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Earlier this year our EM, China, and geopolitical strategists highlighted that 2018 would be a year of weaker Chinese growth. This view has broadly panned out (see chart), although the trade war with the United States has ironically boosted economic activity…
Special Report Feature The European stock market has a hidden gem: its clothing and accessories sector. Since the turn of the millennium, the sector’s profits are up by a thousand percent (Feature Chart). In this Special Report we propose that the megatrend has further to run, as its principle driver is still very much in place. Consumption patterns are becoming more female. Feature ChartEuropean Clothes Profits Are Up A Thousand Percent! One of Europe’s major, and largely neglected, success stories is the dramatic rise in the percentage of the working-age population in employment. This major success story stems from another success story: the structural and broad-based increase in the female labour participation rate – which has surged from 57 percent in 1995 to 68 percent today (Chart I-2-Chart I-4). Yet the story is far from over.1 Chart I-2European Male Labour Participation Is Flat...   Chart I-3...But European Female Labour Participation Is Surging   Chart I-4...So The Percentage Of The European Population In Work Is Surging Why Job Creation Favours Women Two things are driving the megatrend in female participation. One is a paradoxical feature of the current technological revolution. As we explained in The Superstar Economy: Part 2, Artificial Intelligence (AI) excels at tasks that we perceive as difficult: those requiring the application of complex algorithms and pattern recognition to a narrowly defined goal, such as making a highly-engineered product or managing a stock portfolio. This poses a big threat to jobs in manufacturing and finance, employment sectors which happen to be male-dominated.2 Conversely, AI still struggles at tasks that we perceive as easy: those requiring adaptable movements, or reading and responding to people’s emotions and intentions. If you are good at controlling a disruptive class of 7-year olds, or calming a nervous patient before giving him an injection, your human skills are still in big demand. But education, healthcare, and social care – the employment sectors that are creating the most jobs – employ three times as many women as men. With AI still in its infancy, the established pattern of job destruction and creation will continue to favour women over men (Table I-1). Table I-1AI Is A Greater Threat To Men The other driver of the megatrend in female participation is a raft of European legislation designed to make work more family friendly: flexible working time, generous paid maternity and paternity leave, and subsidised childcare (Table I-2-Table I-4). Sharing the responsibility of childcare between mothers, fathers and external helpers has allowed tens of millions of European women to enter and remain in the labour force. Table I-2Generous Maternity Pay In Europe And Japan   Table I-3Improving Paternity Pay In Europe And Japan   Table I-4Affordable Childcare In Europe And Japan Nevertheless, the megatrend has a lot further to run. For the ultimate end-point, look at the Scandinavian countries which started legislating such policies in the early 1970s, around twenty years before the rest of Europe. As a result, in Sweden, labour force participation rates for women and men have now converged to almost identical: 81 versus 84 percent (Chart I-5). Chart I-5In Sweden, Labour Force Participation For Women And Men Is Almost Identical The combination of the two drivers – employment growth favouring female-dominated sectors and employment becoming more family friendly – means that net job creation in Europe will be mostly due to more women joining the workforce. An important consequence is that consumption patterns will continue to become more female. But what does that mean? How Women’s Spending Differs From Men’s Spending In the main spending categories of housing, food and healthcare, women and men tend to show near-identical spending behaviours. But there are three sub-categories where there are significant differences. Men considerably outspend women on vehicle purchases: cars account for around 8 percent of disposable income for men versus 4 percent for women. Against this, women spend more on personal care products and services: 2 percent versus 0.5 percent. This is the reason behind our long-standing successful overweight recommendation in the European personal products sector which we maintain (Chart I-6). However, the sub-category in which women outspend men by even more is clothes and accessories: estimates average around 6.5 percent for women versus 2.5 percent for men.3 Chart I-6Personal Product Profits Set To Grow Very Strongly It follows that as consumption patterns become more female, we should expect to see a steady rise in spending on clothes and accessories as a share of total consumer spending. Has this been the case? In the U.K. – where the data is easily available – the answer is yes (Chart I-7). Having said that, other factors are also at play. A generalised deflation in clothes prices (Chart I-8) is also generating a strong tailwind to sales volumes (rather than values). More about this later. Chart I-7More Real Spending On Clothes... Chart I-8Partly Because Clothes Prices Are Falling... Of course, the more compelling evidence is the thousand percent growth in the European clothes sector’s profits since the turn of the millennium. However, with the sector dominated by top brands such as LVMH and Hermes, could a more plausible explanation come from strong economic growth, until recently, in the emerging markets such as China? The answer is yes to the extent that many of the emerging economies are experiencing the same structural uptrends in female participation, and this supports our investment thesis. Still, this cannot be the main driver, because in recent years the connection between the fortunes of the emerging economies and the European clothes sector has been weak (Chart I-9).   Chart I-9The Connection Between Emerging Markets And European Clothes Is Weak There is another obvious question: is the market already aware of, and fully priced for, the megatrend? We think not, as most investors we meet are surprised by the structural uptrend in female participation, the on-going dynamics behind it, and the implications for consumer spending patterns. Understandably, the European clothes sector does trade at a valuation premium to the market (Chart I-10). But for many companies, the recent market hiccup has pulled down their valuation premiums to close to, or below, the long-term average from which the price has previously outperformed very strongly. Chart I-10The Valuation Premium On European Clothes Is Close To Its Long-Term Average What Is In The Clothes Basket? Pulling all of this together, the companies in our European clothes and accessories basket need to meet several criteria: A dominant or significant exposure to women’s clothes and/or accessories. A top-end brand (or brands) giving the company pricing power, and mitigating the very strong deflation in clothes prices. Avoid ‘fast fashion’. A reputation for sustainable development. A track-record of profit growth during the past decade. A forward price to earnings (PE) multiple of less than 25. A market capitalisation of at least €5 billion. On the basis of these criteria, our European clothes and accessories basket contains four names: LVMH, Kering, Luxottica, and Burberry (Table I-5). Hermes meets most of the criteria but, trading on a forward PE close to 35 is very richly valued. Table I-5The European Clothes Basket To be clear, this is not a short-term trade. Investors who buy the clothes basket outright need to have a multi-year investment horizon. Those investors who must also protect short-term performance should instead overweight the clothes basket relative to the broad market. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Female Participation: Another Mega-Trend” published on April 6, 2017 and available at eis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report, “The Superstar Economy: Part 2”, January 19, 2017 available at eis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Expenditure Survey 2016 via SmartAsset, and Paymentsense.
Highlights China’s old economy is set to decelerate in the first half of 2019, regardless of the recent tariff ceasefire. Our base case view is that growth will modestly firm in the second half of 2019, but timing the trough will depend on the dynamics of a battle between debt-focused policymakers and a credit-driven economy. Renewed weakness in China's currency has the potential to rekindle (and reinforce) the now-dormant concern of widespread capital flight. Investors should be alert to its re-emergence, as it would likely have implications for a broad range of financial assets (not just the exchange rate). A tactical overweight stance towards Chinese stocks (either the domestic or investable market) within a global equity portfolio is probably warranted over the coming three months. The conditions for a cyclical overweight stance (6-12 months) are not yet present but may emerge sometime in 2019, particularly if money & credit growth begin to pick up. Defaults in China’s onshore corporate bond market will rise next year, but will likely positively surprise investors. We continue to recommend a diversified position in this asset class for domestic investors and qualified global investors in hedged currency terms. Feature BCA recently published its special year end Outlook report for 2019,1 which described the macro themes that are likely to drive global financial markets over the coming year. In this week’s China Investment Strategy report we expand on the Outlook, by reviewing our four key themes for China in the year ahead. Key Theme # 1: The Battle Between Reluctant Policymakers And A Weakening Economy We presented a stylized view of China’s recent mini-cycle late last year (Chart 1), and argued that while an economic slowdown was underway it would most likely be a benign and controlled deceleration. Chart 1China’s Growth Profile Has Largely Been In Line With What We Forecasted Last Year… Chart 2 highlights that this view has broadly panned out, although the trade war with the United States has ironically (and only temporarily) boosted economic activity over the past several months. When measured by nominal GDP growth, the chart shows that the Chinese economy has retraced roughly 40% of the acceleration that occurred from late-2015 to early-2017, which is entirely consistent with the benign slowdown scenario that we presented a year ago. However, when measured by the Li Keqiang index, the chart shows that growth momentum stumbled quite significantly earlier this year, only to somewhat recover over the past two quarters. Chart 2...But Growth Stumbled In The First Half Of 2018 Chart 3 suggests that this recent recovery in the coincident data has been strongly driven by trade front-running. The chart shows an average of nominal Chinese import and export growth alongside growth in freight volume and manufacturing fixed-asset investment, and makes it clear that the recent pickup in activity has been due to persistently strong trade growth that is unlikely to continue. Chart 3Trade Front-Running Has Clearly Boosted Economic Activity This weekend’s short-term tariff ceasefire between the U.S. and China means that the trade shock will be of considerably reduced intensity than originally feared during the negotiation period. Nonetheless, the front-running effect is set to wane regardless of the existence of negotiations, implying that China’s old economy is set to recouple with our BCA Li Keqiang leading indicator in the first half of 2019. While the indicator has recently ticked up, this is almost entirely due to the recent depreciation in the RMB, as money and credit growth remain flat. For now, investors should focus on the level of the indicator, which is predicting a slowdown in economic activity over the coming several months (Chart 4). Chart 4A Slowdown In China's Old Economy Is Coming Our judgement is that a true deal between the U.S. and China next year that durably ends the trade war remains unlikely, although the odds have certainly increased as a result of this weekend’s announcement. But Chinese domestic demand had been slowing prior to the onset of the trade war, a fact that the market ignored until the middle of this year when it moved to price in both the underlying slowdown and the trade situation (Chart 5). This raises two questions: how much of a deceleration in growth will ultimately occur, and at what point will the economy bottom? Chart 5Investors Ignored A Slowing Economy Until The Trade War Emerged The answers to these questions are subject to the outcome of a battle between policymakers who are reluctant to push for sizeable releveraging, and an economy that appears to be strongly linked to money and credit growth. We have highlighted in several previous reports why Chinese policymakers want to avoid another sharp increase in the private-sector debt-to-GDP ratio,2 reasons that have solid grounding in both political and economic fundamentals and that become more pertinent if a trade deal between the U.S. and China is in fact negotiated. Still, Chinese policymakers, like those in any other country, will forcefully act to stabilize their economy (using whatever policy tools are required) if they conclude that conditions are about to deteriorate past the “point of no return”. Forecasting exactly when or whether this will occur is difficult, but both policymakers and investors will know more once the front-running effect on coincident activity wanes, and the true outlook for the external sector comes into view. For now, our base case view is that growth will modestly firm in the second half of 2019, which would provide a somewhat stronger demand backdrop for commodities and emerging economies that sell goods to China. We will be closely monitoring the incoming macro data in the first quarter of the year to judge whether it is consistent with our outlook. Key Theme # 2: Renewed Investor Scrutiny Of China’s Capital Controls Prior to the G20 summit, our expectation was that a break above the psychologically-important threshold of 7 for USD-CNY was imminent, likely in response to the escalation of the second round tariff rate to 25% on January 1. This catalyst has now clearly been deferred for the next three months, at least. However, Chart 6 shows that a resumption in the trade war is not the only source of potential weakness in the RMB. The chart illustrates the tight link between USD-CNY and the short-term interest rate differential between China and the U.S., and that the latter fell sharply in advance of the collapse in the former. Chart 6Interest Rate Differentials And USD-CNY: A Tight Link The true nature of the relationship between the two variables shown in Chart 6 remains a source of debate within BCA, as classic, open-economy interest rate arbitrage (the dynamic that enables currency carry trades) does not apply to countries that have officially closed capital accounts. But to the extent that the relationship holds over the coming year, Fed rate hikes alone have the potential for USD-CNY to rise above 7, as it would imply that the 1-year swap rate spread between the two countries will fall to zero (assuming no change in Chinese monetary policy). Regardless of the catalyst, renewed weakness in China's currency has the potential to rekindle (and reinforce) the narrative of capital flight that was last present following the August 2015 devaluation of the RMB. Global investor scrutiny of China's capital controls is likely to intensify significantly in such a scenario, and could contribute to negative investor sentiment towards China. As we noted in a September Weekly Report,3 several measures suggest that the capital flow crackdown that China initiated following the severe outflow pressures in 2015 and early-2016 has been successful. However, some other proxies of capital flight show persistent outflow since 2015 (Chart 7), with at least one measure having deteriorated rather significantly over the past few months. Chart 7Some Proxies Of Capital Flight Suggest Persistent Outflow Since 2015 Compiling an exhaustive inventory of different capital flow metrics (and their reliability) is part of our ongoing research efforts, and we hope to publish a Special Report on the topic early in 2019. For now, investors should be alert to any signs suggesting that a capital outflow narrative is becoming more prominent, as it is likely to have broader implications for financial markets than just the bilateral exchange rate. Key Theme # 3: Timing When (And Whether) To Go Long Chinese Stocks On A Cyclical Basis Many global investors are strongly focused on the question of when to go outright long Chinese stocks (either the domestic or investable market), on the basis of a substantial improvement in valuation, deeply oversold technical conditions, expectations of further action from policymakers, and a belief that the trade war with the U.S. will soon be resolved. This weekend’s agreement between the U.S. and China still does not make a trade deal probable,4 but we acknowledge that the odds have increased. This, coupled with the fact that Chinese stocks are still roughly 25% below their January high (Chart 8), suggests that a near-term sentiment-driven rally is possible. Over a 3-month time horizon, a tactical overweight stance towards Chinese stocks (either the domestic or investable market) within a global equity portfolio is probably warranted. Chart 8A Sentiment-Driven Rally Over The Next 3 Months Is Possible However, several points suggest that a long cyclical position (i.e. over a 6-12 month period) is currently pre-mature: We noted above that the Chinese economy is set to decelerate further over the coming several months, suggesting that earnings uncertainty is likely to rise. This, in combination with reactive policymakers, already-slowing earnings momentum, and the fact that 12-month forward earnings have only just started to be adjusted downward (Chart 9), suggests that investors have not yet observed the true point of maximum bearishness for Chinese stock prices. Chart 9The Earnings-Adjustment Process Is Only Beginning The 2014-2016 episode shows that China-related financial assets rallied prematurely in advance of a durable and broad-based improvement in the Chinese macro data, and the belief on the part of investors that a short-term rebound in Chinese stock prices over the coming 3 months is the beginning of a sustained upleg could be a repeat of this mistake. Chart 10 shows our BCA Market-Based China Growth Indicator compared with our Li Keqiang Leading Indicator, and shows that Chinese-related financial assets clearly jumped the gun in the first-half of 2015, and then lagged the improvement in the leading indicator. In the case of 2015, it was the August devaluation in the RMB that caused a severe deterioration in investor sentiment towards China; in the first-half of 2019, a failed attempt at a trade deal coupled with a further slowdown in domestic activity may do the same. Chart 10A Near-Term Rally Will Likely Fizzle, Like In 2015 While a near-term rally in CNY-USD may occur, the currency may come under renewed pressure if the interest rate differential effect shown in Chart 6 becomes the dominant driver of the exchange rate. For global investors managing their equity portfolios in unhedged terms, further declines in the RMB will negatively impact U.S. dollar performance. Finally, Chart 11 shows that, based on a trailing earnings and cash flow basis, the investable market is not as cheap relative to the global benchmark as it was in early-2016, casting some doubt on valuation as a rally catalyst. Undoubtedly, part of this discrepancy reflects the substantial rise in the BAT stocks (Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent) as a share of investable market capitalization, which are priced at a premium but also viewed by many investors as largely immune to a slowdown in China’s old economy. But the fact that the trade war largely reflects the decision of the Trump administration to crack down on Chinese technology transfer and intellectual property theft suggests that the market share of these companies could be negatively impacted by any successful trade deal, implying that a higher risk premium for the tech sector is warranted today than in the past. Chart 11Investable Stocks Aren't Massively Cheap We do not rule out the possibility that conditions will justify shifting to an overweight cyclical stance (6-12 month time horizon) for Chinese stocks sometime in 2019, particularly if money & credit growth begin to pick up. But for now, this is something that remains on our watch list for next year, rather than a recommendation to act on today. Key Theme # 4: Onshore Corporate Bonds – Position For Positive Default Surprises Our fourth theme for 2019 is a highly contrarian view that is, to some, at odds with our pessimistic view of the Chinese economy. BCA’s China Investment Strategy service has maintained a long China onshore corporate bond trade since June 2017, and we continue to recommend a diversified portfolio of these bonds for domestic investors and qualified global investors in hedged currency terms. The fear of sharply rising defaults stemming from refocused efforts to reform China’s financial system is the basis for the predominantly bearish outlook for onshore corporate bonds. The value of defaulted bonds reportedly rose to 100 Bn RMB in 2018, a sharp increase (of approximately 70 Bn RMB) from 2017,5 and many market participants have argued that defaults will be even higher next year. We do not dispute that China’s onshore corporate bond default rate is rising, and it is certainly possible that the rate will be even higher in 2019. To us, the problem with the bearish corporate bond narrative is that 100 Bn RMB amounts to a default rate of approximately 0.4%, whereas investors are pricing the onshore market for a 4-5% default rate over the coming year (Chart 12). In other words, domestic investors appear to be expecting over a tenfold increase in corporate defaults over the coming 12 months from what occurred this year, a scenario that we believe is extremely unlikely. Chart 12Allowing Market-Implied Default Rates To Occur Would Be A Huge Policy Error In our judgement, there is simply no way that policymakers can allow default rates on the order of what is being priced in to occur, as it would constitute an enormous policy mistake that would risk destabilizing the financial system at a time when officials are attempting to counter a domestic economic slowdown. In fact, we doubt that China’s typical policy of gradualism when liberalizing its economy and financial markets would allow default rates to rise from 0% to 4-5% over a year in any economic environment, particularly the current one. We therefore do not see a long recommendation favoring Chinese corporate bonds as being at odds with a slowing economy, because spreads are more than pricing in what is likely to be a modest worsening in corporate defaults. In short, defaults will rise, but will likely positively surprise investors. As a final point, our positive view towards the onshore corporate bond market should not be taken as a positive sign for the offshore US$ market. BCA’s Emerging Market Strategy service has recently reiterated its recommendation to position defensively within EM US$ sovereign and corporate bonds,6 and China accounts for roughly 1/3rd of the latter. Chart 13 highlights the difference in spread between the onshore and offshore market, the latter proxied by the Bloomberg Barclays China Corporate & Quasi-Sovereign index. The chart shows that the onshore market substantially led the offshore market in terms of pricing in a deterioration in credit fundamentals, with the latter only now starting to catch up to the former. As such, we have a clear preference for the onshore market, and would not argue against a bearish offshore corporate bond view. Chart 13Onshore Corporate Bonds Offer More Compelling Value Than Those Offshore   Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1      Pease see BCA Special Report "Outlook 2019 Late-Cycle Turbulence," published on November 27, 2018. Available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 2      Pease see Geopolitical Strategy/China Investment Strategy Special Report “China: How Stimulating Is The Stimulus?,” published August 15, 2018; Geopolitical Strategy/China Investment Strategy Special Report “China: How Stimulating Is The Stimulus? Part Two," published August 15, 2018; and China Investment Strategy Special Report “Chinese Policymakers: Facing A Trade-Off Between Growth And Leveraging,” published August 29, 2018. All available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3      Pease see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report “Moderate Releveraging And Currency Stability: An Impossible Dream?," published on September 5, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 4      Pease see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report “Trade Truce: Narrative Vs. Structural Shift?,” published December 3, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5      Please see “China Bond Defaults Surpass 100 Billion Yuan For 1st Time”, Bloomberg News, November 29, 2018. 6      Pease see Emerging Markets Strategy/Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report “EM Corporate Health And Credit Spreads,” published November 22, 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com.   Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Special Report Highlights The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) may consider a rate hike in 2019 if additional tightening of labor markets leads to higher wage inflation, which would help lift core inflation back to the midpoint of the RBA’s 2-3% target band.  Reflation in China could also embolden the RBA to tighten monetary policy – though the odds of a more aggressive stimulus package will decline as long as China’s overall economy remains stable and the U.S. maintains its tariff ceasefire. The Labor Party is favored to win the federal election, which is most likely to occur in May. This is a low-conviction view, as polls are tight and economic improvement will help the ruling Liberal-National Coalition. Feature 2018 has been a challenging year for global financial markets, as investors have had to deal with greater economic uncertainty, less dovish central banks and more volatile asset prices. One country that has bucked the trend to some degree is Australia. The nation has famously avoided a recession since 1991 and last saw a tightening of monetary policy in 2010. While the recession streak is unlikely to be broken in 2019, there are growing risks that the era of interest rate tranquility will soon end. In this Special Report, jointly published with our colleagues at BCA Geopolitical Strategy, we update our views on Australia for 2019 – a year when the investment backdrop has the potential to become far more interesting, and volatile, due to election year uncertainty and a potential shift to a more hawkish bias for monetary policy. The Bond Outlook: What To Watch To Turn Bearish BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy has maintained an overweight stance on Australian government bonds since the end of 2017. That high-conviction view stemmed from our expectation that the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) would keep policy rates on hold for longer due to sluggish economic growth and underwhelming inflation. This recommendation has performed well, with Australian government bonds returning 2.4% (currency-hedged into U.S. dollars) in 2018 year-to-date, beating the Bloomberg Barclays Global Treasury index by 190bps. The benchmark 10-year Australian government is now yielding 36bps below the equivalent 10-year U.S. Treasury yield, the tightest spread since 1980 (Chart 1). Chart 1Australian Bonds Have Outperformed Looking ahead, we still have a positive opinion on Australian debt relative to its global peers over the next six months. The RBA is unlikely to make any adjustments to the Cash Rate - which remains at a highly-accommodative level of 1.5% - without seeing some signs of accelerating inflation in both the Q4 2018 and Q1 2019 CPI reports. This is especially true given the political uncertainty with another federal election due by May 18,1 which could change the outlook for fiscal policy (as we discuss later in this report) and impact the RBA’s economic projections. In our view, the RBA will only be able to seriously consider an interest rate hike, warranting a downgrade of our recommended overweight stance, if all three of the following conditions occur: Australia’s underemployment rate falls below 8% China’s economy shows convincing evidence of reacceleration, especially in commodity-intensive industries like construction Core CPI inflation rises back to at least the midpoint of the RBA’s 2-3% target band We will now discuss each of these in turn. Underemployment Australia is a fairly open economy with a large export sector, but consumer spending is still the largest share of GDP (60%) so it matters most for growth. On that front, real consumption has grown in a narrow and uninspiring range between 2-3% over the past five years. Anemic wages and disposable incomes have been the problem, with the growth of both (in nominal terms) struggling to grow faster than low realized inflation, which now sits below the RBA’s inflation target range of 2-3% (Chart 2). Households have been forced to deploy a greater share of that modest income growth just to maintain spending, with the savings rate plunging from 8% at the end of 2014 to 1% this year and consumer debt piling up. Chart 2An Income-Fueled Pickup In Consumer Spending The dynamics may be changing in a more positive direction, however. Growth rates of nominal wage (+2.3%) and disposable income (+3.1%) have accelerated this year to a pace faster than inflation. With real incomes perking up, the year-over-year growth rate of real consumer spending growth accelerated to 3% in Q3/2018, driving real GDP growth to similar levels. A sustained pickup in wage growth is necessary before the RBA would even contemplate a rate hike. For that to occur, there must be decisive evidence of a tightening Australian labor market and increased resource utilization. While the headline unemployment rate of 5.0% is below the OECD’s estimate of the full employment NAIRU for Australia (5.3%), broader measures of labor market slack are still at elevated levels. Specifically, the “underemployment” rate, which includes workers who are working fewer hours than they would like or at jobs below their skill levels, is still at an elevated 8.3% (Chart 3). That is down from the peak of just below 9% seen in early 2017, but well above the 2012 trough near 7% (when wage growth was close to 4%).  Chart 3UNDERemployment Rate Matters More For Australian Wages Australian wage growth tends to correlate more with the underemployment rate than the traditional unemployment rate (middle panel). This suggests that the recent blip higher in wage growth could be the beginning of a new trend, given that it has occurred alongside the recent drop in underemployment. Already, underemployment is back below the levels that prevailed when the RBA did its last interest rate cut back in 2016 (bottom panel).  A further dip lower in the underemployment rate to below the 8% threshold would likely confirm that wage growth has more upside. That outcome would give the RBA greater confidence that consumer spending will gain more strength even with a low savings rate, and that CPI inflation will return back into the target range – both outcomes that would justify some removal of the RBA’s highly stimulative monetary accommodation. China Stimulus The main connection from China’s economy to Australia is through Chinese demand for Australian exports. There is also an indirect, but very important, link between Chinese demand boosting industrial commodity prices. The latter boosts Australian growth through positive terms-of-trade effects and increased capital spending in commodity-related sectors like mining. Iron ore is the most important of those commodities, representing 18% of total Australian goods exports, with 85% of those iron ore exports going to China. Australian export growth has decelerated during 2018 from the very robust 15% year-over-year pace to a still solid 10% rate. This has mirrored the trends seen in many other economies, where exports have slowed alongside diminished demand from China. If Chinese authorities change their current policy trajectory, and embrace more aggressive fiscal and credit stimulus, then they will reaccelerate the country’s flagging demand, which should benefit Australian exporters. If the increase in spending occurs in commodity-intensive parts of China’s economy, like construction, then Australia can also benefit from a terms-of-trade impact if commodity prices rise. However, BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy and China Investment Strategy remain skeptical that China will launch a major economic stimulus package along the lines of what occurred in 2015-16. That surge not only boosted Chinese GDP and import demand but also triggered a boost to global industrial commodity prices that benefitted many commodity exporters, including Australia. In recent months, there has been a pickup in overall Chinese import growth, as well as some acceleration of higher frequency growth indicators like the Li Keqiang index (Chart 4). Australian exports to China have not picked up though, and Chinese iron ore imports are contracting. Part of that is due to the elevated levels of Chinese iron ore inventories. More likely, there is little demand for additional iron ore given China’s reform agenda and the struggles of its construction sector (which accounts for roughly 35% of Chinese steel demand). Chart 4China Stimulus Not Helping Australia...Yet? Our colleagues at BCA China Investment Strategy2 have noted that both weakening sales and tighter funding sources for real estate developers point to declining growth in property starts and construction. This will be negative for construction-related commodity markets and construction-related machinery. This is coming at a time when the Chinese government is trying specifically to address over-indebted industries like construction. As for the U.S.-China trade truce, a permanent de-escalation of tensions – which has not yet occurred – could provide a boost to Australian export demand, as with other export-focused countries. But the negative impact of bilateral U.S.-China tariffs on the global economy is much smaller than that of China’s attempt to limit indebtedness. Moreover, a trade truce will remove China’s primary incentive to adopt more aggressive stimulus. Nevertheless, from the RBA’s perspective, any boost to China’s construction-related activity would have a big impact on Australia’s economy and would strengthen the case for a rate hike in 2019.  Core Inflation Australia’s headline CPI inflation has struggled to hit even the bottom end of the RBA’s 2-3% target band since 2015, reaching only 1.9% in Q3 of this year (Chart 5). The story is even worse for inflation excluding food and energy, with core CPI inflation now only at 1.2% after having drifted lower in two consecutive quarters. Both market-based and survey-based measures of inflation expectations are also hovering near 2%. Chart 5Australian Inflation Well Below RBA Target When breaking down the CPI into tradeables (i.e. more globally-focused) and non-tradeables (i.e. more domestically-focused), the two types of inflation have not been accelerating at the same time since the 2009-11 period. Since then, faster tradeables inflation has occurred alongside slowing non-tradeables inflation, and vice versa.  While volatility on the tradeables side should be expected given the correlation to swings in commodity prices and the Australian dollar, the weakness in non-tradeables is more directly related to the spare capacity in the domestic economy. Therefore, if wage growth continues to pick up as the labor market tightens, then non-tradeables inflation should follow suit and boost Australian CPI inflation back towards the RBA target range. The implication for the RBA is that a move in core CPI inflation back towards 2.5% (the midpoint of the RBA band), occurring after an acceleration in wage growth as described above, would give the central bank confidence that a higher Cash Rate is required. Bottom Line: The RBA has kept interest rates on hold for over two years, but may consider a rate hike in 2019 if additional tightening of labor markets leads to higher wage inflation, which would help lift core inflation back to the midpoint of the RBA’s 2-3% target band. A more aggressive fiscal and monetary stimulus package in China, while not our base case, would also embolden the RBA to tighten monetary policy. Risks From Australian Banks? Throughout 2018, the Australian financial industry has had to endure the slings and arrows of a government inquiry into its questionable business practices and misconduct. Revelations of bribery, fraud, the charging of fees for no service and from the accounts of deceased people, as well as board-level deception of regulators, have roiled Australia's financial sector since the explosive inquiry began in February. The final report of the Australian Financial Services Royal Commission will be published in February, but the impact is already being felt throughout the industry. Bank CEOs have been publically shamed, while other senior financial sector executives have been forced from their jobs. The chairman of National Australia Bank stated before the inquiry that customers’ trust in lenders had been “pretty well eroded to zero”, and that it could take as long as a decade to successfully overhaul the culture within the banks. The biggest impacts from the Commission will come through hits to banks’ earnings and funding costs, as well as the potential impact on lending standards for new loans. Australian banks will be less profitable because of fines, customer refunds, setting aside provisions for potential misconduct penalties and the government wanting increased competition. If banks also choose to be more conservative with the marking of loans, then higher loan-loss provisions could be an additional drag on bank earnings. Already, Australian bank stocks have severely underperformed the overall domestic market, and there has been some slowing of domestic credit growth (Chart 6). There are also signs of bank funding stresses from contracting bank deposit growth (second panel) and wider offshore funding costs like relatively elevated LIBOR-OIS spreads (bottom panel). Considering how heavily Australian banks rely on offshore funding, any squeeze in those markets could severely influence the availability of credit within the Australian economy. Chart 6Australian Banks Under Some Stress... Looking ahead, if banks do tighten up their lending standards in response to the criticism and findings of the Commission, that will be from a starting point of very accommodative levels. In other words, getting a loan will likely still be “easy”, rather than “incredibly easy”. The reason is that Australian bank balance sheets remain in excellent condition. Credit crunches begin when banks are undercapitalized and are forced to retrench new loan activity as losses on existing loans pile up. That is not the case in Australia, where the major banks have Tier 1 capital ratios in the 10-12% range and non-performing loans are a tiny share of total lending. In our view, a true credit crunch would likely only occur after the Australian housing bubble bursts and the economy enters a severe downturn. That outcome would most likely be triggered by monetary policy tightening via multiple RBA rate hikes. Importantly, some of the steam has already been taken out of Australian house prices thanks to changes in regulations on new lending (Chart 7), potentially reducing some of the immediate risks to growth from a sharp plunge in home values.  Chart 7...But No Credit Crunch Expected Bottom Line: In 2019, the Australian government and its key financial regulators will have to work together to enforce responsible lending without triggering a catastrophic property market unwind. RBA policymakers are less likely to hike rates given their desire to maintain financial stability in the aftermath of the Commission – or at least until the inflation story forces their hand, as outlined in this report. The Federal Election: Polling Slightly Favors Labor Scandals in the financial sector are of utmost importance to the other major factor that could make 2019 a year of significant change in Australia: the federal election that looms most likely in the spring. Parliament is balanced on a knife’s edge, with the Australian Liberal Party’s loss of former Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s parliamentary seat in a Sydney by-election on October 20. The ruling Liberal-National Coalition no longer has a majority and must rely on independent MPs to survive any no-confidence vote. This precarious situation suggests that the election could come even sooner than May and that the slightest twist in the campaign could deliver at least a small majority to either of the top two parties. Indeed, at this early stage, a high-conviction view on the election outcome is not warranted. After all, the 2016 election was decided in the Coalition’s favor only after a shift in opinion in the final month! Chart 8Labor Party Narrowly Leads All-Party Opinion Polls Nevertheless, with all due caveats, our baseline case is for a Labor majority in 2019, however slim it may be.3 Labor is slightly ahead of the Coalition in the primary opinion polling, which includes all parties (Chart 8). In two-party preference polling, Labor has gradually widened its general lead since the July 2016 election and now holds a 10% advantage in the federal polls – albeit only a 6% lead when a moving average is taken (Chart 9). Labor is also winning or tied in every major state. Chart 9Labor Has Large Lead In Two-Party Preference Polls The dramatic shift in polling since August is significant because that is when the knives came out and the Coalition ousted Turnbull in favor of the current Prime Minister Scott Morrison. The purpose of this move was to give the party a facelift ahead of the election. It is true that public opinion views Morrison as the preferred prime minister to Labor’s Bill Shorten. Shorten has a negative net approval rating and has never been viewed as an inspiring politician, while Morrison is just barely net positive. This perception works against Labor’s lead in the party polling – which is very competitive anyway – and suggests the election will be close. Critically, the Liberal-National Coalition’s polling as a whole has not benefited from the change in leadership. And in fact the data does not support the two major Australian parties’ abiding belief that a leadership coup will boost their popularity: Australia has seen four of these coups since 2010, two from Labor and two from the Coalition, and the party in question lost an average of 8% of the popular vote and 14 seats in parliament in the succeeding election (Table 1). Table 1Intra-Party Coups Don’t Win Votes Turnbull’s ouster also calls attention to another detrimental factor for the Coalition: the challenge on the right flank from minor and anti-establishment parties. Pauline Hanson’s One Nation has a relatively low support rate both historically and in today’s race, currently at 8%, but anti-establishment feeling may have forced the Coalition into an error. Judging by the party’s weak polling since August, the negative response to Turnbull’s ouster has been more detrimental than the nomination of Morrison, an immigration hardliner and social conservative, has been beneficial. Meanwhile, Labor’s momentum has been corroborated by a string of surprise victories in by-elections and a sweeping win in the Victoria state elections on November 24. In the latter case, the party not only defended its hold on government, as one might expect in this progressive state, but exceeded expectations to win 56 seats out of 88 in the lower House, while the Coalition lost nearly half of its seats, falling from 37 to 21. Still, Labor’s lead is by no means decisive. In the average of the various primary polls its edge over the Coalition is within the margin of error. Moreover, the Coalition holds more “safe” (uncompetitive) seats than Labor.4 The bottom line is that a small swing in either party’s favor can produce a thin majority. The Coalition’s best case is the economy. But as concerns about unemployment and job creation recede, voters will make other demands. The top issues in recent polling are the cost of living, health care, housing affordability, and wages. Some polls also emphasize social mobility and climate change and renewable energy. Will Shorten’s Labor Party be able to capture the median voter? It is highly significant that the party has taken a rightward turn on immigration and taxes even as it holds out a more left-wing agenda on health, education, regulation, and social benefits. Immigration has played a major role in Australian politics and Labor is currently positioned near the political center – in other words, if Morrison hardens his line to guard against populists, he risks over-hardening and moving away from the median voter (Chart 10). Shorten has proposed a large bipartisan task force to determine the proper limits to immigration and how to deal with congestion and infrastructure pressures. Shorten’s platform also calls attention to abuse of temporary visas by foreign workers. Chart 10Labor Is Not Too Soft On Immigration On taxes, Shorten has attempted to separate small and big companies, again in a bid for the political center. When Prime Minister Morrison sought to establish his anti-tax credentials (Chart 11), Shorten met him halfway and proposed relief for middle class families and small and medium-sized enterprises. Yet he doubled down on higher taxes for multinational corporations and high-income earners. Chart 11Liberal-National Coalition Cutting Corporate Tax Rates Critically, the latter redistributive stances are more in line with the median voter than the Liberal Party’s more conservative, supply-side, tax cut agenda. All of Australia’s parties, including the increasingly popular “minority parties,” have a more favorable attitude toward redistribution than the Coalition, which is the outlier (Chart 12). Indeed, the National Party is closer in line with the others than the Liberals, highlighting the divisions within the Coalition that have been jeopardizing votes. As for tax cuts on middle income earners and small businesses, Labor’s acceptance of them speaks to voter concerns about living costs, jobs, and wages. Chart 12The Coalition Is Out Of Synch On Taxes Labor is also closer to the median voter on the aforementioned financial sector scandals. The Coalition stands to suffer because it has developed a reputation for being too cozy with the banks (Chart 13). This is one of the biggest perceived differences between the two major parties – in addition to the negative perception of intra-Coalition betrayal – and it is possibly one of the most salient issues in the election. This presents a serious danger for the Coalition. Chart 13Banks: The Coalition’s Ball And Chain What would a Labor government bring? The market will be jittery about Shorten’s attempts to increase tax revenue, which threatens a non-negligible tightening of fiscal policy. Shorten wants to raise taxes on high income earners; remove or lower deductions and discounts (such as on capital gains); crack down on tax evasion; and tighten control over a range of tax practices specific to Australia (limiting “negative gearing” and cutting cash refunds for “franking credits”). He is also taking a tough position on banks and the energy sector. At the same time, it is clear from Labor’s proposals in 2016 (Chart 14) that there will be a hefty amount of new spending coming down the pike if a Labor government is formed – primarily on education, health, infrastructure and job training. The tax cuts that Shorten does support will go to those with a higher propensity to consume, as well as to SMEs that are responsible for job creation. Chart 14Labor’s Spending Plans Unlikely To Change Much Ultimately, Australia’s recent history, taken in consideration with the global business cycle, does not suggest that the Labor Party is all that much more fiscally profligate than the Coalition – but the current budget balance does suggest that there is substantial room to increase deficits, which is convenient for a government that is predisposed to give voters more services (Chart 15). Hence fiscal easing is the path of least resistance - one that could make the RBA even more comfortable in raising interest rates if the conditions laid out earlier in this report come to pass. Chart 15Australia's Next Government Will Have Room To Spend! Bottom Line: The Australian Labor Party is slightly favored to win the next Australian election. This is a low-conviction call given the tight competition in public opinion polling and other mixed indicators. Broadly speaking, Labor’s shift to the political center on immigration and some tax issues makes the party more electable relative to the Coalition; meanwhile its promise of more government services fits with voter demands. We do not accept the narrative that Shorten’s Labor Party will engage in substantial fiscal tightening. The path of least resistance is for tax cuts as well as revenue collection, and for greater government spending. On the other hand, if the Coalition capitalizes on the incumbent advantage and stays in power, larger tax cuts will be in store. Hence we expect Australia to see marginally larger-than-expected budget deficits and fiscal thrust as the one reliable takeaway of next year’s election. Fixed Income Investment Implications We continue to recommend an overweight stance on Australian government bonds in currency-hedged global bond portfolios. While we have laid out the conditions that would make us change that view in this report, it is still too soon to position for such a move. Our RBA Monitor, which measures the cyclical pressures on the central bank to change monetary policy settings, is modestly below the zero line (Chart 16). This indicates a need for easier policy, although the indicator is starting to rise driven by the inflation components in the Monitor (bottom panel). In terms of market pricing, there are only 15bps of rate hikes over the next year discounted in the Australian Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve, so markets are exposed to any shift to a more hawkish bias by the RBA as 2019 progresses. Chart 16Our RBA Monitor Starting To Turn Less Dovish Looking purely at Australian government bond yields, the forward curves are priced for very little change in yields over the next year (Chart 17). This suggests that outright duration trades in Australia look uninteresting from a carry perspective of betting against the forwards. We continue to prefer Australian bonds on a relative basis to global developed market peers until there is more decisive evidence pointing to convergence of Australian growth and inflation to the other major economies (bottom panel). Chart 17Stay Overweight Australian Government Bonds Over the past year, Global Fixed Income Strategy has recommended tactical trades in Australian money market futures to fade the pricing of RBA hikes that we did not expect to materialize. Specifically, we entered a long position in December 2018 Australian 90-Day Bank Bill futures on October 17, 2017, then switched to a long October 2019 90-Day Bank Bill futures position on May 29, 2017. The latter contract is now trading at implied interest rate levels just above the RBA’s 1.5% Cash Rate (Chart 18), suggesting that there is no more value in this trade.  Chart 18Taking Profits On Our Long Bank Bill Futures Trade We therefore take a profit of 21bps on the Bank Bill futures trade, while awaiting evidence from the “RBA Hike Checklist” introduced in this report before considering trades that will benefit from a more hawkish central bank.   Robert Robis, CFA, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Matt Gertken, Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, CFA, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1      Technically the House of Representatives election could occur as late as November 2, while the half Senate election is due May 18, but the norm is to hold the election simultaneously. The 2016 election was a “double dissolution” involving the election of the entire Senate and House of Representatives.  2      Please see BCA China Investment Strategy Special Report, “China’s Property Market: Where Will It Go From Here?” dated September 13, 2018, available at cis.bcareserach.com. 3      We would slightly favor Labor leading a slim majority in the Senate as well as in the House. In the Senate, the half of the seats that are up for grabs are evenly split and the polling at this early stage favors Labor over the Coalition. The poor performance of the Greens, in recent polling and in the Victoria state election, suggests a positive development for Labor on the margin, whereas One Nation, whose polls are improving, poses a threat to the Coalition. 4      Labor is fighting for 15 “marginal” (hotly contested) seats and 28 “fairly safe” seats, while the Coalition is only fighting for 12 marginal seats and 14 fairly safe seats.  
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