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The GAA DM Equity Country Allocation model is updated as of June 29, 2018. The model has reduced weights in Italy, the U.S., the Netherlands and France to beef up weights in Spain, Australia, Canada, Switzerland and Germany. After these adjustments, Australia is now upgraded to overweight from neutral and Italy is downgraded to neutral from overweight, as shown in Table 1. Table 1Model Allocation Vs. Benchmark Weights As shown in Table 2 and Chart 1, Chart 2 and Chart 3, the overall model outperformed its benchmark by 34 bps in June, largely driven by the Level 2 model which outperformed its benchmark by 87 bps. The Level 1 model performed in line with its benchmark in June. Since going live, Level 2 and Level 1 have outperformed their respective benchmarks by 171 bps and 5bps, resulting in overall model outperformance of 47 bps. Table 2Performance (Total Returns In USD %) Chart 1GAA DM Model Vs. MSCI World Chart 2GAA U.S. Vs. Non U.S. Model (Level 1) Chart 3GAA Non U.S. Model (Level 2) Please see also the website http://gaa.bcaresearch.com/trades/allocation_performance. For more details on the models, please see Special Report, "Global Equity Allocation: Introducing The Developed Markets Country Allocation Model," dated January 29, 2016, available at https://gaa.bcaresearch.com. Please note that the overall country and sector recommendations published in our Monthly Portfolio Update and Quarterly Portfolio Outlook use the results of these quantitative models as one input, but do not stick slavishly to them. We believe that models are a useful check, but structural changes and unquantifiable factors need to be considered too in making overall recommendations. GAA Equity Sector Selection Model The GAA Equity Sector Selection Mode (Chart 4) is updated as of June 30, 2018. Chart 4Overall Model Performance Table 3Allocations Table 4Performance Since Going Live Following our Quarterly Update that was released yesterday, the model corroborates the defensive stance with an aggregate underweight of 5.8% in cyclical sectors. The switch to a defensive mode was driven by a weaker growth outlook. The upgraded sectors were consumer staples and health care. Additionally, the model has turned more negative on the two largest sectors - financials and technology. Resources-based sectors remain unattractive on the back of weaker growth outlook. For more details on the model, please see the Special Report "Introducing The GAA Equity Sector Selection Model," dated July 27, 2016, available at https://gaa.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Five key drivers - late cycle dynamics, likelihood of pricing power regulatory relief, the rising U.S. dollar, firming operating metrics and investor and analyst capitulation- all suggest that it no longer pays to be bearish the S&P pharma and S&P biotech indexes. Lift to neutral. This also raises the S&P health care sector exposure to neutral, as these two heavyweight health care sub-indexes command a 49% weighting in the sector. Recent Changes Act on the upgrade alert and lift the S&P pharma and S&P biotech indexes to neutral today for a profit of 14.5% and 13.9%, respectively since inception (we are also removing the S&P pharma index from our high-conviction underweight list). Lock in gains in the S&P health care sector of 5.3% since inception and upgrade exposure to a benchmark allocation today. Table 1 Feature Stocks continued to wrestle with escalating geopolitical threats last week, but remained resilient. While the global trade soft patch could morph into a steep contraction if protectionism proliferates, our working assumption is that the executive branch's bark will be worse than its bite. The SPX is in the midst of a recalibration to a cooling in EPS momentum in calendar 2019 as we have been highlighting in recent research, and were the U.S. dollar to continue its ascent in the back half of the year, the sell-side's calendar 2019 almost 10% growth estimate will sink like a stone. This remains our number one downside risk that we are closely monitoring, though it should be reasonably contained by mounting signs of a healthier corporate sector and an easing in financial stress (Chart 1). This week we are updating our corporate pricing power proxy that has reaccelerated. Importantly, the breadth of the surge has gone parabolic, which bodes well for its staying power (second panel, Chart 2). This firming corporate inflation backdrop suggests that businesses have been successful in passing on skyrocketing input costs down the supply chain, and thus implies that final demand remains robust. Chart 1Reset Chart 2Pricing Power Flexing Its Muscles On the flip side, rising labor costs have stabilized. Compensation growth remains contained, and according to our diffusion index, just over half of the 44 industries we track have to contend with rising wages. In addition, the Atlanta Fed Wage Growth Tracker switcher/stayer index provides a reliable leading indication for the trend in overall labor expenses and it recently ticked down. In other words, pricing power is rising on a broad basis while wage inflation is moving laterally. Consequently, there are decent odds that upbeat forward operating margin expectations are attainable, further prolonging the near two year margin expansion phase (bottom panel, Chart 2). Delving deeper into our corporate pricing power update is revealing. Table 2 summarizes the results. As a reminder, we calculate industry group pricing power from the relevant CPI, PPI, PCE and commodity growth rates for each of the 60 industry groups we track. Table 2 also highlights shorter term pricing power trends and each industry's spread to overall inflation. Table 2Industry Group Pricing Power 80% of the industries we cover are lifting selling prices, and 45% are doing so at a faster clip than overall inflation. This is on a par with our late-April report. Chart 3Cyclicals Come Out On Top Outright deflating sectors increased by two to 12 since our last update. Encouragingly, only 7 industries are still experiencing a downtrend in selling price inflation, in line with our most recent report. Impressively, deep cyclicals/commodity-related industries continue to dominate the top ranks, occupying the top 7 slots (top panel, Chart 3). Despite the ongoing global export jitters, escalating trade war fears and year-to-date gains in the greenback, the commodity complex's ability to increase prices is extraordinary. In contrast, airlines, soft drinks, telecom, autos and tech populate the bottom ranks of Table 2. In sum, accelerating business sector selling prices will continue to underpin top line growth in the back half of the year. Recent evidence of a slight letdown in wage inflation is welcome news for corporate sector profit margins and earnings. In fact, it will be critical for labor costs to remain tame or at least continue to trail pricing power gains, otherwise profit margins will be at risk of a squeeze. This week we are locking in gains and lifting a defensive sector to a benchmark allocation by acting on our recent upgrade alert on two of its key subcomponents. Upgrade Pharma & Biotech To Neutral... We are pulling the trigger on our recent upgrade alerts and are upgrading the S&P pharma and biotech groups to neutral from underweight, locking in relative gains of 14.5% and 13.9%, respectively since inception, and we are also removing the S&P pharma index from our high-conviction underweight list. As a reminder, we set the heavyweight S&P pharmaceuticals and S&P biotech indexes on upgrade alert, and thus the overall S&P health care sector, on May 22nd following the insight from our Special Report titled 'Portfolio Positioning For A Late Cycle Surge'. In more detail, health care stocks excel in both phases we examined - ISM peak-to-SPX peak and SPX peak-to-recession commencement (Tables 3, 4 & 5). This is largely due to the high-beta biotech sub-sector outperforming early with the more defensive pharma sub-group sustaining the outperformance following the SPX peak. Table 3Health Care Outperforms In The Late Cycle Table 4High Beta Stocks Outperform Early... Table 5...Defensive Stocks Beat Late Moreover, recent pricing power developments point to a softer than previously expected blow to drug pricing practices revealed in the President's recent speech. This is music to the ears of Big Pharma executives and can serve as a catalyst to unlock latent buying power in this traditionally considered defensive sector. While no bill has been drafted yet and we are awaiting more details, at the margin, this is a net positive for pharma and biotech top line growth at least from a cyclical perspective (Chart 4). The thesis we postulated last July was that the easy pricing power gains were behind the pharma and biotech industries and likely a secular decline in the ability of these groups to raise prices at a faster pace than overall inflation was in order (Chart 5). While this thesis remains intact from a structural perspective, in the next 9-12 months there is scope for some relief. Chart 4Overdone Cyclically... Chart 5...But Structural Issues Remain Beyond these two drivers, the trade-weighted U.S. dollar's year-to-date gains also signal that it no longer pays to be bearish this safe haven group. Chart 6 shows that relative pharma profits are positively correlated with the greenback as Big Pharma's domestically-derived earnings dwarf foreign sourced EPS. Keep in mind that the industry still dictates terms to the U.S. government, a key end-market. The opposite is true with regard to other governments around the world, especially in the key European markets, where the industry is a price taker. This partially explains the positive correlation with the currency. On the operating front, there are also signs of a bottom. Not only are pharmaceutical factories humming, but also our pharma productivity proxy (industrial production / employment) is gaining steam, underscoring that profits can surprise to the upside (second panel, Chart 7). Chart 6Appreciating Dollar Helps Chart 7Bullish Operating Metrics With regard to demand, pharma retail sales are expanding nicely and overall industry shipments are also rising at a healthy clip, at a time when inventories are whittled down (third and bottom panels, Chart 7). This represents a positive pharma pricing power backdrop in the coming quarters. In terms of investor and analyst sentiment, a near full capitulation has taken root. Relative share price momentum is steeply contracting close to 15%/annum, a rate that has previously coincided with cyclical troughs (second panel, Chart 4). Sell-side pessimism reigns supreme as pharma profits are slated to trail the broad market by a wide margin both for the next year and on a 3-5 year time frame. In fact, the latter just sunk to all-time lows (Chart 8). Analyst gloom is pervasive as relative top line growth expectations also call for a contraction in the coming twelve months. Valuations are as good as they get with the relative forward price-to-earnings ratio trading way below par and the historical mean (bottom panel, Chart 8). Finally, the S&P pharma and S&P biotech indexes are more alike than different, as biotech stocks have long had blockbuster billion dollar selling drugs and therefore have substantial earnings (unlike 78% of the NASDAQ biotech index that do not even have forward earnings) and are really disguised pharma outfits hiding under the biotech label. The biotech index also offers a near 2% dividend yield, on par with the SPX, but still trailing the S&P pharma index roughly by 70bps (Chart 9). As such, there is an inverse correlation of both indexes with interest rates. Not only are higher interest rates punitive to growth stocks, but also fierce competitors to fixed income proxies. The implication is that if the broad equity market reset continues for a while longer and the 10-year Treasury yield continues to fall, relative share prices will likely come out of their recent funk (Chart 10). Chart 8Full Capitulation Chart 9Close Siblings... Chart 10...That Despise Higher Rates Adding it up, five key drivers - late cycle dynamics, likelihood of pricing power regulatory relief, the rising U.S. dollar, firming operating metrics and investor and analyst capitulation- all suggest that it no longer pays to be bearish the S&P pharma and S&P biotech indexes. Bottom Line: Lock in profits of 14.5% and 13.9% in the S&P pharma and S&P biotech indexes respectively since inception and lift to a benchmark allocation. Also remove the S&P pharma group from the high-conviction underweight list. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the S&P biotech and S&P pharma indexes are: BLBG: S5BIOTX - ABBV, AMGN, GILD, CELG, BIIB, VRTX, REGN, ALXN, INCY and BLBG: S5PHAR - JNJ, PFE, MRK, BMY, AGN, LLY, ZTS, MYL, PRGO, NKTR, respectively. ...Which Lifts Health Care To A Benchmark Allocation The S&P pharma and biotech indexes command roughly a 50% weighting in the S&P health care sector. As a result, their profit fortunes are closely tied and relative share prices tend to move in lockstep (Chart 11). Today's upgrade to a benchmark allocation in both of these sub-groups also lifts the health care sector to a neutral portfolio weighting. Relative share prices have been in correction mode for the better part of the past year and may now have found support near their upward sloping long-term trend line (top panel, Chart 12). Importantly, our S&P health care EPS growth model is making an effort to trough (bottom panel, Chart 12), and if the Trump Administration does not clamp down on pharma pricing power as initially feared and recently hinted at, then overall health care sector profits will likely overwhelm. Keep in mind that the bar for upward surprises is extremely low as analysts have thrown in the towel on the sector. Similar to the S&P pharma index, health care long-term EPS growth expectations have never been lower in the history of the I/B/E/S/ data. This is contrarily positive (third panel, Chart 13). Chart 11Joined At The Hip Chart 12EPS Model Says Trough Is Near Chart 13Underappreciated And Unloved We would not hesitate to lift exposure further to overweight were the Trump Administration to put forth a bill with minimal damage inflicted upon drug prices, were the green back to keep on appreciating and were a steep 'risk off' phase to grip the broad equity market. Bottom Line: We are acting on our May 22nd upgrade alert and lifting the S&P health care sector to neutral, crystalizing relative profits of 5.3% since the July 31st, 2017 inception. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps
Recommended Allocation Risks to equities and credit are now evenly balanced. We downgrade both to neutral. We are worried that desynchronized growth will further push up the dollar, damaging emerging markets, especially since U.S. inflation will remove the Fed "put". The trade war is nowhere near over, and China shows signs of slowing growth. To de-risk, we raise U.S. equities to overweight, cut the euro zone to neutral, and increase our underweight in EM. We move overweight in cash, rather than fixed income because, with inflation still rising, we see U.S. 10-year rates at 3.3% by year-end. We turn more cautious on equity sectors (reducing the pro-cyclicality of our recommendations by raising consumer staples and cutting materials) and suggest less pro-risk tilts for alternative assets, shifting to hedge funds and away from private equity. Overview Lowering Risk Assets To Neutral Since last December we have been advising risk-averse clients, who prioritize capital preservation, to turn cautious, but suggested that professional fund managers who need to maximize quarterly performance stay invested in risk assets. With U.S. equities returning 3% in the first half of the year and junk bonds 0% (versus -1% for U.S. Treasury bonds), that was probably a correct assessment. Now, however, our analysis indicates that the risk/reward trade-off has deteriorated. Although we still do not expect a global recession until 2020, risks to the global equity bull market have increased. The return outlook is asymmetrical: a last-year bull market "melt-up" could give 15-20% upside, but in bear markets over the past 50 years global equities have seen peak-to-trough declines of 25-60% (Table 1). We think it better to turn cautious too early. A key to successful asset allocation is missing the big drawdowns - but getting the timing of these right is a near impossibility. Table 1How Much Stocks Fall In Bear Markets Chart 1Growth Is Becoming More Desynchronized What are the risks we are talking about? Global growth is slowing and becoming less synchronized (Chart 1). Fiscal stimulus and a high level of confidence among businesses are keeping U.S. growth strong, with GDP set to grow by close to 3% this year and S&P 500 earnings by 20%. But the euro zone and Japan have weakened, and these growing divergences are likely to push the dollar up further, which will cause more trouble in emerging markets. EM central banks are reacting either by raising rates to defend their currencies (which will hurt growth) or by staying on hold (which risks significant inflation). With the U.S. on the verge of overheating, the Fed will need to prioritize the fight against inflation. Lead indicators of core inflation suggest it is likely to continue to rise (Chart 2). The FOMC's key projections seem incompatible with each other: it sees GDP growth at 2.7% this year (well above trend), but unemployment barely falling further, bottoming at 3.6% by end-2018 (from 3.8% now) and core PCE inflation peaking at 2.1% (now: 2.0%). A further rise in inflation means that the Fed "put option" will expire: even if there were a global risk-off event, the Fed might not be able to put tightening on hold. It will take only one or two more hikes for Fed policy to be restrictive - something we have previously flagged as a key warning signal (Chart 3). Chart 2U.S. Inflation Could Pick Up Further Chart 3Fed Policy Is Close To Being Restrictive There is no end in sight for the trade war. President Trump is unlikely to back down on imposing further tariffs on China, since the tough stance is proving popular with his support base. On the other hand, President Xi Jinping would lose face by giving in to U.S. demands. BCA's geopolitical strategists warn that we are not at peak pessimism, and do not rule out even a military dimension.1 China is unlikely to roll out stimulus, as it did in 2015. With the authorities focused on structural reform, for example debt deleveraging, the pain threshold for stimulus is higher than in the past. Recent moves such as reductions in banks' reserve requirement have had little impact on effective interest rates (Chart 4). More likely, China might engineer a weakening of the RMB, as it did in 2015. There are signs that it is already doing so (Chart 5). This would exacerbate political tensions. Chart 4China Has Not Eased Monetary Conditions... Chart 5...But It Might Be Depreciating The RMB As we explain in detail in the pages that follow, with risk now two-way, we cut our weighting in global equities to neutral. We are not going underweight since global economic growth remains above trend, and corporate earnings will continue to grow robustly (though no faster than analysts are already forecasting). We see upside risk if the Fed were to allow an overshoot of inflation amid strong growth. If the concerns highlighted above cause a 15% correction in equity markets - triggering the Fed to go on hold - we would be inclined to move back overweight (having in mind a scenario like 1987 or 1998, where a sell-off led to a last-year bull-market rally). More likely, however, we will move underweight at the end of the year, when recession signals, such as an inverted yield curve, appear. We have shifted our detailed recommendations to line up with this de-risking. We move overweight U.S. equities (which are lower beta, and where unhedged returns should benefit from a stronger dollar). We keep our overweight on Japan, since the Bank of Japan remains the last major central bank in fully accommodative mode. We increase our underweight in EM equities. Among sectors, we reduce pro-cyclicality by cutting materials to underweight and raising consumer staples to overweight. We remain underweight fixed income, since inflationary pressures point to the 10-year U.S. Treasury bond yield moving up to 3.3% before the end of this cycle. We remain short duration and continue to prefer inflation-linked securities over nominal bonds. Within fixed income, we cut corporate credit to neutral, in line with our de-risking. Finally, we recommend that investors move into cash rather than bonds, though we understand that, especially for European investors, this may mean accepting a small negative return.2 Still puzzled how markets may pan out over the next 12 months? Then join BCA's annual Conference in Toronto this September, where I will be chairing a panel on asset allocation, featuring two experienced Chief Investment Officers, Erin Browne of UBS Asset Management, and Norman Villamin of Union Bancaire Privée. Garry Evans, Senior Vice President garry@bcaresearch.com What Our Clients Are Asking How To Overweight Cash? Chart 6Sometimes Cas Is The Only Answer BCA's call to start to derisk portfolios includes a new overweight in cash. This is logical since, historically, cash often outperformed both equities and bonds early in a downturn, when growth was starting to falter (bad for equities) but inflation was still rising (bad for bonds) - though this last happened in 1994 (Chart 6, panel 1). Currently, a move to cash is easy for U.S. investors, who can invest in three-month Treasury bills yielding 1.9%, or USD money market funds, some of which offer just over 2%. But it is much harder for investors in the euro area, where three-month German government bills yield -0.55%. Also, in Japan cash yields -0.17% and in Switzerland -0.73%. Some European investors will be tempted to go into U.S. cash. Given our view of dollar appreciation over the next six months, this should pay off. But it clearly is risky, should we be wrong and the dollar decline. As theory predicts, the cost of hedging the U.S. dollar exposure wipes out any advantage (since three-month euro-dollar forwards are 2.7% lower on an annualized basis than EURUSD spot). Some investors will have to put up with a small negative return in nominal terms in order to (largely) protect their capital. More imaginative European fund managers might be able to come up with schemes to get cash-like returns but with a positive return. For example, Danish mortgage bonds yield 1.8% (in Danish krone, which is largely pegged to the euro) with little risk. U.S. mortgage-backed securities offer yields well over 3%, which should give a positive return after hedging costs (and relatively low risk, given the robust state of the U.S. housing market) - panel 3. Carefully-selected global macro hedge funds can give attractive Libor-plus returns.3 We still see attractiveness of catastrophe bonds,4 which have a high yield and no correlation to the economic cycle. How Seriously Should We Take The Risk Of A Trade War? Is this a full-blown trade war? The answer is not yet. However, the risk is rising that the current spat will turn into one. President Trump has escalated tensions further by indicating that a 10% tariff would be placed on $200 billion of Chinese imports, in addition to the 25% tariff on $50 billion of imports announced in March and to be implemented on July 6. Trump's incentive to escalate the conflict is that a tough trade policy plays well with his support base (Chart 7). Ever since the trade issue hit the headlines early this year, his approval ratings have been on the rise. This means that he is unlikely to back down at least until the mid-term elections in November. Xi Jinping is also unlikely, for his own political reasons, to give in to U.S. demands. But China's retaliation will most likely come through non-tariff actions, since its imports from the U.S. total only about $130 billion (compared to $500 billion of Chinese exports to the U.S.). It could look to restrict imports, for example via quotas, or cause extra bottlenecks for U.S. businesses operating in China. Additionally, it could threaten to sell some of its holdings of U.S. Treasuries, or devalue the RMB. As Chart 8 shows, the RMB has already weakened against the dollar this year (though this was mainly due to the dollar's overall strength). There are suggestions that China might adjust the currency basket that it targets for the RMB, for example by adding more Asian currencies, to allow further depreciation against the dollar. Chart 7 Chart 8Sharp Rise In RMB This Year It is hard, then, to see a smooth outcome to this standoff. A further escalation could even have a military dimension, with the U.S. having recently opened a new "embassy" in Taiwan, and sailing navy vessels close to Chinese "islands" in the South China Sea. It is also a complication that President Trump has recently raised tensions with other G7 trading partners, rather than engaging their help in combatting China's perceived unfair trading practices. Is It Time To Buy Chinese A-Shares? In Q2 2018, MSCI China A-shares lost 19% in absolute terms, compared to a 3.5% gain for MSCI U.S. Some investors attribute this performance divergence to trade tension between the U.S. and China, and take the view that the Chinese government may step in to stimulate the economy and support the equity market, similar