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BCA Research's Global Asset Allocation service reiterates its longstanding overweight on healthcare equities for the next 12 months and possibly beyond. The macro environment, as well as underlying demand factors, will continue to drive the sector’s…
Highlights A buildup in industrial inventory may temporarily slow down China’s commodity imports over the next month or two. Last week’s Politburo meeting stated that policy supports will remain in place for 2H20, despite a rising policy rate. We think the policy rate normalization will not imminently reverse the credit impulse; strong bank lending growth will be sustained and fiscal support will likely accelerate through Q3. The liquidity-driven hype in Chinese equities may be waning, but improving economic fundamentals should support a continued bull run (in both absolute and relative terms) for the rest of this year. Feature July’s official PMI indicates that China's economic recovery remains two-tracked, with a rebound in the supply side outpacing demand and investment outpacing consumption. This uneven improvement in the economy may lead to some inventory buildup in July and August. Nevertheless, both production and demand have grown steadily and should continue to pick up in the rest of the year, ahead of other major economies.1 The annual mid-year Politburo meeting last week indicates that the monetary and fiscal policies will remain accommodative through the end of 2020.  Chinese policymakers also emphasized the importance of reviving domestic demand and consumption in H2. While we have seen a rising interbank rate since late April, the current growth in credit should be sustained at least through Q3. Moreover, we expect fiscal spending to accelerate in H2 and boost infrastructure investment growth even higher. The authorities’ stringent regulations on equity margin lending may curb speculation in the financial markets. However, stronger economic fundamentals in the second half of 2020 bodes well for China’s equity performance, particularly for cyclical stocks on a 6-12 month time horizon. Tables 1 and 2 present key developments in China’s economic and financial market performance over the past month, and we highlight several developments below: Table 1China Macro Data Summary Table 2China Financial Market Performance Summary Chart 1Export Growth Has Been Beating Expectations (And Our Model) China’s official manufacturing PMI rose to 51.1 in July, beating the market consensus. The export order subcomponent of the PMI rebounded substantially last month, although it remains below the 50 percent boom-bust threshold (Chart 1). Recent high-frequency data in the US suggests that America’s economic and consumption recovery may be stalling.2 While weak economic improvement in major global economies will be a drag on external demand for consumer and capital goods, we expect that China’s export growth will continue to be supported by the pandemic-related need for medical supplies. Both the production and demand subcomponents of the PMI improved in July, but the demand side was outpaced by the supply side. This has led to a significant uptick in the finished-goods inventory subcomponent, which is the first advance in four months (Chart 2).  The acceleration in post-lockdown construction activity in Q2 and exceptionally low commodity prices have driven up China’s imports of major commodities, such as steel, copper and crude oil. In turn, industrial inventories remained at their highest levels since late 2017 (Chart 3). This suggests that an inventory destocking and delay in construction activity in the flood-stricken southern part of China may hold back commodity import growth in August and possibly September. Chart 2Faster Production Rebound Leads To A Pickup In Inventory Chart 3High Product Inventories May Curb Commodity Imports In Q3 Chart 4Chinese Demand For Commodities Remains Strong Despite this, any moderation in China’s imports should be temporary. Industrial profit growth sprung back sharply in June. Rejuvenated growth in China’s industrial profits is crucial for fixed-asset investment and demand for durable goods, which would allow imports of commodities to remain robust in most of H2 this year (Chart 4). Statements from the mid-year Politburo meeting highlighted that “monetary policy will be more flexible and targeted in 2H20; and that the PBoC will focus on guiding the loan primary rate (LPR) lower to reduce financing costs for enterprises, particularly to the manufacturing sector and the SMEs.”  Since late April, the 3-month SHIBOR (the de facto policy rate) has been rising, though it remains at a historic low. Our take is that the authorities intend to normalize liquidity conditions in the interbank system, at least for the time being, to curb financial institutions’ speculative activities (Chart 5). Even though the rising policy rate has pushed up both government and corporate bond yields, it does not necessarily lead to an imminent tightening in credit growth. Instead, we expect bank lending and fiscal spending to accelerate. Even if the 3-month SHIBOR decisively bottomed in April, the momentum in credit growth should continue through Q3 and possibly peak in October (Chart 6). Our view is based on the following:  Chart 5Policymakers May Be Trying To Curb "Animal Spirits"... Chart 6...Without Stopping Capitals From Flowing To The Real Economy   The rising policy rate and corporate bond yields do not seem to affect the amount of corporate bonds being issued. Moreover, corporate bond issuance as a share of total social financing has been flat since 2016 and remains small relative to bank lending (Chart 7, top and middle panels)   On the other hand, the local government bonds’ share of total social financing has been rising since 2016 (Chart 7, middle panel). Since the amount of local government bonds issued is set at the annual National People’s Congress, a rising policy rate and bond yields have little effect on this segment of total social financing. Last week’s Politburo meeting called for local governments to speed up their special purpose bonds (SPB) issuance and complete the 3.75 trillion yuan annual quota by the end of October. The government bond issuance in July was dominated by special COVID-19 relief treasury bonds (STB), therefore, the SPB issuance will be concentrated in August to October. Based on our estimates, the average SPB issuance may reach 500 billion yuan per month in August through October, a more than 30% increase from the average monthly issuance in H1 this year.   The largest share in total social financing is bank lending, which has not correlated with the policy rate since 2016 (Chart 7, bottom panel). Instead, bank loan growth and lending rates are affected by the LPR, which rate policymakers vow to guide further downwards (Chart 8). Additionally, the PBoC signaled that bank lending in 2020 is targeted at 20 trillion yuan. This leaves the second half of 2020 with a minimum of 40% of the target, or 8 trillion yuan of newly increased bank lending. To complete this annual target, according to our calculations, the growth rate of bank lending in 2H20 will need to reach at least 13% on an annual basis. This would equal to the annual growth in bank lending seen in H1. Chart 7Fiscal Support Will Accelerate Chart 8Bank Loans Should Accelerate Too When Lending Rates Are Lower China’s domestic and investable stocks dropped by 2% and 4%, respectively, from their peaks in early July, a technical correction that was mainly driven by market concerns that Chinese policymakers will withdraw stimulus too soon. China’s policymakers have indeed tightened interbank liquidity conditions and adopted more stringent measures to curb speculative behavior in the financial markets. However, we think the strong credit growth and fiscal stimulus will continue in the second half of the year, and will provide substantial support to boost China’s economic growth. As shown in Chart 9 (top panel), there has not been a steady correlation between China’s policy rate and equity performance. Rather, economic fundamentals are still the main driver for stock performance on a cyclical basis (6-12 month) (Chart 9, bottom panel). The multiples in Chinese stocks are not too elevated compared with their global peers (Chart 10A,10B, and 10C). Moreover, Chinese cyclical stocks have outperformed defensives, enhancing our cyclical bullish view on stocks in both absolute and relative terms (Chart 11).  Chart 9Chinese Equity Performances Are More Correlated With Economic Fundamentals Than Policy Rate Chart 10AChinese A Shares Are Not Too Decoupled From Economic Fundamentals Chart 10BChinese Offshore Stocks Are More Driven By Multiple Expansions... Chart 10C...But Still Not As Much As Their Global Peers Chart 11Cyclical Stocks Are Having The Upper Hand   Qingyun Xu, CFA Senior Analyst qingyunx@bcaresearch.com Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1Please see Global Investment Strategy Outlook "Third Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: Navigating The Second Wave," dated June 30, 2020, available at gis.bcaresearch.com 2Please see Daily Insights "A Bumpy Recovery, But Stocks Have Room To Run," dated July 31, 2020, available at bcaresearch.com Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
In this Monday’s Special Report we outlined 10 reasons why investors should favor cyclical over defensive equities on a 12-18 month time horizon. Not only does the debasing of the US dollar bode well for Income Statement (I/S) relative translation gains, but also serves as a tonic to global growth. In other words, a final demand recovery is in the works on the back of a pending virtuous cycle: a depreciating dollar lifts global growth, and an increase in trade brings more US dollars in circulation further weakening the greenback (top panel). Our Global Trade Activity Indicator also corroborates the USD message and underscores a global growth recovery into 2021 (second panel). Tack on the meteoric rise in the G10 economic surprise index (third panel) and factors are falling into place for a synchronized global economic recovery including a V-shaped US rebound from the depths of the recession in Q2 (ISM manufacturing survey shown advanced, bottom panel). Bottom Line: Favor cyclical equities at the expense of defensives over the next 12-18 months.    
