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First, the level of product and service market regulation in Europe is highly punitive. Like Japan, most euro area countries fare poorly in the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business survey. In fact, Italy scores even lower than China! Meanwhile, the U.S. ranks…
Highlights Open an equity market relative overweight to Europe versus China. Upgrade Denmark to neutral. Downgrade the Netherlands to underweight. Maintain Switzerland at overweight. With the Euro Stoxx 50 now up almost 20 percent from its January 3 low, the majority of this year’s absolute gains have already been made. Core euro area bond yields will edge modestly higher… …and EUR/USD will appreciate, as the backward-looking data on which the ECB depends catches up with the more perky real-time economic data.   Feature Vertical charts scare us, as we contemplate falling over the edge. But they also excite us, as we contemplate a lucrative investment opportunity. Right now, the vertical chart that is causing us palpitations is technology versus healthcare (Chart of the Week).  Chart of the WeekTechnology Versus Healthcare Has Gone Vertical! The technology versus healthcare sector pair is critical, because it looms large in several stock markets’ ‘fingerprint’ sector skews. Meaning that the technology versus healthcare relative performance has unavoidable consequences for regional and country stock market allocation (Chart I-2 and Chart I-3). The technology versus healthcare sector pair is critical, because it looms large in several stock markets’ ‘fingerprint’ sector skews. Chart I-2When Technology Underperforms Healthcare, Netherlands Underperforms Switzerland Chart I-3When Technology Underperforms Healthcare, China Underperforms Switzerland Specifically, from a European stock market perspective, the Netherlands is overweight technology while Switzerland and Denmark are both overweight healthcare. Further afield, the U.S. is overweight technology while China is both overweight technology and underweight healthcare. Explaining Verticality And The Subsequent Fall What creates vertical charts? To answer the question, let’s turn it on its head: what prevents vertical charts? The answer is: the presence of value investors. In a healthy market, a cohort of value investors will sit on the side lines and only transact with the marginal seller when the price falls to a semblance of value. In other words, the value sensitive investors help to set the price, preventing verticality. But if the value sensitive cohort switches out of character to join a strong uptrend, the cohort will suddenly become value insensitive. In this case, the marginal seller will set the price higher and the formerly uninterested value sensitive buyer will now buy at the higher price. The market has morphed into a trend-following market. As more of the value cohort switch sides, the process adds rocket fuel to the rally. Driven by the ‘fear of missing out’ the marginal buyer will buy at larger and larger price increments, and the chart becomes vertical. What triggers the subsequent fall? When all of the value cohort have joined the uptrend, the fuel has run out: the marginal seller will no longer find a willing marginal buyer at the elevated price. At this critical point, one of two things will happen. Either: a completely new cohort of even deeper value investors will switch out of character and provide new fuel to the trend, allowing it to continue. Or: the deep value investors will stay true to character and will only deal with the marginal seller when the price falls, perhaps sharply, to a semblance of deep value. Technology versus healthcare is now at this critical technical point at which the probability of trend-reversal has significantly increased. Both the theoretical and empirical evidence suggests that at this critical point, the probability of trend-continuation decreases to about a third and the probability of a trend-reversal increases to about two-thirds. Technology versus healthcare is now at this critical technical point at which the probability of trend-reversal has significantly increased (Chart I-4). Chart I-4Technology Versus Healthcare: The Probability Of A Trend-Reversal Is High Therefore, on a tactical horizon, it is now appropriate to underweight technology versus healthcare – which, to reiterate, carries unavoidable consequences for country and regional stock market allocation: Open an overweight to Europe versus China. Upgrade Denmark to neutral. Downgrade the Netherlands to underweight. Maintain Switzerland at overweight. Distinguishing Between Valuation And Growth Is Extremely Difficult There is another problem for value investors. Over short periods – meaning less than a year – it is very difficult, if not impossible, to decompose a price return into its two components: the component coming from the change in valuation and the component coming from the change in earnings growth expectations. A stock market’s actual earnings are highly sensitive to small changes in economic growth. This is universally the case but is especially true in Europe, because the European stock market’s skew towards growth-sensitive cyclicals gives it a very high operational leverage to GDP growth: a seemingly minor 0.5 percent change in economic growth translates into a major 25 percent change in stock market earnings growth (Chart I-5). The slightest improvement in economic growth expectations causes the market to upgrade its forecasts for earnings very sharply. Chart I-5A Minor Upgrade To Economic Growth = A Major Upgrade To Profits Growth Given this very high operational leverage, the slightest improvement in economic growth expectations causes the market to upgrade its forecasts for earnings very sharply. Which of course lifts the market’s price, P, very sharply. In contrast, equity analysts’ forecasts for earnings, which drive the market’s ‘official’ forward earnings, E, adjust much more slowly. As my colleague, Chris Bowes explains: “analysts get married to a view and usually require overwhelming evidence to materially change it.” The upshot is that the P rises very sharply but the official forward E does not, meaning that the official forward P/E also rises very sharply. This gives the impression that the move is mostly valuation driven, but the truth is that the move is mostly earnings growth driven. In a similar vein, when central banks guide interest rates lower, how much of the equity market’s move is due to a higher valuation, and how much is due to improved prospects for economic growth resulting from the central bank policy change? Over relatively short periods of time, it is extremely difficult to tell. All of which provides an important lesson: over short periods, do not focus on separately forecasting the valuation change and earnings growth change of a stock market. Much better to forecast the stock market price directly, by focussing on the two main things which will drive it: changes to central bank policy, and changes to short-term real-time economic growth. Focus On Central Banks And Short-Term Economic Growth Central bank policy now ‘depends’ on relatively longer-term changes (say, year-on-year) in backward-looking data, most notably the consumer price index. Whereas the stock market’s earnings growth expectations take their cue from shorter-term changes in real-time economic indicators (Chart I-6). Chart I-6Quarter-On-Quarter Growth Is Rebounding Hence, the ‘sweet spot’ for equity markets is when, in simple terms, year-on-year CPI inflation is decelerating, implying central banks will become more dovish, while quarter-on-quarter economic growth is accelerating, implying the market will upgrade earnings growth (Chart I-7). The stock market’s earnings growth expectations take their cue from shorter-term changes in real-time economic indicators. The ‘weak spot’ for equity markets is the exact opposite, when year-on-year CPI inflation is accelerating, implying central banks will become less dovish, while quarter-on-quarter economic growth is decelerating, implying the market will downgrade earnings growth. As 2019 progresses, our high-conviction prediction is that equity markets will move from a sweet spot to a weak spot. With the Euro Stoxx 50 now up almost 20 percent from its January 3 low, it implies that the majority of 2019’s gains have already been made in the first four months of the year – and the market is unlikely to be significantly higher at the end of the year. Compared to the equity market, the bond, interest rate, and currency markets are – almost by definition – much more dependent on central banks’ lagging reaction functions than on real-time growth. Which solves the mystery as to why bond yields are close to new lows while equity markets are close to new highs. It also solves the mystery as to why EUR/USD has lagged the very clear recovery in euro area real-time growth and in euro area stock markets (Chart I-8). Central banks are following lagging indicators. Chart I-7Stock Markets Take Their Cue from Real-Time Indicators Chart I-8Central Banks Are Following Lagging Indicators, Stock Markets Are Following Real-Time Indicators But as the backward-looking data, on which the ECB depends, catches up with the more perky real-time data, core euro area bond yields will edge modestly higher, and EUR/USD will gently appreciate. Next week, in lieu of the usual weekly report, I will be giving this quarter’s webcast titled ‘From Sweet Spot to Weak Spot?’ live on Wednesday May 8 at 10.00 AM EDT (3.00 PM BST, 4.00 PM CEST, 10.00 PM HKT). Through a series of key charts, the webcast will reveal the prospects and opportunities for all asset-classes through the remainder of 2019. At the end of the webcast, I will also unveil a brand new investment recommendation. So don’t miss it! Fractal Trading System* Supporting the arguments in the main body of this report, fractal analysis suggests that the recent rally in China’s stock market is at a technical point that has reliably signaled previous major reversals. Accordingly, this week’s recommended trade is a stock market pair trade, short China versus Japan. Set the profit target at 2.5 percent with a symmetrical stop-loss. We now have six open positions. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment’s fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-9Short China Vs. Japan   The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions.   * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com.     Dhaval Joshi, Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Recommendations Asset Allocation Equity Regional and Country Allocation Equity Sector Allocation Bond and Interest Rate Allocation Currency and Other Allocation Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations    
Highlights The March data brought the first signs of a stabilization in China’s “hard” economic data, albeit from a weak level. The April PMIs disappointed, but they remained in expansionary territory; this is in addition to a continued significant improvement in the trade-related subcomponents of the official survey. Chinese credit growth is unlikely to relapse over the coming year, despite recent investor concerns that Chinese policymakers may dial back their stimulus efforts. The pace of growth may moderate, but halting the uptrend in growth this year would constitute a major policy mistake that we do not expect. Chinese stocks may trend flat-to-down in the very near term as investors await a signed trade deal with the U.S. and further signs of a recovery in activity. Over the next 6-12 months, however, an overweight stance is warranted, barring a major relapse in our leading indicator. Feature Tables 1 and 2 on pages 2 and 3 highlight key developments in China’s economy and its financial markets over the past month. On the growth front, March’s data brought the very first (albeit modest) signs of stabilization in actual Chinese economic activity. While the April manufacturing PMIs released earlier this week disappointed, the trade related components of the official survey continued to improve meaningfully, which implies that an improvement in domestic demand is still early. This conclusion is not particularly surprising given that the first green shoots in the actual data are emerging from a depressed level of activity. Credit growth has only recently picked up, implying that actual activity will strengthen over the coming 6-12 months followed a signed trade deal and a continued (modest) uptrend in credit. Table 1China Macro Data Summary Table 2China Financial Market Performance Summary Within financial markets, the most significant recent development has been that Chinese stocks have sagged somewhat due to concerns that policymakers may meaningfully dial back their stimulus efforts over the coming year. In our view, recent statements from policymakers, as well as the fact that the recovery in activity is only now beginning, underscores that credit growth is unlikely to relapse over the coming year. It may not grow at the breakneck pace observed in the first quarter, but beyond the near-term jitters that this may introduce into the equity market, we do not see it as a threat to an overweight stance towards Chinese stocks over the coming 6-12 months. In reference to Tables 1 and 2, we provide below several detailed observations concerning developments in China’s macro and financial market data: Chart 1 highlights that March brought the first sign of a stabilization in actual Chinese economic activity. When measured on a smoothed basis, the Li Keqiang index itself weakened further in March, but total import growth moved sideways and nominal manufacturing output ticked higher. We noted in our last Macro & Market review that future changes in activity measures were now more likely to reflect actual changes in underlying economic circumstances given that the previously beneficial tariff front-running effect had probably washed out of the data. March’s data confirms this view, and underscores that activity will pickup in the second half of the year. Chart 1The First (Albeit Tentative) Sign Of Economic Stabilization Chart 2 shows that the uptrend in our leading indicator for Chinese economic activity is so far modest, but also that it is now at a 2-year high relative to its 12-month moving average. The indicator is being weighed-down by weak money growth (M2 and our definition of M3), even though monetary conditions remain easy and our measures of credit growth picked up sharply in Q1. We doubt that the trend in Chinese money and credit growth can sustainably decouple in a scenario where the latter is sustainably improving, as it would imply that all of the credit improvement was originating from non-bank financial institutions. As such, we expect money growth to catch up to credit growth in the coming months. The annual change in the PBOC’s pledged supplementary lending injection remained in negative territory in March, and both floor space started and sold decelerated modestly further. Construction and sales activity continue to diverge, with the latter still pointing to a further slowdown in the former. We will be updating our Chinese housing outlook in a Special Report next week. April’s Caixin and official manufacturing PMI disappointed, but this overshadowed a continued significant improvement in the new export orders and import components of the official PMI (Chart 3). In our view, this is consistent with a stabilization in the export outlook, but implies that Chinese domestically-oriented manufacturing activity is not yet booming. Nonetheless, a signed trade deal, improving importer/exporter sentiment, and an uptrend in credit growth still implies that activity will pick up meaningfully later in the year. Chart 2Our Leading Indicator Is Now Modestly Trending Higher Chart 3Trade-Related Components Of The Official PMI Continue To Rise   Over the past month, Taiwanese and domestic Chinese stocks have been the best performers within “Greater China”, relative to the MSCI Hong Kong index, the MSCI China index, and the Hang Seng China Enterprises index. The latter in particular has lagged other Chinese equity indexes since late-March (Chart 4), and may be due for a catch-up. Over the nearer-term, Chinese stocks, especially the domestic market, have sagged due to concerns that Chinese policymakers may meaningfully dial back their stimulus efforts over the coming year. We discussed this risk in our April 17thWeekly Report,1 and noted that while we expected credit growth to moderate somewhat, a more meaningful slowdown, particularly if coupled with signals from policymakers that a much slower pace of growth is desired, could pose a risk to our overweight equity stance. The April manufacturing PMIs disappointed, but the trade-related components of the official survey continued to improve meaningfully. In our view, recent statements from policymakers, particularly from PBOC Deputy Governor Liu Guoqiang,2 underscores that credit growth is unlikely to relapse over the coming year; it will simply not be growing at the breakneck pace observed in the first quarter. Beyond the near-term jitters that this may introduce into the equity market, we do not see it as a threat to an overweight stance towards Chinese stocks over the coming 6-12 months. Chart 5 highlights that Chinese consumer stocks have been the clear winners since the beginning of the year, particularly in the domestic market. Consumer stocks, including staples, sold off substantially in 2H2018 as investors responded to shockingly weak consumer spending data. Stimulus measures targeted to Chinese households, along with a meaningful improvement in some measures of consumer spending, has helped restore investor confidence in consumer stocks (which had previously been viewed as a bullish “no-brainer” structural trade). Chart 4Is An H-Share Catchup##br## Looming? Chart 5Chinese Consumer Stocks Have Been On Fire   The sharp rise in the 7-day interbank repo rate in April fed concerns among equity investors that Chinese policymakers might be in the process of paring back their stimulus efforts. However, as Chart 6 shows, China’s 7-day repo rate is extraordinarily volatile, and is affected by a variety of seasonal and technical factors. The chart shows that a 1-month moving average of the 7-day repo rate is broadly in line with the level that has prevailed over the past 9 months. In addition, the 3-month repo rate (which we have argued has been a more informative predictor of China’s monetary policy stance) remains well on the low end of its range over the past year. In short, despite investor concerns, Chinese interbank repo rates are not signaling a change in China’s monetary policy stance. Tighter monetary policy is not in the cards for this year. After having risen noticeably in late-March, Chinese onshore corporate bond spreads have fallen back to the low end of their trading range over the past 8 months. We continue to recommend that domestic investors hold a diversified portfolio of SOE corporate bonds, on the basis that actual bond defaults over the coming 6-12 months are likely to be materially lower than what investors are pricing in even though they are indeed likely to rise. Chart 7 shows that USD-HKD has eased somewhat over the past month from the top end of the band, and now trades closed at 7.845. This modest appreciation in HKD appears to have been catalyzed by a further reduction in the supply of interbank liquidity by the HKMA. While the appreciation in HKD is some modest good news for Hong Kong’s monetary authority, it remains reluctant to reduce liquidity in the system given how extremely weak loan growth is in Hong Kong. This implies that, barring a meaningful upturn in credit, a significant appreciation in HKD is not likely in the cards. Chart 6Interbank Repo Rates Are Not Trending Higher Chart 7A Modest Appreciation In HKD (Which Is Not Likely To Continue)   Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1      Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report “In The Wake Of An Upgrade: An Investment Strategy Post-Mortem,” dated April 17, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 2      During a PBOC briefing on April 25, Deputy Governor Guoqiang noted that “no one can bear it if policy swings back and forth between tightening and loosening many times a year”. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Evidence continues to mount that global growth is starting to rebound. European GDP was strong in Q1 and Korean exports, another global growth bellwether, beat expectations in April. However, just like how U.S. activity was resilient as non-U.S. growth slowed…
Consumer Spending Consumer spending added a meager +0.8% to GDP in Q1, but core retail sales growth has recovered sharply after having plunged near the end of last year. What’s more, with consumer sentiment close to one standard deviation above its…
Much like how core measures of inflation strip out volatile food and energy prices to give a better sense of the underlying trend, we can also look at Real Final Sales To Domestic Purchasers (FSDP) to get a better sense of the underlying trend in economic…
