of The Mill Virus ? (2)
The most recent fall in the S&P 500 index versus gold is definitely a sign of risk aversion, but the much broader peak almost two years ago might be signaling an outright shift in the investment universe. In other words, capital preservation might now be best sought outside US bourses. If this is the case, cheap and unloved value stocks will provide better shelter compared to the growth champions of the last decade. It is interesting that emerging market cyclical stocks (where the epicenter of the crisis is) have not underperformed defensives in a meaningful way during the latest riot (Chart I-3). The typical narrative is that the dollar is now a high-yielding currency within the G10. That means it has now become the object of carry trades. Should the investment universe be shifting to one of prudence, it is plausible though not probable that the greenback will provide both functions. Chart I-3Mixed Message From Cyclicals Versus Defensives
Mixed Message From Cyclicals Versus Defensives
Mixed Message From Cyclicals Versus Defensives
Chart I-4Correlation Break Down Or Unsustainable Gap?
Correlation Break Down Or Unsustainable Gap?
Correlation Break Down Or Unsustainable Gap?
The absolute collapse in the gold-to-bond ratio further confirms that after almost a decade of underperformance, hard money might be coming back into favor versus yield plays (Chart I-4). Gold was a monetary aggregate for centuries, and continues to stand as a viable threat to dollar liabilities. This is not only visible in the rampant accumulation of gold by foreign central banks, notably Russia and China, but also by the breakout in gold in almost every currency, including safe-havens like the Swiss franc and the Japanese yen (Chart I-5). The absolute collapse in the gold-to-bond ratio further confirms that after almost a decade of underperformance, hard money might be coming back into favor. Data from the US Treasury confirms that foreign entities have been fleeing US bond markets at among the fastest pace in recent years. On a rolling 12-month total basis, the US saw an exodus of about US$250 billion in Treasurys from foreigners, one of the largest on record (Chart I-6). Foreign private investors are still net buyers of US Treasurys, but the downtrend in purchases in recent years is evident. In addition, this helps explain why gold has also outperformed Treasurys over this period. Chart I-5Soft Versus Hard ##br##Money
Soft Versus Hard Money
Soft Versus Hard Money
Chart I-6Official Data Shows Less Preference For Treasurys
Official Data Shows Less Preference For Treasurys
Official Data Shows Less Preference For Treasurys
The US dollar’s reserve status remains intact for now. But subtle shifts in this exorbitant privilege are worth monitoring. If balance-of-payment dynamics continue to head in the wrong direction, as they are now, this will favor hard money and non-US assets, while accelerating divestment out of US Treasurys. This is irrespective of whether we enter a risk-on versus risk-off environment. A good proxy for whether the US government was prudent or profligate over the past four decades can be measured by the gap between unemployment relative to NAIRU (the so-called unemployment gap) and the corresponding budget deficit. In simple terms, full employment should be accompanied by balanced budgets, while governments can step in during recessions to put a floor under aggregate demand. Not surprisingly, using this simple rule, sound fiscal policies in the US were usually accompanied by a strong dollar, and vice versa. Chart I-7The Risk To Long Dollar Positions
The Risk To Long Dollar Positions
The Risk To Long Dollar Positions
Over the next five years, the US Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that the US budget deficit will swell to 4.6% of GDP. Assuming the current account deficit remains stable, this will pin the twin deficits at 7.2% of GDP. This assumes no recession, which would have the potential to boost the deficit even further. In the last forty years, there has not been any prolonged period where twin deficits in the US have been expanding while the dollar has been in a bull market (Chart I-7). In a nutshell, even though the coronavirus is dominating headlines, the lack of a more pronounced greenback strength can be pinpointed to a rising number of negative market signals. Our bias is that when this eventually rolls over and global growth picks up in earnest, dollar bulls may be forced to capitulate. Bottom Line: We are not downplaying the potential impact of the coronavirus, but are skeptical of its ability to catapult the dollar higher. We are short the DXY index, with a target of 90 and a stop at 100. Stick with it. Bullish Both Gold And Silver, But Go Short The GSR If we are right, then both gold and silver will tend to rise in an environment where the dollar is falling. That said, the gold/silver ratio (GSR) hit a three-decade high of 93.3 last summer, opening up an arbitrage opportunity. The history of these reversals is that they tend to be powerful, quick, and extremely volatile (Chart I-8). This not only paves the way for an excellent entry point to short gold versus silver, but provides important information on the battleground between easing financial conditions and a pick-up in economic (or manufacturing) activity. The ratio of the velocity of money between the US and China has tended to track both the gold/silver ratio and the dollar closely. Just like gold, silver benefits from low interest rates, plentiful liquidity, and the incentive for fiat money debasement. However, the gold/silver ratio is sitting near two standard deviations above its mean. Meanwhile, over the past century, the peak in GSR has been around 100. The gold/silver ratio tends to rally ahead of an economic slowdown, but then peaks when growth is still weak but liquidity conditions are plentiful enough to affect the outlook for future growth. This appears to be the case today. The simple reason is that silver has more industrial uses than gold (Chart I-9). Chart I-8GSR At A Speculative Extreme
GSR At A Speculative Extreme
GSR At A Speculative Extreme
Chart I-9No Recession = Buy Silver
No Recession = Buy Silver
No Recession = Buy Silver
The ratio of the velocity of money between the US and China has tended to track both the gold/silver ratio and the dollar closely (Chart I-10). A falling ratio signifies that the number of times money is changing hands in China is outpacing that number in the US. This also tends to coincide with a preference for US versus non-US assets, since animal spirits (as measured by money velocity) tend to be pronounced in places where returns on capital are higher. Silver is a more volatile metal than gold. Part of the reason is that the silver market is thinner, with future open interest that is about one-third that of gold. As such, silver tends to rise faster than gold during precious metal bull markets (Chart I-11). Chart I-10Falling GSR = Rising Manufacturing Activity
Falling GSR = Rising Manufacturing Activity
Falling GSR = Rising Manufacturing Activity
Chart I-11Silver Is More Volatile Than Gold
Silver Is More Volatile Than Gold
Silver Is More Volatile Than Gold
This brings us to the sweet spot for silver. Even if global growth remains tepid over the next few months, due to a rise in infections from the coronavirus, a lot of the bad news is already reflected in a high GSR. This means the potential for upside will have to be nothing short of a deep recession. Relative speculative positioning favors gold, which is positive from a contrarian standpoint. Ditto for relative sentiment. More often than not, a positive signal from both these indicators has been a good timing tool for a selloff in the GSR. If global growth bottoms, then the rise in silver prices could be explosive. Silver fabrication demand benefits from new industries such as solar and a flourishing “cloud” industry that are capturing the new manufacturing landscape. Meanwhile, we are also entering a window where any pickup in demand could lead to a sizeable increase in the physical silver deficit. Bottom Line: A falling GSR provides important information about the battleground between easing financial conditions and a pickup in economic activity. We remain bullish on both gold and silver, but a trading opportunity has opened up for a short GSR position. Housekeeping Chart I-12AUD Will Follow Asian Currencies
AUD Will Follow Asian Currencies
AUD Will Follow Asian Currencies
Our limit buy on the Australian dollar was triggered at 68 cents. We discussed the Aussie at length in our report dated January 17.1 Place an initial target at 0.75 cents and a tight stop at 0.66. The near-term risk to this trade is any escalation in virus infections that will collectively send Asian currencies into a tailspin (Chart I-12). Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled "On AUD And CNY," dated January 17, 2020, available at fes.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
Chart II-2USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
Recent data in the US have been positive: The Markit manufacturing PMI fell to 51.7 while the services component increased to 53.2 in January. The Dallas Fed manufacturing index improved from -3.2 to -0.2 in January. Moreover, the Richmond Fed manufacturing index soared to 20 in January. Durable goods orders increased by 2.4% month-on-month in December. The trade deficit widened further to $68.3 billion from $63 billion in December. Annualized GDP growth was unchanged at 2.1% year-on-year in Q4. Initial jobless claims fell to 216K from 223K for the week ended January 24th. The DXY index appreciated by 0.1% this week. While the coronavirus spurred worries about a further slowdown in the global economy, the impact on the US remains to be seen. On Wednesday, the Fed committee voted unanimously to keep interest rates on hold at 1.75% and concluded that the current rate is appropriate to support sustained expansion of the US economy. Report Links: Portfolio Tweaks Before The Chinese New Year - January 24, 2020 On Oil, Growth And The Dollar - January 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 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 in the euro area have been mostly positive: The Markit manufacturing PMI jumped to 47.8 in January while the services PMI fell slightly to 52.2. The German IFO current assessment index increased to 99.1 from 98.8 in January, while expectations component fell to 92.9. The economic sentiment indicator increased to 102.8 from 101.3 in January. The unemployment rate fell further to 7.4% in December from 7.5% the prior month. The euro has been flat against the US dollar this week. Though the German IFO expectations component disappointed, the overall assessment has shown tentative signs of recovery. More importantly, changes in the manufacturing PMI indices, especially in Germany, are staging the V-shaped recovery we have been expecting. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 On Money Velocity, EUR/USD And Silver - October 11, 2019 A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 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 in Japan have been positive: Consumer confidence was unchanged at 39.1 in January. Services PPI increased by 2.1% year-on-year in December. Headline inflation increased to 0.8% year-on-year from 0.5% in December. Both manufacturing and services PMIs increased to 49.3 and 52.1, respectively in January. The Japanese yen appreciated by 0.6% against the US dollar this week. The flare up in risk aversion was a very potent catalyst, given the yen had become unloved and under owned. Persistent global risks, including Mid East tensions, and more recently, the spread of coronavirus, all warrant holding the Japanese yen as a portfolio hedge. Our last weekly report discussed why we prefer the Japanese yen to the Swiss franc as portfolio insurance. Report Links: Portfolio Tweaks Before The Chinese New Year - January 24, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Signposts For A Reversal In The Dollar Bull Market - November 1, 2019 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
Recent data in the UK have been solid: Both Markit manufacturing and services PMIs soared to 49.8 and 52.9 respectively in January. Nationwide housing prices increased by 1.9% year-on-year in January, compared with 1.4% the previous month. The saucer-shaped bottom in home prices is becoming more and more evident. The British pound has been flat against the US dollar this week. On Thursday, the BoE decided to leave interest rates unchanged at 0.75%. The fact that there were only two dissenters, in line with the previous month, suggests that rising bets for a rate cut were misplaced. The UK is due to leave the EU as of January 31st and enter a transition period that is supposed to last until December 31st 2020. The immediate aftermath of the exit will be business as usual. Trading strategy on the pound should be a buy on dips. We will continue to explore opportunities in GBP in upcoming reports. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 2019 United Kingdom: Cyclical Slowdown Or Structural Malaise? - Sept. 20, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
Recent data in Australia have been mixed: The NAB business conditions index fell to 3 from 4 in December. Moreover, the business confidence index decreased to -2 from 0. Headline inflation increased to 1.8% year-on-year from 1.7% in the fourth quarter. Import prices increased by 0.7% quarter-on-quarter, while export prices plunged by 5.2% quarter-on-quarter in Q4. The Australian dollar fell by 2.1% against the US dollar this week, triggering our limit buy position at AUD/USD 0.68. Despite temporary challenges from the bushfires and the coronavirus, we continue to hold our base case view that global growth is likely to rebound in the next 12-to-18 months, which is bullish for the Aussie dollar. Report Links: On AUD And CNY - January 17, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Contrarian View On The Australian Dollar - May 24, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
