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Highlights The ECB defines a euro overshoot as EUR/USD in the high 1.20s. Until then, remain cyclically long both EUR/USD and the associated SEK/USD. EUR/USD is a function of expected terminal interest rates in the euro area and U.S. Whether the Fed hikes in December or whether the ECB hikes next year is largely irrelevant. Global investors should be long the euro, but underweight the Euro Stoxx 50. European equity investors should prefer the broader based 300-constituent Euro Stoxx over the 50-constituent Euro Stoxx 50.1 And prefer the FTSE100 over the Euro Stoxx 50. Feature Arguably the biggest macro trade of 2017 has been to own the euro. Year to date, the big winner is EUR/USD, which is up 15%, but even EUR/GBP is up an impressive 9%. An additional merit is that the euro has behaved like a haven currency. When risk assets have sold off sharply, EUR/USD has tended to strengthen.2 The Euro Is Stronger, But It Is Not Strong Although the euro is stronger, the ECB's own indicators for euro area competitiveness3 suggest that the euro is not yet strong. The euro needs to appreciate by at least another 5%4 to cancel the euro area's over-competitiveness versus its top 19 trading partners (Chart of the Week). Translated to EUR/USD this implies a fair value in the 1.25-1.30 range. Chart of the WeekThe Euro Is Stronger, But It Is Not Yet Strong The Euro Is Stronger, But It Is Not Yet Strong The Euro Is Stronger, But It Is Not Yet Strong To be clear, the ECB's competitiveness analysis assumes that the euro started its life in 1999 close to fair value. This assumption seems reasonable. In 1999, the euro area's constituent economies were broadly in internal balance with each other and had much in common. Hard as it is to believe today, in 1999 Germany and Italy scored identically on total debt as a share of GDP (Chart I-2) as well as on exports as a share of GDP (Chart I-3). Chart I-2At The Euro"s Birth, Germany And##br## Italy Had The Same Debt To GDP... At The Euro"s Birth, Germany And Italy Had The Same Debt To GDP... At The Euro"s Birth, Germany And Italy Had The Same Debt To GDP... Chart I-3...And Exports##br## To GDP ...And Exports To GDP ...And Exports To GDP Perhaps more significantly, euro area trade was in external balance, and the bloc's real competitiveness versus its major trading partners was exactly in line with its long-term average. But after its birth, the euro became extremely undervalued in the dot com bubble, then extremely overvalued in the global credit boom, and most recently, extremely undervalued again - as a direct result of the ECB's extreme monetary easing. Seen in this bigger picture, the euro's recent rally is just a recovery from this most recent undervaluation, an argument that the ECB itself made at its last monetary policy meeting: "Regarding exchange rates, the appreciation of the euro to date could be seen as reflecting changes in relative fundamentals in the euro area vis-à-vis the rest of the world." At the same time: "Concerns were expressed about the risk of the exchange rate overshooting in the future." What would constitute such an overshooting? Based on the ECB's own analysis, we can deduce that it would occur if EUR/USD broke into the high 1.20s (Chart I-4). This is the level at which we would consider removing our cyclical overweight. Until then, remain cyclically long both EUR/USD and the associated SEK/USD. Chart I-4The Euro Needs To Rally Another 5% To Cancel The Euro Area"s Over-Competitiveness The Euro Needs To Rally Another 5% To Cancel The Euro Area"s Over-Competitiveness The Euro Needs To Rally Another 5% To Cancel The Euro Area"s Over-Competitiveness Explaining The Stronger Euro The explanation for the euro's impressive rally starts with central banks' strong commitment to 'data-dependency'. Over short periods, economic data can be noisy or "transient" giving central banks an excuse to look through the data. But over periods of 6 months and longer, the noise cancels out. So unless central banks break their commitment to data-dependency - which would mark a big shift in transparency and communication - the markets know that central bank policy must ultimately follow the hard data on GDP growth, inflation, and job creation. This necessarily means that the evolution of relative interest rate expectations and bond yields must also ultimately follow relative economic performance. Which they have done perfectly (Chart I-5). The next part of the explanation is the so-called fixed income portfolio channel (Chart I-6). The key point is that international fixed income investors make their allocations based on both bond valuations and currency valuations. Chart I-5Bond Yield Spreads Follow Relative##br## Economic Performance Bond Yield Spreads Follow Relative Economic Performance Bond Yield Spreads Follow Relative Economic Performance Chart I-6Fixed Income Flows Are The Most Volatile##br## Part Of Currency Demand Fixed Income Flows Are The Most Volatile Part Of Currency Demand Fixed Income Flows Are The Most Volatile Part Of Currency Demand When the expected interest rate in the euro area rises relative to that in the U.S., the euro bond becomes de facto relatively cheaper. As an example, let's say 1% cheaper. In this case, the international fixed income investor will shift into the euro bond until the flow makes EUR/USD symmetrically 1% more expensive. At this point, the fixed income portfolio flow will stop, and an equilibrium will reestablish at the new higher level for EUR/USD. This is because the international investor now has 1% more upside from the cheaper bond, but 1% less upside from the more expensive currency - and the two cancel out. Finally, at major turning points in monetary policy such as now, the expected interest rate that matters is the so-called terminal rate. At such major turning points, the issue for the largest fixed income portfolio flows is not the exact timing of rate hikes. Whether the Fed hikes in December or whether the ECB hikes next year is largely irrelevant. The big issue is: at what level of rates will the respective tightening cycles ultimately end many years from now? Chart I-7 and Chart I-8 illustrate that EUR/USD has recently been tracking the expected policy rate differential not in 2018 or 2019, but in 2022! Chart I-7EUR/USD Is Not Tracking Policy ##br##Rate Differentials In 2019... EUR/USD Is Not Tracking Policy Rate Differentials In 2019... EUR/USD Is Not Tracking Policy Rate Differentials In 2019... Chart I-8...But Rather Policy Rate ##br##Differntials In 2022 ...But Rather Policy Rate Differntials In 2022 ...But Rather Policy Rate Differntials In 2022 Based on the latest PMIs which capture current economic sentiment, and on 6-month credit impulses which lead activity, euro area hard data will continue to perform at least in line with those in other major economies. In which case, relative expectations for the terminal policy interest rate will continue to converge, long-dated bond yield spreads will continue to compress, and the euro has further cyclical upside. Losers And Winners From The Stronger Euro A stronger euro creates both losers and winners. A stronger euro hurts the competitiveness of firms selling euro priced products in international markets. Therefore, firms exporting discretionary goods and services which are price elastic could suffer a drop in sales. Against this, a stronger euro makes everyone in the euro area richer in terms of the goods and services they can buy from outside the euro area. This is particularly significant for non-discretionary items - food and energy - of which Europe is a large importer. Given that the volumes of these purchases tend to be inelastic, their price decline in euro terms significantly boosts the real spending power of euro area consumers. Chart I-9The Stronger Euro Weighs##br## On The Eurostoxx 50 The Stronger Euro Weighs On The Eurostoxx 50 The Stronger Euro Weighs On The Eurostoxx 50 (As an aside, the exact opposite applies in the U.K. The post Brexit vote slump in the pound - and the associated rise in prices - has depressed U.K. consumers' real spending power. And likely explains why the U.K. economy is now slowing.) A stronger euro also reflects a steeper yield curve, and its associated boost to bank profit margins, solvency, and credit creation. The important point is that the stronger euro's aggregate impact on an economy depends on how the losers and winners net out. For example, many people will worry that the stronger euro has made Italy 5% under-competitive versus its major trading partners. However, the drag on Italy's price-sensitive exporters could be less significant than the boost to real consumer spending and bank credit creation - netting out as a positive for Italy. Equity investors should note that most exporters in the Euro Stoxx 50 tend to be multinationals whose sales and costs are currency diversified and/or hedged. So a stronger euro should not hurt operationally. But it does hurt in the translation of multi-currency profits back into euros - the base currency of the Euro Stoxx 50. This drags down (local currency) index performance. Hence, global investors should be cyclically long the euro, but underweight the Euro Stoxx 50. European equity investors should prefer the broader based 300-constituent Euro Stoxx5 over the 50-constituent Euro Stoxx 50 (Chart I-9); and prefer the FTSE100 over the Euro Stoxx 50. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 Not to be confused with the Stoxx Europe 600 2 Global equities assets have suffered 11 sharply down days this year - defined as the MSCI World index (in local currency terms) down more than -0.5%. And on 9 of those 11 days, EUR/USD has rallied 3 Available at https://www.ecb.europa.eu/stats 4 The ECB calculates three Harmonised Competitiveness Indicators for the euro area versus its top 19 trading partners based on unit labour costs, GDP deflators, and consumer price indices. Updated to August 29 2017, the three indicators suggest that the trade-weighted euro is still undervalued by 5%, 11% and 6% respectively. 5 Not to be confused with the Stoxx Europe 600 Fractal Trading Model* This week we are initiating a short nickel / long silver commodity pair trade with a profit target / stop loss at 8%. In other trades, short MSCI Turkey / long Eurostoxx600 hit its stop-loss. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-10 Nickel Vs. Silver Nickel Vs. Silver The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: 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. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * 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 Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades 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##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Mario Draghi will signal the ECB's intention to further taper asset purchases during his Jackson Hole address later today, while cautioning that rate hikes remain a way away. The spread between long-term U.S. and euro area bond yields is not especially wide considering that trend growth is higher in the U.S. and fiscal policy will add 4% of GDP more to U.S. aggregate demand over the next few years than it will in the euro area. The upswing in Japanese growth is unlikely to prompt the BoJ to abandon its yield- curve targeting regime. Japanese stocks are cheap and corporate profits are rebounding smartly. Stay overweight Japanese equities in currency-hedged terms for the next 12 months. As one looks further ahead to the next decade, Japanese inflation will likely break out as labor shortages intensify. This will be part of a broad-based increase in global inflation. Stay long Japanese inflation protection and go short 20-year JGBs relative to their 5-year counterparts. Feature Mario Draghi: Action Jackson, The Sequel? Mario Draghi made shockwaves the last time he spoke at Jackson Hole on August 22, 2014. Draghi used that occasion to lay out the case for additional monetary easing. This paved the way for the ECB's own QE program. From that fateful speech to March 2015, EUR/USD fell from 1.33 to 1.05. Three years later, investors are anxious to hear what Draghi has to say, but this time around the expectation is that he will discuss plans for winding down QE. We agree that Draghi will signal the ECB's intent to further taper asset purchases. Growth is currently strong and the risk of a euro area breakup has all but disappeared. Nevertheless, although he may not publicly admit it, Draghi is cognizant of the fact that euro area financial conditions have tightened on the back of a strong euro, while U.S. financial conditions have continued to ease (Chart 1). Mario Draghi also knows that both inflation and wage growth remain depressed across the euro area, and that labor market slack outside Germany is still 6.7 percentage points higher than in 2008 (Chart 2). In addition, Draghi is undoubtedly aware of the likelihood that the neutral rate of interest is extremely low in the euro area, implying that the ECB would be constrained in raising rates even if the region were close to full employment.1 The spread between the 30-year U.S. Treasury yield and the 30-year GDP-weighted euro area bond yield - a reasonable proxy for the market's estimate of the difference in neutral rates between the two regions - currently stands at 86 basis points in nominal terms and 56 basis points in real terms. This is not especially wide considering that trend growth is higher in the U.S. and fiscal policy will add 4% of GDP more to U.S. aggregate demand over the next few years than it will in the euro area (Chart 3).2 Chart 1Diverging Financial Conditions Favor U.S. Over The Euro Area Diverging Financial Conditions Favor U.S. Over The Euro Area Diverging Financial Conditions Favor U.S. Over The Euro Area Chart 2Draghi Is Paying Attention Draghi Is Paying Attention Draghi Is Paying Attention Chart 3The State Of Fiscal Policy In The G4 Is The BoJ Next? Is The BoJ Next? We expect EUR/USD to pare back its gains, dropping to $1.05 by the end of 2018. However, most of the dollar's rebound is likely to occur next year, when it becomes apparent that the U.S. unemployment rate will fall well below the Fed's 2018 projection of 4.2%. This will force the Fed to step up the pace of rate hikes. For the time being, we see EUR/USD fluctuating within a broad range of $1.10-to-$1.20. BoJ: Time To Remove The Sake Bowl? Could the Bank of Japan follow in the Fed's and ECB's footsteps by signaling the desire to slowly withdraw monetary accommodation? On the surface, there are certainly some reasons to think so. Japanese growth has picked up recently, with real GDP rising at a blistering annualized pace of 4% in the second quarter (Chart 4). The acceleration in growth was driven entirely by stronger domestic demand. Consumer spending increased by 3.7%, while private nonresidential investment jumped by 9.9%. Inflation appears to be bottoming. The national core CPI index, which excludes fresh food prices but includes energy costs, rose for the seventh straight month in June to 0.4% on a year-over-year basis. Corporate goods inflation has reached 2.6%, up from a low of -4.6% in May 2016. Corporate service inflation moved to 0.8% this spring, the highest rate since 1993 (Chart 5). Nominal wage growth has also accelerated. Our Wage Trend Indicator, which uses statistical techniques applied to three separate data series to extract the underlying trend in Japanese wages, is now close to its 2007 highs (Chart 6). Chart 4GDP Growth Has Perked Up In Japan GDP Growth Has Perked Up In Japan GDP Growth Has Perked Up In Japan Chart 5Corporate Pricing Power Has Improved Corporate Pricing Power Has Improved Corporate Pricing Power Has Improved Chart 6Japanese Wages Are In An Uptrend Japanese Wages Are In An Uptrend Japanese Wages Are In An Uptrend The recovery in Japanese wage growth has occurred alongside a tightening of the labor market. The latest Economy Watchers Survey featured a litany of companies complaining of worsening labor shortages (Table 1). This is confirmed by the job openings-to-applicants ratio, which has surged to the highest level since 1974 (Chart 7). Table 1Japan: Evidence Of Shortages Of Workers, Part I Is The BoJ Next? Is The BoJ Next? Chart 7Japan: Evidence Of Shortages Of Workers, Part II Japan: Evidence Of Shortages Of Workers, Part II Japan: Evidence Of Shortages Of Workers, Part II Easy Does It, Kuroda-san Despite the good news on the economy, it is highly unlikely that the Bank of Japan will abandon its ultra-accommodative stance any time soon. There are a number of reasons for this: While inflation is rising, it is coming off a very low base, and is nowhere near the BoJ's 2% target. A deflationary mindset also remains firmly entrenched, as highlighted by both survey data and market expectations (Chart 8). Much of the recent pickup in inflation is attributable to higher energy prices and the lagged effects of a weaker yen. Excluding energy prices, core inflation has barely risen. The increase in corporate goods prices has also closely tracked the price of imports. Considering that the trade-weighted yen has appreciated of late, it is reasonable to assume that import price inflation will dissipate. This spring's annual shunto wage negotiations yielded smaller wage hikes among large companies than in 2016. This suggests that further near-term gains in wages will be hard to come by. Fiscal policy may turn less accommodative. The government passed a supplementary budget last summer (worth 1.5% of GDP according to the IMF). The effects of this package are being felt now. Public fixed investment surged by 21.9% in Q2. Under current law, however, fiscal policy is set to turn contractionary again over the next few years. Leading economic indicators are pointing to a modest slowdown in growth over the coming months (Chart 9). Chart 8Deflationary Mindset Has Been Hard To Shake Off Deflationary Mindset Has Been Hard To Shake Off Deflationary Mindset Has Been Hard To Shake Off Chart 9LEIs Pointing To Modest Slowdown LEIs Pointing To Modest Slowdown LEIs Pointing To Modest Slowdown The BoJ is not the same central bank that it was five years ago. The last two hawkish dissenters, Takehiro Sato and Takehide Kiuchi, both stepped down in July when their terms expired. They were replaced by Goshi Kataoka and Hitoshi Suzuki, neither of whom are expected to oppose Governor Haruhiko Kuroda's dovish approach. As such, it is highly likely that the BoJ will continue to anchor the 10-year yield at close to zero for at least the next 12 months. If bond yields elsewhere rise over this period - as we expect will be the case - the yen will weaken. Good News For Japanese Stocks... For Now A weaker yen is, of course, good news for Japanese stocks. Japanese equities are currently trading at a 16% discount to the MSCI World index based on forward earnings (Chart 10). Moreover, unlike in the past, both earnings and dividend growth have been strong, averaging 19% and 9%, respectively, over the last five years (Chart 11). Corporate governance reform - a key element of Abenomics - can take some credit for this. The share of companies with at least two independent directors rose from 18% in 2013 to 78% in 2016. The number of companies with performance-linked pay increased from 640 to 941, while the number that publish disclosure policies jumped from 679 to 1055. Analysts have been slow to factor in these positive developments. Chart 12 shows that Japan leads all other major stock markets in positive earnings surprises in the second quarter. We remain overweight Japanese equities in currency-hedged terms. Chart 10Good Value In Japanese Stocks Good Value In Japanese Stocks Good Value In Japanese Stocks Chart 11Solid Earnings And Dividend Growth Solid Earnings And Dividend Growth Solid Earnings And Dividend Growth Chart 12Japan And Positive Earnings Revisions: Follow The Leader Is The BoJ Next? Is The BoJ Next? . The Longer-Term Outlook: Japan (Eventually) Escapes Deflation As we discussed last week, it is likely that the U.S. will fall into recession in 2019 or 2020, dragging the rest of the world down with it.3 As a risk-off currency, the yen will strengthen, potentially reigniting deflationary forces. This will make it impossible for the BoJ to abandon its yield-curve targeting regime. Does that mean that Japan is condemned to a never-ending cycle of reflation/deflation? Not necessarily. As one looks at a longer-term horizon of 5-to-10 years, it is likely that Japan will finally escape deflation. This is because many of the structural forces that have sustained deflation will have either receded or reversed course by then. The simultaneous bursting of Japan's real estate and stock market bubbles in the early 1990s ushered in a prolonged period of falling property prices and corporate deleveraging. This suppressed both household consumption and business investment, leading to a persistent shortfall in aggregate demand. The latest data suggests that property prices are bottoming and corporate balance sheets have finally improved to the point where further aggressive cost-cutting is no longer necessary (Chart 13). Demographic trends are also likely to fuel higher inflation over the long haul. The deceleration in population growth in the early 1990s reduced the need for everything from new homes to new cars, shopping malls, and factories. This weighed on business capex and consumer durable spending, thereby exacerbating the deflationary forces that were already in place. In addition, a surge in the share of the population in their peak saving years - ages 30 to 50 - led to an increase in desired savings throughout the economy. More savings means less spending, so this also contributed to deflation. Looking out, population growth will remain anemic. However, two important developments will occur. First, the biggest cohort of Japanese baby boomers - those born in 1947-52 - will hit 70, the age at which most Japanese workers retire. Second, the secular rise in female labor force participation will plateau. Chart 14 shows that a larger percentage of Japanese women between the ages of 25 and 54 are employed than in the U.S., a massive shift from 20 years ago. Both these changes will exacerbate labor shortages, while further reducing national savings. Chart 13Deflationary Headwinds Are Abating Deflationary Headwinds Are Abating Deflationary Headwinds Are Abating Chart 14Female Employment In Japan Has Surpassed The U.S. Female Employment In Japan Has Surpassed The U.S. Female Employment In Japan Has Surpassed The U.S. Concluding Thoughts Contrary to popular belief, the Phillips curve remains intact, even in Japan (Chart 15). The market is not at all prepared for the prospect of higher Japanese inflation, as evidenced by the fact that CPI swaps are pricing in inflation of only 0.5% over the next two decades. As inflation picks up in the 2020s, nominal GDP will rise (even if real GDP growth remains anemic due to a shrinking labor force). The Bank of Japan will keep nominal rates low during the first half of the 2020s, ensuring that real rates sink further into negative territory. This will be the way by which Japan reduces its debt burden. Older savers may not like it, but the alternative of pension and health care cuts will be seen as even worse. We are currently long Japanese inflation protection through the CPI swaps market. As of today, we are adding a new long-term trade recommendation: Go short 20-year JGBs relative to their 5-year counterparts. The potential upside from this trade easily compensates for the negative carry of 66 bps. An upswing in Japanese inflation in the 2020s is very much in line with our secular view that global inflation will trend higher over the long haul, as articulated in a recent report.4 This will have a profound impact on fixed-income markets. While Japan's demographic transition has been and will continue to be more extreme than elsewhere, population aging is something that will affect all major economies. Chart 15Japan's Phillips Curve Is Alive And Well Is The BoJ Next? Is The BoJ Next? Chart 16Demographic Shifts: From Highly Deflationary To Highly Inflationary Is The BoJ Next? Is The BoJ Next? Chart 16 shows the IMF's estimate of how projected changes in the age structure of the population will affect inflation over the next few decades. The Fund's calculations suggest that demographic shifts will go from being very deflationary to very inflationary in every major economy. This will translate into significantly higher long-term nominal bond yields. Peter Berezin, Global Chief Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Future Of The Neutral Rate," dated August 4, 2017. 2 We calculate this number by taking the difference between the structural primary budget balance in the euro area (roughly 1.5% of GDP) and the U.S. (roughly -2.5% of GDP). The claim that this will translate into 4% more in aggregate demand in the U.S. implicitly assumes a fiscal multiplier of one. A larger multiplier would generate an even bigger gap in demand. 3 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "From Slow Burn Recovery To Retro-Recession?" dated August 18, 2017. 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "A Secular Bottom In Inflation," dated July 28, 2017. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Feature Dear client, This week we are publishing a brief Special Report highlighting ten charts that have captured our attention, charts we would like to emphasize before the summer lull ends. We will not be sending a report next week, but we will be resuming our regular publishing schedule on September 8, 2017. Warm regards, Mathieu Savary With both the Manufacturing Council and the Strategy and Policy Forum disbanded, markets have lost faith in the capacity of the Trump administration to pass on any meaningful tax reforms or tax cuts. However, as Chart 1 shows, the imperative for Republicans in Congress to do so before the 2018 mid-term election is in fact growing by the minute: The unpopularity of Donald Trump is becoming a major handicap for the GOP in Congress and the post-Charlottesville debacle is only making matters worse. Legislative action needs to materialize to compensate for this hurdle. The tax cuts or reforms ultimately passed are not likely to be what the administration envisage and are likely to be emanating from Congress itself and not the White House. This situation should also give Republicans an incentive to avoid an unpopular government shutdown around the debt ceiling negotiations, but we expect uncertainty around this question to remain elevated as rhetoric flairs up, which could potentially put our long USD/JPY position at risk. Chart 1If Tax Cuts Don't Pass, Republicans Are Heading For A Huge Defeat In 2018 10 Charts For A Late-August Day 10 Charts For A Late-August Day While automation has received a lot of press, one of the key factors that keeps weighing on inflation on a structural basis is the continuation of a 30-year process: The entry of China and other key emerging markets into the global economy, which has massively expanded global aggregate supply relative to aggregate demand. Through the 1980s and 1990s, this expansion in supply mostly reflected the addition of billions of potential workers to the global labor force. However, as Chart 2 illustrates, since the turn of the millennium, the supply-side expansion has mostly taken the form of a massive increase in the EM and Chinese capital stock, which has lifted the global capital stock. As a result, this has created excess capacity for the world as a whole, which is keeping a lid on prices. As long as China keeps a very high savings rate, global demand is likely to remain inadequate relative to global supply, structurally limiting the upside to global inflation. Chart 2Global Excess Capacity Global Excess Capacity Global Excess Capacity While the structural anchor on inflation remains, this does not mean that cycles in prices are dead. In fact, from a cyclical perspective, U.S. core inflation is likely to bottom and slowly inch higher in the second half of 2017. Inflation remains a lagging indicator of the business cycle. Supported by very easy financial conditions, growth has regained some vigor while the U.S. is now at full employment. Additionally, as Chart 3 illustrates, the U.S. velocity of money has once again picked up, a reliable leading indicator of core inflation over the past 20 years. This supports our thesis that this year's downleg in the dollar is long in the tooth: A stabilization and uptick in inflation could force markets to push up the number of interest rates hikes anticipated from the Federal Reserve. Chart 3Cyclical Inflation Dynamics Cyclical Inflation Dynamics Cyclical Inflation Dynamics In 2015, the Chinese economy was losing speed at an accelerating pace. Beijing began to panic and pulled out all the stops to put a floor under growth: Fiscal spending increased at an incredible 25% annual pace by the end of 2015 and credit growth was encouraged. While the fiscal stimulus is long past, the Chinese credit impulse has continued to support economic activity, investment, construction, and imports. However, the People's Bank of China has begun engineering a tightening in monetary conditions and is slowly but surely putting the brakes on the expansion of off-balance sheet instruments in the Chinese financial system. As a result, the amount of financing raised by smaller Chinese financial institutions is decelerating. Historically, without this source of liquidity, total debt growth has tended to slow, adversely impacting the credit impulse (Chart 4). This is likely to weigh on investment and construction, thus negatively affecting the dollar-bloc currencies. Chart 4Key Risk To Chinese Credit Growth Key Risk To Chinese Credit Growth Key Risk To Chinese Credit Growth The euro has rallied violently this year. Some of this strength has been a reflection of the euro's nature as the anti-dollar. As investors began doubting the capacity of the Fed to stick to its plan of hiking interest rates to 2.9% by the end of 2019, and as political paralysis took over the U.S., the greenback suffered, lifting the euro in the process. In sharp contrast, the European economy and inflation picked up and political risk in continental Europe receded, adding fuel to the fire. Today, buying the euro has become the epitome of the "consensus trade," with investors massively long the common currency. However, while a pickup in U.S. inflation will be required to expect a full reversal of this trade, a correction in the euro is a growing risk: The EUR/USD's fractal dimension - a measure of groupthink - has hit 1.25, a level that in the past has warned of a potential countertrend move (Chart 5). Chart 5Correction In The Euro Correction In The Euro Correction In The Euro Betting on the yen remains the FX analogue to betting on bonds. JGB yields display a low beta to global government bond yields; thus, when global rates go up, interest rate differentials move against the yen. The opposite is true when global yields fall. The downside to the yen when global rates rise has now been supercharged by the yield cap implemented by the Bank of Japan, as JGB yields are now prohibited from rising when global bond yields rise. BCA's view is that U.S. bond yields should rise over the next 12 months, which will should prompt a period of pronounced weakness in the JPY. But what if a rise in bond yields causes an EM selloff - wouldn't this help the yen? As Chart 6 illustrates, the correlation between USD/JPY and bond yields is, in fact, stronger than that with stocks. In other words, the pain in EM has to become acute enough to cause bond yields to fall before the yen can rally. This means there is a window of opportunity to short the yen when bond yields rise even if EM assets depreciate. Chart 6The Yen Is A Play On Bonds The Yen Is A Play On Bonds The Yen Is A Play On Bonds Dollar-bloc currencies (CAD, AUD and NZD) tend to be prime beneficiaries of expanding global liquidity. This is because in an environment where global liquidity expands, the U.S. dollar weakens and commodity prices strengthen. Moreover, when global liquidity is plentiful, risk-taking and carry trades are emboldened, creating inflows of funds and liquidity into EM nations, which in turn, boosts their economic prospects. This also pushes up the expected returns of assets in the dollar-bloc countries, and thus incentivizes global investors to purchase the AUD, the CAD, and the NZD. This means that historically, the performance of dollar-bloc currencies has been tightly linked to the expansions in global central bank reserves - a good measure of global liquidity growth. This time around, dollar-bloc currencies have massively outperformed the growth in global reserves, leaving them vulnerable to any slowdown in global liquidity (Chart 7). Chart 7Dollar-Bloc Currencies Have Overshot Global Liquidity Dollar-Bloc Currencies Have Overshot Global Liquidity Dollar-Bloc Currencies Have Overshot Global Liquidity While commodity currencies are all likely to face headwinds over the course of the next 12 months, all dollar-bloc currencies are not created equal. The AUD looks much more vulnerable than the CAD. First, the AUD is trading at a 10.7% premium vis-à-vis its long-term fair value, while the CAD is only slightly expensive. Second, Canadian terms of trade are governed by dynamics in energy prices, its main commodity export, while Australian export prices are a function of base metal prices. BCA's Commodity And Energy Strategy service is currently more positive on energy prices than it is on industrial metals. The energy market is undergoing an important curtailment of supply that will lead to further drawdowns in oil inventories. Meanwhile, the supplies of metal are not as well controlled as those of energy, and China's desire to slow real estate speculation should weigh on construction activity in the Middle Kingdom. Finally, as Chart 8 illustrates, AUD/CAD rarely diverges from AUD/USD, but right now, AUD/CAD is trading at a large premium to AUD/USD. This means shorting AUD/CAD could be a nice way to benefit from a weakening in dollar-bloc currencies while limiting the direct exposure to aggregate commodity-price dynamics. Chart 8AUD/CAD Is A Short AUD/CAD Is A Short AUD/CAD Is A Short The Swedish economy has been strong and the output gap now stands at 1.26% of GDP. Yet, despite this positive backdrop, the Riksbank is keeping in place one of the easiest monetary policies in the world, with nominal policy rates standing at -0.5% and real rates at a stunning -2.6%. It is no wonder that the SEK trades at a 6.4% discount to its PPP fair value against the euro. Now, two developments warrant selling EUR/SEK. First, Stefan Ingves, the extremely dovish president of the Swedish central, is leaving the institution at the end of this year. While his replacement has yet to be announced, it will be difficult to find someone more dovish than him to take the helm of the oldest central bank in the world. Second, not only has Sweden inflation picked up violently, the Riksbank's resource utilization indicator continues to shoot up, pointing to a further acceleration in inflation (Chart 9). As a result, we expect the Swedish central bank to be the next one to join the Fed and the Bank of Canada in tightening policy, which will give additional support for the Swedish krona, especially against the euro. Chart 9The Riksbank Will Hike Soon The Riksbank Will Hike Soon The Riksbank Will Hike Soon EUR/NOK has rarely traded above current levels over the course of the last decade. It has only done so when Brent prices have fallen below US$40/bbl (Chart 10). BCA's base case is that oil is more likely to finish the year between US$50 and US$60 than it is to trade below US$40. With EUR/NOK trading 13% over its PPP fair value, and with Norway still sporting a current account surplus of 6% of GDP, even if the Norwegian economy continues to exhibit rather low inflation readings, there is a greater likelihood that EUR/NOK depreciates from current levels than appreciates. We thus recommend investors short this cross over the remainder of 2017. Chart 10If Brent Doesn't Fall Below , EUR/NOK Is A Short If Brent Doesn't Fall Below $40, EUR/NOK Is A Short If Brent Doesn't Fall Below $40, EUR/NOK Is A Short Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights China's tightened control on capital account transactions has played a key role in slowing down capital outflows, particularly outward FDIs. Meanwhile, investors' panic over the RMB has also abated substantially, likely due to a combination of greater policy transparency and improved growth conditions. The PBoC's capital account control measures will not be permanent. Cross-border capital flows are by nature volatile and highly pro-cyclical, while China's capital account control measures are imposed as a counter-cyclical mechanism. The stabilization in China's official reserves is accompanied by a notable setback in the RMB's internationalization process. The internationalization of the RMB will resume, but it is impossible to challenge the role of the dollar as the world's dominant reserve currency in the foreseeable future. Feature Chart 1The Decline In Chinese Official Reserves##br## Has Halted The Decline In Chinese Official Reserves Has Halted The Decline In Chinese Official Reserves Has Halted Amid recent soft growth numbers, an important positive development is that official foreign reserves in China have been increasing for six consecutive months, which is being perceived as a sign of the country's re-gained macro stability (Chart 1). A closer look at China's foreign reserves and balance-of-payment statistics suggests capital outflows have slowed considerably. Confidence in the RMB appears to have improved, but expectations of further RMB depreciation have not completely reversed. This means capital outflows may still accelerate, especially if the dollar bull market resumes.1 The RMB internationalization process has also suffered a notable setback in recent quarters due to investors' weakened confidence in the currency. The RMB will continue to gain broader adoption beyond China's borders over time, but the process will be gradual and hesitant, and it will not challenge the mighty dominance of the U.S. dollar anytime soon. Capital Flows: What Has Changed? Chinese official reserves have stabilized around US$3 trillion since early this year, bottoming from a prolonged decline from a peak of over US$4 trillion in mid-2014. The broad dollar weakness in recent months has boosted the value of Chinese official holdings of non-dollar assets, which has helped stabilize the level of overall reserves. Nonetheless, the country's balance-of-payment data shows major changes in the patterns of cross-border capital flows, yielding some important information. Chart 2Inward Portfolio Investment Has "Normalized" Monitoring Chinese Capital Outflows And The RMB Internationalization Process Monitoring Chinese Capital Outflows And The RMB Internationalization Process In terms of capital inflows, the messages are mixed (Chart 2). On one hand, portfolio inflows have rebounded sharply since the second quarter of 2016 after a deep decline in the previous three consecutive quarters. Foreign investors aggressively pulled out of Chinese markets, particularly bonds, between the third quarter of 2015 and the first quarter of 2016, spooked by the People's Bank of China's surprise moves to devalue the RMB in August 2015 and in January 2016. It appears that foreign investors have become more comfortable with the RMB's "new normal" in recent quarters. Foreign purchases of Chinese onshore bonds have largely returned to normal, but stock purchases have remained subdued compared with previous years. The dramatic boom-bust in the Chinese domestic stock market in 2015 also dampened foreign investors' appetite towards this volatile asset class. It remains to be seen whether the newly established "bond connect" program and the MSCI's recent decision to include A shares in its indexes will be able attract more foreign portfolio investors. On the other hand, foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows have continued to decline. Inbound FDI dropped to a mere US$21 billion in the last quarter, near the levels at the height of the global financial crisis (Chart 3). FDIs are largely strategic decisions and are less influenced by near-term exchange rate fluctuations. Therefore, the sharp decline in FDI is a worrying sign that foreign investors' confidence in the Chinese business environment has weakened significantly, which is consistent with numerous surveys that show a gradual drop in China's ranking in global company's investment plans (Chart 4). For the Chinese authorities, how to improve the country's business environment and re-gain investors' confidence should be taken much more seriously. Chart 3FDI Has Fallen Sharply FDI Has Fallen Sharply FDI Has Fallen Sharply Chart 4China Is Losing Lure Among Global Firms China Is Losing Lure Among Global Firms China Is Losing Lure Among Global Firms On capital outflows, all channels have slowed of late, which is the key reason behind the stabilizing official reserves. Outbound FDI has fallen sharply since the fourth quarter of 2016 (Chart 5). Corporate China's overseas investments averaged almost US$60 billion for six consecutive quarters between the third quarter of 2015 and the fourth quarter of 2016, and has dropped to less than US$20 billion in the past two quarters. Repayment of overseas liabilities by the corporate sector, another major reason for capital outflows in previous years, has also slowed substantially (middle panel, Chart 5). Corporate China's deleveraging of dollar debt quickened sharply in 2015, as the RMB began to fall against the dollar. It has eased considerably of late, either due to re-gained stability of the exchange rate or as the deleveraging process has become advanced. The balance-of-payment statistics shows that total outstanding foreign loans and trade credit currently stand at US$620 billion, down from a peak of over US$1 trillion in the second quarter of 2014. Rampant "hot money" outflows in previous quarters have reversed recently (bottom panel, Chart 5). In fact, inbound "currency and deposits," which we label as "hot money," as it is most liquid and historically has been highly volatile, have reached a new record high. Taken together, the Chinese regulators' tightened rein on capital account transactions have clearly played a key role in slowing down capital outflows, particularly outward FDIs. Meanwhile, investors' panic over the RMB has also abated substantially, likely due to a combination of greater policy transparency and improved growth conditions. In essence, cross-border capital flows are by nature volatile and highly pro-cyclical, while China's capital account control measures are imposed as a counter-cyclical mechanism to regulate capital flows. In this vein, the PBoC's capital account control measures will not be permanent - they will be eased as capital outflows ease. It is important to note that China still runs a current account surplus, which means the country, public and private sectors combined, is still accumulating net foreign assets. Chart 6 shows that China's official reserves have declined substantially from their 2014 peak, but the country's total foreign assets have continued to climb - an indication that the private sector has been taking a greater share in the country's total foreign claims. For years, the PBoC's key challenge was to persuade the private sector to hold more assets in foreign currencies, and the trend has suddenly changed in recent years. It is wrong, however, to assume that the change is permanent. Chart 5Capital Outflows Have Eased Significantly Capital Outflows Have Eased Significantly Capital Outflows Have Eased Significantly Chart 6Private Sector Is Taking A Greater Share ##br##Of China's Foreign Claims Private Sector Is Taking A Greater Share Of China's Foreign Claims Private Sector Is Taking A Greater Share Of China's Foreign Claims The RMB Internationalization Scorecard Chart 7Setback In The RMB Internationalization Process Setback In The Rmb Internationalization Process Setback In The Rmb Internationalization Process The stabilization in China's official reserves is accompanied by a notable setback in the RMB's internationalization process. Measured by two key functions of money, the role of the RMB as an international currency has declined. As a medium of exchange, the RMB's role in cross-border settlement has dropped sharply (top panel, Chart 7). Currently the RMB accounts for about 15% of China's foreign trade settlement, down from over 30% at the peak of early 2016. The RMB's share as an international payments currency dropped to 1.98% in July, down from 2.45% in January 2016, according to SWIFT. The share of the RMB as a trade settlement currency has also stabilized in recent months, as the RMB exchange rate has stabilized. As a store of value, the RMB's role has likely also dropped, particularly among private investors, as evidenced by the sharp decline in RMB deposits in Hong Kong (bottom panel, Chart 7). Among official reserve managers, however, the role of the RMB may have begun to increase. The European Central Bank converted the equivalent of €500 million of its foreign reserves into RMBs in the first half of 2017. Since March 2017, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has begun to include holdings of RMB in its currency composition of official foreign exchange reserves (COFER). The IMF identified US$88.5 billion of RMB-denominated official foreign reserve assets held by reserve managers in the first quarter of 2017, about 1% of total allocated reserve holdings (Table 1). From a big-picture perspective, the internationalization of the RMB will continue, even though the process will be hesitant and halting, with temporary setbacks. China is the largest trade partner of a growing number of countries with tightly-linked supply chains. This generates natural demand for RMB settlement in bilateral trade. In fact, the correlation between the RMB and the currencies of some of China's Asian neighbors has increased significantly in recent years, which is effectively creating a "RMB currency bloc" (Chart 8). Meanwhile, the Chinese government's ongoing "one-belt one-road" initiative involves financing for infrastructure in some less-developed countries, which will further boost demand for the RMB in these regions. All of this will inevitably broaden the reach of the RMB beyond China's borders. Table 1Composition Of Global Reserve Assets Monitoring Chinese Capital Outflows And The RMB Internationalization Process Monitoring Chinese Capital Outflows And The RMB Internationalization Process Chart 8The RMB Currency Bloc The RMB Currency Bloc The RMB Currency Bloc Nonetheless, it is impossible for the RMB to challenge the role of the dollar as the world's dominant reserve currency in the foreseeable future. The dollar's dominant status is not only supported by America's strong and open economy, but also by its deep, liquid and highly efficient financial markets, which are simply impossible for China to replicate anytime soon. The dramatic volatility in China's financial markets, regulators' shaky handling of the stock market boom-bust and the RMB's volatility in recent years are all indicative of a primitive financial infrastructure. China's legal and administrative frameworks will likely take even longer to converge to western standards. In short, the role of the RMB as an international currency will likely remain marginal for a long time. Yan Wang, Senior Vice President China Investment Strategy yanw@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "China: What Could Go Wrong?" dated August 3, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights Your portfolio cash weighting should be at least in the middle of its range, until the observed volatility of risk assets rises meaningfully from its record low. Cyclically add long SEK/USD to long EUR/USD. Within a European equity portfolio, this implies going cyclically underweight Sweden's OMX, given its high exposure to exporters. Go underweight Swedish real estate equities; overweight Spanish real estate equities. Within a global equity portfolio, overweight euro area banks versus U.S. banks. Feature Great expectations for Mario Draghi's appearance at the Jackson Hole Symposium have been dampened, and understandably so. After the last monetary policy meeting, Draghi emphasised that ECB discussions about policy direction would take place in the autumn. It would undermine this decision making process if Draghi's Jackson Hole speech front ran the ECB discussions. Nonetheless, twitchy markets will inevitably read the tone of Draghi's observations on the global and euro area economies. Chart of the WeekSwedish House Prices Are Up 50% In Just Four Years...Thanks To Negative Interest Rates Swedish House Prices Are Up 50% In Just Four Years...Thanks To Negative Interest Rates Swedish House Prices Are Up 50% In Just Four Years...Thanks To Negative Interest Rates But the more market-relevant presentation might come five hours earlier on Friday at 3pm London time, when Janet Yellen gives a keynote speech on the market's latest meme - financial stability. Three months ago in Madrid, Draghi delivered a keynote speech1 on the very same topic - The interaction between monetary policy and financial stability - available here https://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/key/date/2017/html/ecb.sp170524_1.en.html and well worth reading as a prelude to Yellen's presentation. Draghi explained that ultra-accommodative monetary policy endangers financial stability through three potential channels: Distorting investor behaviour. Generating credit-fuelled bubbles, especially in real estate. Squeezing bank profitability. Do any of these three channels give ground for concern today? Yes. Distorting Investor Behaviour In our view, central banks' distortive impact on investor behaviour is the single biggest source of financial instability today. Yet Draghi devoted only a cursory mention of this danger, noting that investors "could be prone to engage in search-for-yield behaviour and take on excessive risks." The difficulty is that the psychological and behavioural finance biases creating the current distortions lie outside central bankers' natural area of expertise. Nevertheless, we hope that Yellen develops this topic much further at Jackson Hole. Specifically, the behavioural finance distortion known as Mental Accounting Bias describes the irrational distinction between the part of an investment's return that comes from its income, and the part that comes from its capital growth. Rationally, people should not care about this distinction because the money that comes from income and the money that comes from capital growth is perfectly fungible.2 But in practice, many people want a minimum investment income - because they wish to match their known spending outlays with their known income. While they could meet their spending needs by crystalizing capital growth, many people create psychologically separate 'mental accounts': spending from investment income and saving from capital growth. This is especially true for retirees whose main or only income might come from accumulated assets. Traditionally, this psychological mental accounting bias would be unnoticeable because investors could easily match their spending needs with the safe income generated by cash and government bonds. But in recent years, central banks' extended experiments with zero and negative interest rates and QE have forced the 'income mental account' to chase the higher but much more risky income streams from high-yield bonds and equities (Chart I-2 and Chart I-3). To the point where these risk assets no longer offer a sufficient risk premium. Chart I-2A Positive Yield On Equities Can Produce##br## A Negative 5-Year Return... A Positive Yield On Equities Can Produce A Negative 5-Year Return... A Positive Yield On Equities Can Produce A Negative 5-Year Return... Chart I-3...And Even A Negative##br## 10-Year Return ...And Even A Negative 10-Year Return ...And Even A Negative 10-Year Return The search-for-yield pushed up the prices of these risk assets. Now add to the mix the phenomenon known as negative skew.3 Risk asset advances tend to be gradual and gentle, and the longer and more established the advance becomes, the lower the observed volatility goes. Some investors then mistakenly interpret lower observed volatility as justification for a lower risk premium, which warrants a further price advance. And so on, in a self-reinforcing feedback. Today, this has left us with a bizarre and unprecedented situation in which the observed volatility of the Eurostoxx50 equity index is a fraction of the observed volatility of the long-dated German bund! (Chart I-4) Chart I-4Unprecedented: The Observed Volatility Of The Eurostoxx50 ##br## Is Now Lower Than That On The German Bund! Unprecedented: The Observed Volatility Of The Eurostoxx50 Is Now Lower Than That On The German Bund! Unprecedented: The Observed Volatility Of The Eurostoxx50 Is Now Lower Than That On The German Bund! But given the strong inverse relationship between observed volatility and price, record low observed volatility categorically does not mean that prospective risk of a drawdown is low. Quite the reverse, the lower the observed volatility, the higher the prospective risk. And vice-versa. Investment bottom line: Your portfolio cash weighting should always be inversely proportional to the observed volatility of risk assets. Today, with observed volatility still near a record low, your cash weighting should be at least in the middle of its range. Generating Credit-Fuelled Bubbles... In Sweden Turning to the second channel of financial instability, the ECB sees no evidence of credit-fuelled bubbles. Banks are extending credit, but at a fraction of the rate seen prior to 2007 (Chart I-5). And although house prices are rising, the ECB claims that its ultra-accommodative monetary policy has not created imbalances in real estate markets in the euro area. Taken at face value, this claim might be true. Chart I-5Euro Area Banks Are Extending Credit... But At A Modest Rate Euro Area Banks Are Extending Credit... But At A Modest Rate Euro Area Banks Are Extending Credit... But At A Modest Rate But look across the Baltic Sea. Chart I-6Swedish House Prices Accelerated##br## After ZIRP And NIRP Swedish House Prices Accelerated After ZIRP And NIRP Swedish House Prices Accelerated After ZIRP And NIRP Sweden's Riksbank has had to shadow the ECB's ultra-loose policy, to prevent a sharp appreciation of the Swedish krona versus the euro. The trouble is that negative interest rates have been wholly inappropriate for an economy that has recently been growing at 4.5%. One worrying consequence is that Swedish house prices have gone up by 50% in just four years (Chart of the Week), with the bulk of the boom happening after ZIRP and NIRP (Chart I-6). Also, bear in mind that the Swedish real estate market did not suffer a meaningful setback in either 2008 or 2011, meaning the recent boom is not a corrective rebound - like say, in Spain and Ireland. So the ECB's ultra-loose policy may indeed have generated a credit-fuelled bubble... albeit in Sweden! Fortunately, as the ECB ends its ultra-accommodation, it will also liberate the Riksbank to end its incongruous and dangerous NIRP policy. Investment bottom line: Cyclically add long SEK/USD to long EUR/USD. For European equity investors, this implies going cyclically underweight Sweden's OMX, given its high exposure to exporters. Also, go underweight Swedish real estate equities which are now approaching peak price-to-book multiples (Chart I-7). Prefer to overweight Spanish real estate equities which offer much more attractive valuations (Chart I-8). Chart I-7Swedish Real Estate Equities ##br##Are Close To Peak Valuation Swedish Real Estate Equities Are Close To Peak Valuation Swedish Real Estate Equities Are Close To Peak Valuation Chart I-8Spanish Real Estate Equities ##br##Offer Better Value Spanish Real Estate Equities Offer Better Value Spanish Real Estate Equities Offer Better Value Squeezing Bank Profitability For the third channel of financial instability, the ECB concedes that ultra-loose monetary policy compresses banks' net interest margins and thus exerts pressure on their profitability. "Since banks carry out maturity transformation by borrowing short and lending long-term, both the slope of the yield curve and its level matter for profitability." In turn, lower retained profits means lower accumulation of capital, making banks more fragile. The evidence strongly supports this logic. Since the start of the ECB's asset-purchase program, euro area bank valuations - a good proxy for profitability - have formed a perfect mirror-image of the expected intensity of QE (Chart I-9). Chart I-9Bank Valuations Have Been A Mirror-Image Of QE Bank Valuations Have Been A Mirror-Image Of QE Bank Valuations Have Been A Mirror-Image Of QE It follows that as the ECB dials back accommodation, the valuations of euro area banks will continue to recover - at the very least, in relative terms versus banks elsewhere in the world. Investment bottom line: Global equity investors should stay overweight euro area banks versus U.S. banks. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 At the First Conference on Financial Stability, May 24 207. 2 Assuming the tax treatment of income and capital growth is equal. 3 Please see the European Investment Strategy Weekly Report titled 'Negative Skew: A Ticking Time-Bomb' dated July 27, 2017 available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model* We are monitoring the Italian stock Tenaris which is approaching a point of being technically oversold. We are also monitoring a commodity pair-trade, short nickel / long silver which is also approaching a potential entry point in the coming days. But we have not yet opened either trade. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-10 Nickel Vs. Silver Nickel Vs. Silver The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: 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. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * 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 Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades 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 ##br##- Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch ##br##- Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Beware of asset managers' and leveraged funds' large net long positions in EM currencies. Overextended net long positions in EM and commodities currencies signify overbought conditions in EM risk assets in general. This in tandem with the poor outlook for EM/China growth makes the risk-reward of EM financial markets unattractive. Downgrade Korean equities from overweight to neutral, but continue to overweight Korean technology stocks relative to the EM benchmark. Also, maintain the short KRW / long THB trade. Take profits on the long Indian / short Indonesian stocks position. Consistently, downgrade Indian stocks to neutral and upgrade Indonesian bourses to neutral within an EM equity portfolio. Feature Investor positioning in EM currencies is elevated. From a contrarian perspective, this at minimum warrants a correction. Chart I-1 illustrates that asset managers' and leveraged funds' combined net long positions in the Mexican peso, the Brazilian real, the Russian ruble and South African rand are very elevated.1 This aggregate is weighted by notional value of outstanding open interest of each currency, and is shown as a percentage of open interest. Importantly, we have refined positioning data to separate asset managers and leveraged funds from other non-commercial and commercial institutions. Asset managers and leveraged funds reflect investment community sentiment the best. Besides, they are the most inclined to scale back their net long positions if and when these currencies begin to depreciate, i.e., they are more momentum driven. By doing so, they will reinforce the selloff. Currently bullish sentiment on EM and commodities is corroborated by the fact that asset managers' and leveraged funds' aggregate net long positions in non-EM commodities currencies such as the CAD, the AUD and the NZD are at the highest level since 2011 (Chart I-2). Typically, these currencies are at risk of a correction when positioning reaches such excessive levels. Chart I-1Asset Manager's And Leveraged Funds' Net Long Positions In EM Currencies Are Large Asset Manager's And Leveraged Funds' Net Long Positions In EM Currencies Are Large Asset Manager's And Leveraged Funds' Net Long Positions In EM Currencies Are Large Chart I-2Asset Manager's And Leveraged Funds' Net ##br##Long Positions In Commodities Currencies Asset Manager's And Leveraged Funds' Net Long Positions In Commodities Currencies Asset Manager's And Leveraged Funds' Net Long Positions In Commodities Currencies Chart I-3A and Chart I-3B show the same for individual currencies such as the MXN, the BRL, the RUB, the ZAR, the CAD, the AUD and the NZD. The overarching message is that investors' net long exposure to both EM and commodities currencies is large and depreciation risk for these exchange rates is substantial, at least in the near term. Chart I-3AAsset Managers And Leveraged Funds' Net ##br##Long Positions In Select Currencies Asset Managers And Leveraged Funds' Net Long Positions In Select Currencies Asset Managers And Leveraged Funds' Net Long Positions In Select Currencies Chart I-3BAsset Managers And Leveraged Funds' Net ##br##Long Positions In Select Currencies Asset Managers And Leveraged Funds' Net Long Positions In Select Currencies Asset Managers And Leveraged Funds' Net Long Positions In Select Currencies Yet, these positioning data do not reveal whether potential weakness will be a bull market correction or the beginning of bear market. Our bias remains that the potential selloff will evolve into a new phase of the bear market in EM currencies that began in 2011. In turn, as EM currencies depreciate, they will erode foreign investors' returns and trigger a selloff in other EM risk assets such as stocks, domestic bonds and credit markets. In short, investor sentiment on EM risk assets correlates with sentiment toward both EM and commodities currencies. Hence, bullish sentiment and overextended net long positions in EM and commodities currencies signify overbought conditions in EM risk assets in general. The Cyclical Outlook Chart I-4EM Currency Valuations Are Close To Neutral EM Currency Valuations Are Close To Neutral EM Currency Valuations Are Close To Neutral We are negative on the cyclical outlook for EM currencies for the following reasons: With a few minor exceptions, EM currencies are not cheap; their valuations are close to neutral Chart I-4 demonstrates the real effective exchange rate for aggregate EM excluding China, Korea and Taiwan. This is an equity market cap-weighted aggregate. It shows that EM exchange rate valuations are not depressed. The reason why we remove China, Korea and Taiwan from the calculation is because their respective bourses have large equity market-cap weights in the MSCI EM stock index, and thereby dominate the EM aggregate. Excluding these three markets, we get a less skewed perspective on EM currency valuations and assign higher weight to the high-yielding ones. Importantly, the best measure of currency valuation is, in our opinion, the real effective exchange rate based on unit labor costs (ULC). The rationale is that this measure captures changes in wages and productivity. The latter two are critical to competitiveness and, hence, reveal the true valuation of currencies. Unfortunately, there is no available ULC-based real effective exchange rate data for all individual EM currencies. Chart I-5A and Chart I-5B presents the measure for countries where data from reputable sources are available. By and large, the message is that, with the exception of the Mexican peso, EM currencies are not particularly cheap. Chart I-5AReal Effective Exchange Rates ##br##Based On Unit Labor Costs Real Effective Exchange Rates Based On Unit Labor Costs Real Effective Exchange Rates Based On Unit Labor Costs Chart I-5BReal Effective Exchange Rates ##br##Based On Unit Labor Costs Real Effective Exchange Rates Based On Unit Labor Costs Real Effective Exchange Rates Based On Unit Labor Costs The outlook for EM exchange rates has historically been contingent on growth and corporate profitability in developing economies. That said, EM exchange rate fluctuations have in recent years become dependent on U.S. real interest rates as the importance of portfolio fixed-income flows into EM has dramatically surged. Both drivers - EM growth and U.S. real yields - are likely to become headwinds for EM exchange rates going forward. EM growth will relapse anew as Chinese growth slows and EM shipments to China decline. Our new money impulse for China2 has historically been a good leading indicator for EM exchange rates, and it points to potentially considerable EM currency depreciation in the next six to nine months (Chart I-6). Meanwhile, U.S. interest rate expectations are very depressed. It will take only slightly stronger U.S. growth and inflation readings or some non-dovish guidance from the Federal Reserve for U.S. interest rate expectations to move higher. The latter will support the U.S. dollar and hurt EM currencies. Although industrial metals prices have recently spiked to new cyclical highs, we believe commodities prices - both for energy and industrial materials - will be lower in the medium term. Global oil stocks are breaking to new cyclical lows, heralding weakness in crude prices (Chart I-7). The fact that oil has failed to post gains amid a notable rally in the euro could be a sign of fundamental vulnerability. Chart I-6China's Money Impulse And EM Currencies China's Money Impulse And EM Currencies China's Money Impulse And EM Currencies Chart I-7Oil Prices Are Vulnerable Oil Prices Are Vulnerable Oil Prices Are Vulnerable As for industrial metals prices, our analysis has not changed: the considerable slowdown in China's broad money heralds a major top in industrial metals prices, as per Chart I-8. The mainland accounts for 50% of global industrial metals consumption, and its capex cycle is of critical importance. What explains the latest spike in base metals prices? Chart I-9 reveals that since early this year, iron ore prices have been negatively correlated with Chinese money market rates (interest rates are shown inverted and are advanced by 30 days Chart I-9). This year's correction and subsequent rebound in iron ore prices might be attributed to changes in mainland traders' positioning due to swings in domestic interest rates. Chart I-8China-Plays Are At Risk China-Plays Are At Risk China-Plays Are At Risk Chart I-9Chinese Interest Rates And Iron Ore Prices Chinese Interest Rates And Iron Ore Prices Chinese Interest Rates And Iron Ore Prices Going forward, either China's growth will decelerate sufficiently enough to weigh on industrial metals prices, or the authorities will resume policy tightening to rein in financial excesses. All in all, the risk-reward for iron ore and other industrial metals is negative. On the whole, lower energy and industrial metals prices will weigh on EM commodities currencies. As for Asian currencies, they are sensitive to global trade. We expect global trade and tradable goods prices to relapse due to the resumption of a slowdown in China/EM demand. Manufacturing-based Asian currencies will depreciate amid budding weakness in their manufacturing sector (Chart I-10). In addition, Chart I-11 shows global auto sales lead global semiconductor sales by several months. The basis for this correlation is that autos nowadays use a lot of semiconductors, and therefore auto cycles affect semiconductor demand. The boom in semi-cycle has been one of the pillars of Asian exports recovery. As the former moderates, the latter will relapse weighing on Asian non-commodities currencies. Chart I-10Asian Manufacturing ##br##And Exchange Rates Asian Manufacturing And Exchange Rates Asian Manufacturing And Exchange Rates Chart I-11Global Auto Sales Lead ##br##Global Semiconductor Sales Global Auto Sales Lead Global Semiconductor Sales Global Auto Sales Lead Global Semiconductor Sales Bottom Line: Our bet remains that EM currencies will depreciate versus both the U.S. dollar and the euro - and regardless of euro/U.S. dollar exchange rate fluctuations. We recommend a short position in a basket of the following EM currencies: ZAR, TRY, COP, CLP, BRL, IDR, MYR and KRW. For market-neutral portfolios, our currency overweights are MXN, RUB, PLN, CZK, TWD, INR and THB. Korean Equities: Downgrading To Neutral We recommend downgrading Korea to neutral from overweight within EM equity portfolios. North Korea will likely remain a source of uncertainty and volatility. BCA's Geopolitical Strategy service does not expect war on the Korean peninsula as long-standing constraints to conflict are still in place, starting with Pyongyang's ability to cause massive civilian casualties north of Seoul via an artillery barrage. As such, the ultimate resolution to the conflict will be a peaceful one. However, getting from here (volatility) to there (negotiated resolution) requires more tensions. The U.S. has to establish a "credible threat" of war in order to move China and North Korea towards a negotiated resolution.3 And that process could take more time, which means more volatility in the markets.4 The overwhelming portion of Korea's equity rally has been driven by a phenomenal surge in one company's share price: Samsung. Excluding technology companies, the performance of MSCI Korea stock prices and their EPS has been mediocre. Samsung's explosive rally has been partially due to the exponential surge in DRAM prices (Chart I-12). On a macro level, we cannot forecast prices of individual semiconductors (such as DRAM). Nevertheless, our assessment is that the global semi cycle is entering a soft patch as per Chart I-11 above. Furthermore, Korea's cyclical growth has already peaked, and will slow going forward (Chart I-13). Broad money growth is still decelerating, entailing that no turnaround is in the cards (Chart I-13, bottom panel). Chart I-12Samsung Share Prices And DRAM Samsung Share Prices And DRAM Samsung Share Prices And DRAM Chart I-13Korea: Cyclical Profile Korea: Cyclical Profile Korea: Cyclical Profile Importantly, the new government has enacted a law to boost minimum wages by 16% in January 2018 and would need to increase by a similar rate annually to reach its 2020 target. Even though there are fiscal subsidies for businesses and minimum wages affect smaller businesses much more than larger ones, odds are that this will still boost overall wage growth, and hence weigh on companies' profit margins. Chart I-14Korean Won Is Expensive Versus The Yen Korean Won Is Expensive Versus The Yen Korean Won Is Expensive Versus The Yen Finally, the Korean won is modestly expensive, based on the unit labor costs-based real effective exchange rate (Chart I-14, top panel). The won is especially expensive versus the yen (Chart I-14, bottom panel). This is negative for Korean manufacturers and the currency. Investment Recommendations Downgrade Korean stocks from overweight to neutral, but continue to overweight Korean technology stocks relative to the EM benchmark. Close long Korea / short EM equities and long Korean banks / short Indonesian banks positions. These positions have produced small gains since their initiation (details on all our open positions are available at the end of each week's report on page 17). Maintain a short KOSPI / long Nikkei in common currency terms trade: Either the won will depreciate substantially versus the yen or the KOSPI will underperform the Nikkei in local currency terms. In both cases, this trade will be profitable. Continue to bet on lower bond yields in Korea via receiving 10-year swap rates. Deflationary pressures from weaker exports - that make up 35% of GDP - will weigh on economic growth, and the central bank will be forced to cut rates. Maintain a short Korean won / long Thai baht position. The won is a high-beta currency and will underperform the Thai baht in a selloff / Asian exports slowdown. The Thai currency will likely trade in a low beta fashion due to the country's large current account surplus and low exposure to both China and commodities. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com Take Profits On Long Indian / Short Indonesian Equities Position This recommendation has generated 8.4% gain since its initiation on July 30, 2014, and we recommend booking profits. Indian share prices have outperformed their Indonesian peers over the past year (Chart II-1) but the outlook for top line growth appears to be slightly better in Indonesia than in India. Specifically: We have combined bank credit to businesses and households with government expenditures to calculate a credit and fiscal spending impulse for both countries. Chart II-2 illustrates that this impulse heralds a more positive outlook for listed companies' revenues in the case of Indonesia than India. Chart II-1Book Profits On Long Indian / ##br##Short Indonesian Stocks Position Book Profits On Long Indian / Short Indonesian Stocks Position Book Profits On Long Indian / Short Indonesian Stocks Position Chart II-2Credit And Fiscal Spending ##br##Impulse Favor Indonesia Over India Credit And Fiscal Spending Impulse Favor Indonesia Over India Credit And Fiscal Spending Impulse Favor Indonesia Over India Other cyclical variables are mixed in both economies: vehicle and two-wheeler sales are sluggish, manufacturing PMIs have rolled over, but imports of capital goods are improving (Chart II-3). In regard to valuation and profitability, both bourses are expensive in absolute terms (Chart II-4, top panel) but India's return on equity (RoE) is well below Indonesia's (Chart II-4, bottom panel). Such a 14% premium of Indian stocks over Indonesian ones along with a poor revenue outlook and lower RoE might prevent further share price outperformance by India. Chart II-3Mixed Cyclical Growth Dynamics Mixed Cyclical Growth Dynamics Mixed Cyclical Growth Dynamics Chart II-4India And Indonesian Equities: P/E Ratios And RoEs India And Indonesian Equities: P/E Ratios And RoEs India And Indonesian Equities: P/E Ratios And RoEs Although our negative outlook for commodities prices and expensive equity valuations entail a negative stance on Indonesian risk assets in absolute terms, we believe this bourse's underperformance versus the EM overall equity index and Indian stocks is late. It makes sense to reduce/eliminate an underweight allocation to Indonesian equities. Bottom Line: We recommend booking gains on the long Indian / short Indonesia equity position initiated on July 30, 2014. Consistently, we downgrade Indian stocks from overweight to neutral and upgrade Indonesian ones from underweight to neutral within an EM equity portfolio. Ayman Kawtharani, Associate Editor ayman@bcaresearch.com 1 CFTC is the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission. The data on South African rand is available from May 2015. 2 Presented and discussed in detail in July 26, 2017 and August 16, 2017 reports; the links are available on page 18. 3 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "North Korea: Beyond Satire," April 19, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market?," August 16, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights Despite a tightening in Chinese monetary conditions, dollar bloc currencies have continued to rally. Rising global reserves and strong carry inflows into EM prompted by low global financial volatility have created plentiful liquidity conditions in EM, supporting dollar-bloc currencies. The beginning of the Fed's balance-sheet runoff could reverse these dynamics, hurting the AUD, CAD and NZD in the process. Monitor U.S. inflation, cross-currency basis swap spreads, gold, EM currencies and Chinese monetary conditions to judge when a break in dollar-bloc currencies will materialize. Feature The rally in the dollar-bloc currencies since July 2016 has been nothing short of stunning. We did highlight in April last year that commodity currencies had room to appreciate, but we did not anticipate such a prolonged move.1 In fact, the up leg that began in April 2017 caught us by surprise. At this juncture, it is essential to analyze whether or not the bull move in commodity currencies has further to run, or whether it is in its final innings. A principal component analysis of the returns of the AUD, the CAD, and the NZD shows that despite differing central bank postures in the three countries, a simple common factor explains 86% of their variability against the USD since 2010 (Chart I-1). Because of this result, our focus in this week's report are the global forces that may be driving this factor. Today, the key risk to the dollar-bloc currencies is global liquidity tightening. Behind this danger lies the removal of policy accommodation in the U.S., and the risks to carry trades created by the already-very-low volatility of risk assets. A China-Fueled Rebound, But Something Is Amiss... The key reason behind the rally in commodity currencies has been improvement in EM growth relative to DM economies since 2016 (Chart I-2). This growth outperformance has been underpinned by a few factors. Chart I-1One Factor To Drive Them All One Factor To Drive Them All One Factor To Drive Them All Chart I-2Commodity Currencies And EM Growth Commodity Currencies And EM Growth Commodity Currencies And EM Growth China has played an essential role. As the Chinese economy decelerated in 2015, Beijing implemented a large amount of fiscal stimulus, which saw government spending grow at a 25% annual rate in November 2015. Due to the lags of stimulus on the economy, the full force of that stimulus was felt in 2016. Direct fiscal goosing was not the only road taken by Beijing. The Chinese authorities also applied a considerable amount of monetary pressure on China. After tightening massively through 2015, Chinese monetary conditions eased greatly in 2016 as real borrowing costs collapsed from a peak of 10.5% in the fall of 2015 to a trough of -3.5% earlier this year (Chart I-3). Directed expansion of credit through banking channels was also used to support the economy, resulting in a surge in the Chinese credit impulse. However, in recent months these positives have dissipated. Chinese money growth has slowed, and the combined credit and fiscal impulse has been lessened. Yet EM equity prices, copper prices and commodity currencies are all continuing their rally, and are now re-testing their May 2015 levels - levels last experienced right before EM assets and related plays entered a vicious tailspin that lasted all the way until January 2016 (Chart I-4). Chart I-3China: From Tailwind ##br##To Headwind China: From Tailwind To Headwind China: From Tailwind To Headwind Chart I-4EM, Copper, Dollar Bloc: ##br##Back To May 2015 Levels EM, Copper, Dollar Bloc: Back To May 2015 Levels EM, Copper, Dollar Bloc: Back To May 2015 Levels Bottom Line: The rally in dollar-bloc currencies that begun in January 2016 was powered by improving growth performance within EM economies. The original driver behind this move was Chinese monetary and fiscal stimulus. However, even once the easing faded, EM plays, including the AUD, the CAD and the NZD continued to appreciate. Another factor is currently at play. ...And This Something Is Global Liquidity Our view is that global liquidity is now the key factor supporting EM plays in general and dollar-bloc currencies in particular. Since the end of 2016, we have seen a rebound in the Federal Reserve's custody holdings - one that has happened as foreign central banks resumed their purchases of Treasury securities (Chart I-5). Fed custodial holdings for other monetary authorities are a key component of our dollar-based liquidity indicator. A rebound in this indicator tends to be associated with a surge in high-powered money globally. The capital outflows from China have dissipated, helping high-powered money find its way into EM plays and the commodity-currency complex. Private FX settlements - a proxy for the Chinese private sector's selling of yuan - was CNY -43 billion in July, a massive improvement compared to the CNY 800 billion in outflows experienced in August 2015 (Chart I-6). Through stringent administrative controls and a lessening of deflation, China gained the upper hand over its capital account. This development has two implications: it means that China does not need to sell reserves anymore, and in fact has been accumulating Treasurys since February 2017. It also means that investors are now less afraid of a sudden devaluation in the CNY, which has heartened risk-taking globally - especially in assets most exposed to China, which includes EM, commodities and dollar-bloc currencies. Chart I-5Easing Global Liquidty In 2017 Easing Global Liquidty In 2017 Easing Global Liquidty In 2017 Chart I-6Chinese Capital Account Under Control Chinese Capital Account Under Control Chinese Capital Account Under Control The collapse in the volatility of risk assets has been an additional element helping global liquidity make its way into EM plays and commodity currencies. As Chart I-7 illustrates, there is a relationship between the realized volatility of the U.S. stock market and the performance of dollar-bloc currencies. The first hunch is to dismiss the relationship as an artifact of the fact that both stock prices and commodity currencies are "risk-on" instruments. But there is an economic underpinning behind this relationship. As we argued in a Special Report on carry trades last year, the main reason carry trades have been able generate high Sharpe ratios since the 1980s is because they offer investors a risk premium for taking on exposure to unforeseen spikes in volatility.2 As a result, when the volatility of risk assets collapses, as has been the case recently, carry currencies outperform. The opposite holds true when volatility spikes back up. Chart I-7Dollar Bloc Currencies Like Low Vol Dollar Bloc Currencies Like Low Vol Dollar Bloc Currencies Like Low Vol When carry trades do well, investors end up aggressively buying EM currencies. As a result of these purchases, they inject funds - i.e. liquidity - into these economies. These injections of liquidity end up boosting money growth and supporting their economic activity, which stimulates global trade, commodity prices, and thus commodity currencies - even if these are not currently "high-yielders." Bottom Line: Chinese monetary conditions have deteriorated, creating a handicap for EM assets and the dollar-bloc currencies. Nonetheless, an increase in high-powered money growth, a decline in the risk premium to compensate investors for the risk of sudden new Chinese devaluation, and a collapse in global financial volatility have reinforced each other to create the ideal breeding ground for a rally in the AUD, the CAD and the NZD. The Sweet Spot Is Passing At the current juncture, the sweet spot for the dollar-bloc currencies may be passing. To begin with, commodity currencies are trading at a significant premium to underlying commodity prices, suggesting they are expensive and vulnerable to a decrease in global liquidity (Chart I-8). The AUD and the NZD stand out as especially expensive, while the CAD is only trading at a small premium to its long-term fair value (Chart I-9). This suggests that the Canadian dollar is likely to continue to outperform the Australian and New Zealand currencies, as it has been doing in choppy fashion since November 2016. Chart I-8Dollar Bloc Currencies Are Expensive Dollar Bloc Currencies Are Expensive Dollar Bloc Currencies Are Expensive Chart I-9AUD And NZD Are Expensive AUD And NZD Are Expensive AUD And NZD Are Expensive Another problem for dollar-bloc currencies is that they have greatly overshot global liquidity metrics. Historically, the commodity currencies have moved in lockstep with the evolution of global central bank reserves - a key measure of global liquidity (Chart I-10). While global reserves have improved, the average of the AUD, the CAD and the NZD has over-discounted this positive, pointing to potential vulnerability once liquidity ebbs. The problem with this overshoot is that liquidity is likely to decline with the imminent reduction in the Fed's balance sheet size. As Chart I-11 shows, the USD has been closely linked to changes in the reserves of commercial banks held at the Fed. As commercial banks accumulate excess reserves, this provides fuel for the repo market and the Eurodollar market, creating a supply of globally available USD for offshore markets. However, mechanically, once the Fed lets the assets on its balance sheet run off (its holdings of Treasurys), a liability will also have to decrease. This liability is most likely to be excess reserves as banks buy the Treasurys sold by the Fed. A fall in the accumulation of reserves of commercial banks in the U.S. is also directly linked with weaker dollar-bloc currencies (Chart I-12). This is because falling reserves push up the dollar and hurt commodity prices - a negative terms-of-trade shock for the AUD, the CAD and the NZD. Moreover, less reserves point to less liquidity making its way into EM economies. This also hurts the expected returns of holding assets in dollar-bloc economies. This therefore means that not only is there less liquidity available to move into these markets, the rationale to do so also dissipates. Without this dollar-based liquidity support, the tightening in Chinese monetary conditions could finally show its true impact on commodity currencies. Chart I-10Commodity Currencies Have##br## Overshot Global Liquidity Commodity Currencies Have Overshot Global Liquidity Commodity Currencies Have Overshot Global Liquidity Chart I-11Falling Excess Bank Reserves##br## Equals Strong Greenback Falling Excess Bank Reserves Equals Strong Greenback Falling Excess Bank Reserves Equals Strong Greenback Chart I-12Falling Excess Reserves Equals##br## Falling Commodity Currencies Falling Excess Reserves Equals Falling Commodity Currencies Falling Excess Reserves Equals Falling Commodity Currencies The last worrisome development for the dollar-bloc currencies is the volatility of financial assets. When volatility falls, it creates a wonderful environment for these currencies. But today, historical volatility is near the bottom of its distribution of the past 28 years. Being a highly mean-reverting series, it is thus more likely to rise than fall further going forward. There are three fundamental factors pointing to a potential reversal. First, share buyback activity has been declining, which historically points to rising volatility. Second, the U.S. yield curve slope also points toward a higher level of volatility. Volatility tends to bottom before the stock market peaks, and the stock market tends to peak before the economy enters recession. The yield curve itself tends to invert a year or so before a recession emerges. As a result, the yield curve begins to flatten around two years before volatility picks up (Chart I-13). Third, the anticipated decline in bank reserves - an important factor that has supported risk-taking around the globe - is likely to be the key catalyst supporting the relationship between the yield curve and volatility. If volatility increases, carry trades are likely to perform poorly, which will hurt EM currencies and result in outflows from these markets. This will cause liquidity conditions in EM economies to dry out, hurting their growth outlook. EM M1 growth has already weakened considerably, and is currently pointing to problems for commodity currencies (Chart I-14). The dry out in liquidity resulting from a reversal in carry trades will only amplify this phenomenon. Chart I-13Listen To The Yield Curve: ##br##Volatility Will Pick Up Listen To The Yield Curve: Volatility Will Pick Up Listen To The Yield Curve: Volatility Will Pick Up Chart I-14EM M1 Growth Is Becoming ##br##A Headwind For The Dollar Bloc EM M1 Growth Is Becoming A Headwind For The Dollar Bloc EM M1 Growth Is Becoming A Headwind For The Dollar Bloc Bottom Line: Global liquidity conditions are set to begin to tighten. While it is probably not enough to cause the bull market in stock prices to end now, it could be enough to affect the area of the global economy most exposed to this risk factor: carry trades and the dollar-bloc currencies. Specifically, commodity currencies are likely to be negatively affected by their elevated valuations, their strong sensitivity to excess bank reserves, and their high responsiveness to changes in financial market volatility. Key Indicators To Monitor After the surge that the dollar-bloc currencies have experienced since the spring and the large increase in the long exposure of speculators to these currencies, they are naturally at risk of experiencing a period of weakness. However, what worries us is not a retracement of 3-4%, but rather a 10-15% move. We suggest monitoring the following: First, watch U.S. inflation closely. The U.S. dollar is only likely to genuinely rally once the market believes the Fed can actually increase rates. So long as inflation remains tepid, investors will continue to second-guess the Fed. The market's response to this week's release of the most recent Federal Open Market Committee minutes only confirmed this. Mentions of debate on inflation within the FOMC was enough to send bond yields and the dollar reeling. However, based on the dynamics in the U.S. velocity of money, we continue to expect inflation to pick up in the second half of 2017 (Chart I-15).3 Second, follow cross-currency basis swap spreads. The cost of hedging U.S. assets back into euro or yen has normalized somewhat after hitting record levels in early 2016 (Chart I-16). If the removal of excess bank reserves in the U.S. system does affect global liquidity conditions, this market will be one of the first to be affected. Third, scrutinize the price of gold. The yellow metal remains a key gauge of global liquidity. Moreover, it is extremely sensitive to real rates and the dollar - two major determinants of the cost of global liquidity. In the summer of 2015, EM and dollar-bloc currencies severely suffered once gold broke below 1150. Today, a break below 1200 would be a sign of danger ahead. Fourth, watch EM currencies. A breakdown in EM currencies would be a key indication that carry trades are being reversed, and that global liquidity is no longer making its way into EM and EM-related plays. Commodity currencies are currently trading at a premium to their historical relationship with EM currencies, suggesting they would be highly vulnerable to such an event (Chart I-17). Chart I-15Watch U.S. Inflation Watch U.S. Inflation Watch U.S. Inflation Chart I-16Monitor Cross-Currency Basis Swap Spreads Monitor Cross-Currency Basis Swap Spreads Monitor Cross-Currency Basis Swap Spreads Chart I-17Dollar-Bloc Currencies At The Mercy Of EM FX Dollar-Bloc Currencies At The Mercy Of EM FX Dollar-Bloc Currencies At The Mercy Of EM FX Finally, keep an eye on Chinese monetary conditions. If Chinese monetary conditions improve from here, it would alleviate some of the negative pressure exercised on dollar-bloc currencies by the upcoming deterioration in global liquidity. However, if Chinese monetary conditions deteriorate further, this would negatively affect commodity prices, EM returns and the commodity currency complex. It would also hurt expected returns on Chinese assets, re-kindling outflows out of China and thus raising the risk premium associated with what would become a growing risk of CNY depreciation. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report titled, "Pyrrhic Victories", dated April 29, 2016, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report titled, "Carry Trades: More Than Pennies And Steamrollers", dated May 6, 2016, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report titled, "Fade North Korea, And Sell The Yen", dated August 11, 2017, 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 U.S. data has been mixed this week: The Empire State Manufacturing Index increased to 25.2, a significant jump and beat Retail Sales increased at a 0.5% monthly pace, with the ex. Autos measure increasing at 0.5%, both beating expectations; The Import Price Index increased by 1.5% since last year; Initial jobless claims dropped to 232,000, beating expectations significantly; However, housing starts and building permits both underperformed expectations. While the DXY has rebounded, the FOMC's July minutes discussed the recent shortfall of inflation, which was interpreted bearishly by markets. The Fed is likely to begin normalizing its balance sheet very soon, as well as raising rates again by the end of this year. The greenback will likely continue its ascent when firmer inflation data emerges. Report Links: Fade North Korea, And Sell The Yen - August 11, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 Improving euro area growth prospects have propelled the euro 12% higher since the beginning of the year. However, the market seems to begin questioning the ECB's hawkishness. In its minutes, the ECB expressed worries about a potential euro overshoot. Additionally, rumors emerged that Mario Draghi will not give much guidance in Jackson Hole. Together, these stories have reversed some of the euphoria that had engulfed the euro. The tightening in euro area financial conditions relative to the U.S. has prompted a roll over in relative economic and inflation surprises, justifying these budding doubts. Furthermore, U.S. inflation should begin to meaningfully accelerate in the fall. This is likely to add to the euro's weakness, as the greenback will resume its upward trend. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 Data in Japan was mixed this week: Annualized gross domestic product growth grew by 4% on an annualized basis, crushing expectations. Additionally the month-to-month growth of industrial production came in at 2.2%, also beating expectations. However both export and import growth underperformed, coming in at 13.4% and 16.3% respectively. On cue, after we placed a long USD/JPY trade last week, USD/JPY rallied half percentage point, even if it gave up some of the gain now. We continue to be bearish on the yen as we expect U.S. yields to start picking up, in an environment where market expectations are very depressed. But could a correction in EM caused by the rise in the dollar help the yen? Not in the short term, given that historically the yen only gains in very sharp EM selloffs that themselves weigh on bond yields. Report Links: Fade North Korea, And Sell The Yen - August 11, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 Data in the U.K. was mixed this week: Retail sales prices increased by 3.6% year-on-year, outperforming expectations. However, The trade balance not only worsened since last month but also came in below expectations, at -4.564 Billion pounds Crucially, most inflation metrics came in below expectations, with headline inflation coming in at 2.6% while PPI core output inflation came in at 2.4%. Overall, we continue to believe that the market's rate expectations for the BoE remain too hawkish. As the pass through from the currency dissipates, inflation should also start to come down. Furthermore, one has to remember that the BoE has a higher hurdle for raising rates than other central banks due to the unique situation in which the U.K. is currently in. Lowered rate expectations will be negative for cable in the short term. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 Despite initially weak data, a risk-on environment and increasing copper prices have fueled a rally in the AUD. Data from China has been soft, and Australian data has been neutral: Chinese retail sales increased annually by 10.4%, less than expected; Chinese industrial production also underperformed at 6.4%; Australian wages increased at a 1.9% annual pace, in line with expectations; Australian unemployment dropped to 5.6%; participation rate increased to 65.1%; and a net of 27,900 jobs were filled. However, full-time employment went down by 20,300 while part-time employment increased by 48,200, so hours worked contracted. This development is likely to comfort the RBA in its dovish stance. In its minutes, the RBA discussed its worries concerning the housing market, and that "borrowers investing in residential property had been facing higher interest rates". This further worries the RBA regarding the impact of higher interest rates, limiting the room for more hawkish speeches. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 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 has been positive: Retail sales and retail sales ex-autos Quarter-on-quarter growth strengthened relatively to the previous quarter, coming in at 2% and 2.1% respectively. Moreover quarter-on-quarter inflation both for producer prices in outputs and inputs outperformed expectations, coming in at 1.3% and 1.4%. Currently, differences in perception adjustment between the dovishness of the RBNZ and the RBA have pushed Australian rate expectations to the point that the market is now pricing a hike in Australia before New Zealand. Overall, this seems like a mispricing, as the kiwi economy is on a stronger footing than the aussie one. Moreover, a slowdown in China would be more harmful for Australia as iron ore is more sensitive to the Chinese industrial cycle than dairy products. Thus we remain bearish on AUD/NZD. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 The CAD has regained some composure despite weak oil prices. Even with the U.S. dollar weakening and inventories drawing massively, oil dropped. This dynamic is particularly worrying for oil, as the markets are doubting the durability of the curtailment in global oil production. While this could be worrying for the CAD, we still believe the USD 40-60/bbl equilibrium price level, as postulated by the BoC, will have a limiting effect on the oil-based currency, which has been driven by interest rate differentials. Both central banks are now hiking, but we believe that markets are underpricing Fed hikes. Thus, the CAD should weaken against USD. However, it will outperform other G10 currencies. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 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 has continued to show a mixed picture for the Swiss economy: Consumer prices inflation, increased slightly from the previous month, coming in at 0.3%, in line with expectations. The unemployment rate also came in in line of expectations at 3.2%, unchanged from the previous month. However, producer prices contracted by 0.1%, underperforming expectations. EUR/CHF has been weakening since its August second overbought extreme. For the moment, we expect the SNB to stand pat in its ultra-dovish monetary policy, at least until inflation and other economic indicators start to strengthen considerably. USD/CHF however might appreciate, given that the euro might fall the ECB minutes this week showed that the ECB is concerned by a potential euro overshoot. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 Data in Norway this week was mixed: Headline inflation came in at 1.5% in July, outperforming expectations. However, it softened from June's 1.9% reading. Core inflation came at 1.2% in July, in line with expectations, decreasing from 1.6% in June. Moreover, manufacturing output contracted by 0.6% year-on-year. We continue to be bullish on USD/NOK, as the increasing gap in real rate differentials between the United States and Norway should outweigh any oil rally. Indeed, the recent numbers in Norway illustrate the lack of inflationary pressures in this Scandinavian country. This should keep a lid on rates, and thus help USD/NOK. On the other hand EUR/NOK should follow the path of oil. Thus, the OPEC supply cuts will ultimately support oil prices and thus, weigh on this cross. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 A Market Update: June 23, 2017 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 The SEK has had a particularly strong week, as inflation surprised to the upside on both a monthly and a yearly basis, coming in at 0.5% and 2.2% respectively. While it initially appreciated against all currencies, the uptick in commodity currencies on Wednesday made it lose its gains against AUD, CAD, NZD and NOK. As inflationary pressures grow, the SEK is likely to appreciate further, especially against the EUR and GBP. Additionally, with current Riskbank governor Stefan Ingves' term coming to an end by the end of this year, the hawkish rhetoric is likely to only increase. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Bloody Potomac - May 19, 2017 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Closed Trades
Highlights Geopolitical tensions will stay elevated. We are not changing our strategic views. So long as the situation does not degenerate into a major military conflict or escalating trade wars with significant economic damages, the impact on both the broader growth outlook and financial markets should be limited. President Trump's recent decision to probe China's IPR practices is his first direct trade measure against China, and therefore is of important symbolic significance, but the near term impact should be limited. There is enough common ground for the two sides to avoid direct confrontation. We expect Beijing to cooperate with the U.S. administration to intensify pressure on North Korea. Short KRW/JPY as a hedge against geopolitical risk in The Korean Peninsula. There is an economic case for the trade, even without geopolitical considerations. Feature The Chinese economy is experiencing a summer lull, as most recent growth figures have disappointed, albeit slightly. Exports, production, investment and retail sales have all decelerated, underscoring that growth momentum is softening across the board. Investors have largely shrugged off the weaker-than-expected numbers, a sign that the market is not overly concerned about a major relapse down the road. We share investors' optimism, as discussed in some recent reports,1 but are watchful for signs of market complacency.2 After the most recent rally, multiples of Chinese equities are no longer exceptionally cheap by historical norms, even though they are still a lot cheaper compared with most other major global and EM bourses. We will discuss Chinese equity valuations in greater detail in the coming weeks. Geopolitical risks have dominated Greater China markets of late. The escalation of tensions surrounding North Korea briefly took their toll in the past week. On Monday, U.S. President Donald Trump authorized U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer to determine whether to launch an investigation into China's alleged theft of intellectual property. Overall, both events underscore rising geopolitical tensions globally, particularly around China. So long as the situation does not degenerate into a major military conflict or an escalating trade war that causes major economic damage, the tensions should not have a material impact on the outlook for the Chinese and global economy, as well as financial markets. A short position on the Korean won versus the Japanese yen offers a low-risk hedge against a sudden escalation of geopolitical tensions in the region. Intellectual Property Investigation: The Knowns And Unknowns It is unclear at the moment whether Trump is simply using the investigation as a bargaining chip to seek concessions/cooperation from China, or to start a trade war with lose-lose outcomes. The situation needs to be closely monitored and assessed continuously. For now, a few observations are in order: This is the first direct trade measure by the Trump administration against China, and therefore is of important symbolic significance, but the near-term impact should be limited. President Trump has only authorized his administration to determine whether or not to formally investigate Chinese policies and practices. It may take a year to finalize the decision, and even longer to begin negotiations and discussions with Chinese officials for solutions and remedies. Previous similar investigations against Chinese products resulted in bilateral agreements rather than all-out confrontations. Trump's decision is based on Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, which allows the president to unilaterally impose tariffs or other trade restrictions to protect U.S. industries from "unfair trade practices" of foreign countries. This was a popular trade tool in the 1980s and was used to impose tariffs against certain Japanese and Korean products, but has been rarely used in the past decade. In 2010 the Obama administration also accepted a petition under Section 301 to investigate China's state support for clean-energy exports, particularly solar panels and wind turbines, and the Chinese government later promised to limit some of these practices through bilateral negotiations. The World Trade Organization (WTO) has ruled that taking any such actions against other member countries without first securing approval under WTO rules is, in of itself, a violation of the WTO Agreement, and can be challenged under the WTO framework. In fact, section 301 investigations have not resulted in any trade sanctions since the WTO was set up in 1995. Table 1Top Challenges Doing Business In China China's Geopolitical Pressure Points: Knowns, Unknowns And A Hedge China's Geopolitical Pressure Points: Knowns, Unknowns And A Hedge More importantly, we see common ground enabling the U.S. and China to work together to improve China's Intellectual Property Rights, or IPR practices. From the U.S.'s perspective, while Trump's blunt accusations on China's trade policies are not completely justified and will not solve the massive trade imbalances between the two countries, his challenge on China's IPR infringement has legitimate ground, and resonates well within the broader American business community. American companies doing business in China have long listed intellectual property rights infringement and protectionism as top challenges, especially among industrial and resources businesses (Table 1). In other words, Trump's complaints on China's IPR practices reflects corporate America's rational voice rather than a sensational rant. China's own practices are also in conflict with its intentions to build a more open and market-friendly policy environment. Indeed, China has also been making notable progress to enhance IPR protections. In September 2015, in his state visit to the U.S., President Xi promised to limit the scope of national security reviews on investment, refrain from cyber-enabled IP theft, and uphold WTO agreements regarding market access for information and communications technology (ICT) products. China's deficits in IP royalty fees has increased sharply in recent years, while America's royalties surpluses have been expanding (Chart 1). Furthermore, 90% of American firms doing business in China believe that China's IPR enforcement has improved over the last five years, according to American Chamber Of Commerce In China (AmCham China) surveys.3 In short, there is certainly room for further improvement in China's IPR practices, and the broad direction fits with Trump's expectations, creating common ground for the two sides to avoid direct confrontation. We expect China's IPR practices will continue to converge towards international standards going forward. Chart 2 shows Chinese patent applications have exploded in recent years. As the country's technology continues to advance and local businesses are growing more aware of the value of intellectual property, China will develop a keen interest to safeguard its own IPRs. We are hopeful that Trump's investigation will provide a catalyst for further improvement in Chinese IPR practices, rather than derail broader bilateral trade. Chart 1China's Widening Deficits In IPR Royalty China's Widening Deficits In IPR Royalty China's Widening Deficits In IPR Royalty Chart 2China's Exploding Patent Applications ##br##Will Demand Stricter IPR Protections China's Exploding Patent Applications Will Demand Stricter IPR Protections China's Exploding Patent Applications Will Demand Stricter IPR Protections North Korea Tensions, And Short KRW/JPY As A Crisis Hedge The escalation of geopolitical tensions surrounding North Korea briefly took a toll on global and Greater China markets in the past week. The situation remains highly fluid, and the stakes are exceedingly high - both of which will put investors on edge in the weeks and months ahead. Our Geopolitical team in their latest assessment concludes that the U.S. is not likely to preemptively attack North Korea. However, the U.S. has an interest in signaling that it may conduct precisely such an attack, and brinkmanship could last for a long time.4 As far as China is concerned, there is genuine interest among the Chinese leadership to de-escalate tensions on the Korean Peninsula, but there is no easy solution. On one hand, it is absolutely against the country's best interests to collapse the North Korea regime. Such an outcome could see a surge of refugees to its densely populated and economically struggling Northeast region. Moreover, it could also potentially lead to a strong and unified Korea at the Chinese border that is a military ally to the United States. On the other hand, Beijing also feels that it has fallen victim to North Korea's nuclear ambitions, and has become growingly frustrated by its escalating provocations. China also fears that North Korea's nuclear program could encourage countries in the region, particularly Japan, to develop their own nuclear arsenals, which would be viewed as strategically threatening to China's national security. For now, we expect Beijing to cooperate with the U.S. administration to intensify pressure on North Korea. Already, China has supported the United Nations Security Council in imposing new sanctions on North Korea last week. Early this week, the Commerce Ministry announced a ban on imports of iron ore, iron, lead and coal from North Korea. These actions may have contributed to the softened tones from North Korea since, but it remains to be seen whether the impact will be long-lasting. The upshot is that the shared interests between China and the U.S. on various major global issues mean that the risk of an escalating trade war between the two countries should remain under control. For investors, bouts of geopolitical tension will likely bid up traditional safe-haven assets such as gold and the Swiss franc going forward. Another way to play the geopolitical risk is to short the Korean won (KRW) and long the Japanese yen (JPY). The KRW will obviously suffer devastating losses in even mild military skirmishes between the U.S. and North Korea, while the JPY may benefit from any "risk-off" unwinding of the yen carry trade. More importantly, economic fundamentals are not supportive of a stronger KRW, especially against the JPY, which means the downside risk in shorting the KRW/JPY is quite low, even without geopolitical considerations. Chart 3The Won Is Expensive Against The Yen The Won Is Expensive Against The Yen The Won Is Expensive Against The Yen The KRW is expensive against the JPY, based on a purchasing power parity (PPP) assessment (Chart 3). The 30% rally of KRW/JPY since 2012 has pushed it to an over two-sigma overshoot above its PPP fair value. Historically the won has rarely been sustainable at such elevated levels. Korea's economic outlook remains uninspiring. Capacity utilization has continued to decline, pricing power is weak, money growth is decelerating and real retail sales growth has stalled (Chart 4). Exports have been the bright spot in the overall growth picture, recovering strongly from last year's slump, but it is unrealistic to expect the export sector to continue to accelerate if growth numbers in China downshift. Softening exports will further weigh on Korea's growth outlook. In contrast, the latest growth numbers confirm that the Japanese economy has improved notably (Chart 5). Real GDP expanded by 1% in the second quarter compared with the previous three months, significantly beating expectations. While it remains to be seen whether Japan is able to maintain its regained momentum going forward, its growth gap with Korea has narrowed considerably of late, which will also lend support to the yen against its Korean counterpart. Chart 4Korea Growth Is Set To Moderate Korea Growth Is Set To Moderate Korea Growth Is Set To Moderate Chart 5Japan And Korea: Growth Gap Has Narrowed Japan And Korea: Growth Gap Has Narrowed Japan And Korea: Growth Gap Has Narrowed The bottom line is that geopolitical tensions in the Korean Peninsula will stay elevated. We are not changing our strategic views. So long as the situation does not degenerate into a significant military conflict that causes major economic damage, the geopolitical skirmishes should not have a material impact on both the broader growth outlook and financial markets. Investors may consider shorting the KRW/JPY as a hedge for geopolitical risks. Yan Wang, Senior Vice President China Investment Strategy yanw@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Reports, "China Outlook: A Mid-Year Revisit", dated July 13, 2017, and "Rising Odds Of PBoC Rate Hikes", dated July 20, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "China: What Could Go Wrong?" dated August 3, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3 AmCham In China 2016 White Paper 4 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market?" dated August 16, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights Washington must establish a "credible threat" if it is to convince Pyongyang that negotiations offer the superior outcome; The process of establishing such a credible threat is volatile; U.S. Treasurys, along with Swiss and Japanese government bonds have been consistent safe haven assets; The risk of a U.S. attack against North Korea is a red herring, while the crisis itself is not; We suggest that investors hedge the risk with an equally-weighted basket of Swiss bonds and gold. Feature Brinkmanship between Pyongyang and Washington, D.C. has roiled markets over the past week. The uptick in rhetoric has not come as a surprise. Since last year, BCA's Geopolitical Strategy has stressed that souring Sino-American relations were the premier geopolitical risk to investors and that China's periphery, especially the Korean peninsula, would be the "decisive" factor for markets.1 North Korea's nuclear ambitions - which could be snuffed out immediately by a concerted and coordinated effort by China and the U.S. - are a derivative of the broader U.S.-China dynamic. The U.S. is unlikely to use military force to resolve its standoff with North Korea. There are long-standing constraints to war, ones that all of the interested parties know only too well from their experience in the Korean War of 1950-53. The first of these is that war is likely to bring a high death toll: Pyongyang can inflict massive civilian casualties in Seoul with a conventional artillery barrage; U.S. troops and Japanese troops and civilians would also likely suffer. Second, China is unlikely to remain neutral, given its behavior in the 1950s, its persistent strategic interest in the peninsula, and its huge increase in military strength relative to both the past and to the United States. However, the process by which the U.S. establishes a "credible threat" of military action is volatile.2 Such a credible threat is necessary if Washington is to convince Pyongyang that negotiations offer a superior outcome to the belligerent status quo. Viewed from this perspective - which is informed by game theory -President Donald Trump has not committed any grave mistakes so far, but has rather shrewdly manipulated the world's perception that he is mentally unhinged in order to enhance his negotiating leverage. It is unclear how long it will take Trump to convince North Korea that the threat of a U.S. preemptive strike is "credible." As such, it is unclear how long the current standoff will persist. From an investor perspective, it will be difficult to gauge whether the brinkmanship and military posturing are part of this "territorial threat display" or evidence of real preparations for an actual attack. As such, further volatility is likely. The ongoing crisis in North Korea is neither the first nor the last geopolitical crisis the world will face in today's era of paradigm shifts.3 We have long identified East Asia as the cauldron of investment-relevant geopolitical risks.4 This is a dynamic produced by the multipolar global context and the geopolitical disequilibrium in the Sino-American relationship. For now, investors have been able to ignore the rising global tensions (Chart 1) due to the ample liquidity emanating from central banks, but the day of reckoning is nigh (Chart 2). Chart 1Multipolarity Increases Conflict Frequency Multipolarity Increases Conflict Frequency Multipolarity Increases Conflict Frequency Chart 2Day Of Reckoning? Day Of Reckoning? Day Of Reckoning? Q&A On North Korea Back on April 19, we wrote a Special Report, "North Korea: Beyond Satire," which argued that North Korea had at last become a market-relevant geopolitical risk after decades of limited impact (Chart 3).5 Chart 3North Korean Provocations Rarely Affect Markets For Long North Korean Provocations Rarely Affect Markets For Long North Korean Provocations Rarely Affect Markets For Long Looking to the next steps, we introduced the "arc of diplomacy," a framework comparable to the U.S.-Iran nuclear negotiations from 2010-15 (Chart 4). We predicted that the U.S. would ultimately ramp up threats for the purpose of achieving a diplomatic solution. The U.S. was constrained and would only go to war if an act of war were committed, or appeared imminent.6 Chart 4Arc Of Diplomacy: Tensions Ramp Up As Nuclear Negotiations Begin Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? This assessment is now playing out. But not all clients are convinced of our logic, as we have found in our travels throughout Asia Pacific and elsewhere this month. Below we offer a short Q&A based on questions we have received from clients: Q: Diplomacy has already been tried, so why won't the U.S. attack? A: The U.S. public has less appetite for war, especially a preemptive strike, in the wake of the Iraq War, and has not suffered a 9/11 or Pearl Harbor-type catalyst. The U.S. will exhaust diplomatic options before joining a catastrophic second Korean War. And the diplomatic options are far from exhausted. The latest round of sanctions are tighter and more serious than past ones, but still leave categories untouched (like fuel supplies to the North) and are still very hard to enforce (like cutting illegal North Korean labor remittances). Enforcement is always difficult, and the U.S. is currently attempting to ensure that its allies enforce the sanctions strictly, not to mention its rivals (i.e. Russia and China). While we do not think China will ever impose crippling sanctions, we do think it can tighten them up considerably, which could be enough to change the North's behavior. Q: Why doesn't China just take North Korea out? A: China is a formal political, military, and ideological ally of North Korea, and has a strategic interest in maintaining a buffer space on the Korean peninsula - which it defended at enormous human cost in the Korean War. This interest remains in place. China is far more likely to aid and abet a nuclear-armed ally in North Korea than it is to endorse (much less participate in) regime change. The fallout from a new war, such as North Korean refugees flooding into China, is extremely undesirable for China, though it could handle the problem ruthlessly. China would also prefer not to have to occupy a collapsing North, which would be an extensive and dangerous entanglement. Therefore, expect China to twist Pyongyang's arm but not to break its legs. On a more topical note, China is consumed with domestic politics ahead of the nineteenth National Party Congress. It is perhaps more likely to take action after the congress in October-November. Q: Will U.S. allies cooperate with Trump? Why not bandwagon with China to gain economic benefit? A: South Korea is the best litmus test for whether Trump is causing U.S. allies to drift. The new South Korean President Moon Jae-In, who is politically left-of-center, has played his cards very carefully and started out on good footing with President Trump. A disagreement appears to be a likely consequence of Moon's agenda, which calls for extensive engagement with the North and a review of the U.S. THAAD missile defense deployment in Korea. So far, however, Moon is reaffirming the alliance, in his own way, and Trump has not (yet) expressed misgivings about him. If this changes significantly - as in, South Korea joining with China to give North Korea significant economic aid in defiance of U.S. sanctions efforts - then it would be a sign of division among the allies that would benefit North Korea and could even increase the risk of the U.S. taking unilateral action. The odds of that are still low, however. We have been short the Korean won versus the Thai baht since March 1, and the trade is up 6.03%. We also expect greater volatility and higher prices of credit default swaps to plague South Korea while the crisis continues over the coming months. We are closing our long Korean consumer stocks trade versus Taiwanese exporters for a loss of 4.24%. Q: What is Japan's role in the current crisis? What is the impact on Japan? A: Japan is one of the few countries whose relations with the U.S. have benefited under the Trump administration. The Japanese are in lock-step so far in reacting to North Korea. The government has been sounding louder alarms about North Korea for the past year, including by conducting evacuation drills in the case of attack. Japan has long been within range of North Korea's missiles, but its successes in nuclear miniaturization pose a much greater threat. Not only does North Korea pose a legitimate security risk, but Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe also stands to benefit at least marginally in terms of popular support and support for his controversial constitutional revision. This will, in turn, feed into the region's insecurities. Yen strength as a result of the crisis, however, would be a headwind to Japan's economic growth. Thus Abe has a tightrope to walk. We expect him to take actions to ensure the economy continues to reflate. Q: Is Trump rational? How do we know he won't push the nuclear button? A: Ultimately this is unknowable. It also involves one's philosophical outlook. Josef Stalin and Mao Zedong both committed atrocities by the tens of millions but did not use nuclear weapons. Nikita Khrushchev practically wrote the playbook that North Korea's Kim dynasty has used in making its belligerent nuclear threats. Yet Khrushchev ultimately agreed to détente. Kim Jong Un makes Trump look calm. The combination of Kim and Trump is worrisome; but so was the combination of Eisenhower and Khrushchev, one believing nuclear weapons should be used if needed, the other threatening wildly to use them. It may be the case that the threat of an atrocity, or (in Kim's case) of total annihilation, is enough to keep decisions restrained. As we go to press, Kim has ostensibly suspended his plan to fire missiles around Guam and U.S. officials have repeatedly stated that they would not attack unless attacked. Stairway To (Safe) Haven Revisited In expectation of increased frequency of geopolitical risks, BCA's Geopolitical Strategy has produced two quantitative analyses of safe haven assets over the past two years. The first, "Geopolitics And Safe Havens," unequivocally crowned gold as the ultimate safe haven (Table 1), while showing that the USD is not much of a defense against geopolitical events (Chart 5).7 Table 1Safe-Haven Demand Rises During Crises Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? Table 1Safe-Haven Demand Rises During Crises Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? As such, investors should fade the narrative that the failure of the USD to appreciate amidst the latest North Korean imbroglio is a sign of some structural weakness. The greenback continues to underperform due to weak inflation in the U.S., a fleeting condition that our macro-economist colleagues expect to reverse. Mathieu Savary, BCA's currency strategist, believes that more upside exists for the USD regardless of the geopolitical outcome: Chart 5Gold Loves Geopolitical Crises Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? Chart 6DXY Is Cheap... DXY Is Cheap... DXY Is Cheap... Chart 7...But The Euro Is Not ...But The Euro Is Not ...But The Euro Is Not First, the dollar is currently trading at its deepest discount to the BCA Foreign Exchange Service augmented interest rate parity model since 2010 (Chart 6). The euro, which accounts for 58% of the DXY index, is its mirror image, being now overvalued by two sigma, the most since 2010 (Chart 7). Second, bullish euro bets will dissipate as Europe's economic outperformance versus the U.S. fades. Financial conditions have massively eased in the U.S., while they have tightened in Europe, resulting in the biggest upswing on euro area growth relative to the U.S. in over two years (Chart 8). Such an economic outperformance by the U.S. should lead to a strengthening greenback (Chart 9).8 Chart 8Easing Versus Tightening FCI Easing Versus Tightening FCI Easing Versus Tightening FCI Chart 9PMIs Point To USD Rally PMIs Point To USD Rally PMIs Point To USD Rally Our second attempt to quantify safe-haven assets, "Stairway To (Safe) Haven: Investing In Times Of Crisis," concluded that U.S. Treasurys, Swiss bonds, and Japanese bonds are the best performers in times of crisis.9 We considered 65 assets10 (Table 2) with five different methodologies and back-tested them empirically within the context of 25 financial and geopolitical events since January 1988. Some of these assets have been proven to perform as safe havens by previous academic research, some are commonly utilized in investment strategies, and others could provide alternatives (see Box 1 for further details). Table 2Scrutinizing The World For Safe Havens Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? This report demystifies four key issues related to safe havens: Part I identifies what qualifies as a safe-haven asset. Unsurprisingly, the best performers are U.S. Treasurys along with Swiss and Japanese bonds due to their currency effects. Part II examines if safe havens change over time. We find that gold and Treasurys have changed places as safe havens, and that JGBs and Swiss bonds have a long history as portfolio protectors. Part III breaks down safe havens through an event analysis. We look at the country of origin, the nature of the crisis, and whether the risk is a "black swan" or "red herring" - two classifications of events that BCA's Geopolitical Strategy has established - all of which have an impact on their performance. But red herrings or black swans are only defined after the fact, thus requiring geopolitical analysis or market timing indicators to be able to act on them. Part IV demonstrates that timing plays a crucial part when investing in safe havens as their performance is coincident with that of equities. Box 1 Safe Havens - A Literature Review In a previous Geopolitical Strategy Special Report published in November 2015, it was established that shifts in economic and political regimes alter investors' preferences for safe-haven assets, and that Swiss bonds and U.S. 10-year Treasurys were at the top of that list.11 Also, statistical methods were used to demonstrate that gold had acted as a safe haven from the 1970s to the early 90s, but has since lost its status due in part to a new era of looming deflationary risks. Li and Lucey (2013) have identified a pattern in precious metals, through a series of quarterly rolling regressions testing the significance of the 1st, 5th and 10th percentile movements in U.S. equity movements against safe-haven assets, catching extreme negative events. For instance, the 1st percentile captures the very worst corrections that have occurred, the one that represent the bottom 1% of the equity performances. The 5th and 10th percentiles represent the 5% and 10% lowest returns for equities, respectively. The authors demonstrated that silver, platinum and palladium act as safe havens when gold does not.12 Similarly, Bauer and McDermott (2013) examined the 1st, 5th and 10th percentile movements in U.S. equity movements and proved that both gold and U.S. Treasurys can serve as safe havens, but that gold has the best record in times of extreme financial stress.13 Baele et al. (2015) concentrated on flight-to-safety episodes, which they characterized as events in which the VIX, TED spreads and a basket of CHF, JPY, and USD all increased drastically.14 They found that during flight-to-safety episodes, large cap stocks outperform small caps, precious metal and gold prices (measured in dollars) increase slightly, while bond returns exceed those of the equity market by 2.5-4 percentage points. Baur and Glover (2012) provide further evidence that gold can no longer be utilized as a safe haven due to increased speculation and hedging. Their main finding is that gold cannot be both an investment and a safe-haven asset. That is, gold can only be effective as a safe haven if the periods prior to the event had not generated significant investment demand for gold.15 Using high-frequency exchange rate data, Ranaldo and Soederlind (2010) conclude that the CHF, EUR and JPY have significant safe-haven characteristics, but not the GBP.16 The strongest safe havens are identified as the CHF and JPY, but the returns are partly reversed after a day of safe-haven protection. They also find that the nature of the crisis has a significant effect on safe-haven properties. For instance, a financial crisis and a natural disaster produced drastically different outcomes for the yen. Part I - Safety In Numbers Our first step in identifying safe-haven assets was to review each asset's performance against equities in times of crisis. As such, we conducted a series of threshold regressions to generate a list of true safe-haven assets - assets that have a statistically significant positive performance in times of turmoil. Our method is explained as follows: Step 1 - Percentile Dummies: Following methods from Li and Lucey (2013) and Bauer and McDermott (2013), we created dummy variables for the 1st, 5th and 10th percentile of the S&P 500 daily total returns since 1988. We then multiplied each of these dummies by their corresponding stock returns (see Box 1 for further detail). Step 2 - Regressions: Using the 64 potential safe-haven assets, we ran a series of regressions both in USD and the local currency, testing each asset's returns explained by the three percentile dummies.17 Step 3 - Identifying Safe Havens: We then quantified strong safe-havens as assets having significant coefficients for all three return thresholds (1st, 5th and 10th percentile of the S&P 500 daily total returns). Results - Seek Refuge In Currencies And Government Bonds: Our quantitative results are mainly consistent with what others have found in the past: the Japanese yen and most G10 government bonds are safe havens. Table 3 shows the safe-haven assets that generated negative coefficients versus equities for all three threshold percentiles. Table 3Seeking Protection Against Corrections Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? In our threshold regressions expressed in USD terms, we found that the Japanese yen, Quality Stocks,18 and Japanese, Swiss and U.S. bonds acted as strong safe havens. Currencies play a crucial part in the performance of safe havens. In fact, in local-currency terms, a series of G10 government bonds (U.S., Canada, Belgium, France, Germany, Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, and the U.K.) proved to be the most useful safe havens. In sum, true or strong safe havens are government bonds that have currencies that add to positive returns during times of crisis. Unsurprisingly, this select group of strong safe-haven assets is comprised of U.S., Japanese, and Swiss government bonds. Quality Stocks did provide positive and statistically significant results, but the returns were very low - for this reason, we excluded them from our basket of strong safe havens. While gold, the Swiss franc, and the U.S. dollar did generate positive returns during times of crisis, they failed to generate statistically significant results at all three thresholds. Bottom Line: Based on our econometric work, most G10 government bonds can act as safe havens. But due to strong currency effects, our models favor what are already commonly known as safe havens: U.S., Japanese, and Swiss government bonds. Simply put, the difference between this select group and other G10 bonds is that their currencies rise or are stable during turmoil, while the currencies of the other G10 bonds do not. Part II - Are Safe Havens Like Fine Wines? U.S., Japanese, and Swiss government bonds were not always the top assets providing protection against the downside in equities, however. To determine whether safe-haven properties change, we examined the evolution of the relationship between safe havens and U.S. equity markets over time with the following model: Step 1 - Rolling Regressions: Considering the results obtained in Part I, we restricted our sample to G10 governments in USD and local-currency terms, Quality Stocks, gold, JPY, EUR, and USD for this statistical procedure. We put these remaining assets, both in USD and local-currency terms, through a series of 1-year rolling regressions.19 Step 2 - Identifying Trends: Each regression generated a coefficient that explained the relationship between equities and safe havens (B1). We created a new time series by collecting the coefficients for each data point and smoothing them using a five-year moving average, thus depicting a long-term pattern in the evolution of safe havens. Results - A Regime Shift In Gold And Treasurys: Our findings show that safe-haven assets fall in and out of favor through time (Charts 10A, B & C). Most striking are the changes in U.S. Treasurys and gold. Only after 2000 did Treasurys start providing a good hedge for equity corrections. The contrary is true for gold - it acted as one of the most secure investments during corrections until that time, but has since become correlated with S&P 500 total returns. That said, gold's coefficient has been falling closer to zero lately, illustrating that it could soon resurface as a proper safe haven, especially if deflation risks begin to dissipate. Given that this is precisely the conclusion stated by our colleague Peter Berezin - BCA's Chief Global Strategist - and our own political analysis, we suspect that gold may be resurrected as a safe haven very soon.20 Chart 10ASafe Havens Don't Necessarily Age Well Safe Havens Don't Necessarily Age Well Safe Havens Don't Necessarily Age Well Chart 10BSafe Havens Don't Necessarily Age Well Safe Havens Don't Necessarily Age Well Safe Havens Don't Necessarily Age Well Chart 10CSafe Havens Don't Necessarily Age Well Safe Havens Don't Necessarily Age Well Safe Havens Don't Necessarily Age Well Another important finding is that the currency effect plays a key role during recent risk-off periods (Charts 11A & B). The best protector currencies are the ones that are negatively correlated with equity returns. According to our results, the CHF and the JPY have generally been risk-off currencies, while the USD has only been one since 2007, switching places with the euro. This reinforces the case for U.S., Japanese, and Swiss government bonds, which are supported by risk-off currencies. Chart 11ACurrencies Are Difference Makers Currencies Are Difference Makers Currencies Are Difference Makers Chart 11BCurrencies Are Difference Makers Currencies Are Difference Makers Currencies Are Difference Makers Bottom Line: Safe havens change over time. Gold fell out of favor due to global deflationary dynamics. With inflation on the horizon, we will keep monitoring the relationship between gold and equities for a possible return of the yellow metal as a safe haven. Since the July 4 North Korean ICBM test, for example, gold has rallied 4.8%. Part III - Red Herrings And Black Swans Since 1988, we identified 25 economic and (geo)political events that generated instant panic or acute uncertainty in the media and financial markets.21 We analyzed the short-term reactions of the safe-haven assets, both in USD and local-currency terms. This methodology allowed for the deconstruction of the impact of the events by the following factors: Country of origin of the crisis, the nature of the crisis, and whether the event was a "red herring" or a "black swan." Generally speaking, a red herring event is a crisis of some sort with little lasting financial impact. A black swan, on the other hand, is an event that has a very low probability of occurring but has a pronounced market impact if it does. Quantitatively, our definition of a black swan is an event that produces an immediate negative response in the S&P 500 below -1%, while creating a rise in either U.S., Japanese, or Swiss government bonds above 0% (Table 4). Of course, determining which event is a red herring or a black swan is only obvious post-facto and thus requires thorough geopolitical analysis. Table 4Understanding The Crises Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? Results - Red Herrings And Black Swans Matter: Our event analysis solidifies our findings with regards to U.S., Japanese, and Swiss government bonds, but also builds a case for some European bonds as well as gold during black swan events. Our main findings can be summarized as follows. Fade The Red Herrings: Out of the sixteen geopolitical events, ten were identified as red herrings, in which safe havens underperformed the equity market. This, then, suggests that it is not always beneficial to buy safe-haven assets when tensions are rising. What is interpreted as a major geopolitical crisis - say, Ukraine in 2014 or Greece in 2015 - often ends up being a "red herring." Geopolitical Risk = Gold: Geopolitical black swan events, on the other hand, have a significant, negative impact on the market. During these events, gold emerges as the strongest hedge against a downturn in equities. U.S. Treasurys And The Swiss Franc Provide A Baseline: Under all black swan events considered - geopolitical and non-geopolitical - U.S. Treasurys and the Swiss franc had the strongest performance, generating positive returns on the day of the stock market crash in 85% of the cases. G10 Government Bonds Will Also Do: German, Dutch, Swiss and Swedish government bonds also provided protection during black swan events in local and common-currency terms, albeit to a lesser extent. U.S. And Swiss Bonds Outperform During Financial Episodes: During black swan financial crises, Swiss and U.S. government bonds stand out as the best safe havens due to their capacity to generate positive returns both in USD and local-currency terms in eight out of the nine examined crashes. Other findings that are interesting, yet less robust due to a limited sample size, include: When the crisis originated on U.S. soil, U.S. Treasurys and the dollar performed relatively poorly compared to other safe-haven assets. This is a somewhat surprising finding, as most investors believe that U.S. assets rally even at a time of U.S.-based crises, such as the 2011 budget crisis. We show that they may perform well, but in USD, non-U.S. based assets do better. When the crisis originated in Europe, European bonds performed very well both in USD and local-currency terms. When the crisis originated in Europe, Swiss and U.K. government bonds performed poorly in USD terms, but offered strong protection in local-currency terms. When the crisis originated in Russia, precious metals acted as a poor hedge. Bottom Line: It is crucial to gain an understanding of the nature of any potential crisis. Red herrings should always be faded, not hedged against, as they produce poor results in safe-haven assets. U.S. Treasurys, Swiss and Japanese government bonds have been very consistent safe-haven assets during previous periods of acute risk. Part IV: Timing Is Everything As a final step in our quantitative approach, we put our results through numerous timing exercises to test how the assets would perform in real time. Based on our Risk Asset Spectrum (Diagram 1), which summarizes our findings, one could argue that investing in times of crisis simply boils down to buying an equal-weighted basket of U.S. Treasurys, Swiss, and Japanese government bonds. Although this is technically true, such a strategy would require perfect foresight, unparalleled timing, or dumb luck - since black swan events are, by definition, very difficult to predict. Diagram 1Risk Asset Spectrum Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? Proof Of The Ultimate Safe Haven: The first experiment we conducted was to illustrate how powerful safe havens can be when timed perfectly in a trading strategy. We started off by comparing two baskets. The first was a benchmark portfolio comprised of 60% U.S. equities and 40% U.S. bonds. The other contained the same two assets, but with 100% allocated to a basket comprised of U.S. Treasurys, Swiss, and Japanese government bonds during times of negative returns for equities. Of course, this strategy is not realistic and would be impossible to implement, since the trading rule depends on future events. But as Chart 12 shows, if one were able to predict every single period of negative returns for global equities and hold safe-haven assets instead, the trading rule would outperform almost 10-fold. Chart 12Safe Havens Work Wonders With Perfect Information... Safe Havens Work Wonders With Perfect Information... Safe Havens Work Wonders With Perfect Information... One-Month Lag Is Already Too Late: Repeating the same exercise, but with a one-month lag in the execution, produces drastically different results. More specifically, whenever the previous month's equity return is negative (t=0), the portfolio allocates 100% to a single safe-haven asset for the current month (t=1), otherwise it keeps the allocation identical to that of the benchmark. The rationale for using such a simple rule is that average investors are generally late in identifying a crisis and only react once they have validation that the market is in a correction. Chart 13 shows that being late by one month changes the performance of the safe haven basket from astronomically outperforming the benchmark to underperforming it. Chart 13... But Timing Is Everything ... But Timing Is Everything ... But Timing Is Everything Reaction Is Key: As a final timing exercise, we analyzed the reaction function of our assets to see how quickly they react after the correction in equities begins (Chart 14). Unsurprisingly, the top assets that we identified start appreciating as soon as the crisis hits (t=0). Gold is, on average, the quickest asset to react from investors seeking refuge. Swiss bonds come in as a close second, almost mirroring gold during the first few days of the correction. But both assets start to flatten out and even roll over after a few days. Japanese bonds react slightly later than gold and Swiss bonds, but keep increasing for a longer period of time and start plateauing around the 30th day after the crisis. U.S. Treasurys and Quality Stocks, on the other hand, remain rather flat and constant over the short term. These results attest to the importance of timing the crisis using the best safe-haven assets. Chart 14Safe Havens React Instantly Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? Bottom Line: Timing plays a crucial part in investing in safe-haven assets, as their performance is coincident to that of equities. Investment Implications: Is Pyongyang A Red Herring Or A Black Swan? The results of our quantitative analysis are clear: hedging geopolitical risk depends on whether it is persistent or fleeting. So, is Pyongyang a red herring or a black swan? From our geopolitical analysis we make three key conclusions: The U.S. is not likely to preemptively attack North Korea; However, the U.S. has an interest in signaling that it may conduct precisely such an attack; Brinkmanship could last for a long time. Even if the risk of a U.S. attack against North Korea itself is a red herring, the crisis itself is not. In fact, between now and when a negotiated solution emerges, investors may face several new crises, which may include limited military attacks or skirmishes. While markets have faded such North Korean provocations in the past, the current context is clearly different. As such, we would suggest that investors hedge the risk with an equally-weighted basket of Swiss bonds and gold. Even though a "buy and hold" strategy with such a "Doomsday Basket" will likely underperform the market if tensions with North Korea subside, we are betting that it may take time for the U.S. and North Korea to get to the negotiating table. Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com Matt Gertken, Associate Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com David Boucher, Associate Vice President Quantitative Strategist davidb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "The Geopolitics Of Trump," dated December 6, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. We upgraded North Korea to the status of a genuine market-relevant risk in "North Korea: A Red Herring No More?" in Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, "Partem Mirabilis," dated April 13, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Client Note, "Trump Re-Establishes America's 'Credible Threat'," dated April 7, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Strategic Outlook, "Strategic Outlook 2017: We Are All Geopolitical Strategists Now," dated December 14, 2017 available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Power And Politics In East Asia: Cold War 2.0," dated September 25, 2012, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "North Korea: Beyond Satire," dated April 19, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. In particular, we argued, "the current saber-rattling is carefully orchestrated. But North Korea can no longer be consigned to the realm of satire. The very fact that the U.S. administration is adopting greater pressure tactics makes this year a heightened risk period. Investors should be especially wary of any missile tests that reveal North Korean long-range capabilities to be substantially better than is known to be the case today." Then, on May 13 and July 4, North Korea conducted its first ICBM launches; the UN Security Council agreed to a new round of even tighter economic sanctions on August 5; and the U.S. and North Korea engaged in an alarming war of words. 6 Specifically, we wrote: "Diplomacy is the only real option. And in fact it is already taking shape. The theatrics of the past few weeks mark the opening gestures. And theatrics are a crucial part of any foreign policy. The international context is looking remarkably similar to the lead-up to the new round of Iranian negotiations in 2012. The United States pounded the war drums and built up the potential for war before coordinating a large, multilateral sanctions-regime and then engaging in talks with real willingness to compromise." 7 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Geopolitics And Safe Havens," dated November 11, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see BCA Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Fade North Korea, And Sell The Yen," dated August 11, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see BCA Bank Credit Analyst Special Report, "Stairway To (Safe) Haven: Investing In Times Of Crisis," dated August 25, 2016, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 10 Forty-one assets were denominated in USD only, while G10 bonds, Credit Suisse Swiss Real Estate Fund, and European 600 real estate were used both in local-currency terms and USD, for a total of 65 assets. 11 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Geopolitics And Safe Havens," dated November 11, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 12 Sile Li and Brian M. Lucey, "What precious metals act as safe havens, and when? Some U.S. evidence," Applied Economic Letters, 2013. 13 Dirk G. Bauer and Thomas K.J. McDermott, "Financial Turmoil and Safe Haven Assets," 2013. 14 Lieven Baele, Geer Bekaert, Koen Inghelbrecht and Min Wei, "Flights to Safety," National Bank of Belgium Working Paper No. 230, 2015. 15 Dirk G. Baur and Kristoffer J. Glover, "The Destruction of Safe Haven Asset?,"2012. 16 Angelo Ranaldo and Paul Soederlind, "Safe Haven Currencies," Review of Finance, Vol. 10, pp. 385-407, 2010. Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? 18 Quality stocks are defensive equity plays with high, steady earnings with an elevated return on investments. They are estimated by Deutsche Bank's Factor Index Equity Quality Excess Return in USD. Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market? 20 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, "Throwing The Baby (Globalization) Out With The Bath Water (Deflation)," dated July 13, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com, and BCA Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "A Secular Bottom In Inflation," dated July 28, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 21 Since we were interested in the immediate, often unexpected, response to the event, we did not include economic recessions in our event analysis.