Feature What Could Sour The Sweet Spot? This continues to look like a very benevolent environment for risk assets. Growth in the U.S. remains decent, with Q1 GDP growth beating expectations at 3.2% QoQ annualized (albeit somewhat distorted by rising inventories). Leading indicators point to U.S. GDP growth of around 2.5% for 2019. The rest of the world is showing the first “green shoots” of economic recovery. China continues to expand credit, and the effects of this are starting to stabilize growth in Europe, Japan, and the Emerging Markets (Chart 1). Recommended Allocation Chart 1China Reflation Helping Growth To Bottom At the same time, central banks everywhere have turned accommodative. Following the Fed’s dovish shift late last year, the market has priced in rate cuts by end-2019. The ECB is about to relaunch its TLTRO funding program, and is expected to keep rates in negative territory for at least another year (Chart 2) – though there are worries whether Mario Draghi’s successor as ECB president might be more hawkish. The Bank of Canada and Bank of Japan, among others, have recently reemphasized monetary caution. Chart 2No Rate Hikes Anywhere Chart 3Term Premium Keeping Down Yields This goes some way to explain the biggest puzzle in markets currently: why, despite global equities being less than 1% below a record high, long-term interest rates remain so low, with the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield at 2.5%, and yields in Germany and Japan hovering around zero. There are other explanations too. A decomposition of the U.S. 10-year yield shows that most of the downward pressure has come from a sharp drop in the term premium (Chart 3). This is partly because lousy growth in other developed economies, such as Germany and Japan, has pushed down yields in these countries and, given that spreads to the U.S. were at record highs, depressed U.S. rates too. It also reflects a lingering pessimism among investors who bought Treasuries at the end of last year to hedge against recession and who remain concerned about the economy. This is evidenced by continuing strong flows into bond funds in 2019 (Chart 4). A decomposition of the U.S. 10-year yield shows that most of the downward pressure has come from a sharp drop in the term premium. Chart 4Investors Buying Bonds, Not Equities Chart 5Why Has Inflation Fallen? A further explanation is the recent softness in inflation, with the Fed’s focus measure, core PCE inflation, slowing to an annual rate of only 0.7% over the past three months (Chart 5). This is probably mostly due to the economic slowdown late last year. But it may also have structural causes: the recent improvement in labor productivity can perhaps allow wages to rise without feeding through into consumer price inflation (Chart 6). Chart 6Maybe Because Of Better Productivity Chart 7Indicators Suggest Inflation Will Still Trend Up How is this all likely to pan out?  We think it improbable that inflation will stay low for long if growth is as robust as we expect. Leading indicators of inflation continue to suggest prices will trend higher (Chart 7). The Fed may not rush to raise rates (not least since, with the lower inflation recently, the Fed Funds Rate in real terms is now at neutral according to the Laubach-Williams model, Chart 8). But we also find it inconceivable that the Fed will cut rates, if growth remains strong, stocks continue to rise, and global risks recede. By the end of this year, it should be able to make a renewed case for a further hike. But even if it doesn’t do that – and permits either inflation to overheat for a while, or asset bubbles to form – these scenarios should be more conducive to equity outperformance, than bond outperformance. Global equities have already risen by 22% since last December’s low and may struggle to make rapid progress over the next few months. The key to further upside for stocks will be earnings: since analysts have cut EPS forecasts for S&P 500 companies for this year to only 4%, those expectations should not be hard to beat. In the Q1 earnings season, for instance, 79% of companies have so far come in ahead of the consensus EPS forecast. For global asset allocators, the key decision is always at the asset-class level. Will equities outperform bonds over the coming 12 months? Equities should have further upside if our macro scenario proves correct. On the other hand, we find it hard to imagine that global bond yields will not rise moderately if global growth recovers, the Fed refrains from cutting rates, inflation rises somewhat, and investors turn less wary of equities. We continue, therefore, to expect the stock-to-bond ratio (Chart 9) to rise further over the next 12 months. We think it improbable that inflation will stay low for long if growth is as robust as we expect. Chart 8Is Fed Now At Neutral? Chart 9Stock-To-Bond Ratio Can Rise Further   Chart 10Europe And EM Outperform Only Briefly Equities: We remain overweight global equities, but are reluctant to take higher beta country exposure until there is greater clarity on the bottoming out of ex-U.S. growth. Moreover, the structural headwinds that have prevented anything more than short-term outperformance for eurozone stocks (banking sector weakness) and Emerging Markets (excess debt and poor productivity) since 2010 remain powerful negative factors (Chart 10). Our moderately pro-cyclical sector recommendations (overweight energy and industrials) should hedge us against upside risk emanating from a strong rebound in Chinese imports. Fixed Income: Over the past few years, periods where equities have decoupled from bond yields have been resolved with bond yields playing catch-up (Chart 11). We expect the same to happen over the next few months, with global government bond yields rising moderately. The risk-on environment continues to be positive for credit. We prefer credit to government bonds within fixed income, but are only neutral within our overall recommended portfolio. U.S. high-yield bonds in particular look attractively valued, as long as growth continues and default rates don’t start to rise too much (Chart 12). Chart 11When Bonds And Equities Diverge… Chart 12Junk Bonds Attractively Valued Currencies: A pick-up in global growth would be negative for the U.S. dollar, typically a counter-cyclical currency (Chart 13). BCA’s currency strategists have slowly been moving towards a more positive stance on some currencies versus the dollar, particularly the euro and Australian dollar. We would expect to see the trade-weighted dollar start to depreciate in H2 once global growth accelerates, fueled by the very skewed long-dollar positioning currently. However, this may be only a six- to 12-month move, since growth and interest-rate differentials suggest that the structural dollar bull market that began in 2012 has not yet fully run its course. Commodities: Oil remains dominated by supply-side dynamics. How much the ending of waivers on Iranian oil sanctions, plus troubles in Venezuela and Libya, push up oil prices will depend on whether President Trump can persuade Saudi Arabia and UAE to increase production. BCA’s energy team expects he will be only partially successful in doing so, and see Brent reaching $80 a barrel and WTI $77 (from $72 and $64 currently) during 2019. Industrial commodities prices will depend on the strength and nature of China’s reflation: our commodities strategists see copper, the most sensitive metal to Chinese demand, as the best way to play this.1 Garry Evans Chief Global Asset Allocation Strategist garry@bcaresearch.com Chart 13Stronger Growth Would Be Dollar Negative   Footnotes 1       Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, “Copper Will Benefit Most From Chinese Stimulus,” dated April 25, 2019, available at ces.bcaresearch.com GAA Asset Allocation  
It’s official, the Italian technical recession is over. Italian GDP growth moved back into positive territory in the first quarter. Additionally, Spanish GDP growth rebounded to 0.7% on a quarterly basis, or 2.4% year-on-year. Thanks to those two surprises,…
Highlights Fed: Fed policymakers are sending a unified message that they want to keep rates on hold until they see a significant increase in inflation. However, our reading of their recent remarks suggests that they will be reluctant to actually cut rates unless GDP growth falls to below its estimated potential. Economy: If we strip out the volatile net exports, government and inventory components of growth, we see that economic activity slowed to below potential in the first quarter. However, the timeliest data on consumer spending, nonresidential investment and residential investment all suggest that Q1 will be the trough for the year. All in all, economic growth should be comfortably above potential in 2019, keeping rate cuts at bay. Investment Strategy: Investors should keep portfolio duration low, avoiding the 5-year/7-year part of the Treasury curve. Investors should also overweight spread product versus Treasuries, with a focus on Baa and junk rated corporate bonds. Feature Since January, Federal Reserve policymakers have sent a strikingly unified message: Policy should remain “patient” in an effort to re-anchor inflation expectations and demonstrate the symmetry of the Fed’s 2 percent inflation target. Take for example, two excerpts from recent speeches by Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren and Chicago Fed President Charles Evans. Rosengren:1 My own preference is for the Federal Reserve to adopt an inflation range that explicitly recognizes the challenge of the effective lower bound. We might be forced to accept below-2-percent inflation during recessions, but we would commit to achieving above-2-percent inflation in good times, so as to provide more policy space to counteract the next recession. Evans:2 I think the Fed must be willing to embrace inflation modestly above 2 percent 50 percent of the time. Indeed, I would communicate comfort with core inflation rates of 2-1/2 percent, as long as there is no obvious upward momentum and the path back toward 2 percent can be well managed. The consensus appears to be not only that higher inflation is necessary before the Fed lifts rates again, but also that the Fed should explicitly target an overshoot of its 2 percent target. With trailing 12-month core PCE inflation running at only 1.55% as of March, it will undoubtedly take some time before these inflation goals are met. We think the Fed’s commitment to keeping rates steady could waver if financial conditions ease sufficiently.3 But for now, with the market priced for 36 basis points of rate cuts over the next 12 months, the more pertinent question is: What will it take for the Fed to lower rates from current levels? Expecting A Rate Cut? Don’t Hold Your Breath Our Fed Monitor has an excellent track record calling turning points in monetary policy, and at present it is very close to zero, consistent with the Fed’s “on hold” stance (Chart 1). The Monitor is comprised of 44 indicators of economic growth, inflation and financial conditions. In other words, for the Monitor to recommend rate cuts going forward we will need to see some further deterioration in either economic growth, inflation or financial markets (Chart 2). This is roughly consistent with how Chicago Fed President Evans described his reaction function in his speech from two weeks ago: Chart 1"On Hold" Stance Justified Chart 2Fed Monitor Components If growth runs close to or somewhat above its potential and inflation builds momentum, then some further rate increases may be appropriate over time… In contrast, if activity softens more than expected or if inflation and inflation expectations run too low, then policy may have to be left on hold – or perhaps even loosened – to provide the appropriate accommodation to obtain our objectives. Our interpretation of the Fed’s reaction function is that it wants to maintain an accommodative monetary policy to ensure that inflation and inflation expectations move higher over time. However, it will consider monetary policy to be accommodative as long as GDP growth stays close to, or above, estimates of its potential rate. In other words, while the Fed is in no rush to tighten, we probably need to see a significant period of below-potential GDP growth before rate cuts are on the table. In his speech, Evans indicates that his personal estimate of potential GDP growth is 1.75%. The March Summary of Economic Projections shows that the central tendency of FOMC participant estimates is 1.8% - 2%. Our view is that U.S. growth will easily surpass this threshold in 2019, keeping rate cuts at bay. Tracking U.S. Growth Markets were caught off guard last week when we learned that real GDP grew 3.17% in the first quarter, above consensus estimates and well above the 1.8% - 2% potential growth threshold. However, the headline Q1 figure was flattered by significant gains in a few volatile GDP components. Chart 3Underlying Growth Slowdown Much like how core measures of inflation strip out volatile food and energy prices to give us a better sense of the underlying trend, we can also look at Real Final Sales To Domestic Purchasers (FSDP) to get a better sense of the underlying trend in economic growth. FSDP includes only consumer spending, nonresidential investment and residential investment. That is, it removes government spending, net exports and inventory investment from the overall number. Viewed this way, we see that the U.S. economy did experience a significant growth slowdown in the first quarter. Real FSDP grew only 1.45% in Q1, below the 1.8% - 2% potential growth threshold (Chart 3). Net Exports & Inventories Chart 4Net Exports & Inventories First quarter GDP was boosted by a +1.03% contribution from net exports and a +0.65% contribution from inventory investment, neither of which is likely to be repeated in Q2 (Chart 4). The top panel of Chart 4 shows just how unusual it is to see such a large contribution from net exports, an event that becomes even less likely when you factor in the dollar’s recent appreciation (Chart 4, panel 2). Turning to inventories, a significant build was long overdue given the backlog of orders seen during the past two years. But the ISM Manufacturing Index’s backlog of orders component has now fallen back to a neutral level (Chart 4, bottom panel). This suggests that firms are comfortable with their current inventory stockpiles, and that no aggressive inventory increases are likely during the next few quarters. Interestingly, while net exports and inventories will almost certainly pressure GDP growth lower in Q2, back toward the growth rate in FSDP, the latter has probably already troughed for the year. Recent data on consumer spending, nonresidential investment and residential investment all appear to have turned a corner. Consumer Spending Consumer spending added a meager +0.8% to GDP in Q1, but core retail sales growth has recovered sharply after having plunged near the end of last year (Chart 5). What’s more, with consumer sentiment close to one standard deviation above its historical mean – whether we look at expectations or current conditions surveys – consumers don’t seem inclined to retrench in the months ahead (Chart 6). Chart 5Consumer Spending Chart 6Buoyant Consumer Sentiment Nonresidential Investment Chart 7Nonresidential Investment We expected business investment to weaken in Q1, and its +0.4% growth contribution is low compared to recent readings. The decline was anticipated due to last year’s significant deterioration in global growth. Slower global growth necessarily causes firms to downgrade their profit expectations. Faced with lower expected profits, companies are much more inclined to curtail investment. However, considering the outlook heading into mid-year, we have already noticed signs of improvement in leading global growth indicators.4 More recently, we have even seen that improvement translate into stronger U.S. investment data. Core durable goods new orders grew +17% (annualized) in March, dragging the year-over-year rate up to +5.3% (Chart 7). Further, our BCA Composite New Orders Indicator – a weighted combination of ISM New Orders and NFIB Capital Spending Plans – has bounced during the past few months, returning close to its historical mean (Chart 7, panel 3). An average of Capital Spending Intentions from regional Fed surveys also remains close to one standard deviation above its historical average (Chart 7, bottom panel). Residential Investment Residential investment (aka Housing) has exerted a meaningful drag on GDP growth in each of the past five quarters, and it lowered GDP by -0.1% in Q1 (Chart 8). However, much like with consumer spending and nonresidential investment, the timely economic data suggest a turnaround is in the offing. Much like with consumer spending and nonresidential investment, the timely economic data suggest a turnaround is in the offing. Optimism has returned to housing since mortgage rates fell earlier this year. New home sales and mortgage purchase applications have jumped, and single-family housing starts are the only important housing-related data that haven’t yet rebounded. We expect that rebound to occur soon, as do homebuilders whose confidence has risen during the past few months. Homebuilder optimism surveys remain close to one standard deviation above their historical averages (Chart 9). Chart 8Residential Investment Chart 9Buoyant Homebuilder Confidence Bottom Line: Fed policymakers are sending a unified message that they want to keep rates on hold until they see a significant increase in inflation. However, our reading of their recent remarks suggests that they will be reluctant to actually cut rates unless GDP growth falls to below its estimated potential. Potential GDP growth is estimated to be in the 1.8% to 2% range. If we strip out the volatile net exports, government and inventory components of growth, we see that economic activity slowed to below potential in the first quarter. However, the timeliest data on consumer spending, nonresidential investment and residential investment all suggest that Q1 will be the trough for the year. All in all, economic growth should be comfortably above potential in 2019, keeping rate cuts at bay. Investment Implications To translate the above views on the economy and the Fed’s reaction function into a portfolio strategy, we first return to our Golden Rule of Bond Investing.5The Golden Rule states that if the Fed delivers more (fewer) rate hikes than are currently discounted in the market over the next 12 months, then the Treasury index will earn negative (positive) excess returns versus cash during that investment horizon (Chart 10). At present, this means that investors should only expect positive excess returns from taking duration risk in the event that the Fed cuts rates by more than 36 basis points during the next 12 months. Given our view that rate cuts are unlikely, investors should maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration. Chart 10The Golden Rule's Track Record If we further assume that market expectations will shift to price-in fewer rate cuts, or even possibly some rate hikes, then we would expect 5-year and 7-year yields to rise the most (Chart 11). Investors should avoid those maturities and focus their Treasury exposure on the short and long ends of the curve. These barbell over bullet trades have the advantage of being positive carry, so they will earn money even if rate hike expectations are unchanged.6  Chart 11Avoid The 5- And 7-Year Maturities Chart 12Investment Grade Spread Targets Finally, the combination of above-potential GDP growth and a patient Fed is positive for spread product. Investors should remain overweight spread product versus Treasuries in bond portfolios, focusing on Baa and junk rated corporate bonds. Spreads for those credit tiers remain wide compared to historical median levels for this phase of the cycle (Charts 12 &13).7 Chart 13High-Yield Spread Targets Ryan Swift, U.S. Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 https://www.bostonfed.org/news-and-events/speeches/2019/monetary-policymaking-in-todays-environment.aspx 2 https://www.chicagofed.org/publications/speeches/2019/risk-management-and-the-credibility-of-monetary-policy 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The New Battleground For Monetary Policy”, dated March 26, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Bond Kitchen”, dated April 9, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, “The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing”, dated July 24, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Paid To Wait”, dated February 26, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 For further details on how we calculate these spread targets please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Value In Corporate Bonds”, dated February 19, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Oil & Bond Yields: Global growth indicators are starting to rebound, risk assets have returned to previous cyclical highs, and oil prices remain buoyant. This is a combination that will eventually result in rising global bond yields, but more through higher inflation expectations that will bear-steepen yield curves. Stay below-benchmark on overall portfolio duration, but enter new reflationary trades in core Europe (long inflation breakevens) and Australia (yield curve steepeners). EM vs DM Credit: Signs of a pickup in Chinese growth will be more supportive for growth in EM economies. Hedging against an extended downturn in China is no longer needed. Upgrade EM U.S. dollar denominated sovereign and corporate debt to neutral (3 of 5), at the expense of a smaller overweight position in U.S. investment grade corporates. Feature Chart of the WeekA Consistent Message On Rebounding Growth Evidence is starting to point to a bottoming in global economic momentum. Credit growth has notably picked up in China, global leading economic indicators are stabilizing and sentiment measures like our Duration Indicator have started to climb (Chart of the Week). While it is still early in this reflation process, the leading data is now moving in a direction that bodes well for continued gains in global equities and growth-sensitive spread product. The sharp rallies across risk assets seen so far this year have merely retraced the stinging losses incurred in the final months of 2018. Those moves were fueled by a combination of slowing global growth and overly hawkish central bankers. Now that policymakers have “course corrected” towards dovishness, led by the Fed’s 180-degree turn on the outlook for rate hikes in 2019 that drove U.S. Treasury yields lower, the next leg of the risk rally can begin, led by improving global growth. At some point, looser financial conditions – higher equity prices, tighter credit spreads and lower market volatility – will require global central bankers to retreat from dovish forward guidance (Chart 2). Policymakers who have been focused on sluggish global growth, “persistent uncertainty” (as ECB President Mario Draghi has described it), and falling inflation expectations will eventually have to adjust their policy bias once those factors reverse. On that front, the combination of improving global growth, rising oil prices and an increasingly likely U.S.-China trade deal will help boost global bond yields through rising inflation expectations first and higher interest rate expectations later (Chart 3). Chart 2A Full Unwind Of Late-2018 Moves...Except For Inflation Chart 3Get Ready For A Bond-Bearish Turn In Growth We continue to recommend a high-level fixed income portfolio construction that will benefit from these trends: below-benchmark on overall duration exposure with overweights on global corporate debt versus government bonds. We also see a case to selectively position for steeper yield curves and higher inflation expectations in countries more sensitive to higher oil prices and where central banks will be less hawkish/more dovish. Most importantly, we no longer see a need to maintain a defensive underweight in emerging market (EM) hard currency spread product, as we discuss later in this report. Yes, Oil Prices Still Matter For Bond Yields Global oil prices hit a new 2019 high last week on news that the Trump administration was letting waivers expire on U.S. sanctions of Iranian oil exports. Coming on top of the lost output from Venezuela, increased tensions in Libya and persistent production discipline from the major oil players (OPEC, the so-called “OPEC 2.0” of Russia and Saudi Arabia, and even U.S. shale producers), a boost to global oil demand from faster global growth is likely to result in even higher oil prices in the next 6-9 months. The combination of improving global growth, rising oil prices and an increasingly likely U.S.-China trade deal will help boost global bond yields. Our colleagues at BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy remain steadfast bulls on oil prices, with a year-end price target of $80/bbl on the Brent crude benchmark. They view the supply constraints as large and persistent enough to cause oil prices to continue rising alongside firmer global demand. Our most optimistic forward-looking growth indicator, the diffusion index of global leading economic indicators, is now calling for a sharp rebound in cyclical data like the global manufacturing PMI in the latter half of 2019. A move back to the 55-60 range for the global PMI, which the diffusion indicator is pointing towards (Chart 4, bottom panel), would be consistent with the +50% year-over-year growth rates in oil prices implied by BCA’s bullish oil forecasts (middle panel). Chart 4The 2019 Oil Rally Is Not Over Yet Over the past several years, there has been a strong correlation between oil prices and government bond yields in most developed economies (Chart 5). Since the most recent bottom in global yields back on March 27, that behavior has persisted. Longer-term bond yields have risen more than shorter-dated yields, alongside higher inflation expectations further out the yield curve (Table 1). Chart 5Inflation Expectations Still Driving Bond Yields Such “bear-steepenings” do not usually last for long periods of time. Inflation targeting central banks typically look at the reflationary implications of higher oil prices – faster economic growth with more future inflation as energy costs seep into core inflation measures – as a sign to maintain a more hawkish bias for monetary policy. That is not the case today, though, as data dependent central bankers have been more focused on past soft readings on both growth and inflation momentum. This should support a growth-driven rise in global oil prices in the coming months, as policymakers will be reluctant to alter the current dovish guidance without signs of both faster growth and higher realized inflation. Within the major developed markets, the recent correlations between oil prices (in local currency terms) and inflation expectations have been weakest in regions where central banks are most likely to keep policy interest rates stable. In the euro area, Japan and Australia – where core inflation rates are well below central bank targets and money markets are discounting flat-to-lower interest rate expectations over the next 1-2 years – market-based measures of inflation expectations like CPI swap rates have diverged from the rising path of local-currency denominated oil prices (Chart 6). In the U.S. and Canada, which have only recently paused their rate hike cycles, the correlation between oil prices and inflation expectations has been a bit more in line with the experience of the past several years. The same goes for the U.K., although inflation expectations there seem more driven by currency weakness stemming from the Brexit uncertainty rather than a central bank that is perceived to be too hawkish (even though the Bank of England only recently shifted away from its past language signaling a desire to start normalizing very low interest rates). Table 1A Reflationary Bear-Steepening Of Yield Curves Since Yields Troughed In March Correlations between longer-term inflation expectations and the slopes of government bond yield curves have also become less consistent across countries (Chart 7). In particular, 2-year/10-year yield curves been more positively correlated to inflation expectations in the euro zone, Australia and even Japan (where the BoJ is actively targeting the yield curve) than in the U.S., U.K. and Canada. Chart 6Higher Oil, Higher Inflation Expectations Chart 7Position For Reflationary Yield Curve Steepening Given BCA’s bullish oil forecast, we recommend positioning for higher inflation expectations and steeper yield curves in selected countries based on the above correlations. We are already doing this in the U.S., where we are running a long position in U.S. 10-year TIPS breakevens. This week, we are entering the following new positions in our Tactical Trade portfolio (see page 15): Long 10-year CPI swaps (or inflation-linked bonds versus nominal debt) in Germany A 2-year/10-year government bond curve steepener in Australia We are not confident enough about the growth outlook in Canada and Japan, and the political outlook in the U.K., to recommend inflation-focused trades in those markets at the present time. We recommend positioning for higher inflation expectations and steeper yield curves in selected countries. Bottom Line: Global growth indicators are starting to rebound, risk assets have returned to previous cyclical highs, and oil prices remain buoyant. This is a combination that will eventually result in rising developed market global bond yields, but more through higher inflation expectations that will bear-steepen yield curves. Stay below-benchmark on overall portfolio duration, but enter new reflationary trades in core Europe (long inflation breakevens) and Australia (yield curve steepeners). Upgrade EM U.S. Dollar Denominated Debt To Neutral Chart 8A Cyclical Rebound In China Is Underway Back in January, we upgraded our recommended allocation for global corporate debt to overweight, while downgrading developed market government bonds to underweight.1 That decision was in response to the Fed’s dovish turn, which lowered the risk of a monetary policy-induced U.S. recession that spooked investors in late 2018. Yet while a more accommodative Fed meant an extension of the U.S. business cycle expansion, it did not solve the problems of slowing growth elsewhere in the world – most notably in China and Europe. For that reason, we have maintained a preference for U.S. investment grade and high-yield corporate debt relative to European and EM spread product, even within an overall overweight recommended allocation to global corporates. In particular, we maintained an outright underweight stance on EM U.S. dollar denominated sovereigns and corporates within our model bond portfolio. That tilt served as a hedge to the risk of persistent softening growth in China – the nation to which EM economies remain most highly levered. It is the pickup in the China credit impulse that is most relevant for EM growth and asset markets. Now, amid signs that Chinese policy stimulus is starting to show up in faster credit growth – a reliable precursor to greater Chinese domestic demand (Chart 8) – that EM hedge to our overweight stance on global corporates is no longer needed. Thus, this week, we are upgrading our recommended exposure on EM USD-denominated sovereign and corporate debt to neutral, while reducing the size of our recommended overweight in U.S. investment grade corporates in our model bond portfolio (see the changes on page 14). The broadening rebound in Chinese economic data makes us more confident that growth there has turned the corner (Chart 9): Aggregate government spending is up 15.5% on a year-over-year basis. Infrastructure spending is now starting to grow again after the sharp slowdown seen in 2018. The China manufacturing PMI rose sharply in March, with the surge in the import sub-component of the overall PMI suggesting that domestic demand may be improving. In addition, with all signals pointing to a U.S./China trade deal being signed by the end of May, a major source of uncertainty weighing on the Chinese (and global) economy will soon be lifted. It is the pickup in the China credit impulse that is most relevant for EM growth and asset markets. Over the past decade, the credit impulse has led both the EM (ex-China) manufacturing PMI and annual growth in overall EM corporate earnings by around 9-12 months (Chart 10). The credit impulse bottomed back in October 2018, which means EM growth should begin to improve in the third quarter of 2019. Financial markets will discount that improvement in advance, however, which is why it makes sense to increase EM credit allocations today. Chart 9The Arrows Are Pointing 'Up' For Chinese Growth Chart 10EM Growth Is Highly Dependent On China   As can be seen in the bottom panels of Chart 11 and Chart 12, there is a strong correlation between Chinese credit (as a % of GDP) and the relative performance of EM U.S. dollar denominated spread product versus U.S. investment grade corporates. Our colleagues at BCA China Investment Strategy recently noted that if the pace of China’s credit expansion seen in Q1 were to be maintained over the rest of 2019, this would imply a credit overshoot beyond the stated medium-term goal of Chinese policymakers to avoid significant further increases in leverage.2 Such additional stimulus would very beneficial for EM growth (via strong Chinese import demand), supporting continued EM credit market outperformance. Chart 11Upgrade EM USD Sovereigns Vs U.S. IG Corporates Chart 12Upgrade EM USD Corporates Vs U.S. IG Corporates By moving our EM credit allocation only to neutral, we are merely responding to the pickup in Chinese credit growth seen over the past several months. The increasingly positive cyclical story is not yet bullish enough to justify a full-blown overweight stance on EM credit, however, for several reasons: Past periods of EM credit market outperformance have typically occurred during periods of U.S. dollar weakness. Chart 13A Weaker USD Is Good For EM Markets The amount of policy stimulus likely to be delivered in China in 2019 will be more limited than in past cycles, given policymakers’ concerns over high Chinese debt levels and excess industrial capacity. A U.S.-China trade deal may not involve the swift reduction in U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports, if the White House chooses to use tariffs as the mechanism to ensure Chinese compliance with the terms of an agreement. “Hard data” in China that measures private sector spending (retail sales, autos sales, etc.) has yet to bottom, which may indicate that the improvement seen in the credit aggregates and survey data like the manufacturing PMI is overstating the growth rebound. The U.S. dollar remains firm, and past periods of EM credit market outperformance have typically occurred during periods of dollar weakness (Chart 13). We do anticipate moving to an overweight position sometime in the next several weeks, after getting more Chinese economic data to confirm the improvement seen in March. This also lines up with the timetable for a potential trade deal, the details of which will be critical for boosting investor sentiment towards assets sensitive to Chinese demand, like EM credit. We will also look for signs of the U.S. dollar breaking to the downside to confirm any decision to upgrade EM credit. One final point – we are only reducing our recommended overweight on U.S. investment grade credit in our model bond portfolio as part of this EM upgrade. We are leaving our U.S. high-yield credit overweights untouched, as U.S. investment grade is much closer to the spread targets laid out by our colleagues at BCA U.S. Bond Strategy than U.S. high-yield. Bottom Line: Signs of a pickup in Chinese growth will be more supportive for growth in EM economies. Hedging against an extended downturn in China is no longer needed. Upgrade EM U.S. dollar denominated sovereign and corporate debt to neutral (3 of 5), at the expense of a smaller overweight position in U.S. investment grade corporates.   Robert Robis, CFA, Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, “Enough With The Gloom: Upgrade Global Corporates On A Tactical Basis”, dated January 15th, 2019, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “In The Wake Of An Upgrade: An Investment Strategy Post-Mortem”, dated April 17th, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns