Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.
Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Economy

Special Report Highlights Wells Fargo’s path, before and after deregulation, has been similar to every other SIFI bank’s: It began by serving a single area in a single state, expanded within the state, and then pieced together its regional and national footprint via combinations. A review of 50 years of Wells Fargo’s financials offers multiple insights into the way that banking has evolved at the regional and SIFI bank level: Several community banks are at risk amidst the economy’s unprecedentedly sudden stop, but the overall banking system’s health turns on the condition of the regional banks and the SIFIs. Larger banks are far less reliant on lending than they used to be, … : Net interest income has contributed just 53% of Wells Fargo’s revenues since 2009. The banks would prefer wider net interest margins, but narrow ones won’t wreck their earnings power. … have considerably more capital, and are holding more cash, Treasury and agency securities to stabilize the asset side of the balance sheet: The big banks have two sources of additional ballast: more equity capital to absorb losses, and more stable asset portfolios to limit them in the first place. Feature We are top-down researchers at BCA, using macro data to make conclusions about how financial markets will fare against the economic backdrop they’ll face in the future. We also occasionally glean macro insights from micro data, which we are happy to incorporate into our process when it helps augment our understanding. Wells Fargo is a good proxy for the SIFIs and regional banks which make up the heart of the banking system, because it traveled the same serial acquisition path as its peers once prohibitions on interstate banking began to be eased in the mid-‘80s, and were wiped away for good in 1994. Wells Fargo makes all of its annual reports since 1969 available on its website, and their balance-sheet and income-statement detail fills in some gaps in the system-wide data available from the FDIC and the Fed. We will dig into the system-wide data in next week’s second installment of our examination of banking system vulnerability. This week, we focus on five decades of Wells Fargo data for insight into how banks have fared during the last seven recessions, and how they’re positioned heading into the current one. Banking, Then And Now A time-traveling visitor who worked in banking between the New Deal and the beginning of bank deregulation in the late seventies would find that banks fulfill the same two primary functions as they did in his/her day. They still promote financial intermediation by turning savers’ deposits into fuel for investment and accelerated consumption via loans to businesses and households, and they still administer the payments system. S/he might be unfamiliar with many of the ways they carry out those duties, however, and especially surprised at the way that lending and maturity transformation have been eclipsed. The biggest banks have become far less reliant on lending over the last 50 years, and they no longer engage in maturity transformation, ... At the largest banks, lending is no longer the be-all and the end-all, as revenue from fees has very nearly caught up to net interest income (Chart 1). After adjusting net interest income for loan-loss provisions, lending accounted for just 44% and 48% of Wells Fargo’s revenues in the 2000s in the 2010s, respectively. On that basis, fee revenue exceeded net interest income every year from 2007-2013, inclusive. The rise of fee income has made bank earnings more stable and bank capital levels less dependent on borrower fitness. Chart 1Lending Is No Longer The Only Game In Town Banks also no longer engage in maturity transformation, or borrowing short to lend long, which placed them at the mercy of the yield curve. When it inverted, profitability was squeezed as new deposit-taking-and-lending activity became less lucrative. When the curve shifted out, even if it remained upward-sloping, there was a risk that interest expense on new short-term borrowings would exceed interest income on legacy portfolio assets. The latter is what killed the savings and loans, which were chartered expressly to channel household savings into 30-year fixed-rate home mortgages. ... so investors shouldn't obsess over the yield curve's every wiggle. There is no doubt that bank stocks have closely followed moves in the 10-year Treasury yield for the last several years, and the correlation makes some sense. With deposit rates stuck at zero, the spread between the rate banks pay for funds and the rate at which they lend them out (net interest margin), should move with long yields. Over the last two decades, however, Wells Fargo’s profitability (Chart 2, top panel) has largely detached from net interest margins (Chart 2, bottom panel). It and other banks would welcome higher long yields, but equity investors’ fixation on them is misplaced in a banking industry which has rigorously matched the duration of its assets and liabilities for decades. Chart 2NIM's Influence Has Faded Bank Balance Sheets Have Become Considerably More Conservative In the wake of the 2008-9 crisis, Wells Fargo and other banks have been managed much more cautiously. The share of Wells Fargo’s assets held in cash, Treasury and agency securities is at its highest level in the last 50 years (Chart 3). Its loan-to-deposit ratio is around 50-year lows, indicating that sticky core deposits1 are amply capable of funding its loan book (Chart 4). Wells’ overall leverage,2 or the value of assets supported by each dollar of common equity, is also way down (Chart 5). All banks have de-levered from their peaks, as mandated by regulators after the 2008-9 crisis, making the banking system safer, if less profitable. Mitigating some of the drag on profits brought about by lessened leverage, banks have become considerably more efficient since the early ‘70s. The ATM has reduced the need for physical branches and staff, check processing has been streamlined, and online banking is continuing to help push costs even lower. Chart 3Playing It Safe Chart 4Not Anywhere Close To Extended Chart 5Safety First Credit Costs: The Elephant In The Room The main concern for bank stability, profitability and capital adequacy is the effect of the economic sudden stop on credit performance. Credit performance is acutely sensitive to the business cycle, and banks have headed into this recession, as always, with very low loan-loss reserve balances (Chart 6, top panel). Loan-loss provisions, which reduce net income and chip away at capital positions, are bound to rise, suddenly and significantly (Chart 6, middle panel). (Please see the Box, below, for a brief description of the mechanics of accounting for credit impairments.) Chart 6Banks Have A Lot Of Catching Up To Do Box: Accounting For Lending Losses Every business that makes sales on credit maintains an allowance for doubtful accounts to reflect the fact that not every bill will be paid in full. That allowance reduces the carrying value of its accounts receivable to something below their aggregate face value. Using a loan-loss reserve account, banks apply the same principle to loan repayments. The loan-loss reserve is increased by provisions for loan losses, projections of future loan losses that are immediately recognized as an expense. At the time that a bank provisions for future losses, it does not map the as-yet unrealized losses to individual loans. The value of the loans that are not going to be fully repaid are marked down once they reveal themselves, and the sum of all of the individual write-downs is aggregated as a net charge-off. Identifying individual loan impairments reduces the pool of unspecified loan-loss reserves represented by the reserve account. Net charge-offs do not have any direct impact on bank earnings or bank capital, but by consuming existing reserves, they herald a rebuild of the reserve buffer. Table 1 shows the accounting entries involved in recognizing credit losses, demonstrating the underlying rules. Provisions increase reserves and charge-offs reduce them, triggering a need for more provisions, and ensuring a continuing drain on income and equity capital. Table 1Loan-Loss Accounting The current recession, emerging from the widespread shutdown of economic activity to counter COVID-19, will mark the sharpest downturn since the Great Depression. The sudden stop in activity, and borrowers’ revenue streams, should induce a high level of defaults. Perhaps Wells Fargo’s loan-loss reserves as a share of outstanding loans will ultimately exceed their 1993 peak of nearly 6.5%, following the 1990-91 recession, which wreaked particular havoc on real estate, and in California, where the bank conducted substantially all of its business. Banks would be in a tricky spot if the economy were left to face the coronavirus crisis by itself, but policymakers are doing their utmost to support it. Chart 7There's Nothing Unusual About Credit Line Exposures Wells Fargo barely broke even in 1991, and its book value declined by 6%. Investors seem to fear that it, and other banks, are at risk of net losses and book value declines in 2020. With nearly $1 trillion of outstanding loans, and an annual earnings run rate of around $20 billion, Wells Fargo would appear to be at risk of a nasty capital hit if the economic effects were left alone to play themselves out. The CARES Act coronavirus relief measure, however, clearly signals that the federal government is not going to leave the economy on its own to face the recession’s ravages. As a part of the act, banks were granted the option of delaying the implementation of CECL, the new credit loss recognition standard, which would have had the effect of speeding up the recognition of losses, until the virus emergency passes. The act also provided relief from a loan modification rule, thereby encouraging banks to work out new, easier terms to prevent defaults, and allowed community banks to operate with a reduced minimum equity capital cushion. The $850 billion dedicated to supporting small business borrowers ($350 billon) and other borrowers, including airlines and companies deemed critical to national security ($500 billion) will also benefit their creditors. It is clear to us that forbearance, which will help debtors and creditors weather the social-distancing storm, has been established as a guiding principle for managing through the crisis. Policymakers are out to help banks, not to clip their wings. Investors should also recognize that a lot of lending to small businesses and industrial borrowers has migrated away from banks. They do not stand as squarely in the path of the default storm as they would have in the ‘70s, ‘80s and ‘90s. Direct-lending funds sprung up in the wake of the 2008-9 crisis like mushrooms after the rain, and publicly-traded business development companies (BDCs) have steadily grown their SMID lending share. The biggest industrial borrowers are much more likely to turn to the bond market than they are to call on a syndicate of banks. Finally, the existence of unused loan commitments has occasioned concern among commentators and investors over the last several weeks. If corporate borrowers were to tap their credit lines en masse, would banks find themselves significantly more leveraged? Not at Wells Fargo, where total unfunded lending commitments are about at the middle of their range over the past 25 years (Chart 7, top panel), and its commitments to corporate borrowers are at the low end of their range (Chart 7, second panel). Credit card borrowers may be more inclined to max out their capacity (Chart 7, bottom panel), but that may not be a bad thing for bank profits. Interest on unpaid card balances produces juicy returns, and the 2005 bankruptcy overhaul makes it more difficult to discharge credit card debt. Bullish Or Bearish? Based on what we know now, we do not expect that the SIFI banks will pose a systemic threat to the financial system. Entire industries are at risk, and a multitude of small businesses are reeling, but banks have less exposure than they have in the past, and the Fed and Congress are on a war footing to try to protect the most vulnerable parts of the economy. The looming hit to the banks may be less severe than markets expect. Banks are especially exposed to the business cycle, and the market rule is to avoid them ahead of recessions. From a fundamental perspective, though, the last seven recessions have not been so bad for Wells Fargo. Its per-share book value managed to rise in all of them except the ’90-’91 recession3 (Chart 8). The stock slid in recessions because its book value multiple was slashed (Chart 9). Chart 8Book Value Doesn't Suffer Too Much In Recessions, ... Chart 9... But Multiples Are Regularly Crushed Wells Fargo’s multiple has been slashed again; as of Friday’s close, using its December 31st book value, it had fallen by 44%, from 1.33 to 0.75, and it had been more than halved as of last Monday. It trades at just 90% of its year-end tangible book value. On our first day on an equity trading desk, an old-timer told us that you “buy ‘em at one [times book], and sell ‘em at two.” He was talking about the investment banks, but Wells Fargo’s history suggests the maxim applies to commercial banks, too. In our view, SIFI banks offer an appealing margin of safety to investors who buy them at or below their tangible book value. The degree to which individual banks’ book values fall in this quarter and beyond depends on the size of their loan-loss provisions, but the selloff appears extreme. We noted the appeal of writing out-of-the-money puts on the SIFI banks last week, when the VIX was in the high 70s. Selling those options has lost some appeal after the S&P 500’s 10% surge last week, but writing them could again be alluring if the SIFIs revisit their lows in the coming days and weeks.   Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Loans that exceed deposits, or very nearly match them, are a sign of potential instability because banks often rely on “hot-money” flows to fund them by offering above-market interest rates on instruments like CDs. A bank must continue to pay above-market rates to retain these flows, which are prone to leave the bank for higher interest rates elsewhere. Loan-to-deposit ratios well below 100% can be funded entirely with core deposits, like checking and savings accounts, or market-rate CDs placed with core banking customers who are unlikely to move their business. 2 A bank’s leverage is calculated by dividing its total assets by its common shareholders’ equity. 3 Book value would have shrunk in 2008 if not for the purchase of Wachovia Bank at a significant discount.
Dear Client, I will be discussing the economic and financial implications of the pandemic with my colleague Caroline Miller this Friday, March 27 at 8:00 AM EDT (12:00 PM GMT, 1:00 PM CET, 8:00 PM HKT). I hope you will be able to join us for this webcast. Next week, we will send you a special report prepared by BCA’s Chief Economist Martin Barnes. Martin will provide his perspective on the current crisis, focusing on some of the longer-run implications. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights The world is in the midst of a deep recession. Growth should recover in the third quarter as the measures taken to compensate for the initial slow response to the crisis are relaxed and existing measures are better calibrated to reduce economic distress. Continued monetary support and unprecedented fiscal stimulus should help drive the recovery once businesses reopen and workers return to their jobs. Investors should maintain a modest overweight to global equities. US stocks will lag their foreign peers over the next 12 months. The US dollar has peaked. A weaker dollar should help lift commodity prices and the more cyclical sectors of the stock market. High-yield credit spreads will narrow over the next 12 months, but we prefer investment-grade credit on a risk-reward basis. Investors are understating the potential long-term inflationary consequences of all the stimulus that has been unleashed on the global economy. Buy TIPS and gold. I. Macroeconomic Outlook The global economy is now in recession. The recession has occurred because policymakers saw it as the lesser of two evils. They judged, with good reason, that a temporary shutdown of most non-essential economic activities was a price worth paying to contain the virus. Outside of China, the level of real GDP is likely to be down 1%-to-3% in Q1 of 2020 relative to Q4 of 2019, and down another 5%-to-10% in Q2 relative to Q1. On a sequential annualized basis, this implies that GDP growth could register a negative print of 40% in some countries in the second quarter, a stunning number that has few parallels in history. Growth in China should stage a modest rebound in the second quarter, reflecting the success the country has had in containing the virus. Nevertheless, the level of Chinese economic activity will remain well below its pre-crisis trend, with exports increasingly weighed down by the collapse in overseas spending. A One-Two Punch The “sudden stop” nature of the downturn stems from the fact that the global economy was simultaneously hit by both a massive demand and supply shock. When households are confined to their homes, they cannot spend as much as they normally would. This is particularly the case in an environment of heightened risk aversion, which usually leads to increased precautionary savings. At times like these, businesses also slash spending in a desperate effort to preserve cash. All this reduces aggregate demand. On the supply side, production has been impaired because of workers’ inability to get to their jobs. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, less than 30% of US employees can work from home (Chart 1). Since modern economies rely on an intricate division of labor, disturbances in one part of the economy quickly ripple through to other parts. The global supply chain ceases to function normally. Chart 1US: Who Can Work From Home And Who Cannot? Think of this as a Great Depression-style demand shock combined with a category five hurricane supply shock.  The fact that both of these shocks have been concentrated in the service sector, which represents at least two-thirds of GDP in most economies, has made the situation even worse (Chart 2). During most recessions, the service sector is the ballast that helps stabilize the economy in the face of sharp declines in the more cyclical sectors such as manufacturing and housing. This time is different. Chart 2The Service Sector Accounts For A Big Chunk Of GDP And Has Been Very Hard Hit The Shape Of The Recovery: L, U, or V? Provided that the number of new infections around the world stabilizes during the next two months, growth should begin to recover in the third quarter. What will the recovery look like? From the perspective of sequential quarterly growth rates, a V-shaped recovery is inevitable simply because a string of quarters of negative 20%-to-40% growth would quickly leave the world with no GDP at all. However, thinking in terms of growth rates is not the best approach. It is better to think of the level of real GDP. Chart 3 shows three scenarios: 1) An L-shaped profile for real GDP where the level of output falls and then remains permanently depressed relative to its long-term trend; 2) A sluggish U-shaped recovery where output slowly rebounds starting in the second half of the year; and 3) A rapid V-shaped recovery where output quickly moves back to its pre-crisis trend. Chart 3Profile Of The Recovery: L, U, or V? We had previously thought that the recovery from the pandemic would be V-shaped. Compared to the sluggish recovery following the Great Recession, that is likely still true. However, at this point, we would prefer to characterize the probable recovery as being more U-shaped in nature. This is mainly because the measures necessary to contain the virus may end up having to remain in place, in one form or another, for the next few years. Why Not L? Given the likelihood that containment measures will continue to weigh on economic activity, how can an L-shaped “recovery” be avoided? While such a dire outcome cannot be ruled out, there are three reasons to think “U” is more likely than “L”. Reason #1: We Will Learn From Experience It is almost certain that we will figure out how to fine-tune containment measures to reduce the economic burden without increasing the number of lives lost. There are still many questions that remain unanswered. For example: Are restaurants where family members sit together really more dangerous than bars or conferences where strangers are milling about talking to one another? How dangerous is air travel? Modern airplanes have hospital-grade filtration systems that recirculate all the air in the cabin every three minutes. Might this explain why there has only been a handful of flight attendants that have tested positive for the virus? How contagious are children, who often may not present any symptoms at all? Which drugs might slow the spread of the disease or perhaps even cure it? To what extent would widespread mask-wearing help? Yes, a mask may not prevent you from catching the virus, but if there is major social stigma associated with being unmasked in public, then people who have the virus and may not know it will be less of a threat to others. One study estimates that the virus could be completely eradicated if 80% of people always wore masks.1  With time, we will learn the answers to these questions. We will also be able to stockpile masks, ventilators, respirators, and test kits – all of which are currently in short supply – to better combat the virus. Reason #2: We Are NowOvercompensating For Lost Time Second, most countries are currently at the stage where they are trying not just to bring down the basic reproduction number for the virus to 1, but to drive it down to well below 1. There is merit in doing so. If you can reduce the reproduction number to say, 0.5, meaning that 100 people with the virus will pass it on to only 50 other people, then the number of new infections will fall rapidly over time. This is what China was finally able to achieve. A recent study documented that China succeeded in bringing down the reproduction number in Wuhan from 3.86 to 0.32 once all the containment measures had been implemented (Chart 4).2 Chart 4Severe Containment Measures Have Changed The Course Of The Wuhan Outbreak The critical point is that once you reduce the number of new infections to a sufficiently low level, you can then relax the containment measures by just enough so that the reproduction number rises back to 1. At that point, the number of new infections at any given point in time will be constant. One can see this point by imagining a bicycle coasting down a mountain road. Ideally, the rider should apply uniform pressure on the brakes at the outset of the descent to prevent the bicycle from accelerating too quickly. However, if the rider is too slow to apply the brakes and ends up going too fast, he or she will then need to overcompensate by pressing hard on the brakes to slow the bike down before easing off the brakes a bit. Most of the world is currently in the same predicament as the cyclist who failed to squeeze the brakes early on. We are overcompensating to get the infection rate down. However, once the infection rate has fallen by enough, we can ease off the most economically onerous measures, allowing GDP to slowly recover. Reason #3: Containment Measure Will Be Eased As More People Acquire Immunity Much of the popular discussion of the epidemiology of COVID-19 has failed to distinguish between the basic reproduction number, R0, and the effective reproduction number, Re. The former measures the average number of people a carrier of the virus will infect in an entirely susceptible population, whereas the latter measures the average number of people who will be infected after some fraction of the population acquires immunity either by surviving the disease or getting vaccinated. Mathematically, Re = R0*(1-P), where P is the proportion of the population which has acquired immunity. For example, suppose P=0.5, meaning that half the population has acquired immunity. In this case, the average number of people a carrier will infect will be only half as high as when no one has immunity. As we discuss below, there is considerable uncertainty about how fast P will increase over time, including whether it could spike upwards if a vaccine becomes widely available. Still, any increase in P will make it more difficult for the virus to propagate. Over time, this will permit policymakers to raise R0 at an accelerating rate towards the level it would naturally be in the absence of any containment measures (Chart 5). Such a strategy would allow economic activity to increase without raising Re; that is to say, without triggering an explosion in the number of new cases. Chart 5Populations Acquiring Immunity Is Key The Virus Endgame How long will it take to dismantle all the containment measures completely? This partly depends on what medical breakthroughs occur and what measures are needed to “flatten the curve” of new infections (Chart 6). Right now, most countries are trying to drive down the number of new infections to very low levels in the hopes that either a vaccine will be invented or new treatment options will become available. Chart 6Flattening The Curve We are not medical experts and will not offer an opinion on how likely a breakthrough may be. What we would say is that combating the virus has become a modern-day Manhattan project. If the project succeeds, a V-shaped recovery could still ensue. What if the virus evades the best efforts of scientists to eradicate it? In that case, the only way for life to return to some semblance of normalcy is for the population to acquire herd immunity. How many people would need to be infected? In the context of the foregoing discussion, this is equivalent to asking how high P needs to rise for Re to fall below 1. The equation above tells us this must correspond to the value of P for which R0 (1-P) <1. Solving for P yields P > 1-1/R0. In the absence of social distancing and other containment measures, most estimates of R0 for COVID-19 place it between 1.5 and 4. This implies that between one-third (1-1/1.5) to three-quarters (1-1/4) of the population would need to be infected for herd immunity to set in. Even if one allows for the likelihood that significantly more resources will be marshalled to allow hospitals to service a greater number of patients, we estimate that it would take 2-to-3 years to reach that point.3 To be clear, the virus’ ability to spread will decline even before herd immunity is achieved. An increase in the share of the population who survived and became naturally inoculated against the virus would allow policymakers to relax containment measures, perhaps to such an extent that eventually only the simplest of actions such as increased hand-washing and widespread mask-wearing would be enough to prevent hospitals from being overwhelmed. This underscores our baseline expectation of a U-shaped economic recovery. Second-Round Effects Suppose the global economy starts to recover in the third quarter of this year as the measures taken to compensate for the initial slow response to the crisis are relaxed, existing measures are better calibrated to reduce economic distress, and more younger and healthier people acquire natural immunity to the virus, thus reducing the vulnerability of the old and frail. Does that mean we are out of the woods? Not necessarily! We still have to worry about the second-round economic effects. Even if the virus is contained, there is a risk that the economy will be so scarred by the initial drop in output that it will fail to recover. A vicious circle could emerge where falling spending leads to higher unemployment, leading to even less spending. In the current environment, the tendency for unemployment to rise may be initially mitigated by the decision of a few large companies with ample financial resources to pay their workers even if they are confined to their homes. This would result in a decline in labor productivity rather than higher unemployment. That said, given the severity of the shock and the fact that many of the hardest-hit firms are in the labor-intensive service sector, a sharp rise in joblessness is still inevitable, particularly in countries with flexible labor markets such as the US. Chart 7Worries Over Job Security Abound Today’s spike in US initial unemployment claims is testament to that point (Chart 7). In fact, the true increase in the unemployment rate will probably be greater than what is implied by the claims data because many state websites did not have the bandwidth to handle the slew of applications. In addition, under existing rules, the self-employed and those working in the “gig economy” do not qualify for unemployment benefits (this has been rectified in the bill now making its way to the White House). The Role Of Policy Could we really end up in a world where the virus is contained, and people are ready and able to work, only to find that there are no jobs available? While such a sorry outcome cannot be dismissed, we would bet against it. This outcome would only arise if there is insufficient demand throughout the economy when it reopens. Unlike in 2008/09 when there was a lot of moralizing about how this or that group deserved to be punished for their reckless behavior, no one in their right mind today would argue that the workers losing their jobs and the companies facing bankruptcy somehow had it coming. What can policymakers realistically do? On the monetary side, policy rates are already close to zero in most developed economies. A number of emerging markets still have scope to cut rates, but even there, many find themselves not far from the zero bound (Chart 8). Chart 8DM Rates At The Zero Bound, With EM Rates Approaching Chart 9A Mad Scramble For Cash   That said, cutting interest rates right now is not the only, and probably not the most important, way for central banks to stimulate their economies. The global economy is facing a cash shortage. Companies are tapping credit lines at a time when banks would normally be looking to increase their own cash reserves. The mad scramble for cash has caused libor, repo, and commercial paper spreads to surge (Chart 9). And not just any cash. As the world’s reserve currency, the dollar is increasingly in short supply (Chart 10). This explains why cross-currency basis spreads have soared and why the DXY index has jumped to the highest level in 17 years. Chart 10Dollars Are In Short Supply   Flood The Zone Chart 11US Mortgage Spreads Have Spiked The good news is that there is no limit to how many dollars the Federal Reserve can create. The Fed has already expanded the supply of bank reserves by initiating the purchase of $500 billion in treasuries and another $200 billion in agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS) since relaunching its QE program on March 15th. Further MBS purchases will be especially useful given that mortgage rates have not come down as quickly as Treasury yields (Chart 11). The Fed has also dusted off the alphabet soup of programs created during the financial crisis to improve proper market functioning, and has even added a few more to the list, including a program to support investment-grade corporate bonds and another to support small businesses. In order to ease overseas funding pressures, the Fed has opened up swap lines with a number of central banks. We expect these lines to be expanded to more countries if the situation necessitates it. The Coming Mar-A-Lago Accord? We also think that there is at least a 50-50 chance that we could see coordinated currency interventions designed to drive down the value of the US dollar. Federal Reserve, Treasury, and IMF guidelines all permit currency intervention to counter “disorderly market conditions.” While a weaker dollar would erode the export competitiveness of some countries, this would be more than offset by the palliative effects of additional dollar liquidity stemming from US purchases of foreign securities, as well as the relief that overseas dollar borrowers would receive from dollar depreciation. Thus, on balance, a weaker dollar would result in an easing of global financial conditions. Liquidity Versus Solvency Risk Some might complain that the actions of the Fed and other central banks go well beyond their mandates. They might argue that it is one thing to provide liquidity to the financial system; it is quite another to socialize credit risk. We think these arguments are largely red herrings. For one thing, concern about credit risk can be addressed by having governments backstop central banks for any losses they incur. Moreover, there is no clear distinction between liquidity and solvency risk during a financial crisis. The former can very easily morph into the latter. For example, consider the case of Italy. Would you buy more Italian bonds if the yield rises? That depends on two competing considerations. On the one hand, a higher yield makes the bond cheaper. On the other hand, a higher yield may make it more difficult for the government to service its debt obligations, which raises the risk of default. If the second consideration outweighs the first, your inclination may be to sell the bond. To the extent that your selling causes yields to rise further, that could lead to another wave of selling. As Chart 12 illustrates, this means that there may be multiple equilibria in fixed-income markets. It is absolutely the job of central banks to try to steer the economy towards the good ”low yield” equilibrium rather than the bad “default” equilibrium. Chart 12Multiple Equilibria In Debt Markets Are Possible Without A Lender Of Last Resort In this light, ECB president Christine Lagarde’s statement on March 12th that “we are not here to close spreads” –  coming on the heels of a spike in Italian bond yields and a 13% drop in euro area stocks the prior day – was one of the most negligent things a central banker has ever said. To her credit, she has since walked back her comments. The ECB has also launched the Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme (PEPP), a EUR 750bn asset-purchase program, which gives the central bank considerable flexibility over the timing, composition, and geographic makeup of purchases. Further actions, including upsizing the PEPP, creating a “conditionality-lite” version of the ESM program, and perhaps even issuing Eurobonds, are possible. All this should help Italy. Accordingly, BCA’s global fixed-income team upgraded Italian government bonds to overweight this week. Using Fiscal Policy To Align Financial Time With Economic Time While central banks will play an important role in mitigating the crisis, most of the economic burden will fall on fiscal policy. How much fiscal support is necessary and what should it consist of? To get a sense of what is optimal, it is useful to distinguish between the concept of financial time and economic time. Financial time and economic time usually beat at the same pace. Most of the time, people have financial obligations – rent, mortgage payments, spending on necessities – that they match with the income earned from work. Likewise, companies have expenses that they match with the revenue that they derive from various economic activities.  No one worries when economic time and financial time deviate in predictable ways. For example, GDP collapses around 5pm on Monday only to recover at 9am on Tuesday. The fact that many western Europeans take most of August off for vacation is also not a problem, since everyone expects this. The problem occurs when economic time and financial time deviate in unpredictable ways. That is the case at present. Today, economic time has ground to a halt as businesses shutter their doors and workers confine themselves to their homes. Yet, financial time continues to march on. This implies that in the near term, the correct course of action is for governments to transfer money to households and firms to allow them to service their financial obligations. One simple way of achieving this is through wage subsidies, where the government pays companies most of the wage bill of their employees who, through no fault of their own, are unable to work. Note that this strategy does not boost GDP. By definition, an idle worker is one who does not contribute to economic output. What this strategy does do is alleviate needless hardship, while creating pent-up demand for when businesses start to open their doors again. Once the virus is contained, traditional fiscal stimulus that boosts aggregate demand will be appropriate. How much money are we talking about? In the case of the US, suppose that annualized growth is -5% in Q1, -25% in Q2, and +10% in Q3 and Q4, respectively. That would leave the level of real GDP down 4% on the year compared to 2019. Assuming trend GDP growth of 2%, that implies an annual shortfall of income (consisting of wages and lost profits) that the government would have to cover amounting to 6% of GDP. The $2 trillion stimulus bill amounts to 10% of GDP, although not all of that will be spent during the next 12 months and about a quarter of the amount is in the form of loans and loan guarantees. Still, on size, we would give it an “A”. On composition, we would give it a “B”, as it lacks sufficient funding for state and local governments to cover the likely decline in the tax revenues that they will experience. This could result in layoffs of first responders, teachers, etc. Given that the US was running a fiscal deficit going into the crisis, all this additional stimulus could easily push the budget deficit to over 15% of GDP. While this is a huge number, keep in mind that in a world where interest rates are below the trend growth rate of the economy, a government can permanently increase its budget deficit by any amount it wants while still achieving a stable debt-to-GDP ratio over the long haul.4 Today, we are not even talking about a permanent increase in the deficit, but a temporary increase that could last a few years at most. If we end up in a depression, don’t blame the virus; blame politicians. Fortunately, given that the political incentives are aligned towards fiscal easing rather than austerity, our guess is that a depression will be averted. Appendix A summarizes the monetary and fiscal measures that have already been taken in the major economies. II. Investment Strategy As anyone who has ever watched a horror movie knows, the scariest part of the film is the one before the monster is revealed to the audience. No matter how good the makeup or set design, our imaginations can always conjure up something much more frightening than Hollywood can invent. Right now, we are fighting an invisible enemy that is ravaging the world. Victory is in sight. The number of new infections has peaked in China and South Korea. I mentioned during last week’s webcast that we should watch Italy very carefully. If the number of new infections peaks there, that would send an encouraging signal to financial markets that other western democracies will be able to get the virus under control. While it is too early to be certain, this may be happening: Both the number of new cases and deaths in Italy have stabilized over the past five days (Chart 13). Chart 13A Peak In The Number Of New COVID-19 Cases In Italy Would Send An Encouraging Signal Of course, there is still the risk that the number of new infections will rise again if containment measures are relaxed prematurely. However, as we spelled out in this report, there are good reasons to think that these measures will not need to be as severe as the ones currently in place. As such, it is likely that global growth will begin to rebound in the third quarter of this year. Equities: A Modest Overweight Is Warranted We turned more cautious on the near-term outlook for global equities earlier this year, but upgraded our recommendation on the morning of February 28th after the MSCI All-Country World Index fell by 12% over the prior week. While stocks did rally by 7% during the following three trading days, they subsequently plunged to multi-year lows. In retrospect, we should have paid more attention to our own warnings in our earlier report titled “Markets Too Complacent About The Coronavirus.” 5 For now, we would recommend a modest overweight to stocks on both a 3-month and 12-month horizon. Monetary and fiscal easing and the prospect of a peak in the number of new cases in Italy could continue to support stocks in the near term, while a rebound in growth starting this summer should pave the way for a recovery in corporate earnings over a 12-month horizon. Chart 14US Equity Valuations Are Not Yet At Bombed-Out Levels Of course, when it comes to financial markets, one should always be prepared to adjust one’s conviction level if prices either rise or fall significantly. We mentioned two weeks ago that we would move to a high-conviction overweight if the S&P 500 fell below 2250. While the index did briefly fall below this level, it has since bounced back to about 2630. At its current level, the S&P 500 is trading at 15.3-times forward earnings (Chart 14). While this is not particularly expensive, it is still well above the trough of 10.5-times forward earnings reached in 2011 during the height of the euro crisis. And keep in mind that current earnings estimates are based on the stale assumption that S&P 500 companies will earn $172 over the next four quarters, down only 3% from the peak earnings estimate of $177 reached in February. With this in mind, we are introducing a lower and upper bound for global equity prices at which we will adjust our view. To keep things simple, we will focus on the S&P 500, which accounts for over half of global stock market capitalization. If the S&P 500 falls below (and stays below) 2250, we would recommend a high-conviction overweight to global stocks. If the index rises above 2750, we would recommend a neutral equity allocation. Anything between 2250 and 2750 would justify the current stance of modest overweight. Going forward, we will adjust this range as events warrant it. Our full slate of views can be found in the table at the end of this report. Sector And Regional Equity Allocation: Favor Cyclicals and Non-US Over A 12-Month Horizon Not surprisingly, defensive equity sectors outperformed cyclicals both in the US and abroad during this month’s selloff. Financials also underperformed on heightened worries about rising defaults and the adverse effect on net interest margins from flatter yield curves (Chart 15). Chart 15Cyclicals And Financials Underperformed On The Way Down Chart 16Non-US Stocks Are Cheaper Even After Adjusting For Differences In Sector Weights   Cyclicals and financials have outperformed the broader market over the past few days as risk sentiment has improved. They are likely to continue outperforming over a 12-month horizon as global growth eventually recovers and yield curves steepen modestly. To the extent that cyclicals and financials are overrepresented in stock market indices outside the US, this will give non-US equities the edge. Stocks outside the US also benefit from more favorable valuations. Even after adjusting for differences in sector weights, non-US stocks are quite a bit cheaper than their US peers as judged by price-to-earnings, price-to-book, and other valuation measures (Chart 16). The US Dollar Has Probably Peaked Another factor that should help cyclical stocks later this year is the direction of the US dollar. The greenback has been buffeted by two major forces this year (Chart 17). Chart 17The Dollar Has Been Facing Crosscurrents Chart 18USD Is A Countercyclical Currency   Between February 19 and March 9, the dollar weakened as US bond yields fell more than yields abroad. This eliminated some of the yield advantage that had been supporting the dollar last year. Starting around the second week of March, however, global financial stresses escalated. Money began to flow into the safe-haven Treasury market. Global growth prospects also deteriorated sharply. As a countercyclical currency, this helped the dollar (Chart 18). Looking out, interest rate differentials are unlikely to return anywhere close to where they were at the start of this year, given that the Fed will probably keep rates near zero at least until the middle of 2021. Meanwhile, aggressive central bank liquidity injections should reduce financial stress, while a rebound in global growth will allow capital to start flowing back towards riskier foreign markets. This should result in a weaker dollar. Once Growth Bottoms, So Will Commodities Chart 19Low Prices Force US Shale Cutbacks The combination of a weaker dollar, a rebound in global growth starting this summer, and increased infrastructure stimulus spending in China should help lift resource prices. This will also buoy currencies such as the AUD, CAD, and NOK in the developed market space, and RUB, CLP, ZAR, and IDR, in the EM space. Oil prices have tumbled on the back of the sudden stop in global economic activity and the breakdown of the agreement between OPEC and Russia to restrain crude production. BCA’s commodity strategists expect the Saudis and Russians to come to an agreement to reduce output, as neither side has an incentive to pursue a prolonged price war. They see Brent prices averaging $36/barrel in 2020 and $55/barrel in 2021. However, prices are not likely to go much higher than $60/barrel because that would take them well above the current breakeven cost for shale producers, eliciting a strong supply response (Chart 19). Spread Product: Favor IG Over HY A rebound in oil prices from today’s ultra-depressed levels should help the bonds of energy companies, which are overrepresented in high-yield indices. This, together with stronger global growth and improving risk sentiment, should allow HY spreads to narrow over a 12-month horizon. Chart 20High-Yield Credit Is Pricing In Only A Moderate Recession Nevertheless, we think investment grade currently offers a better risk-reward profile. While HY spreads have jumped to more than 1000 basis points in the US, they are still nowhere close to 2008 peak levels of almost 2000 basis points. Like the equity market, high-yield credit is pricing in only a modest recession, with a default rate on par with the 2001 downturn (Chart 20). Moreover, central banks around the world are racing to protect high-quality borrowers from default. The Fed’s announcement that it will effectively backstop the investment-grade corporate bond market could be a game changer in this regard. Unfortunately for HY credit, the moral hazard consequences of bailing out companies that investors knew were risky when they first bought the bonds are too great for policymakers to bear. Government Bonds: Deflation Today, Inflation Tomorrow? As noted at the outset of this report, the current economic downturn involves both an adverse supply and demand shock. Outside of a few categories of consumer staples and medical products, we expect demand to fall more than supply, resulting in downward pressure on prices. This deflationary impulse will be exacerbated by rising unemployment. Looking beyond the next 12-to-18 months, the outlook for inflation is less clear. On the one hand, it is possible that the psychological trauma from the pandemic will produce a permanent, or at least semi-permanent, increase in precautionary savings. If budget deficits are reined in too quickly, many countries could find themselves facing a shortage of aggregate demand. This would be deflationary. On the other hand, one can easily envision a scenario where monetary policy remains highly accommodative and many of the fiscal measures put in place to support households are maintained long after the virus is eradicated. This could be particularly true in the US, where our geopolitical team now expects Joe Biden to win the presidential election. In such an environment, unemployment could fall back to its lows, eventually leading to an overheated economy. Our hunch is that the more inflationary scenario will unfold over the next 2-to-3 years. Interestingly, that is not the market’s opinion. For example, the 5-year US TIPS breakeven inflation rate is currently only 0.69% and the 10-year rate is 1.07%. This means that a buy-and-hold investor will make money owning TIPS versus nominals if inflation averages more than 0.69% per year for the next five years, or 1.07% per year for the next decade. That is a bet we would be willing to take. Finally, a word on gold. Just as during the Global Financial Crisis, gold failed to be an attractive hedge against financial risk during the recent stock market selloff – bullion dropped by 15% from $1704/oz to $1451/oz, before rebounding back to $1640/oz over the past few days as risk sentiment improved. Nevertheless, gold remains a good hedge against long-term inflation risk. And with the US dollar likely to weaken over the next 12 months, gold prices should move up even if near-term inflationary pressures remain contained. As such, we are upgrading our outlook on the yellow metal. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Appendix A Appendix A Table 1Central Banks Still Had Some Options When Crisis Hit Appendix A Table 2Massive Stimulus In Response To Pandemic Footnotes 1  Jing Yan, Suvajyoti Guha, Prasanna Hariharan, and Matthew Myers, “Modeling the Effectiveness of Respiratory Protective Devices in Reducing Influenza Outbreak,” U.S. National Library of Medicine, (39:3), March 2019. 2  Chaolong Wang, Li Liu, Xingjie Hao, Huan Guo, Qi Wang, Jiao Huang, Na He, Hongjie Yu, Xihong Lin, Sheng Wei, and Tangchun Wu, “Evolving Epidemiology and Impact of Non-pharmaceutical Interventions on the Outbreak of Coronavirus Disease 2019 in Wuhan, China,”medrxiv.org, March 6, 2020. 3  This calculation assumes that 5% of infected people need ICU care and each spends an average of 2 weeks in the ICU. It also assumes that hospitals are able to expand their capacity by 30 additional ICU beds per 100,000 people per year to treat COVID-19. 4  Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Is There Really Too Much Government Debt In The World?” dated February 22, 2019, available at gis.bcarearch.com. 5  Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Markets Too Complacent About The Coronavirus,” dated February 21, 2020, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. Global Investment Strategy View Matrix MacroQuant Model And Current Subjective Scores Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
In an emergency meeting last Friday, the Bank of Canada lowered the overnight target rate by 50 basis points rate to 0.25%. Meanwhile, it also launched two new programs to restore liquidity to financial markets.&nbsp; The Commercial Paper Purchase Program…
Last Friday, BCA Research's Global Investment Strategy service’s Q2 Strategic Outlook report concluded that investors should think of the coronavirus-induced ‘sudden stop’ in global economic activity as a Great Depression-style demand shock combined with a…
Unsurprisingly, European consumer confidence has declined sharply as a result of&nbsp;lockdown measures required to contain the spread of COVID-19. The GfK survey in Germany fell from 8.3 to 2.7, much worse than the consensus expectation of 7.1, and close to…
Highlights The pillars of dollar support continue to fall, but the missing catalyst is visibility on the trajectory of global growth. For now, we remain constructive on the DXY short term, but bearish longer term. Market internals and currency technicals have become supportive of pro-cyclical trades in recent days. There is tremendous value in the Norwegian krone, Swedish krona and British pound. Buy a basket of NOK and SEK against a basket of USD and EUR. Feature Markets are getting some semblance of calm after being flooded with vast amounts of monetary and fiscal stimulus. The DXY index, having breached the psychological 100 level, failed to break above 103, and is now in a volatile trading pattern of lower intra-day highs. The message is that the Federal Reserve’s injection of liquidity, along with generous USD swap lines for major central banks, has eased the funding crisis (Chart I-1).1 All eyes will now begin to focus on fiscal support, especially from the US. As we go to press, US leaders have agreed to a $2 trillion fiscal package. As we highlighted last week, a central bank cannot do much about an economy in a liquidity trap, but governments can step in and be spenders of last resort. While fiscal stimulus is a welcome catalyst, the impact on the economy is likely to be felt a bit later. More importantly, until the number of new Covid-19 cases peak, the global economy will remain in shutdown, and visibility on the recovery will be opaque (Chart I-2). This provides an air pocket in which the dollar can make new highs, especially if the slowdown is not of a garden variety, but a deep recession. Chart I-1A Shortage Of Dollars Chart I-2Some Reason For Optimism We continue to monitor the behavior of market internals and currency technicals to gauge a shift in market dynamics. Both liquidity and valuation indicators are USD bearish, but as a momentum currency, the dollar will benefit from any signs we are entering a more protracted slowdown. In this report, we use a simple framework for ranking G10 currencies – the macroeconomic environment, valuation and sentiment. There has been a tectonic shift in currency markets over the last few weeks which has uncovered some very compelling opportunities. This is good news for investors willing to stomach near-term volatility. In short, we like the pound, Swedish krona and Norwegian krone. Are Policy Actions Enough? Chart I-3The Dollar And Interest Rates Diverge There has been an unprecedented wave of monetary and fiscal stimulus announced in recent weeks.2 This should eventually backstop economic activity. Below we highlight a few key developments, along with our thoughts. USD: The Fed has cut interest rates to zero and announced unlimited QE. As we go to press, a $2 trillion fiscal package has been passed. This represents a much bigger monetary and fiscal package compared to the 2008 Great Recession. The near-term impact will be to boost aggregate demand, but the massive increase in the supply of dollars should lower the USD exchange rate. As a rule of thumb, lower interest rates in the US have usually been bearish for the currency (Chart I-3). EUR: The European central bank has announced a €750 billion package effectively backstopping the peripheral bond market. The good news is that the structural issues in the periphery are much less pronounced than during the 2010-2011 crisis. This is positive for the euro over the longer term, as cheaper funding should boost capital spending and productivity. GBP: The Bank of England has cut interests to almost zero and expanded QE. Meanwhile, there has been an intergenerational shift in the pound. The lesson from the imbroglio in British politics since 2016 is that cable at 1.20 has been the floor for a “hard Brexit” under normal conditions. This makes the latest selloff an indiscriminate liquidation of the pound. On a real effective exchange rate-basis, the pound is close to two standard deviations below its mean since 1965. On this basis, only two currencies are cheaper: the Norwegian krone and Swedish krona. AUD: The Reserve Bank Of Australia cut interest rates to 25 basis points and has introduced QE. The Aussie is now trading below the lows seen during the Great Financial Crisis. This suggests any shock to Aussie growth will have to be larger than 2008 to nudge the AUD lower. CAD: The Bank Of Canada has cut rates to 75 basis points and introduced a generous fiscal package. More may be needed if the downdraft in oil prices persists beyond the near term. We highlighted a few weeks ago how the landscape was rapidly stepping into one of competitive devaluations.3 We can safely assume that we are already into this zone. One end result of competitive devaluations is that as interest rates converge to zero, relative fundamentals resurface as the key drivers of currency performance. In short, the last few weeks have seen long bond yields converge in the developed world (Chart I-4). That means going forward, picking winners and losers will become as much a structural game as a tactical one. From a bird’s eye view, below are a few key indicators we are monitoring.  Chart I-4The Race To Zero G10 Basic Balances Chart I-5CHF, EUR, AUD and NOK Are Supported The basic balance captures the ebb and flow of demand for a country’s domestic assets. Persistent basic balance surpluses are usually associated with an appreciating currency, and vice versa. This is especially important since the rise in offshore dollar funding has been particularly pernicious for deficit countries. Switzerland sports the best basic balance surplus in the G10 universe, followed by the euro area, Australia and then Norway (Chart I-5). Surpluses imply a constant underlying demand for these currencies - either for domestic goods and services or for investment into portfolio assets. The UK and the US rank the worst in terms of basic balances. As for the UK, the basic balance deficit explains why the recent flight to safety hit the pound particularly hard. Net International Investment Position Both Switzerland and Japan have the largest net international investment positions. These tend to buffet their currencies during crises, since foreign assets are liquidated and the proceeds repatriated home. This is at the root of their status as safe-haven currencies. There has been structural improvement in most G10 net international investment positions, especially compared to the US (Chart I-6). Should the returns on those foreign assets be sufficiently high, this will lead to income receipts for surplus countries, providing an underlying boost for their currency. Chart I-6Structural Increase In G10 NIIP Interest Rates The race to the zero bound has pushed real interest rates into negative territory for most of the developed world. This has also greatly eroded the yield advantage of the US dollar against its G10 peers (Chart I-7). Within the G10 universe, the commodity currencies (Aussie, kiwi and loonie) have become the high yielders in real terms. This yield advantage should help stem structural depreciation in their currencies. Chart I-7Most Of The G10 Has Negative Real Rates Valuation Models One of our favored valuation models for currencies is the real effective exchange rate. The latest downdraft in most G10 currencies has nudged them between one and two standard deviations below fair value (Chart I-8A and Chart I-8B). According to the BIS measure, the Norwegian krone and Swedish krona are currently the cheapest currencies, with the krone trading at more than three standard deviations below its mean fair value. Chart I-8ASome G10 Currencies Are Very Cheap Chart I-8BSome G10 Currencies Are Very Cheap Most importantly, despite the recent rise in the US dollar, it is not yet very expensive. The trade-weighted dollar will need to rise by 8% to bring it one standard deviation above fair value. This was a definitive top in the early 2000s. This rise will also knock the euro lower and push many pro-cyclical currencies into bombed-out levels, making them even more attractive over the long term. Chart I-9NOK and SEK Are Deeply Undervalued Other valuation measures corroborate this view: Our in-house purchasing power parity (PPP) models show the US dollar as only slightly overvalued, by 7%. These models adjust the CPI baskets across countries so as to get closer to an apples-to-apples comparison. The cheapest currencies according to the model are the SEK, NOK, AUD and GBP (Chart I-9). The yen is more attractive than the Swiss franc as a safe-haven currency. Our intermediate-term timing models (ITTM) show the dollar as fairly valued. The main ingredients in these models are real interest rate differentials and a risk factor. On a risk-adjusted return basis, a dynamic hedging strategy based on our ITTMs has outperformed all static hedging strategies for all investors with six different home currencies since 2001. According to these models, the Australian dollar and Norwegian krone are the most attractive currencies, while the Swiss franc is the least attractive. Our long-term FX models are also part of a set of technical tools we use to help us navigate FX markets. Included in these models are variables such as productivity differentials, terms-of-trade, net international investment positions, real rate differentials, and proxies for global risk aversion. These models cover 22 currencies, incorporating both G10 and emerging market FX markets. According to these models, the US dollar is at fair value (mostly against the euro), but the yen, the Norwegian krone and the Swedish krona are quite cheap. In a forthcoming report, we will show how valuation can be used as a tool to enhance excess returns in the currency space. For now, the universal message from our models is that the cheapest currencies are the NOK, SEK, AUD and GBP. Speculative Positioning Chart I-10Speculators Have Been Taking Profits Our favorite sentiment indicator is speculative positioning. More specifically, positioning is quite useful when it is rolling over from an overbought or oversold extreme. Being long Treasurys and the dollar has been a consensus trade for many years now (Chart I-10). According to CFTC data, this has been expressed mostly through the aussie and kiwi, although our bias is that the Swedish krona and Norwegian krone have been the real victims. The key question is whether the unwinding of dollar long positions we have seen in recent days reflects pure profit-taking, or represents a fundamental shift in the outlook for the greenback. Our bias is the former. Net foreign purchases of Treasurys by private investors have reaccelerated anew. Given the momentum of these purchases tends to be persistent over a six-month horizon, it is too early to conclude that dollar gains are behind us. That said, speculative positioning has also uncovered currencies in which investor biases are lopsided. This includes the Australian and New Zealand dollars. Currency Rankings And Portfolio Tweaks The depth and duration of the economic slowdown remain the primary concern for most investors. Should the world economy see a more protracted slowdown than in 2008, then more gains lie ahead for the greenback. This is on the back of a currency that is not too expensive, relative to history. That said, there have been a few currencies that have been indiscriminately sold with the global liquidation in risk assets. These include the Norwegian krone, the British pound and the Swedish krona, among others. To reflect the fundamental shift in both valuation and sentiment indicators, we are buying a basket of the Scandinavian currencies against a basket of both the dollar and euro. Finally, our profit targets on a few trades were hit, and we were stopped out of a few. Please see our trading tables for the latest recommendations. Appendix Table I-1 Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled “The Dollar Funding Crisis”, dated March 19, 2020, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please refer to Appendix Table 1.  3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled “Are Competitive Devaluations Next?”, dated March 6, 2020, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the US have been negative: The Markit manufacturing PMI dropped to 49.2 while the services PMI tanked to 39.1 from 49.4 in March. Initial jobless claims hit 3.3 million, a record high, in the week ended March 20. Nondefense capital goods orders, excluding aircraft, shrank by 0.8% month-on-month in February. The DXY index depreciated by 2.6% this week. The US Senate passed a $2 trillion economic relief package, which is now pending approval by the House. The bill includes direct payments to individuals, US$350 billion in loans to small businesses and investments in medical supplies. The Fed has created a backstop for investment grade bonds by vowing to purchase as many securities as needed to prop up the market. Report Links: The Dollar Funding Crisis - March 19, 2020 Are Competitive Devaluations Next? - March 6, 2020 The Near-Term Bull Case For The Dollar - February 28, 2020 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Recent data in the euro area have been negative: ZEW economic sentiment crashed to -49.5 from 10.4 while consumer confidence fell to -11.6 from -6.6 in March. The Markit manufacturing PMI decreased to 44.8 from 49.2 while the services PMI tumbled to 28.4 from 52.6 in March. This pulled the composite index down to 31.4 from 51.6 in March. The current account increased to EUR 34.7 billlion from EUR 32.6 billion while the trade balance fell to EUR 17.3 billion in January. The euro appreciated by 2.4% against the US dollar this week. ECB President Lagarde argued for the one-off issuance of “coronabonds,” a shared debt instrument among member economies that pools risk and lowers lending costs for the more indebted nations affected by the pandemic.  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 Japanse Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan have been negative: The Jibun bank manufacturing PMI fell to 44.8 from 47.8 in March. The coincident index increased to 95.2 from 94.4 while the leading index fell to 90.5 from 90.9 in January. Imports shrank by 14% while exports shrank by 1% year-on-year in February. The Japanese yen appreciated by 0.9% against the US dollar this week. As expected, the Tokyo Olympics were postponed, striking a further blow to economic activity and the tourism sector. The government is considering a JPY 56 trillion stimulus package that includes cash payments to households and subsidies for small businesses, restaurants and other tourist-related sectors. 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: The Markit manufacturing PMI declined to 28 from 51.7 while the services PMI collapsed to 35.7 from 53.2 in March. Retail sales contracted by 0.3% month-on-month in February from an increase of 1.1% in January. Headline CPI grew by 1.7% year-on-year in February. The public sector net borrowing deficit shrank to GBP 0.4 billion from GBP 12.4 billion in February. The British pound appreciated by 4.3% against the US dollar this week. The Bank of England (BoE) left rates unchanged at 0.1% and decided to continue purchases of UK government bonds and nonfinancial investment grade bonds, bringing the total stock to GBP 645 billion. The BoE has stated that it can expand asset purchases further if needed. 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 negative: The Commonwealth bank manufacturing PMI decreased slightly to 50.1 while the services PMI plunged to 39.8 from 49 in March. The house price index grew by 3.9% quarter-on-quarter from 2.4% in Q4. Unemployment decreased slightly to 5.1% in February. The Australian dollar appreciated by 5.1% against the US dollar this week. The government pledged an additional A$64 billion package, bringing total stimulus to 10% of GDP. The package includes assistance for individuals and small businesses impacted by the virus. Prime Minister Morrison said that more stimulus, including direct cash handouts to households, is likely to be announced over coming weeks. 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 negative: Exports increased to NZD 4.9 billion, imports shrank to NZD 4.3 billion and the monthly trade balance showed a surplus of NZD 593 billion. Credit card spending grew by 2.5% in February from 3.7% the previous month. The New Zealand dollar appreciated by 4.2% against the US dollar this week. The RBNZ turned to quantitative easing and announced the purchase of up to NZ$30 billion of government bonds, at a pace of NZ$750 million per week. The government announced fiscal stimulus of just over NZ$12 billion that includes wage subsidies for businesses, income support, tax relief and support for the airline industry.     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: Headline CPI grew by 2.2% year-on-year in February. Retail sales excluding autos fell by 0.1% month-on-month in January, compared to growth of 0.5% the previous month. Wholesale sales grew by 1.8% month-on-month in January from 1% the previous month. Jobless claims soared to 929 thousand in the week ended March 22, representing almost 5% of the labor force. The Canadian dollar appreciated by 2.8% against the US dollar this week. The government approved a C$107 billion stimulus package that includes payments of C$2,000 per month to individuals unemployed due to Covid-19 and C$55 billion in deferred tax payments for businesses and individuals. Report Links: The Loonie: Upside Versus The Dollar, But Downside At The Crosses Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Making Money With Petrocurrencies - November 8, 2019 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland have been negative: Producer and import prices contracted by 2.1% from 1% year-on-year in February. ZEW expectations sank to -45.8 from 7.7 in March. Imports fell to CHF 15.7 billion from CHF 16 billion while exports fell to CHF 19.2 billion from CHF 20.7 billion in February. The Swiss franc appreciated by 1.6% against the US dollar this week. The Swiss government proposed stimulus worth CHF 32 billion, bringing total stimulus to 6% of GDP. The package will largely consist of bridge loans to small- and medium-sized businesses, social insurance and tax deferrals. The SNB also set up a refinancing facility to provide liquidity to banks. 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: The trade balance declined to 18.3 billion from 21.2 billion in February. Norwegian unemployment soared to 10.9% in March, the highest level since the Great Depression. The Norwegian krone appreciated by 7% against the US dollar this week. The Norges Bank cut rates from 1% to a record low of 0.25%, citing worsening conditions since the 50 basis point cut on March 13. Parliament approved loans, tax deferrals, and extra spending worth NOK 280 billion. The government expects private-sector activity to contract by 15-20% in the near-term. The government will likely need to draw on its sovereign wealth fund to finance spending. Report Links: Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 On Oil, Growth And The Dollar - January 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Recent data in Sweden have been negative: The producer price index contracted by 1.2% year-on-year in February, deepening from 0.4% the previous month. Consumer confidence dropped to 89.6 from 98.5 in March. The trade balance grew to SEK 13.2 billion from SEK 11.8 billion in February. The unemployment rate rose to 8.2% from 7.5% in February. The Swedish krona appreciated by 3.5% against the US dollar this week. The Swedish government bucked the lockdown strategy, choosing to keep businesses open during the pandemic. In addition, the government announced stimulus measures of up to SEK 300 billion, which includes relief for employees that have been laid off or taken sick leave. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Highlights The pandemic has a negative impact on households and has not peaked in the US. But a depression is likely to be averted. Our market-based geopolitical risk indicators point toward a period of rising political turbulence across the world. We are selectively adding risk to our strategic portfolio, but remain tactically defensive. Stay long gold on a strategic time horizon. Feature I'm going where there's no depression, To the lovely land that's free from care. I'll leave this world of toil and trouble My home's in Heaven, I'm going there. - “No Depression In Heaven,” The Carter Family (1936) Chart 1The Pandemic Stimulus Versus The Great Recession Stimulus Markets bounced this week on the back of a gargantuan rollout of government spending that is the long-awaited counterpart to the already ultra-dovish monetary policy of global central banks (Chart 1). Just when the investment community began to worry about a full-fledged economic depression and the prospect for bank runs, food shortages, and martial law in the United States, the market rallied. Yet extreme uncertainty persists over how long one third of the world’s population will remain hidden away in their homes for fear of a dangerous virus (Chart 2). Chart 2Crisis Has Not Verifiably Peaked, Uncertainty Over Timing Of Lockdowns Chart 3The Pandemic Shock To The Labor Market While an important and growing trickle of expert opinion suggests that COVID-19 is not as deadly as once thought, especially for those under the age of 50, consumer activity will not return to normal anytime soon.1 Moreover political and geopolitical risks are skyrocketing and have yet to register in investors’ psyche. Consider: American initial unemployment claims came in at a record-breaking 3.3 million (Chart 3), while China International Capital Corporation estimates that China’s GDP will grow by 2.6% for the year. These are powerful blows against global political as well as economic stability. This should convince investors to exercise caution even as they re-enter the equity market. We are selectively putting some cash to work on a strategic time frame (12 months and beyond) to take advantage of some extraordinary opportunities in equities and commodities. But we maintain the cautious and defensive tactical posture that we initiated on January 24. No Depression In Heaven The US Congress agreed with the White House on an eye-popping $2.2 trillion or 10% of GDP fiscal stimulus. At least 46% of the package consists of direct funds for households and small businesses (Chart 4). This includes $290 billion in direct cash handouts to every middle-class household – essentially “helicopter money,” as it is financed by bonds purchased by the central bank (Table 1). The purpose is to plug the gap left by the near complete halt to daily life and business as isolation measures are taken. A depression is averted, but we still have a recession. Go long consumer staples. Chart 4The US Stimulus Package Breakdown Table 1Distribution Of Cash Handouts Under US Coronavirus Response Act China, the origin of the virus that triggered the global pandemic and recession, is resorting to its time-tried playbook of infrastructure spending, with 3% of GDP in new spending projected. This number is probably heavily understated. It does not include the increase in new credit that will accompany official fiscal measures, which could easily amount to 3% of GDP or more, putting the total new spending at 6%. Germany and the EU have also launched a total fiscal response. The traditionally tight-fisted Berlin has launched an 11% of GDP stimulus, opening the way for other member states to surge their own spending. The EU Commission has announced it will suspend deficit restrictions for all member states. The ECB’s Pandemic Emergency Purchase Program (PEPP) enables direct lending without having to tap the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) or negotiate the loosening of its requirements. It also enables the ECB to bypass the debate over issuing Eurobonds (though incidentally Germany is softening its stance on the latter idea). The cumulative impact of all this fiscal stimulus is 5% of global GDP – and rising (Table 2). Governments will be forced to provide more cash on a rolling basis to households and businesses as long as the pandemic is raging and isolation measures are in place. Table 2The Global Fiscal Stimulus In Response To COVID-19 President Trump has signaled that he wants economic life to begin resuming after Easter Sunday, April 12. But he also said that he will listen to the advice of the White House’s public health advisors. State governors are the ones who implement tough “shelter in place” orders and other restrictions, so the hardest hit states will not resume activity until their governors believe that the impact on their medical systems can be managed. Authorities will likely extend the social distancing measures in April until they have a better handle on the best ways to enable economic activity while preserving the health system. Needless to say, economic activity will have to resume gradually as the government cannot replace activity forever and the working age population can operate even with the threat of contracting the disease (social distancing policies would become more fine-tuned for types of activity, age groups, and health risk profiles). The tipping point from recession to depression would be the point at which the government’s promises of total fiscal and monetary support for households and businesses become incapable of reassuring either the financial markets or citizens. The largest deficit the US government has ever run was 30% of GDP during World War II (Chart 5). Today’s deficit is likely to go well beyond 15% (5% existing plus 10% stimulus package plus falling revenue). If authorities were forced to triple the lockdown period and hence the fiscal response the country would be in uncharted territory. But this is unlikely as the incubation period of the virus is two weeks and China has already shown that a total lockdown can sharply reduce transmission. Chart 5The US's Largest Peacetime Budget Deficit Any tipping point into depression would become evident in behavior: e.g. a return to panic selling, followed by the closure of financial market trading by authorities, bank runs, shortages of staples across regions, and possibly the use of martial law and curfews. While near-term selloffs can occur, the rest seems very unlikely – if only because, again, the much simpler solution is to reduce the restrictions on economic activity gradually for the low-risk, healthy, working age population. Bottom Line: Granting that the healthy working age population can and will eventually return to work due to its lower risk profile, unlimited policy support suggests that a depression or “L-shaped” recovery is unlikely. The Dark Hour Of Midnight Nearing While the US looks to avoid a depression, there will still be a recession with an unprecedented Q2 contraction. The recovery could be a lot slower than bullish investors expect. Global manufacturing was contracting well before households got hit with a sickness that will suppress consumption for the rest of the year. There is another disease to worry about: the dollar disease. The world is heavily indebted and holds $12 trillion in US dollar-denominated debt. Yet the dollar is hitting the highest levels in years and global dollar liquidity is drying up. The greenback has rallied even against major safe haven currencies like the Japanese yen and Swiss franc (Chart 6). Of course, the Fed is intervening to ensure highly indebted US corporates have access to loans and extending emergency dollar swap lines to a total of 14 central banks. But in the near term global growth is collapsing and the dollar is overshooting. This can create a self-reinforcing dynamic. The same goes for any relapse in Chinese growth. Unlike in 2008 – but like 2015 – China is the epicenter of the global slowdown. China has much larger economic and financial imbalances today than it did in 2003 when the SARS outbreak occurred, and it will increase these imbalances going forward as it abandons its attempt to deleverage the corporate sector (Chart 7). Chart 6The Greenback Surge Deprives The World Of Liquidity Chart 7China's Financial Imbalances Are A Worry The rest of emerging markets face their own problems, including poor governance and productivity, as well as the dollar disease and the China fallout. They are unlikely to lift themselves out of this crisis, but they could become the source for credit events and market riots that prolong the global risk-off phase. Bottom Line: It is too soon to sound the all-clear. If the dollar continues on its rampage, then the gigantic stimulus will not be enough, markets will relapse, and fears of deflation will grow. World Of Toil And Trouble Political risk is the next shoe to drop. The pandemic and recession are setting in motion a political earthquake that will unfold over the next decade. Almost all of our 12 market-based geopolitical risk indicators have exploded upward since the beginning of the year. Chart 8China's Political Risk Is Rising These indicators show that developed market equities and emerging market currencies are collapsing far more than is justified by underlying fundamentals. This risk premium reflects the uncertainty of the pandemic, but the recession will destabilize regimes and fuel fears about national security. So the risk premium will not immediately decline in several important cases. China’s political risk is shooting up, as one would expect given that the pandemic began in Hubei (Chart 8). The stress within the Communist Party can be measured by the shrill tone of the Chinese propaganda machine, which is firing on all cylinders to convince the world that Chinese President Xi Jinping did a great job handling the virus while the western nations are failing states that cannot handle it. The western nations are indeed mishandling it, but that does not solve China’s domestic economic and social troubles, which will grow from here. Of course, our political risk indicator will fall if Chinese equities rally more enthusiastically than Chinese state banks expand credit as the economy normalizes. But this would suggest that markets have gotten ahead of themselves. By contrast, if China surges credit, yet equity investors are unenthusiastic, then the market will be correctly responding to the fact that a credit surge will increase economic imbalances and intensify the tug-of-war between authorities and the financial system, particularly over the effort to prevent the property sector bubble from ballooning. China needs to stimulate to recover from the downturn. Obviously it does not want instability for the 100th birthday of the Communist Party in 2021. An even more important reason for stimulus is the 2022 leadership reshuffle – the twentieth National Party Congress. This is the date when Xi Jinping would originally have stepped down and the leading member of the rival faction (Hu Chunhua?) would have taken over the party, the presidency, and the military commission. Today Xi is not at risk of losing power, but with a trade war and recession to his name, he will have to work hard to tighten control over the party and secure his ability to stay in power. An ongoing domestic political crackdown will frighten local governments and private businesses, who are already scarred by the past decade and whose animal spirits are important to the overall economic rebound. It is still possible that Beijing will have to depreciate the renminbi against the dollar. This is the linchpin of the trade deal with President Trump – especially since other aspects of the deal will be set back by the recession. As long as Trump’s approval rating continues to benefit from his crisis response and stimulus deals, he is more likely to cut tariffs on China than to reignite the trade war. This approach will be reinforced by the bump in his approval rating upon signing the $2 trillion Families First Coronavirus Response Act into law (Chart 9). He will try to salvage the economy and his displays of strength will be reserved for market-irrelevant players like Venezuela. But if the virus outbreak and the surge in unemployment turn him into a “lame duck” later this year, then he may adopt aggressive trade policy and seek the domestic political upside of confronting China. He may need to look tough on trade on the campaign trail. Diplomacy with North Korea could also break down. This is not our base case, but we note that investors are pricing crisis levels into the South Korean won despite its successful handling of the coronavirus (Chart 10). Pyongyang has an incentive to play nice to assist the government in the South while avoiding antagonizing President Trump. But Kim Jong Un may also feel that he has an opportunity to demonstrate strength. This would be relevant not because of North Korea’s bad behavior but because a lame duck President Trump could respond belligerently. Chart 9Trump’s Approval Gets Bump From Crisis Response And Stimulus Chart 10South Korean Political Risk Rising We highlighted Russia as a “black swan” candidate for 2020. This view stemmed from President Vladimir Putin’s domestic machinations to stay in power and tamp down on domestic instability in the wake of domestic economic austerity policies. For the same reason we did not expect Moscow to engage in a market share war with Saudi Arabia that devastated oil prices, the Russian ruble, and economy. At any rate, Russia will remain a source of political surprises going forward (Chart 11). Go long oil. Putin cannot add an oil collapse to a plague and recession and expect a popular referendum to keep him in power till 2036. The coronavirus is hitting Russia, forcing Putin to delay the April 22 nationwide referendum that would allow him to rule until 2036. It is also likely forcing a rethink on a budget-busting oil market share war, since more than the $4 billion anti-crisis fund (0.2% of GDP) will be needed to stimulate the economy and boost the health system. Russia faces a budget shortfall of 3 trillion rubles ($39 billion) this year from the oil price collapse. It is no good compounding the economic shock if one intends to hold a popular referendum – even if one is Putin. For all these reasons we agree with BCA Research Commodity & Energy Strategy that a return to negotiations is likely sooner rather than later. Chart 11Russia: A Lake Of Black Swans However, we would not recommend buying the ruble, as tensions with the US are set to escalate. Instead we recommend going long Brent crude oil. Political risk in the European states is hitting highs unseen since the peak of the European sovereign debt crisis (Chart 12). Some of this risk will subside as the European authorities did not delay this time around in instituting dramatic emergency measures. Chart 12Europe: No Delay In Offering 'Whatever It Takes' Chart 13Political Risk Understated In Taiwan And Turkey However, we do not expect political risk to fall back to the low levels seen at the end of last year because the recession will affect important elections between now and 2022 in Italy, the Netherlands, Germany, and France. Only the UK has the advantage of a single-party parliamentary majority with a five-year term in office – this implies policy coherence, notwithstanding the fact that Prime Minister Boris Johnson has contracted the coronavirus. The revolution in German and EU fiscal policy is an essential step in cementing the peripheral countries’ adherence to the monetary union over the long run. But it may not prevent a clash in the coming years between Italy and Germany and Brussels. Italy is one of the countries most likely to see a change in government as a result of the pandemic. It is hard to see voters rewarding this government, ultimately, for its handling of the crisis, even though at the moment popular opinion is tentatively having that effect. The Italian opposition consists of the most popular party, the right-wing League, and the party with the fastest rising popular support, which is the right-wing Brothers of Italy. So the likely anti-incumbent effect stemming from large unemployment would favor the rise of an anti-establishment government over the next year or two. The result would be a clash with Brussels even in the context of Brussels taking on a more permissive attitude toward budget deficits. This will be all the worse if Brussels tries to climb down from stimulus too abruptly. Our political risk indicators have fallen for two countries over the past month: Taiwan and Turkey (Chart 13). This is not because political risk is falling in reality, but because these two markets have not seen their currencies depreciate as much as one would expect relative to underlying drivers of their economy: In Taiwan’s case the reason is the US dollar’s unusual strength relative to the Japanese yen amidst the crisis. Ultimately the yen is a safe-haven currency and it will eventually strengthen if global growth continues to weaken. Moreover we continue to believe that real world politics will lead to a higher risk premium in the Taiwanese dollar and equities. Taiwan faces conflicts with mainland China that will increase with China’s recession and domestic instability. In Turkey’s case, the Turkish lira has depreciated but not as much as one would expect relative to European equities, which have utterly collapsed. Therefore Turkey’s risk indicator shows its domestic political risk falling rather than rising. Turkey’s populist mismanagement will ensure that the lira continues depreciating after European equities recover, and then our risk indicator will shoot up. Chart 14Brazilian Political Risk Is No Longer Contained Prior to the pandemic, Brazilian political risk had remained contained, despite Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro’s extreme and unorthodox leadership. Since the outbreak, however, this indicator has skyrocketed as the currency has collapsed (Chart 14). To make matters worse, Bolsonaro is taking a page from President Trump and diminishing the danger of the coronavirus in his public comments to try to prevent a sharp economic slowdown. This lackadaisical attitude will backfire since, unlike the US, Brazil does not have anywhere near the capacity to manage a major outbreak, as government ministers have warned. This autumn’s local elections present an opportunity for the opposition to stage a comeback. Brazilian stocks won’t be driven by politics in the near term – the effectiveness of China’s stimulus is critical for Brazil and other emerging markets – but political risk will remain elevated for the foreseeable future. Bottom Line: Geopolitical risk is exploding everywhere. This marks the beginning of a period of political turbulence for most of the major nation-states. Domestic economic stresses can be dealt with in various ways but in the event that China’s instability conflicts with President Trump’s election, the result could be a historic geopolitical incident and more downside in equity markets. In Russia’s case this has already occurred, via the oil shock’s effect on US shale producers, so there is potential for relations to heat up – and that is even more true if Joe Biden wins the presidency and initiates Democratic Party revenge for Russian election meddling. The confluence of volatile political elements informs our cautious tactical positioning. Investment Conclusions If the historic, worldwide monetary and fiscal stimulus taking place today is successful in rebooting global growth, then there will be “no depression.” The world will learn to cope with COVID-19 while the “dollar disease” will subside on the back of massive injections of liquidity from central banks and governments. Gold: The above is ultimately inflationary and therefore our strategic long gold trade will be reinforced. The geopolitical instability we expect to emerge from the pandemic and recession will add to the demand for gold in such a reflationary environment. No depression means stay long gold! US Equities: Equities will ultimately outperform government bonds in this environment as well. Our chief US equity strategist Anastasios Avgeriou has tallied up the reasons to go long US stocks in an excellent recent report, “20 Reasons To Buy Equities.” We agree with this view assuming investors are thinking in terms of 12 months and beyond. Chart 15Oil/Gold Ratio Extreme But Wait To Go Long Tactically, however, we maintain the cautious positioning that we adopted on January 24. We have misgivings about the past week’s equity rally. Investors need a clear sense of when the US and European households will start resuming activity. The COVID-19 outbreak is still capable of bringing negative surprises, extending lockdowns, and frightening consumers. Hence we recommend defensive plays that have suffered from indiscriminate selling, rather than cyclical sectors. Go tactically long S&P consumer staples. US Bonds: Over the long run, the Fed’s decision to backstop investment grade corporate bonds also presents a major opportunity to go long on a strategic basis relative to long-dated Treasuries, following our US bond strategists. Global Equities: We prefer global ex-US equities on the basis of relative valuations and US election uncertainty. Shifting policy winds in the United States favor higher taxes and regulation in the coming years. This is true unless President Trump is reelected, which we assess as a 35% chance. Emerging Markets: We are booking gains on our short TRY-USD trade for a gain of 6%. This is a tactical trade that remains fundamentally supported. Book 6% gain on short TRY-USD.   Oil: For a more contrarian trade, we recommend going long oil. Our tactical long oil / short gold trade was stopped out at 5% last week. While we expect mean reversion in this relationship, the basis for gold to rally is strong. Therefore we are going long Brent crude spot prices on Russia’s and Saudi Arabia’s political constraints and global stimulus (Chart 15). We will reconsider the oil/gold ratio at a later date.     Matt Gertken Vice President Geopolitical Strategist mattg@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1 See Joseph T. Wu et al, "Estimating clinical severity of COVID-19 from the transmission dynamics in Wuhan, China," Nature Medicine, March 19, 2020, and Wei-jie Guan et al, "Clinical Characteristics of Coronavirus Disease 2019 in China," The New England Journal Of Medicine, February 28, 2020. Section II: Appendix : GeoRisk Indicator China Russia UK Germany France Italy Canada Spain Taiwan Korea Turkey Brazil Section III: Geopolitical Calendar
Highlights Rapidly changing news flows are forcing oil markets to recalibrate supply-demand fundamentals continuously. This will keep volatility at or close to recent record highs (Chart of the Week). The demand shock from COVID-19 accounts for ~ 65% of the oil price collapse, based on our modeling. USD demand is fueling record dollar strength, which could suppress commodity consumption after the COVID-19 shock dissipates. If the Fed’s epic monetary policy response sates USD demand, commodity demand will rebound strongly. Highly uncertain expectations on the supply side – fueled by the market-share war between the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and Russia set to begin in earnest April 1 – will keep global policy uncertainty elevated post-COVID-19. Texas regulators are debating the efficacy of re-establishing a long-dormant policy mandating the state’s Railroad Commission (RRC) pro-rate production. The chairman of the RRC and the CEO of Russia’s state oil champion Rosneft both oppose production-management schemes, arguing they allow other producers to steal market share. The Trump administration, however, sees potential in working with KSA to stabilize markets. Feature Sparse information available to markets makes it extremely difficult to estimate the impact of the COVID-19 shock to demand. Oil options’ implied volatility reached record levels following unprecedented price changes – down and up – in the underlying futures markets over the past month, as the Chart of the Week shows.1 This reflects the markets’ profound uncertainty regarding supply, demand and near-term policy outcomes that will affect these fundamentals in the short-, medium- and long-term. Sparse information available to markets makes it extremely difficult to estimate the impact of the COVID-19 shock to demand. The ever-changing evolution of supply dynamics presents its own – unprecedented – difficulties. The usual lags in information on supply and demand are compounded by the near-certain substantial revisions that will accompany these data as a better picture of the fundamentals emerges. Chart of the WeekOil Price Volatility At Record Level That said, we are attempting to develop models and an intuition for likely turning points on both sides of the fundamentals. We stress up front that these estimates are tentative, particularly on the demand side, as they use commodity prices and financial variables that are difficult to track closely even in the best of times, and are themselves continuously adjusting to highly uncertain fundamentals. COVID-19 Crushes Commodity Demand Oil prices fell 60% YTD after being struck by simultaneous demand and supply exogenous shocks (Chart 2). We capture the effect of the demand shock with a combination of multivariate regressions using various cyclical commodities, the US trade-weighted dollar, and 10-year treasury yields. Global demand for cyclical commodities – including oil – is fundamentally related to global economic activity. By extracting the common information from these commodity prices, we can estimate the proportion of the oil price decline associated with the ongoing demand shock.2 Chart 2Oil-Price Collapse Of 2020 We estimate roughly 60% of the crude oil price drop so far this year can be explained by the sharp contraction in global demand caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. To estimate the impact of the demand shock from the COVID-19 pandemic on crude oil prices, we expanded a model developed by James Hamilton in the last market-share war of 2014-16.3 Hamilton’s model uses market-cleared prices outside of oil – copper, the USD and 10-year nominal US treasurys – to estimate the extent of the global aggregate demand shock. We estimate roughly 60% of the crude oil price drop so far this year can be explained by the sharp contraction in global demand caused by the COVID-19 pandemic (Chart 3). Some specific refined-product demand (i.e., air and car travel, marine-fuel consumption) was hit harder, meaning the demand shock would be higher in those sectors. For transportation-related refined products, COVID-19-related impacts could account for as much as 70% of the decline in prices. Chart 3COVID-19 Crushes Oil Demand Chinese Demand May Be Recovering News reports suggesting a tentative recovery from the COVID-19 demand shock are emerging in China, where the virus originated late last year. Weekly data indicate inventories in bellwether commodity markets – copper and steel – should begin to fall as demand slowly recovers. While encouraging, this may not be sufficient to offset the massive losses in copper demand that likely will be posted this year as a result of the lockdown imposed in China – and globally – to contain the spread of COVID-19. China accounts for ~ 50% of global demand and ~ 40% of refined copper supply.4 Global copper inventories will be useful indicators of the state of China’s recovery, as they will be sourced early as mining and refining operations are ramped up in response to increasing demand (Chart 4). Chart 4Copper Inventories Will Track Aggregate Demand Recovery Chart 5China Expected To Roll Infrastructure Investment Into 2020 China is set to roll a large portion of its multi-year 34-trillion-yuan (~ $5 trillion) investment plan into this year, to secure economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic. For example, our colleagues at BCA Research’s China Investment Service expect a near 10% increase in infrastructure investments this year, which would take such investment to 198 billion yuan (Chart 5). Local governments already have ramped up their expenditures, frontloading 1.2 trillion yuan of bond issuance in the first two months of 2020, a 53% jump versus the same period last year. This includes 1 trillion yuan of special government bonds (SPBs), which is expected to rise to 3-3.5 trillion yuan by the end of 2020, up 30% from 2019 levels. Additional funding channels likely will be opened to support public spending this year. Aggressive policy easing by the Peoples Bank of China (PBOC) in recent weeks, coupled with likely additional debt issuance and infrastructure spending this year will support revived aggregate demand in China. China’s policy responses will be additive to those of the US, where more than $2.2 trillion of fiscal stimulus could be deployed following Congressional agreement on a massive fiscal package that likely will be endorsed by the White House. For its part, the Fed has gone all-in on fighting the economic, liquidity and credit shocks unleashed by the COVID-19 pandemic.5 The EU also is expected to roll out large fiscal-stimulus packages, led by Germany, which is lining up a 150-billion-euro (~ $162 billion) bond issue this year, and a 156 billion-euro supplementary budget.6 Texas Railroad Commission To The Rescue? Another possible element of a global oil-production-regulation scheme emerged in recent days from America’s Lone Star state: The Texas Railroad Commission (RRC). Based on our modeling, 30% to 40% of the decline in oil prices this year is explained by the expectation of higher supply in the coming months (Chart 6).7 It is worthwhile remembering this is anticipatory, given statements and actions from KSA and Russia regarding steps both are taking to sharply increase future production. KSA, for example, provisionally chartered transport to move close to ~ 38mm barrels of crude to refining centers, 12mm barrels of which will be pointed toward the US.8 This was part of the Kingdom’s plan to boost supplies to the market to 12.3mm b/d beginning in April, most of which will come from higher production, augmented by storage drawdowns. If we get a rapprochement between OPEC 2.0’s leaders – KSA and Russia – and the coalition’s production-management scheme is rebuilt, oil prices could outperform other cyclical commodities post-COVID-19, as a large component of supply uncertainty is removed. However, before that can happen, markets will have to absorb the surge in exports from KSA that are being priced in for April and May. Chart 6Expected Supply Increase From KSA, Russia Accounts For 30-40% Of Oil Price Collapse Another possible element of a global oil-production-regulation scheme emerged in recent days from America’s Lone Star state: The Texas Railroad Commission (RRC). Texas regulators are openly debating the efficacy of re-establishing a long-dormant policy mandating the RRC pro-rate production. The idea was floated by outgoing RRC Commissioner Ryan Sitton, who earlier this month in an op-ed proposed KSA, Russia and the US could jointly agree to 10% reductions in output to stabilize global oil markets. This would expand the management of oil production and spare capacity globally, a profound shift from earlier eras when the RRC then OPEC took on that role.9 While RRC staff are studying the idea, Sitton’s proposal has not received the endorsement of fellow commissioners, particularly Wayne Christian, the chairman of the RRC.10 Christian’s argument against the scheme is similar to that of Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin’s: Both argue such schemes allow other producers to steal market share. Russian government officials continue to signal they are open to returning to the negotiating table with KSA. The Trump administration, however, sees potential in working with KSA and to stabilize markets. Earlier this month, the administration sent a “senior Energy Department official” to Riyadh to support the State Department and the US’s energy attache.11 For its part, Russian government officials continue to signal they are open to returning to the negotiating table with KSA. The “Russian position was never about triggering an oil prices fall. This is purely our Arab partners initiative,” according to a Reuters report quoting Andrei Belousov, Russia’s first deputy prime minister, in an interview with state news agency TASS. “Even oil companies who are obviously interested to maintain their markets, did not have a stance that the deal (OPEC+) should be dissolved.” According to Reuters, Russia proposed an extension of existing production cuts of 1.7mm b/d, perhaps to the end of this year, but “(our) Arab partners took a different stance.” 12 Investment Implications The big uncertainty at present is the extent of demand destruction that will be caused by COVID-19. At this point, the diplomatic maneuvering among states on the oil-supply side is a distraction. Any substantive action will require drawn-out negotiation, particularly to reconstitute and expand OPEC 2.0 to include the Texas RRC in the management of global oil production and spare capacity. In the here and now, markets are forcing sharp reductions in oil output, particularly in the US shales – e.g., Chevron announced it will be cutting capex and exploratory spending 20% this year on Tuesday.13 This is occurring throughout the industry in the US and around the world. Reuters compiled announcements by oil producers that have indicated they will cut an average 30% reduction in capex in response to the oil-price collapse.14 We are expecting US shale output to grow ~ 650k b/d this year, and to fall by ~ 1.35mm b/d next year on the back of the price collapse this year (Chart 7).15 We do not expect a resurgent shale-producing sector in the short- to medium-term, given the capital markets’ demonstrated aversion to funding this sector until it can demonstrate long-term profitability. The big uncertainty at present is the extent of demand destruction that will be caused by COVID-19, and the effectiveness of fiscal and monetary policy in supporting national economies during the pandemic. Equally important will be policy responsiveness post-COVID-19, and how quickly economies worldwide return to normal. Chart 7US Shale Output Will Fall Sharply Bottom Line: We expect a re-building of OPEC 2.0, with KSA and Russia restoring their production-management scheme before global storage facilities are filled and markets push prices below cash costs to force production to shut in. The revenue gains from this course of action far exceed any benefit derived from increasing production and prolonging a market-share war.16 Any agreement to include the Texas RRC will occur after demand is bottoming and moving up – i.e., once the outlook for demand is more stable – as happened when OPEC 2.0 was formed.   Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger Associate Editor Commodity & Energy Strategy HugoB@bcaresearch.com Fernando Crupi Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy FernandoC@bcaresearch.com     Commodities Round-Up Energy: Overweight The COVID-19 pandemic produced one undisputed winner: the environment. Limits on movement and factory shutdowns have massively reduced air pollution in countries hit by the pandemic early on (e.g. China and Italy). We expect similar declines elsewhere in Europe. This already is reflected in the ~ 30% drop in Carbon Emission Allowances (EUA) futures this year (Chart 8). Following the GFC, worldwide CO2 emissions dropped by 2.2%, but rapidly rebounded in 2010 – surpassing pre-crisis levels. We expect a similar recovery in global emissions as record stimulus measures kick in and normal traffic resumes post-COVID-19. Therefore, we are going long December 2020 ICE EUA futures. Base Metals: Neutral The LME base metal index is down 20% YTD. Downside risks remain large as lockdowns globally continue to intensify in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. These drastic measures also threaten mine operations for some metals. Copper supply is reportedly reduced in Peru and Chile. Nonetheless, weak economic growth along with a strong US dollar remain the dominant factors. Base metals prices gained from a lower USD on Tuesday, signaling market participants welcomed the Fed’s actions to relieve global liquidity fears. Still, it is too early to confirm these measures will be sufficient to circumvent further deterioration in the global economy. Precious Metals: Neutral Gold, silver, platinum, and palladium rose 12%, 15%, 14%, and 16% from the start of the week, recovering part of the sharp losses from the COVID-19 shock. Metals – especially Gold – were supported by the Fed’s resolve to provide much-needed liquidity to markets. Platinum and palladium were pushed higher following South Africa’s government decision to halt metal and mining operations as part of a 21-day nationwide shutdown to prevent the spread of the virus. Silver prices remain disconnected from their main drivers – i.e. safe-haven and industrial demand – and should rise along with gold once liquidity concerns dissipate (Chart 9). Ags/Softs:  Underweight After being under pressure for the last three sessions, CBOT May Corn futures rose this week, trading above $3.50/bu, as expectations of stronger demand for ethanol were revived by increasing oil prices. Wheat and beans also put in strong showings this week, as demand starts to lift. US grain exports are holding up relatively well versus the competition – chiefly the South America powerhouses Argentina and Brazil – as COVID-19 hampers their exports. Wheat futures remain firm on the back of stronger demand as consumers stockpile during the pandemic. Chart 8 Chart 9   Footnotes 1     The Chart of the Week shows prompt volatility at the end of last week, when it stood at a record 183.22%, and a sharply backwardated volatility forward curve. Implied volatility is a parameter in option-pricing models, which equates the premium paid for options with the principal factors determining its value (i.e., the underlying futures price, the option’s strike price, time to expiry, interest rates and the expected volatility, or standard deviation of expected returns on the underlying). All of the factors other than volatility can be observed in the underlying market and interest rate markets, leaving volatility to be determined using an iterative search. Please see Ryan, Bob and Tancred Lidderdale (2009), Short-Term Energy Outlook Supplement: Energy Price Volatility and Forecast Uncertainty, published by the US Energy Information Administration, for a discussion of volatility as a market-cleared parameter. 2     We estimate our model both in (1) levels given that base metals, the US dollar and oil prices are cointegrated – i.e. these variable follow a common long-term stochastic trend – and (2) log-difference. We include the US dollar and 10-year treasury yields as explanatory variables. These series are closely linked to global growth trends, weakness in global economic activity is associated with a rising dollar and falling treasury yields. We only include treasury yields in the first difference model given that it is not cointegrated with oil and metal prices in levels. 3     Please see Oil prices as an indicator of global economic conditions, posted by Prof. Hamilton on his Econbrowser blog December 14, 2014. Our model uses monthly market inputs – non-oil commodities, the trade-weighted USD, US 10-year treasurys from January 2000 to February 2020, and the last daily close for March 2020. We extend Brian Prest’s 2018 model, which is based on Hamilton but uses monthly data instead of weekly data as in Hamilton. Please see Prest, C. Brian, 2018. "Explanation for the 2014 Oil Price Decline: Supply or Demand?" Energy Economics 74, 63-75. 4    Please see China steel, copper inventories dip as demand recovers from virus and Rupture of copper demand to fuel surplus as industry hit by virus, published March 20 and March 23, 2020, by reuters.com. 5     For an in-depth discussion, please see Life At The Zero Bound published March 24, 2020, by BCA Research’s US Bond Strategy. It is available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 6    Please see Germany expected to announce fiscal stimulus as European death toll rises published by thehill.com March 23, 2020. 7     We estimate the share of the price collapse explained by the supply shock using the residuals from our demand-only Brent price model presented in Chart 3. The difference between actual Brent prices and our demand-only estimates captures oil-specific factors unexplained by global economic growth – mainly supply dynamics. 8    Please see Saudi provisionally charters 19 supertankers, six to U.S. as global oil price war heats up published by reuters.com March 11, 2020. 9    Please see Texas regulator considers oil output cuts for the first time in decades published by worldoil.com on March 20, 2020. We discussed the historic role of the RCC during the 2014-16 OPEC-led market-share war in End Of An Era For Oil And The Middle East, a Special Report published April 9, 2014, with BCA Research’s Geopolitical Strategy. We noted, “In March of 1972, the (RRC) effectively relinquished control of Texas oil production, when it allowed wells in the state to produce at 100% of their capacity. This signaled the exhaustion of U.S. spare capacity – production no longer had to be pro-rated to maintain prices above marginal costs – and the ascendance OPEC to global prominence in the oil market.” 10   Please see Texas Railroad Commission chairman opposes OPEC-style oil production cuts published by S&P Global Platts March 20, 2020. 11    Please see U.S. to send envoy to Saudi Arabia; Texas suggests oil output cuts published by reuters.com March 20, 2020. 12    Please see Russia: Gulf nations, not us, to blame for oil prices fall -TASS published by reuters.com March 22, 2020. 13   Please see Chevron cuts spending by $4 billion, suspends share buybacks published by worldoil.com March 24, 2020. 14   Please see Factbox: Global oil, gas producers cut spending after crude price crash, published by reuters.com March 23, 2020. Refiners also are cutting runs – particularly in the US and Europe – in the wake of collapsing demand for gasoline and distillates (jet, diesel and marine fuels), as S&P Global Platts reported March 23, 2020: Refinery margin tracker: Global refining margins take a severe hit on falling gasoline demand. 15   This extends to oil-services companies as well, which are anticipating a deeper crash in their businesses than occurred in the 2014-16 market-share war. Please see Shale service leaders warn of a bigger crash this time around published by worldoil.com March 24, 2020. 16   We argued this outcome was more likely than not – given the economic and welfare stakes – in last week’s report, KSA, Russia Will Be Forced To Quit Market-Share War.   Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades TRADE RECOMMENDATION PERFORMANCE IN 2019 Q4 Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in Summary of Closed Trades
Feature We closed our short position in EM equities last week but still maintain our short recommendation on EM currencies. Going forward we will be looking for signs of a durable bottom in risk assets. The clash between forthcoming massive economic stimulus around the world and the unprecedented plunge in global economic activity has generated a great deal of uncertainty over the magnitude and duration of the global recession. In turn, enormous ambiguity continues to produce extreme gyrations in financial markets. The unparalleled drop in the level of business activity and uncertainty over the length of lockdowns make it impossible to determine how much stimulus is required to produce a V-shaped recovery. Notably, all these stimuli will have an effect on the real economy with a lag. In the meantime, the real economy will remain in an air pocket. Overall, financial markets will remain very volatile as they try to recalibrate the magnitude and duration of recession as well as the speed of recovery. Chart 1China: Level Of Business Activity Is Still Lower Than A Year Ago Even in China, where the authorities have been stimulating and trying hard to restart the economy following lockdowns, the level of business activity remains below last year’s levels. In particular, Chart 1 illustrates that residential floor space sold in Shanghai in the past couple of weeks remains 60% lower than a year ago. This reveals how difficult it is to reboot discretionary consumer spending and business investment following a negative income shock. Overall, financial markets will remain very volatile as they try to recalibrate the magnitude and duration of recession as well as the speed of recovery. Such heightened uncertainty warrants a higher risk premium. Given financial markets are already discounting a lot of bad news, incoming economic data will be of little use. In our opinion, investors can only rely on various market indicators to gauge the direction of risk assets. Given financial markets are already discounting a lot of bad news, incoming economic data will be of little use. In our opinion, investors can only rely on various market indicators to gauge the direction of risk assets. Review Of Indicators The following market-based indicators lead us to believe that the selloff is in a late-stage, but not over. Chart 2More Downside In This Risk-On/Safe-Haven Currency Ratio Our Risk-On/Safe-Haven1 currency ratio is in free fall but has not reached the level that marked its 2011 and 2015 troughs (Chart 2). It is still well above its 2008 level.  Odds are that this indicator will drop to 2011 and 2015 levels before staging a major recovery. EM share prices, commodities and global cyclical stocks correlate closely with this ratio. A further drop in Risk-On/Safe-Haven currency ratio will be consistent with more downside in EM equities, resource prices and global cyclicals. The global stock-to-US 30-year bond ratio has crashed but is still above its 2008 trough (Chart 3). Given this global recession is worse than the one in 2008, it is reasonable to expect the ratio to drop to its 2008 level before recovering. The gold-to-US bonds ratio2 has not yet broken out of its rising channel (Chart 4). Only a decisive breakout above the upper boundary of this channel will confirm a sustainable rally in reflation plays. Chart 3Global Stock-To-Bond Ratio: More Downside Is Likely Chart 4The Gold-To-Bond Ratio Is Not Yet Confirming The Reflation Trade Meanwhile, the industrial metals-to-gold ratio has plunged below its 2008 and 2015/16 lows (Chart 5). This qualifies as a structural regime change in this indicator. Odds are that this ratio will continue to fall, heralding further weakness in global cyclicals in general and EM risk assets in particular.   The relative performance of non-financial Swiss stocks versus Swedish non-financials seems to have broken below 2002 and 2008 lows The relative performance of non-financial Swiss stocks versus Swedish non-financials seems to have broken below 2002 and 2008 lows (Chart 6). Such a breakdown typically entails additional decline. The latter will be consistent with more weakness in global cyclicals versus defensives. Chart 5A Noteworthy Breakdown Chart 6Cyclicals Vs Defensives Interestingly, Chinese equity indexes have dropped less than their global and EM peers. Nevertheless, cyclical sectors within the Chinese equity universe are exhibiting very disturbing chart patterns. Chinese bank stocks appear to be in a genuine downtrend, with no immediate support (Chart 7, top panel). Property developers in the onshore A-share market have hit key resistance levels and appear to be vulnerable to the downside (Chart 7, middle panel). Finally, Chinese investable small-cap stocks have broken down, and their path of least resistance is down (Chart 7, bottom panel). Overall, the relative resilience of Chinese share prices has been due to tech and “new economy” stocks. The rest of Chinese equities have been quite week in absolute terms. Finally, the net aggregate long position in US equity futures by asset managers and leveraged funds as of March 17 was still above its 2011 and 2016 lows (Chart 8).  It is reasonable to expect that the ultimate capitulation in US stocks will be consistent with a lower reading of this indicator. Chart 7Weak Internals Of Chinese Equity Markets Chart 8No Capitulation Among Investors In US Equity Futures     Bottom Line: The recent rebound in EM risk assets is unlikely to be sustainable. Several important indicators are not confirming a durable rally in reflation plays. Investment Strategy Even though EM equities have become cheap and very oversold as we discussed last week, odds are that the bear market in EM risk assets and currencies is not yet over. It might be too late to sell EM stocks, but also too risky to buy them aggressively. Chart 9EM Corporate Credit And Domestic Bonds: A Bear Market, Not A Correction Provided the selloff in EM fixed-income markets commenced only a couple of weeks ago, it will likely persist as investors facing losses are forced to further trim their positions (Chart I-9). We continue to recommend staying put on EM fixed-income markets. As EM US dollar and local currency bond yields rise, EM share prices will struggle. Finally, EM currencies remain vulnerable against the greenback. We are maintaining our short in a basket of the following EM currencies versus the US dollar: BRL, CLP, ZAR, IDR, PHP and KRW. Reshuffling EM Equity Country Allocation We are making the following changes within a dedicated EM equity portfolio: Upgrading Peru from neutral to overweight, and Colombia from underweight to neutral. Both bourses have underperformed substantially and warrant a one-notch upgrade. Peru will - on the margin - benefit from relative resilience in gold and silver prices. The collapse in Colombia’s relative equity performance is advanced. While we are not bullish on oil prices, we are protecting our gains on the underweight Colombian stocks allocation by moving it to neutral. Reiterating our underweight allocations in both Indonesian and Philippine equities. Both bourses are breaking down relative to the EM benchmark (Chart I-10). More downside is in the cards. Readers can click here to access our latest fundamental analysis on financial markets in Indonesia and the Philippines.  Maintaining our overweight positions in Korean and Thai equities. Underperformance in both bourses relative to the EM benchmark is at a late stage. We expect the relative performance of these markets versus the overall EM equity index to find a support close to current levels (Chart I-11). Chart 10Continue Underweighting Indonesian And Philippines Equities Chart 11Overweight Korean And Thai Stocks Within The EM Universe Downgrading UAE from overweight to underweight. We have been bearish on oil prices, but the speed of the collapse in crude prices has wreaked havoc on Gulf equity markets. Similarly, the speed of decline in oil prices has caused considerable tremors in Mexican and Russian financial markets. Our overweight position in Russian equities is now back to its breakeven level, but the one in Mexican stocks is deep under water. We are reiterating our overweight in both bourses but have much lower conviction on Mexican stocks versus Russian ones. We will publish an updated analysis on Mexico in the near term. Finally, we have been and remain neutral on the following equity markets relative to the EM benchmark: China, Taiwan, India, Malaysia, Brazil and Chile. We have been negative on Brazil but have not formally downgraded it to underweight. Among our underweights are also Turkey, South Africa and Hong Kong domestic stocks. The complete list of our equity recommendations is available on page 8. Our fixed-income and currencies recommendations are available on page 9 (all of our recommendations are always enclosed at the end of our Weekly Reports and are available on our Website as well).   Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1    Average of CAD, AUD, NZD, BRL, IDR, RUB, CLP, MXN & ZAR total return indices relative to the average of CHF & JPY total returns. 2   It is calculated by dividing gold prices by total return on 10-year US government bonds. Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
Weekly US initial unemployment insurance claims were even worse than the dire predictions, and well above the 1.5 million that we had forecasted in yesterday’s Daily Insights. They came in at 3.283 million (compared to a normal 220k weekly pace at this time…