BCA Research's US Equity Strategy service recently highlighted that the S&P5 (AAPL, MSFT, AMZN, GOOGL & FB) are trouncing the S&P495. Upon further analysis, and drilling deeper beneath the tech sector’s surface is revealing. These tech titans…
Two weeks ago we highlighted that the S&P5 (AAPL, MSFT, AMZN, GOOGL & FB) are trouncing the S&P495. Upon further analysis, and drilling deeper beneath the tech sector’s surface is revealing. These tech titans explain all of the year-to-date (ytd) tech related returns. The top panel of the chart shows that the S&P tech sector excluding AAPL & MSFT is below the February highs and nearly all the tech related return sits with the top five titans. Worrisomely, the remaining S&P 426 stocks (which exclude all the tech names) are down 10% ytd. In relative terms, the bottom panel of the chart reiterates that even the tech sector itself is in this bifurcated market where only a handful of stocks have been generating all the alpha. Such extreme concentration, while not unprecedented, is a sign of an unhealthy overall market backdrop which makes it vulnerable to a significant shock. Bottom Line: We remain cautious on the near-term prospects of the S&P 500, until the election uncertainty lifts late in the year.
BCA Research's Global Investment Strategy service concludes that bank shares should start to do better as yield curves steepen and faster economic growth reduces concerns over non-performing loans. Gauging the outlook for financials is tricky. Credit…
BCA Research's US Equity Strategy service believes that capex intentions are promising enough to signal a harbinger of a cyclicals outperformance phase at the expense of defensives. The latest GDP report made for grim reading. US capex collapsed 27% last…
Special Report Dear Client, There will be no Weekly Report on August 10, as the US Equity Strategy team will be on vacation for the week. Our regular publication schedule will resume on Monday August 17, 2020 with a Special Report by my colleague Chester Ntonifor, BCA’s Chief FX Strategist on the interplay of the style bias and the US Dollar. We trust that you will find this Report both informative and insightful. Kind Regards, Anastasios Feature Before getting to our analysis on why cyclicals will best defensives, we want to address our definition of cyclicals and defensives, where we think tech stands and why, discuss what our current positioning is and what time horizon we are targeting for this portfolio bent. Cyclicals And Defensives Definition Table 1 is a stripped down version of our current recommendations table and shows that our cyclicals definition is one of deep cyclicals including industrials, materials, energy and the information technology sector. Utilities, consumer staples, health care and telecom services (which is currently categorized as a GICS2) comprise our defensives universe. Table 1US Equity Strategy's Cyclicals Vs. Defensives Current Recommendations Tech Is Still Cyclical Importantly, we still consider the tech sector a deep cyclical and not a safe haven sector. While the COVID-19 fallout has acted as an accelerant especially to a faster absorption of goods and services of the tech titans, that is not a de facto change in the behavior of these still cyclical stocks.  As a reminder tech stocks have 60% export exposure or 20 percentage points higher than the broad market. The implication is that US tech trends should follow the ebbs and flows of the global economy. Contrary to popular belief that technology equities behaved defensively recently, empirical evidence gives credence to our hypothesis that technology stocks remain cyclical: from the Feb 19 SPX peak until the March trough the IT sector underperformed all four defensive sectors (Chart of the Week). In marked contrast, tech has left in the dust defensive sectors since the March bottom, cementing its cyclical status. Chart of the WeekTech Remains A Cyclical Sector Current Positioning With regard to our broader technology positioning, we are currently neutral the S&P tech sector, overweight the S&P internet retail index (which Amazon dominates) that sits under the S&P consumer discretionary sector and underweight the S&P interactive media & services index (which includes Alphabet and Facebook) that falls under the newly formed S&P communications services sector. Thus, our broadly defined tech sector exposure remains neutral. Meanwhile, last week we boosted the S&P materials sector to overweight and that move pushed our cyclicals/defensives bent marginally to preferring deep cyclicals to defensives (please see market cap weights in Table 1). Timing Is Key This portfolio bent may run into some near-term trouble as we expect a flare up of (geo)political risks (please see here and here), but once the election uncertainty lifts, hopefully in late-November/early-December, from that point onward and on a 9-12 month time horizon cyclicals should really start to flex their muscles versus defensives.  The purpose of this Special Report is to identify the top ten drivers of the looming cyclicals versus defensives outperformance phase on a cyclical time horizon. What follows is one page one chart per key reason, in no particular order of importance. 1.)    Dollar The Reflator Time and again we have highlighted the boost that internationally exposed sectors get from a weakening greenback. Cyclicals are the primary beneficiaries of such a backdrop as a lot of these deep cyclical companies garner over 50% of their sales from abroad. We recently updated in a Special Report the breakdown of GICS1 sectors’ foreign sourced revenues and more importantly their performance during US dollar bear markets. Cyclicals clearly have the upper hand. Chart 1 shows this tight inverse correlation, irrespective of what USD index we use. Finally, looking ahead a falling greenback will act as a relative profit reflator (US dollar shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 1), especially given that most of the defensive sectors are landlocked in the US and do not get a P&L fillip from positive translation gains. Chart 1CHART 1 2.)    Global Growth Recovery Not only does the debasing of the US dollar bode well for Income Statement (I/S) relative translation gains, but also serves as a tonic to global growth. In other words, a final demand recovery is in the works on the back of a pending virtuous cycle: a depreciating dollar lifts global growth, and an increase in trade brings more US dollars in circulation further weakening the greenback (top panel, Chart 2). Our Global Trade Activity Indicator also corroborates the USD message and underscores a global growth recovery into 2021 (second panel, Chart 2). Tack on the meteoric rise in the G10 economic surprise index (third panel, Chart 2) and factors are falling into place for a synchronized global economic recovery including a V-shaped US rebound from the depths of the recession in Q2 (ISM manufacturing survey shown advanced, bottom panel, Chart 2). Chart 2CHART 2 3.)    US Capex To The Rescue The latest GDP report made for grim reading. US capex collapsed 27% last quarter in line with the fall it suffered in Q1/2009. Not even bulletproof software investment escaped unscathed and contracted for the first time in seven years, albeit modestly. However, if the looming recovery resembles the GFC episode when real non-residential investment soared 40 percentage points from that nadir in the subsequent five quarters, then a slingshot rebound will ensue by the end of 2021. Importantly, our US capex indicator has an excellent track record in leading the relative share price ratio and confirms that a capex trough is already in store, tracing out the bottom hit during the Great Recession (top panel, Chart 3). Regional Fed surveys also signal that a capex boom looms in the coming quarters (middle panel, Chart 3). And, so do cheery CEOs that expect a sizable investment recovery in the next six months, according to the Conference Board survey (bottom panel, Chart 3). All of this is a harbinger of a cyclicals outperformance phase at the expense of defensives. Chart 3CHART 3 4.)   Chinese Capex On The Upswing (Fiscal Easing) Across the pacific, Chinese excavator sales have gone vertical. While we take Chinese data with a grain of salt, Komatsu hydraulic excavator demand growth in China has averaged 45% on a year-over-year basis in the quarter ending in June. This Japanese company’s data, which has been unaffected by the US/Sino trade war, corroborates the Chinese official statistics (top panel, Chart 4). Infrastructure spending is also on the rise in China following an abrupt halt in projects started early in 2020. This revving of the investment spending engine is bullish for the broad commodity complex including US cyclicals (bottom panel, Chart 4). Chart 4CHART 4 5.) Chinese Monetary Easing None of the above investment recovery would have been possible had the Chinese authorities not opened up the liquidity spigots. Monetary easing via the sinking reserve-requirement-ratio (RRR) has been instrumental in engineering an economic rebound (RRR shown inverted, third panel, Chart 5). The credit-easing channel has been also important in funneling cash toward investment, and the climbing Li Keqiang index is evidence that sloshing liquidity is being put to good use (bottom & second panels, Chart 5). Finally, Chinese loan demand data also confirms that an economic recovery is in the offing and heralds a US cyclicals versus defensives portfolio tilt (top panel, Chart 5).  Chart 5CHART 5 6.)   Firming Financial Market Data (Chinese And EM Equity Market Outperformance) Typically, financial market data are early in sniffing out a turn in economic data. This anticipatory nature of financial markets is currently signaling that EM in general and Chinese economic growth in particular will make a significant comeback in the coming quarters. Importantly, Chinese bourses and the MSCI EM equity index (in USD) have recently started to outperform the ACWI and the SPX (Chart 6). Both of these equity markets are more cyclically exposed than the defensive US and global indexes because of the respective sector composition and have paved the way for a sustainable rise in the US cyclicals/defensives share price ratio (Chart 6).   Chart 6CHART 6 7.)    Transition From Deflation To Inflation Similarly to the EM and Chinese equity market outperformance of their DM peers, commodity prices are putting in a bottom and forecasting a brighter global trade backdrop for the rest of the year (top panel, Chart 7). The depreciating US dollar is also underpinning the commodity complex and this should serve as a catalyst for an exit from the recent global disinflationary backdrop, especially corporate wholesale price deflation. Domestically, the prices paid subcomponent of the ISM manufacturing survey is firming and projecting that relative pricing power will favor cyclicals versus defensives (bottom panel, Chart 7). Chart 7CHART 7 8.)   Profit Expectations Have Turned The Corner Sell-side extreme pessimism has given way to mild optimism as depicted by the now positive relative Net Earnings Revisions (NER) ratio (third panel, Chart 8).  Importantly, despite the spike in the relative NER ratio, the bar has not risen enough both on a relative profit growth and revenue growth basis in order to short circuit the recovery in the relative share price ratio (second & bottom panels, Chart 8).  Chart 8CHART 8 9.)   Alluring Valuations The relative Valuation Indicator remains below the neutral zone offering a cushion to investors that are contending to execute a cyclicals versus defensives portfolio bent (Chart 9).   Chart 9CHART 9 10.) Enticing Technicals Lastly, cyclicals are still unloved compared with defensives as our relative Technical Indicator (TI) highlights in Chart 10.  In fact, our relative TI also hovers below the neutral zone, near a level that has marked previous playable recovery rallies (bottom panel, Chart 10). Chart 10CHART 10     But Monitor Three Key Risks Over the coming 12 to 18 months, investors should prepare their portfolios for an outperformance phase of cyclical sectors relative to defensives. Nonetheless, we are closely monitoring a number of key risks that can put our view offside. First, the relentless rise of ex-Vice President Biden in the polls on PREDICTIT, the rapidly increasing probability of a “Blue Sweep” in the upcoming elections, and the non-negligible risk of a contested election (as discussed in a joined Special Report with our sister Geopolitical Strategy service last week), all pose a short-term threat to the benign election backdrop priced into stocks. Were a risk-off phase to materialize in the next three months, as we expect, then cyclicals would take the back seat versus defensives, at least temporarily (bottom panel, Chart 11). Second, what worries us most is that Dr. Copper and crude oil (another global growth barometer), especially compared with gold, have yet to confirm the global growth recovery. In other words, the fleeting oil-to-gold and copper-to-gold ratios underscore that the liquidity-to-growth handoff has gone on hiatus. While we are not ready to throw in the towel yet, these relative commodity signals are disconcerting, and were they to deteriorate further, they would definitely undermine our optimistic view on global growth (top and second panels, Chart 11). Finally, it is disquieting that our relative profit growth models have no pulse. They represent a significant risk to the relative earnings-led rebound which the rest of the indicators we track are anticipating (third panel, Chart 11). Chart 11Three Key Risks We Are Monitoring Bottom Line: On balance, a looming global growth recovery and pending global capex upcycle, a softening US dollar, commodity price inflation and Chinese monetary easing will more than offset the trifecta of rising election-related risks, the current unresponsiveness of our relative profit growth models and the lack of confirmation of a liquidity-to-growth transition. This will pave the way for a cyclicals outperformance phase at the expense of defensives.     Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com  
  Markets have shrugged off the rise in COVID-19 cases in the US and new clusters in other places such as Spain, Hong Kong, Melbourne, and Tokyo (Chart 1). The MSCI All-Country World Index is now only 4% off its all-time high in February. We don’t see the markets ignoring reality for much longer. Economic activity remains very subdued (Chart 2), which will eventually cause a significant rise in bankruptcies and problems for banks. Nevertheless, the unprecedented monetary and fiscal stimulus will be increased further in coming weeks, which should prevent a big shift towards pessimism for a while. The crunch time will come in the northern-hemisphere winter, when COVID cases in North America and Europe are likely to rise sharply again. Risk assets at their current levels are not pricing in those risks. Recommended Allocation   Chart 1COVID Cases Are Still On The Rise Chart 2Activity Remains Subdued Markets are driven by the second derivative of growth. It is not surprising, then, that equities began to rally in March, exactly when economic data stopped deteriorating, even though it remained atrocious (Chart 3). Real interest rates have also continued to fall, even as risk assets rallied; this further fueled the rally, since the theoretical value of equities rises as the rate at which they are discounted falls (Chart 4). Chart 3Data Stopped Deteriorating In March Chart 4Real Interest Rates Have Continued To Fall But the question now is: Can the data continue to improve? PMIs will fall back towards 50, and economic releases are unlikely to surprise so strongly on the upside. In the US, as a result of the rise in COVID-19 cases and renewed (albeit mostly moderate) government restrictions on activity, consumer confidence has started to weaken again and initial unemployment claims to pick up (Charts 5 and 6). Even though the Fed will remain ultra-dovish, real rates will not fall much further from their current level, which is the lowest since TIPS started trading in the late 1990s. Chart 5Consumer Confidence Is Weakening Again Chart 6The Jobs Market Has Stopped Improving Chart 7Will Money Supply Growth Peak? Money supply growth has grown rapidly, as a result of the increase in central-bank balance-sheets and the rush of companies to borrow to shore up their cash positions (Chart 7). The increase in excess liquidity has also been a force behind the rise in risk assets. But money supply growth is likely to slow from now. At least partly offsetting these risks will be further fiscal stimulus. BCA Research’s Geopolitical strategists see Congress approving a big new package of around $2.5 trillion, mainly because of widespread popular support for an extension of more generous unemployment benefits (Table 1). Agreement should come before the scheduled recess on August 10 (if it doesn’t, this would trigger a market selloff). The recent agreement between European Union leaders on a EUR750 billion fiscal package was a major breakthrough, since it represented joint borrowing backed by the rich northern European countries to provide transfers to the poorer periphery. Table 1There Is Much Public Support For Fiscal Stimulus Further upside may come as the many investors who have missed the rally since March capitulate and buy risk assets. Investor sentiment is currently unusually polarized. Speculative individuals and hedge funds are very bullish (Chart 8). But more conservative pension funds, wealth managers, and individual investors, mostly remain cautious, as evidenced by the AAII weekly survey, in which many more investors say they expect the stock market to fall over the next six months than to rise (Chart 9). Cash levels remain high by historical standards (Chart 10). Although only a minority of investors turned positive in March, a recent academic study demonstrated how hedge funds and small active institutions have a disproportionate influence on price movements (Chart 11). A downside risk, then, would be if these investors decided to take profits or turned more bearish. Chart 8Hedge Funds Are Bullish... Chart 9...But Retail Investors Very Cautious Chart 10Cash Holdings Remain Elevated Chart 11Some Smaller Investors Have A Big Impact We have argued, since the pandemic began, that investors should not take high-conviction bets in such an uncertain environment. They should, rather, design portfolios which are robust under various scenarios. After the 43% rise in global equities since March, we cannot recommend an above-benchmark weighting, since downside risks are not priced in. We remain neutral on global equities. However, fixed-income instruments look even more unattractive at the current low level of rates; we remain underweight. We recommend hedging via a large overweight in cash, which leaves dry powder for when a better buying opportunity arises. Currencies: A key (as always) to the macro view is what happens to the US dollar. Many of the drivers of the dollar – interest-rate differentials, valuation, momentum, and relative money-supply growth – point to it weakening further (Chart 12). The trade-weighted dollar is already off 9% from its March peak. We turned bearish on the USD in our Quarterly published at the beginning of July. It is too early, however, to declare that the dollar bull market, which began in 2012, is definitely over. Chart 12Dollar Indicators Are Bearish... Chart 13…But Short USD Is Now A Consensus A new downturn in the global economy would push the dollar back up again, since it is a safe-haven currency. Shorting the dollar, especially against the euro, is now a consensus position, and so a near-term reversal is quite likely (Chart 13). But, over the next 12-18 months, a move above 1.22 for the euro and towards 100 for the yen is possible. We will continue to analyze whether the dollar could be entering a bear market, since this would necessarily make us more structurally positive on commodities and emerging markets. Equities: A pickup in global growth and a weakening US dollar might prove positive for cyclicals and value stocks in the long run, which would cause European and EM equities to outperform. Given the current uncertainty, however, we cannot recommend that stance and therefore continue to prefer “growth defensives” such as Health Care and Technology, which implies an overweight on the overall US market. Valuations in the Health Care sector remain attractive (Chart 14). Companies in the (broadly defined) Tech sector are beneficiaries of the pandemic, generally have robust balance-sheets, and should continue to see strong earnings growth for some years. And, while Technology is clearly expensive, valuations are still nowhere as excessive as in 2000 (Chart 15). For Tech to crash would require either that it go ex-growth, or that there is significant regulatory action. Chart 14Health Care Still Attractively Valued Chart 15Tech Still Way Below Bubble Levels Chart 16Europe No Longer So Dominated By Financials Neither of these seems likely for now. Euro zone equities are less dominated than they were by Financials, but remain more cyclical than the US, with very few internet-related names (Chart 16).   Fixed Income: Central banks will remain very dovish and, as Fed chair Jerome Powell has emphasized, are not even thinking about thinking about tightening policy. This suggests that nominal rates will rise only moderately, even if growth continues to pick up. The Fed still has plenty of room to ease further if needed, since the programs it rolled out in March have barely been taken up yet (Table 2). We thus recommend a neutral position on duration. We find TIPS attractive as a hedge against an eventual spike in inflation. The 10-year breakeven inflation rate implied in TIPS remains around 100 basis points below being compatible with the Fed achieving its 2% PCE inflation target in the long run (Chart 17). The announcement in September of the results of the Fed’s 18-month review of its policy framework, which is likely to intensify its efforts to achieve the inflation target, could push breakevens up a bit further. In credit, we continue to recommend buying whatever central banks are buying, mostly investment-grade corporate bonds and the top end of the US junk bond market. Though spreads have fallen a long way, they are still well above end-2019 levels, and look attractive in a world of such low government bond yields (Chart 18). Table 2Usage Of The 2020 Federal Reserve Emergency Lending Facilities Chart 17TIPS Still Pricing Low Inflation For A Decade Chart 18Credit Spreads Could Fall Further Commodities: The weakening US dollar and continued expansion of Chinese stimulus (Chart 19) should be positive for industrial metals prices over the next six to nine months. Oil prices also have some further upside, since the OPEC 2.0 agreement to restrict supply is being adhered to, and demand will gradually pick up (although air travel will remain depressed, more commuters are using their cars as they avoid public transport). BCA Research’s Energy Service forecasts Brent crude to average $44 in the second half of this year, and $65 in 2021 (up from the current $43). Gold has already run up a lot and is now close to a record high price in real terms, with sentiment very optimistic (Chart 20). Chart 19China Stimulus Positive For Metals Nonetheless, in an environment of very low real rates, it represents a good hedge against extreme tail risks, and therefore we continue to recommend a moderate position as an insurance. Chart 20Gold Looking Rather Toppish Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Global Asset Allocation garry@bcaresearch.com Recommended Asset Allocation  
GAA DM Equity Country Allocation Model Update The GAA DM Equity Country Allocation model is updated as of July 31, 2020.  The model has not made any meaningful adjustment to the top overweight countries with the top four remaining the US, Spain, Australia, and Sweden. Within the underweight countries, however, the UK has dropped out of the top four, replaced by Germany. Japan, France, and Switzerland remain in the top 4 underweight countries, as shown in Table 1.  Table 1Model Allocation Vs. Benchmark Weights As shown in Table 2 and Charts 1, 2 and 3, the overall model outperformed the MSCI World benchmark by 73 bps in July, with positive contributions from both the Level 1 and the Level 2 models. The Level 2 model outperformed its benchmark by 176 bps, thanks largely to the underweight in Japan and the UK, as well as the overweight in Sweden. The Level 1 model outperformed by 27 bps due to the large overweight in the US. Since going live, the overall model has outperformed its MSCI World benchmark by 390 bps, with 714 bps of outperformance from the Level 2 model, and 74 bps of outperformance from the Level 1 model. Table 2Performance (Total Returns In USD %) Chart 1GAA DM Model Vs. MSCI World Chart 2GAA US Vs. Non US Model (Level 1)   Chart 3GAA Non US Model (Level 2) GAA Equity Sector Selection Model The GAA Equity Sector Model (Chart 4) is updated as of July 31, 2020. The model’s relative tilts between cyclicals and defensives did not change compared to last month. The model continues to maintain its cyclical stance driven by an improvement in its global growth proxy and remains exposed to cyclical sectors. Over the past month, the model outperformed its benchmark by 32 basis points. Year-to-date, the model has outperformed its benchmark by 144 basis points, and 149 basis points since inception. Chart 4Overall Model Performance Table 3Overall Model Performance The model’s global growth proxy improved – driven by appreciating EM currencies and rising metal prices, and therefore continues to remain positive on cyclical sectors. Global monetary easing and low rates should keep the liquidity component favoring a mixed bag of cyclical and defensive sectors. The valuation component remains muted across all sectors except Energy. However, multiple sectors continue to be near the expensive and cheap zones – mainly Info Tech and Consumer Discretionary (expensive), and Real Estate and Consumer Staples (cheap). The model awaits confirming momentum signals to change recommendations for those sectors. Table 4Current Model Allocations The model is now overweight four cyclical sectors in total. These are Information Technology, Consumer Discretionary, Communication Services, and Materials. For more details on the model, please see the Special Report “Introducing the GAA Equity Sector Selection Model”, dated July 27, 2016, as well as the Sector Selection Model section in the Special Alert “GAA Quant Model Updates”, dated March 1, 2019 available at https://gaa.bcaresearch.com.   Xiaoli Tang Associate Vice President xiaoliT@bcaresearch.com Amr Hanafy Senior Analyst amrh@bcaresearch.com