Recent data in New Zealand have been positive: Headline inflation increased to 1.9% year-on-year in Q4, compared with 1.5% the previous quarter. It also beat expectations of 1.8%. The trade balance shifted to a surplus of NZ$547 million in December. Goods exports rose by 4.8% year-on-year to NZ$5.5 billion, while imports fell by 5.4% year-on-year to NZ$5 billion. Shortly after the rise along with inflation data, the New Zealand dollar fell by more than 2% this week, amid growing risk aversion. New Zealand, as a chief exporter of agricultural products, bore a good brunt of speculative selling. Assuming infections peak in the coming weeks, we remain positive on the kiwi as the Chinese government is likely to inject more stimulus into the economy. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Place A Limit Sell On DXY At 100 - November 15, 2019 USD/CNY And Market Turbulence - August 9, 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 in Canada have been mostly positive: Retail sales increased by 0.9% month-on-month in November. The Bloomberg Nanos confidence index rose to 56.5 from 56.1 for the week ended January 24th. The Canadian dollar fell by 0.6% against the US dollar this week. As a petrocurrency, the risk of much reduced travel hit the loonie. We have written at length in various reports about the loonie, but the bottom line is that Canada benefits less than other petrocurrencies in oil bull markets. Ergo, the underperformance of short CAD/NOK and long AUD/CAD positions this week is expected. In other news, Trump has signed the new USMCA bill into law this week, leaving Canada the only member of the trilateral deal that has yet to ratify the agreement. Report Links: The Loonie: Upside Versus The Dollar, But Downside At The Crosses Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Making Money With Petrocurrencies - November 8, 2019 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 in Switzerland have been mixed: The trade surplus narrowed for a fourth consecutive month in December, falling to CHF 2 billion. Real exports decreased by 3.4% month-on-month while real imports grew by 0.2% month-on-month. The ZEW expectations index fell to 8.3 from 12.5 in January. The KOF leading indicator jumped to 100.1 from 96.2 in January. The Swiss franc has been more or less flat against the US dollar this week. The fall in exports of chemical and pharmaceutical production was the main driver behind the decrease in the Swiss trade balance in December. The SNB is walking a fine line. The improvement in the KOF leading indicator, along with rising inflation and PMI data is definitely a source of comfort, but the surge in EUR/CHF will hurt competitiveness and warrant stealth intervention. Buy EUR/CHF at 1.06. Report Links: Portfolio Tweaks Before The Chinese New Year - January 24, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Notes On The SNB - October 4, 2019 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 in Norway have been negative: Retail sales fell by 2% month-on-month in December. The Norwegian krone fell by 1.9% against the US dollar this week. The WTI crude oil price plunged by 20% since the peak earlier this month, due to a combination of falling global travel demand, eased Iran tensions and a bearish EIA inventory report. That being said, our Commodity & Energy strategists continue to be bullish energy prices and expect the WTI crude oil price to reach $63/bbl in 2020, based on recovering global demand and supply constraints. This should eventually lift the Norwegian krone. OPEC is scheduled to meet early March, and plunging prices could be a catalyst for the cartel to cut production. Report Links: On Oil, Growth And The Dollar - January 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Making Money With Petrocurrencies - November 8, 2019 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 in Sweden have been mixed: Producer prices increased by 1.3% year-on-year in December. The trade surplus shrank to SEK 0.3 billion from SEK 2.7 billion in December. Retail sales grew by 3.4% year-on-year in December. Consumer confidence marginally fell to 92.6 from 94.7 in January, while business confidence jumped to 97.4 in January, the highest in seven months. The Swedish krona fell by 1.3% against the US dollar this week. Recent Swedish data has been disappointing given the steep decline during the trade war, but we are beginning to see second-derivative improvements. The trade surplus is rising on a year-on-year basis. Particularly noteworthy was the improvement in business confidence, which has historically led the Swedbank PMI index tick for tick. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Highlights The liquidity-driven rally will soon be followed by an acceleration in global growth. The economic recovery will bump up expectations of long-term profit growth. The dollar has downside, but the euro will not benefit much. Overweight stocks relative to bonds and bet on traditional cyclical sectors and commodities. The potential for outperformance of value relative to growth favors European equities. The probability of a tech mania is escalating: how should investors factor an expanding bubble into their portfolios? Feature Chart I-1A Bull Market In Stocks And Volatility?
A Bull Market In Stocks And Volatility?
A Bull Market In Stocks And Volatility?
Despite all odds, the nCoV-2019 outbreak is barely denting the S&P 500’s frenetic rally. Plentiful liquidity, thawing Sino-US trade relations and improving economic activity in Asia, all have created ideal conditions for risk assets to appreciate on a cyclical basis. Stocks may look increasingly expensive and are primed to correct, but the bubble will expand further. After lifting asset valuations, monetary policy easing will soon boost worldwide economic activity. Consequently, earnings in the US and Europe will improve. As long as central bankers remain unconcerned about inflation, investors will bid up stocks. Investors should remember we are in the final innings of a bull market. Stocks can deliver outsized returns during this period, but often at the cost of elevated volatility, and the options market is not pricing in this uncertainty (Chart I-1). Moreover, timing the ultimate end of the bubble is extremely difficult. Hence, we prefer to look for assets that can still benefit from easy monetary conditions and rebounding growth, but are not as expensive as equities. Industrial commodities fit that description, especially after their recent selloff. The dollar remains a crucial asset to gauge the path of least resistance for assets. If it refuses to swoon, then it will indicate that global growth is in a weaker state than we foresaw. The good news is that the broad trade-weighted dollar seems to have peaked. Accommodative Monetary Conditions Are Here To Stay Easy liquidity has been the lifeblood of the S&P 500’s rally. The surge in the index coincided with the lagged impact of the rise in our US Financial Liquidity Index (Chart I-2). Low rates have allowed stocks to climb higher, yet earnings expectations remain muted. For example, since November 26, 2018, the forward P/E ratio for the S&P 500 has increased from 15.2 to 18.7, while 10-year Treasury yields have collapsed from 3.1% to 1.6%. Meanwhile, expectations for long-term earnings annual growth extracted from equity multiples using a discounted cash flow model have dropped from 2.4% to 1.2%. Historically, easier monetary policy pushes asset prices higher before it lifts economic activity. Historically, easier monetary policy pushes asset prices higher before it lifts economic activity. Yet, stocks and risk assets normally continue to climb when the economy recovers. Even without any additional monetary easing, as long as policy remains accommodative, risk assets will generate positive returns. Expectations for stronger cash flow growth become the force driving asset prices higher. Policy will likely remain accommodative around the world. Within this framework, peak monetary easing is probably behind us, even though liquidity conditions remain extremely accommodative. Nominal interest rates remain very low, and real bond yields are still falling. Unlike in 2018 and 2019, dropping TIPs yields reflect rising inflation expectations (Chart I-3). Those factors together indicate that policy is reflationary, which is confirmed by the gold rally. Chart I-2A Liquidity Driven Rally
A Liquidity Driven Rally
A Liquidity Driven Rally
Chart I-3Today, Lower TIPS Yields Are Reflationary
Today, Lower TIPS Yields Are Reflationary
Today, Lower TIPS Yields Are Reflationary
Chart I-4Economic Activity To Respond To Liquidity
Economic Activity To Respond To Liquidity
Economic Activity To Respond To Liquidity
Based on the historical lags between monetary easing and manufacturing activity, the global industrial sector is set to mend (Chart I-4). Moreover, the liquidity-driven surge in stock prices, combined with low yields and compressed credit spreads, has eased financial conditions, which creates the catalyst for an industrial recovery. Where will the growth come from? First, worldwide inventory levels have collapsed after making negative contributions to growth since mid-2018 (Chart I-5). Thus, there is room for an inventory restocking. Secondly, auto sales in Europe and China have rebounded to 18.5% from -23% and to -0.1% from -16.4%, respectively. Thirdly, China’s credit and fiscal impulse has improved. The uptick in Chinese iron ore imports indicates that the pass-through from domestic reflation to global economic activity will materialize soon (Chart I-6). Finally, following the Phase One Sino-US trade deal, global business confidence is bottoming, as exemplified by Belgium’s business confidence, Switzerland KOF LEI, Korea's manufacturing business survey, or US CFO and CEO confidence measures. The increase in EM earnings revisions shows that US capex intentions should soon re-accelerate, which bodes well for investment both in the US and globally (Chart I-7). Chart I-5Room For Inventory Restocking
Room For Inventory Restocking
Room For Inventory Restocking
Chart I-6China Points To Stronger Global Growth
China Points To Stronger Global Growth
China Points To Stronger Global Growth
Construction activity, a gauge of the monetary stance, is looking up across the advanced economies. In the US, housing starts – a leading indicator of domestic demand – have hit a 13-year high. A pullback in this volatile data series is likely, but it should be limited. Vacancies remain at a paltry 1.4%, household formation is solid and affordability is not demanding (Chart I-8). In Europe, construction activity has been relatively stable through the economic slowdown. Even in Canada and Australia, housing transactions have gathered steam quickly following declines in mortgage rates (Chart I-9). Chart I-7Capex Is Set To Recover
Capex Is Set To Recover
Capex Is Set To Recover
Chart I-8US Housing Is Robust
US Housing Is Robust
US Housing Is Robust
Chart I-9Even The Canadian And Australian Housing Markets Are Stabilizing
Even The Canadian And Australian Housing Markets Are Stabilizing
Even The Canadian And Australian Housing Markets Are Stabilizing
Consumers will remain a source of strength for the global economy. The dichotomy between weak manufacturing PMIs and the stable service sector reflects a healthy consumer spending. December retail sales in Europe and the US corroborate this assessment. The stabilization in US business confidence suggests that household incomes are not in as much jeopardy as three months ago. As household net worth and credit growth improve further, a stable outlook for household income will underwrite greater gains in consumption. Policy will likely remain accommodative around the world. For the time being, US inflationary pressures are muted. The New York Fed’s Underlying Inflation Gauge has rolled over, hourly earnings growth has moved back below 3%, our pipeline inflation indicator derived from the ISM is weak, and core producer prices are flagging (Chart I-10). This trend is not US-specific. In the OECD, core consumer price inflation is set to decelerate due to the lagged impact of the manufacturing slowdown. Central banks are also constrained to remain dovish by their own rhetoric. The Fed's statement this week was a testament to this reality. Central banks are increasingly looking to set symmetrical inflation targets. After a decade of missing their targets, a symmetric target would imply keeping policy easier for longer, even if realized inflation moves back above 2%. A rebound in global growth and weak inflation should create a poisonous environment for the US dollar. Finally, fiscal policy will make a small positive contribution to growth in most major advanced economies in 2020, particularly in Germany and the UK (Table I-1). Chart I-10Limited Inflation Will Allow The Fed To Remain Easy
Limited Inflation Will Allow The Fed To Remain Easy
Limited Inflation Will Allow The Fed To Remain Easy
Table I-1Modest Fiscal Easing In 2020
February 2020
February 2020
The Dollar And The Sino-US Phase One Deal At first glance, a rebound in global growth and weak inflation should create a poisonous environment for the US dollar (Chart I-11). As we have often argued, the dollar’s defining characteristic is its pronounced counter-cyclicality. Chart I-11A Painful Backdrop For The Greenback
February 2020
February 2020
Deteriorating dollar fundamentals make this risk particularly relevant. US interest rates are well above those in the rest of the G10, but the gap in short rates has significantly narrowed. Historically, the direction of rates differentials and not their levels has determined the trend in the USD (Chart I-12). Moreover, real differentials at the long end of the curve support the notion that the maximum tailwinds for the dollar are behind us (Chart I-12, bottom panel). Furthermore, now that the US Treasury has replenished its accounts at the Federal Reserve, the Fed’s addition of excess reserves in the system will likely become increasingly negative for the dollar, especially against EM currencies. Likewise, relative money supply trends between the US, Europe, Japan and China already predict a decline in the dollar (Chart I-13). Chart I-12Interest Rate Differentials Do Not Favor The Dollar...
Interest Rate Differentials Do Not Favor The Dollar...
Interest Rate Differentials Do Not Favor The Dollar...
Chart I-13...Neither Do Money Supply Trends
...Neither Do Money Supply Trends
...Neither Do Money Supply Trends
Chart I-14The Phase One Deal Is Ambitious
February 2020
February 2020
The recent Sino-US trade agreement obscures what appears to be a straightforward picture. According to the Phase One deal signed mid-January, China will increase its US imports by $200 billion in the next two years vis-à-vis the high-water mark of $186 billion reached in 2017. This is an extremely ambitious goal (Chart I-14). Politically, it is positive that China has committed to buy manufactured goods and services in addition to commodities. However, the scale of the increase in imports of US manufactured goods is large, at $77 billion. China cannot fulfill this obligation if domestic growth merely stabilizes or picks up just a little, especially now that the domestic economy is in the midst of a spreading illness. It will have to substitute some of its European and Japanese imports with US goods. A consequence of this trade deal is that the euro’s gains will probably lag those recorded in normal business cycle upswings. Historically, European growth outperforms the US when China’s monetary conditions are easing and its marginal propensity to consume is rising (Chart I-15). However, given the potential for China to substitute European goods in favor of US ones, China’s economic reacceleration probably will not benefit Europe as much as it normally does. China may not ultimately follow through with as big of US purchases as it has promised, but it is likely, at least initially, to show good faith in the agreement. The euro’s gains will probably lag those recorded in normal business cycle upswings. While the trade agreement is a headwind for the euro, it is a positive for the Chinese yuan. The US output gap stands at 0.1% of potential GDP and the US labor market is near full employment. The US industrial sector does not possess the required spare capacity to fulfill additional Chinese demand. To equilibrate the market for US goods, prices will have to adjust to become more favorable for Chinese purchasers. The simplest mechanism to achieve this outcome is for the RMB to appreciate. Meanwhile, the euro is trading 16% below its equilibrium, which will allow European producers to fulfill US domestic demand. A widening US trade deficit with Europe would undo improvements in the trade balance with China. The probability that US equities correct further in the short-term is elevated. The implication for the dollar is that the broad trade-weighted USD will likely outperform the Dollar Index (DXY). The euro represents 18.9% of the broad trade-weighted dollar versus 57.6% of the DXY. Asian currencies, EM currencies at large, the AUD and the NZD, all should benefit from their close correlation with the RMB (Chart I-16). Chart I-15Europe Normally Wins When China Recovers
Europe Normally Wins When China Recovers
Europe Normally Wins When China Recovers
Chart I-16EM, Asian, And Antipodean Exchange Rates Love A Strong RMB
EM, Asian, And Antipodean Exchange Rates Love A Strong RMB
EM, Asian, And Antipodean Exchange Rates Love A Strong RMB
Obviously, before the RMB and the assets linked to it can appreciate further, the panic surrounding the coronavirus will have to dissipate. However, the economic damage created by SARS was short lived. This respiratory syndrome resulted in a 2.4% contraction Hong-Kong’s GDP in the second quarter of 2003. The economy of Hong Kong recovered that loss quickly afterward. Investment Forecasts BCA continues to forecast upside in safe-haven yields. Global interest rates remain well below equilibrium and a global economic recovery bodes poorly for bond prices (Chart I-17). However, inflation expectations and not real yields will drive nominal yield changes. The dovish slant of global central banks and the growing likelihood that symmetric inflation targets will become the norm is creating long-term upside risks for inflation. Moreover, if symmetric inflation targets imply lower real short rates in the future, then they also imply lower real long rates today. Investors should begin switching their risk assets into industrial commodity plays, especially after their recent selloff. Easy monetary conditions, decreased real rates and an improvement in economic activity are also consistent with an outperformance of assets with higher yields. High-yield bonds, which offer attractive breakeven spreads, will benefit from this backdrop (Chart I-18). Furthermore, carry trades will likely continue to perform well. In addition to low interest rates across most of the G10, the low currency volatility caused by an extended period of easy policy will continue to encourage carry-seeking strategies. Chart I-17Bonds Are Still Expensive
Bonds Are Still Expensive
Bonds Are Still Expensive
Chart I-18Where Is The Value In Credit?
Where Is The Value In Credit?
Where Is The Value In Credit?
An environment in which growth is accelerating and monetary policy is accommodative argues in favor of stocks. Our profit growth model for the S&P 500 has finally moved back into positive territory. As earnings improve, investors will likely re-rate depressed long-term growth expectations for cash flows (Chart I-19). The flip side is that equity risk premia are elevated, especially outside the US (Chart I-19). Hence, as long as accelerating growth (but not tighter policy) drives up yields, equities should withstand rising borrowing costs. The use of passive investing and the prevalence of “closet indexers” accentuates the risk that a tech mania could blossom. The 400 point surge in the S&P 500 since early October complicates the picture. The probability that US equities correct further in the short-term is elevated, based on their short-term momentum and sentiment measures, such as the put/call ratio (Chart I-20). Foreign equities will continue to correct along US ones, even if they are cheaper. Chart I-19Elevated Stock Multiples Reflect Low Yields, Not Growth Exuberance
Elevated Stock Multiples Reflect Low Yields, Not Growth Exuberance
Elevated Stock Multiples Reflect Low Yields, Not Growth Exuberance
Chart I-20Tactical Risks For Stocks
Tactical Risks For Stocks
Tactical Risks For Stocks
Chart I-21Buy Commodities/Sell Stocks?
Buy Commodities / Sell Stocks?
Buy Commodities / Sell Stocks?
The coronavirus panic seems to be the catalyst for such a correction. When a market is overextended, any shock can cause a pullback in prices. Moreover, as of writing, medical professionals still have to ascertain the virus’s severity and potential mutations. Therefore, risk assets must embed a significant risk premium for such uncertainty, even if ultimately the infection turns out to be mild. However, that risk premium will likely prove to be short lived. During the SARS crisis in 2003, stocks bottomed when the number of reported new cases peaked. The tech sector has plentiful downside if the correction gathers strength. As indicated in BCA’s US Equity Sector Strategy, Apple, Microsoft, Google, Amazon and Facebook account for 18% of the US market capitalization, which is the highest market concentration since the late 1990s tech bubble. Investors should begin switching their risk assets into industrial commodity plays, especially after their recent selloff. Commodity prices are trading at a large discount to US equities. Moreover, the momentum of natural resource prices relative to stocks has begun to form a positive divergence with the price ratio of these two assets (Chart I-21). Technical divergences such as the one visible in the ratio of commodities to equities are often positive signals. Low real rates, an ample liquidity backdrop, a global economic recovery, a weak broad trade-weighted dollar and a strong RMB, all benefit commodities over equities. Tech stocks underperform commodities when the dollar weakens and growth strengthens. Moreover, our positive stance on the RMB justifies stronger prices for copper, oil and EM equities (Chart I-22). Chart I-22The Winners From A CNY Rebound
February 2020
February 2020
Our US Equity Strategy Service has also reiterated its preference for industrials and energy stocks, and it recently upgraded materials stocks to neutral.1 All three sectors trade at significant valuation discounts to the broad market and to tech stocks in particular. They are also oversold in relative terms. Finally, their operating metrics are improving, a trend which will be magnified if global growth re-accelerates. Do not make these bets aggressively. A weakening broad trade-weighted dollar would allow for a rotation into foreign equities and an outperformance of value relative to growth stocks. The share of US equities in the MSCI All-Country World Index is a direct function of the broad trade-weighted dollar (Chart I-23). Moreover, since 1971, the dollar and the relative performance of growth stocks versus value stocks have exhibited a positive correlation (Chart I-24). Thus, the dollar’s recent strength has been a key component behind the run enjoyed by tech stocks. Chart I-23Global Stocks Love A Soft Dollar
Global Stocks Love A Soft Dollar
Global Stocks Love A Soft Dollar
Chart I-24Value Stocks Needs A Weaker Dollar To Outperform Growth Stocks
Value Stocks Needs A Weaker Dollar To Outperform Growth Stocks
Value Stocks Needs A Weaker Dollar To Outperform Growth Stocks
Despite the risks to the euro discussed in the previous section, European equities could still outperform US equities. Such a move would be consistent with value stocks beating growth equities (Chart I-24, bottom panel). This correlation exists because the euro area has a combined 17.7% weighting to tech and healthcare stocks compared with a 37.1% allocation in US benchmarks. Moreover, a cheap euro should allow European industrials and materials to outperform their US counterparts. Finally, the recent uptick in the European credit impulse indicates that an acceleration in European profit growth is imminent, a view that is in line with our preference for European financials (Chart I-25).2 Chart I-25Euro Area Profits Should Improve
Euro Area Profits Should Improve
Euro Area Profits Should Improve
Bottom Line: The current environment remains favorable for risk assets on a 12-month investment horizon. As such, we expect stocks and bond yields to continue to rise in 2020. Moreover, a pick-up in global growth, along with a fall in the broad trade-weighted dollar, should weigh on tech and growth stocks, and boost the attractiveness of commodity plays, industrial, energy and materials stocks, as well as European and EM equities. Forecast Meets Strategy Liquidity-driven rallies, such as the current one, can carry on regardless of the fundamentals. As Keynes noted 90 years ago: “Markets can remain irrational longer than you can stay solvent.” The gap between forecast and strategy can be great. The use of passive investing and the prevalence of “closet indexers” accentuates the risk that a tech mania could blossom. We assign a substantial 30% probability to the risk of another tech mania. Outflows from equity ETFs and mutual funds have been large. Investors will be tempted to move back into those vehicles if stocks continue to rally on the back of plentiful liquidity and improving global growth (Chart I-26). In the process, the new inflows will prop up the over-represented, over-valued, and over-extended tech behemoths. Chart I-26Depressed Equity Flows Should Pick Up
Depressed Equity Flows Should Pick Up
Depressed Equity Flows Should Pick Up
The current tech bubble can easily run a lot further. Based on current valuations, the NASDAQ trades at a P/E ratio of 31 compared with 68 in March 2000 (Chart I-27). Moreover, momentum is becoming increasingly favorable for the NASDAQ and other high-flying tech stocks. The NASDAQ is outperforming high-dividend stocks and after a period of consolidation, its relative performance is breaking out. Momentum often performs very well in liquidity-driven rallies. Chart I-27Where Is The Bubble?
Where Is The Bubble?
Where Is The Bubble?
Chart I-28Debt Loads Are Already High Everywhere
Debt Loads Are Already High Everywhere
Debt Loads Are Already High Everywhere
A full-fledged tech mania would make our overweight equities / underweight bonds a profitable call, but it would invalidate our sector and regional recommendations. Moreover, with a few exceptions in China and Taiwan, the major tech bellwethers are listed in the US. A tech bubble would most likely push our bearish dollar stance to the offside. Bubbles are dangerous: participating on the upside is easy, but cashing out is not. Moreover, financial bubbles tend to exacerbate the economic pain that follows the bust. During manic phases, capital is poorly invested and the economy becomes geared to the sectors that benefit from the financial excesses. These assets lose their value when the bubble deflates. Moreover, bubbles often result in growing private-sector indebtedness. Writing off or paying back this debt saps the economy’s vitality. Making matters worse, today overall indebtedness is unprecedented and central banks have little room to reflate the global economy once the bubble bursts (Chart I-28). Finally, US/Iran tensions will create additional risk in the years ahead. Matt Gertken, BCA’s Geopolitical Strategist, warns that the ratcheting down of tensions following Iran’s retaliation to General Soleimani’s assassination is temporary.3 As a result, the oil market remains a source of left-handed tail-risk. Section II discusses other potential black swans lurking in the geopolitical sphere. We continue to recommend that investors overweight industrials and energy, upgrade materials to neutral, Europe to overweight, and curtail their USD exposure as long as US inflation remains well behaved and the US inflation breakeven rate stays below the 2.3% to 2.5% range. However, do not make these bets aggressively. Moreover, some downside protection is merited. Due to our very negative view on bonds, we prefer garnering these hedges via a 15% allocation to gold and the yen. The yen is especially attractive because it is one of the few cheap, safe-haven plays (Chart I-29). Chart I-29The Yen Offers Cheap Portfolio Protection
The Yen Offers Cheap Portfolio Protection
The Yen Offers Cheap Portfolio Protection
Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst January 30, 2020 Next Report: February 27, 2020 II. Five Black Swans In 2020 Our top five geopolitical “Black Swans” are risks that the market is seriously underpricing. With the “phase one” trade deal signed, Chinese policy could become less accommodative, resulting in a negative economic surprise. The trade deal may fall victim to domestic politics, raising the risk of a US-China military skirmish. A Biden victory at the Democratic National Convention or a Democratic takeover of the White House could trigger social unrest and violence in the US. A pickup in the flow of migrants to Europe would fundamentally undermine political stability there. Russia’s weak economy will add fuel to domestic unrest, risking an escalation beyond the point of containment. Over the past four years, BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy service has started off each year with their top five geopolitical “Black Swans.” These are low-probability events whose market impact would be significant enough to matter for global investors. Unlike the great Byron Wien’s perennial list of market surprises, we do not assign these events a “better than 50% likelihood of happening.” We offer risks that the market is seriously underpricing by assigning them only single-digit probabilities when we think the reality is closer to 10%-15%, a level at which a risk premium ought to be assigned. Some of our risks below are so obscure that it is not clear how exactly to price them. We exclude issues that are fairly probable, such as flare-ups in Indo-Pakistani conflict. The two major risks of the year – discussed in our Geopolitical Strategy’s annual outlook – are that either US President Donald Trump or Chinese President Xi Jinping overreaches in a major way. But what would truly surprise the market would be a policy-induced relapse in Chinese growth or a direct military clash between the two great powers. That is how we begin. Other risks stem from domestic affairs in the US, Europe, and Russia. Black Swan 1: China’s Financial Crisis Begins Chart II-1A Crackdown On Financial Risk Could Cause China's Economy To Derail
A Crackdown On Financial Risk Could Cause China's Economy To Derail
A Crackdown On Financial Risk Could Cause China's Economy To Derail
The risk of Xi Jinping’s concentration of power in his own person is that individuals can easily make mistakes, especially if unchecked by advisors or institutions. Lower officials will fear correcting or admonishing an all-powerful leader. Inconvenient information may not be relayed up the hierarchy. Such behavior was rampant in Chairman Mao Zedong’s time, leading to famine among other ills. Insofar as President Xi’s cult of personality successfully imitates Mao’s, it will be subject to similar errors. If President Xi overreaches and makes a policy mistake this year, it could occur in economic policy or other policies. We begin with economic policy, as we have charted the risks of Xi’s crackdown on the financial system since early 2017 (Chart II-1). This year is supposed to be the third and final year of Xi Jinping’s “three battles” against systemic risk, pollution, and poverty. The first battle actually focuses on financial risk, i.e. China’s money and credit bubble. The regime has compromised on this goal since mid-2018, allowing monetary easing to stabilize the economy amid the trade war. But with a “phase one” trade deal having been signed, there is an underrated risk that economic policy will return to its prior setting, i.e. become less accommodative (Chart II-2). When Xi launched the “deleveraging campaign” in 2017, we posited that the authorities would be willing to tolerate an annual GDP growth rate below 6%. This would not only cull excesses in the economy but also demonstrate that the administration means business when it says that China must prioritize quality rather than quantity of growth. While Chinese authorities are most likely targeting “around 6%” in 2020, it is entirely possible that the authorities will allow an undershoot in the 5.5%-5.9% range. They will argue that the GDP target for 2020 has already been met on a compound growth rate basis (Chart II-3), as astute clients have pointed out. They may see less need for stimulus than the market expects. Chart II-2Easing Of Trade Tensions May Re-Incentivize Tighter Policy
Easing Of Trade Tensions May Re-Incentivize Tighter Policy
Easing Of Trade Tensions May Re-Incentivize Tighter Policy
Chart II-3Chinese Authorities Might Tolerate A Growth Undershoot In 2020
Chinese Authorities Might Tolerate A Growth Undershoot In 2020
Chinese Authorities Might Tolerate A Growth Undershoot In 2020
Similarly, while urban disposable income is ostensibly lagging its target of doubling 2010 levels by 2020, China’s 13th Five Year Plan, which concludes in 2020, conspicuously avoided treating urban and rural income targets separately. If the authorities focus only on general disposable income, then they are on track to meet their target (Chart II-4). This would reduce the impetus for greater economic support. The Xi administration may aim only for stability, not acceleration, in the economy. There are already tentative signs that Chinese authorities are “satisfied” with the amount of stimulus they have injected: some indicators of money and credit have already peaked (Chart II-5). The crackdown on shadow banking has eased, but informal lending is still contracting. The regime is still pushing reforms that shake up state-owned enterprises. Chart II-4Lower Impetus For Economic Support Due To Improvements In National Income?
Lower Impetus For Economic Support Due To Improvements In National Income?
Lower Impetus For Economic Support Due To Improvements In National Income?
Chart II-5Has China's Stimulus Peaked?
chart 5
Has China's Stimulus Peaked?
Has China's Stimulus Peaked?
An added headwind for the Chinese economy stems from the currency. The currency should track interest rate differentials. Beijing’s incremental monetary stimulus, in the form of cuts to bank reserve requirement ratios (RRRs), should also push the renminbi down over time (Chart II-6). However, an essential aspect of any trade deal with the Trump administration is the need to demonstrate that China is not competitively devaluing. Hence the CNY-USD could overshoot in the first half of the year. This is positive for global exports to China, but it tightens Chinese financial conditions at home. A stronger than otherwise justified renminbi would add to any negative economic surprises from less accommodative monetary and fiscal policy. Conventional wisdom says China will stimulate the economy ahead of two major political events: the centenary of the Communist Party in 2021 and the twentieth National Party Congress in 2022. The former is a highly symbolic anniversary, as Xi has reasserted the supremacy of the party in all things, while the latter is more significant for policy, as it is a leadership reshuffle that will usher in the sixth generation of China’s political elite. But conventional wisdom may be wrong – the Xi administration may aim only for stability, not acceleration, in the economy. It would make sense to save dry powder for the next US or global recession. The obvious implication is that China’s economic rebound may lose steam as early as H2 – but the black swan risk is that negative surprises could cause a vicious spiral inside of China. This is a country with massive financial and economic imbalances, a declining potential growth profile, and persistent political obstacles to growth both at home and abroad. Corporate defaults have spiked sharply. While the default rate is lower than elsewhere, the market may be sniffing out a bigger problem as it charges a much higher premium for onshore Chinese bonds (Chart II-7). Chart II-6CNY/USD Overshoot Would Tighten Chinese Financial Conditions
CNY-USD Overshoot Would Tighten Chinese Financial Conditions
CNY-USD Overshoot Would Tighten Chinese Financial Conditions
Chart II-7Is China's Bond Market Sniffing Out A Problem?
Is China's Bond Market Sniffing Out A Problem?
Is China's Bond Market Sniffing Out A Problem?
Bottom Line: Our view is that China’s authorities will remain accommodative in 2020 in order to ensure that growth bottoms and the labor market continues to improve. But Beijing has compromised its domestic economic discipline since 2018 in order to fight trade war. The risk now, with a “phase one” deal in hand, is that Xi Jinping returns to his three-year battle plan and underestimates the downward pressures on the economy. The result would be a huge negative surprise for the Chinese and global economy in 2020. Black Swan 2: The US And China Go To War In 2013, we predicted that US-China conflict was “more likely than you think.” This was not just an argument for trade conflict or general enmity that raises the temperature in the Asia-Pacific region – we included military conflict. At the time, the notion that a Sino-American armed conflict was the world’s greatest geopolitical threat seemed ludicrous to many of our clients. We published this analysis in October of that year, months after the Islamic State “Soldier’s Harvest” offensive into Iraq. Trying to direct investors to the budding rivalry between American and Chinese naval forces in the South China Sea amidst the Islamic State hysteria was challenging, to say the least. Chart II-8Americans’ Attitudes Toward China Plunged…
February 2020
February 2020
The suggestion that an accidental skirmish between the US and China could descend into a full-blown conflict involved a stretch of the imagination because China was not yet perceived by the American public as a major threat. In 2014, only 19%of the US public saw China as the “greatest threat to the US in the future.” This came between Russia, at 23%, and Iran, at 16%. Today, China and Russia share the top spot with 24%. Furthermore, the share of Americans with an unfavorable view of China has increased from 52% to 60% in the six intervening years (Chart II-8). The level of enmity expressed by the US public toward China is still lower than that toward the Soviet Union at the onset of the Cold War in the 1950s (Chart II-9). However, the trajectory of distrust is clearly mounting. We expect this trend to continue: anti-China sentiment is one of the few sources of bipartisan agreement remaining in Washington, DC (Chart II-10). Chinese sentiment toward the United States has also darkened dramatically. The geopolitical rivalry is deepening for structural reasons: as China advances in size and sophistication, it seeks to alter the regional status quo in its favor, while the US grows fearful and seeks to contain China. Chart II-9…But Not Yet To War-Inducing Levels
February 2020
February 2020
Chart II-10Distrust Of China Is Bipartisan
February 2020
February 2020
Chart II-11Newfound American Concern For China’s Repression
February 2020
February 2020
One example of rising enmity is the US public’s newfound concern for China’s domestic policies and human rights, specifically Beijing’s treatment of its Uyghur minority in Xinjiang. A Google Trends analysis of the term “Uyghur” or “Uyghur camps” shows a dramatic rise in mentions since Q2 of 2018, around the same time the trade war ramped up in a major way (Chart II-11). While startling revelations of re-education camps in Xinjiang emerged in recent years, the reality is that Beijing has used heavy-handed tactics against both militant groups and the wider Uyghur minority since at least 2008 – and much earlier than that. As such, the surge of interest by the general American public and legislators – culminating in the Uyghur Human Rights Policy Act of 2019 – is a product of the renewed strategic tension between the two countries. The same can be said for Hong Kong: the US did not pass a Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act in 2014, during the first round of mass protests, which prompted Beijing to take heavy-handed legal, legislative, and censorship actions. It passed the bill in 2019, after the climate in Washington had changed. Why does this matter for investors? There are two general risks that come with a greater public engagement in foreign policy. First, the “phase one” trade deal between China and the US could fall victim to domestic politics. This deal envisions a large step up in Sino-American economic cooperation. But if China is to import around $200 billion of additional US goods and services over the next two years – an almost inconceivable figure – the US and China will have to tamp down on public vitriol. This is notably the case if the Democratic Party takes over the White House, given its likely greater focus on liberal concerns such as human rights. And yet the latest bills became law under President Trump and a Republican Senate, and we fully expect a second Trump term to involve a re-escalation of trade tensions to ensure compliance with phase one and to try to gain greater structural concessions in phase two. Second, mounting nationalist sentiment will make it more difficult for US and Chinese policymakers to reduce tensions following a potential future military skirmish, accidental or otherwise. While our scenario of a military conflict in 2013 was cogent, the public backlash in the United States was probably manageable.3 Today we can no longer guarantee that this is the case. The “phase one” trade deal risks falling victim to domestic politics due to greater public engagement in foreign policy. China has greater control over the domestic narrative and public discourse, but the rise of the middle class and the government’s efforts to rebuild support for the single-party regime have combined to create an increase in nationalism. Thus it is also more difficult for Chinese policymakers to contain the popular backlash if conflict erupts. In short, the probability of a quick tamping down of public enmity is actively being reduced as American public vilification of China is closing the gap with China’s burgeoning nationalism at an alarming pace. Another of our black swan risks – Taiwan island – is inextricably bound up in this dangerous US-China dynamic. To be clear, Washington will tread carefully, as a conflict over Taiwan could become a major war. Nevertheless Taiwan’s election, as we expected, has injected new vitality into this already underrated geopolitical risk. It is not only that a high-turnout election (Chart II-12) gave President Tsai Ing-wen a greater mandate (Chart II-13), or that her Democratic Progressive Party retained its legislative majority (Chart II-14). It is not only that the trigger for this resounding victory was the revolt in Hong Kong and the Taiwanese people’s rejection of the “one country, two systems” formula for Taiwan. It is also that Tsai followed up with a repudiation of the mainland by declaring, “We don’t have a need to declare ourselves an independent state. We are an independent country already and we call ourselves the Republic of China, Taiwan.” Chart II-12Tsai Ing-Wen Enjoys A Greater Mandate On Higher Turnout…
February 2020
February 2020
Chart II-13…Popular Support…
February 2020
February 2020
Chart II-14…And A Legislative Majority
February 2020
February 2020
This statement is not a minor rhetorical flourish but will be received as a major provocation in Beijing: the crystallization of a long-brewing clash between Beijing and Taipei. Additional punitive economic measures against Taiwan are now guaranteed. Saber-rattling could easily ignite in the coming year and beyond. Taiwan is the epicenter of the US-China strategic conflict. First, Beijing cannot compromise on its security or its political legitimacy and considers the “one China principle” to be inviolable. Second, the US maintains defense relations with Taiwan (and is in the process of delivering on a relatively large new package of arms). Third, the US’s true willingness to fight a war on Taiwan’s behalf is in doubt, which means that deterrence has eroded and there is greater room for miscalculation. Bottom Line: A US-China military skirmish has been our biggest black swan risk since we began writing the BCA Geopolitical Strategy. The difference between then and now, however, is that the American public is actually paying attention. Political ideology – the question of democracy and human rights – is clearly merging with trade, security, and other differences to provoke Americans of all stripes. This makes any skirmish more than just a temporary risk-off event, as it could lead to a string of incidents or even protracted military conflict. Black Swan 3: Social Unrest Erupts In America There are numerous lessons that one can learn from the ongoing unrest in Hong Kong, but perhaps the most cogent one is that Millennials and Generation Z are not as docile and feckless as their elders think. Images of university students and even teenagers throwing flying kicks and Molotov cocktails while clad in black body armor have shocked the world. Perhaps all those violent video games did have a lasting impact on the youth! What is surprising is that so few commentators have made the cognitive leap from the ultra-first world streets of Hong Kong to other developed economies. Perhaps what is clouding analysts’ minds is the idiosyncratic nature of the dispute in Hong Kong, the “one China” angle. However, Hong Kong youth are confronted with similar socio-economic challenges that their peers in other advanced economies face: overpriced real estate and a bifurcated service-sector labor market with few mid-tier jobs that pay a decent wage. There is a risk of rebellion from Trump’s most ardent supporters if he loses the White House. In the US, Millennials and Gen Z are also facing challenges unique to the US. First, their debt burden is much more toxic than that of the older cohorts, given that it is made up of student loans and credit card debt (Chart II-15). Second, they find themselves at odds – demographically and ideologically – with the older cohorts (Chart II-16). Chart II-15Younger American Cohorts Plagued By Toxic Debt
February 2020
February 2020
Chart II-16Younger And Older Cohorts At Odds Demographically
February 2020
February 2020
Chart II-17Massive Turnout To The 2016 Referendum On Trump
February 2020
February 2020
The adage that the youth are apolitical and do not turn out to vote may have ended thanks to President Trump. The 2018 midterm election, which the Democratic Party successfully turned into a referendum on the president, saw the youth (18-29) turnout nearly double from 20% to 36% (the 30-44 year-old cohort also saw a jump in turnout from 35.6% to 48.8%). The election saw one of the highest turnouts in recent memory, with a 53.4% figure, just two points off the 2016 general election figure (Chart II-17). Despite the high turnout in 2018, the-most-definitely-not-Millennial Vice President Joe Biden continues to lead the Democratic Party in the polls. His probability of winning the nomination is not overwhelming, but it is the highest of any contender. In recent polls, Biden comes third place in Millennial/Gen-Z vote preferences (Chart II-18). Yet he is hardly out of contention, especially for the 30-44 year-old cohort. The view that “Uncle Joe” does not fit the Democratic Party zeitgeist has become so entrenched in the Democratic Party narrative that it became conventional wisdom last year, pulling oddsmakers and betting markets away from the clear frontrunner (Chart II-19). Chart II-18Biden Unpopular Among Young American Voters
February 2020
February 2020
Chart II-19Bookies Pulled Down 'Uncle Joe’s' Odds, Capturing Democratic Party Zeitgeist
February 2020
February 2020
As such, a Biden victory at the Democratic National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on July 13-16 may come as an affront to the left-wing activists who will surely descend on the convention. This will particularly be the case if Biden wins despite the progressive candidates amassing a majority of overall delegates, which is possible judging by the combined progressive vote share in current polling (Chart II-20). He would arrive in Milwaukee without clearing the 1990 delegate count required to win on the first ballot. On the second ballot, his presidency would then receive a boost from “superdelegates” and those progressives who are unwilling to “rock the boat,” i.e. unify against an establishment candidate with the largest share of votes. This is also how Mayor Michael Bloomberg could pull off a surprise win. Chart II-20Progressives Come Closest To Victory
February 2020
February 2020
Such a “brokered” – or contested – convention has not occurred since 1952. However, several Democratic Party conventions came close, including 1968, 1972, and 1984. The 1968 one in Chicago was notable for considerable violence and unrest. Even if the Milwaukee Democratic Party convention does not produce unrest, it could sow the seeds for unrest later in the year. First, a breakout Biden performance in the primaries is unlikely. As such, he will likely need to pledge a shift to the left at the convention, including by accepting a progressive vice-presidential candidate. Second, an actual progressive may win the primary. Chart II-21Zealots In Both Parties Perceive Each Other As A National Threat
February 2020
February 2020
It is likely that either of the two options would be seen as an existential threat to many of Trump’s loyal supporters across the United States. President Trump’s rhetoric often paints the scenario of a Democratic takeover of the White House in apocalyptic terms. And data suggests that the zealots in both parties perceive each other as a “threat to the nation’s wellbeing” (Chart II-21). The American Civil War in the nineteenth century began with the election of a president. This is not just because Abraham Lincoln was a particularly reviled figure in the South, but because the states that ultimately formed the Confederacy saw in his election the demographic writing-on-the-wall. The election was an expression of a general will that, from that point onwards, was irreversible. Given demographic trends in the US today, it is possible that many would see in Trump’s loss a similar fait accompli. If one perceives progressive Democrats as an existential threat to the US constitution, rebellion is the obvious and rational response. Bottom Line: Year 2020 may be a particularly violent one for the US. First, left wing activists may be shocked and angered to learn that Joe Biden (or Bloomberg) is the nominee of the Democratic Party come July. With so much hype behind the progressive candidates throughout the campaign, Biden’s nomination could be seen as an affront to what was supposed to be “the big year” for left-wing candidates. Second, investors have to start thinking about what happens if Biden – or a progressive candidate – goes on to defeat President Trump in the general election. While liberal America took Trump’s election badly, it has demographics – and thus time – on its side. Trump’s most ardent supporters may conclude that his defeat means the end of America as they know it. Black Swan 4: Europe’s Migration Crisis Restarts It is a testament to Europe’s resilience that we do not have a Black Swan scenario based on an election or a political crisis set on the continent in 2020. Support for the common currency and the EU as a whole has rebounded to its highest since 2013. Even early elections in Germany and Italy are unlikely to produce geopolitical risk. The populists in the former are in no danger of outperforming whereas the populists in the latter barely deserve the designation. But what if one of the reasons for the surge in populism – unchecked illegal immigration – were to return in 2020? Chart II-22Decline In Illegal Immigration Dampened European Populism
February 2020
February 2020
The data suggests that the risk of migrant flows has massively subsided. From its peak of over a million arrivals in 2015, the data shows that only 125,472 migrants crossed into Europe via land and sea routes in the Mediterranean last year (Chart II-22). Why? There are five reasons that we believe have checked the flow of migrants: Supply: The civil wars in Syria, Iraq, and Libya have largely subsided. Heterogenous regions, cities, and neighborhoods have been ethnically cleansed and internal boundaries have largely ossified. It is unlikely that any future conflict will produce massive outflows of refugees as the displacement has already taken place. These countries are now largely divided into armed, ethnically homogenous, camps. Enforcement: The EU has stepped up border enforcement since 2015, pouring resources into the land border with Turkey and naval patrols across the Mediterranean. Individual member states – particularly Italy and Hungary – have also stepped up border enforcement policy. While most EU member states have publicly chided both for “draconian” policies, there is no impetus to force Rome and Budapest to change policy. Libyan Imbroglio: Conflict in Libya has flared up in 2019 with military warlord Khalifa Haftar looking to wrest control from the UN-backed Government of National Accord led by Fayez al-Serraj. The Islamic State has regrouped in the country as well. Ironically, the conflict is helping stem the flow of migrants as African migrants from sub-Saharan countries dare not cross into Libya as they did in 2015 when there was a brief lull in fighting. Turkish benevolence: Ankara is quick to point out that it is the only thing standing between Europe and a massive deluge of migrants. Turkey is said to host somewhere between two and four million refugees from various conflicts in the Middle East. Fear of the crossing: If crossing the Mediterranean was easy, Europe would have experienced a massive influx of migrants throughout the twentieth century. Not only is it not easy, it is costly and quite deadly, with thousands lost each year. Furthermore, most migrants are not welcomed when they arrive to Europe, many are held in terrible conditions in holding camps in Italy and Greece. Over time, migrants who made it into Europe have reported these dangers and conditions, reducing the overall demand for illegal migration. We do not foresee these five factors changing, at least not all at once. However, there are several reasons to worry about the flow of migrants in 2020. US-Iran tensions have sparked outright military action, while unrest is flaring up across Iran’s sphere of influence. Going forward, Iran could destabilize Iraq or fuel Shia unrest against US-backed regimes. Second, Afghanistan has been the source of most migrants to Europe via sea and land Mediterranean routes – 19.2%. The conflict in the country continues and may flare up with President Trump’s decision to formally withdraw most US troops from the country in 2020. Third, a break in fighting in Libya may encourage sub-Saharan migrants to revisit routes to Europe. Migrants from Guinea, Cote d’Ivoire, and the Democratic Republic of Congo make up over 10% of migrants to Europe. Finally, Turkish relationship with the West could break up further in 2020, causing Ankara to ship migrants northward. We highly doubt that President Erdogan will risk such a break, given that 50% of Turkish exports go to Europe. A European embargo on Turkish exports – which would be a highly likely response to such an act – would crush the already decimated Turkish economy. Bottom Line: While we do not see a return to the 2015 level of migration in 2020, we flag this risk because it would fundamentally undermine political stability in Europe. Black Swan 5: Russia Faces A “Peasant Revolt” Our fifth and final black swan risk for the year stems from Russia. This risk may seem obvious, since the US election creates a dynamic that revives the inherent conflict in US-Russian relations. Russia could seek to accomplish foreign policy objectives – interfering in US elections, punishing regional adversaries. The Trump administration may be friendly toward Russia but Trump is unlikely to veto any sanctions passed by the House and Senate in an election year, should an occasion for new sanctions arise. Conversely Russia could anticipate greater US pressure if the Democrats win in November. Yet it is Russia’s domestic affairs that represent the real underrated risk. Putin’s fourth term as president has been characterized by increased focus on domestic political control and stability as opposed to foreign adventurism. The creation of a special National Guard in 2016, reporting directly to Putin and responsible for quelling domestic unrest, symbolizes the shift in focus. So too does Russia’s adherence to the OPEC 2.0 regime of production control to keep oil prices above their budget breakeven level. Meanwhile Putin’s courting of Europe for the Nordstream II pipeline, and his slight peacemaking efforts with Ukraine, has suggested a slightly more restrained international posture. Strategically it makes little sense for Russia to court negative attention at a time when the US and Europe are at odds over trade and the Middle East, the US is preoccupied with China and Iran, and Russia itself faces mounting domestic problems. The domestic problems are long in coming. The central bank has maintained a stringent monetary policy for the better part of the decade. Despite cutting interest rates recently, monetary and credit conditions are still tight, hurting domestic demand. Moscow has also imposed fiscal austerity, namely by cutting back on state pensions and hiking the value added tax. Real wage growth is weak (Chart II-23), retail sales are falling, and domestic demand looks to weaken further, as Andrija Vesic of BCA Emerging Markets Strategy observes in a recent Special Report. The effect of Russia’s policy austerity has been a drop in public approval of the administration (Chart II-24). Protests erupted in 2019 but were largely drowned out by the larger and more globally significant protests in Hong Kong. These were met by police suppression that has not removed their underlying cause. Putin’s first major decision of the new year was to reshuffle the government, entailing Prime Minister Dmitri Medvedev’s transfer to a new post and the appointment of a new cabinet. This move reveals the need to show some accountability to reduce popular pressure. While Moscow now has room to cut interest rates and ease fiscal policy, it is behind the curve and the weak economy will add fuel to domestic unrest. Chart II-23Sluggish Wage Growth Threatens Russian Stability
Sluggish Wage Growth Threatens Russian Stability
Sluggish Wage Growth Threatens Russian Stability
Chart II-24Austerity Weighed On The Administration's Popularity In Russia
Austerity Weighed On The Administration's Popularity In Russia
Austerity Weighed On The Administration's Popularity In Russia
Meanwhile Putin’s efforts to alter the Russian constitution so he can stay in power beyond current term limits, effectively becoming emperor for life, like Xi Jinping, should not be dismissed merely because they are expected. They reflect a need to take advantage of Putin’s popular standing to consolidate domestic political power at a time when the ruling United Russia party and the federal government face discontent. They also ensure that strategic conflict with the United States will take on an ideological dimension. Russia's recent cabinet shakeup is positive from the point of view of economic reform. And the country's monetary and fiscal room provide a basis for remaining overweight equities within EM, as our Emerging Markets Strategy recommends. However, Russian equities have rallied hard and the political risk is understated. Chart II-25Russian Political Risk Is Unsustainably Low
Russian Political Risk Is Unsustainably Low
Russian Political Risk Is Unsustainably Low
Bottom Line: It is never easy predicting Putin’s next international move. Our market-based indicators of Russian political risk have hit multi-year lows, but both the domestic and international context suggest that these lows will not be sustained (Chart II-25). A new bout of risk can emanate from Putin, or from changes in Washington, or from the Russian people themselves. What would take the world by surprise would be domestic unrest on a larger scale than Russia can easily suppress through the police force. Housekeeping We are closing our long European Union / short Chinese equities strategic trade with a 1.61% loss since inception on May 10, 2019. Dhaval Joshi of BCA’s European Investment Strategy downgraded the Eurostoxx 50 to underweight versus the S&P 500 and the Nikkei 225 this week. He makes the point that the Euro Area bond yield 6-month impulse hit 100 bps – a critical technical level – and will be a strong headwind to growth. We will look to reopen this trade at a later date when the euphoria over the “phase one” trade deal subsides, as we still favor European equities and DM bourses over EM. We will reinstitute our long Brent crude H2 2020 versus H2 2021 tactical position, which was stopped out on January 9, 2020. We remain bullish on oil fundamentals and expect Middle East instability to add a political risk premium. China's stimulus and the oil view also give reason for us to reinitiate our long Malaysian equities relative to EM as a tactical position. The Malaysian ringgit will benefit as oil prices move higher, helping Malaysian companies make payments on their large pile of dollar-denominated debt and improving household purchasing power. Higher oil prices also correlate with higher equity prices, while China's stimulus and the US trade ceasefire will push the US dollar lower and help trade revive in the region. Marko Papic Chief Strategist, Clocktower Group Matt Gertken Geopolitical Strategist III. Indicators And Reference Charts The S&P 500 rally looks increasingly vulnerable from a tactical perspective. The US benchmark is overbought, and the percentage of NYSE stocks above their 30-week and 10-week moving averages is rolling over at elevated levels. Additionally, the number of NYSE new highs minus new lows has moved in a parabolic fashion and has hit levels that in previous years have warned of an imminent correction. The spread of nCoV-2019 is likely to be the catalyst to a pullback that could cause the S&P 500 to retest its October 2019 breakout. An improving outlook for global growth, limited inflationary pressures and global central banks who maintain an accommodative monetary stance bode well for stocks. Therefore, the anticipated equity correction will not morph into a bear market. For now, our Monetary Indicator remains at extremely elevated levels. Furthermore, our Composite Technical Indicator has strengthened. Additionally, our BCA Composite Valuation index suggests that stocks are expensive, but not so much as to cancel out the supportive monetary and technical backdrop. Finally, our Speculation Indicator is elevated, but is not so high as to warn of an imminent market top. This somewhat muted level of speculation is congruent with the expectation of low long-term growth rates for profits embedded in equity prices. In contrast to our Revealed Preference Indicator, our Willingness-to-Pay (WTP) is moving in accordance with our constructive cyclical stance for stocks. Indeed, the WTP for the US, Japan and Europe continues to improve. The WTP indicator tracks flows, and thus provides information on what investors are actually doing, as opposed to sentiment indexes that track how investors are feeling. This broad-based improvement therefore bodes well for equities. Meanwhile, net earnings revisions appear to be forming a trough. 10-year Treasury yields remain extremely expensive. Moreover, according to our Composite Technical Indicator, T-Note prices are losing momentum. The fear surrounding the spread of the new coronavirus has cause bonds to rally again, but this is likely to be the last hurrah for the Treasury markets before a major reversal takes hold. The rising risk premia linked to the coronavirus is also helping the dollar right now, but signs that global growth is bottoming, such as the stabilization in the global PMIs, the pick-up in the German ZEW and Belgium’s Business Confidence surveys, or the improvement in Asia’s export growth, point to a worsening outlook for the counter-cyclical US dollar. Moreover, the dollar trades at a large premium of 24.5% relative to its purchasing-power parity equilibrium. Additionally, the negative divergence between the dollar and our Composite Momentum Indicator suggests that the dollar is technically vulnerable. In fact, the very modest pick-up in the dollar in response to the severe fears created by the spreading illness in China argues that dollar buying might have become exhausted. Finally, commodity prices have corrected meaningfully in response to the stronger dollar and the growth fears created by the spread of the coronavirus. However, they have not pulled back below the levels where they traded when they broke out in late 2019. Moreover, the advance/decline line of the Continuous Commodity Index remains at an elevated level, indicating underlying strength in the commodity complex. Natural resources prices will likely become the key beneficiaries of both the eventual pullback in virus-related fears and the weaker dollar. 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 US Equity Strategy Weekly Report "Three EPS Scenarios," dated January 13, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com; US Equity Strategy Insight Report "Bombed Out Energy," dated January 8, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com; US Equity Strategy Special Report "Industrials: Start Your Engines," dated January 21, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report "January 2020," dated December 20, 2019 available at bca.bcaresearch.com; The Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report "OUTLOOK 2020: Heading Into The End Game," dated November 22, 2019 available at bca.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Geopolitical Strategy "A Reprieve Amid The Bull Market In Iran Tensions," dated January 8, 2020, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 4 Observe how little attention the public paid to US-China saber-rattling around China’s announcement of an Air Defense Identification Zone in the East China Sea that year.
The yen constitutes an attractive insurance asset in portfolios with a pro-risk bias. In recent months, there has been the +130-basis-point move in favor of Japanese yields. The gap between the USD/JPY and real rates has opened up a rare arbitrage…
European equities are not cheap; European currencies are. The central bank's own currency valuation indicator admits that the trade-weighted euro is 10 percent undervalued. Hence, investors seeking alpha should focus on the main currencies. That said,…
Highlights Most central banks still consider economic risks asymmetrical to the downside. This means that even if global growth rebounds in earnest, policy is likely to stay pat over the next three to six months. The conclusion is that relative growth fundamentals rather than central bank policy will likely drive FX price action in the next few months. Our bias remains that the growth impulse will be strongest outside the US during the first half of this year. Stay short the DXY index. The BoJ’s inaction this week makes long yen bets cheap insurance against a rise in FX volatility. Remain short USD/JPY and go short CHF/JPY. The pound remains a buy on dips but will likely underperform the euro over the next few months. EUR/GBP should touch 0.88. The BoC kept rates on hold, but erred on the dovish side, in line with our expectations. Stay short CAD/NOK and long AUD/CAD. We were stopped out of our long NOK/SEK trade for a profit of 1.8%. We will look to rebuy the cross at lower levels. Feature Chart I-1Currency Markets Have Priced In A Benign Recovery
Currency Markets Have Priced In A Benign Recovery
Currency Markets Have Priced In A Benign Recovery
The powerful bounce in global equity markets since the August lows has pushed many stock indices into overbought territory. Chart I-1 shows that the rise in global stocks has already discounted an improvement in global manufacturing in order of magnitude similar to the 2012 and 2016 episodes. However, currency markets have been discounting a much more benign outcome (bottom panel). The divergence between currency and equity performance is a marked change from what has prevailed during past cycles. For example, trough to peak, AUD/JPY, a key barometer of greed versus fear in currency markets, appreciated 40% during the 2012 episode, and 25% in 2016-2017, along with rising equity prices. The performance of even more high-octane currency pairs such as the RUB/JPY, the ZAR/JPY, or even the BRL/JPY, was explosive. More muted currency action this time around therefore calls into question the durability of this recovery. Perhaps given that equities are long-duration assets, it is quite plausible that the drop in interest rates in 2019 has increased their relative appeal, boosting nominal values. While that makes sense, most bond markets have also seen higher yields over the past few months, making this explanation questionable. Alternatively, the easing in trade tensions and/or the Federal Reserve’s liquidity injections may have rekindled animal spirits among domestic investors. Or perhaps, a synchronized recovery has narrowed G10 growth differentials, muting currency performance in the process but boosting share prices. The rise in global stocks has already discounted an improvement in global manufacturing. However, currency markets have been discounting a much more benign outcome. Either way, the resolution to this dissonance will be either through marked improvement in global economic data in the coming months (which will support pro-cyclical currencies), or a period of indigestion for stock markets (which will lift volatility) – or a combination of both. At a minimum, this suggests tweaking currency portfolios in anticipation of these dynamics. On Volatility And The Dollar Everyone understands that currency markets are about relative trends. Therefore, the implicit assumption that the dollar will weaken as global growth picks up is that the epicenter of this recovery will be outside the US. Chart I-2 shows that economic data is not yet surprising to the upside outside the US, even though there has been marked improvement on a rate-of-change basis. Beneath the surface, the strongest data surprises have been in the euro area, Switzerland, New Zealand and Australia, while disappointments have been in Canada and the UK. In hindsight, the chart also highlights why the Canadian dollar was the best performing G10 currency in 2019, while the Swedish krona was the weakest. Chart I-2Growth Dispersion Has Fallen
Growth Dispersion Has Fallen
Growth Dispersion Has Fallen
The drop in economic dispersion has pushed currency volatility near record lows (Chart I-3). Every seasoned investor does and should pay attention to low volatility. This is because what destroys portfolios is not exuberance, but complacency. This might sound like a tautology, but during the last three episodes of volatility dropping to these levels, the dollar soared and pro-cyclical currencies suffered severe losses. Everyone remembers 1997-1998, 2007-2008 and 2014-2015. Will this time be the same? While a rise in volatility is usually associated with a higher dollar, there are three key differences this time around. First, real rates turned positive in the US relative to its G10 counterparts in 2014 (Chart I-4). This meant the US dollar, which has typically been a funding currency (not least because it is a reserve currency), became the object of carry trades. It is a fair contention that any capital that wanted to find its way into US Treasurys has had more than five years of positive real carry to do so. With real relative yields in the US now rolling over, which way will capital gravitate? Chart I-3Volatility Near Record Lows
Volatility Near Record Lows
Volatility Near Record Lows
Chart I-4Real Rates Lower In The US
Real Rates Lower In The US
Real Rates Lower In The US
The dollar has been in a bull market since 2011, which has shifted valuations towards expensive quartiles. This is a key difference from previous low-volatility episodes when the dollar was much earlier into bull-market territory (Chart I-5). The dollar tends to run in long cycles, and a spike in volatility can either mark the beginning or the end of a cycle. As we have emphasized numerous times in previous reports, being long the US dollar is a consensus trade. Our primary basis for this is CFTC positioning data. However, a timelier leading indicator to watch is the gold-to-bond ratio. Currencies are about confidence, and a key measure of confidence in the US dollar is the total return in the US 10-year Treasury compared to gold bullion, which has collapsed (Chart I-6). The budget deficit in the US is about to explode, while it was low and falling during prior dollar riot points. Chart I-5The Dollar Is Expensive
The Dollar Is Expensive
The Dollar Is Expensive
Chart I-6Tug Of War Between US Bonds And Gold
Tug Of War Between US Bonds And Gold
Tug Of War Between US Bonds And Gold
More importantly, currency markets are likely to gyrate with relative fundamentals. The slowdown in the global economy was driven by the manufacturing sector, so it is fair to assume that this is the part of the economy that is ripe for mean reversion. Historically, cyclical swings in most economies tend to be driven by manufacturing and exports rather than services (and consumption). More specifically, the currencies that have borne the brunt of the manufacturing slowdown should logically be the ones to experience the quickest reversals. This is already being manifested in a very steep rise in their bond yields vis-à-vis those in the US. For example, yields in Norway, Sweden, Switzerland and Japan have risen significantly versus those in the US since the bottom. A synchronized recovery in global growth will go a long way in further eroding the US’ yield advantage. Currencies are about confidence, and a key measure of confidence in the US dollar is the total return in the US 10-year Treasury compared to gold bullion. Bottom Line: Remain short the DXY index with an initial target of 90 and a stop loss at 100. The Yen As Portfolio Insurance Should our thesis that the dollar is in a downtrend for 2020 be correct, it is unlikely to occur in a straight line. This argues for having some portfolio insurance. The Bank of Japan’s inaction this week may have been a red herring, since one of the most potent moves in asset markets in recent months has been the +130-basis-point move in favor of Japanese yields (Chart I-7). The gap between the USD/JPY and real rates has opened up a rare arbitrage opportunity. Should a selloff in global risk assets materialize, the yen will strengthen. On the other hand, if global growth does eventually accelerate, the yen could weaken on its crosses but strengthen vis-à-vis the dollar. This keeps short USD/JPY bets in an enviable “heads I win, tails I do not lose too much” position. The rise in Japanese yields has been driven by three key pivotal developments: For most of the past five years, the BoJ was one of the most aggressive central banks in terms of asset purchases. This was a huge catalyst for a downturn in the trade-weighted yen (Chart I-8). With a renewed expansion in the Fed’s balance sheet, monetary policy is tightening on a relative basis in Japan. Total annual asset purchases by the BoJ are currently running at about ¥20 trillion, while JGB purchases are running at ¥15 trillion. This is a far cry from the central bank’s soft target of ¥80 trillion, and unlikely to change anytime soon. Chart I-7Japanese Bond Yields Have Surged
Japanese Bond Yields Have Surged
Japanese Bond Yields Have Surged
Chart I-8The Yen And QE
The Yen And QE
The Yen And QE
Movements in the yen are as influenced by external conditions as what is happening domestically, given Japan’s huge export sector. Credit default swap spreads of cyclical sectors are collapsing to new lows, symptomatic of an improving profit outlook (Chart I-9). This suggests it is the growth component driving Japanese yields higher (Japanese CPI swaps have indeed been flat). This also mirrors the recent outperformance of Asian cyclical sectors relative to defensive ones. The Abe government announced a huge fiscal package last year, in part driven by the disastrous typhoons as well as the upcoming Olympics. This allowed the BoJ to upgrade its growth forecasts in its latest policy minutes. The relative performance of construction and engineering stocks are an important barometer for when the funds are flowing into the economy (Chart I-10). Chart I-9Default Risk Easing In Japan
Default Risk Easing In Japan
Default Risk Easing In Japan
Chart I-10Fiscal Stimulus And Construction Stocks
Fiscal Stimulus And Construction Stocks
Fiscal Stimulus And Construction Stocks
As a defensive currency, the yen tends to weaken as global growth improves, given it is usually used to fund carry trades. That said, our contention is that the yen will surely weaken at the crosses, but could still strengthen versus the dollar. As mentioned above, one catalyst is the divergence from the traditional relationship with real rates. More importantly, the USD/JPY and the DXY tend to have a positive correlation, because the dollar drives the yen most of the time. Meanwhile, net short positioning in the yen versus the dollar makes it attractive from a contrarian standpoint (Chart I-11). Given extremely low volatility, this places short USD/JPY bets as an attractive vehicle to play a rise in volatility. Chart I-11Investors Are Short The Yen
Investors Are Short The Yen
Investors Are Short The Yen
More conservative investors could go short CHF/JPY. The recent rise in the Swiss franc threatens the nascent recovery in inflation (Chart I-12), while weakness in the Japanese yen will help lift domestic tradeable goods prices. This puts more pressure on the Swiss National Bank rather than the BoJ. Meanwhile, as a safe haven, the yen is cheaper than the franc. This is confirmed by many of our in-house models. In simple terms, relative inflation with the US has been lower in Japan over the last several decades, but the franc has been stronger. In simple terms, relative inflation with the US has been lower in Japan over the last several decades, but the franc has been stronger (Chart I-13). Meanwhile, over the last two years, a rise in volatility has benefited the yen more than the franc. Chart I-12Strong Franc Is A Headwind For Swiss Inflation
Strong Franc Is A Headwind For Swiss Inflation
Strong Franc Is A Headwind For Swiss Inflation
Chart I-13The Yen Is Cheaper ##br##Insurance
The Yen Is Cheaper Insurance
The Yen Is Cheaper Insurance
Bottom Line: The yen is the most attractive safe-haven currency at the moment. Remain short USD/JPY and sell CHF/JPY. Housekeeping We were stopped out of our long NOK/SEK trade for a profit of 1.8%. We will look to rebuy this cross at lower levels. The trade is mostly about carry, and we are both positive on the NOK and SEK. This makes market timing important. NOK/SEK at 1.04 will be attractive. There were no new insights from the Norges bank this week, in the context of all the central bank meetings. We will also be looking to opportunistically buy the pound, but buying EUR or GBP volatility might be a better bet. For now, despite the robust labor report, economic surprises in the UK remain negative (Chart I-14). Stay tuned. Chart I-14GBP Is Vulnerable
GBP Is Vulnerable
GBP Is Vulnerable
Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
Chart II-2USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
Recent data in the US have been mixed: Industrial production fell by 1% year-on-year in December. The preliminary Michigan consumer sentiment index fell slightly to 99.1 in January. MBA mortgage applications fell by 1.2% for the week ended January 17th. However, existing home sales surprised to the upside, rising 3.6% month-on-month in December. Chicago Fed national activity index fell to -0.35 from 0.41 in December. Initial jobless claims increased to 211K for the week ended January 17th, better than expectations. The DXY index increased by 0.4% this week. There are growing concerns over whether China's coronavirus would significantly drag down global growth. While this is a hiccup in the short term, we remain positive and believe that global growth will accelerate this year on easy financial conditions and faded trade war risks. Report Links: On Oil, Growth And The Dollar - January 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Place A Limit Sell On DXY At 100 - November 15, 2019 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 in the euro area have been mostly positive: The current account balance came in at €33.9 billion in November. Headline and core inflation were both unchanged at 1.3% year-on-year respectively in December. The ZEW economic sentiment survey soared to 25.6 from 11.2 in January. The euro fell by 0.8% against the US dollar this week. On Thursday, the ECB maintained interest rates at -0.5%. The key takeaway from the ECB is that they are grappling with a review of their monetary policy objective in a manner that might increase accommodation. A switch to an explicit 2% inflation target and/or including a climate change objective into quantitative easing decisions heralds a much more dovish ECB. We are tightening our stop on long EUR/CAD to 1.42. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 On Money Velocity, EUR/USD And Silver - October 11, 2019 A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 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 in Japan have been negative: Industrial production fell by 8.2% year-on-year in November. The trade deficit widened to ¥152.5 billion in December. Imports and exports both fell by 4.9% and 6.3% year-on-year, respectively. All industry activity index increased by 0.9% month-on-month in November. Both the coincident index and the leading economic index fell to 94.7 and 90.8, respectively in November. The Japanese yen appreciated by 0.3% against the US dollar this week. The BoJ kept interest rates unchanged, in line with expectations. More importantly, the outlook report revised the growth forecast upward to 0.9% from 0.7% for the fiscal year 2020. Moreover, the BoJ revised down the inflation forecast by 10 bps due to lower crude oil prices. Please refer to our front section this week for a more in-depth analysis on the Japanese yen. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Signposts For A Reversal In The Dollar Bull Market - November 1, 2019 A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 2019 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
Recent data in the UK have been positive: Retail sales grew by 0.9% year-on-year in December. The Rightmove house price index increased by 2.7% year-on-year in January. The ILO unemployment rate was unchanged at 3.8% in November. Average earnings grew by 3.2% year-on-year in November. This followed a 3-month improvement in employment of 208K, after what had been a dismal employment report for most of 2019. The British pound appreciated by 0.7% against the US dollar this week. The biggest volatility in European currencies in the next few weeks is likely to emerge in the EUR/GBP cross. European economic data has had the best positive surprises in the last few weeks, in part due to base effects. However, the ECB’s transcript this week suggests leaning against any currency strength. In the UK, the pound will still trade partly on politics for now. Buying GBP and EUR volatility looks like a good bet. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 2019 United Kingdom: Cyclical Slowdown Or Structural Malaise? - Sept. 20, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
Recent data in Australia have been positive: The Westpac consumer confidence index fell by 1.8% in January. Consumer inflation expectations increased to 4.7% from 4% in January. 28.9K new jobs were created in December, above consensus. This was a combination of 29.2K part-time jobs but a loss of 0.3K full-time jobs. The participation rate was unchanged at 66% in December, while the unemployment rate fell further to 5.1%. The Australian dollar fell by 0.6% against the US dollar this week. The positive jobs report placed a bid under AUD, but that quickly dissipated as the coronavirus scare started to dominate headlines. We discussed AUD in depth last week and are buyers at 68 cents. Our primary rationale is that this is a potent contrarian bet. Report Links: On AUD And CNY - January 17, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Contrarian View On The Australian Dollar - May 24, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
Recent data in New Zealand have been negative: Visitor arrivals fell by 3.5% year-on-year in November. Net migration fell to 2610 from 3400 in November. The performance services index fell to 51.9 from 52.9 in December. The New Zealand dollar fell by 0.5% against the US dollar this week. While we believe that the kiwi dollar will outperform the US dollar this year amid improving global growth, domestic constraints including decreasing net migration might limit upside potential. Stay long AUD/NZD and SEK/NZD. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Place A Limit Sell On DXY At 100 - November 15, 2019 USD/CNY And Market Turbulence - August 9, 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 in Canada have been soft: Manufacturing sales fell by 0.6% month-on-month in November. Headline inflation was unchanged at 2.2% year-on-year in December. Core inflation however, fell to 1.7% from 1.9% in December. New house prices grew by 0.1% year-on-year in December. The Canadian dollar fell by 0.8% against the US dollar this week. On Wednesday, the BoC decided to put interest rates on hold, while opening the door for possible rate cuts later this year if the Canadian data disappointed. In short, like most other central banks, the BoC is data dependent. Our story for CAD is simple – if the epicenter of a growth rebound is outside the US, CAD will underperform its antipodean counterparts. Stay long AUD/CAD. Report Links: The Loonie: Upside Versus The Dollar, But Downside At The Crosses Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Making Money With Petrocurrencies - November 8, 2019 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: Producer prices fell by 1.7% year-on-year in December, compared with a decrease of 2.5% the previous month. Money supply (M3) grew by 0.7% year-on-year in December. The Swiss franc has been more or less flat against the US dollar this week. We continue to favor the Swiss franc as global risks persist, including concerns about the coronavirus. However, as discussed in the front section of this report, the yen is a better hedge than the franc at the current juncture. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Notes On The SNB - October 4, 2019 What To Do About The Swiss Franc? - May 17, 2019 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
There was scant data out of Norway this week: The Labor Force Survey recorded an increase in the unemployment rate to 4% in November. The Norwegian krone fell by 1.3% against the US dollar this week amid lower energy prices. On Thursday, the Norges Bank kept interest rates on hold at 1.5%, as widely expected. Moreover, the Bank Governor Øystein Olsen said that "The Committee’s current assessment of the outlook and the balance of risks suggests that the policy rate will most likely remain at the present level in the coming period," implying no change in the policy rate in the near-term. This suggests that going forward, relative fundamentals rather than policy decisions will dictate NOK’s path. Our bias is that a valuation cushion offers a margin of safety for long NOK positions. Remain short USD/NOK and CAD/NOK. Report Links: On Oil, Growth And The Dollar - January 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Making Money With Petrocurrencies - November 8, 2019 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 was scant data out of Sweden this week: After rising from 6% to 6.8% in November, the unemployment rate fell back to 6% in December. The Swedish krona fell by 0.2% against the US dollar this week. Going forward, improving global growth, diminished trade tensions, and fewer concerns about a near-term recession all underpin the Swedish economy and the krona. SEK is the most potent G10 cross to play a global manufacturing rebound. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades