Equities
Since the Christmas Eve lows essentially all of the 26% return in equities is explained by valuation expansion. The forward P/E has recovered from 13.5 to nearly 17.2 (bottom panel), but there is limited scope for further expansion as four interest rate cuts in the coming 12 months are already priced in lofty valuations. Now profits will have to do the heavy lifting. Meanwhile, more than half of the S&P 500 GICS1 sectors are forecast to have contracted profits last quarter, and three sectors could not lift revenue versus year ago comps, according to I/B/E/S data. In our most recent Weekly Report we also highlighted that BCA’s global manufacturing PMI diffusion index has cratered to below 40%, the NY Fed’s recession probability model continues to tick higher, and that non-financial ex-tech corporate net debt-to-EBITDA has hit all-time highs. Bottom Line: Once the euphoria around the looming Fed easing cycle settles, there will be a massive clash between perception and reality that will likely propagate as a surge in volatility. We continue to remain cautious on the prospects of the broad equity market on a cyclical three-to-twelve month time horizon.
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Recession odds continue to tick higher, according to the NY Fed’s probability of recession model, at a time when global growth is waning, U.S. profit growth is contracting and the non-financial ex-tech corporate balance sheet is degrading rapidly. On a cyclical 3-12 month time horizon we remain cautious on the broad equity market. This is U.S. Equity Strategy’s view, which stands in contrast to the more sanguine equity BCA House View. The souring macro backdrop coupled with a firming industry demand outlook signal that more gains are in store for hypermarket stocks. The global growth slowdown, declining real bond yields, missing inflation, rising policy uncertainty and a favorable relative demand backdrop suggest that there is an exploitable tactical trading opportunity in a long global gold miners/short S&P oil & gas E&P pair trade. Recent Changes Upgrade the S&P hypermarkets index to overweight, today. Initiate a long global gold miners/short S&P oil & gas exploration & production (E&P) pair trade, today Table 1 Feature Obsession with the Fed easing continues to trump all else, with the SPX piercing through the 3,000 mark to fresh all-time highs last week. However, it is unrealistic for the Fed to do all the heavy lifting for the equity market as we have argued recently (see Chart 3 from June 24),1 at a time when profit cracks are spreading rapidly. This should be cause for some trepidation. Since the Christmas Eve lows essentially all of the 26% return in equities is explained by valuation expansion. The forward P/E has recovered from 13.5 to nearly 17.2 (Chart 1). There is limited scope for further expansion as four interest rate cuts in the coming 12 months are already priced in lofty valuations. Now profits will have to do the heavy lifting. But on the eve of earnings season, more than half of the S&P 500 GICS1 sectors are forecast to have contracted profits last quarter, and three sectors could not lift revenue versus year ago comps, according to I/B/E/S data. Looking further out, there is a plethora of indicators that we highlighted last week that suggest that a profit recession is looming.2 Our sense is that once the euphoria around the looming Fed easing cycle settles, there will be a massive clash between perception and reality (Chart 2) that will likely propagate as a surge in volatility. Chart 1Multiple Expansion Explains All Of The SPX’s Return Chart 2Unsustainable Divergence This addiction to low rates has come at a great cost to the non-financial corporate sector. As a reminder, this segment of the economy is where the excesses are in the current cycle as we have been highlighting in recent research.3 Using stock market related data for the non-financial ex-tech universe, net debt has increased by 70% to $4.2tn over the past five years, but cash flow has only grown 18% to $1.7tn. As a result, net debt-to-EBITDA has spiked from 1.7 to 2.5, an all-time high (Chart 3). While stocks are at all-time highs (top panel, Chart 3), the debt-saddled non-financials ex-tech universe will likely exert substantial downward pressure to these equities in the coming months (Chart 4). Chart 3Balance Sheet Degrading Chart 4Something’s Got To Give Moving on to the labor market, we recently noticed an interesting behavior between the unemployment rate and wage inflation since the early-1990s recession: a repulsive magnet-type property exists where like magnetic poles repel each other (middle panel, Chart 5). In other words, every time the falling unemployment rate has kissed off accelerating wage growth, a steep reversal ensued at the onset of recession during the previous three cycles. A repeat may be already taking place, as average hourly earnings (AHE) growth has been stuck in the mud since peaking in December 2018. Importantly, the AHE impulse is quickly losing steam and every time the Fed embarks on an aggressive easing cycle it typically marks the end of wage inflation (bottom panel, Chart 5). Chart 5Beware Of Repulsion Chart 6Waiting For Growth Meanwhile, BCA’s global manufacturing PMI diffusion index has cratered to below 40% (middle panel, Chart 6). Neither the G7 nor the EM aggregate PMIs are above the boom/bust line (top panel, Chart 6). Our breakdown of the Leading Economic Indicators into G7 and EM14 also signals that global growth is hard to come by, albeit EMs are showing some early signs of a trough (bottom panel, Chart 6). As the early-May announced increase in Chinese tariffs begin to take a toll, we doubt global growth can have a sustainable recovery for the rest of 2019, despite Chinese credit growth picking up. Now, even Japan and Korea are fighting it out and are erecting barriers to trade, dealing a further blow to these economically hyper-sensitive export-oriented economies. Netting it all out, the odds of recession by mid-2020 continue to tick higher according to the NY Fed’s model (NY Fed’s probability of recession shown inverted, top panel, Chart 5) at a time when global growth is waning, U.S. profit growth is contracting and the non-financial ex-tech corporate balance sheet is degrading rapidly. On a cyclical 3-12 month time horizon we remain cautious on the broad equity market. This is U.S. Equity Strategy’s view, which stands in contrast to the more sanguine equity BCA House View. This week we are upgrading a consumer staples subgroup to overweight and initiating an intra-commodity market neutral trade. Time To Buy The Hype The tide is shifting and we are upgrading the S&P hypermarkets index to an above benchmark allocation. While valuations are stretched, trading at a 50% premium to the overall market on a 12-month forward P/E basis (not shown), our thesis is that these Big Box retailers will grow into their pricey valuations in the coming months. The macro landscape is aligned perfectly with these defensive retailers. Consumer confidence has been falling all year long and now cracks are spreading to the labor market (confidence shown inverted, top panel, Chart 7). ADP small business payrolls declined for the second month in a row. Similarly, the NFIB survey shows that small business hiring plans are cooling (hiring plans shown inverted, middle panel, Chart 7). As a reminder, 2/3 of all new hiring typically occurs in the small and medium enterprise space. In the residential real estate market, the drop in interest rates that is now in its eighth month has yet to be felt, and house price inflation has ground to a halt. Historically, Costco membership growth has been inversely correlated with house prices (house price inflation shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 7). Chart 7Deteriorating Macro Backdrop … Chart 8…Is A Boon To Hypermarkets… Chart 8 shows three additional macro variables that signal brighter times ahead for the relative share price ratio. The drubbing in the 10-year U.S. treasury yield reflects a souring macro backdrop, melting inflation and a steep fall in U.S. economic data surprises. The ISM manufacturing index that continues to decelerate and is now closing in on the boom/bust line corroborates the bond market’s grim message. Tack on the Fed’s expected four cuts in the coming 12 months, and factors are falling into place for a durable rally in relative share prices. This disinflationary backdrop along with the Fed’s looming easing interest rate cycle have put a solid bid under gold prices. Hypermarket equities and bullion traditionally move in lockstep, and the current message is to expect more gains in the former (top panel, Chart 9). On the trade front specifically, these Big Box retailers do source consumer goods from China, but up to now these imports have been nearly immune to the U.S./China trade dispute as prices have been deflating (import prices shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 9). However, this does pose a risk going forward and we will be closely monitoring it for two reasons: First, because downward pressures may intensify on the greenback and second, President Trump may impose additional tariffs, both of which are negative for industry pricing power. Chart 9Profit Margins… Chart 10…Will Likely Expand Meanwhile, industry demand is on the rise and will likely offset the potential trade and U.S. dollar induced margin pressures. Hypermarket retail sales are climbing at a healthy clip outpacing overall retail sales (bottom panel, Chart 10). Already non-discretionary retail sales are outshining discretionary ones, which is a precursor to recession at a time when overall consumer outlays have sunk below 1% (real PCE growth shown inverted, top panel, Chart 10). The implication is that hypermarkets will continue to garner a larger slice of consumer outlays as the going gets tough. In sum, the souring macro backdrop coupled with a firming industry demand outlook signal that more gains are in store for hypermarket stocks. Bottom Line: Boost the S&P hypermarkets index to overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG – S5HYPC – WMT, COST. Initiate A Long Global Gold Miners/Short S&P Oil & Gas E&P Pair Trade One way to benefit from the global growth soft-patch and looming global liquidity injection is to go long global gold miners/short S&P oil & gas E&P stocks on a tactical three-to-six month basis. While this market neutral and intra-commodity pair trade has already enjoyed an impressive run, there is more upside owing to a favorable macro backdrop. The key determinant of this share price ratio is the relative move in the underlying commodities that serve as pricing power proxies (top panel, Chart 11). Given the massive currency debasement potential that has gripped Central Banks the world over, such a flush liquidity backdrop will boost the allure of the shiny metal more so than crude oil. Global manufacturing PMIs are foreshadowing recession and our diffusion index has plummeted to the lowest level since 2011 (diffusion shown inverted, middle panel, Chart 11). In the U.S. specifically there is a growth-to-liquidity handoff and the ISM manufacturing survey’s new order versus prices paid subcomponents confirms that global gold miners have the upper hand compared with E&P equities (bottom panel, Chart 11). Chart 11Global Soft-Patch… Chart 12…Disinflation… As a result of this growth scare that can easily morph into recession especially if the U.S./China trade war continues into next year, inflation is nowhere to be found. Unit labor costs are slumping (top panel, Chart 12), the NY Fed’s Underlying Inflation Gauge has rolled over decisively (not shown),4 and the GDP deflator is slipping (middle panel, Chart 12). Parts of the yield curve first inverted in early-December and the 10-year/fed funds rate slope is still inverted, signaling that gold miners will continue to outperform oil producers (yield curve shown on inverted scale, bottom panel, Chart 13). The near 100bps dive in real interest rates since late-December ties everything together and is a boon to bullion (and gold producers) that yields nothing (TIPS yield shown inverted, top panel, Chart 13). Meanwhile, bond volatility has spiked of late and the bottom panel of Chart 14 shows that historically the MOVE index has been joined at the hip with relative share prices. Chart 13…Melting Real Yields And… Chart 14…The Spike In Bond Vol, All Favor Gold Miners Over Oil Producers On the relative demand front, we peer over to China to take a pulse of the marginal moves in these commodity markets. China (and Russia) has been aggressively shifting their currency reserves into gold, and bullion holdings are rising both in volume terms and as a percentage of total FX reserves. In marked contrast, oil demand is feeble and Chinese apparent diesel consumption that is closely correlated with infrastructure and manufacturing activity has tumbled. Taken together, the message is to expect additional gain in relative share prices (middle & bottom panels, Chart 15). Adding it all up, the global growth slowdown, declining real bond yields, missing inflation, rising policy uncertainty and a favorable relative demand backdrop suggest that there is an exploitable tactical trading opportunity in a long global gold miners/short S&P oil & gas E&P pair trade. Bottom Line: Initiate a tactical long global gold miners/short S&P oil & gas E&P pair trade on a three-to-six month time horizon with a stop at the -10% mark. The ticker symbols for the stocks in these indexes are: GDX:US and BLBG – S5OILP – COP, EOG, APC, PXD, CXO, FANG, HES, DVN, MRO, NBL, COG, APA, XEC, respectively. Chart 15Upbeat Relative Demand Backdrop Anastasios Avgeriou, U.S. Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Cracks Forming” dated June 24, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Beware Profit Recession” dated July 8, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “A Recession Thought Experiment” dated June 10, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 https://www.newyorkfed.org/research/policy/underlying-inflation-gauge Current Recommendations Size And Style Views Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps
Highlights A lower fed funds rate will not necessarily boost equities, … : A chorus of Wall Street strategists has recently advised investors to curb their enthusiasm about looming rate cuts. … because stocks are more sensitive to the relative level of the fed funds rate than they are to its direction: The Street strategists’ advice is sound, even if they haven’t homed in on its true rationale. Monetary policy’s influence on equity returns is primarily a function of the fed funds rate’s relationship to the equilibrium rate, not the direction in which it’s moving. Monetary policy settings remain accommodative, in our view, … : We estimate that the equilibrium fed funds rate remains well above the target fed funds rate. One or two rate cuts will push monetary policy even further into accommodative territory. ... and investors should therefore remain at least equal weight equities: Over the last 60 years, investors would have done exceptionally well if they had simply owned stocks when monetary policy settings were easy, and avoided them when they were tight. Feature Dear Client, We are in the midst of collaborating with several of our colleagues on a roundtable Special Report outlining the view differences between BCA’s most bullish and bearish strategists, scheduled to be published on Friday, July 19th. In the absence of a major event between now and then, the July 19th roundtable report will replace the July 22nd U.S. Investment Strategy. We will return to our usual format on Monday, July 29th. Best regards, Doug Peta U.S. equities have rallied smartly since Fed officials began hinting at rate cuts in early June. The S&P 500 advanced nearly 7% last month on rate cut hopes, and tacked on close to another 2% by making new highs in each of July’s first three sessions. As the gains grew, however, so too did the admonitions from equity strategists at leading broker-dealers that they were getting out of hand. Over the last month, no less than four shops wrote reports warning that rate cuts will not necessarily boost equities. From the financial media’s summaries of the reports, the curb-your-enthusiasm conclusion stems from a straightforward analysis of rate-cut impacts over the last 35 years. According to Goldman Sachs by way of Barron’s, the S&P 500 posted double-digit returns in the year following the start of all five of the rate-cutting cycles that occurred from the mid-eighties to the end of the nineties, before performing terribly following the cuts that began in 2001 and 2007.1 The Street-wide takeaway was that rate cuts worked wonders for stocks when the Greenspan put was still a fresh concept, but the inverse relationship between interest rates and equity multiples that initially prevailed has since been supplanted by a direct relationship. It is surely true that rate cuts are not a magic bullet for equities, but we find the flipped-correlation hypothesis wanting. There is more to the question of how monetary policy impacts equities than just the direction of rates. The state of monetary policy – accommodative or restrictive – matters, too. Even though assessments of the state of policy are necessarily uncertain, they allow for a much more sophisticated analysis of policy impacts. Without estimating the equilibrium fed funds rate, an investor cannot go beyond simple observations of the correlation between policy rates and equity returns to the causal interactions that drive the observed correlations. Numerators And Denominators When an investor buys a stock, s/he is buying a pro rata claim on the future earnings of the company that issued it. The value of that claim is a function of the company’s estimated future earnings and the interest rate used to discount them. Expressed as an equation, the fundamental value of a share of stock is as follows, where r is the reference interest rate: Year 1 Earnings + Year 2 Earnings + Year 3 Earnings + … + Year n Earnings (1+r) (1+r)2 (1+r)3 (1+r)n That equation can be simplified and rewritten as: Fundamental Value = ∑nt=1(Year t Earnings) (1+r)t It’s a stretch to think that equities’ reaction to rate cuts reversed after the year 2000. The final form of the equation shows that the underlying value of a share of stock is directly related to its future earnings and inversely related to interest rates. When the broker-dealer analyses conclude that the ‘80s-‘90s inverse relationship between stock prices and rate cuts has flipped since the turn of the millennium, they’re asserting that the relative sensitivities of stock prices to changes in the numerator (earnings) and the denominator (interest rates) have changed. That’s a mouthful, but the effect can be seen clearly by holding the numerator constant: if earnings don’t change, stock prices are inversely related to changes in interest rates. Relaxing the constant earnings assumption, the inverse relationship between rate cuts and stock prices in the ‘80s and ‘90s could only have occurred if earnings rose when the Fed cut, or if earnings fell when the Fed cut rates, but not so much that they offset the beneficial impact of the reduction in the discount rate. An Empirical Curveball When investors think about the impact of changes in interest rates on stock prices, they tend to assume that earnings remain constant. They therefore conclude that lower rates are good for stocks and higher rates are bad for them. The underlying assumption is flawed, however, because it ignores the fact that earnings are themselves a function of the macro backdrop that influences interest rates. Rising real interest rates are most often a sign of gathering economic momentum; since the end of World War II, U.S. equities have performed markedly better when real long-term Treasury yields were rising than they have when they were falling (Chart 1). Chart 1Stocks Do Better When Real Rates Rise Investors’ appetite for equities reinforces the direct relationship between earnings and rates, as long as rates are not at extremes. Trailing P/E multiples have risen with real interest rates except when rates are negative or above 4% (Chart 2). When real rates are negative, deflation is a real possibility and fearful investors value future earnings streams conservatively. When they’re above zero, investors have been willing to let multiples rise with real rates, until rates get high enough to squeeze profitability. The key, then, is what is going to happen with real yields if the Fed does indeed cut rates. Will 50 basis points (“bps”) of incremental accommodation (we expect 25-bps cuts in July and September) help to extend the expansion, or will it be too little, too late to impede the course of a recession that’s already begun? In the former case, economic growth will get a boost, and real yields and corporate earnings will go along for the ride. In the latter, the economy will contract, drawing real yields and corporate earnings into its vortex. We believe monetary policy is still squarely accommodative, and therefore have both feet planted firmly in the bullish camp. The Fed Funds Rate Cycle Our fed funds rate cycle framework helps us to assess the line of demarcation between accommodative and restrictive policy settings and thereby project