to what happened in 2015. We have no doubt that China will stimulate again if the economy appears to be heading for a deep slowdown. Given elevated debt levels and excess capacity in some parts of the economy and worries about pollution, however, the bar for a fresh round of stimulus is a lot higher than in the past. With the incremental inclusion of MSCI on-shore A-Shares into the MSCI China investible universe, A-shares are gaining more attention from international investors. However, the A-Share Index is very different from the MSCI China Index. First, the sector compositions are very different, as shown in Chart 9. The MSCI China index is not only dominated by the tech sector (40%), it's also very concentrated, with the top 10 names accounting for 56% of the index, while the top 10 names in the A-shares account for only about 20%. Second, even in the same sectors, the performance of the two indexes has diverged as shown in Chart 10. We see the reason for these divergences being that domestic investors are more concerned about growth in China than foreign investors are. Instead of buying A-Shares, investors should be more cautious on the MSCI China Index, for which we have a neutral view within MSCI EM universe. Chart 9 Chart 10ONE CHINA, TWO DIFFERENT EQUITY INDEXES What Are The Characteristics Of The Private Debt Market? Chart 11Private Debt Market Private debt (Chart 11) raised a record $115 billion through 158 funds in 2017, pushing aggregate AUM from $244 billion in 2007 to $664 billion in 2017. This explosive growth was driven by bank consolidation in the U.S., increased financial sector regulation, and the global search for yield. Private debt has historically enjoyed a higher yield and return, along with fewer defaults, than traditional public-market corporate bonds. Below are some of the key points from our recent Special Report:5 Private debt has returned an average net IRR of 13% from 1989 to 2015. This compares to an annualized total return of 7% and 7.2% for equities and corporate bonds respectively. Investors can diversify their sources of risk and return by giving access to more esoteric exposures such as illiquidity and manager skill. The core risk exposure in private debt comes from idiosyncratic firm-specific sources, which is not the case with publicly traded corporate credit. Investors can gain more tailored exposure to different industries and customized duration horizons. Additionally, private debt was the only group in the private space that did not experience a contraction in AUM during the financial crisis. Direct lending and mezzanine debt are capital preservation strategies that offer more stable returns while minimizing downside. Distressed debt and venture debt are more return-maximizing strategies that offer larger gains, but with a higher probability of losses. In the late stages of an economic cycle, investors should deploy capital defensively through first-lien and other senior secured debt positions. In contrast, a recession would create opportunities for distressed strategies and within deeper parts of the capital structure. Global Economy Overview: Growing divergences are emerging in global growth, with the U.S. producing strong data, but a cyclical slowdown in the euro area and Japan, and the risk of significantly slower growth in China and other emerging markets. This means that monetary policy divergences are also likely to increase, exacerbating the rise in the U.S. dollar and putting further pressure on emerging markets. Eventually, however, tighter financial conditions could start to dampen growth in the U.S. too. U.S.: Data has been very strong for the past few months, with the Fed's two NowCasts pointing to 2.9% and 4.5% QoQ annualized GDP growth in Q2. Small businesses are confident (with the NFIB survey at a near record high), which suggests that the capex recovery is likely to continue. With unemployment at the lowest level since 1969, wages should pick up soon, boosting consumption. But it is possible the data might now start to weaken. The Surprise Index (Chart 12, panel 1) has turned down. And a combination of trade war and a stronger dollar (up 8% in trade-weighted terms since April) might start to dent business and consumer confidence. Chart 12U.S. Growth Remains Strong... Chart 13...While Europe, Japan And EMs Start To Slow Euro Area: Euro area data, by contrast to the U.S., have turned down since the start of the year, with both the PMI and IFO slipping significantly (Chart 13, panel 1). This is most likely because the 6% appreciation of the euro last year has affected export growth, which has slowed to 3.1% YoY, from 8.3% at the start of the year. However, the PMI remains strong (around the same level as the U.S.) and, with a weaker euro since April, growth might pick up late in the year, as long as problems with trade and Italy do not deteriorate. Japan: Japan's growth has also slipped noticeably in recent months (Chart 13, panel 2), perhaps also because of currency strength, though question-marks over Prime Minister Abe's longevity and the slowdown in China may also be having an effect. The rise in inflation towards the Bank of Japan's 2% target has also faltered, with core CPI in April back to 0.3% YoY, though wages have seen a modest pickup to 1.2%. Emerging Markets: China is now showing clear signs of slowing, as the tightened monetary conditions and slower credit growth of the past 12 months have an effect. Fixed-asset investment, retail sales and industrial production all surprised to the downside in May. The authorities have responded to this (and to threat of trade disruptions) by slightly easing monetary policy, though this has not yet fed through to market rates, which have risen as a result of rising defaults. Elsewhere in EM, many central banks have responded to sharp declines in their currencies by raising rates, which is likely to dampen growth. Those, such as Brazil, which refrained from defensive rate hikes, are likely to see an acceleration in inflation Interest rates: The Fed has signaled that it plans to continue to hike once a quarter at least for the next 12 months. It may eventually have to accelerate that pace if core PCE inflation moves decisively above 2%. The ECB, by contrast, announced a "dovish tightening" last month, when it signaled the end of asset purchases in December, but no rate hike "through the summer" of next year. It can do this because euro zone core inflation remains around 1%, with fewer underlying inflationary pressures than in the U.S. The Bank of Japan is set to remain the last major central bank with accommodative policy, since it is unlikely to alter its yield-curve control any time soon. Global Equities Chart 14Neutral Global Equities A Bird In The Hand Is Worth Two In The Bush: After the initial strong recovery from the low in March 2009, global equity earnings have risen by only 20% from Q3 2011, and that rise mostly came after February 2016. In the same period, global equity prices, however, have gained over 80%, largely due to multiple expansion (Chart 14), supported by accommodative monetary and stimulative fiscal policies. Year-to-date, our pro-cyclical equity positioning has played out well with developed markets (DM) outperforming emerging markets (EM) by 8.8%, and cyclical equities outperforming defensives by 2.9%. As the year progresses, however, we are becoming more and more concerned about future prospects given the stage of the cycle, stretched valuations and the elevated profit margin.6 The three macro "policy puts", namely the Fed Put, the China Put and the Draghi Put, are all in jeopardy of disappearing or, at the very least, of weakening, in addition to the risk of rising protectionism. BCA's House View has downgraded global risk assets to neutral.7 Reflecting this change, within global equities we recommend investors to take a more defensive stance by reducing portfolio risk. We remain overweight DM and underweight EM; We upgrade U.S. equities to overweight at the expense of the euro area (see next page); Sector-wise, we suggest to take profits in the pro-cyclical tilts and become more defensive (see page 14). Please see page 21 for the complete portfolio allocation details. U.S. Vs. The Euro Area: Trading Places Chart 15Favor U.S. Vs. Euro Area In line with the BCA House View to reduce exposure in global risk assets, we are downgrading the euro area to neutral in order to fund an upgrade of the U.S. to overweight from neutral, for the following reasons: First, GAA's recommended equity portfolio has always been expressed in USD terms on an unhedged basis. Historically, the relative total return performance of euro area equities vs. the U.S. has been highly correlated with the euro/USD exchange rate. With BCA's House View calling for further strength of the USD versus the euro, we expect euro area total return in USD terms to underperform the U.S. (Chart 15, panel 1). Second, the euro area economy has been weakening vs. the U.S. as seen by the relative performance of PMIs in the two regions; this bodes ill for the euro area's relative profitability (Chart 15, Panel 2). Third, because euro area equities have a much higher beta to global equities than U.S. equities do, shifting towards the U.S. reduces the overall portfolio beta (Chart 15, Panel 3). Last, even though euro area equities are cheaper than the U.S. in absolute term, they have always traded at a discount to the U.S. On a relative basis, this discount is currently fair compared to the historical average. Sector Allocation: Become More Defensive Chart 16Sectors: Turn Defensive Year to date, our pro-cyclical sector positioning has worked very well, especially the underweights in telecoms, consumer staples and utilities, and the overweight of energy. The overweight in healthcare also has worked well, but the overweights in financials and industrials, as well as the underweight of consumer discretionary, have not panned out. Global economic growth has peaked, albeit at a high level. This does not bode well for the profitability of the economically sensitive sectors (industrials, consumer discretionary and materials) relative to the defensive sectors (healthcare, consumer staples and telecoms), as shown in Chart 16, top two panels. In addition, slowing Chinese growth will weigh on the materials sector, and rising tension in global trade will pressure the industrials sector. As such, we are upgrading consumer staples to overweight (from underweight) and telecoms to neutral, and downgrading materials to underweight (from neutral). Oil has gained 16% so far this year, driving energy equities to outperform the global benchmark by 6.2%. Going forward, however, the oil outlook is less certain as OPEC and Russia work to ease production controls, and demand is cloudy. This prompts us to close the overweight in the energy sector to stay on the sideline for now (Chart 16, bottom panel). We also suggest investors to reduce exposure in financials to a benchmark weighting due to our concerns on Europe and also the flattening of yield curves. After all these changes, we are now overweight healthcare and consumer staples while underweight consumer discretionary, utilities and materials. All other sectors are in line with benchmark weightings. Government Bonds Maintain Slight Underweight On Duration. BCA's house view has downgraded global risk assets to neutral and raised cash to overweight, while maintaining an underweight in fixed income.8 This prompts us to downgrade credit to neutral vs. government bonds (see next page). However, we still see rates rising over the next 9-12 months and so our short duration recommendation for the government bonds is unchanged. The U.S. Fed is on track to deliver a 25bps rate hike each quarter given robust business confidence and tight labor markets, and the ECB has announced it will stop new bond buying in its Asset Purchase Program after December this year. As such, bond yields are likely to move higher in both the U.S. and the euro area given the close relationship between 10-year term premium and net issuance (Chart 17). Chart 17Yields Will Rise Further Chart 18Favor Inflation-Linked Bonds Favor Linkers Vs. Nominal Bonds. The latest NFIB survey shows that wage pressure is on the rise, with reports of compensation increases hitting a record high (Chart 18, top panel). BCA's U.S. Bond Strategy still believes that the U.S. TIPS breakeven will rise to 2.4-2.5% around the time that U.S. core PCE inflation exceeds the Fed's 2% target rate (the Fed forecasts 2.1% by end-2018). Compared to the current breakeven level of 2.1%, this means 10-year TIPS has upside of 30-40bps, an important source of return in the low-return fixed income space (Chart 18, panel 2). Maintain overweight TIPS vs. nominal bonds. However, TIPS are no longer cheap. For those who have not already moved to overweight TIPS, we suggest "buying TIPS on dips". Inflation-linked bonds (ILBs) in Australia and Japan are also still very attractive vs. their respective nominal bonds (Chart 18, bottom panel). Overweight ILBs in those two markets also fits well with our macro themes. Corporate Bonds Chart 19Spreads Not Attractive We have favored both investment-grade and high-yield corporates (Chart 19) over government bonds for over two years. But, while monetary and credit conditions remain favorable, we think rising uncertainty and weakening corporate balance sheets in the coming quarters warrant a more cautious stance. We are moving to neutral on corporate credit. In Q1, outstanding U.S. corporate debt grew at an annualized rate of 4.4%, while pre-tax profits (on a national accounts basis) contracted by 5.7%, raising gross leverage from 6.9x to 7.1x. The benign default rates and tight credit spreads associated with robust economic growth are at risk now that leverage growth is soon poised to overtake cash flow growth, challenging companies' debt service capability. Finally, if labor costs accelerate, leverage will continue to rise in 2H18. Since February, our financial conditions index has tightened considerably driven by a combination of falling equity prices and a stronger dollar. As monetary policy shifts to an outright restrictive stance once inflation reaches the Fed's target later in 2018, corporates will suffer. The risk-adjusted returns to high yield (Chart 20) are no longer attractive relative to government bonds. Chart 20Junk Only Attractive If Defaults Stay Low Chart 21Rising Leverage Finally, valuations are expensive. Investment grade spreads have widened by 50bps from the start of the year, but junk spreads are still close to their post-crisis lows. As we are late in the credit cycle, we do not expect further contraction in spreads. For now monetary and credit quality indicators remain stable, but we are booking profits and moving both investment-grade and high-yield corporates to neutral. In the second half of the year, as corporate leverage (Chart 21) starts to deteriorate and monetary policy gets more restrictive, we will look to further review our allocations. Commodities Chart 22Strong Demand But Uncertain Supply In Oil Energy (Overweight): Underlying demand/supply fundamentals (Chart 22, panel 2) will continue to drive prices, as the correlation with the U.S. dollar breaks down. We expect the key OPEC countries to increase production by 800k b/d and over 210k b/d in 2H18 and 1H19 respectively. This will be offset by losses in the rest of OPEC of 530k b/d and 640k b/d in 2H18 and 1H19 respectively. Venezuelan production has dropped from a peak of 2.1m b/d to 1.4m b/d, and we expect it to reach 1.2m b/d by year end and 1.0m b/d by the end of 2019. Additionally, we expect Iranian exports to fall by 200k b/d to the end of 2018, and by another 300k b/d by the end of 1H19 as a result of sanctions. Demand seems to be holding up for now, but is conditional on developments in global trade. BCA's energy team forecasts Brent crude to average $70 in 2H18 and $77 in 2019. Industrial Metals (Neutral): China remains the largest consumer of metals, and so price action will react to underlying economic growth there and to the dynamics of its local metals markets. Additionally, a strengthening dollar will add downward pressure to prices and increase volatility. We expect a physical surplus in copper markets to emerge by year end, given slower demand growth and supply concerns due to restrictions on China's imports of scrap copper. Precious Metals (Neutral): Rising global uncertainties and geopolitical tensions driven by trade wars and divergent monetary policy will continue to keep market volatility high. During periods of equity market downturns, gold will continue to be an attractive hedge. Additionally, as inflationary pressures continue to rise, investors will continue to look for inflation protection in gold. However, rising interest rates and a strengthening dollar could limit price upside. We recommend gold as a safe-haven asset against unexpected volatility and inflation surprises. Currencies Chart 23Dollar Appreciation To Continue King Dollar U.S. Dollar: Following the recent strong economic data out of the U.S., the Fed is likely to maintain its moderately hawkish stance and follow its current dot plan of gradual rate hikes over the course of this year and next. For now the Fed is unlikely to accelerate the pace of hikes: it hinted that it could allow inflation to overshoot its target of 2% on core PCE. We expect the U.S. dollar to appreciate further over the coming months (Chart 23, panel 1). Euro: Disappointments in European economic data, in addition to political uncertainties in Italy, have led to a correction in the EUR/USD (Chart 23, panel 2). The ECB's indication that it will not raise rates through the summer of 2019 added further downward pressure on the currency. In addition, rising tension related to trade war and its impact on European growth is likely to dampen the euro's performance further. We look for EUR/USD to weaken to at least 1.12. JPY: The outlook for the yen is more mixed than for the euro. Japanese data over the past couple of months have been anemic, and interest rate differentials with the U.S. point to a weakening yen (Chart 23, panel 3). Moreover, the BoJ is still concerned with achieving its inflation target and so remains the last major central bank in full accommodative mode. However, escalating global tension is likely to be a positive factor for the JPY as a safe haven currency. It also looks far cheaper relative to PPP than does the euro. We see the yen trading fairly flat to the USD, but appreciating against the euro. EM Currencies: Tighter U.S. financial conditions, rising bond yields, and a strengthening dollar are all disastrous for EM currencies (Chart 23, panel 4). Additionally, the ongoing growth slowdown in China, and in EM as a whole, will add further downside pressures on most EM currencies. Alternatives Chart 24Turn Defensive On Alts Allocations to alternatives continue to rise as investors look for new avenues to preserve capital and generate attractive returns. We are turning more cautious on risk assets across all asset classes on the back of a possible growth slowdown and restrictive monetary policy. With intra-correlations between alternative assets reaching new lows (Chart 24), investors need to be especially careful picking the right category of alt investments. Return Enhancers: We have favored private equity over hedge funds since 1Q16, and this has generated an excess return of 20%. But, given our decision to scale back on risk assets on the back of a possible growth slowdown, we are turning cautious on private equity. Higher private-market multiples, stiff competition for buyouts from large corporates, and an uncertain macro outlook will make deal flow difficult. On the other hand, as volatility makes a comeback and markets move sideways, discretionary and systematic macro funds should fare better. We recommend investors pair back on their private equity allocations and increase hedge funds as we prepare for the next recession. Inflation Hedges: We have favored direct real estate over commodity futures since 1Q16; this position has generated a small loss of 1.4%. Total global commercial real-estate (CRE) loans outstanding have reached a record $4.3 trillion, 11% higher than at the pre-crisis peak. CRE prices peaked in late 2016, and are now flat-lining, partly due to the downturn of shopping malls and traditional retail. On the other hand, commodity futures have had a good run on the back of rising energy prices. We recommend investors reduce their real estate allocations, and put on modest positions in commodity futures as an inflation hedge. Volatility Dampeners: We have favored farmland and timberland over structured products since 1Q16, and this has generated an excess return of 6%. As noted in our Special Report,9 of the two, timberland assets tend to have a stronger correlation with growth, whereas farmland demand is relatively inelastic during times of a slowdown. Additionally, farmland returns tend to have lower volatility compared to timberland. Structured products will continue to suffer with rising rates. We recommend investors allocate more to farmland over timberland, and stay underweight structured products. Risks To Our View Chart 25What If China's Imports Weaken Sharply Our neutral view on risk assets implies that we see the upside and downside risks as evenly balanced. Could the macro environment turn out to be worse than we envisage? Clearly, there would be more downside for equities if the risks we highlighted in the Overview (slowing growth, U.S. inflation, trade war, Chinese policy) all come through. China and emerging markets are the key. China's import growth has been trending down for 12 months; could it turn significantly negative, as it did in 2015 (Chart 25)? Emerging markets look sensitive to further rises in U.S. interest rates and the dollar. The most vulnerable currencies have already fallen by up to 20% since the start of the year, but could fall further (Chart 26). We would not over-emphasize these risks, however. If growth were to slow drastically, China would roll out stimulus. Emerging markets are more resilient than they were in the 1990s, thanks to currencies that mostly are floating and generally healthier current account positions (though, note, their foreign-currency debt is bigger). Chart 26EM Currencies Could Fall Further Chart 27Is This An Excuse For The Fed To Be Dovish? On the positive side, the biggest upside risk comes from the Fed slowing the pace of rate hikes even though growth is robust. This might be because U.S. inflation remains subdued (perhaps for structural reasons) - or because the Fed allows an overshoot of inflation, either under political pressure, or because of arguments that its inflation target is "symmetrical" and that it has missed it on the downside ever since the target was introduced in 2012 (Chart 27). This would be likely to weaken the dollar, giving emerging markets a reprieve. It might lead to a 1999-like stock market rally, perhaps led again by tech - specifically, internet - stocks. 1 Please see What Our Clients Are Asking: How Seriously Should We Take The Risk Of A Trade War, on page 7 of this Quarterly for more analysis of this subject. 2 Please see What Our Clients Are Asking: How To Overweight Cash, on page 6 of this Quarterly for some suggestions on how to minimize this. 3 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report, "Hedge Funds: Still Worth Investing In?", dated June 16, 2017, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report, "A Primer On Catastrophe Bonds", dated December 12, 2017, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report, "Private Debt: An Investment Primer", dated June 6, 2018, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see Global Asset Allocation - Quarterly Portfolio Outlook, dated April 3, 2018, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see Global Investment Strategy - Special Report "Three Policy Puts Go Kaput: Downgrade Global Equities To Neutral", dated June 20, 2018, available at gis.bcaresearch.com 8 Please see Global Investment Strategy - Special Report "Three Policy Puts Go Kaput: Downgrade Global Equities To Neutral", dated June 20, 2018, available at gis.bcaresearch.com 9 Please see Global Asset Allocation - Special Report "U.S. Farmland & Timberland: An Investment Primer", dated October 24, 2017, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com GAA Asset Allocation
Highlights Macro Outlook: Global growth is decelerating and the composition of that growth is shifting back towards the United States. Policy backdrop: The specter of trade wars represents a real and immediate threat to risk assets. Meanwhile, many of the "policy puts" that investors have relied on have been marked down to a lower strike price. Global equities: We downgraded global equities from overweight to neutral on June 19th. Investors should favor developed market equities over their EM counterparts. Defensive stocks will outperform deep cyclicals, at least until the dollar peaks early next year. Government bonds: Treasury yields may dip in the near term, but will rise over a 12-month horizon. Overweight Japan, Australia, New Zealand, and the U.K. relative to the U.S., Canada, and the euro area. Credit: The current level of spreads points to subpar returns over the next 12 months. We have a modest preference for U.S. over European corporate bonds. Currencies: EUR/USD will fall into the $1.10-to-1.15 range during the next few months. The downside risks for the pound and the yen are limited. Avoid EM and commodity currencies. The risk of a large depreciation in the Chinese yuan is rising. Commodities: Favor oil over metals. Gold will do well over the long haul. Feature I. Macro Outlook Back To The USA The global economy experienced a synchronized expansion in 2017. Global real GDP growth accelerated to 3.8% from 3.2% in 2016. The euro area, Japan, and most emerging markets moved from laggards to leaders in the global growth horse race. The opposite pattern has prevailed in 2018. Global growth has slowed, a trend that is likely to continue over the next few quarters judging by a variety of leading economic indicators (LEIs) (Chart 1). The U.S. has once again jumped ahead of its peers: It is the only major economy where the LEI is still rising (Chart 2). The latest tracking data suggest that U.S. real GDP growth could reach 4% in the second quarter, more than double most estimates of trend growth. Chart 1Global Growth Is Slowing Again Chart 2U.S. Is Outshining Its Peers Such a lofty pace of growth cannot be sustained. For the first time in over a decade, the U.S. economy has reached full employment. The unemployment rate stands at a 48-year low of 3.75%. The number of people outside the labor force who want a job, as a percentage of the total working-age population, is back to pre-recession lows (Chart 3). For the first time in the history of the Bureau of Labor Statistics' Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS), there are more job vacancies than unemployed workers (Chart 4). Chart 3U.S. Is Back To Full Employment Chart 4There Are Now More Vacancies Than Jobseekers Mainstream economic theory states that governments should tighten fiscal policy as the economy begins to overheat in order to accumulate a war chest for the next inevitable downturn. The Trump administration is doing the exact opposite. The budget deficit is set to widen to 4.6% of GDP next year on the back of massive tax cuts and big increases in government spending (Chart 5). Chart 5The U.S. Budget Deficit Is Set To Widen Even If The Unemployment Rate Continues To Decline The Fed In Tightening Mode As the labor market overheats, wages will accelerate further. Average hourly earnings surprised to the upside in May. The Employment Cost Index for private-sector workers - one of the cleanest and most reliable measures of wage growth - rose at a 4% annualized pace in the first quarter. The U.S. labor market has finally moved onto the 'steep' side of the Phillips curve (Chart 6). Rising wages will put more income into workers' pockets who will then spend it. As aggregate demand increases beyond the economy's productive capacity, inflation will rise. The New York Fed's Underlying Inflation Gauge, which leads core CPI inflation by 18 months, has already leaped to over 3% (Chart 7). The prices paid components of the ISM and regional Fed purchasing manager surveys have also surged (Chart 8). Chart 6Wage Inflation Will Accelerate Chart 7U.S. Inflation: Upside Risks (Part I) Chart 8U.S. Inflation: Upside Risks (Part II) The Fed has a symmetric inflation target. Hence, a temporary increase in core PCE inflation to around 2.2%-to-2.3% would not worry the FOMC very much. However, a sustained move above 2.5% would likely prompt an aggressive response. The fact that the unemployment rate has fallen 0.7 percentage points below the Fed's estimate of full employment may seem like a cause for celebration, but this development has a dark side. There has never been a case in the post-war era where the unemployment rate has risen by more than one-third of a percentage point without this coinciding with a recession (Chart 9). The Fed wants to avoid a situation where the unemployment rate has fallen so much that it has nowhere to go but up. Chart 9Even A Small Uptick In The Unemployment Rate Is Bad News For The Business Cycle As such, we think that the bar for the Fed to abandon its once-per-quarter pace of rate hikes is quite high. If anything, the risk is that the Fed expedites monetary tightening in order to keep real rates on an upward trajectory. Jay Powell's announcement that he will hold a press conference at the conclusion of every FOMC meeting opens the door for the Fed to move back to its historic pattern of hiking rates once every six weeks. Housing And The Monetary Transmission Mechanism Economists often talk about the "monetary transmission mechanism." As Ed Leamer pointed out in his 2007 Jackson Hole symposium paper succinctly entitled, "Housing Is The Business Cycle," housing has historically been the main conduit through which changes in monetary policy affect the real economy.1 A house will last a long time, and the land on which it sits - which in many cases is worth more than the house itself - will last forever. Thus, changes in real interest rates tend to have a large impact on the capitalized value of one's home. Today, the U.S. housing market is in pretty good shape (Chart 10). Construction activity was slow to increase in the aftermath of the Great Recession. As a result, the vacancy rate stands at ultra-low levels. Home prices have been rising briskly, but are still 13% below their 2005 peak once adjusted for inflation. On both a price-to-rent and price-to-income basis, home prices do not appear overly stretched. Mortgage-servicing costs, expressed as a share of disposable income, are near all-time lows. The homeownership rate has also been trending higher, thanks to faster household formation and an improving labor market. Lenders remain circumspect (Chart 11). The ratio of mortgage debt-to-disposable income has barely increased during the recovery, and is still 31 percentage points below 2007 levels. The average FICO score for new mortgages stands at a healthy 761, well above pre-recession standards. Chart 10U.S. Housing Is In Pretty Good Shape Chart 11Mortgage Lenders Remain Circumspect The Urban Institute Housing Credit Availability Index, which measures the percentage of home purchase loans that are likely to default over the next 90 days, is nowhere close to dangerous levels. This is particularly the case for private-label mortgages, whose default risk has hovered at just over 2% during the past few years, down from a peak of 22% in 2006. If Not Housing, Then What? Since the U.S. housing sector is in reasonably good shape, the Fed may need to slow the economy through other means. Here's the rub though: Other sectors of the economy are not particularly sensitive to changes in interest rates. Decades of empirical data have clearly shown that business investment is only weakly correlated with the cost of capital. Unlike a house, most business investment is fairly short-lived. A computer might be ready for the recycling heap in just a few years. The Bureau of Economic Analysis estimates that the depreciation rate for nonresidential assets is nearly four times higher than for residential property (Chart 12). During the early 1980s, when the effective fed funds rate reached 19%, residential investment collapsed but business investment was barely affected (Chart 13). Chart 12U.S.: Depreciation Rate For Business ##br##Investment Is Much Larger Than For Residential Property Chart 13Residential Investment Collapsed In ##br##Response To Higher Interest Rates In The Early 80s... While Business Investment Was Barely Affected Rising rates could make it difficult for corporate borrowers to pay back loans, which could indirectly lead to lower business investment. That said, a fairly pronounced increase in rates may be necessary to generate significant distress in the corporate sector, given that interest payments are close to record-lows as a share of cash flows (Chart 14). In addition, corporate bonds now represent 60% of total corporate liabilities. Bonds tend to have much longer maturities than bank loans, which provides a buffer against default risk. A stronger dollar would cool the economy by diverting some spending towards imports. However, imports account for only 16% of GDP. Thus, even large swings in the dollar's value tend to have only modest effects on the economy. Likewise, higher interest rates could hurt equity prices, but the wealthiest ten percent of households own 93% of all stocks. Hence, it would take a sizable drop in the stock market to significantly slow GDP growth. The conventional wisdom is that the Fed will need to hit the pause button at some point next year. The market is pricing in only 85 basis points in rate hikes between now and the end of 2020 (Chart 15). That assumption may be faulty, considering that housing is in good shape and other sectors of the economy are not especially sensitive to changes in interest rates. Rates may need to go quite a bit higher before the U.S. economy slows materially. Chart 14U.S. Corporate Sector Interest Payments ##br##At Near Record-Low Levels As A Share Of Cash Flows Chart 15Market Expectations Versus The Fed Dots Global Contagion Investors and policymakers talk a lot about the neutral rate of interest. Unfortunately, the discussion is usually very parochial in nature, inasmuch as it focuses on the interest rate that is consistent with full employment and stable inflation in the United States. But the U.S. is not an island unto itself. Even if a bit outdated, the old adage that says that when the U.S. sneezes the rest of the world catches a cold still rings true. What if there is a lower "shadow" neutral rate which, if breached, causes pain outside the U.S. before it causes pain within the U.S. itself? Eighty per cent of EM foreign-currency debt is denominated in U.S. dollars. Outside of China, EM dollar debt is now back to late-1990s levels both as a share of GDP and exports (Chart 16). Just like in that era, a vicious cycle could erupt where a stronger dollar makes it difficult for EM borrowers to pay back their loans, leading to capital outflows from emerging markets, and an even stronger dollar. The wave of EM local-currency debt issued in recent years only complicates matters (Chart 17). If EM central banks raise rates, this could help prevent their currencies from plunging. However, higher domestic rates will make it difficult for local-currency borrowers to pay back their loans. Damned if you do, damned if you don't. Chart 16EM Dollar Debt Is High Chart 17EM Borrowers Like Local Credit Too China To The Rescue? Don't Count On It When emerging markets last succumbed to pressure in 2015, China saved the day by stepping in with massive new stimulus. Fiscal spending and credit growth accelerated to over 15% year-over-year. The government's actions boosted demand for all sorts of industrial commodities. Today, Chinese growth is slowing again. May data on industrial production, retail sales, and fixed asset investment all disappointed. Our leading indicator for the Li Keqiang index, a widely followed measure of economic activity, is in a clear downtrend (Chart 18). Property prices in tier one cities are down year-over-year. Construction tends to follow prices. So far, the policy response has been muted. Reserve requirements have been cut and some administrative controls loosened, but the combined credit and fiscal impulse has plunged (Chart 19). Onshore and offshore corporate bond yields have increased to multi-year highs. Bank lending rates are rising, while loan approval rates are dropping (Chart 20). Chart 18Chinese Growth Is Slowing Anew Chart 19China: Policy Response To Slowdown ##br##Has Been Muted So Far Chart 20China: Credit Tightening There is no doubt that China will stimulate again if the economy appears to be heading for a deep slowdown. However, the bar for a fresh round of stimulus is higher today than it was in the past. Elevated debt levels, excess capacity in some parts of the industrial sector, and worries about pollution all limit the extent to which the authorities will be willing to respond with the usual barrage of infrastructure spending and increased bank lending. The economy needs to feel more pain before policymakers come to its aid. Rising Risk Of Another RMB Devaluation Chart 21China: Currency Wars Are Good And ##br##Easy To Win Even if China does stimulate the economy, it may try to do so by weakening the currency rather than loosening fiscal and credit policies. Chart 21 shows that the yuan has fallen much more over the past week than one would have expected based on the broad dollar's trend. The timing of the CNY's recent descent coincides with President Trump's announcement of additional tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese goods. Global financial markets went into a tizzy the last time China devalued the yuan in August 2015. The devaluation triggered significant capital outflows, arguably only compounding China's problems. This has led commentators to conclude that the authorities would not make the same mistake again. But what if the real mistake was not that China devalued its currency, but that it did not devalue it by enough? Standard economic theory says that a country should always devalue its currency by a sufficient amount to flush out expectations of a further decline. China was too timid, and paid the price. Capital controls are tighter in China today than they were in 2015. This gives the authorities more room for maneuver. China is also waging a geopolitical war with the United States. The U.S. exported only $188 billion of goods and services to China, a small fraction of the $524 billion in goods and services that China exported to the United States. China simply cannot win a tit-for-tat trade war with the United States. In contrast, a currency war from China's perspective may be, to quote Donald Trump, "good and easy to win." The Chinese simply need to step up their purchases of U.S. Treasurys, which would drive up the value of the dollar. Trump And Trade Needless to say, any effort by the Chinese to devalue their currency would invite a backlash from the Trump administration. However, since China is already on the receiving end of punitive U.S. trade actions, it is not clear that the marginal cost to China would outweigh the benefits of having a more competitive currency. The truth is that there may be little that China can do to fend off a trade war. Protectionism is popular among American voters, especially among Trump's base (Chart 22). Donald Trump ran on a protectionist platform, and he is now trying to deliver on his promise of a smaller trade deficit. Whether he succeeds is another story. Trump's macroeconomic policies are completely at odds with his trade agenda. Fiscal stimulus will boost aggregate demand, which will suck in more imports. An overheated economy will prompt the Fed to raise rates more aggressively than it otherwise would, leading to a stronger dollar. All of this will result in a wider trade deficit. What will Trump tell voters two years from now when he is campaigning in Michigan and Ohio about why the trade deficit has widened under his watch? Will he blame himself or America's trading partners? No trophy for getting that answer right. Trump seems to equate countries with companies: Exports are revenues and imports are costs. If a country is exporting less than it is importing, it must be losing money. This is deeply flawed reasoning. I run a current account deficit with the place where I eat lunch and they run a capital account deficit with me - they give me food and I give them cash - but I don't go around complaining that they are ripping me off. A trade war would be much more damaging to Wall Street than Main Street. While trade is a fairly small part of the U.S. economy, it represents a large share of the activities of the multinational companies that comprise the S&P 500. Trade these days is dominated by intermediate goods (Chart 23). The exchange of goods and services takes place within the context of a massive global supply chain, where such phrases as "outsourcing," "vertical integration" and "just-in-time inventory management" have entered the popular vernacular. Chart 22Free Trade Is Not In Vogue In The U.S. Chart 23Trade In Intermediate Goods Dominates This arrangement has many advantages, but it also harbors numerous fragilities. A small fire at a factory in Japan that manufactured 60 per cent of the epoxy resin used in chip casings led to a major spike in RAM prices in 1993. Flooding in Thailand in 2011 wreaked havoc on the global auto industry. The global supply chain is highly vulnerable to even small shocks. Now scale that up by a factor of 100. That is what a global trade war would look like. The Euro Area: Back In The Slow Lane Euro area growth peaked late last year. Real final demand grew by 0.8% in Q4 of 2017 but only 0.2% in Q1 of 2018. The weakening trend was partly a function of slower growth in China and other emerging markets - net exports contributed 0.41 percentage points to euro area growth in Q4 but subtracted 0.14 points in Q1. Domestic factors also played a role. Most notably, the euro area credit impulse rolled over late last year, taking GDP growth down with it (Chart 24).2 It is too early to expect euro area growth to reaccelerate. German exports contracted in April. Export expectations in the Ifo survey sank in June to the lowest level since January 2017, while the export component of the PMI swooned to a two-year low. We also have yet to see the full effect of the Italian imbroglio on euro area growth. Italian bond yields have come down since spiking in April, but the 10-year yield is still more than 100 basis points higher than before the selloff (Chart 25). This amounts to a fairly substantial tightening in financial conditions in the euro area's third largest economy. And this does not even take into account the deleterious effect on Italian business confidence. Chart 24Peak In Euro Area Credit Impulse Last Year##br## Means Slower Growth This Year Chart 25Uh Oh Spaghetti-O If You Are Gonna Do The Time, You Might As Well Do The Crime At this point, investors are basically punishing Italy for a crime - defaulting and possibly jettisoning the euro - that it has not committed. If you are going to get reprimanded for something you have not done, you are more likely to do it. Such a predicament can easily create a vicious circle where rising yields make default more likely, leading to falling demand for Italian debt and even higher yields (Chart 26). The fact that Italian real GDP per capita is no higher now than when the country adopted the euro in 1999, and Italian public support for euro area membership is lower than elsewhere, has only added fuel to investor concerns (Chart 27). Chart 26When A Lender Of Last Resort Is Absent, Multiple Equilibria Are Possible Chart 27Italy: Neither Divine Nor A Comedy The ECB could short-circuit this vicious circle by promising to backstop Italian debt no matter what. But it can't make such unconditional promises. Recall that prior to delivering his "whatever it takes" speech in 2012, Mario Draghi and his predecessor Jean-Claude Trichet penned a letter to Silvio Berlusconi outlining a series of reforms they wanted to see enacted as a condition of ongoing ECB support. The contents of the letter were so explosive that they precipitated Berlusconi's resignation after they were leaked to the public. One of the reforms that Draghi and Trichet demanded - and the subsequent government led by Mario Monti ultimately undertook - was the extension of the retirement age. Italy's current leaders promised to reverse that decision during the election campaign. While they have softened their stance since then, they will still try to deliver on much of their populist agenda over the coming months, much to the consternation of the ECB and the European Commission. It was one thing for Mario Draghi to promise to do "whatever it takes" to protect Italy when the country was the victim of contagion from the Greek crisis. But now that Italy is the source of the disease, the rationale for intervention has weakened. Italy's Macro Constraints Much has been written about what Italy should be doing, but the fact is that there are no simple solutions. Italy suffers from an aging population that is trying to save more for retirement. Italian companies do not want to invest in new capacity because the working-age population is shrinking, which limits future domestic demand growth. Thus, the private sector is a chronic net saver, constantly wanting to spend less than it earns (Chart 28). Italy is not unique in facing an excess of private-sector savings. However, Italy is unique in that the solutions available to most other countries to deal with this predicament are not available to it. Broadly speaking, there are two ways you can deal with excess private-sector savings. Call it the Japanese solution and the German solution. The Japanese solution is to have the government absorb excess private-sector savings with its own dissavings. This is tantamount to running large, sustained fiscal deficits. Italy's populist coalition Five Star-Lega government tried to pursue this strategy, only to have the bond vigilantes shoot it down. The German solution is to ship excess savings out of the country through a large current account surplus (in Germany's case, 8% of GDP). However, for Italy to avail itself of this solution, it would need to have a hypercompetitive economy, which it does not. Unlike Spain, Italy's unit labor costs have barely declined over the past six years relative to the rest of the euro area, leaving it with an export base that is struggling to compete abroad (Chart 29). Chart 28The Italian Private Sector Wants To Save Chart 29Italy: More Work Needs To Be Done On The Labor Competitiveness Front Since there is little that can be done in the near term that would improve Italy's competitiveness vis-Ă -vis the rest of the euro area, the only thing the ECB can do is try to improve Italy's competitiveness vis-Ă -vis the rest of the world. This means keeping monetary policy very loose and hoping that this translates into a weak euro. II. Financial Markets Downgrade Global Risk Assets From Overweight To Neutral Investors are accustomed to thinking that there is a "Fed put" out there - that the Fed will stop raising rates if growth slows and equity prices fall. This was a sensible assumption a few years ago: The Fed hiked rates in December 2015 and then stood pat for 12 months as the global economic backdrop darkened. These days, however, the Fed wants slower growth. And if weaker asset prices are the ticket to slower growth, so be it. The "Fed put" may still be around, but the strike price has been marked down to a lower level. Likewise, worries about growing financial and economic imbalances will limit the efficacy of the "China stimulus put" - the tendency for the Chinese government to ease fiscal and credit policy at the first hint of slower growth. The same goes for the "Draghi put." The ECB is hoping, perhaps unrealistically so, to wind down its asset purchase program later this year. This means that a key buyer of Italian debt is stepping back just when it may be needed the most. The loss of these three policy puts, along with additional risks such as rising protectionism, means that the outlook for global risk assets is likely to be more challenging over the coming months. With that in mind, we downgraded our 12-month recommendation on global risk assets from overweight to neutral last week. Fixed-Income: Stay Underweight Chart 30U.S. Corporate Bonds: Leverage-Adjusted Value A less constructive stance towards equities would normally imply a more constructive stance towards bonds. Global bond yields could certainly fall in the near term, as EM stress triggers capital flows into safe-haven government bond markets. However, if we are really in an environment where an overheated U.S. economy and rising inflation force the Fed to raise rates more than the market expects, long-term bond yields are likely to rise over a 12-month horizon. As such, asset allocators should move the proceeds from equity sales into cash. The U.S. yield curve might still flatten in this environment, but it would be a bear flattening - one where long-term yields rise less than short-term rates. Bond yields are strongly correlated across the world. Thus, an increase in U.S. Treasury yields over the next 12 months would likely put upward pressure on bond yields abroad, even if inflation remains contained outside the United States. BCA's Global Fixed Income Strategy service favors Japan, Australia, New Zealand, and the U.K. over the U.S., Canada, and euro area bond markets. Investors should also pare back their exposure to spread product. Our increasing caution towards equities extends to the corporate bond space. BCA's U.S. Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) remains in deteriorating territory. With profits still high and bank lending standards continuing to ease, a recession-inducing corporate credit crunch is unlikely over the next 12 months. Nevertheless, our models suggest that both investment grade and high yield credit are overvalued (Chart 30). In relative terms, our fixed-income specialists have a modest preference for U.S. over European credit. The near-term growth outlook is more challenging in Europe. The ECB is also about to wind down its bond buying program, having purchased nearly 20% of all corporate bonds in the euro area over the course of only three years. Currencies: King Dollar Is Back The U.S. dollar is a counter-cyclical currency, meaning that it tends to do well when the global economy is decelerating (Chart 31). If the Chinese economy continues to weaken, global growth will remain under pressure. Emerging market currencies will suffer in this environment especially if, as discussed above, the Chinese authorities engineer a devaluation of the yuan. Momentum is moving back in the dollar's favor. Chart 32 shows that a simple trading rule - which goes long the dollar whenever it is above its moving average and shorts it when it is below - has performed very well over time. The dollar is now trading above most key trend lines. Chart 31Decelerating Global Growth Tends To Be##br## Bullish For The Dollar Chart 32The Dollar Trades On Momentum Some commentators have argued that a larger U.S. budget deficit will put downward pressure on the dollar. However, this would only happen if the Fed let inflation expectations rise more quickly than nominal rates, an outcome which would produce lower real rates. So far, that has not happened: U.S. real rates have risen across the entire yield curve since Treasury yields bottomed last September (Chart 33). As a result, real rate differentials between the U.S. and its peers have increased (Chart 34). Chart 33U.S. Real Rates Have Risen Across ##br##The Entire Yield Curve Chart 34Real Rate Differentials Have Widened ##br##Between The U.S. And Its DM Peers Historically, the dollar has moved in line with changes in real rate differentials (Chart 35). The past few months have been no exception. If the Fed finds itself in a position where it can raise rates more than the market anticipates, the greenback should continue to strengthen. Chart 35Historically, The Dollar Has Moved In Line With Interest Rate Differentials True, the dollar is no longer a cheap currency. However, if long-term interest rate differentials stay anywhere close to where they are today, the greenback can appreciate quite a bit from current levels. For example, consider the dollar's value versus the euro. Thirty-year U.S. Treasurys currently yield 2.98% while 30-year German bunds yield 1.04%, a difference of 194 basis points. Even if one allows for the fact that investors expect euro area inflation to be lower than in the U.S. over the next 30 years, EUR/USD would need to trade at a measly 84 cents today in order to compensate German bund holders for the inferior yield they will receive.3 We do not expect EUR/USD to get down to that level, but a descent into the $1.10-to-$1.15 range over the next few months certainly seems achievable. Brexit worries will continue to weigh on the British pound. Nevertheless, we are reluctant to get too bearish on the pound. The currency is extremely cheap (Chart 36). Inflation has come down from a 5-year high of 3.1% in November, but still clocked in at 2.4% in April. Real wages are picking up, consumer confidence has strengthened, and the CBI retail survey has improved. In a surprise decision, Andy Haldane, the Bank of England's Chief Economist, joined two other Monetary Policy Committee members in voting for an immediate 25 basis-point increase in the Bank Rate in June. Perhaps most importantly, Brexit remains far from a sure thing. Most polls suggest that if a referendum were held again, the "Bremain" side would prevail (Chart 37). Rules are made to be broken. It is the will of the people, rather than legal mumbo-jumbo, that ultimately matters. In the end, the U.K. will stay in the EU. The yen is likely to weaken somewhat against the dollar over the next 12 months as interest rate differentials continue to move in the dollar's favor. That said, as with the pound, we think the downside for the yen is limited (Chart 38). The yen real exchange rate remains at multi-year lows. Japan's current account surplus has grown to nearly 4% of GDP and its net international investment position - the difference between its foreign assets and liabilities - stands at an impressive 60% of GDP. If financial market volatility rises, as we expect, some of those overseas assets will be repatriated back home, potentially boosting the value of the yen in the process. Chart 36The Pound Is Cheap Chart 37When Bremorse Sets In Chart 38The Yen's Long-Term Outlook Is Bullish Commodities: Better Outlook For Oil Than Metals The combination of slower global growth and a resurgent dollar is likely to hurt commodity prices. Industrial metals are more vulnerable than oil. China consumes around half of all the copper, nickel, aluminum, zinc, and iron ore produced around the world (Chart 39). In contrast, China represents less than 15% of global oil demand. The supply backdrop for oil is also more favorable than for metals. While Saudi Arabia is likely to increase production over the remainder of the year, this may not be enough to fully offset lower crude output from Venezuela, Iran, Libya, and Nigeria, as well as potential constraints to U.S. production growth due to pipeline bottlenecks. Additionally, a recent power outage has knocked about 350,000 b/d of Syncrude's Canadian oil sands production offline at least through July. The superior outlook for oil over metals means we prefer the Canadian dollar relative to the Aussie dollar. Chart 40 shows that the AUD is expensive compared to the CAD based on a Purchasing Power Parity calculation. Although the Canadian dollar deserves some penalty due to NAFTA risks, the current discount seems excessive to us. Accordingly, as of today, we are going tactically short AUD/CAD. Chart 39China Is A More Dominant Consumer ##br##Of Metals Than Oil Chart 40The Canadian Dollar Is Undervalued ##br##Relative To The Aussie Dollar The prospect of higher inflation down the road is good news for gold. However, with real rates still rising and the dollar strengthening, it is too early to pile into bullion and other precious metals. Wait until early 2020, by which time the Fed is likely to stop raising rates. Equities: Prefer DM Over EM One can believe that emerging market stocks will go up; one can also believe that the Fed will do its job and tighten financial conditions in order to prevent the U.S. economy from overheating. But one cannot believe that both of these things will happen at the same time. As Chart 41 clearly shows, EM equities almost always fall when U.S. financial conditions are tightening. Chart 41Tightening U.S. Financial Conditions Do Not Bode Well For EM Stocks Our overriding view is that U.S. financial conditions will tighten over the coming months. As discussed above, the adverse effects of rising U.S. rates and a strengthening dollar are likely to be felt first and foremost in emerging markets. Our EM strategists believe that Turkey, Brazil, Argentina, South Africa, Malaysia, and Indonesia are most vulnerable. We no longer have a strong 12-month view on regional equity allocation within the G3 economies, at least not in local-currency terms. The sector composition of the euro area and Japanese bourses is more heavily tilted towards deep cyclicals than the United States. However, a weaker euro, and to a lesser extent, a weaker yen will cushion the blow from a softening global economy. In dollar terms, the U.S. stock market should outperform its peers. Getting Ready For The Next Equity Bear Market A neutral stance does not imply that we expect markets to move sideways. On the contrary, volatility is likely to increase again over the balance of the year. We predicted last week that the next "big move" in stocks will be to the downside. We would consider moving our 12-month recommendation temporarily back to overweight if global equities were to sell off by more than 15% during the next few months or if the policy environment becomes more market-friendly. Similar to what happened in 1998, when the S&P 500 fell by 22% between the late summer and early fall, a significant correction today could set the scene for a blow-off rally. In such a rally, EM stocks would probably rebound and cyclicals would outperform defensives. However, absent such fireworks, we will probably downgrade global equities in early 2019 in anticipation of a global recession in 2020. The U.S. fiscal impulse is set to fall sharply in 2020, as the full effects of the tax cuts and spending hikes make their way through the system (Chart 42).4 Real GDP will probably be growing at a trend-like pace of 1.7%-to-1.8% by the end of next year because the U.S. will have run out of surplus labor at that point. A falling fiscal impulse could take GDP growth down to 1% in 2020, a level often associated with "stall speed." Investors should further reduce exposure to stocks before this happens. The next recession will not be especially severe in purely economic terms. However, as was the case in 2001, even a mild recession could lead to a very painful equity bear market if the starting point for valuations is high enough. Valuations today are not as extreme as they were back then, but they are still near the upper end of their historic range (Chart 43). A composite valuation measure incorporating both the trailing and forward PE ratio, price-to-book, price-to-cash flow, price-to-sales, market cap-to-GDP, dividend yield, and Tobin's Q points to real average annual total returns of 1.8% for U.S. stocks over the next decade. Global equities will fare slightly better, but returns will still be below their historic norm. Long-term equity investors looking for more upside should consider steering their portfolios towards value stocks, which have massively underperformed growth stocks over the past 11 years (Chart 44). Chart 42U.S. Fiscal Impulse Set To Drop In 2020 Chart 43U.S. Stocks Are Pricey Chart 44Value Stocks: An Attractive Proposition Appendix A depicts some key valuation indicators for global equities. Appendix B provides illustrative projections based on the discussion above of where all the major asset classes are heading over the next ten years. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Edward E. Leamer, "Housing Is The Business Cycle," Proceedings, Economic Policy Symposium, Jackson Hole, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, (2007). 2 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. Euro area private-sector credit growth accelerated from -2.6% in May 2014 to 3.1% in March 2017, but has been broadly flat ever since. Hence, the credit impulse has dropped. 3 For this calculation, we assume that the fair value for EUR/USD is 1.32, which is close to the IMF's Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) estimate. The annual inflation differential of 0.4% is based on 30-year CPI swaps. This implies that the fair value for EUR/USD will rise to 1.49 after 30 years. If one assumes that the euro reaches that level by then, the common currency would need to trade at 1.49/(1.0194)^30=0.84 today. 4 We are not saying that fiscal policy will be tightened in 2020. Rather, we are saying that the structural budget deficit will stop increasing as the full effects of the tax cuts make their way through the system and higher budgetary appropriations are reflected in increased government spending (there is often a lag between when spending is authorized and when it takes place). It is the change in the fiscal impulse that matters for GDP growth. Recall that Y=C+I+G+X-M. If the government permanently raises G, this will permanently raise Y but will only temporarily raise GDP growth (the change in Y). In other words, as G stops rising in 2020, GDP growth will come back down. Appendix A Appendix A Chart 1Long-Term Return Prospects Are Slightly Better Outside The U.S. Appendix A Chart 1Long-Term Return Prospects Are Slightly Better Outside The U.S. Appendix A Chart 1Long-Term Return Prospects Are Slightly Better Outside The U.S. Appendix A Chart 1Long-Term Return Prospects Are Slightly Better Outside The U.S. Appendix B Appendix B Chart 1Market Outlook: Bonds Appendix B Chart 2Market Outlook: Equities Appendix B Chart 3Market Outlook: Currencies Appendix B Chart 4Market Outlook: Commodities Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights We have been cautious on asset allocation on a tactical (3-month) horizon for two months. The backdrop has deteriorated enough that we believe that caution is now warranted beyond a tactical horizon. Trim exposure to global stocks to benchmark and place the proceeds in cash on a cyclical (6-12 month) horizon. Government bonds remain at underweight. Our growth and earnings indicators are not flashing any warning signs. Indeed, while economic growth is peaking at the global level, it remains impressive in the U.S. Nonetheless, given the advanced stage of the economic cycle and the fact that a lot of good news is discounted in risk assets, we believe that it is better to be early and leave some money on the table than to be late. There are several risks that loom large enough to justify caution. First, the clash between monetary policy and the markets that we have been expecting is drawing closer. The FOMC may soon be forced to more aggressively tighten the monetary screws. The ECB signaled that it will push ahead with tapering. Perhaps even more important are escalating trade tensions, which could turn into a full-scale trade war with possible military implications. China has eased monetary policy slightly, but the broad thrust of past policy tightening will continue to weigh on growth. The RMB may be used to partially shield the economy from rising tariffs. Global bonds remain vulnerable. In the U.S., rate expectations in 2019 and beyond are still well below the path implied by a "gradual" tightening pace. In the Eurozone, there is also room for the discounted path of interest rates beyond the next year to move higher. Lighten up on both U.S. IG and HY corporate bonds, placing the proceeds at the short-end of the Treasury and Municipal bond curves. Duration should be kept short. We would consider upgrading if there is a meaningful correction in risk assets. More likely, however, we will shift to an outright bearish stance later this year or in early 2019 in anticipation of a global recession in 2020. Diverging growth momentum, along with the ongoing trade row, will continue to place upward pressure on the dollar. Shift to an overweight position in U.S. equities versus the other major markets on an unhedged basis. The risk of an oil price spike to the upside is rising. Feature The time to reduce risk-asset exposure on a cyclical horizon has arrived. Escalating risks and our assessment that equities and corporate bonds offered a poor risk/reward balance caused us to trim our tactical (3-month) allocation to risk assets to neutral two months ago. We left the 6-12 month cyclical view at overweight, because we expected to shed our near-term caution once the global slowdown ran its course, geopolitical risk calmed down a little, and EM assets stabilized. Nonetheless, the backdrop for global financial markets has deteriorated enough that we believe that caution is now warranted beyond a tactical horizon. It is not that there have been drastic changes in any particular area. Indeed, while profit growth is peaking at the global level, 12-month forward earnings continue to rise smartly in the major markets (Chart I-1). In the U.S., our corporate pricing power indicator is still climbing, forward earnings estimates have "gone vertical", and the net earnings revisions ratio is elevated (Chart I-2). The negative impact of this year's dollar strength on corporate profits will be trounced by robust sales activity. The U.S. economy is firing on all cylinders and growth appears likely to remain well above-trend in the second half of the year. Chart I-1Forward EPS Estimates Still Rising Chart I-2Some Mixed Signals For Stocks This economic and profit backdrop might make the timing of our downgrade seem odd at first glance. Nevertheless, valuations and the advanced stage of the economic and profit cycle mean that it is prudent to focus on capital preservation and be quicker to take profits than would be the case early in the cycle. BCA has recommended above-benchmark allocations to equities and corporate bonds for most of the time since mid-2009. There are several risks that loom large enough to justify taking some money off the table. One of our main themes for the year, set out in the 2018 BCA Outlook, is that markets are on a collision course with policy. This is particularly the case in the U.S. Real interest rates and monetary conditions still appear to be supportive by historical norms, but this cycle has been anything but normal and the level of real interest rates that constitute "neutral" today is highly uncertain. The fact that broad money growth has slowed in absolute terms and relative to nominal GDP is a worrying sign (Chart I-3). Dollar-based global liquidity is waning based on our proxy measure, which is particularly ominous for EM assets (bottom panel). Chart I-3Liquidity Conditions Are Deteriorating Moreover, our Equity Scorecard remained at 'two' in June, which is below a level that is consistent with positive excess returns in the equity market (please see the Overview section of the May 2018 Bank Credit Analyst). Our U.S. Willingness-to-Pay indicator reveals that investment flows are no longer favoring stocks over bonds in the U.S. (Chart I-2). Perhaps even more importantly for the near term are the escalating trade tensions, which could turn into a full trade war with possible military implications (see below). These and other risks suggest to us that the period of "prudent caution" may extend well into the 6-12 month cyclical horizon. For those investors not already at neutral on equities and corporate bonds, we recommend trimming exposure and placing the proceeds in cash rather than bonds. Fixed-income remains at underweight. There are risks on both sides for government bonds, but we believe that it is more likely that yields rise than fall. Trade Woes: Not Yet At Peak Pessimism The Trump Administration upped the ante in June by announcing plans to impose tariffs on another $200 billion of Chinese exports to the U.S., as well as to restrict Chinese investment in the U.S. We would expect China to retaliate if this is implemented but, at that point, China's proportionate response would cover more goods than the entire range of U.S. imports. Retaliation will therefore have to occur elsewhere. Tariffs are bad enough, but our geopolitical team flags the risk that trade tensions spill over into the South China Sea and other areas of strategic disagreement. The South China Sea or Taiwan could produce market-moving "black swan" geopolitical events this year or next.1 The Trump Administration has also launched an investigation into the auto industry, and has threatened to tear up the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). Congress will likely push hard to save the agreement because it is important for so many U.S. companies, especially those with supply chains that criss-cross the borders with Canada and Mexico. Still, Trump has the option of triggering the six-month withdrawal period as a negotiating tactic to increase the pressure on the two trading partners. This would really rattle equity markets. Many believe that Trump will back away from his aggressive negotiating tactics if the U.S. stock market begins to feel pain. We would not bet on that. The President's popularity is high, and has not been overly correlated with the stock market. Moreover, blue collar workers, Trump's main support base, do not own many stocks. The implication is that the President will be willing to take risks with the equity market in order to score points with his base heading into the mid-term elections. The bottom line is that we do not believe that investors have seen "peak pessimism" on the trade front. A trade war would result in a lot of stranded capital, forcing investors to mark down the value of the companies in their portfolios. Can Trump Reduce The Trade Gap? One of the Administration's stated goals is to reduce the U.S. trade deficit. It is certainly fair to ask China to pay for the intellectual property it takes from other countries. Broadly speaking, rectifying unfair trade practices is always a good idea. However, erecting a higher tariff wall alone is unlikely to either shrink the trade gap or boost U.S. economic growth, especially given that other countries are retaliating in kind. During the 2016 election campaign, then-candidate Trump proposed a 35% and 45% across-the-board tariff on Mexican and Chinese imports, respectively. We estimated at the time that, with full retaliation, this policy would reduce U.S. real GDP by 1.2% over two years, not including any knock-on effects to global business confidence.2 Cancelling NAFTA would be much worse. The bottom line is that nobody wins a trade war. Moreover, the trade deficit is more likely to swell than deflate in the coming years, irrespective of U.S. trade policy action. The flip side of the U.S. external deficit is an excess of domestic investment over domestic savings. The latter is set to shrivel given the pending federal budget deficit blowout and the fact that the household savings rate continues to decline and is close to all-time lows. This, together with an expected acceleration in business capital spending, pretty much guarantees that the U.S. external deficit will swell in the next few years. This month's Special Report, beginning on page 18, discusses the consequences of the deteriorating long-term fiscal outlook and the associated "twin deficits" problem. We conclude that a market riot point will be required to change current trends. But even if disaster is avoided for a few more years, the dollar will ultimately be a casualty. In the near term, however, trade friction and the decoupling of U.S. from global growth should continue to support the dollar. We highlighted the divergence in growth momentum in last month's Overview. Fiscal policy is pumping up the U.S. economy, while trade woes are souring confidence abroad. Coincident and leading economic indicators confirm that the divergence will continue for at least the near term (Chart I-4). Policy Puts We do not believe that the current 'soft patch' in the Eurozone and Japanese economies will turn into anything worse over the next year. We are much more concerned with the Chinese economy. May data on industrial production, retail sales, and fixed asset investment all disappointed. Property prices in tier 1 cities are down year-over-year. Our leading indicator for the Li Keqiang index, a widely followed measure of economic activity, is in a clear downtrend (Chart I-5). Chart I-4Growth Divergence To Continue Chart I-5China's Growth Slowdown The authorities will likely provide fresh stimulus if the trade war intensifies. Indeed, recent statements from the Ministry of Finance suggest that planned fiscal spending for the year will be accelerated/brought forward, and the PBOC has already made a targeted cut to the reserve requirement ratio and reduced the relending rate for small company loans. Chart I-6U.S. Small Business Is Ecstatic However, the bar for a fresh round of material policy stimulus is higher today than it was in the past; elevated debt levels, excess capacity in some parts of the industrial sector, and worries about pollution all limit the extent to which the authorities can respond with monetary or fiscal stimulus. The most effective way for China to retaliate to rising U.S. tariffs is to weaken the RMB, but this too could be quite disruptive for financial markets and, thus, provides another reason for global investors to scale back on risk. Similarly, the bar is also rising in terms of the Fed's willingness to come to the rescue. Policymakers have signaled that they will not mind an overshoot of the inflation target. Nonetheless, the facts that core PCE inflation is closing in on 2% and that unemployment rate is well below the Fed's estimate of full employment, mean that the FOMC will be slower to jump to stock market's defense were there to be a market swoon. Small business owners are particularly bullish at the moment because of Trump's regulatory, fiscal and tax policies. The NFIB survey revealed that confidence soared to the second highest level in the survey's 45-year history (Chart I-6). Expansion plans are also the most robust in survey history. With the output gap effectively closed, increasing pressure on resource utilization should translate into faster wage gains and higher inflation. This was also quite apparent in the latest NFIB survey. Reports of higher compensation hit an all-time high as firms struggle to find qualified workers, and a growing proportion of small businesses plan to increase selling prices. Despite the signs of a very tight labor market, the FOMC's inconsistent macro projection remained in place in June. Policymakers expect continued above-trend growth for 2018-2020, but they forecast a flat jobless rate and core inflation at 3.5% and 2.1%, respectively. If the Fed is right on growth, then the overshoot of inflation will surely be larger than officials are currently expecting. Risk assets will come under downward pressure when the Fed is forced to shift into a higher gear and actively target slower economic growth. We expect the Fed to hike more aggressively next year than is discounted, and lift the consensus 'dot' for the neutral Fed funds rate from the current 2¾-3% range. Bonds remain vulnerable to this shift because rate expectations in 2019 and beyond are still well below the path implied by a "gradual" quarter-point-per-meeting tightening pace (Chart I-7). Chart I-7Market Expectations For Fed Funds Are Below A ''Gradual'' Pace At a minimum, rising inflation pressures have narrowed the Fed's room to maneuver, which means that the "Fed Put" is less of a market support. Italy Backs Away From The Brink Last month we flagged Italy as a reason to avoid risk in financial markets, but we are less concerned today. We believe that Italy will eventually cause more volatility in global financial markets, but for the short-term it appears that this risk has faded. The reason is that the M5S-Lega coalition has already punted on three of its most populist promises: wholesale change to retirement reforms, a flat tax of 15%, and universal basic income. The back-of-the-envelope cost of these three proposals is €100bn, which would easily blow out Italy's budget deficit to 7% of GDP. There was also no mention of issuing government IOUs that would create a sort of "parallel currency" in the country. If this is wrong and there is another blowout in Italian government spreads, investors should fade any resulting contagion to the peripheral countries. Greece, Portugal, Ireland and Spain - the hardest-hit economies in 2010 - have undertaken significant fiscal adjustment and, unlike Italy, have closed a lot of the competitiveness gap relative to Germany. Spread widening in these countries related to troubles in Italy should be considered a buying opportunity.3 ECB: Tapering To Continue The ECB looked through the recent Italian political turmoil and struck a confident tone in the June press conference. President Draghi described the first quarter cooling of the euro area economy as a soft patch driven mainly by external demand. We agree with the ECB President; in last month's Overview we highlighted several factors that had provided extra lift to the Eurozone economy last year. These tailwinds are now fading, but we believe that growth is simply returning to a more sustainable, but still above-trend, pace. That said, rising trade tensions are a wildcard to the economic outlook, especially because of Europe's elevated trade sensitivity. Draghi provided greater clarity on the outlook for asset purchases and interest rates. The pace of monthly purchases will slow from the current €30bn to €15bn in the final three months of year and then come to a complete end (Chart I-8). On interest rates, the ECB expects rates to remain at current levels "at least through the summer of 2019". This means that September 2019 could be the earliest timing for the ECB to deliver the first rate hike. Chart I-8ECB Balance Sheet Will Soon Stop Growing We agree with this assessment on the timing of the first rate increase. It will likely take that long for inflation to move into the 1½-2% range, and for long-term inflation expectations to surpass 2%. These thresholds are consistent with the ECB's previous rate hike cycles. Still, there is room for the discounted path of interest rates beyond the next year to move higher as Eurozone economic slack is absorbed. The number of months to the first rate hike discounted in the market has also moved too far out (24 months). Thus, we expect that bunds will contribute to upward pressure on global yields. Bond investors should be underweight the Eurozone within global fixed income portfolios. In contrast, we recommend overweight positions in U.K. gilts because market expectations for the Bank of England (BoE) are too hawkish. Investors should fade the central bank's assertion that policymakers now have a lower interest rate threshold for beginning to shrink the balance sheet. The knee-jerk rally in the pound and gilt selloff in June will not last. First, the OECD's leading economic indicator remains in a downtrend, warning that the U.K. economy faces downside risks (Chart I-9). Second, Brexit uncertainty will only increase into the March 2019 deadline. Prime Minister May managed to win a key parliamentary vote on the Withdrawal Bill in late June, but the Tories will face more tests ahead, including a vote on the Trade and Customs Bill. The fault lines between the hard and soft Brexiteers within the Tory party could bring an early end to May's government. Either May could be replaced with a hard Brexit prime minister, such as Brexit Secretary David Davis, or the U.K. could face a new general election. The latter implies the prospect of a Labour-led government. Admittedly, this will ensure a soft Brexit, but Jeremy Corbyn would almost surely herald far-left economic policies that will dampen business sentiment. As a result, we believe that the BoE is sidelined for the remainder of the year, which will keep a lid on gilt yields and sterling. Corporate Bonds: Poor Value And Rising Leverage Our newfound caution for equities on a 6-12 month investment horizon carries over to the corporate bond space. Corporate balance sheets have been deteriorating since 2015 Q1 based on our Corporate Health Monitor (CHM). The first quarter's improvement in the CHM simply reflected the tax cuts and thus does not represent a change in trend (Chart I-10). Chart I-9Fade BoE Hawkish Talk Chart I-10Q1 Improvement In Corporate ##br##Health To Reverse The improvement was concentrated in the components of the Monitor that use after-tax cash flows, and as such they were influenced by the sharp decline in the corporate tax rate. Profit margins, for example, increased from 25.8% to 26.4% on an after-tax basis in Q1 (Chart I-10, panel 2), but would have fallen to 25.5% if the effective corporate tax rate had remained the same as in 2017 Q4. As the effective corporate tax rate levels-off around its new lower level (bottom panel), last quarter's improvement in the Corporate Health Monitor will start to unwind. More importantly, the corporate sector has been leveraging aggressively, as we highlighted in our special reports that analysed company-level data from the U.S. and the Eurozone.4 We highlighted that investors and rating agencies are not too concerned about leverage at the moment, but that will change when growth slows. Interest- and debt-coverage ratios are likely to plunge to new historic lows (Charts I-11A and I-11B). Chart I-11ACorporate Leverage Will Come ##br##Back To Haunt Bondholders Chart I-11BCorporate Leverage Will Come ##br##Back To Haunt Bondholders Both U.S. investment grade (IG) and high-yield (HY) corporates are expensive, but not at an extreme, based on the 12-month breakeven spread.5 However, both IG and HY are actually extremely overvalued once we adjust for gross leverage (Chart I-12). Chart I-12U.S. Leverage - Adjusted ##br##Corporate Bond Valuation We have highlighted several other indicators to watch to time the exit from corporate bonds. These include long-term inflation expectations (when the 10-year TIPS inflation breakeven reaches the 2.3-2.5% range), bank lending standards for C&I loans, the slope of the yield curve, and real short-term interest rates or monetary conditions. While monetary conditions have tightened, the overall message from these indicators as a group is that it is still somewhat early to expect rising corporate defaults and sustained spread widening. That said, we have also emphasized that it is very late in the credit cycle and return expectations are quite low. Excess returns historically have been modest when the U.S. 3-month/10-year yield curve slope has been in the 0-50 basis point range. Similar to our logic behind trimming our equity exposure, the expected excess return from corporate bonds no longer justifies the risk. We recommend lightening up on both U.S. IG and HY corporate bonds, moving to benchmark and placing the proceeds at the short-end of the Treasury and Municipal bond curves. Duration should be kept short. Also downgrade EM hard currency sovereign and corporate debt to maximum underweight. We are already underweight on Eurozone corporates within European fixed-income portfolios due to the pending end to the ECB QE program. Conclusions The political situation in Italy and tensions vis-à-vis North Korea appear to be less of a potential landmine for investors, at least for the next year. Nonetheless, the risks have not diminished overall - they have simply rotated into other areas such as international trade. It is also worrying that the FOMC will have to become more aggressive in toning down the labor market. What makes the asset allocation decision especially difficult is that the economic and earnings backdrop in the U.S. is currently constructive for risk assets. Nonetheless, recessions and bear markets are always difficult to spot in real time. Given the advanced stage of the economic cycle and the fact that a lot of good news is discounted in risk assets, we believe that it is better to be early and leave some money on the table than to be late and go over the cliff. This does not mean that we will recommend a neutral allocation to risk assets for the remainder of the economic expansion. We would consider upgrading if there is a meaningful correction in equity and corporate bond prices at a time when our growth indicators remain positive. More likely, however, we will shift to an outright bearish stance on risk assets later this year or in early 2019 in anticipation of global recession in 2020. The divergence in growth momentum between the U.S. and the rest of the major economies, along with the ongoing trade row, will continue to place upward pressure on the dollar. We envision the following pecking order from weakest to strongest currency versus the greenback: dollar bloc and EM commodity currencies, non-commodity sensitive EM currencies, the euro and yen. The Canadian dollar is an exception; we are bullish versus the U.S. dollar beyond a short-term horizon due to expected Bank of Canada rate hikes. Tightening financial conditions are likely to culminate in a crisis in one or more EM countries; as a share of GDP, exports and international reserves, U.S. dollar debt is at levels not seen in over 15 years. Slowing Chinese growth and trade tensions just add to the risk in this space. The recent upturn in base metal prices will likely reverse if we are correct on the Chinese growth outlook. Oil is a different story, despite our bullish dollar view. OPEC 2.0 - the oil-producer coalition led by Saudi Arabia and Russia - agreed in June to raise oil output by 1 million bpd. The coalition aims to increase production to compensate for an over-compliance of previous deals to trim output, as well as production losses due to lack of investment and maintenance (Chart I-13). The bulk of the losses reflect the free-fall in Venezuela's output. Our oil experts believe that OPEC 2.0 does not have much spare capacity to lift output. Meanwhile, the trend decline in production by non-OPEC 2.0 states is being magnified by unplanned outages in places like Nigeria, Libya and Canada. While U.S. shale producers can be expected to grow their output, infrastructure constraints - chiefly insufficient pipeline capacity to take all of the crude that can be produced in the Permian Basin to market - will continue to limit growth in the short-term. In the face of robust demand, the risk to oil prices thus remains to the upside. A stronger dollar will somewhat undermine the profits of U.S. multinationals. U.S. equities also appear a little expensive versus Europe and Japan based on our composite valuation indicators (Chart I-14). Nonetheless, the sector composition of the U.S. stock market is more defensive than it is elsewhere and relative economic growth will favor the U.S. market. On balance, we no longer believe that euro area and Japanese equities will outperform the U.S. in local currency terms. Overweight the U.S. market on an unhedged basis. Chart I-13Oil Production Outlook Chart I-14Composite Equity Valuation Indicators Consistent with our shift in broad asset allocation this month, we have adjusted our global equity sector allocation to be more defensive. Materials and Industrials were downgraded to underweight, while Healthcare and Telecoms were upgraded (Consumer Staples was already overweight). Financials was downgraded to benchmark because the flattening term structure is expected to pressure net interest margins. Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst June 28, 2018 Next Report: July 26, 2018 1 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Reports, "The South China Sea: Smooth Sailing?," March 28, 2017 and "Taiwan Is A Potential Black Swan," March 30, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Overview, dated December 2016, Box I-1. 3 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Mediterranean Europe: Contagion Risk Or Bear Trap?," June 13, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst, March 2018 and June 2018, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 5 The breakeven spread is the amount of spread widening that would have to occur over 12 months for corporates to underperform Treasurys. We focus on the breakeven spread to adjust for changes in the average duration of the index over time. II. U.S. Fiscal Policy: An Unprecedented Macro Experiment Congress is conducting a major economic experiment that has never been attempted in the U.S. outside of wartime; substantial fiscal stimulus when the economy is already at full employment. The budget deficit is on track to surpass 6% of GDP in a few years. It would likely peak above 8% in the case of a recession. The alarming long-term U.S. fiscal outlook is well known, but it has just become far worse. The combination of rising life expectancy and a decline in the ratio of taxpayers to retirees will place growing financial strains on the Social Security and Medicare systems. The federal government will be spilling far more red ink over the next decade than during any economic expansion phase since the 1940s. The debt/GDP ratio could surpass the previous peak set during WWII within 12 years. Shockingly large budget deficits in the past have sparked some attempt in Congress to limit the damage. Unfortunately, there will be little appetite to tighten the fiscal purse strings for the next decade. Voters have shifted to the left and politicians are following along. Factors that explain the political shift include disappointing income growth, income inequality, and rising political clout for Millennials, Hispanics and the elderly. Fiscal conservatism is out of fashion and this is unlikely to change over the next decade, no matter which party is in power. This means that a market riot will be required to shake voters and the political establishment into making the tough decisions necessary. While the U.S. is not at imminent risk of a market riot over the deteriorating fiscal trends, there are costs: in the long-term, the dollar will be weaker, borrowing rates will be higher and living standards will be lower than otherwise would be the case. Profligacy: (Noun) Unconstrained by convention or morality. Congress is conducting a major economic experiment that has never been attempted before in the U.S. outside of wartime; substantial fiscal stimulus at a time when the economy is already at full employment. Investors are celebrating the growth-positive aspects of the new fiscal tailwind at the moment, but it may wind up generating a party that is followed by a hangover as the Fed is forced to lean hard against the resulting inflationary pressures. Moreover, even in the absence of a recession, the federal government will likely be spilling far more red ink than during any economic expansion since the 1940s (Chart II-1). What are the long-term implications of this macro experiment? Will the U.S. continue to easily fund large and sustained budget deficits? Chart II-1U.S. Deficits Will Be Extremely Large For A Non-Recessionary Period Historically, shockingly large budget deficits sparked some attempt by Congress to limit the damage. Unfortunately, we argue in this Special Report that there will be little appetite to tighten the fiscal purse strings for the next decade. Voters have shifted to the left and politicians are following along. While the U.S. is not at imminent risk of a market riot over the deteriorating fiscal trends, the dollar will be weaker, borrowing rates will be higher and living standards will be lower than otherwise would be the case. On The Bright Side The Trump tax cuts, the immediate expensing of capital spending and a lighter regulatory touch have stirred animal spirits in the U.S. The Administration's trade policies are a source of concern, but CEO confidence is generally high. The NFIB survey highlights that small business owners are almost euphoric regarding the outlook. The IMF estimates that the tax cuts and less restrictive spending caps will provide a direct fiscal thrust of 0.8% in 2018 and 0.9% in 2019 (Chart II-2). The overall impact on the economy over the next 12-18 months could be larger to the extent that business leaders follow through on their newfound bullishness and ramp up capital spending. Chart II-2Lots Of Fiscal Stimulus In 2018 And 2019 Fiscal policy is a clear positive for stocks and other risk assets in the near term, as long as inflation is slow to respond. In addition to the near-term boost, there will be longer-term benefits from the 2017 tax act. Various provisions of the act affect the long-run productive potential of the U.S. economy, by promoting increases in investment and labor supply. Corporate tax cuts and the full expensing of business capital outlays should permanently increase the nation's capital stock relative to what it otherwise would be, leading to a slightly faster trend pace of productivity growth. Similarly, lower income taxes are projected to encourage more people to enter the workforce or to work longer hours. The CBO estimates that the tax act will boost the level of potential real GDP by 0.9% by the middle of the next decade. This may not sound like much, but it translates into almost a million extra jobs. The supply-side benefits of the 2017 tax act are therefore meaningful. Unfortunately, given the lack of offsetting spending cuts, it comes at the cost of a dramatically worse medium- and long-term outlook for government debt. The CBO estimates that the recent changes in fiscal policy will cumulatively add $1.7 trillion to the federal government's debt pile, relative to the previous baseline (Chart II-3). The annual deficit is projected to surpass $1 trillion in 2020, and peak as a share of GDP at 5.4% in 2022. Federal government debt held by the private sector will rise from 76% this year to 96% in 2028 in this scenario. Chart II-3Comparing To The Reagan Era The budget situation begins to look better after 2020 in the CBO's baseline forecast because a raft of "temporary provisions" are assumed to sunset as per current law, including some of the personal tax cuts and deductions included in the 2017 tax package. As is usually the case, the vast majority of these provisions are likely to be extended. The CBO performed an alternative scenario in which it extends the temporary provisions and grows the spending caps at the rate of inflation after 2020. In this more realistic scenario, the deficit reaches 7% of GDP by 2028 and the federal debt-to-GDP ratio hits 105% (Chart II-3). Moreover, there will undoubtedly be a recession sometime in the next five years. Even a mild downturn, on par with the early 1990s, could inflate the budget deficit to 8% or more of GDP. The Demographic Time Bomb Chart II-4The Withering Support Ratio The pressure that the aging population will place on federal coffers over the medium term is well known, but it is worth reviewing in light of Washington's new attitude toward deficit financing. The combination of rising life expectancy and a decline in the ratio of taxpayers to retirees will place growing financial strains on the Social Security and Medicare systems. In 1970, there were 5.4 people between the ages of 20 and 64 for every person 65 or older. That ratio has since dropped to 4 and will be down to 2.6 within the next 20 years (Chart II-4). Spending on entitlements (Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, Income Security and government pensions) is on an unsustainable trajectory (Charts II-5 and II-6). In fiscal 2017, these programs absorbed 76% of federal revenues and the CBO estimates that this will rise to almost 100% by 2028, absent any change in law. If we also include net interest costs, total mandatory spending1 is projected to exceed total federal government revenues as early as next year, meaning that deficit financing will be required for all discretionary spending. Chart II-5Entitlements Will Explode ##br##Mandatory Spending Chart II-6All Discretionary Spending ##br##To Be Deficit Financed? The CBO last published a multi-decade outlook in 2017 (Chart II-7). The Federal debt/GDP ratio was projected to reach 150% by 2047. If we adjust this for the new (higher) starting point in 2028 provided by the CBO's alternative scenario, the debt/GDP ratio would top 164% in 2047. Chart II-7An Unsustainable Debt Accumulation To put this into perspective, the demands of WWII swelled the federal debt/GDP ratio to 106% in 1946, the highest on record going back to the early 1700s (Chart II-8). The debt ratio could rocket past that level before 2030, even in the absence of a recession. Chart II-8U.S. Debt In Historical Context These extremely long-term projections are only meant to be suggestive. A lot of things can happen in the coming years that could make the trajectory better or even worse. But the point is that current levels of taxation are insufficient to fund entitlements in their current form in the long run. Chart II-9 shows that outlays as a share of GDP have persistently exceeded revenues since the mid-1970s, except for a brief period during the Clinton Administration. The gap is set to widen over the coming decade. Something will have to give. Chart II-9U.S. Outlays And Revenues Forget Starving The Beast "Starve the Beast" refers to the idea that the size of government can be restrained through a low-tax regime that spurs growth and pressures Congress to cut spending and control the budget deficit. It has been the mantra of Republicans since the Reagan era. The 1981 Reagan tax cuts included an across-the-board reduction in marginal tax rates, taking the top rate down from 70% to 50%. Corporate taxes were slashed by $150 billion over a 5-year period and tax rates were indexed for inflation, among other changes. It was not surprising that the budget deficit subsequently ballooned. Outrage grew among fiscal conservatives, but Congress spent the next few years passing laws to reverse the loss of revenues, rather than aggressively attacking the spending side. Today, Congressional fiscal hawks are in retreat and the Republican Party under President Donald Trump is not as fiscally conservative as it once was. This trend reflects the pull toward the center of the economic policy spectrum in response to a shift to the left among voters. BCA's political strategists have highlighted that this is the "median voter theory" (MVT) in action.2 The MVT posits that parties and politicians will approximate the policy choices of the median voter in order to win an election or stay in power. Every U.S. presidential election involves candidates making a mad dash to the most popularly appealing positions. President Trump exhibited this process when he ran in the Republican primary on a platform of increased infrastructure spending and zero cuts to "entitlement" spending. The Great Financial Crisis, disappointingly slow growth, stagnating middle class incomes and the widening income distribution have resulted in a leftward shift among voters on economic issues. Adding to the shift is the rising political clout of the Millennial generation, which generally favors more government involvement in the economy and will become the major voting block as it ages in the 2020s. There also are important changes underway in the ethnic composition of the electorate. The rising proportion of Hispanic voters will on balance favor the Democrats, according to voting trends (Chart II-10). A previous Special Report by Peter Berezin, BCA's Chief Global Strategist, predicted that Texas will become a swing state in as little as a decade and a solid Democrat state by 2030.3 Chart II-10The Proportion Of Minority Voters Set To Grow President Trump's shift to the left on economic policy helped him to out-flank Clinton in the election, particularly in the Rust Belt, where his protectionist and anti-austerity message resonated. Even his anti-immigration appeal is mostly based on economic reasoning - i.e. jobs, rather than cultural factors. Trump has admitted that he is not all that concerned about taking the country deeper into hock. The Republican rank-and-file has generally gone along with Trump's agenda because he has delivered traditional Republican tax cuts and continues to rate highly among his supporters (his approval is around 90% among Republicans). Fiscal hawks within the GOP have been forced to the sidelines while Trump and moderate Republicans have passed bipartisan spending increases with Democratic assistance. Where's The Outrage? Chart II-11Entitlements Are Popular* The implication is that, unlike the Reagan years, we do not expect there will be a strong political force capable of leading a fight against budget deficits. After a decade of disappointing income growth, voters are in no mood for tax hikes. On the spending side, health care and pensions are still politically untouchable. A recent study by the Pew Research Center confirms that only a very small percentage of Americans of either political stripe would agree with cuts to spending on education, Medicare, Social Security, defense, infrastructure, veterans or anti-terrorism efforts (Chart II-11). It is therefore no surprise that a populist such as Trump has promised to defend entitlement programs. Moreover, the graying of America will make it increasingly difficult for politicians to tame the entitlement beast. An aging population might generally favor the GOP, but it will also solidify opposition towards cutting Medicare and Social Security. As for defense, U.S. military spending was 3.3% of GDP and almost 15% of total spending in 2017 (Chart II-12). Congress recently lifted the spending cap for defense expenditures, but it is still projected to fall as a share of total government spending and GDP in the coming years. It is conceivable that Congress could eventually trim the defense budget even faster, but spending is already low by historical standards and it is hard to see any future Congress gutting the military at a time when the global challenge from China and Russia is rising. Indeed, given the geopolitical atmosphere of great power competition, defense spending is more likely to rise. Chart II-12What's Left To Cut? So, what is left to cut? If entitlements and defense are off the table, that leaves non-defense discretionary spending as the sacrificial lamb. This category includes spending by the Departments of Agriculture, Education, Energy, Homeland Security, Health and Human Services, Justice, State and Veteran Affairs. Such spending has already declined sharply during the past several decades (Chart II-12). Non-defense discretionary spending amounted to $610 billion in 2017, which is only 15.3% of total federal spending. To put this into perspective, cutting every last cent of non-defense discretionary spending by 2022 would still leave a budget deficit of about 2½% of GDP. And it would be political suicide. The Departments of Education, Health and Human Services, Homeland Security, Justice and Veterans Affairs account for more than half of non-defense discretionary spending. But these programs are very popular among voters. And, at only 1.3% of total spending, eliminating all foreign aid won't make much difference. Either President Trump or Vice-President Mike Pence will be the GOP presidential candidate in 2020. Pence could be more fiscally conservative than Trump, but Congress is unlikely to remain GOP-controlled through 2024. Similarly, it is difficult to see the Democrats making more than a token effort to rein in the deficit if the party is in charge after 2020. Perhaps they will raise taxes on the rich and push the corporate rate back up a bit, but voters will probably not favor a full reversal of the Trump tax cuts. Democrats will not tackle entitlements either. In other words, we can forget about "starving the beast" as a viable option no matter which party is in power. There will be little appetite for fiscal austerity in the U.S. through to the mid-2020s at a minimum. International Comparison This all places the U.S. out of sync with other major industrialized countries, where structural budget deficits have been tamed in most cases and are expected to remain so according to the IMF's latest projections (Chart II-13). The U.S. cyclically-adjusted budget deficit is projected to be almost 7% of GDP in 2019, by far the highest among other industrialized countries except for Norway. Spain and Italy are expected to have relatively small structural deficits of 2½% and 0.8%, respectively, next year. Greece is running a small structural surplus! Including all levels of government, the IMF estimates that the U.S. general government gross debt/GDP ratio is projected to be well above that of the U.K., France, Germany, Spain and Portugal in 2023 (Chart II-14). It is expected to be on par with Italy at that time, although the newly-installed populist government there is likely to negotiate a loosening of the fiscal rules with Brussels, leading to higher debt levels than the IMF currently expects. The implication is that the U.S. government appears destined to become one of the most indebted in the developed world. Chart II-13U.S. Budget Deficit Stands Out Chart II-14International Debt Comparison The Fiscal Tipping Point Investors are not yet worried about the path of U.S. fiscal policy; the yield curve is quite flat, CDS spreads on U.S. Treasurys have not moved and the dollar is still overvalued by most traditional measures. The challenge is timing when a fiscally-induced crisis might occur. A warning bell does not ring when government debt or deficits reach certain levels. Fiscal trends generally do not suddenly spiral out of control - it is a gradual and insidious process reflected in multi-year deficits and slowly accumulating debt burdens. Eventually, a tipping point is reached where the only solution is drastic policy shifts or in extreme cases, default. Along the way, there are a number of signs that fiscal trends are entering dangerous territory. The relevance of the various signs will be different for each country, reflecting, among other things, the depth and structure of the financial system, the soundness of the economy, the dependence on foreign capital, and the asset preferences of domestic investors. Some key signs of building fiscal stress are given in Box II-1. None of the factors in Box II-1 appear to be a threat at the moment for the U.S. Moreover, comparisons with other countries that have hit the debt wall in the past are not that helpful because the U.S. is a special case. It has a huge economy and has political and military clout. The dollar is the world's main reserve currency and the country is able to borrow in its own currency. This suggests that the U.S. will be able to "get away with" its borrowing habit for longer than other countries have in the past. At the same time, financial markets are fickle and, even with hindsight, it not always clear why investors switch from acceptance to bearishness about a particular state of affairs. BOX II-1 Traditional Signs Of An Approaching Debt Crisis Government deficits absorb a rising share of net private savings, leaving little for new investment. Interest payments account for an increasingly large share of government revenues, squeezing out discretionary spending and requiring tough budget action merely to stop the deficit from rising. The government exhausts its ability to raise tax burdens. Traditional sources of debt finance dry up, requiring alternative funding strategies. Fears of inflation and/or default lead to a rising risk premium on interest rates and/ or a falling exchange rate. Political shifts occur as governments get blamed for eroding living standards, high taxes, and continued pressure to cut spending. The Costs Of Fiscal Profligacy Even if the U.S. is not near a fiscal tipping point, this does not mean that massive debt accumulation is costless: Interest Costs: Spending 3% of GDP on servicing the federal government's debt load over the next decade is not a disaster. Nonetheless, it does reduce the tax dollars available to fund entitlements or investing in infrastructure. Counter-Cyclical Fiscal Policy: Lawmakers would have less flexibility to use tax and spending policies to respond to unexpected events, such as natural disasters or recessions. As noted above, a recession in 2020 could generate a federal deficit of more than 8% of GDP. In that case, Congress may feel constrained in supporting the economy with even temporary fiscal stimulus. National Savings: Because government borrowing reduces national savings, then either capital spending must assume a smaller share of the economy or the U.S. must borrow more from abroad. Most likely it will be some combination of both. Crowding Out: If global savings are not in plentiful supply, then the additional U.S. debt issuance will place upward pressure on domestic interest rates and thereby "crowd out" business capital spending. This would reduce the nation's capital stock, leading to lower growth in productivity and living standards than would otherwise be the case. The CBO estimates that the positive impact on the capital stock from the changes to the corporate tax structure will overwhelm the negative impact from higher interest rates over the next decade. Nonetheless, the crowding out effect may dominate over a longer-time horizon. Academic studies suggest that every percentage point rise in the government's debt-to-GDP ratio adds 2-3 basis points to the equilibrium level of bond yields. If this is correct, then a rise in the U.S. ratio of 25 percentage points over the next decade in the CBO's baseline would lift equilibrium long-term bond yields by a meaningful 50-75 basis points. Much depends, however, on global savings backdrop at the time. External Trade Gap: If global savings are plentiful, then it may not take much of a rise in U.S. interest rates to attract the necessary foreign inflows to fund both the higher U.S. federal deficit and the private sector's borrowing requirements. Of course, this implies a larger current account deficit and a faster accumulation of foreign IO Us. Twin Deficits The U.S. has run a current account deficit for most of the past 40 years, which has cumulated into a rising stock of foreign-owned debt. The Net International Investment Position (NIIP) is the difference between the stock of foreign assets held by U.S. residents and the stock of U.S. assets held by foreign investors. The NIIP has fallen increasingly into the red over the past few decades, reaching 40% of GDP today (Chart II-15). The current account deficit was 2.4% at the end of 2017, matching the post-Lehman average. Nonetheless, this deficit is set to worsen as increased domestic demand related to the fiscal stimulus is partly satisfied via higher imports. Chart II-15Scenarios For The U.S. Net International Investment Position We estimate that a two percentage point rise in the budget deficit relative to the baseline could add a percentage point or more to the current account deficit, taking it up close to 4% of GDP. Upward pressure on the external deficit will also be accentuated in the next few years to the extent that the U.S. business sector ramps up capital spending. The implication is that the NIIP will fall deeper into negative territory at an even faster pace. A 2% current account deficit would be roughly consistent with stabilization in the NIIP/GDP ratio. But a 4% deficit would cause the NIIP to deteriorate to almost 80% of GDP by 2040 (Chart II-15). The sustainability of the U.S. twin deficits has been an area of intense debate among academics and market practitioners for many years. The U.S. has been able to get away with the twin deficits for so long in part because of the dollar's status as the world's premier reserve currency. The critical role of the dollar in international transactions underpins global demand for the currency. This has allowed the U.S. to issue most of its debt obligations in U.S. dollars, forcing the currency risk onto foreign investors. The worry is that foreign investors will at some point begin to question the desirability of an oversized exposure to U.S. assets within their global portfolios. We argued in our April 2018 Special Report 4 that the U.S. situation is not that dire that the U.S. dollar and Treasury bond prices are about to fall off a cliff because of sudden concerns about the unsustainability of the current account deficit. Even though the NIIP/GDP ratio will continue to deteriorate in the coming years, it does not appear that the U.S. is close to the point where foreign investors would begin to seriously question America's ability or willingness to service its debt. That said, the "twin deficits" and the downward trend in U.S. productivity relative to the rest of the world will ensure that the underlying long-term trend in the dollar will remain down (Chart II-16).5 Chart II-16Structural Drivers Of The U.S. Dollar Conclusions The long-term U.S. fiscal outlook was dire even before the Great Recession and the associated shift to the political left in America. Fiscal conservatism is out of fashion and this is unlikely to change before the mid-2020s, no matter which party is in power. This means that a market riot will be required to shake voters and the political establishment into making the tough decisions. Given demographic trends, it appears more likely that taxes will rise than entitlements cut. We do not foresee a crisis occurring in the next few years. Nonetheless, arguing that the U.S. fiscal situation is sustainable for the foreseeable future does not mean that it is desirable. There will be costs associated with current fiscal trends, even on a relatively short 5-10 year horizon. Interest costs will mushroom, potentially crowding out government spending in other areas. U.S. government debt has already been downgraded by S&P to AA+ in 2013, and the other two main rating agencies are likely to follow suit during the next recession as the deficit balloons to 8% or more. Investors may begin to demand a risk premium in order to entice them to continually raise their exposure to U.S. government bonds in their portfolios. Taxes will eventually have to rise to service the government debt, and some capital spending will be crowded out, both of which will undermine the economy's growth potential. Finally, the dollar will also be weaker than it otherwise would be in the long-term, representing an erosion in America's standard of living because everything imported is more expensive. Could Japan offer a roadmap for the U.S.? The Bank of Japan has effectively monetized 43% of the JGB market and has control over yields, at least out to the 10-year maturity. Moreover, Japan has enjoyed a "free lunch" so far because monetization has not resulted in inflation. The reason that Japan has enjoyed a free lunch is that it has suffered from a chronic lack of demand and excess savings in the private sector. The government has persistently run a deficit and fiscally stimulated the economy in order to offset insufficient demand in the private sector. The Bank of Japan purchased bonds and drove short-term interest rates down to zero. These policies have made very slow progress in eradicating lingering deflationary economic forces. However, if animal spirits in the business sector perk up, then inflation could make a comeback unless the policy stimulus is dialed down in a timely manner. In other words, the BoJ-financed fiscal "free lunch" should disappear at some point. The U.S. is in a very different situation. There is no lack of aggregate demand or excessive savings in the private sector. The economy is at full employment, and thus persistent budget deficits should turn into inflation much more quickly than was the case in Japan. In other words, the U.S. is unlikely to enjoy much of a "free lunch", whether the Fed monetizes the debt or not. Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst 1 Mandatory spending refers to entitlements; that is, government expenditure programs that are required by current law. These include Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, government pensions and other smaller programs. 2 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, "Introducing The Median Voter Theory," June 8, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst, "America's Fiscal Fortune: Leave Your Wallet On The Way Out," June 2011, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Special Report, "U.S. Twin Deficits: Is The Dollar Doomed?," April, 2018, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 5 In the near term, fiscal stimulus and increased business capital spending will likely boost the dollar. But this effect on the dollar will reverse in the long-term. III. Indicators And Reference Charts The divergence between the U.S. corporate earnings data and our equity-related indicators continued in June. Forward earnings estimates continue to climb at an impressive pace. The U.S. net revisions ratio pulled back a little, but remains well above the zero line. Moreover, positive earnings surprises continue to trounce negative surprises. That said, the earnings upgrades are partly due to the Trump tax cuts, which are still being reflected in analysts' estimates. Second, some of our indicators are warning that there are clouds on the horizon. Our Monetary Indicator has fallen to levels that are low by historical standards, which is a negative sign for risk assets. This partly reflects the slowdown in growth in the monetary aggregates (see the Overview section). Our Equity Technical Indicator is threatening to dip below the zero line, which would be a clear 'sell' signal. Our Equity Valuation Indicator is flirting with our threshold of overvaluation, at +1 standard deviations. This is not bearish on its own, but valuation does provide information on the downside risks when the correction finally occurs. Our Willingness-to-Pay (WTP) indicator for the U.S. has rolled over, although this hasn't yet occurred for Japan and the Eurozone. The WTP indicators track flows, and thus provide information on what investors are actually doing, as opposed to sentiment indexes that track how investors are feeling. This indicator suggests that flows into the U.S. stock market are waning. Finally, our Revealed Preference Indicator (RPI) for stocks remained on a 'sell' signal in June. The RPI combines the idea of market momentum with valuation and policy measures. It provides a powerful bullish signal if positive market momentum lines up with constructive signals from the policy and valuation measures. Conversely, if constructive market momentum is not supported by valuation and policy, investors should lean against the market trend. These indicators are not aligned at the moment, further supporting the view that caution is warranted. The U.S. 10-year Treasury is slightly on the inexpensive side and our Composite Technical Indicator suggests that the bond has still not worked off oversold conditions. This suggests that the consolidation period has further to run, although we still expect yields to move higher over the remainder of the year. The dollar is expensive on a PPP basis, but is not yet overbought. The long-term outlook for the dollar is down, but it has more upside in the next 6-12 months. EQUITIES: Chart III-1U.S. Equity Indicators Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk Chart III-3U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators Chart III-4Revealed Preference Indicator Chart III-5U.S. Stock Market Valuation Chart III-6U.S. Earnings Chart III-7Global Stock Market And Earnings: ##br##Relative Performance Chart III-8Global Stock Market And Earnings: ##br##Relative Performance FIXED INCOME: Chart III-9U.S. Treasurys And Valuations Chart III-10U.S. Treasury Indicators Chart III-11Selected U.S. Bond Yields Chart III-1210-Year Treasury Yield ComponentsChart III-13U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor Chart III-14Global Bonds: Developed Markets Chart III-15Global Bonds: Emerging Markets CURRENCIES: Chart III-16U.S. Dollar And PPP Chart III-17U.S. Dollar And Indicator Chart III-18U.S. Dollar Fundamentals Chart III-19Japanese Yen Technicals Chart III-20Euro Technicals Chart III-21Euro/Yen Technicals Chart III-22Euro/Pound Technicals COMMODITIES: Chart III-23Broad Commodity Indicators Chart III-24Commodity Prices Chart III-25Commodity Prices Chart III-26Commodity Sentiment Chart III-27Speculative Positioning ECONOMY: Chart III-28U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop Chart III-29U.S. Macro Snapshot Chart III-30U.S. Growth Outlook Chart III-31U.S. Cyclical Spending Chart III-32U.S. Labor Market Chart III-33U.S. Consumption Chart III-34U.S. Housing Chart III-35U.S. Debt And Deleveraging Chart III-36U.S. Financial Conditions Chart III-37Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Chart III-38Global Economic Snapshot: China Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst
Underweight We moved to a large over small cap preference last month, based on the exploding balance sheets of small cap equities. Our thesis was that the rapid increase in leverage would find its way into higher risk premia for small cap equities, necessitating a valuation derating. Small caps have since been outperforming owing to their inherent trade war insulation (top panel), implying the opposite has happened and risk premia have, in fact, decreased. The middle panel of the chart shows the cyclically adjusted relative price to earnings (CAPE) ratio. While on a forward earnings basis, small caps are trading at an elevated (but still within the realm of normal) 13% premium to large caps, on a cyclically adjusted basis, the premium has exploded near all-time highs, approaching 50%, well above the historical mean. This lofty relative CAPE multiple leaves small caps increasingly vulnerable to profit and debt related shocks and we reiterate our large cap bias.
Highlights Wage inflation in the EU28 is running at exactly the same rate as in the U.S. In the euro area, it is only modestly lower. As the current business cycle completes, the euro area versus U.S. bond yield spread will narrow, one way or the other. European equities are structurally handicapped by their substantial underexposure to technology, their substantial overexposure to financials, and the structurally undervalued currency. Still, there will be phases in which financials outperform technology and therefore in which European equities outperform. We anticipate that the next such phase to overweight European equities will occur later this year. In the near term, one European stock market that could outperform is Switzerland's SMI. Feature Largely unnoticed and without great fanfare, Europe has just overtaken the U.S. on a very important labour market measure. For the first time in living memory, the percentage of the working age (15-64) population that is in the labour force is higher in Europe than it is in the U.S., for both men and women (Chart of the Week). Chart of the WeekMale Labour Force Participation Is Now Higher In Europe Than In The U.S. One putative explanation is that as U.S. baby boomers have aged, people older than 64 have chosen to remain in the labour force, which has indirectly weighed on the U.S. 15-64 participation rate. But the phenomenon of baby boomers staying in the workforce is common to both Europe and the U.S. and cannot explain the extent of outperformance in European labour participation - a ten percentage point catch-up since the start of this millennium (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Labour Force Participation Is Now Higher ##br##In Europe Than In The U.S. The true explanation is that the European female participation rate has been in a major structural uptrend (Chart I-3) while the U.S. male participation rate has been in a major structural downtrend (Chart I-4). Chart I-3European Female Labour Force Participation##br## Is In A Structural Uptrend Chart I-4U.S. Male Labour Force Participation##br## Is In A Structural Downtrend Misleading Comparison 1: The Unemployment Rate In Europe Vs The U.S. This week, our purpose is not to discuss the reasons behind these labour participation trends - as we covered these in our recent report How Women Are Powering The European Economy.1 Rather, we want to point out one important repercussion: when the participation rate is changing, the unemployment rate is a misleading measure of labour market slack. When labour participation is rising, a seemingly high unemployment rate overstates true slack; conversely, when labour participation is falling, a seemingly low unemployment rate understates true slack. To understand why, consider a population in which the numbers employed, unemployed, and officially inactive stand at 95:5:25. The unemployment rate is 5%. But let's assume that ten officially inactive people could, with some mild encouragement, participate in the formal labour market. This means the true slack is fifteen people, or 14%.2 Now imagine that five of the officially inactive people join the formal labour force, albeit with a slightly higher unemployment rate given their inexperience in the formal labour force. Under these circumstances, the numbers employed, unemployed, and officially inactive might reasonably change to 99:6:20. The unemployment rate has increased to 5.7%, suggesting slack has increased. But the truth is that slack has actually decreased to eleven people, or 10%.3 Clearly, the process also works the other way. If somebody leaves the formal labour force, it might depress the unemployment rate, giving the impression of a tight labour market. But the impression would be misleading. As a recent paper from the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston pointed out:4 "Informal work arrangements, such as gig economy jobs... embodies an economically significant amount of labour market slack that is not captured in the U-3 unemployment rate and other standard estimates of slack... Informal work can be viewed as slack because most informal work participants would drop informal work for formal work, (thereby) adding potential labour supply to the formal market that could reduce pressure on measured wages" Is there any direct evidence for this thesis? Yes, the evidence is compelling. Standard measures of slack, such as the unemployment rate, suggest that the labour market has substantially more slack in Europe than in the U.S. (Chart I-5). Yet wage inflation is running at exactly the same rate in the EU28 as in the U.S. (Chart I-6). And in the euro area, it is only modestly lower (Chart I-7). Chart I-5The Unemployment Rate Suggests Much More ##br##Slack In Europe Than In The U.S. ... Chart I-6...But Wage Inflation ##br##Is Identical! Chart I-7Euro Area Wage Inflation##br## Is Not Far Behind This brings us to a glaring structural anomaly which must eventually correct. The gulf in monetary policy between the ECB and the Fed - reflected in the bond yield spread - has become unsustainably stretched relative to the economic fundamentals, specifically the difference in wage inflation which in reality is very modest (Chart I-8). As the current business cycle completes, we expect this bond yield spread to narrow, one way or the other. Chart I-8The U.S.-Euro Area Bond Yield Spread Is Stretched ##br##Relative To The Wage Inflation Differential Misleading Comparison 2: Equity Valuations In Europe Vs The U.S. Staying on the theme of Europe versus U.S. comparisons which are highly misleading, let's share one of the most common questions we get: are European equities relatively cheap, as their headline valuation suggests? The answer is an emphatic no. Compared with currencies and bonds, mainstream stock markets have little connection with the economies of their countries or regions of domicile. Mainstream stock markets are just collections of multinational companies, with each stock market defined by its own unique sector fingerprint. Sectors with vastly different structural growth prospects - say, financials and technology - must necessarily trade on vastly different valuations. So the sector with the lower headline valuation is not necessarily the cheaper sector. By extension, the stock market with the lower headline valuation because of its sector fingerprint is not necessarily the cheaper stock market. This means that a head-to-head comparison of European stock market valuations either with each other or with non-European stock markets is highly misleading. To which, a frequent follow-up question is: within the same sector, are European companies cheaper than their counterparts elsewhere in the world? The answer is, not necessarily. To understand why, consider the international cruise company Carnival which has a dual listing, one in London, one in New York. The London listing has recently traded at a substantial discount to the New York listing (Chart I-9 and Chart I-10). Does this mean that the London listing is cheap? Of course not. If it were, the markets would arbitrage away this valuation anomaly instantaneously! Chart I-9Carnival Can Trade On A Different Valuation##br## In London And New York... Chart I-10...Because Of The Currency##br## Translation Effect On the face of it, the valuations of Carnival's two listings should be the same because the underlying company is the same. However, the London and New York valuations can deviate substantially because of the so-called 'currency translation effect'. An international company like Carnival will intentionally receive its sales and profits across multiple global currencies - say, dollars and pounds, but a stock market listing is denominated in just one currency. If investors anticipate the dollar ultimately to weaken versus the pound - because they see that the pound is structurally cheap today - they might downgrade Carnival's multi-currency profit growth expectations in pound terms. Thereby, the London listing will trade at a discount to the New York listing. But the discount is a false impression. Allowing for the anticipated decline in the dollar versus the pound, the London listing is not cheap. It follows that any multinational listed in Europe will give a false impression of cheapness if investors see European currencies as structurally undervalued. European Equity Relative Performance Has Little Connection With European Economic Relative Performance Given the large distortions to stock market valuations from sector effects and currency translation effects, picking markets on the basis of relative valuation is a very dangerous way to invest. The correct and safe way to invest is to pick stock markets on the basis of the sector and currency biases you wish to express. This creates a paradox. The overall economic fundamentals in Europe, correctly measured, are not inferior to those in the United States. Yet European stock market relative performance has very little to do with Europe's relative economic performance. European equities are structurally handicapped by their substantial underexposure to technology, their substantial overexposure to financials, and the structurally undervalued currency. Unfortunately, this will necessarily weigh on their long-term relative performance prospects. Still, there will be phases in which financials outperform technology and therefore in which European equities outperform other major markets. We anticipate that the next such phase to overweight European equities will occur later this year. In the near term, one European stock market that could outperform is Switzerland's SMI. Given its overweighting to healthcare - Novartis and Roche - and healthcare's outperformance this year, the SMI should have fared well in the first half. However, this tailwind was countered by a stronger headwind - the SMI has a huge underweight to oil and gas, which is the one cyclical sector that has outperformed. But as we pointed out last week, the performance of oil and gas equities is technically stretched, and will require strong momentum in the crude price to extend further. Therefore, we like the combination of overweight healthcare, underweight oil and gas - which is precisely what Switzerland's SMI offers (Chart I-11). Chart I-11Switzerland = Long Healthcare, Short Energy Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see the European Investment Strategy Weekly Report, 'How Women Are Powering The European Economy' dated June 7, 2018 available at eis.bcaresearch.com 2 5/(95+5) = 5%, (5+10)/(95+5+10) = 14% 3 6/(99+6) =5.7%, (6+5)/(99+6+5) = 10% 4 The Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Current Policy Perspectives No. 18-2 'Wage Inflation and Informal Work' by Anat Bracha and Mary A. Burke, October 2017. Fractal Trading Model This week we note that the outperformance of consumer services versus consumer goods is technically stretched. The 65-day fractal dimension is at a limit that has reliably signalled reversals. The recommended trade is short global consumer services versus consumer goods. Set a profit target of 2.5% with a symmetrical stop-loss. 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-12 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 Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions 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##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
NOTE: There will be a few minor scheduling changes to BCA's China Investment Strategy service in July. We will publishing next week's report and the report scheduled on July 25 one day late, on Thursday, July 5 and 26, respectively. There will also be no report on Wednesday, July 18 due to our regular summer break. Highlights In response to the sharp spike in the risk of a full-blown U.S./China trade war, many market participants have concluded that significant fiscal and/or monetary policy stimulus is forthcoming. But for now, a depreciation in the RMB is the only clear and significant policy response to the imposition of U.S. import tariffs that we can currently observe, and we would still classify it as just a remedial measure. While a falling RMB will improve the financial position of China's exporters, it also increases the risk that the U.S. will follow through with the worst of their threats. Despite two conceivable upside scenarios for the equity market, we recommend a neutral stance towards Chinese stocks within a global equity portfolio and currently view the risks as largely to the downside. We are closing our long China / short Taiwan trade for a considerable profit, and recommend that investors go long low-beta sectors within the MSCI China index. Feature Chart 1A Decisive Technical Breakdown In ##br##Ex-Tech Stocks Vs Global In a Special Alert last week, we recommended that investors downgrade Chinese ex-tech stocks versus their global peers to neutral from overweight,1 after having placed them on downgrade watch at the end of March.2 Our recommendation was made in response to the ongoing slowdown in China's industrial sector, a significant escalation in the imposition of import tariffs between the U.S. and China, and an unfavorable shift in the risk/reward balance of global risky asset prices.3 It was also timely, as Chinese ex-tech stock prices have now decisively broken below their 200-day moving average (Chart 1). Following our shift in stance, the question facing BCA's China team, as well as global investors, is straightforward: Now what? Stimulus Watch The answer to this question among many market participants is that fiscal and/or monetary policy stimulus is forthcoming. We have no doubt that China will announce some remedial or compensatory measures in response to protectionist action from the U.S. Indeed, recent statements from the Ministry of Finance (MOF) suggest that planned fiscal spending for the year will be accelerated/brought forward, and the PBOC has already made a targeted cut to the reserve requirement ratio and reduced the relending rate for small company loans. However, we have argued that the bar for a fresh round of material stimulus is higher today than it was in the past, and we continue to hold this view. Elevated debt levels, excess capacity in some parts of the industrial sector, and worries about pollution all limit the extent to which the authorities can respond with the usual barrage of infrastructure spending and increased bank lending. The economy likely needs to feel more pain before policymakers come to its aid with enough magnitude to potentially spark another upswing in economic activity. Below we outline a few perspectives on the potential for stimulus, and how investors can gauge whether policymakers are deploying enough stimulus to materially impact China's economic outlook: Fiscal Stimulus The MOF's statement reflects the first fiscal policy action that China would likely take to combat any economic weakness, which is to speed up spending that has already been approved but was planned to occur later in the year. But from the perspective of whether a policy action is likely to materially boost economic activity, frontloading pre-approved spending would qualify, at best, as a remedial measure. In our view, tracking China's budgetary government finance data represents the best method for investors to determine whether policymakers are truly stimulating via the fiscal channel. While it is true that China's shadow budget deficit is much larger than the official data show (Chart 2), there is a crucial aspect of China's recent mini-cycle that is not well understood by many investors: almost all of the expansion of China's fiscal stance from 2014-16 was from on-budget rather than off-budget spending. Given that China has been trying to limit off-budget spending as part of its structural reform program, our sense is that this time won't be different if China decides that significant fiscal stimulus is required. This is good news for investors, given that on-budget spending is easier to observe in real-time, and Chart 3 presents two simple measures that we are using to monitor China's fiscal stance, alongside their year-over-year changes: on-budget expenditure and the on-budget balance, both as a % of GDP. Based on these measures there are no signs yet that the fiscal stance is easing (in fact, the opposite has occurred over the past year), but we will watching Chart 3 closely over the coming months for any indication of a change. Chart 2China's Shadow Budget Deficit Is Large... Chart 3...But If China Stimulates It Will Likely Be On-Budget Monetary Stimulus In our judgement, the recent cut to the reserve requirement ratio is not likely to be effective at stimulating the domestic economy. Investors should note that the initial reaction of many market participants to the April 17 reserve requirement ratio cut of 1% was that it represented a shift in the PBOC's policy stance towards easing, which ultimately proved to be a false narrative. Chart 4 shows China's 3-month interbank repo rate (China's de-facto policy rate which leads average lending rates), and highlights the timing of two specific events: March 28, when news broke that the PBOC would extend the deadline for the implementation of new regulatory standards for asset management products, and April 17, when the PBOC announced its targeted reserve requirement ratio cut. The chart makes it clear that the decline in the repo rate was in response to the deadline extension rather than the repo rate cut. This is entirely consistent with the findings of our February 22 Special Report,4 particularly the fact that 75% of the monetary tightening that has occurred since late-2016 has been regulatory in nature. We have previously argued that the dip in the repo rate in response to the deadline extension would probably be temporary,5 and Chart 4 shows that the rate has indeed increased over that past two months. In short, there is no evidence that the April 17 reserve ratio cut had any measurable effect on the stance of monetary policy in China. Given this, there are two key points for investors. The first is that small cuts to the reserve requirement ratio should be viewed, at best, as remedial measures that may help blunt the impact of shock to the export sector, but they are unlikely to alter the downward trajectory of the "old economy" (the portion of China's economy that is most relevant to global investors). The second is that if cuts to the reserve requirement ratio or any other monetary policy action stimulates the provision of credit via easier lending standards (rather than by reducing the cost of borrowing), their effect should result in a pickup in broad measures of credit growth rather than a reduction in interest rates. Chart 5 highlights that, for now, no such pickup has occurred; adjusted total social financing, which excludes equity issuance but includes municipal bonds, remains in a downtrend. This series, along with its impulse equivalent, are both included in the BCA Li Keqiang Leading Indicator which is at the core of our efforts to monitor the cyclical condition of China's business cycle. Chart 4No Evidence That April RRR Cut Eased Interest Rates Chart 5No Evidence That April RRR Cut Eased Lending Standards The Exchange Rate BCA's Geopolitical Strategy team has recently argued that China is likely to retaliate to a potential tariff imposition by weakening CNY/USD. This would have the effect of improving the competitiveness of exports priced in RMB, or would bolster the revenue of exporters selling goods priced in U.S. dollars (by way of receiving more RMB after converting the dollars received). Evidence has emerged over the past week to suggest that the PBOC is indeed allowing China's currency to depreciate against the U.S. dollar. Chart 6 shows the actual CNY/USD exchange rate alongside the value that would be predicted based on its relationship with the dollar over the year prior to its early-April peak. The chart suggests that the decline in CNY/USD appears to have, until very recently, reflected the strength in the U.S. dollar. However, the chart shows that CNY/USD has fallen over the past few days by magnitude in excess of what would be expected given movements in the U.S. dollar, implying that the very recent weakness is likely policy-driven. Chart 6The PBOC Is Letting CNY/USD Depreciate We agree that depreciating the currency versus the U.S. dollar will improve the financial condition of domestic exporters, but we would also caution investors against looking at a deep depreciation in CNY/USD in an encouraging light. We have noted in previous reports that such a development would be a clear sign of an outright, full-scale trade war between the U.S. and China, and in this context currency deprecation should still be classified as just a remedial measure (i.e. it is unlikely to lead to a renewed upswing in Chinese economic activity). Bottom Line: A depreciation in the RMB is the only clear and significant policy response to the imposition of U.S. import tariffs that we can currently observe, and we would still classify it as just a remedial measure. While a falling RMB will improve the financial position of China's exporters, it may also invite even further protectionist action from the U.S. Investment Recommendations Our recommendation to cut Chinese ex-tech stocks to neutral means that investors should be looking both for upside and downside risks when judging when to make their next allocation shift. For now, our discussion above underscores that we view the risks largely to the downside. The scenario that would cause us to further downgrade Chinese stocks to underweight within a global equity portfolio is not difficult to imagine: the worst outcome in the U.S. / China trade dispute materializes, the global economy slows meaningfully, and the inertia from the ongoing structural reform program causes Chinese policymakers to limit their stimulus to compensatory, remedial measures until a painful slowdown emerges in the domestic economy. We are not yet past the "point of no return" on the way to this outcome, but the events of the past two weeks have clearly moved us further along the path. Conversely, there are two scenarios that we can envision that could cause us to upgrade Chinese stocks back to overweight: Chart 7Keep Monitoring Floor Space Sold A protectionist exchange occurs between China and the U.S. but fails to devolve to the most damaging outcome. China's remedial measures are successful at easing the pain from tariffs on domestic producers, and the economic outlook stabilizes. In this scenario the most acute risk would be removed, but the gradual underlying downtrend in China's "old economy" would be intact. In this case we would be more comfortable upgrading Chinese stocks if there was an additional reflationary tailwind, such as a boost from fiscal spending or some reversal of the monetary tightening that has occurred since late-2016. But a significant, exogenous acceleration in economic activity from some other sector of China's economy would also fit the bill, and we have argued in past reports that housing appears to be the best candidate. Chart 7 highlights that residential sales volume may now be in a gradual uptrend, which could translate into stronger construction in the months ahead. The second scenario that would cause us to upgrade Chinese stocks is straightforward: Chinese policymakers determine that the risks to growth from an export shock are unacceptably large given the existing slowdown in the industrial sector, and decide to temporarily reverse course on the structural reform path by opting for "big bang" fiscal and/or monetary stimulus. A significant and highly investment-relevant mini-cycle upswing occurred in China the last time that the authorities strongly prioritized growth, and we will watching closely for real indications of a shift in attitude in this direction. For now our judgement is that policymakers have a higher pain threshold than in the past, suggesting that this is outcome is not yet probable. Related to our decision to downgrade Chinese ex-tech stocks to neutral within a global equity portfolio, we have three updates to our trade book: We are closing our long MSCI China / short MSCI Taiwan position and upgrading our Taiwanese cyclical stance to neutral: Despite being massively overweight technology stocks, Chart 8 highlights that Taiwan is a comparatively low-beta equity market versus China. Our trade has generated a 21% return since we initiated it in February 2017, and we believe it is time to book profits. Given Taiwan's small size it is actually possible that its economy and/or equity market will suffer disproportionately if the worst U.S. / China trade outcome materializes, which could cause us to revisit the trade. But for now our judgement is that a neutral position is warranted. We are sticking with our long China onshore corporate bond trade: We would certainly expect credit spreads on Chinese corporate bonds to flare in response to a deteriorating economic outlook, but we highlighted in our June 13 Weekly Report how high the bar is for investors to lose money on these bonds.6 In short, China's corporate bond market already offers a margin of safety given its high yield and a comparatively short duration, and we do not see recent developments on the trade front as a sufficiently compelling reason to exit the trade. We are initiating a new trade - within the MSCI China index, long low-beta sectors / short benchmark: Chart 9 presents the relative US$ stock price return of a portfolio of low-beta level 1 GICS sectors within the MSCI China index, relative to the index itself. Our methodology in calculating the portfolio is the same as that employed in the A-share factor analysis that we presented in our June 13 report; namely it is a value-weighted portfolio of sectors with below-median rolling 1-year market beta.7 The chart shows that the portfolio has outperformed over time, but sold off quite substantially last year as the high-flying tech sector boosted the performance of the overall index. The relative performance trend for low-beta has recently strengthened and crossed above its 200-day moving average, which we regard as a supportive technical signal to initiate the trade. Chart 8Taiwan's Equity Market Is Low Beta Vs China's Chart 9Go Long Low-Beta Sectors Vs The Broad Market Bottom Line: Despite two potential upside scenarios, we recommend a neutral stance towards Chinese stocks within a global equity portfolio and currently view the risks as largely to the downside. We are closing our long China / short Taiwan for a considerable profit, and recommend that investors go long low-beta sectors within the MSCI China index. Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com 1 Pease see China Investment Strategy Special Alert "Downgrade Chinese Stocks To Neutral", dated June 20, 2018, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "Chinese Stocks: Trade Frictions Make For A Tenuous Overweight," dated March 28, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Pease see Global Investment Strategy Special Report "Three Policy Puts Go Kaput: Downgrade Global Equities To Neutral", dated June 19, 2018, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Pease see China Investment Strategy Special Report "Seven Questions About Chinese Monetary Policy", dated February 22, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Pease see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "China: A Low-Conviction Overweight", dated May 2, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 6 Pease see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "A Shaky Ladder", dated June 13, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 7 The current sector weights of the portfolio are: 26% telecom services, 24% industrials, 19% health care, 16% utilities, and 14% consumer staples. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights We have downgraded our 12-month recommendation on global equities and credit from overweight to neutral. If macro developments evolve as expected, then we will shift to an outright bearish stance on risk assets later this year or early 2019 in anticipation of a global recession in 2020. BCA has identified ten periods since 1950 when U.S. equities moved sideways for at least five months in a narrow range; when the economy is at full employment, stocks are more likely to sell off after these sideways periods than if there is still some slack in the labor market. Feature The outlook for global risk assets will likely be more challenging in the coming months. With that in mind, we have downgraded our 12-month recommendation on global equities and credit from overweight to neutral. BCA still expects that the U.S. stock-to-bond ratio will grind higher in the next 12 months, as U.S. stocks move sideways and Treasury yields climb (Chart 1A and 1B). We recommend that investors put the proceeds from the sale of equity positions into cash. Chart 1AScenarios For Stock-To-Bond Ratio ##br##If 10-Year Treasury Hits 3.80% Chart 1BScenarios For Stock-To-Bond Ratio ##br##If 10-Year Treasury Hits 3.29% Within a fixed-income only portfolio, we are selling credit and putting the proceeds into Treasuries. We maintain our underweight duration stance given our view of the Fed and the 10-year Treasury. At 2.91%, the 10-year is still below BCA's view of fair value (3.29%). Moreover, BCA's position is that the Fed's gradual path of rate hikes is consistent with a cyclical peak in the 10-year Treasury yield between 3.30% and 3.80%, well above current levels.1 On the credit side, we note that late in the cycle the yield curve is moderately flat, between 0 and 50 bps. Work by our U.S. Bond Strategy team2 shows that periods when the curve is flat are consistent with much lower excess returns than when the slope is above 50 bps (Chart 2). Given the low potential reward, a neutral posture on credit makes the most sense. Investors will not give up too much by starting to downgrade early. Tomorrow's U.S. Bond Strategy report will provide more details on the corporates versus Treasuries allocation. Chart 2Corporate Bond Performance And The Yield Curve BCA has recommended overweight positions in U.S. risk assets since spring 2009 when equities became attractive from a risk/reward perspective. At that time, the U.S. economy was weak, the Fed was easing, equity valuations were depressed and forward earnings estimates were dismal (Chart 3). In contrast, the risk/reward for risk assets today is much less attractive. The economy is in the late stages of an expansion and is running beyond full employment. The central bank is raising rates. Moreover, equity valuations are elevated and forward earnings estimates are at their most optimistic in 20 years (Chart 3 again). This means that good news is already priced into the equity market. When the Shiller PE, a measure of the market's valuation, is between 30 and 40, 1-year returns are tepid at best (Chart 4). Chart 3Five-Year Bottom-Up EPS Growth Estimates Are Impossibly High Chart 4Expected Returns Given Starting Point Shiller P/E We are not trimming exposure to risk assets because we are more concerned about the economic outlook. BCA's view is that odds of a U.S. recession in the next 12 months remain low. Furthermore, the traditional recession signals that we track do not suggest a recession is nigh (Chart 5). For example, the 2/10 yield curve is still positive at 34 basis points (panel 2). Upward movement in long-dated breakevens will offset some of the upward pressure at the front-end from further Fed rate hikes, limiting the amount of curve flattening during the next few months. Once long-dated breakevens get back to a range between 2.3% and 2.5% then flattening could proceed more rapidly.3 Panel 3 shows that the LEI crosses below zero when a recession is imminent. The May LEI rose by 6% year-over-year. Initial claims for unemployment insurance in the week ending June 16 were 24K below their mid-December 2017 reading. Panel 4 shows that a 6-month increase in unemployment claims of between 75,000 and 100,000 is associated with a recession. The bottom line is that we are not concerned about a recession. Nonetheless, BCA's Equity Scorecard has dropped to 2, below the critical value of three that has been consistent in the past with positive equity returns (not shown). Table 1 updates our Exit Checklist of items that are important for the equity allocation call. Three of the nine are now giving a 'sell' signal and they suggest that prudence is necessary, despite the constructive economic outlook. Chart 5No Recession Signal Here Table 1Exit Checklist For Risk Assets Furthermore, several technical indicators that we monitor signal caution. The National Association of Active Investment Managers (NAAIM) says that active managers have increased equity risk since the start of the year (Chart 6). At 89%, the average equity exposure of institutional investors is close to the cycle high reached in March 2017, which was the highest since 2007, just before the S&P 500 peak in October 2007. Furthermore, BCA's Equity Speculation Index remains elevated. At slightly under 2, it is at a position where bear markets began in 2000 and 2007, and it is well above the level seen just before the 2015 bear market (Chart 7, panel 1). That said, not all technical indicators are flashing red. Chart 8 shows that BCA's Technical Indicator is not at an extreme (panel 1). Moreover, BCA's Equity Sentiment Composite Index is neutral (panel 2); panel 3 shows that the U.S. large cap equities remain in the middle of their 2009-2018 recovery channel, albeit in the top half of the channel. Note that the S&P 500 tested the top end of the channel (near 2850) in January 2018. Chart 6Active Managers Have Increased ##br##Equity Exposure This Year Chart 7Equity Speculation Is Elevated Chart 8Not All Technical Indicators Are Bearish The risk to our neutral stance on equities is that credit and equities will rally to fresh highs before the cycle is done. However, given our bias for capital preservation and views on the late stage of the business cycle, it is not advisable to reach for the last few drops of return. With equity valuations stretched, we would rather be early and judicious and miss out on the last few basis points of outperformance rather than be late and underperform as risk assets sell off. BCA's view is that the next recession will be sparked by the Fed overtightening in 2019 and 2020 when it finds itself behind the curve on inflation. Moreover, because inflation is at the Fed's 2% target and the economy is beyond full employment, the price at which the Fed's "policy put" gets exercised is much lower than earlier in the cycle. The implication is that the Fed will be reluctant to deviate from its tightening path even in the face of more turmoil in the EM space or in Europe. This supports our guarded view on equities and our decision to move into cash instead of Treasuries. Geopolitical risk is another reason to be cautious. Chart 9 shows that globalization, a tailwind for risk assets, is stalling. Moreover, there is an increased threat of a breakup in the Eurozone, led by political uncertainty in Italy (Chart 10). In addition, tensions with Iran are mounting. Nonetheless, our Geopolitical Strategy service notes that the U.S.'s relationship with China is the primary source of geopolitical peril (Chart 11).4 Although we are not adjusting our view on the dollar,5 a stronger greenback would bolster our case for caution on risk assets. A higher dollar would hurt the profits of U.S. multinationals and could lead to instability in the emerging markets, raising the odds of a policy misstep. Chart 9Globalization Has Reached Its Zenith Chart 10Risk Of Eurozone Breakup Is Rising Chart 11BCA's Geopolitical Power Index Illustrates A Multipolar World Equity volatility will accelerate through year end, as is often the case late in equity bull markets. Bottom Line: If macro developments evolve as expected, then we will shift to an outright bearish stance on risk assets later this year or early 2019 in anticipation of a global recession in 2020. Absent a recession, we would move to underweight stocks if a wider trade war develops. We would consider temporarily shifting our 12-month recommendation back to overweight if global equities sell off by more than 15% in the next few months, especially if our economic indicators remain constructive and the Fed either cuts rates or signals that it is on hold. Treading Water BCA has identified ten periods since 1950 when U.S. equities moved sideways for at least five months in a narrow range (See Appendix Charts 1 and 2).6 We excluded bear markets and recessions from our analysis because our view is that neither condition will occur in the next 12 months. Table 2 shows that these sideways episodes lasted an average of eight months. At the end of six of the ten intervals, U.S. large cap equities rallied (1986, 1988, 1992, 1997-1998, 2004, and 2015); after two phases, stocks recovered briefly and then sold off (1951-52 and 1972). At the conclusion of the 1991 episode, stocks rallied and then resumed moving sideways. Stocks sold off after the eight-month sideways phase in 1976. Table 2What Happens After Stocks Move Sideways? Four (1951-52, 1972, 1988, 1997-98) of the ten sideways periods occurred after the U.S. economy reached full employment. The 10 year Treasury yield increased as stocks moved sideways in 1972 and in 1988, but fell in the 1997-98 episode. The S&P 500 PE ratio increased in two sideways phases (1972 and 1997-98) and contracted in 1988. S&P 500 EPS growth accelerated in 1972, 1988 and 1997-98 phases. The S&P 500 rallied after the sideways episodes in 1988 and 1997-98, but sold off after the 1951-52 and 1972 sideways phases that occurred after the economy hit full employment (Chart 12). Chart 12S&P 500 Valuations, EPS Growth, Margins And The 10-Year Treasury Yield When Stocks Move Sideways As the S&P 500 moved sideways when the economy was not yet at full employment (1976, 1986, 1991, 1992, 2004 and 2015), 10-year Treasury yields fell four times (1976, 1986, 1991 and 1992) and rose in two (2004 and 2015). The forward PE ratio for the S&P 500 expanded in 1986 and 1992, but contracted in 1991, 2004 and 2015. EPS growth during sideways episodes for stocks when the economy was not yet at full employment is mixed. EPS growth accelerated in 1976, 1992 and 2004, but slowed in 1986, 1991 and 2015 as oil prices fell. U.S. large cap equities rallied after four of the sideways periods when the economy was not yet at full employment (1986, 1992, 2004 and 2015) but sold off after the 1976 sideways move (Chart 12 again). We intend to further examine the macro backdrop during sideways periods for U.S. equities in future Weekly Reports. Bottom Line: BCA expects bond yields to rise in the next 12 months and S&P 500 profit growth will peak. Stocks are more likely to move higher after a period of sideways price action if the economy is not at full employment. Rising PE ratios as stocks move sideways most often lead to equity rallies after the sideways phases end. With valuations already elevated, PEs are unlikely to expand much further in this cycle. Moreover, the U.S. economy reached full employment in early 2017, making it less likely that the Fed will hit the pause button on its rate hike regime. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA's U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Bond Bear Still In Tact," published June 5, 2018. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA's U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "As Good as It Gets For Corporate Debt," published April 24, 2018. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA's U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Rigidly Defined Areas Of Doubt And Uncertainty," published June 19, 2018. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA's Geopolitical Strategy "Are You Sick of Winning Yet," published June 20, 2018. Available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Research's Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "Three Policy Puts Go Kaput: Downgrade Global Equities To Neutral," published June 20, 2018. Available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 6 There are well-established periods for bull and bear markets for U.S. equities, however not for "sideways" episodes for stocks. We have defined "sideways" as a period of range-bound equity price movements that have lasted for at least five months outside of recessions and bear markets. Readers may have other definitions of "sideways". APPENDIX CHARTS Chart 1Sideways Epsisodes For Stocks 1950-1980... Chart 2..And 1980-2018
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Selling in the S&P cable & satellite index is overdone. Recession type valuations fully reflect the acquirer discount heavyweight CMCSA is still commanding. Lift exposure to neutral. Content providers' assets are highly coveted, and these firms remain in play as media is undergoing a tectonic shift. The industry's demand backdrop is also on the rise, signaling that it no longer pays to underweight the S&P movies & entertainment index. Increasing construction expenditures, ballooning balance sheets, soft relative selling prices and a rising U.S. dollar all suggest that restaurant profits will underwhelm. Downgrade to underweight. Recent Changes Raise the S&P cable & satellite index to neutral today. Lift the S&P movies & entertainment index to a benchmark allocation today. Act on the downgrade alert and trim the S&P restaurants index to underweight today. Table 1 Feature Geopolitical risks held equities hostage last week as President Trump toughened his tariff rhetoric toward China. While the risk of a global trade spat remains acute, the market is becoming desensitized to daily trade-related headlines and remains resilient. Given the plethora of political risks and upcoming midterm elections, I look forward to hearing Greg Valliere's keynote speech in BCA's Toronto Investment Conference on September 24-25. Importantly, last week rising protectionism along with "Three Policy Puts Going Kaput" compelled BCA's Global Investment Strategy service to turn more cautious toward global risk assets over its 6 to 12 month cyclical horizon, prompting them to downgrade global equities from overweight to a neutral stance.1 We have sympathy for this view and acknowledge that the risks to our still sanguine U.S. equity market view, which we have been flagging in recent publications, have increased a notch. We are especially worried about the greenback's appreciation and increasing potential to infiltrate SPX EPS in calendar 2019 (please see Chart 2 and Chart 4 from the June 4th Weekly Report). Given that technology has the highest foreign sales exposure (58% of total sales) among GICS1 sectors, and a 26% market cap weight, we are closely monitoring leading indicators for tech profits. Indeed, for calendar 2019 the S&P tech sector's contribution to S&P 500 profit growth is the highest at 21%, with financials right on its tail at 20% (Chart 1). Energy sector EPS base effects are filtered out in 2019, but industrials, that have a 37% foreign sales exposure and are at the epicenter of President Trump's tariff rhetoric, also explain 13% of SPX EPS growth in calendar 2019 (Chart 1). Chart 1Contribution To S&P 500 2019 EPS Growth In fact, over a structural (2-3 year) time horizon we are aligned with BCA's more bearish equity outlook. We have been advocating this longer term thesis in our travels visiting BCA clients (please download our latest marketing slide deck here that highlights our bearish secular equity market view). Importantly, the three signposts we are monitoring to help us time the end of the business cycle, and thus equity bull market, are: a yield curve inversion (leading indicator), doubling in year-over-year oil prices based on monthly dataset (coincident indicator) and a mega-merger announcement either in tech or biotech space (confirming anecdotal indicator). There are currently no ticks in any of these three boxes, and we conclude that the S&P 500 has yet to peak for the cycle (Chart 2). Crucially, the Fed is inflating a massive bubble by staying too easy for too long. It is rather obvious to us that the U.S. economy is firing on all cylinders with real non-residential investment growing near 10% in Q1, but the real fed funds rate is still near the zero line (Chart 3). In addition, recent Fed minutes signaled that the Fed is willing to take some inflation risk, which will further push equity markets into steeper disequilibrium. It would be unprecedented for the cycle to end with the real fed funds rate glued to zero (Chart 3). Chart 2Recession Indicators Chart 3Real Fed Funds Rate Is Still Zero! Moreover, the U.S. economy just received a two year fiscal stimulus injection which is rare in both duration and magnitude during the late stages of the expansion and thus inherently inflationary. Worrisomely, the last time this happened was in the mid-to-late 1960s that led to the inflationary 1970s (please see Chart 1 and Table 2 from our October 9th "Can Easy Fiscal Offset Tighter Monetary Policy?" Weekly Report). Tack on the starting point of a World War-like debt-to-GDP ratio and the only regulatory mechanism for government profligacy is the bond market (Chart 4). Chart 4Interest Rates Have Nowhere To Go But Up Another way to make the debt arithmetic work is if one believes the White House's real GDP projections of 3%+ as far as the eye can see, which stand in marked contrast to the IMF's, the CBO's and the Fed's own projections (Chart 5). Therefore, the path of least resistance for interest rates is higher as a way to slow down the economy and also rein in debt excesses. Typically, this overheating late in the cycle is synonymous with a blow off phase in equities (Chart 6), before the bottom falls out. Chart 5Don't Believe The White House Chart 6Blow Off Phase In sum, while BCA downgraded global equities to neutral last week on a cyclical time horizon, we are deviating from the BCA House View and still believe that the S&P 500 will make new all-time highs in absolute terms before the next recession hits. This week we are making a few subsurface changes to the S&P consumer discretionary sector, but we maintain an underweight allocation to this interest rate-sensitive sector. New Media Landscape: (Pipelines Vs. Content Providers) Vs. Netflix At last count Netflix broke into the top 25 largest companies (market cap based) in the S&P 500, and if it keeps up its frenetic pace it is on track to surpass Boeing. While legacy media giants had a chance to scoop up Netflix in the past few years, its current stratospheric valuation makes it uneconomical and nonsensical. Instead, the specter of Netflix, as well as other tech giants circling the space, has accelerated an inter- and intra-industry consolidation (bottom panel, Chart 7). Why? Because Netflix not only went straight to the consumer on a new medium, the internet, and sped up cord cutting, but also blurred industry lines by becoming a content provider producing its own original content in addition to offering third party content. The media landscape is thus still trying to adjust to the Netflix induced "creative destruction" and media executives are scrambling to compete with/protect legacy franchises from Netflix. The recently cleared AT&T/Time Warner merger has intensified the bidding war of remaining crown jewel assets in the legacy content media world. We were well positioned for this shake up in the space as we went underweight the media complex in early March.2 But now, we deem that the easy money has been made and most of the negative narrative is reflected in bombed out relative valuations despite depressed relative profit and sales growth estimates (second & third panels, Chart 7). As a result we recommend lifting exposure back to benchmark in the broad S&P media index. Beyond these industry related intricacies, the macro backdrop is starting to turn in favor of media outfits, warning that it no longer pays to be bearish. Chart 8 shows that relative consumer outlays on media have spiked recently. The implication is that industry revenue growth has more upside. BCA's ad spending indicator also corroborates this firming top line growth message, as does the latest ISM services survey that remains squarely above the 50 boom/bust line on a broad array of measures. Unsurprisingly, this budding demand recovery has translated into a pick up in industry pricing power with our media selling price gauge even surpassing overall inflation. The implication is that media profits could surprise to the upside. Chart 7M&A Frenzy Continues Chart 8Overlooked Demand Recovery While our sense is that pipelines (S&P cable & satellite index) are the likely losers and content providers (S&P movies & entertainment) are the likely winners from the ongoing broad media deck reshuffling, the way we are executing the S&P media upgrade to neutral is by lifting both the S&P cable & satellite and S&P movies & entertainment sub-indexes to neutral. On the cable front, M&A activity is weighing heavily on relative share prices as index heavyweight Comcast is a possible acquirer of the Murdoch empire assets. However, this bellwether company is not a pure pipeline play and were it to win the FOX-related assets bidding war, it would further diversify its cash flow. Monetizing those assets involves execution risk, especially as the legacy cable business is wrestling with decelerating selling prices and still has to contend with cord cutting (top & middle panels, Chart 9). Encouragingly, the bottom panel of Chart 9 shows that likely all the negative news flow is already baked into compelling relative valuations. With regard to the content providers, not only are some of these assets currently caught up in a bidding war, but every remaining independent content provider is now in play, and deal hungry investment bankers are aggressively pitching M&A to media (and likely other industry) CEOs. Macro headwinds are also morphing into tailwinds for the S&P movies & entertainment group. Consumer confidence is pushing multi decade highs and given the fact that the economy is at full employment any increase in discretionary consumer incomes will likely further boost recreation outlays (Chart 10). Industry pricing power is also expanding at a healthy clip at a time when industry executives are showing labor restraint (Chart 11). If selling prices stay firm on the back of improving demand as we expect, then movies & entertainment profit margins will enter an expansion phase (middle panel, Chart 10). Chart 9Cable's Blues Are ##br##Well Discounted Chart 10Firming ##br##Recreation Outlays... Chart 11And Recovering Operating Metrics##br## Remain Underappreciated None of this rosy outlook is reflected in cyclically low S&P movies & entertainment relative valuations (bottom panel, Chart 10). Bottom Line: Book relative profits of 13.5% in the S&P cable & satellite index since inception and lift to neutral. Boost the S&P movies & entertainment index to a benchmark allocation for a relative loss of 8.3% since the early March inception. As a result the broad S&P media index also commands a neutral weighting. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the S&P cable & satellite and S&P movies & entertainment indexes are: BLBG: S5CBST - CMCSA, CHTR, DISH and BLBG: S5MOVI - DIS, FOXA, FOX, VIAB, respectively. Portion Control In Restaurants Restauranteurs are eternal optimists; at least that is the lesson we take from the National Restaurant Association's Restaurant Performance Index (RPI) which only rarely dips below the expansion line (Chart 12, second panel). However, changes in this overly optimistic sentiment survey are useful as they closely lead the S&P restaurants index's relative performance. This indicator has recently rolled over and we think the timing is right to turn negative on restaurants (Chart 12, bottom panel). The recent evaporation of industry pricing power echoes the RPI's early indications of a downturn (Chart 13, second panel). In view of how tightly it moves with relative industry sales, the growth outlook for restaurants has darkened considerably. The underlying driver of weakening pricing power is the industry's collapsing share of the consumer's wallet over the past two years, which has been at least as destructive to industry growth as the Great Recession (Chart 13, bottom panel). While both relative consumption and sales, which move in lockstep, have been staging a recovery in 2018, they both remain firmly in deflationary territory. Meanwhile, industry wages - the largest input cost - have been expanding above trend for the better part of the past four years (Chart 14, second panel). Though restaurant wage growth has recently slowed considerably it has not been enough to bring our margin proxy out of negative territory, implying sliding relative earnings growth is set to continue (Chart 14, bottom panel). Chart 12Optimism Reigns In Restaurants Chart 13Falling Pricing Should Weigh On Sales Chart 14Labor Costs Are A Profit Headwind A rising U.S. dollar is an additional profit headwind for this heavily internationally-geared consumer discretionary sub-index. Despite dollar strength offering an input cost tailwind via lower food commodity costs, declining translation of foreign profits will likely swamp those gains. McDonald's and Starbucks, which together represent 80% of the weight of the S&P restaurants index, had 62% and 49%, respectively, of their locations outside the U.S. at the end of last year. To compensate for a tough profit outlook, restaurants have embarked on a construction spending spree that shows no signs of abating (Chart 15, second panel). The predictable result has been a near-doubling of leverage ratios over the past three years (Chart 15, bottom panel). A weak profit backdrop signals that relief from these levels will be hard to find. Chart 15Restaurants Are Binging On Debt Chart 16Valuations Do Not Reflect Risks Valuations have been treading water at above-normal levels for several years (Chart 16, second and third panels). Perky valuations seem poised for a fall given the cloudy profit outlook and the higher risk premium that recently geared up balance sheets typically command. Bottom Line: Still-high valuations are not supported by falling returns in an increasingly capital intensive industry. Accordingly, we are pulling the trigger on last month's downgrade alert on the S&P restaurants index and moving to an underweight allocation. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5REST - MCD, SBUX, YUM, DRI, CMG. What Does All This Mean For The S&P Consumer Discretionary Index? Chart 17Stay Underweight Consumer Discretionary Despite the S&P media's heavy weighting in the broad consumer discretionary sector, our S&P restaurants downgrade sustains the below benchmark allocation in the S&P consumer discretionary sector. Importantly, the three key factors weighing on this early-cyclical sector we identified in early March remain intact: rising fed funds rate, quantitative tightening and higher prices at the pump (Chart 17). Meanwhile, were we to exclude AMZN from the day the S&P included it in the SPX and the S&P 500 consumer discretionary index (November 21st, 2005), then the vast majority of consumer discretionary stocks are actually following the typical historical relationship with the Fed's tightening cycle (middle panel, Chart 17). Put differently, the equal weighted S&P consumer discretionary relative share price ratio is indeed following the Fed's historical tightening path (bottom panel, Chart 17). Bottom Line: Earnings underperformance will eventually result in relative share price underperformance. Stay underweight the S&P consumer discretionary index. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "Three Policy Puts Go Kaput: Downgrade Global Equities To Neutral," dated June 19, 2018, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Reflective Or Restrictive?" dated March 12, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps