Economy
Highlights When it comes to a beauty contest among currencies, the US dollar is a winner right now. Significant dollar moves tend to occur in very long cycles. When – and only when – the crisis ends will the dollar begin to surrender to significant headwinds. The transition from a stronger to weaker dollar is likely to occur in fits and starts. Watch the gold-to-bond ratio and USD/CNY exchange rate as key arbiters in timing this shift. Feature The world economy has clearly been nudged into a very deep recession. But as with other pandemics, the global economy is likely to survive this one too. As currency markets continue to fight a tug-of-war between deteriorating global growth and very easy financial conditions, it is instructive to start placing bets on the likely winners (and losers) that will emerge from this battle. Throughout the past few decades, the most powerful driver of currencies has been the relative rate of return between any two economies. After all, an exchange rate is simply a measure of relative prices between any two concerns. And as equilibrating mechanisms by definition, currencies will fluctuate to equalize rates of returns across borders. Therefore, placing bets with higher odds of success critically requires answering two questions. Which markets and/or asset classes have the highest potential rate of return? What are the key mechanisms/signals through which this value will be unlocked? The Source Of US Dollar Beauty When it comes to a beauty contest among currencies, the US dollar is clearly the fairest. In fact, the most recent Treasury International Capital (TIC) data show that inflows into US assets have been reaccelerating (Chart I-1). Remarkably, the momentum of these purchases has been driven by equities (bottom panel), as US stocks have outperformed their international peers. Even the 2017 change in the US tax code to allow for favorable capital repatriation still continues to benefit the dollar. On a rolling 12-month basis, the US has repatriated about $192 billion in net assets, or close to 1% of GDP. Chart I-11. Inflows Into US Assets Are Picking Up Supercharging this trend has been a global shortage of dollars, which has increased the international appeal of US paper. This was triggered by the Federal Reserve’s tapering of asset purchases. The Fed’s balance sheet peaked a nudge above US$4.5 trillion in early 2015 and, until recently, had been falling. This triggered a severe contraction in the U.S. monetary base (Chart I-2), and curtailing commercial banks’ excess reserves. Chart I-2A Liquidity Flush Despite the Fed’s massive liquidity injections and significant uptake of its swap program (Chart I-3), the greenback could remain well bid in the near term. We will not revisit the analysis here, but encourage clients to read our issue from last week in case they missed it.1 What we can add is that the dollar tends to thrive in uncertainty, and even with ample dollar liquidity, non-banks are still facing dollar shortages. For example, there remains a gap between the rate on the Fed’s US dollar swap lines and various measures of offshore dollar funding. Meanwhile, cross-currency basis swaps are still wide for some developed and emerging market currencies (Chart I-4).2 Chart I-3Foreign Central Banks Tap Into USD Swaps Chart I-4The Funding Crisis Has Eased Bottom Line: As a countercyclical currency, the greenback remains well bid in the near term. Historically, the dollar has tended to move in long cycles, usually 10 years, suggesting the current bull market might be nearing an end (please see Chart I-8 in the next section). This also suggests there is no need to rush into building USD shorts, should the next cycle in the dollar last a decade. Regime Shift? When, and only when the crisis ends will the dollar begin to surrender to significant headwinds. The good news is that these headwinds continue to mount, and will eventually exert a powerful deflationary force on the greenback. When, and only when the crisis ends will the dollar begin to surrender to significant headwinds. Starting with equity markets, expected relative returns are extremely unfavorable for US stocks. Chart I-5A – Chart I-5R shows that the equity valuation starting point is important for local-currency returns over the long term. The chart shows 10-year annualized equity relative returns, superimposed on our composite valuation indicator.3 So, in the case of the US versus Japan, the left-hand side scale shows that US equities are trading 1.5 standard deviations above their mean valuation relative to Japanese equities. The right-hand side scale shows what to expect in terms of relative returns over the next 10 years by overweighting Japanese equities relative to the US. Chart I-5A Chart I-5B Chart I-5C Chart I-5D Chart I-5E Chart I-5F Chart I-5G Chart I-5H Chart I-5I Chart I-5J Chart I-5K Chart I-5L Chart I-5M Chart I-5N Chart I-5O Chart I-5P Chart I-5Q Chart I-5R The forward P/E on MSCI US and Japan is 19.7x and 13.4x, respectively. The skew towards the US is because market participants expect US profits to keep outperforming, the greenback to keep appreciating, or a combination of the two. While this might be plausible in the short term as the fascination with FAANG stocks continues to capture investors’ imaginations, the empirical evidence is that current US valuations have more than fully capitalized future earning streams. Based on historical correlations, expected 10-year annualized returns for the MSCI US relative to Japan is -10%. Importantly, our composite valuation indicator adjusts for sector weights, so that there is no over representation of any sector in any country. So even if technology and healthcare are winners over the next decade, capital can still gravitate from the US towards other markets where these sectors are cheaper. Capital outflows will lead to a selloff in an overvalued US dollar. In fact, across our sample of 18 developed and emerging market currencies, the message remains that long-term equity capital will dry up for US assets due to expensive valuations. Therefore, the latest inflows into US equities are at risk of a Minsky moment. Such capitulation could well be the beginning of a 10-year cycle of dollar weakness. Cross-currency basis swaps are still wide for some developed and emerging market currencies. Second, the US has lost its interest rate advantage. Against an aggregate of G10 currencies, the dollar currently yields almost nil in real terms (Chart I-6). This has historically led to a softer dollar. Remarkably, even for a Japanese or German investor, negative domestic rates might no longer be a catalyst to invest in US paper, should domestic inflation continue blasting downward. The catalyst for outflows could be if the US 10-year Treasury yield hits zero, amidst the Fed adopting negative rates. Chart I-6The US Interest Rate Gap Has Vanished Chart I-710-Year Cycle Outlook For The Dollar Once that happens, new bond investors face the prospect of real losses from either higher yields and/or currency depreciation as the Fed continues to dilute existing Treasury shareholders (Chart I-7). If the Fed is set to anchor the price of money near zero for the foreseeable future, currency depreciation is the only mechanism to entice foreign investors to keep funding the US twin deficits. The US dollar does have an exorbitant privilege in that as a reserve currency, the trade deficit is settled in dollars. However, that privilege does require that the rise in foreign exchange reserves from other central banks are reinvested back into Treasurys. This allows the current account deficit (or capital account surplus) to finance the budget deficit. The bad news is that official flows into US paper have plateaued, with the likes of Beijing and other central banks continuing to destock their holdings of Treasurys (Chart I-8). Global allocation of foreign exchange reserves paints a similar picture – allocations toward the US dollar recently peaked at about 65% and have been in a downtrend since, with the void being filled by other currencies, notably gold, the British pound, the Swiss franc, and the yen. Chart I-8Diversification Away From Dollars Accelerates The key point is that for one reason or another, foreign central banks are diversifying out of dollars. Our bias is that China has been doing so to make room for the internationalization of the RMB, as well as for geopolitical reasons, similar to other countries such as Russia. This trend will be supercharged as private investors start to focus on the real prospect of very dire returns over the coming cycle. Bottom Line: Expensive valuations and low interest rates make prospective returns for US equities and fixed income unattractive. This will force private capital to require a much lower exchange rate to fund US liabilities. The RMB And Gold As Umpires Chart I-9Will TLT Outperform GLD Next Decade? The transition from a stronger to weaker dollar is likely to occur in fits and starts. For one, the dollar is a countercyclical currency and will remain strong as uncertainty continues to dominate the macro landscape. We are watching two key indicators (among many others) as signposts for when the shift is occurring: Gold-To-Bond Ratio: One of our favorite indicators for gauging ultimate downside in the dollar is the gold-to-bond ratio. Ever since the breakdown of the Bretton Woods system, gold has stood as a viable threat to dollar liabilities, capturing the ebb and flows of investor confidence in the greenback tick-for-tick. Any sign that the balance of forces are moving away from the US dollar will favor a breakout in the gold-to-bond ratio. The TLT ETF relative to the GLD ETF broke above parity earlier this year, and has since been consolidating those gains (Chart I-9). This has brought it back within the trading range in place since early 2017. A decisive move below 0.95 will be a bearish development for the greenback. RMB Exchange Rate: As the RMB continues to gain international recognition, Chinese government bonds should outperform Treasurys. It is remarkable that from 2011 up until the Fed turned dovish in 2018, Chinese government bond performance was much better than Treasurys, even as the dollar was soaring (Chart I-10). Going forward, the USD/CNY rate should continue to act a key anchor for the direction of cyclical/emerging market currencies, as we highlighted last week. A break above last year’s highs will be bearish, while it will be encouraging if the 7.0 level is breached on the downside. Chart I-10Will Treasurys Outperform RMB Bonds Next Decade? Bottom Line: Watch the bond-to-gold ratio and Chinese RMB exchange rate as key signals for the direction of the US dollar. A breakdown in the US dollar will be a key mechanism to unlock value in foreign assets. Housekeeping Chart I-11Target 1.10 On AUD/NZD The Reserve Bank of New Zealand decided to keep rates on hold, but reinforced forward guidance by almost doubling the size of its asset purchases to NZ$60 billion, while keeping open the possibility of negative rates. This has driven the divergence between Aussie and Kiwi 10-year yields to the highest level since 2008 (Chart I-11). In a world where rates continue to fall to very low levels, the policy of yield curve control implemented by the Reserve Bank of Australia does not pack the same punch as negative interest rates. Fundamentally, three factors will support the AUD/NZD cross: First, terms-of-trade dynamics are more favorable for Australia, which is lifting the nation’s basic balance to a substantial surplus. While infrastructure investment growth in China is likely to slow from historical levels, liquefied natural gas imports should remain in a structural uptrend. China’s switch from coal to natural gas electricity generation will continue to buffet Australian export volumes. On the kiwi side of things, as food security becomes more and more important in a post COVID-19 world, agricultural exports will not enjoy the same volume boost. Stay long AUD/NZD. Second, a substantial lift to New Zealand’s labor dividend has come from immigration (Chart I-12). The recent surge in net migrant numbers is due to exit restrictions for recent entrants. Yet even as things return to normal, that labor dividend will remain low as many people rethink international travel for work. This will restrain some supply-side parts of the economy, prompting the RBNZ to keep rates lower for longer. Chart I-12Loss Of A Meaningful Tailwind For Employment Finally, the cross offers a lot of relative value – not just from an interest rate standpoint, but also on a real effective exchange rate basis. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled “Line In The Sand,” dated May 08, 2020, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 2 Egemen Eren, Andreas Schrimpf, and Vladyslav Sushko, “US Dollar Funding Markets During The Covid-19 Crisis – The International Dimension,” BIS Bulletin (May 12, 2020). 3 Composite indicator comprised of price-to-earnings, forward price-to-earnings, price-to-cash flow, dividend yield, price-to-book, price-to-sales, Tobin's Q, and market capitalization-to-GDP. Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the US have been negative: Nonfarm payrolls fell by 20.5 million in April. The unemployment rate soared to 14.7% from 4.4%. The labor force participation rate declined to 60.2%. However, average hourly earnings increased by 7.9% year-on-year, since most job losses were in lower-income quartiles. Headline inflation fell from 1.5% to 0.3% year-on-year in April. Core inflation declined from 2.1% to 1.4% year-on-year in April. The NFIB business optimism index fell from 96.4 to 90.9 in April. Initial jobless claims kept increasing by 22.9 million last week. The DXY index appreciated by 1.2% this week. On Tuesday, House Democrats unveiled a $3 trillion stimulus package to further aid the economy, including nearly $1 trillion for state and local governments, $200 billion fund for essential worker hazard pay, and an additional $75 billion for COVID-19 testing. Report Links: Capitulation? - April 3, 2020 The Dollar Funding Crisis - March 19, 2020 Are Competitive Devaluations Next? - March 6, 2020 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Recent data in the euro area have been negative: Industrial production plunged by 13% year-on-year in March. The unemployment rate in France declined from 8.1% to 7.8% in Q1. The euro depreciated by 0.5% against the US dollar this week. The ECB Economic Bulletin released this Thursday highlighted that euro area GDP could fall by between 5% and 12% this year, highlighting uncertainty around the ultimate extent of the economic fallout. More importantly, the ECB Governing Council is fully prepared to increase the size of the PEPP by as much as necessary. Report Links: On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 On Money Velocity, EUR/USD And Silver - October 11, 2019 Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan have been negative: The coincident index fell from 95.4 to 90.5 in March. The leading economic index fell from 91.9 to 83.8 in March. The trade surplus narrowed from ¥1.4 trillion to ¥1.03 trillion in March. The current account surplus shrank by nearly 40% to ¥1.97 trillion. Bank lending increased by 3% year-on-year in April, up from 2% the previous month. Machine tool orders kept contracting by 48.3% year-on-year in April. The Japanese yen fell by 0.7% against the US dollar this week. The Economy Watchers’ Survey released this week showed that the current situation index plunged from 14.2 to 7.9 in April. The outlook index also declined from 18.8 to 16.6. It also implied that the situation is likely to deteriorate further, due to the severe challenges posed by COVID-19. Report Links: The Near-Term Bull Case For The Dollar - February 28, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the UK have been negative: GDP contracted by 1.6% year-on-year in Q1, compared with a 1.1% increase the previous quarter. Retail sales increased by 5.7% year-on-year in April, up from a 3.5% decline in March. The total trade deficit widened notably from £1.5 billion to £6.7 billion in March. Industrial production fell further by 8.2% year-on-year in March. Manufacturing production fell by 9.7% year-on-year in March. The British pound fell by 1.6% against the US dollar this week, alongside the weak Q1 GDP data. Moreover, the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) estimates that GDP will plunge by about 25-to-30%quarterly in Q2. They also pointed out that while some activities will resume with the reopening, there is a significant risk of a second wave which could trigger a further setback in the economy. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 2019 United Kingdom: Cyclical Slowdown Or Structural Malaise? - Sept. 20, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Recent data in Australia have been mixed: The NAB business confidence improved from -65 to -46 in April, while the business conditions index fell from -22 to -34 in April. Westpac consumer confidence ticked up from -17.7 to 16.4 in May. Employment decreased by 594K in April, down from a 5.9K increase the previous month. The unemployment rate increased from 5.2% to 6.2%, however this is well below the expected rise to 8.3%. The wage price index increased by 2.1% year-on-year in Q1. The Australian dollar fell by 1.9% against the US dollar this week. The labour force survey showed that the number of people looking for work declined significantly during the shutdown, which has been one of the main reasons why the unemployment rate did not fall as much as expected. Report Links: On AUD And CNY - January 17, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Contrarian View On The Australian Dollar - May 24, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Recent data in New Zealand have been mixed: ANZ business confidence improved from -66.6 to -45.6 in May. Net migration increased by 4,941 in March, compared with a 4,339 increase the previous month. The New Zealand dollar fell by 2% against the US dollar this week. On Tuesday, the RBNZ kept the interest rate unchanged at 0.25%, while increasing its asset purchase programme by up to NZ$60 billion. Moreover, it implied that negative interest rates could be possible as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to disrupt the economy. We recommend holding on to long AUD/NZD positions. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Place A Limit Sell On DXY At 100 - November 15, 2019 USD/CNY And Market Turbulence - August 9, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Recent data in Canada have been negative: Housing starts declined from 195.4K to 171.3K in April. Building permits plunged by 13.2% month-on-month in March. The unemployment rate soared to 13% from 7.8% in April. The participation rate declined to 59.8% from 63.5%. Employment decreased by 1993.8K in April, better than the expected 4000K drop, while average hourly wages increased by 10.5% year-on-year. The Canadian dollar depreciated by 0.9% against the US dollar this week. The employment loss is led by Quebec, which saw the increase of unemployment to 18.7%. Moreover, while the number of self-employed workers was little changed, there has been a large drop in total hours worked. In addition, the loss of employment was concentrated in accommodation, food services and construction. Report Links: More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 The Loonie: Upside Versus The Dollar, But Downside At The Crosses Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland have been negative: Producer and import prices kept declining by 4% year-on-year in April, following a 2.7% decrease in March. Sight deposit increased from CHF 663.8 billion to CHF 669.1 billion for the week ended May 8. The Swiss franc fell by 0.3% against the US dollar this week. Switzerland has entered its second phase of reopening. Schools, businesses, museums and restaurants can reopen as long as they take precautionary measures. However, as a small open economy, Switzerland is heavily dependent on exports and imports, which are curtailed in a global economic recession. Report Links: On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 Portfolio Tweaks Before The Chinese New Year - January 24, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Recent data in Norway have been negative: Manufacturing output fell by 3% month-on-month in March. PPI plunged by 16.1% year-on-year in April. Headline inflation increased from 0 to 0.4% in April, while core inflation soared from 2.1% to 2.8% year-on-year, led by higher food prices especially imported fruits and vegetables. The Norwegian krone initially rebounded by 2.8% against the US dollar, then gradually fell amid broad dollar strength, returning flat this week. The Norges Bank Executive Board has decided to exclude a list of Canadian oil companies from its government pension fund due to pollution concerns. Report Links: A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 On Oil, Growth And The Dollar - January 10, 2020 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Recent data in Sweden have been negative: Headline consumer prices contracted by 0.4% year-on-year in April. The Swedish krona has been flat against the US dollar this week. The Minutes of the Monetary Policy Meeting released this week showed that the Riksbank is ready to scale up its bond purchases if conditions warrant. Last week, all bank members continued to support asset purchases of up to SEK 300 billion until this September. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Dear Client, In lieu of our regular report next week, we will be sending you a Special Report on China from Matt Gertken, BCA Research’s Chief Geopolitical Strategist. Matt will discuss whether China’s President Xi Jinping is losing his political mandate. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights The pandemic is likely to have a more severe impact on Main Street than Wall Street, which helps explain why stocks have rallied off their lows even as bond yields have remained depressed. Equity investors are hoping that central banks will keep rates lower for longer, while fiscal easing will revive demand. The end result could be lower bond yields within the context of a full employment economy – a win-win for stocks. In the near term, these hopes could be dashed, given bleak economic data, falling earnings estimates, and rising worries about a second wave of the pandemic. Longer term, an elevated equity risk premium and the likelihood that the pandemic will not have a significantly negative effect on the supply side of the economy argue for overweighting stocks over bonds. Negative real rates will continue to support gold prices. A weaker dollar later this year will also help. Divergent Signals Chart 1Conflicting Signals Global equities have rallied 24% off their March lows. The S&P 500 is down only 12% year-to-date and is trading close to where it was last August. In contrast, bond yields have barely risen since March. The US 10-year note currently yields 0.63%, down from 1.92% at the start of the year. The yield on the 30-year bond stands at a mere 1.3%. While crude oil and industrial metal prices have generally tracked bond yields, gold prices have rallied alongside equities (Chart 1). It would be easy to throw up one’s hands and exclaim that markets are behaving schizophrenically. Yet, we think it is possible to reconcile these seemingly divergent price patterns in a way that sheds light on where the major asset classes are likely to go in the months ahead. Two important points should be kept in mind: Bonds and industrial commodities tend to reflect the outlook for the real economy (i.e., Main Street) whereas stocks reflect the outlook for corporate earnings (i.e., Wall Street). The two often move together but can occasionally diverge in important ways. Stock prices and bond yields will tend to move in tandem when deflationary pressures are intensifying; however, the two often move in opposite directions when monetary policy is becoming more accommodative. The former prevailed in early March whereas the latter has been the dominant force since central banks have opened up the monetary spigots. The Real Economy Is Suffering The current economic downturn will go down as the deepest since the Great Depression. The IMF expects global GDP to contract by 3% this year, compared with a flat reading in 2009. GDP in advanced economies is projected to fall by 6%, twice as bad as in 2009 (Chart 2). Chart 2Severe Damage To The Global Economy This Year Unemployment rates are also likely to reach the highest levels since the 1930s. The US unemployment rate spiked to 14.7% in April. Even that understates the true increase in joblessness. The labor force has shrunk by 8 million workers since February. If everyone who had left the labor force had been considered unemployed, the unemployment rate would have jumped to nearly 19% (Chart 3). Unemployment among less-skilled workers rose more than among the skilled. Joblessness also increased more among women than men (Chart 4). Chart 3Increase In Joblessness Is Understated Chart 4Unemployment Has Risen More For Less Skilled Workers And Women The one silver lining is that unlike in past recessions, temporary layoffs have accounted for the vast majority of job losses (Chart 5). This suggests that the links between firms and workers have yet to be severed. As businesses reopen, the hope is that most of these workers will be able to return to their jobs, fueling a rebound in spending. Chart 5Temporary Layoffs Account For Most Of The Recent Increase In Unemployment Risks Of A Second Wave Will that hope be realized? As we discussed last week, the virus that causes COVID-19 is highly contagious – probably twice as contagious as the one that caused the Spanish flu.1 While some social distancing measures will persist even if governments relax lockdown orders, the risk is high that we will see a second wave of infections. Even if a second wave ensues, we do not expect stocks to take out their March lows. In many places, the second wave could come on top of a first wave that has barely abated. This is precisely what happened during the Spanish flu pandemic (Chart 6). Stock prices and credit spreads have closely tracked the number of Google queries about the coronavirus (Chart 7). If the number of new infections begins to trend higher, concern about the pandemic will deepen. This makes us somewhat wary about the near-term direction of risk assets. Chart 6The Lesson From The Spanish Flu: The Second Wave Could Be Worse Than The First Chart 7Joined At The Hip March Was The Bottom In Equities Nevertheless, even if a second wave ensues, we do not expect stocks to take out their March lows. This is partly because the cone of uncertainty around the virus has narrowed. We now know that the fatality rate from the virus is around 1%-to-1.5%, which makes COVID-19 ten times more deadly than the common flu, but still less lethal than SARS or MERS, let alone some avian flu strains which have mortality rates upwards of 50%. A few treatments for the virus are on the horizon. Gilead’s remdesivir appears to be effective in treating COVID-19. Blood plasma injections also look promising. A vaccine developed by researchers at the University of Oxford has been shown to be safe on humans and effective against COVID-19 on rhesus monkeys. Production of the vaccine has already begun, and if it works well on humans, the Oxford scientists expect it to be widely available by September.2 The Stock Market Is Not The Economy Then there is the issue of Main Street versus Wall Street. US equities account for over half of global stock market capitalization. Tech and health care are the two largest sectors in the S&P 500. The former has benefited from the shift towards digital commerce in the wake of the pandemic, while the latter is a highly defensive sector that has gained from the flurry of interest in new treatments for the disease (Chart 8). Chart 8AUS Equity Sectors: Winners And Losers From The Pandemic (I) Chart 8BUS Equity Sectors: Winners And Losers From The Pandemic (II) Even within individual sectors, the impact on Wall Street has been more muted than on Main Street. For example, spending on consumer discretionary goods and services has plummeted across the real economy over the past few months. Yet, this has not hurt equity investors as much as one might have expected. Amazon accounts for 55% of the retail sector’s market capitalization. Home Depot is in second place by market cap. Home Depot’s stock is trading near an all-time high, buoyed by increased spending on home improvement projects by people stuck at home. McDonald's, which is benefiting from the shift to take-out ordering, is the largest stock in the consumer services sector (followed by Starbucks). Contrary to the claim that the stock market is blissfully ignorant of the mounting economic damage, those sectors that one would expect to suffer from a pandemic-induced downturn have, in fact, suffered. Airline stocks, which account for less than 2% of the industrials sector, have plunged. The same is true for cruise ship stocks. Bank stocks have also been beaten down, reflecting fears of heightened loan losses. Likewise, lower oil prices have undercut the stocks of energy exploration and production companies (Chart 9). At the regional level, non-US stocks, with their heavy weighting in deep cyclicals and financials, have underperformed their US peers. Small caps have also lagged their large cap brethren, while value stocks have trailed growth stocks (Chart 10). Chart 9Sectors Expected To Suffer From A Pandemic-Induced Downturn Have, In Fact, Suffered Chart 10Non-US Stocks, Small Caps, And Value Stocks Have Underperformed Tech stocks are overrepresented in growth indices, which helps explain why growth has outperformed value. Tech companies also tend to carry little debt while sporting large cash holdings. Companies with strong balance sheets have greatly outperformed companies with weak ones since the start of the year (Chart 11). Chart 11Firms With Strong Balance Sheets Have Excelled Relative To Weak Ones Chart 12Real Rates Have Come Down This Year In addition, growth companies have disproportionately benefited from the dramatic decline in real interest rates (Chart 12). A drop in the discount rate raises the present value of a stream of cash flows more the further out in time those cash flows are expected to be realized. What Low Bond Yields Are Telling Us Doesn’t the decline in real long-term interest rates signal that future economic growth will be considerably weaker? If so, doesn’t this nullify the benefit to growth companies in particular, and the stock market in general, from a lower discount rate? Not necessarily! While lockdowns have led to a temporary drop in aggregate supply, they have not severely undermined the long-term productive capacity of the economy. Unlike during a war, no factories have been destroyed. And while heightened unemployment could lead to some atrophying of skills, the human capital base has remained largely intact. Chart 13 shows that output-per-worker eventually returned to its long-term trend following the Great Depression. Chart 13No Clear Evidence That The Great Depression Lowered Long-Term Trend Growth What the pandemic has done is made some forms of capital obsolete. We probably will not need as many cruise ships or airplanes as we once thought. But these items are not a huge part of the capital stock. And while some brick and mortar stores will disappear, this was part of a long-term shift toward a digital economy – a shift that has been raising productivity levels, rather than lowering them. Demand Is The Bigger Issue So why have long-term real interest rates fallen so much? The answer has more to do with demand than supply. Investors are betting that the pandemic will force central banks to keep interest rates at ultra-low levels for a very long period of time. All things equal, such an extended period of low rates might be necessary if the pandemic causes households to increase precautionary savings and prompts businesses to cut back on investment spending for an extended period of time. All things are not equal, however. As discussed in greater detail in Box 1, if real interest rates fall by enough, aggregate demand could still return to levels consistent with full employment since lower interest rates would discourage savings while encouraging capital expenditures. What if interest rates cannot fall by enough because of the zero-lower bound? In that case, fiscal policy would have to pick up the slack. Either taxes would need to be cut so that the private sector becomes more eager to spend, or the government would need to undertake more spending directly on goods and services. When interest rates are close to zero, worries about debt sustainability diminish since debt can be rolled over at little cost. In the end, the economy could end up in a new post-pandemic equilibrium where real interest rates are lower and fiscal deficits are larger. Applying Theory To Practice Framed in this light, we can make sense of what has happened over the past few months. The drop in long-term bond yields in February and early March was driven by falling inflationary expectations and rising financial stress. Yields then briefly jumped in mid-March as panicky investors dumped bonds in a mad scramble to raise cash. Not surprisingly, stocks suffered during this period. The Federal Reserve reacted to this turmoil by cutting rates to zero. It also initiated large-scale asset purchases, which injected much needed cash into the markets. In addition, the Fed dusted off the alphabet soup of programs created during the financial crisis, while launching a few new ones in an effort to increase the availability of credit and reduce funding costs. Other central banks also eased aggressively. As Chart 14 illustrates with a set of simple examples, even a modest decline in long-term interest rates has the power to significantly raise the present value of future cash flows. To compliment the easing in monetary policy, governments loosened fiscal policy (Chart 15). The point of the stimulus was not to raise GDP. After all, governments wanted most non-essential workers to remain at home. What fiscal easing did do was allow many struggling households and businesses to meet their financial obligations, while hopefully having enough income left over to generate some pent-up demand for when businesses did reopen their doors. Chart 14What Happens To Earnings During A Recessionary Shock? Chart 15Will It Be Enough? Ultimately, equity investors are hoping for an outcome where fiscal policy is eased by enough to eventually restore full employment while interest rates stay low well beyond that point in order to induce the private sector to keep spending: A win-win combination for stocks. Chart 16Gold Prices Move In The Opposite Direction To Real Rates The discussion above can also explain the divergent moves in commodity prices. Most industrial metals are consumed not long after they are produced. This makes industrial metal prices highly sensitive to the state of the global business cycle. In contrast, almost all of the gold that has ever been unearthed is still around. This makes gold an anticipatory asset whose price reflects expectations about future demand. Since owning gold does not generate any income, the opportunity cost of holding gold is simply the interest rate (Chart 16). When real interest rates rise, as they did briefly in early March when deflationary fears intensified, gold prices tend to fall. When real interest rates decline, as they did after central banks slashed rates and restarted large-scale QE programs, gold prices tend to rise. Investment Conclusions The current environment bears a passing resemblance to the one that prevailed in late 2008. Following the stock market crash in the wake of Lehman’s bankruptcy, the S&P 500 rallied by 24% between November 20, 2008 and January 6, 2009 to reach a level of 935. Had you bought stocks on that day in January, you still would have made good money over a 12-month horizon. However, you would have lost money over a 3-month horizon since the S&P 500 ultimately dropped to as low as 667 on March 6. During that painful first quarter of 2009, the economic surprise index remained firmly below zero, while earnings estimates continued to drift lower, just like today (Chart 17). As noted above, we do not expect stocks to take out their March 2020 lows, but a temporary sell-off would not surprise us, especially against a backdrop where a second wave of the pandemic looks increasingly likely. Chart 17Is Today A Replay Of Late 2008/Early 2009? Chart 18Favor Equities Over Bonds Over A 12-Month Horizon Despite our near-term concerns, we continue to think that stocks will outperform bonds over a 12-month horizon. The equity risk premium remains elevated, particularly outside the US (Chart 18). While non-US stocks do not have as much exposure to tech and health care, they do benefit from very cheap valuations. European banks are trading at washed out levels (Chart 19). The cyclically-adjusted PE ratio for EM stocks is near record lows (Chart 20). Investors should consider increasing exposure to non-US equities if global growth begins to reaccelerate this summer. Chart 19European Banks Are Trading At Washed Out Levels Chart 20EM Stocks Are Very Cheap Given our view that central banks want real rates to stay low and will refrain from tightening monetary policy even if inflation eventually begins to rise, investors should maintain above-average exposure to gold. A weaker US dollar later this year will also help bullion. Box 1The Role Of Monetary And Fiscal Policy Following Savings Shocks Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Risks To The U,” dated May 7, 2020. 2 Charlie D’Agata, “Oxford scientists say a vaccine may be widely available by September,” cbsnews (April 30, 2020). Global Investment Strategy View Matrix Current MacroQuant Model Scores
Highlights Fear of deflation – especially at current debt levels – will keep central-bank policy looser for longer. As a result, monetary authorities will do whatever it takes to revive inflation and inflation expectations to move policy rates away from the zero lower bound. EM income growth will rebound, and the US dollar will weaken as monetary and fiscal stimulus reach the real economy. This will be bullish for commodities, including gold. Over the medium to long term, the reversal in globalization and the atrophy of working-age populations will be inflationary: Labor markets will tighten as economic growth recovers and baby-boomers continue to retire, pushing wages higher and savings lower. Over the short term, we are neutral gold from a pricing standpoint, and believe $1,700/oz is close to fair value. When gold pushes through $1,800/oz, longer-term demographic and economic trends will become apparent and will catalyze gold’s rally. We continue to favor gold as a portfolio hedge, as it has held value throughout the COVID-19 pandemic and the re-emergence of geopolitical tensions, particularly the return of Sino-US trade acrimony. Feature Gold will remain at ~ $1,700/oz after rallying 15% from its mid-March bottom, as markets consolidate over the short term. This new equilibrium has been fueled by North American retail investors and is slightly above our model’s fair value (Chart of the Week). While gold’s short-term price drivers appear to have stabilized over the past few weeks – i.e. real rates, US dollar, and equity uncertainty are holding fairly steady – a temporary pullback is likely. Strategically, however, the balance of risks is skewed to the upside. Chart of the WeekRetail Investment Demand Supports Gold Above Our Fair-Value Estimates Our usual framework classifies gold’s drivers into three broad categories: Demand for inflation hedges; Monetary and financial aggregates; and Demand for portfolio-diversification assets. In this report, we are narrowing our focus to concentrate on the tactical vs. strategic drivers of gold prices, to assess the metal’s upside potential over the short- and long-term horizons (Table 1). Table 1Short- vs. Long-Term Drivers Of Gold Prices Over the short-term, gold prices fluctuate mostly with changes in risk aversion, opportunity costs and relative prices vis-à-vis other assets. Longer term, gold prices trend with income and inflation cycles, along with structural changes in households’ savings rates. Short- and Medium-term Drivers Elevated global uncertainty and falling US real rates are keeping total gold demand resilient in the West. Western Buyers To The Rescue The COVID-19 pandemic greatly altered the composition of gold demand in 1Q20. Jewellery and bar-and-coin demand dropped 42% and 11% y/y in the wake of a collapse of Chinese and Indian demand (Chart 2, panel 1). This was offset by sharp inflows to ETF products – mainly from DM investors. ETF inflows increased by ~ 300 tons in 1Q20, and by 170 tons in April 2020 (Chart 2, panel 3). Elevated global uncertainty and falling US real rates are keeping total gold demand resilient in the West. However, the short-term outlook for gold could be volatile as investment and jewellery demand normalize. As economies reopen, we expect economic uncertainty will fade, which will bring retail and speculative gold demand down in the West, while a recovery in EM economic activity will revive jewellery, bar and coin demand. Chart 2Weak EM Consumer Demand Offset By Strong North America ETF Inflows Chart 3Investment Demand Overtakes Jewellery's Since 2010, investment and jewellery demand represented ~ 33% and ~ 58%, respectively, of total gold demand – excluding central bank net purchases (Chart 3). As economies reopen, we expect economic uncertainty will fade, which will bring retail and speculative gold demand down in the West, while a recovery in EM economic activity will revive jewellery, bar and coin demand – albeit at a slower pace (Chart 4). NB: A large mismatch in the speed of these adjustments could lead to an undershoot in prices – especially at current elevated positioning. Chart 4Elevated Interests In Gold From Retail Investors Chart 5Investors Allocation To Gold Is Close To 2012 Levels We’ve argued in February there was still an opportunity for investment-led growth to support prices based on the low value of investors’ total holdings of gold compared to global equities on a market-cap basis. This measure is now approaching its 2012 peak and moving toward unknown territory in terms of portfolio and wealth allocation to gold (Chart 5). This is flagging up a risk that short-term traders will want to take profits on their speculative positions, if virus-related uncertainty diminishes. On the other hand, retail buyers could hold on to their hedges. Historically, profound economic dislocations and persistent uncertainty have been complemented by shifts in investors’ behavior, leading to higher average saving rates – e.g. 1929, WWII, 2008’s GFC – (Chart 6). Additionally, downside risks to the reopening of economies worldwide remain significant, particularly given the uncertainty of the COVID-19 pandemic’s evolution: A second wave of contagion would trigger a massive flight to safety and further central bank actions to keep rates depressed. Chart 6Precautionary Savings Rise In Highly Uncertain Periods Awaiting A Setback To The USD The Fed and other systemically important central banks have taken decisive action to keep money markets functioning and to prevent a solvency crisis (Chart 7, panel 1). Ample liquidity, low economic growth, and collapsing inflation expectations pushed bond yields lower globally, which, in large measure, powered the rally in gold prices (Chart 7, panel 2). The protection offered by US bonds is much weaker at the lower bound. This will benefit gold as a safe-haven asset if uncertainty intensifies this year. In recent weeks, US yields have stabilized, meaning this factor will not provide much support to gold at current levels – assuming, again, no major second wave in COVID-19 contagion. The upside to rates is also limited over the short term as the increase in Treasury supply will be offset by the Fed’s dovish forward rate guidance. Still, the protection offered by US bonds is much weaker at the lower bound. This will benefit gold as a safe-haven asset if uncertainty intensifies this year (e.g., ahead of the US elections). Moreover, the Fed appears to be willing to risk remaining behind the curve for the foreseeable future. Bonds' protection would suffer if the Fed allows inflation overshoot (more on this below). In 2H20, we expect the USD to weaken as virus-related safe-haven demand – which fueled its 14% rally ytd vs. EM currencies – abates and the Fed’s and the US government’s responses to the crisis floods markets globally with USD liquidity.1 Relative balance-sheet and interest-rate dynamics will reassert themselves as important drivers of currency movements (Chart 8). Chart 7QE Infinity Will Keep Bond Yields Depressed Chart 8USD Deviating From Interest Rate Differentials The tailwinds from declining US real rates ended and a decline in virus-related uncertainty will be offset by the positive effect of a weaker dollar. A temporary pullback is likely. Bottom Line: The sum of gold’s short-term drivers are neutral at the current $1,700/oz equilibrium. The tailwinds from declining US real rates ended and a decline in virus-related uncertainty will be offset by the positive effect of a weaker dollar. A temporary pullback is likely. Long-term Drivers The underlying trend in gold prices will remain positive, supported by accelerating EM income growth over the next 12 months. Stimulative Policies To Boost EM Income Growth Global income growth is one of the core drivers of gold prices over long horizons (Chart 9, panel 1). As countries get wealthier, the pool of savings rises, which benefits gold, along with most financial assets. Because gold-mining production growth is relatively stable and inelastic to prices in the short-term, changes in income growth above production growth have a crucial influence on gold’s trajectory over the long run. EM countries – chiefly China and India – are the largest buyers of jewellery, bars and coins, and remain among the fastest-growing economies on the planet. Hence, since 2000, gold’s annual price change correlates strongly with their income growth (Chart 9, panel 2). In addition, central banks’ net gold purchases – which have been increasingly positive since 2009 – effectively reduce available supply to consumers. We include net purchases in our measure of total supply to separate it from consumer and investor demand – which respond to entirely different incentives (Chart 9, panel 3). We expect EM central banks will continue diversifying part of their US dollar reserves to gold.2 Chart 9Global Income Growth Drives Long Term Gold Returns Chart 10China's Economic Activity Close To Pre-COVID-19 Levels The underlying trend in gold prices will remain positive, supported by accelerating EM income growth over the next 12 months. China’s economic activity appears to have partly recovered from the COVID-19 shock (Chart 10). Going forward, the country’s surging fiscal and monetary stimulus, in addition to a weakening US dollar, will revive growth in neighboring Asian economies this year. Structural Deflationary Pressures Are Easing We do not believe the lack of inflationary pressure post-GFC will be repeated this time. The stimulus is radically larger and geared more toward the real economy as opposed to rescuing the banking system. As we’ve argued in previous reports, gold acts as a good inflation hedge when there is an increase in perceived risks of significant overshoots.3 In normal times, inflation expectations move slowly and trend more or less with past inflation prints (Chart 11). However, the unprecedented global fiscal and monetary stimulus deployed to combat the COVID-19-induced recession could shift expectations rapidly and profoundly. We do not believe the lack of inflationary pressure post-GFC will be repeated this time. The stimulus is radically larger and geared more toward the real economy as opposed to rescuing the banking system (Chart 12). Moreover, a combination of deflationary structural factors – i.e. trade globalization, expanding global value chains, and demographics – are reversing, and will gradually become inflationary.4 This is a stark difference to the post-GFC quantitative easing. Chart 11Inflation Expectations Trend Along Past Realized Inflation Rates Chart 12Surging US Broad Money Supply Firstly, globalization’s deflationary impulse – thru increasing trade and expanding global value chains – stalled a few years ago (Chart 13). Recently, ramping anti-globalization policies amidst the Sino-US trade tensions exposed vulnerabilities in the current trade infrastructure. The COVID-19 pandemic risks accelerating these trends. Following widespread quarantine measures in China, US imports from China fell sharply in February and March, and firms without pre-established supply chain relationships with other Asian countries that could backstop supply disruptions were left unable to find alternative suppliers (Table 2). Firms will likely continue diversifying their supply sources and insource critical activities to the US, post-COVID-19.5 Additionally, our Geopolitical strategists see increasing risks of renewed US pressures on China ahead of the election.6 An acceleration in de-globalization trends post-COVID-19 will disrupt international supply chains and amplify inflationary pressures. Chart 13The Structural Reversal In Globalization Trends Will Be Inflationary Table 2Vulnerability In US Supply Chains China’s declining support ratio also means the pool of cheap offshore labor for DM economies is shrinking. Secondly, structural demographic trends are reversing. The world’s support ratio – i.e. the number of workers per dependent – has been trending downward since 2015 (Chart 14, panel 1). As more people around the world reach retirement age, this trend is expected to continue. This trend is especially powerful in China, whose workforce was one of the great deflationary demographic factors in previous decades. Effectively, this implies aggregate demand is likely to exceed aggregate supply as more workers become consumers. In theory, this also implies lower global savings and a higher neutral rate of interest. Consequently, a rising neutral rate, combined with our belief central bankers will be behind the curve in raising rates, increases the risks of inflation moving sharply above target. Chart 14Demographic Trends Will Become Inflationary China’s declining support ratio also means the pool of cheap offshore labor for DM economies is shrinking – the country could lose ~ 400 million workers over the remainder of the century (Chart 14, panel 2). The integration of the Chinese – and other EM countries – workforce during the 2000s led to a doubling of the global pool of labor supply and reduced the average labor cost. Investment Conclusion Asset markets are not positioned for higher inflation, thus, investors seeking refuge ahead of a widespread re-pricing of inflation risk likely will benefit from current relatively inexpensive hedges. Investors need to assess the long-term consequences of these trends and policies vs. the short-term deflationary COVID-19 shock. Asset markets are not positioned for higher inflation, thus, investors seeking refuge ahead of a widespread re-pricing of inflation risk likely will benefit from current relatively inexpensive hedges (Chart 15). While we expect higher US inflation expectations and headline rates in 2H20 – driven by the decline in the USD and the increase in oil and base-metals’ prices – we do not expect meaningful inflation-overshoot risks until late 2021. Core inflation rates will remain depressed until the large labor-supply overhang clears – in the US and globally – and the effect of the lower USD pass-through to higher prices emerges (Chart 16). Chart 15Gold Is Not Relatively Expansive, Except Vs. Commodities Chart 16The COVID-19-Induced Deflationary Effects Will Last Until Next Year Re-anchoring expectations will necessitate periods of above-target inflation rates. The short-term drivers of gold are neutral at the current $1,700/oz equilibrium, as inflation pressure won’t surface until 2H21. Moreover, there is a non-negligible risk of a short-term pullback if DM economies are successfully reopened without significant increases in COVID-19 infection rates. This should serve as a buying opportunity, as the medium- and long-term outlook remains bullish for the yellow metal. EM income growth is poised to rebound as global monetary and fiscal stimulus reach the real economy and the USD depreciates. The reversal in globalization and demographic trends will become inflationary. Policymakers will do whatever it takes to revive inflation and inflation expectations to move away from the zero lower bound. Re-anchoring expectations will necessitate periods of above-target inflation rates. Thus, real rates should be contained as QE continues to depress the term premium and inflation starts to move higher. Fear of deflation – especially at current debt levels – will keep central banks too easy for too long. Hugo Bélanger Associate Editor Commodity & Energy Strategy HugoB@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Overweight Oil production globally is falling faster than expected, based on anecdotal press reports showing the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) took an additional 1mm b/d of production off the market, bringing its total shut-in level to 7.5mm b/d for next month. The Saudi government urged OPEC 2.0 member states to follow its lead and reduce production further. The US EIA this week reported it expects Russia’s production to fall more than 800k b/d, while in the US production is expected to decline by a similar amount this year, and another 600k b/d in 2021. Canada’s production is expected to fall 400k b/d. Non-OPEC production overall is expected to fall 2.4mm b/d this year. We will be updating our supply-demand balances and prices forecasts in next week’s report. Base Metals: Neutral Steel markets are becoming concerned COVID-19-induced production declines will reduce iron-ore shipments. Earlier this month, 10 cities in the Brazilian state of Para, an ore-producing region, were placed under lockdown, according to FastMarkets MB, a sister publication of BCA Research. Even though ore mining and shipping have been exempted, concern that COVID-19 could reach the producing regions and affect output is growing. Benchmark 62% Fe ore is down 6.2% from its January highs (Chart 17). Precious Metals: Neutral A forecast by Australia’s Department of Industry, Science, Energy and Resources (ISER) that Australia would become the world’s largest gold producer in 2021 was seconded this week by a private forecaster, Resources Monitor. The ISER forecast Australia would overtake China as the top gold producer in its March 2020 forecast, with output reaching 383 tons next year. Australia produced 326 tons last year, vs. China’s 380 tons. Ags/Softs: Underweight The USDA released its first estimate for the 2020/2021 marketing year, projecting corn ending stocks at 3.318 Bn bushels for the season, the largest stockpile since 1987/1998 (Chart 18). Huge planting projections will outweigh increases in exports demand of 35 Mn bushels and in usage for ethanol biofuel of 5.2 Bn bushels compared to the current season. Nonetheless corn futures hedged higher on Tuesday, rising 5.25 cents/bu, as the weak outlook was offset by downward revisions to old crop inventories. Finally wheat’s ending stocks were moderately revised up for the current season, but futures still fell to the lowest in a week due to better than expected weather in the US and higher global stocks expectations. Chart 17Supply Constraints Could Boost Prices Chart 18USDA Expects Large US Corn Stocks Increase Footnotes 1 We’ve outlined our view on the dollar for 2020 in our April 23, 2020 Weekly Report. Please see USD Strength Restrains Commodity Recovery, available at ces.bcaresearch.com 2 The U.S. dollar remains the reserve currency of the world today, but that exorbitant privilege is fading. 3 Please see our Weekly Report titled "All That Glitters ... And Then Some," published July 25, 2019. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com 4 For more details on these structural factors please see The Bank Credit Analyst Special Reports titled "Troubling Implications Of Global Demographic Trends," and "Three Demographic Megatrends," published 28 February, 2019 and October 26, 2017. 5 Please see Sebastian Heise, “How Did China’s COVID-19 Shutdown Affect U.S. Supply Chains?,” Federal Reserve Bank of New York Liberty Street Economics, May 12, 2020. 6 Please see BCA's Geopolitical Strategy Special Alert titled "#WWIII," published May 1, 2020. It is available at gps.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Trade Recommendation Performance In 2020 Q1 Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2020 Summary of Closed Trades
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