the direction of corporate earnings following rate cuts. To refresh, we decompose the fed funds rate cycle into four phases based on the interaction between the level of rates and their direction (Diagram 1), as follows: Diagram 1The Fed Funds Rate Cycle Phase I represents the early stage of the withdrawal of monetary stimulus. This phase begins with the first rate hike of a new tightening cycle and ends when the fed funds rate crosses above our estimate of the equilibrium rate. Phase II represents the latter stages of the tightening cycle, when the Fed hikes its target rate above equilibrium in a deliberate effort to cool an overheating economy. Phase III represents the early stage of the easing cycle. It begins with the first rate cut from the peak and lasts until the Fed cuts its target rate below equilibrium. Phase IV represents the late stage of the easing cycle. It encompasses both the period when the fed funds rate falls from below its equilibrium level to its cycle trough and the subsequent adjustment period when the Fed remains on hold in an effort to kick start an economic recovery. Plotting the course of the fed funds rate is a simple matter; the challenge in Diagram 1 comes in deciding where to draw the dashed line. That decision requires estimating the policy rate that neither encourages nor discourages economic activity. Our equilibrium estimate, which uses potential GDP growth to adjust a smoothed and filtered long-run series of the actual fed funds rate, can be viewed as a line in the sand separating the point where monetary policy goes from encouraging activity to discouraging it. When the funds rate is above our estimate of equilibrium, we consider policy to be tight; when it’s below our estimate of equilibrium, we consider policy to be easy. Since equilibrium is a concept, rather than an observable objective data point, we have to look at the broad sweep of economic activity to infer whether or not our equilibrium estimate is accurate. As we’ve repeatedly written, we interpret the economic data received so far this year as indicating that the U.S. economy is decelerating from its stimulus-fueled 2018 surge, but is on track to meet or exceed its long-term potential growth pace of 2 - 2.25%. We therefore do not believe that policy is tight, and that a recession has already begun, or is in the offing. Recession? What About Stock Prices? We didn’t forget about stock prices. Markets are always our primary focus, and we study the economy for insight into how it might impact their direction. The business cycle is a robust link connecting the state of monetary policy with equity performance. In the 60 years covered by our equilibrium fed funds rate estimate, recessions have only occurred when the funds rate has exceeded our estimate of equilibrium (Chart 3). Equity bear markets typically coincide with recessions – Black Monday in October 1987 is the only instance of a bear market occurring independently of a recession in the last half-century. Chart 3Recessions Only Occur When Policy Is Tight For 60 years, stocks have thrived when monetary policy is easy and staggered when it is tight. S&P 500 performance across the four phases of the fed funds rate cycle reveals that it has been the level of rates vis-à-vis the equilibrium rate that has mattered for equity returns, not the direction. Annualized nominal S&P 500 price returns have been nine percentage points higher when policy is easy than when it is tight (Table 1), and the disparity widens to ten-and-a-half percentage points after adjusting for inflation (Table 2). The disparity is even more pronounced when the Fed is cutting rates – annualized Phase IV price returns beat Phase III by eleven percentage points on a nominal basis, and by thirteen-and-a-half percentage points on a real basis. Table 1Stocks Love Easy Policy, ... Table 2… Especially After Adjusting For Inflation Our base case is that the FOMC will cut the fed funds rate by 25 bps at its July and September meetings. The investment strategy question arising from our base-case scenario is what will that mean for equities? With reference to the dot-com bust and the financial crisis, the broker-dealers say, “nothing much.” We posit that a more sophisticated answer would consider the monetary-policy climate in which the cuts occur. Reduce equity exposure if you believe the Fed went too far hiking rates last year, but maintain/increase it if you think monetary policy has always remained accommodative. 60 years of history say that incremental accommodation will boost equities if it occurs against a backdrop of already easy policy. The S&P 500 will decline, on the other hand, if the monetary policy starting point is restrictive.2 In terms of our fed funds rate cycle framework, the equity market outcome turns on whether the cuts occur in Phase III or Phase IV. We estimate that the equilibrium rate is currently in the neighborhood of 3¼%, so we have a high level of conviction that equities will spend the rest of the year in Phase IV, the rate cycle phase that has been most conducive to equity outperformance. Investment Implications From the perspective of our monetary policy cycle framework, positioning a balanced portfolio for impending rate cuts boils down to one’s take on current monetary policy settings. If one thinks the Fed’s already tightened policy enough to squeeze the economy, s/he should sell stocks. (Some of our BCA colleagues advocate that course, and we will share the stage with them in next week’s roundtable Special Report). If one thinks, like we and the overall BCA consensus do, that the Fed hasn’t yet crossed the easy/tight Rubicon and is on a course to push the date when it will out to 2021 or beyond, one should maintain his/her equity positions and consider adding to them. Doug Peta, CFA Chief U.S. Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Hough, Jack, “The ‘Fed Put’ Is Kaput and Interest Rate Cuts Might Hurt Stocks,” Barron’s, July 1, 2019. 2 Remember that monetary policy impacts the economy with a lag. Cuts ameliorating too-tight policy don’t have an effect until after the initial overtightening makes its way through the system.
Internal equity dynamics are sending a powerful signal for the broad equity market. Not only are defensives outshining cyclicals and mega caps trouncing small and micro caps, but also transports are warning that the broad equity market is skating on thin ice (top panel). Importantly, drilling deeper into the highly cyclical trucking industry is instructive. Heavy-duty trucks new orders have plunged (middle panel). While this is likely a consequence of the U.S./China trade war that commenced in the spring of 2018, there are also elements of domestic demand ills that have pushed “class 8 trucks” orders to the lowest point since the late-2015/early-2016 manufacturing recession. In addition, the American Trucking Association’s trucking tonnage index has fallen recently and is contracting at an accelerating pace on a six-month rate of change basis (third panel). Bottom Line: We heed the signal from the highly sensitive transportation sector and remain cautious on the broad equity market.
Dear Client, In lieu of next week’s regular report, we will be bringing you a Special Report featuring a no-holds-barred debate over the economic and financial market outlook among three of BCA’s more bullish strategists (Doug Peta, Rob Robis, and yours truly) and three of the more bearish ones (Anastasios Avgeriou, Arthur Budaghyan, and Dhaval Joshi). Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights Slowdowns are much more likely to turn into recessions when significant economic and financial imbalances are present. The U.S. does not currently suffer from any of the three major imbalances that have historically heralded recessions – rapid private-sector debt growth; excessive spending in cyclical sectors such as housing, consumer durables, and business capex; or accelerating inflation. Imbalances are larger abroad, but not to the extent that they will trigger a global recession. The combination of ongoing Chinese stimulus and the lagged effect from lower bond yields will lift global growth during the coming months. The inventory cycle, which is likely to subtract at least one full percentage point from U.S. growth in Q2, will also turn from being a headwind to a tailwind. Stay overweight global equities relative to government bonds over the next 12 months. A rebound in global growth will push down the U.S. dollar later this year, creating an opportunity to increase exposure to European and EM equities. Feature Global Growth At A Critical Juncture The global economy has clearly slowed since early 2018 (Chart 1). So far, much of the weakness has been confined to the manufacturing sector. However, the service sector has softened as well (Chart 2). Chart 1The Global Economy Has Slowed... Chart 2...Mostly Due To Another Manufacturing Downturn Regionally, the U.S. has held up somewhat better than most other economies. Nevertheless, the ISM manufacturing and nonmanufacturing indices have both declined, with the former now flirting with the 50 line. All recessions begin as slowdowns but not all slowdowns end in recessions. As we discuss below, slowdowns are much more likely to morph into recessions when financial and economic imbalances are elevated. We confine our empirical analysis to the U.S., but discuss the global context later in the report. Three Key Recessionary Imbalances Three imbalances, in particular, have often been present at the outset of U.S. recessions (Chart 3): Chart 3What Makes A Slowdown Degenerate Into A Recession: Imbalances Rapid private-sector debt growth: Rising debt lifts aggregate demand.1 Fast debt growth is also often associated with bad lending decisions, which makes economies more vulnerable to adverse shocks. An unsustainably high level of cyclical spending: Cyclical spending includes business and residential investment, as well as spending on consumer durable goods. If spending on these categories is elevated, there is more scope for it to decline when the economy turns down. High and rising inflation. When inflation rises above the Fed’s comfort zone, the central bank normally needs to raise rates into restrictive territory. Fast debt growth is also often associated with bad lending decisions, which makes economies more vulnerable to adverse shocks. Table 1 shows every episode since 1960 when the U.S. economy has slowed significantly. To keep things simple, we define a slowdown as a 10-point drop in the ISM manufacturing index from its recent high. Table 1Episodes Of Significant Economic Slowdown Of the 15 slowdowns that we examined, seven culminated in recessions. An average of 2.1 of the three imbalances listed above were visible prior to recessions. However, an average of only 0.9 imbalances were present when a recession failed to materialize. This supports our claim that slowdowns are more likely to turn into recessions when significant imbalances are present. The good news for the U.S. is that it currently does not register any of three imbalances that have typically preceded recessions. Equities reacted very differently in the two cases. When a recession did occur following the start of a slowdown, the S&P 500 declined by an average of 3.6% over the subsequent 12 months. When the slowdown failed to turn into a recession, the S&P rose by an average of 18.3%. In the latter case, the recovery in stocks usually coincided with a swift rebound in the ISM index. The U.S. Is Currently 0 For 3 On The Imbalance Front The good news for the U.S. is that it currently does not register any of three imbalances that have typically preceded recessions. Chart 4Reasons Not To Panic About U.S. Corporate Debt (I) Private-Sector Debt While U.S. private nonfinancial debt has edged up slightly as a share of GDP since 2015, it remains well below its 2008 peak. In fact, the current business expansion is the only one in the post-war era where private-sector debt has failed to rise above its previous cycle high. A recent Bank of England study examined 130 recessions across 26 countries. It found private debt growth matters much more for recession risk than the level of debt.2 Granted, the composition of debt also matters: While household debt in the U.S. has fallen over the past decade, corporate debt has risen. As a share of GDP, corporate debt is now at the highest level in the post-war era. That said, despite its recent ascent, the ratio of corporate debt-to-GDP is less than two percentage points higher than it was in 2008. One drawback of comparing debt to GDP is that the former is a stock variable while the latter is a flow variable. A more sensible “apples-to-apples” approach is to look at corporate debt in relation to assets rather than GDP. If one does that, one sees that the ratio of U.S. corporate debt-to-assets is below its post-1980 average and only slightly above its post-1950 average. The interest coverage ratio, which compares the profits that companies earn for every dollar of interest that they pay, is above its historic norm (Chart 4). Corporate sector free cash flow – the difference between profits and spending on such things as labor and capital goods – remains in surplus. Every recession during the past 50 years has begun when the free cash flow balance was in deficit (Chart 5). In contrast to mortgages, which are generally held by leveraged institutions such as banks, most corporate debt is held by entities such as insurance companies, pension funds, mutual funds, and ETFs. Banks hold only 18% of corporate debt, down from 40% in 1980 (Chart 6). Thus, while high corporate debt levels could exacerbate the next recession, they are unlikely to engender it. Chart 5Reasons Not To Panic About U.S. Corporate Debt (II) Chart 6Banks Have Reduced Their Exposure To The Corporate Sector Cyclical Spending Unlike a restaurant meal or a vacation, a house, office tower, factory, or automobile will usually retain some value for a while after it is purchased. If spending on cyclical items rises to a high level for an extended period of time, a glut will form, requiring a period of lower production. By contrast, if spending on these items is subdued for a long time, pent-up demand will accumulate, requiring a period of higher production. Recessions can result from either economic overheating or financial market overheating. As a share of GDP, cyclical spending is still far below the peaks observed during past expansions. Just as importantly, today’s low level of cyclical spending follows ten years of even lower spending. As a result, the average age of the U.S. capital stock has increased across almost all categories since 2008 (Chart 7). Most notably, the average age of U.S. homes has risen by nearly five years since 2006, the sharpest increase since the Great Depression. Despite the rebound in residential investment from its recessionary lows, the current level of homebuilding still falls short of what is necessary to keep up with household formation. As a consequence, the vacancy rate has fallen to multi-decade lows (Chart 8). Chart 7The Capital Stock Is Aging Chart 8There Is No Glut Of U.S. Homes Inflation Recessions can result from either economic overheating or financial market overheating. Economic overheating was the dominant driver of recessions between the late 1960s to early 1980s. Rising inflation preceded the recessions of 1969-70, 1973-75, as well as the back-to-back recessions in 1980-82. Chart 9The 1990 Recession: A Bit Of Everything Overheating also contributed to the 1990 recession. After peaking in 1982, the unemployment rate fell to 5% in 1989, about one percent below its equilibrium level at the time. Core inflation began to accelerate, reaching 5.5% by August 1990. The Fed initially responded to the overheating economy by hiking interest rates. The fed funds rate rose from 6.6% in March 1988 to a high of 9.8% by May 1989. By the summer of 1990, the economy had already slowed significantly. Commercial real estate, still reeling from the effects of the Savings and Loan crisis, weakened sharply. Defense outlays continued to contract following the collapse of the Soviet Union. The final straw was Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait, which caused oil prices to surge and consumer confidence to plunge (Chart 9). In contrast to earlier downturns, the last two recessions were more the byproduct of financial excesses: The 2007-09 recession stemmed from the housing crash and the financial crisis it generated; the 2001 recession followed the dotcom bust, which precipitated a steep decline in capital spending. What will the next U.S. recession look like? Given the absence of major financial imbalances, the odds are high that the next recession will be a “retro recession,” featuring classic economic overheating. The fact that the Fed has adopted a risk-based approach to monetary policy, which puts great weight on avoiding a deflationary outcome, only raises the likelihood that inflation will eventually move higher. The good news is that this is unlikely to happen anytime soon. While wage growth has picked up, productivity growth has risen even more. As a result, unit labor costs – the ratio of wages-to-productivity – have actually decelerated over the past 18 months. Unit labor cost inflation tends to lead core inflation by up to one year (Chart 10). Given the absence of major financial imbalances, the odds are high that the next recession will be a “retro recession,” featuring classic economic overheating. As we discussed in our latest Strategy Outlook, the Fed will probably not bring rates into restrictive territory until early 2022. This gives the economy plenty of breathing space.3 The Global Dimension The discussion above has focused on the United States. To some extent, this is unavoidable. Not only is the U.S. still the world’s largest economy, but it remains at the heart of the global financial system. U.S. equities account for over half of global stock market capitalization, up from a third in the early 1990s (Chart 11). The dollar continues to be the preeminent reserve currency. As a result, U.S. financial markets drive overseas markets much more than the other way around. Chart 10No Imminent Threat Of A Wage-Price Inflationary Spiral Chart 11The U.S. Stock Market Capitalization Is More Than Half Of Global This does not mean that the rest of the world is irrelevant. The global supply chain now dominates international trade. More than half of all cross-border trade is in intermediate goods (Chart 12). Irrespective of the financial and economic imbalances discussed above, a full-blown trade war would upend the global economy, sending the U.S. and the rest of the world into recession. President Trump’s re-election prospects would plummet if U.S. unemployment rose and the stock market plunged. This is the main reason for thinking that the trade talks will ultimately produce some sort of détente. Nevertheless, a severe deterioration of trade relations remains the biggest risk to our bullish view on risk assets. The fact that financial and economic imbalances are generally larger overseas means that the rest of the world is more vulnerable to adverse shocks. Unlike in the United States, private debt has risen sharply as a share of GDP in several key economies over the past decade (Chart 13). Government debt is also a problem in countries such as Italy that do not have central banks which can function as reliable lenders of last resort. Chart 14Economies With Frothy Housing Markets Risk Having Deeper Downturns Cyclical spending is fairly elevated in a number of countries. Notably, residential investment stands at near record highs as a share of GDP in Canada, Australia, and New Zealand (Chart 14). Home prices are also quite frothy there. When the global economy falls into recession in two-to-three years, these economies will take it on the chin. Investment Conclusions Notwithstanding the risks noted above, we continue to maintain a bullish outlook on global equities and spread product over the next 12 months. To paraphrase Wayne Gretzky, one should invest on the basis of where the economic data is going, not where it is.4 While global growth remains anemic today, the combination of Chinese stimulus and the lagged effect from lower bond yields will boost activity during the coming months. The inventory cycle, which is likely to subtract at least one full percentage point from U.S. growth in Q2, will also turn from being a headwind to a tailwind. Global equities are not super cheap, but they are not particularly expensive either. The MSCI All-Country World Index trades at 15.3-times forward earnings. Given the ultra-low level of global bond yields, this generates an equity risk premium (ERP) that is well above its historical average (Chart 15). From an asset allocation perspective, one should favor stocks over bonds when the ERP is high. Chart 15AEquity Risk Premia Remain Elevated (I) Chart 15BEquity Risk Premia Remain Elevated (II) The ERP is especially elevated outside the United States. This is partly because non-U.S. stocks trade at a meager 13.3-times forward earnings, but it also reflects the fact that bond yields are lower overseas. The fact that financial and economic imbalances are generally larger overseas means that the rest of the world is more vulnerable to adverse shocks. As global growth accelerates, the dollar will start to weaken (Chart 16). EM and European equities usually outperform the global benchmark in that environment (Chart 17). We expect to upgrade stocks in these regions later this summer. Chart 16The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency Chart 17EM And Euro Area Equities Outperform When Global Growth Improves Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Recall that GDP is a flow variable (how much production takes place every period), whereas credit is a stock variable (how much debt there is outstanding). By definition, a flow is a change in a stock. Thus, credit growth affects GDP and the change in credit growth affects GDP growth. 2 Jonathan Bridges, Chris Jackson, and Daisy McGregor, "Down in the slumps: the role of credit in five decades of recessions," Bank Of England Staff Working Paper No. 659, (April 2017). 3 Please see Global Investment Strategy Strategy Outlook, "Third Quarter 2019 Strategy Outlook: The Long Hurrah," dated June 28, 2019. 4 According to Wayne Gretzky, his father, Walter, once advised him to “skate to where the puck is going, not to where it is.” Strategy & Market Trends MacroQuant Model And Current Subjective Scores Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Underweight A tactical trading opportunity has re-emerged in semi equipment stocks. This week we recommended trimming the S&P semi equipment index to underweight on a three-to-six month time horizon, but with a tight stop at the -7% relative return mark. Semi equipment stocks are capital intensive and require precision manufacturing, which makes their sales cycle a carbon copy of the broad manufacturing cycle. The middle panel of the chart shows this tight positive correlation with the ISM manufacturing index and sends a grim message for semi equipment manufacturers. With regard to industry operating metrics, the news is equally glum. Global semi cycles typically last four-to-five quarters and we only just passed the half way mark. Thus, there is more downside to industry sales momentum and we would lean against recent analyst relative revenue euphoria (bottom panel). Bottom Line: Downgrade the S&P semiconductor equipment index to underweight on a tactical – three-to-six month horizon – basis, but set a tight stop at the -7% relative return mark. For additional details please refer to this Monday’s Weekly Report. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG – S5SEEQ – AMAT, LRCX, KLAC.
Highlights The onset of a down-oscillation in growth strongly suggests a rotation out of the growth-sensitive Industrials and Materials into the relatively defensive Healthcare sector. But if the sharpest move in bond yields has already happened, it also suggests that Banks might hold up versus other cyclical sectors. New recommendation 1: Overweight Banks versus Industrials. New recommendation 2: Overweight Eurostoxx50 versus Nikkei225. Remain overweight Eurostoxx50 versus Shanghai Composite and neutral versus the S&P500. Feature Chart of the WeekEuro Stoxx 50 Vs. Nikkei 225 = Global Banks In Euros Vs. Global Industrials In Yen Several decades ago, English football’s top division was a showcase for the top English and British footballers. But not anymore. This year, the top six footballers in the English Premier League hail from Argentina, the Netherlands, Belgium, Senegal, Portugal, plus a token Englishman. Nowadays, if you want to see English or British footballers you have to go to the lower divisions.1 The English Premier League provides a powerful analogy for the FTSE100. Many of the top companies in this blue-chip index have their origins and main businesses outside the U.K. The names say it all: Royal Dutch, Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, British American Tobacco, and so on. Just like in football, if you want stock market exposure to the U.K, you now have to go to the lower divisions: the FTSE250 or the FTSE Small Cap. A view on an economy does not necessarily translate into the same view on its mainstream stock market. The leading companies in the FTSE100 are multinationals, whose sales and profits have a minimal exposure to the economic fortunes of the U.K. This leads to a result which causes investors a great deal of cognitive dissonance: a view on an economy does not necessarily translate into the same view on its mainstream stock market. Picking Stock Markets The Right Way Royal Dutch is neither a Dutch company nor a U.K. company, it is a global company. And the same is true for the vast majority of companies in the FTSE100 and all other major indexes such as the Eurostoxx50, Nikkei225, and S&P500. However, Royal Dutch is most definitely an oil and gas company which moves in lockstep with the global energy sector. Hence, by far the most important performance differentiator for any mainstream equity index is the sector fingerprint that distinguishes the equity index from its peers. Each major stock market has a distinguishing ‘long’ sector in which it contains up to a quarter of its total market capitalisation, as well as a distinguishing ‘short’ sector in which it has a significant under-representation. The combination of this long sector and short sector gives each equity index its distinguishing fingerprint (Table 1): FTSE100 = long energy, short technology. Eurostoxx50 = long banks, short technology. Nikkei225 = long industrials, short banks and energy. S&P500 = long technology, short materials. MSCI Emerging Markets = long technology, short healthcare. Another important factor is the currency. Royal Dutch receives its revenues and incurs its costs in multiple major currencies, such as euros and dollars. In other words, Royal Dutch’s global business is currency neutral. But the Royal Dutch stock price is quoted in London in pounds. Hence, if the pound strengthens, the company’s multi-currency profits will decline in pound terms, weighing on the stock price. Conversely, if the pound weakens, it will lift the Royal Dutch stock price. This means that the domestic economy can impact its stock market through the currency channel. Albeit it is a counterintuitive relationship: a strong economy via a strong currency hinders the stock market; a weak economy via a weak currency helps the stock market. Be Careful With Valuation Comparisons Chart of the Week to Chart I-7 should prove beyond doubt that the sector plus currency effect is all that you need to get right to allocate between these four major regions. The charts show all the permutations of relative performances taken from the S&P500, Eurostoxx50, Nikkei225 and FTSE100 over the last decade. Chart I-2FTSE 100 Vs. S&P 500 = Global Energy In Pounds Vs. Global Technology In Dollars Chart I-3FTSE 100 Vs. Nikkei 225 = Global Energy In Pounds Vs. Global Industrials In Yen Chart I-4FTSE 100 Vs. Euro Stoxx 50 = Global Energy In Pounds Vs. Global Banks In Euros Chart I-5Euro Stoxx 50 Vs. S&P 500 = Global Banks In Euros Vs. Global Technology In Dollars Chart I-6Euro Stoxx 600 Vs. MSCI Emerging Markets = Global Healthcare In Euros Vs. Global Technology In Dollars Chart I-7S&P500 Vs. Nikkei225 = Global Tech In Dollars Vs. Global Industrials ##br##In Yen One important implication of sectors and currencies driving stock market allocation is that the head-to-head comparison of stock market valuations is meaningless. Two sectors with vastly different structural growth prospects – say, energy and technology – must necessarily trade on vastly different valuations. So the sector with the lower valuation is not necessarily the better-valued sector. By extension, the stock market with the lower valuation because of its sector fingerprint is not necessarily the better-valued stock market. Likewise, if investors anticipate the pound to ultimately strengthen – because they see that the pound is structurally cheap today – they might downgrade Royal Dutch’s multi-currency profit growth expectations in pound terms and trade the stock at an apparent discount. But allowing for the anticipated decline in other currencies versus the pound there is no discount. It follows that any multinational listed in Europe will give a false impression of cheapness if investors see European currencies as structurally undervalued. Another implication is that simple ‘value’ indexes may not actually offer value. In reality, they comprise a collection of sectors on the lowest head-to-head valuations which, to repeat, does not necessarily make them better-valued. The sector plus currency effect is all that you need to allocate between equity markets. Some people suggest comparing a valuation with its own history, and assessing how many ‘standard deviations’ it is above or below its norm. Unfortunately, the concept of a standard deviation is meaningful only if the underlying series is ‘stationary’ – meaning, it has no step changes through time. But sector valuations are ‘non-stationary’: they do undergo major step changes when they enter a vastly different economic climate. For example, the structural outlook for bank profits undergoes a step change when a credit boom ends. Therefore, comparing a bank valuation after a credit boom with the valuation during the credit boom is like comparing an apple with an orange! The Current Message Last week, we pointed out that current activity indicators are losing momentum, or outright rolling over. The reason being that “both the interest rate impulse and short-term credit impulses are now on the cusp of down-oscillations, which will bear on economies and financial markets in the second half of the year.” This week’s profit warning from BASF supports this analysis. To be clear, this is not a binary issue about recession or no recession. This is just a common or garden down-oscillation in European (and global) growth which tends to happen every 18 months or so with remarkable regularity. Nevertheless, the down-oscillation has a major bearing on sector allocation (Chart I-8) and, therefore, a major bearing on regional equity allocation. Chart I-8Switch Out Of Growth-Sensitives Into Healthcare Based on the major equity index ‘sector fingerprints’ we need to rank the attractiveness of six major global sectors: Materials, Energy, Industrials, Banks, Healthcare, and Technology. In the first half of the year, Industrials outperformed while Banks underperformed. Why? Because Industrials were following the up-oscillation in growth whereas Banks were tracking the bond yield down, as the flattening (or inverting) yield curve ate into their margins. Now, the onset of a down-oscillation in growth strongly suggests a rotation out of the growth-sensitive Industrials and Materials into the relatively defensive Healthcare sector (Chart I-8). But if the sharpest move in bond yields has already happened, it also suggests that Banks might hold up versus other cyclical sectors (Chart I-9 and Chart I-10). Meanwhile, for Energy and Technology we do not hold a high-conviction view. Hence, our ranking of the sectors is as follows: Chart I-9Banks Have Tracked The Bond Yield ##br##Down... Chart I-10...But If The Sharpest Move In Yields Is Over, Banks Can Outperform Other Cyclicals Healthcare Banks Energy and Technology Industrials and Materials On the basis of this ranking, and the major equity index sector fingerprints we are making two new recommendations. Overweight Banks versus Industrials. Overweight Eurostoxx50 versus Nikkei225. For completeness, remain overweight Eurostoxx50 versus Shanghai Composite and neutral versus the S&P500. A New Look To Our Recommendations Finally, from this week onwards we are changing the way we show our investment recommendations. Trades will refer to an investment horizon of 3 months or less, and these will mostly fall within the Fractal Trading System. Cyclical Recommendations will refer to an investment horizon usually between 3 months and a year, and will be sub-divided into asset allocation, equities, and bonds, rates and currencies. Structural Recommendations will refer to an investment horizon longer than a year, and will also be sub-divided into asset allocation, equities, and bonds, rates and currencies. We are changing the way we show our investment recommendations. We have also taken the opportunity to close long-standing stale positions. We hope you find the new look more user-friendly. Next week we will be publishing a jointly written round table discussion in which we debate and explore the interesting view differences within BCA. Absent a major development in the markets, this will replace the normal weekly report. Fractal Trading System* This week we note that the strong rally in the Australian stock market has reached a 65-day fractal dimension which has signalled previous countertrend reversals especially in relative terms. Accordingly, this week’s recommended trade is short ASX 200 vs. FTSE100. The profit target is 2% with a symmetrical stop-loss. In other trades, we are pleased to report that short euro area industrials vs. market achieved its profit target and is now closed. This leaves five 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-11 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 Footnotes 1 The top six players are based on the six nominations for the 2019 PFA Footballer of the Year: Sergio Aguero (Argentina), Virgil Van Dijk (Netherlands), Eden Hazard (Belgium), Sadio Mane (Senegal), Bernardo Silva (Portugal), and Raheem Sterling (England). Virgil Van Dijk was the winner. Fractal Trading System Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations 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
Neutral This week we upgraded the S&P home improvement retail (HIR) index to a benchmark allocation and removed it from our high-conviction underweight list for a small relative loss. Similar to the parent Consumer Discretionary GICS1 sector, HIR stocks are inversely correlated with interest rates (fed funds rate discounter shown inverted, middle panel), given the close residential real estate market links they enjoy. Now that the bond market forecasts that the Fed will cut rates four times by next July, home improvement retailers should be cheering this news. Moreover, home improvement retailers have been flexing their pricing power muscles recently and this represents another boost to their top line growth prospects (bottom panel). Bottom Line: Lift the S&P HIR index to neutral and remove from the high-conviction underweight list. For additional details, on why it no longer pays to be underweight the S&P HIR index, please see this Monday’s Weekly Report. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG – S5HOMI – HD, LOW.
We posited that the easy gains in equities were behind us, which stands in contrast to sell-side analysts who anticipate 10% EPS growth. Our four-factor earnings model also points to profit growth trouble into early 2020. Investors have also been obsessing…
In early June, we shaved our 2021 EPS forecast to $140, and our end-2020 SPX target fell to a range of 1,890-2,310. We posited that the easy gains in equities were behind us, which stands in contrast to sell-side analysts who anticipate 10% EPS growth. Our four-factor earnings model also points to profit growth trouble into early 2020. Investors have also been obsessing with the “Fed put”, but neglecting the looming profit recession (see chart). Moreover, while markets cheered the trade truce following the recent G20 meeting, odds are high that manufacturing will remain in the doldrums as the tariff rate on $200bn of Chinese imports went up from 10% to 25% on May 10, and no tariff rollback was agreed. As a result, highly cyclical global trade and manufacturing will likely continue to weigh on the economy for the remainder of the year. Bottom Line: We reiterate our cyclically cautious market outlook as the risk/reward remains to the downside, and we are not willing to play 100-200 points to the upside against a potential 1,000-point drawdown. Please see our most recent Weekly Report for more details.