Developed Countries
We noted in a late-October Insight that a disaster in the office segment of the US commercial real estate market had not yet occurred. November’s update to CRE prices reinforces this view. The chart above shows the 3-month annualized rate of change in…
BCA Research's US Equity Strategy service has upgraded the S&P hotels, resorts & cruises index to an overweight stance. Relative share prices have bounced from an extremely depressed level, only last seen during the GFC and not far off from the…
Dear Client, As is custom every year, next Monday November 30 instead of our regular Strategy Report you will receive BCA’s flagship publication “The Bank Credit Analyst” detailing the house views and themes for next year. Our regular publishing schedule resumes on December 7 with our 2021 High-Conviction Calls Strategy Report. On December 14 we will host a Webcast to discuss our calls in more detail and answer questions. Happy Thanksgiving. Kind Regards, Anastasios Highlights Portfolio Strategy A firming demand backdrop for lodging services courtesy of the positive vaccine news, enticing industry operating metrics along with compelling valuations encourage us to take a punt on the niche S&P hotels, resorts & cruise line index. In marked contrast, we recommend investors avoid the high-flying S&P homebuilding index. Home-related survey data paint a rosy picture for homebuilding demand in the coming months underpinned by low mortgage rates and low housing supply. Nevertheless, most of the good news is baked in resurgent homebuilder stock prices and the prospects of rising interest rates, a looming profit margin squeeze and extremely high earnings expectations warn that the time is ripe to shed S&P homebuilding exposure. Recent Changes Upgrade the S&P hotels, resorts & cruise lines index to overweight, today. Downgrade the S&P homebuilding index to underweight, today. Feature Similar to two Mondays ago, the SPX opened weekly trading with gusto courtesy of MRNA’s 94% efficacy vaccine news, but failed to breach previous all-time highs. The market has rallied roughly 10% this month, and while we remain cyclically and structurally bullish, a short-term consolidation period is likely in the cards. Extremely easy financial conditions along with a near halving in implied volatility – which have been key rally drivers since the March lows as we pointed out numerous times in our research – are nearly perfectly priced in the SPX. The implication is that were a meaningful rally to resume, further easing is required which is a tall order (top panel, Chart 1). Another factor underpinning the market’s recent advance is the drop in the CBOE’s implied correlation index (pair wise correlation of S&P500 constituents, shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 1). However, correlations have collapsed and are near levels that have marked prior temporary peaks in the SPX. Beyond near-term jitters, output is poised to recover smartly next year and most importantly so are SPX EPS. In a recent Special Report we lifted our EPS target to $168 for calendar 2021 and introduced an end-2021 SPX target of 4,000. The GS Current Activity Indicator corroborates our macro four-factor profit growth estimate and heralds a slingshot EPS recovery next year (Chart 2). Chart 1Good News Is Priced In Chart 2One More V-Shape Is Coming Turning over to capital spending, the latest GDP report was revealing. On the surface private sector capex made a splash with non-residential investment contributing 2.88% to real GDP growth, the highest since Q4/1983 when the economy was recovering from that severe double-dip recession. In absolute terms, the Q/Q annualized growth clocked in at over 20%, a growth rate last seen in the late-1990s (Chart 3). Drilling deeper into capex is instructive. Technology investment was on fire. Surprisingly, software took the back seat and investment in tech goods roared. In other words, this data confirms that businesses and consumers alike prepared to work from home and bought up tech gadgets en masse, and stole demand from the future (Chart 3). Looking ahead we expect a reversal of this trend with software retaking the reigns and the rest of the tech sector fading. As a reminder, while base effects really augmented this capex rebound, recovering animal spirits signal that a capex upcycle is in the offing. We have shown in the past that as profits grow, CEOs become more confident in the longevity of the cycle and choose to deploy long-term oriented capital, albeit with a one-year lag. Eventually, this creates a virtuous upcycle where rising profits lead to rising capital outlays that further boost sales and profits and sustain the positive feedback loop (Chart 4). Chart 3Exploring Investment Data Chart 4Lagging Capex Will Also Recover This week we make two sub-surface consumer discretionary sector changes further adding exposure to our back-to-work reopening laggards and shedding exposure to work-from-home winners. Open For Business While admittedly we were early in locking in gains in the S&P hotels, resorts & cruises index last spring by lifting exposure to neutral from underweight, today we are compelled to augment this niche leisure index to an overweight stance. Relative share prices have bounced at a level last seen during the GFC and not far off the level hit post the 9/11 accelerated recession that dealt a big blow to everything travel related (top panel, Chart 5). The recent positive vaccine news is a key reason we are warming up to this consumer discretionary sub group. While neither lodging nor cruise line vacationing will return to their previous peaks any time soon, both industries will survive and thus should no longer be priced for bankruptcy. Industry pricing power has plunged, but it is trying to trough at an extremely depressed level (middle panel, Chart 5). As a result, profit margins have gone haywire (bottom panel, Chart 5), but again most of the negative news is likely priced into this negative profits backdrop. Chart 5Fell Off A Cliff… One key industry demand determinant is confidence. Consumer sentiment has staged a W-shaped recovery and while still flimsy the brightening vaccine efficacy news should catapult it higher in the coming quarters. The implication is that the wide gulf between consumer confidence and relative share prices will narrow via a catch up phase in the latter (top panel, Chart 6). Closely linked to the budding recovery in confidence are discretionary versus non-discretionary retail sales. Thus, the latter have been tightly correlated with the oscillations in relative share prices, and the current message is positive (top panel, Chart 7). Chart 6...But There Are Signs Of Life Moreover, the ISM non-manufacturing survey is on a sling shot recovery following the depths of the spring readings. This rebound also suggests that the path of least resistance is higher for lodging stocks (middle panel, Chart 6). Chart 7Enticing Signals On the business side, capex intentions are slated to increase in the coming year – as we highlighted above on the back of recovering animal spirits – and by extension so will business-related travel (bottom panel, Chart 7). Our hotel demand indicator does an excellent job at encapsulating all these different forces and forecasts an enticing lodging services demand backdrop into 2021 (bottom panel, Chart 6). Already, consumer outlays on hotels are staging a comeback albeit from an extremely depressed level. The upshot is that an earnings-led rebound is in the cards (middle panel, Chart 7). With regards to industry operating metrics, industry executives have reined in expansion plans: construction spending on hotels has been contracting all year long. At the margin, such a supply restraint on the heels of a seven-year expansion phase is quite encouraging (middle panel, Chart 8) as it will aid in the industry’s efforts to lift beaten down occupancy rates. Another reassuring industry operating metric is the confirmation that hotel workers are returning to work. Not only has leisure and hospitality employment absorbed more than half the losses suffered since the spring carnage, but also industry hours worked have ticked higher of late (bottom panel, Chart 8). Finally, washed out technicals and extremely alluring valuations provide an attractive reward/risk tradeoff at the current juncture (Chart 9). Chart 8Receding Supply Is Good Chart 9Plenty Of Upside Netting it all out, a firming demand backdrop for lodging services courtesy of the positive vaccine news, enticing industry operating metrics along with compelling valuations encourage us to take a punt on the niche S&P hotels, resorts & cruise line index. Bottom Line: Upgrade the S&P hotels, resorts & cruise lines index to overweight, today. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HOTL – MAR, HLT, CCL, RCL, NCLH. Contrarian Housing Call Today we recommend a downgrade in the S&P homebuilding index to underweight. Since the March 23 SPX lows, consumer discretionary stocks are up 74%, besting the S&P 500 by 1500 basis points (bps). While single stock GICS4 sub-groups like household appliances (i.e. Whirlpool) have reached escape velocity rising over 200% over the same time frame, the S&P homebuilding index is also up a whopping 140%. While we were quick enough to close our underweight recommendation in March and cement impressive relative gains for the portfolio to the tune of 50%, we refrained from lifting exposure all the way to overweight and remained at benchmark. As a reminder, we opted instead to play a housing rebound via the sister home improvement retail index in mid-April that also added significant alpha to our portfolio. Residential real estate optimism abounds. The media’s bombardment is non-stop reminding consumers of runaway home prices, all-time lows in fixed mortgage rates (third panel, Chart 10) and nearly non-existent housing inventory (supply of homes shown inverted, middle panel, Chart 11), painting an urgency to stampede into home buying (top panel, Chart 11). Chart 10Positives Reflected In Prices Chart 11The Good… True, the COVID-19 recession has acted as an accelerant to the suburban housing boom and there is an element of at least a semi-permanent shift away from city centers and toward the suburbs as the work-from-home flexibility is not a fad. Tack on all-time highs on the overall NAHB housing sentiment survey and a number of sub-components like sales expectations (second panel, Chart 10) and no wonder mortgage applications to purchase a new home are also flirting with multi-year highs (bottom panel, Chart 10). Another survey, part of the Conference Board’s consumer confidence monthly survey, revealed that consumers’ plans to buy a new home are also probing all-time highs (second panel, Chart 10). Even the Fed’s October Senior Loan Officer survey highlighted that demand for residential mortgage loans is on the mend (bottom panel, Chart 11). However, we deem that most, if not all, of the good news is already priced in galloping homebuilders stock prices and exuberant expectations. While being contrarian is fraught with danger, as more often than not the herd is right, there is a key macro driver that gives us confidence to our going against the grain housing trade: interest rates. If our economic reopening thesis proves accurate next year, then the COVID-19 winners – homebuilders included – will take the back seat. Importantly, as the economy rebounds and is ready to stand on its own two feet, then the selloff in the bond market should gain significant steam. Using our 100-125bps rule of thumb to gauge how much monetary tightening the economy can withstand in a year’s time, then the 10-year US Treasury yield can hit 1.5% by next March. Historically, interest rates and relative share prices have been inversely correlated and a steep selloff in the bond market is bad news for homebuilding stocks (top panel, Chart 12). Chart 12...The Bad... Chart 13...And The Ugly Meanwhile on the operating housing front, some cracks are forming. New home sales, while brisk in absolute terms, are losing out to existing housing sales and homebuilders have resorted to price concessions in order to drive volumes (second, third & bottom panels, Chart 12). Profit margins are at the highest mark since the subprime crisis and are vulnerable to a squeeze not only from lower selling prices, but also from rising input costs. Framing lumber comprises roughly 15% of a new home’s commodity related costs and lumber prices have been expanding all year long (Chart 13). Finally, unfettered sell-side optimism reigns supreme. Net earnings revisions cannot go any higher as they hit a wall at the 100% ceiling. One year forward relative profit growth expectations are literally through the roof, and even five-year relative EPS growth estimates are up 1500bps since the 2019 nadir (Chart 14). All these metrics represent a high bar for homebuilders to surpass and we would lean against such extreme enthusiasm toward this niche early-cyclical group. However, there is a key risk to our bearish homebuilders call we are monitoring: cheap valuations. On relative forward P/E, trailing P/S and EV / EBITDA bases, home construction stocks offer compelling value (bottom panel, Chart 14). Whether this is a value opportunity or a trap, the jury is still out. For the time being we side with the latter. Chart 14Peak Sell-Side Euphoria In sum, home-related survey data paint a rosy picture for homebuilding demand in the coming months underpinned by low mortgage rates and low housing supply. Nevertheless, most of the good news is baked in resurgent homebuilder stock prices and the prospects of rising interest rates, a looming profit margin squeeze and extremely high earnings expectations warn that the time is ripe to shed S&P homebuilding exposure. Bottom Line: Trim the S&P homebuilding index to underweight, today. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HOME – LEN, PHM, DHI, NVR. Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Current Recommendations Current Trades Strategic (10-Year) Trade Recommendations Size And Style Views October 26, 2020 Favor small over large caps July 27, 2020 Overweight cyclicals over defensives June 11, 2018 Long the BCA Millennial basket The ticker symbols are: (AAPL, AMZN, UBER, HD, LEN, MSFT, NFLX, SPOT, TSLA, V). January 22, 2018 Favor value over growth
According to BCA Research's Foreign Exchange Strategy service, there is some evidence that the euro could gravitate to 1.50 over the next few years. The key assumption is that the equilibrium rate of interest will rise in the euro area relative to that in…
Taiwanese export orders remained resilient in October, ticking down to 9.1% year-on-year (y/y) from 9.9% y/y. An acceleration in the pace of shipments to the US supported the continued strength in Taiwanese exports, and while exports to Hong Kong and China…
The chart above shows a measure of breadth for the US equity market that has recently caught the attention of some investors. It shows that the percent of US stocks trading above their 200-day moving average has risen above 80%, the highest point since…
On Friday, Treasury Secretary Mnuchin requested that the Fed return unused funds from some select emergency facilities that were unveiled earlier this year, and is not seeking to renew them when they expire on December 31st 2020. These programs include the…
Today we update our Millennial Basket as TSLA and UBER have gone vertical this month rising 29% and 46%, respectively. Specifically, we rebalance the basket back to an equal weight with AAPL, UBER, LEN, and TSLA being rebalanced lower, and AMZN, HD, MSFT, NFLX, SPOT, and V higher. Our Millennial Basket is up 116% in absolute terms and 68% relative to the SPX since inception in our June 11, 2018 Special Report. In addition, we also recommended investors overweight our Millennial Basket on a secular ten year view basis, predicated upon our Millennials spending theme. While profit potential has not changed, recent news and price action in TSLA (eerily reminiscent of the YHOO inclusion in the SPX announcement 21 years ago on November 30th 1999!) compel us to rebalance this basket back to equal weight. We also add another layer of risk management in order to protect cyclical-only profits and institute a rather wide rolling 18% stop. Bottom Line: We reiterate our structural and cyclical overweight stance on our Millennial Basket, but today we recommend an 18% rolling stop in order to protect cyclical-only profits. The ticker symbols in the US Equity Strategy Millennials Basket are: AAPL, AMZN, UBER, HD, LEN, MSFT, NFLX, SPOT, TSLA, and V.
Highlights There is some evidence that the euro could gravitate to 1.50 over the next few years. The key assumption is that the equilibrium rate of interest will rise in the euro area relative to that in the US. Our bias is that fair value for the euro is closer to 1.35, or 15% above current levels. Over the very near term, the risks are tilted towards the downside. But while EUR/USD could punch below 1.15, an undershoot towards parity is highly unlikely. In our FX portfolio, we are long EUR/CHF and short EUR/GBP. We would buy the euro outright below 1.15. Feature The markets have rejoiced at the success of a few vaccine trials and are looking forward to a return to normalcy in 2021. Around the world, equity markets have rallied in symphony. Even secular dogs such as the Japanese Nikkei, which has been in a relative bear market for many decades, broke to fresh 21-year highs. Copper prices are rising fervently, and measures of risk, such as the VIX index or high-yield corporate spreads, are collapsing to pre-pandemic levels both in the US and Europe. As a procyclical currency, the euro has also been quite cheerful. Bullish sentiment on the euro is at a decade high and the currency has rallied 11% from the lows, commensurate with the drop in the DXY index (Chart 1). As a share of total open interest, 80% of speculators are bullish on the euro. Historically, sentiment at this level has been usually associated with the euro being closer to 1.50. Chart 1Sentiment On The Euro Is Elevated Chart 2The Euro Is Lagging Copper Prices The juxtaposition of much welcomed good news and elevated sentiment sets the euro in a very precarious tug of war. Standard theory suggests that the post-pandemic trade may already be priced into the common currency, given bullish sentiment. This augurs for a reversal. On the other hand, other measures also suggest that the rally in the euro has more room to run. For example, copper prices and the euro have tended to move together, and the red metal suggests EUR/USD should be above 1.20 (Chart 2). Similarly, EUR/JPY has lagged the stellar performance of global equity prices. Is the lagging performance of EUR/USD sending the right signal, suggesting caution? Or is the common-currency a coiled spring ready to head much higher in 2021? How To Forecast The Euro According to Bloomberg forecasts, the euro will be at 1.25 by the end of 2022 (Chart 3). By our reckoning, these forecasts are much too pessimistic. The key driver of the EUR/USD exchange rate is the relative growth profile between the euro area and the US, how that profile is likely to evolve in the future, and the implication for relative monetary policies. Anything else that tries to predict the euro is a subset of this much bigger question. How is growth in the euro area likely to evolve compared to the US? There are many ways to approach this issue, with surprisingly similar results. The key driver of the EUR/USD exchange rate is the relative growth profile between the euro area and the US. The first is just to take the IMF growth estimates at face value. According to the Fund, the euro area economy is projected to contract by 8.3% this year, almost double that of the US, which is 4.3%. But by next year, the economy is expected to bounce back more fervently. Euro area growth is expected to advance by 5.2% compared to 3.1% in the US. Much of the rise will be due to a surge in investment within the euro area, especially driven by pent-up demand in the peripheral countries. This growth acceleration is projected to continue well into 2023. Back-of-the envelope calculations suggest that this will pin EUR/USD around 1.35 (Chart 4) Chart 3Few Expect The Euro Above 1.25 Chart 4EUR/USD And Relative Growth The Case For European Growth We tend to side with the IMF’s forecasts and even argue that this might actually be on the conservative side for the euro area. There are two major reasons for this, both of which are bilaterally important. First, the neutral rate of interest in the euro area may have moved a step function higher relative to the US. The standard dilemma for the euro zone is that interest rates have always been too low for the most productive nation, Germany, but too expensive for others, such as Spain and Italy. The silver lining is that the European Central Bank (ECB) has now lowered domestic interest rates and eased policy to the point where they are accommodative for all euro zone countries.1 Bond yields in peripheral Europe are collapsing relative to those in Germany and France (Chart 5). This makes it much easier for the less-productive, peripheral countries to borrow and invest. This will boost productivity, lifting the neutral rate. Chart 5The Neutral Rate In The Euro Area Second and equally important, the periphery has become as competitive as the core. Through labor market reforms, internal devaluation, and recurring recessions throughout the last decade, unit labor costs in Greece, Ireland, Portugal, and Spain have converged with that in Germany and France. This has effectively eliminated the competitiveness gap that had accumulated over the past two decades (Chart 6). Even Italy, which remained saddled with a rigid and less productive workforce, has seen unit labor costs begin to crest. Chart 6Southern Europe Is Competitive Again According to the Holston-Laubach-Williams estimates at the NY Fed, the natural rate of interest in the euro area is now higher than in the US, something that has rarely occurred over the 20-year history of the common currency. Based on these estimates, the euro could gravitate towards 1.50 (Chart 7). Chart 7EUR/USD And The Neutral Rate US Versus Europe Chart 8Productivity In Europe Has Lagged In today’s world, 1.50 for the euro is certainly very high and will surely stir up some action from the ECB well before we approach these levels. As most of my colleagues would argue, no central bank wants a strong currency.2 But how can we gauge the above premise that the neutral rate of interest should be higher in the euro area due to the tectonic shifts over the last few years? One way is to look at trend productivity growth. Since the 1960s, up until the Great Financial Crisis, trend productivity growth was around 2.2% in the US and 2.8% in the euro area. However, since 2009, productivity growth has been 0.6% per year in the euro area and 1.1% in the US (Chart 8). In other words, the European debt crisis has substantially subdued productivity growth in the euro area. If indeed the crisis is behind us, and we assume European productivity growth returns back to trend over the next 10 years, while making up for the shortfall relative to the US, this will pin it at roughly 1.6% higher in Europe relative to the US. Cumulatively, that is a rise of around 20%. Meanwhile, we highlighted last week that the euro was undervalued by over 10%.3 This pins the euro above 1.50. The Euro At Parity And Inflation Chart 9US Versus Euro Area Inflation While the euro might gravitate higher in the next few years, it is unlikely to do so in a straight line. Meanwhile, deflation is a key near-term threat for the euro (Chart 9). With the ECB clearly telegraphing that it will do more easing in December, the relative monetary policy stance is not favorable. That said, there are three key points to consider about inflation. First, most G10 central banks were unable to meet their inflation mandate when output gaps were closing and the economy was at full employment. This makes it less likely they will meet their mandate anytime soon. This is not just an ECB problem, but one for the Fed, BoJ, and even the RBA. Second, inflation tends to be a global phenomenon in the developed world, meaning desynchronized cycles in inflation dynamics are quite rare. Finally, with balance sheets expanding everywhere in the G10, the potential for higher inflation once output gaps close will be universal. European productivity growth will have to outpace that in the US by roughly 1.6%, to play catch up. Going forward, an agreement on the mutualization of European debt means we can begin to expect more synchronized business cycles as fiscal stabilizers kick in. The reason is that both fiscal and monetary policy can now be synchronized across member states. This makes shortfalls in inflation less likely. Finally, while deflation can be a sign of an expensive currency, there is little evidence that this is the case for the euro. The euro area continues to sport very healthy trade and current account surpluses, a sign that the euro remains very competitive among its trading partners. Intra-European trade represents a large share of cross-border transactions in Europe, meaning currency considerations are less important. In 2019, most member states had a share of intra-EU exports of between 50% and 75%. The bottom line is that disappointing inflation dynamics could lead to a knee-jerk selloff in the euro, but this should be an opportunity to accumulate long positions. The Cyclical Catalyst Ultimately, European growth is cyclically tied to export growth. And with a huge concentration of cyclical sectors, such as financials, industrials, materials and energy, in European bourses, the euro tends to be largely driven by pro-cyclical flows. Earnings revisions between the euro area and the US have generally led the EUR/USD exchange rate by about 9-12 months (Chart 10). Chart 10EUR/USD Tracks Relative Profits So far, the signs are positive. The impulse from Chinese credit is providing a release valve for European exports (Chart 11). So even if social distancing remains in place for longer than people expect, it still allows economies that are geared more towards manufacturing such as Europe, Japan, and China to keep churning higher. This could boost European earnings in a meaningful way. Chart 11Chinese Demand For European Goods Fortunately for investors, European equities, especially those in the periphery, remain unloved, given that they are trading at some of the cheapest cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings multiples in the developed world (Chart 12A). Over the next decade, it would be surprising if some of these “old economy” stocks did not unwind their discount via both rising earnings and multiples. Many emerging markets, including China, still depend on “old-economy” materials such as oil, and industrial machinery, that Europe sells. The impulse from Chinese credit is providing a release valve for European exports. Even in the commodity space, cyclical metals like copper are still massively underperforming safe havens like gold. This has largely tracked the discount between European stocks and US stocks. A bet on a reversal could prove very profitable (Chart 12B). Chart 12AEuro Stocks Are Cheap Chart 12BEuro Stocks Could Rerate Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "EUR/USD And The Neutral Rate Of Interest," dated June 14, 2019, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Nobody Wants A Strong Currency," dated November 17, 2020, gfis.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Updating Our PPP Models," dated November 13, 2020. fes.bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades