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The 10% tactical pullback that we had been flagging in recent publications with the tech sector correctly sniffing it out has materialized, and our strategy is to start "buying the dip" as we do not foresee a recession in the coming 9-12 months. While an undershoot cannot be ruled out, given the emotional nature of recent market action, a number of indicators we track suggest that it would be a mistake to get extremely bearish at the current juncture: First, the recent market swoon along with rising EPS estimates have knocked down valuations, pushing them to a 16 handle on a 12-month forward P/E basis, which is also the 4-year average (see chart below). Second, credit spreads have been surprisingly quiet. Bond spreads across the risk spectrum are extremely sensitive to risk-off phases and one would have expected a sharp widening in spreads during the recent turmoil. Third, the U.S. dollar has remained muted despite recent stock market jitters. A soft greenback is purely redistributive and represents a boost to global growth. Fourth, short equity market positions are pinned near all-time highs, representing latent dry powder. Finally, the VIX went vertical, surging beyond the 50 level. Both the jump in the VIX and the swift reversal of 175K net short to roughly 85K net long speculative VIX futures positions signal that capitulation was likely hit. In other words, all these indicators suggest that the bulk of the selling may have already occurred, and an absorption/consolidation phase will likely take place in the next few weeks. Please see yesterday's Weekly Report for additional details.
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Relentless selling in utilities stocks is overdone and we are compelled to lift exposure to neutral. Operating metrics have turned the corner for the better, but a still challenging macro backdrop suggests that it is too soon to boost to an overweight stance. A rising interest rate backdrop, the sinking Cyclical Macro Indicator and near collapse in our sales growth model along with high chances of a profit margin squeeze, suggest that telecom services stocks are a sell. Recent Changes S&P Utilities - Upgrade to neutral for a gain of 15%. S&P Telecom Services - Downgrade to underweight, and add to high-conviction underweight list today. S&P Utilities - Removed from high-conviction underweight list last week for a gain of 18%.1 S&P Semiconductor Equipment - Removed from high-conviction underweight list last week for a gain of 20%.2 S&P Homebuilding - Removed from high-conviction underweight list last week for a gain of 10%.3 Feature Chart 1Time To Start 'Buying The Dip' Panic selling persisted last week, and equities struggled for direction, as the battle between liquidity withdrawal and stellar profit growth rages on. As we wrote in a recent report, the market will test the new Fed Chairman's resolve and this must have been an unnerving first week for Powell at the helm of the Fed.4 The 10% tactical pullback that we had been flagging in recent publications with the tech sector correctly sniffing it out has materialized, and our strategy is to start "buying the dip" as we do not foresee recession in the coming 9-12 months. While an undershoot cannot be ruled out given the emotional nature of recent market action, a number of indicators we track suggest that it would be a mistake to get extremely bearish at the current juncture. First and foremost, empirical evidence suggests that investors with a cyclical 9-12 month investment horizon should start to buy this correction (Chart 1). We analyzed SPX data back to the early-1960s and identified daily falls of 4% or more. There have been 16 such occurrences. In our sample we excluded the 1982 and 2015 incidents that rounded up to 4%, but were a hair below that level. For 1987 we included only one datapoint for the Black Monday crash and omitted occurrences very close to that date. Similarly, in the autumn of 2008 we only used the first large daily decline in our study and excluded other sizable downdrafts that were clustered around Lehman's collapse. We decided to exclude such clustered datapoints as they would skew our results to the upside. This analysis clearly demonstrates that it pays to "buy the dip" (top panel, Chart 1), and on average the SPX rises roughly 14% in the ensuing 12 months following the steep daily pullback (bottom panel, Chart 1). Interestingly, within a few weeks of the mini-crash empirical evidence suggests that markets typically retest those beaten-down levels and tend to hold above them. The implication is that investors have some time to deploy cash and/or reposition portfolios in order to take advantage of the recent pullback. Second, credit spreads have been surprisingly quiet. Bond spreads across the risk spectrum are extremely sensitive to risk off phases and one would have expected a sharp widening in spreads during the recent turmoil (fourth panel, Chart 2A). Chart 2ANo Systemic Risk Evident Chart 2BLatent Buying Power Third, the U.S. dollar has remained muted despite recent stock market jitters. A soft greenback is purely redistributive and represents a boost to global growth (third panel, Chart 2A). Fourth, short equity market positions are pinned near all-time highs representing latent dry powder (Chart 2B). Fifth, the VIX has gone vertical surging beyond the 50 level. Both the jump in the VIX and the explosion in trading volumes signal that capitulation was likely hit (second panel, Chart 2A). Finally, the recent market swoon along with rising EPS estimates have knocked down valuations pushing them to a 16 handle on a 12-month forward P/E basis (bottom panel, Chart 2A). In other words, all these indicators suggest that the bulk of the selling may have already occurred, and an absorption/consolidation phase will likely take place in the next few weeks. In fact, the recent let-up of soft data and simultaneous perkiness of hard data also corroborates that a lateral move is in the cards for the broad market (Chart 3). Chart 3Consolidation Phase Ahead We are willing to ride out the volatility and selectively look for opportunities to put cash to work, given our view that the longevity of the business cycle remains intact. Our core strategy remains to stay heavily focused on financials and industrials that benefit from our two key 2018 themes: higher interest rates and synchronized global capex upcycle. The energy sector also provides excellent value and a positive cyclical earnings outlook, based on BCA's upbeat crude oil view and rising odds of a virtuous capex upcycle. Meanwhile, health care remains our core defensive sector underweight. This sector still has to contend with political backlash against its multi-decade resilient selling price backdrop. With regard to the niche fixed income proxies, we are making a small tweak this week lifting the bombed-out utilities sector to neutral from underweight and locking in gains of 15% since inception. We are also downgrading defensive telecom stocks from neutral to underweight. Enough Is Enough In Bombed-Out Utilities In mid-summer we downgraded utilities to a below benchmark allocation, and subsequently on November 27th we were compelled to add it to our 2018 high-conviction underweight list, doubling down on our bearishness toward this fixed income proxy sector. These moves have paid handsome dividends and added alpha to our portfolio. Last week we crystalized gains by obeying our trailing stop that got triggered on our high-conviction list, registering 18% gains for the utilities underweight call. And, today we recommend an upgrade to a neutral stance to the niche S&P utilities sector, booking 15% gains since the July 24th inception, as indiscriminate selling has gone way too far in our opinion. Chart 4 shows that relative utilities performance has hit rock-bottom, plumbing all-time lows. In fact, the relative share price ratio has been so downbeat that if history at least rhymes a temporary relief rebound is in sight. Such oversold levels in our composite technical indicator have marked previous troughs (bottom panel, Chart 5). Tack on a gap down in relative valuations right at the neutral zone, and the implication is that it does not pay to be bearish from current washed out relative share price levels. Chart 4Unloved... Chart 5...And Under-owned Utilities... On the operational front, nat gas prices are no longer reeling and should boost industry pricing power as they are the marginal price setter for utilities (top two panels, Chart 6). Electricity production is also staging a slingshot recovery. This demand increase should also underpin utilities selling prices. Resource utilization is on the rise, up roughly 700bps from the 2016 trough. Once again the removal of excess slack should at least put a floor under industry producer price inflation. Indeed, our utilities sector productivity proxy has caught on fire recently pushing four year highs as both industry output and employment restraint are aiding our gauge. The upshot is that sell side analyst pessimism has likely hit a trough (bottom panel, Chart 6). All of these positives signal that we should take a punt and boost exposure all the way to overweight, nevertheless a challenging macro backdrop keeps us on the sidelines for now. Chart 7 shows that utilities stocks are the mirror image of the global manufacturing PMI survey. In other words, relative share prices move inversely with the ebb and flow of global growth, showcasing their ultimate safe-haven status. Similarly, increasing capital outlays are negatively correlated with utilities stocks, and given our synchronized global growth and global capex themes, utilities have limited cyclical upside. Finally, this high dividend yielding sector also suffers when Treasury bond yields shoot higher, as competing risk free assets become more appealing. Higher interest rates is one of BCA's key 2018 themes, and any resumption of the 10-year Treasury selloff will continue to weigh on relative performance (bottom panel, Chart 7). Chart 6...Are Coming Back To Life... Chart 7...But Do Not Get Carried Away Netting it all out, relentless selling in utilities stocks is overdone and we are compelled to lift exposure to neutral. Operating metrics have turned the corner for the better, but a still challenging macro backdrop suggests that it is too soon to boost to an overweight stance. Bottom Line: Take profits of 15% and lift the S&P utilities sector to a benchmark allocation. Trim Telecom Services To Underweight We are filling the void from the upgrade in the S&P utilities sector by downgrading the S&P telecom services sector to underweight, and also adding it to the high-conviction underweight list. This defensive sector swap preserves our bearishness toward safe haven assets as both sectors have a similar weight in the SPX. Three main reasons are behind our dislike for this fixed income proxy sector: BCA's 2018 rising interest rate theme Both our Cyclical Macro Indicator (CMI) and our sales model send a distress signal A profit margin squeeze is looming The top panel of Chart 8 shows that high dividend yielding telecom services stocks and the 10-year yield are nearly perfectly inversely correlated. In fact, telecom services stocks are prime beneficiaries of disinflation/deflation and vice versa (bottom panel, Chart 8). BCA's bond market view remains that the 10-year yield will continue to rise on the back of rising inflation expectations, and this represents a bearish backdrop for the telecom services sector. Our CMI has melted and relative consumer outlays on telecom services have also taken a nosedive (top two panels, Chart 9), warning that revenue growth will be hard to come by for telecom carriers. In fact, while nearly all of the GICS1 sectors have come out of the top line growth lull of late-2015/early-2016, telecom services sales growth has relapsed. Worrisomely, our S&P telecom services revenue growth model remains deep in contractionary territory, waving a red flag (bottom panel, Chart 9). Still steeply deflating selling prices are a major headwind for the sector's top and bottom line growth prospects and coupled with a still expanding wage bill, suggest that a profit margin squeeze is looming (fourth panel Chart 10). Chart 8No Dial Tone Chart 9Models Say Shy Away Chart 10Looming Margin Squeeze The sell side analyst community does not share this dire earnings picture. Net earnings revisions have gone vertical likely on the back of the recent tax reform. However, increasing industry slack underscores that beyond any one time gains from a lower corporate tax rate, organic EPS growth will be anemic at best. In fact, telecom services weekly hours worked do an excellent job of forecasting the sector's net earnings revision ratio and the current message is grim for profits (bottom panel, Chart 10). Adding it up, a rising interest rate backdrop, the sinking CMI and near collapse in our sales growth model along with high chances of a profit margin squeeze, suggest that a fresh bear phase is likely in the S&P telecom services sector. Bottom Line: Downgrade the S&P telecom services sector to a below benchmark allocation. We are also adding it to our high-conviction underweight list. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: T, VZ, CTL. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Insight, "Stocks Take An Escalator Up, And An Elevator Down," dated February 7, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Insight, "Housekeeping In Turbulent Times," dated February 9, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Ibid. 4 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Will The Market Test Powell?" dated November 13, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth. Stay neutral small over large caps (downgrade alert).
Highlights The spike in volatility last week led to a sharp correction in equities. However, the bull market in equities is not over yet. The Fed's response to the selloff will be critical. Policymakers will closely monitor financial conditions. The most overvalued assets are at greatest risk during a selloff. Feature Financial markets did not give new Fed Chair Jay Powell a warm welcome last week. Volatility spiked, and risk assets fell sharply. Nonetheless, BCA's view is that strong economic growth and stout earnings growth will keep the bull market intact. The selloff is reminiscent of the 7% drop in the S&P 500 in May of 2006.1 Back in the spring of 2006, then Chairman Ben Bernanke had just taken the helm at the Federal Reserve. Global growth was strong, the U.S. dollar was selling off and global share prices were surging and overbought. From May through June 2006, markets sold off because of the then-prevailing narrative that Chairman Bernanke would be too dovish, allowing U.S. inflation to get out of hand. U.S. bond yields spiked, inflicting particular damage on EM assets. The February 2018 may not play out exactly like May 2006. That said, there are enough similarities to draw parallels. Global growth is robust and inflationary pressures are accumulating. Bond yields are rising, and the greenback is selling off. A new Fed Chairman just took over the reins, and there are growing odds that U.S. inflation will soon begin to rise, justifying more Fed rate hikes. The Fed's response to the tighter financial conditions will be crucial. The May 2006 selloff turned out to be just a correction in a bull market that lasted another 18 months. Still, investors today are also concerned about what to sell first as the end of the expansion draws closer. A Shake Up BCA strategists believe that the market turmoil since last week reflects a technical correction from overbought and over complacent levels, but the cyclical bull run is not yet over.2 Nonetheless, investors should note that the bull market is entering its late stages. The low inflation and low volatility era is ending as the U.S. economy begins to face late-cycle, supply-side constraints, especially in the labor market. Therefore, the equity advance will be associated with higher volatility than in the past few years. Chart 1 shows that the VIX soared by roughly four times more on February 5 than expected, based on the decline in equity prices. This suggests that the spike in volatility caused the stock market plunge, rather than the other way around. The relatively muted reaction in the past few days of other risk gauges, such as junk bonds, EM stocks, and gold prices, is consistent with this thesis. Chart 1Last Monday's VIX Spike Was Abnormally Large Importantly, the implosion of volatility funds is unlikely to reverberate across the global financial system in the same way as it did during the 2007-2009 financial crisis. The mortgage crisis a decade ago was so toxic that the losses were concentrated in the books of highly leveraged financial institutions. However, that does not appear to be the current case with volatility funds. The cyclical underpinnings for the bull market in equities is intact. The odds of a recession remain low (Chart 2). Corporate earnings continue to come in above expectations, aided by a wave of share buybacks linked to the U.S. Tax Cut and Jobs Act (Chart 3). Global economic growth remains upbeat as well. Chart 2Odds Of A Recession##BR##Remain Low Chart 3Buybacks, Surging Capex##BR##Raising The Bar For 2018 EPS Growth Chart 4U.S. Equities And Vol##BR##Climbed Through The 1990s This does not mean that everything will be smooth sailing. Last week's selloff marked an inflection point in the low-volatility world that has prevailed in the past few years. The VIX Humpty-Dumpty has been irrevocably broken. Volatility will stay elevated relative to what investors have come to anticipate. As the experience of the 1990s shows, stocks can still climb when volatility trends higher (Chart 4), but this is going to make for a more challenging investment environment. Bottom Line: Rising volatility does not mean the end of the bull market or the economic expansion. Bear markets outside of recessions are rare, and our view remains that the odds of a recession this year or next remain low. Moreover, the additional dose of fiscal stimulus passed by Congress late last week may extend the expansion into 2020. Stay overweight stocks versus bonds.3 The Policy Response The Fed's reaction to this new regime will be critical. The 7.2% drop in equities last week occurred on Jay Powell's first as Chairman of the Fed. Chart 5 shows that it is not unusual for the equity markets to be in turmoil in the early months of a new Fed Chair's tenure. BCA expects that Powell and his FOMC colleagues will adopt Janet Yellen's gradual approach to raising rates this year. Nonetheless, the January readings on average hourly earnings suggest that supply-side constraints are beginning to bite. The runway for low inflation and easy monetary policy may not be as long as some had hoped. Just like Yellen, Jay Powell will seek a consensus among his colleagues. The composition of the FOMC will probably shift in a more hawkish direction, but the evolution will be slow. In the meantime, the recommendations of career Fed staff will represent an important and often underappreciated source of continuity. Last week, several Fed speakers reinforced that the central bank will continue to monitor incoming economic and financial data, and react accordingly. The stock market rout has led to some tightening in financial conditions, but FCIs in the U.S. remain more expansionary than they were six months ago (Chart 6). As a result, U.S. economic growth is poised to accelerate even more in the first half of the year (Chart 7). This will push the unemployment rate further below NAIRU and ultimately force up wage and price inflation. Chart 5New Fed Chairs##BR##And The Equity Market Chart 6Decline In Equity Market##BR##Tightened Financial Conditions However, at 2.1% on February 8, the 10-year TIPS breakeven yield was still below the 2.4 to 2.5% range where markets need to worry about the Fed falling behind the curve (Chart 8). A shift above 2.4% would be consistent with the Fed's 2% target for the PCE measure of inflation. This would signal that the FOMC will have to boost the pace of rate hikes and aggressively slow economic growth. We expect the Fed to tighten four times in 2018. We will likely take some money off the table if core inflation rises, even if it is still below 2%, when the TIPS breakeven reaches 2.4%. Chart 7Lagged Effect Of Easier##BR##Monetary Conditions Will Boost Growth Chart 8Breaking Down##BR##The Rise In Yields A sustained move above 3% on the nominal 10-year Treasury yield will require a more durable increase in inflation. Ultimately, we think core inflation will move4 above 2%, forcing the Fed to lift interest rates into restrictive territory. However, this probably will be a story for 2019 rather than 2018. Stocks tend to peak about six months before the start of a recession (Table 1). If the next recession occurs in late 2019, as we forecast, the equity bull market could last a while longer. The additional fiscal impulse from the spending bill passed by Congress last week may extend the expansion into early 2020. A modest overweight on global risk assets is warranted for now, but investors should consider reducing their risk exposure later this year. Table 1Too Soon To Get Out Bottom Line: The Fed and the market are now in agreement on rate hikes in 2018. BCA's U.S. Bond Strategists' stance is that the 2/10 curve will flatten from here, as the upside in long maturity yields will be limited once the TIPS breakeven inflation rates reach our target fair value range of 2.4-2.5%. Nonetheless, at that point, the nominal 10-year yield5 is likely to be between 3.0 and 3.25%. Stay underweight duration for now. Where Do We Go From Here? Clients have asked our view on the appropriate order in which to reduce risk assets. One way to approach the question is to compare valuation across asset classes. Presumably, the most over-valued ones are at greatest risk, and thus profits should be taken here first. It is difficult to compare valuation across asset classes. Should one use fitted values from models or simple deviations from moving averages? Over what time span? We include multiple measures because there is no widely accepted approach. More than one time period was used in some cases to capture regime changes. Table 2 provides our best approximation for nine asset classes. The approaches range from sophisticated methods6 developed over many years (i.e. our equity valuation indicators), to regression analysis on the fundamentals (i.e. oil), to simple deviations from a time trend (i.e. real raw industrial commodity prices and gold). Table 2Valuation Levels For Major Asset Classes We averaged the valuation readings where there were multiple estimates for a single asset class. The results are shown in Chart 9. Chart 9Valuation Levels For Major Asset Classes By far, U.S. equities stand out as the most expensive at 1.8 standard deviations above fair value. Gold, raw industrials and EM equities are next at one standard deviation overvalued. EM sovereign bond spreads follow at 0.7, tracked closely by U.S. Treasuries (real yield levels) and investment-grade corporate (IG) bonds (expressed as a spread). High-yield (HY) is only about 0.3 sigma expensive, based on default-adjusted spreads over the Treasury curve. That said, both IG and HY are very expensive in absolute terms based on the fact that government bonds are pricey. Oil is sitting very close to fair value, despite the rapid price run up in the past couple of months. This makes oil exposure doubly attractive because the fundamentals point to higher prices when the underlying asset is not expensive. Historical analysis around equity market zeniths provides an alternative approach to the sequencing question. Table 3 presents the number of days that various asset classes peaked before or after the past major five tops in the S&P 500. A negative number indicates that the asset class peaked before U.S. equities, and a positive number means that it peaked after. Table 3Asset Class Leads & Lags Vs. Peak In S&P 500 Unfortunately, there is no consistent pattern observed for EM equities, raw industrials, U.S. cyclical stocks, tech stocks or small-cap versus large-cap relative returns. Sometimes they reached their zenith before the S&P 500, and sometimes after. The EM sovereign bond excess return index peaked about 130 days in advance of the 1998 and 2007 U.S. equity market tops, although we only have three episodes to analyze due to data limitations. Oil is a mixed bag. A peak in the price of gold led the equity market in four out of five episodes, but the lead time was long and variable. The U.S. corporate bond market offers the most consistent lead/lag relationship. Both investment- and speculative-grade excess returns relative to government bonds peaked in advance of U.S. stocks in four of the five episodes. High-yield excess returns provided the most lead time, peaking on average 154 days in advance. Excess returns to high-yield were a better signal than total returns. This leading relationship is one reason why we plan to trim exposure to corporate bonds within our bond portfolio before we scale back on equities. Base metal prices will be hit particularly hard if the 2019 U.S. recession spills over as expected to the EM economies. We may downgrade base metals from neutral to underweight around the time that we downgrade equities, but much depends on the evolution of China's economy in the coming months. Oil is a different story. OPEC 2.0 will likely cut back on supply in the face of an economic downturn, which will help keep prices elevated.7 Therefore, we may not trim energy exposure this year. In terms of equities, our recommended portfolio is still overweight cyclicals for now. Our themes of a synchronized global capex boom, rising bond yield, and firm oil price means we will stay overweight in the industrials, energy and financial sectors. Utilities and homebuilders are underweight. Tech is part of the cyclical sector, but poor valuation keeps us underweight. Our U.S. Equity Strategists have already started a gradual shift away from cyclicals toward defensives. This transition will continue in the coming months as we reduce risk. We will also shift small caps to neutral on earnings disappointments and elevated debt levels.8 Bottom Line: The economic expansion is not over, but investors are already wondering what to sell first as the next peak in equities nears. Market participants should look to trim credit exposure before scaling back on equities, and BCAs' U.S. Equity Strategy service is already scaling back on cyclicals and reduced small caps to neutral from overweight last month. At under $60/ barrel WTI, oil is 5% below our Commodity & Energy Strategy's target of $63/bbl. Moreover, global inventories will continue to draw on the back of OPEC supply restraint as shale production growth alone will not satisfy stronger global demand driven by stronger global economic growth. If prices hit the low $70 range, supply restraint and demand growth will ebb, capping incremental upside. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com Mark McClellan, Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst markm@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Equity Strategy Insight "Buy The Dip," published February 8, 2018. Available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research's Global Investment Strategy Special Report "The Return Of Vol," published February 6, 2018. Available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report "Watching Five Risks," published January 24, 2018. Available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Bond Strategy PAS "Warning Signals," published February 6, 2018. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Bond Strategy PAS "Warning Signals," published February 6, 2018. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Research's The Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report, published January 25, 2018. Available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report "OPEC 2.0 Vs. The Fed," published February 8, 2018. Available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report "Too Good To Be True?," published January 22, 2018. Available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
While the S&P 500 has been struggling for direction and volatility has gone haywire, we continue to believe that "buy the dip" is the proper strategy for this latest market drawdown. Empirical evidence suggests that this is the proper strategy for investors with a cyclical 9-12 month investment horizon. We analyzed SPX data back to the early 1960s and identified daily falls of 4% or more. There have been 16 such iterations, and we excluded the 1982 and 2015 incidents that rounded up to 4%, but were a hair below that level. For 1987 we used one iteration for the black Friday crash, but omitted occurrences very close to that date, and another on for late November 1987. Similarly, in 2008 we only used the first iteration in September of that year for our study as a number of sizable downdrafts clustered around Lehman's collapse. We decided to exclude numerous close by iterations as it would skew our results to the upside. This analysis clearly demonstrates that it pays to "buy the dip" (top panel), and on average the SPX rises roughly 14% following the steep daily pullback in the ensuing 12 months (bottom panel). Interestingly, within a few weeks of the mini-crash empirical evidence suggests that markets typically retest those beaten down levels and tend to hold above them, suggesting that investors have some time to reposition portfolios and take advantage of the recent pullback. Stay tuned.
Highlights The recent house price weakness in Tier 1 markets likely reflects past economic "information", and does not suggest that a more pronounced slowdown is forthcoming. In fact, while it is too soon to conclude that China's housing sector is about to enter a significant upturn, there are several signs of a potential pickup in activity that should be closely monitored. These signs suggest that, at a minimum, the risk of a material housing downturn has somewhat eased. This is consistent with an overweight stance towards Chinese investable stocks within an emerging market or global equity portfolio. The enormous rise in Chinese investable real estate stocks over the past year reflects a significant improvement in fundamentals and a re-rating from deeply depressed levels. Our Sector Alpha Portfolio suggests that cutting exposure is not yet warranted, but investors should tighten their stops given now lofty earnings expectations over the coming year. Feature We presented our framework for tracking the end of China's mini-cycle in an October 2017 Weekly Report,1 and noted at that time that a weakening housing market was a trend that needed to be monitored. We argued that a moderation in house price appreciation was all but inevitable given the magnitude of the boom over the prior 2 years, and was not concerning in isolation. But we also highlighted that home sales and prices were a key bellwether of the efficacy of policymakers' reflationary efforts over the course of the recent mini-cycle, and that an eventual stabilization of the pace of decline would be an important signal confirming the benign nature of China's economic slowdown. Chart 1A Sharp Decline In Tier 1 House Prices The rate of appreciation in Chinese house prices has moderated further since we wrote our October report (Chart 1), with prices in Tier 1 markets (Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen) having recently decelerated to 0%. In this week's report we provide a brief update on China's housing market, and whether recent house price weakness is consistent with our benign slowdown view. We conclude that the softness in house prices, even in Tier 1 markets, has occurred due to the ongoing economic slowdown and does not likely reflect new information about the condition of the Chinese economy. In fact, while it is too soon to conclude that China's housing sector is about to enter a significant upturn, there are several signs of a potential pickup in activity that should be closely monitored. A Stylized View Of China's Housing Cycle Chart 2 presents a stylized description of the sequencing of China's housing market cycles since 2010, at the onset of China's "new normal" period of decelerating economic growth. Chart 3 presents these dynamics directly and illustrates the lag structure that has prevailed over the period. Chart 2A Stylized View Of China's Housing Market Dynamics: 2010 - Present Chart 3Residential Floor Space Sold And House Price Diffusion Indexes Lead ##br##Other Housing Market Data The charts highlight how residential floor space sold has tended to lead other major housing market data in China over the past several years, closely followed by house price diffusion indexes and the year-over-year house price index for Tier 1 markets. These series are, in turn, followed by residential floor space started, the growth rate of house prices in Tier 2 & 3 markets, and finally by land purchased for overall real estate development. Charts 2 & 3 present two noteworthy observations: While Tier 1 house prices have tended to lead prices in Tier 2 and Tier 3 markets, they themselves tend to be preceded by other important housing market series. The extent of the recent decline in Tier 1 house prices seems to simply be the mirror image of the enormous boom that occurred in late-2015 / early-2016, when prices rose over 30% year-over-year. Given the significant slowdown in floor space sold that has occurred since mid-2016, and the enormous rise in prices that preceded it, it seems reasonable to conclude that the recent price weakness in Tier 1 markets likely reflects past economic "information". The more salient question for investors is what developments are likely to occur in China's housing market over the coming year, and what investment strategy conclusions emerge from the outlook. The Cyclical Outlook For Chinese Housing While it is too soon to conclude that China's housing sector is about to enter a significant upturn, there are several signs of a potential pickup in activity that should be closely monitored: Charts 2 & 3 highlight that residential floor space sold has had the best leading properties of the overall housing market cycle in China over the past several years, and there has been a modest pickup in this series since October (Chart 4). Admittedly, there have been two false starts in this series since mid-2016, so it is too early to tell from this data alone that China's housing market activity is about to pick up significantly. However, there has also been a notable improvement in our BCA China 70-City House Price Diffusion Index (Chart 5), which measures the share of cities with accelerating year-over-year house prices. We flagged the previous sharp decline in this measure in our October report, but the recent rebound has resulted in a complete round-trip from last summer's levels. Official diffusion indexes, based on the number of cities with positive month-over-month price gains, are also well above the boom/bust line and have not deteriorated to the same extent as our index has over the past year. Chart 4A Modest Pickup##br## In Housing Sales Volume Chart 5A Notable Pickup##br## In Our House Price Diffusion Index The recent pickup in house prices may be linked to the rolling back of purchase restrictions in some cities, but the correlation is far from perfect. For example, Shijiazhuang, Xiamen, Changsha, Xi'an, and Lanzhou have all been cited in various news reports as having adjusted their housing policies, but none of these markets have experienced a pickup in house price appreciation. We will be watching for more compelling signs over the coming months that local housing market deregulation is the root cause of the recent pickup in our diffusion index. The easing in "for sale" floor space inventory to sales over the past two years has reduced some of the housing overhang, which may cause a moderate boost to new housing construction. Chart 6 highlights that the ratio of residential floor space started to sold has fallen significantly over the past few years, as inventories have been drawn down. Since most of the economic impact from housing comes through the construction process, a pickup in floor space started could shift the growth outlook for China in a positive direction. On the negative side, while survey data suggests that Chinese consumers are upbeat and are looking to buy a home (Chart 7), other indicators suggest that this pickup in interest may be occurring due to unfounded optimism about future employment and/or income. First, we have highlighted in several reports over the past months that the Li Keqiang index is falling (driven significantly by monetary tightening, including rising mortgage rates), which suggests that China's business cycle is shifting down, not up. This clearly raises the risk that income and employment growth with downshift with it. Second, Chart 8 highlights that the employment components of the official manufacturing and services PMIs have stagnated again, after having picked up in 2016 and early-2017. Third, Chart 9 illustrates that while per capita disposable income growth for urban households did pick up during the same period as the employment PMIs, it may be in the process of peaking (especially given the weak Q4 print). Chart 6An Easing In Inventories May Boost##br## New Housing Construction Chart 7Chinese Consumers ##br##Are Upbeat... Chart 8...But Employment Prospects Aren't Great... Chart 9...And Neither Is Recent Income Growth Investment Strategy Implications The first investment strategy implication is that our analysis is consistent with a benign view of the ongoing economic slowdown in China, which supports an overweight stance towards Chinese investable stocks within an emerging market or global equity portfolio. While it is too soon to conclude that housing is about to enter a significant upturn, the risk of a material housing downturn has somewhat eased. Second, a potential pickup in China's housing sector raises the question of whether construction-related sectors are poised to significantly outperform China's investable benchmark over the coming year. We recently closed our long investable building materials / short investable benchmark trade as part of a stringent trade review process, based on the view that a significant upturn in the housing market was far from guaranteed. Our analysis in this report supports that decision, as signs of a significant pickup are tentative at best. However, we will be actively looking to re-open the trade at some point over the coming months were we to observe compelling evidence that a significant acceleration in housing construction is imminent. Third, signs of a potential inflection point in China's housing market would normally be positive for the investable real estate stocks, but the outlook for this sector is clouded by its massive outperformance over the past year. We last wrote about real estate stocks in a September Weekly Report,2 and argued that a positive re-rating from extremely discounted levels had further to run. Indeed, our composite valuation indicator highlights that real estate stocks have merely become fairly valued over the past year (Chart 10), despite a 95% US$ price return in 2017. While this underscores that there has been a major fundamental improvement for Chinese investable real estate companies, Chart 11 highlights that these stocks are now priced for another year of 20-30% EPS growth, which may be a tall order unless a very substantial pickup in Chinese housing market activity materializes. Chart 10Chinese Real Estate Stocks ##br##Are Not Overvalued... Chart 11...But They Are At Risk Of ##br##An Earnings Disappointment For now, the BCA China Investable Sector Alpha Portfolio that we introduced in our January 11 Special Report continues to support an overweight stance towards the investable real estate sector (Table 1),3 and we are reluctant to recommend that investors cut their exposure to these stocks. Still, tight stops may be warranted, especially if the recent pickup in residential floor space sold proves to be fleeting. Table 1Our Investable Sector Alpha Portfolio Still Favors Real Estate Stocks Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Tracking The End Of China's Mini-Cycle", dated October 12, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Chinese Real Estate: Which Way Will The Wind Blow?", dated September 28, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "China: No Longer A Low-Beta Market", dated January 11, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights The end of the low volatility regime could mark a leadership change in global equities away from EM to DM. The near-term risk to our negative stance on EM risk assets is a scenario where Beijing allows RMB appreciation to head off major protectionist threats from the U.S. This could delay the U.S. dollar rally and support EM risk assets. The EM and commodities equity rallies might be facing formidable technical resistances. These equity segments have to break out these technical resistances decisively to confirm the sustainability of the bull market. Feature Global stocks have corrected, and volatility measures have surged. The low volatility regime appears to have come to a decisive end. Even though in the short run volatility measures could well decline after their steep surge of the past week, the cyclical outlook points to higher volatility relative to last year. Financial markets are likely to be re-priced to adjust to the end of this low-volatility period. This entails more stress, and an additional selloff in risk assets. Periods of low volatility historically sow the seeds of their own reversal. Investors tend to embrace high-risk strategies amid low volatility, and take on more leverage. As a result, market excesses and froth arise, increasing the market's vulnerability in the event of a reversal. The latest period of low volatility lasted for more than a year, and no doubt facilitated the build-up of froth and excesses in global financial markets. Chart I-1 illustrates that the aggregate volatility measure of various financial markets was at its lows of the past 12 years before surging in recent days. Chart I-1Rising Volatility Coincides With A U.S. Dollar Rally What does rising volatility mean for emerging market (EM) relative performance vis a vis developed markets (DM)? It is primarily contingent on the U.S. dollar. If the U.S. dollar rebounds along with the rise in volatility, as it has done in the past (Chart I-1), EM equities will commence underperforming DM bourses. If the U.S. dollar fails to rebound and drifts lower, EM stocks are likely to outperform DM equities. With respect to exchange rates, we believe one of the major driving forces for currencies is the relative growth trajectory. The latter can be approximated by relative equity market performance in local currency terms. Chart I-2 shows that U.S. share prices - of both large and small caps - have been outperforming their global counterparts in local currency terms. Persisting periods of outperformance of U.S. stocks versus their global peers eventually, albeit sometimes with a considerable time lag, instigates a stronger trade-weighted U.S. dollar. U.S. large-cap share prices are making new highs versus their global peers in local currency terms. This entails that the selloff in the broad trade-weighted dollar is at a very late stage. The dollar rebound is a missing trigger for EM relative equity outperformance to reverse. A Risk To Our View: The U.S. Dollar One risk to our negative stance on EM risk assets and our recommendation of underweighting EM versus DM is the continuation of the U.S. dollar selloff. The greenback has been trading very poorly despite jitters in global equity markets. The recent surge in the RMB versus the U.S. dollar may be indicative that the Chinese authorities are tolerating RMB appreciation to defuse a threat of major protectionist measures from the U.S. (Chart I-3). If the RMB continues to appreciate versus the greenback, Asian and other EM currencies will stay well supported, and EM outperformance will persist. Chart I-2U.S. Relative Equity Outperformance ##br##Warrants A Stronger Dollar Chart I-3Will Beijing Tolerate A Stronger RMB? We suspect that Chinese policymakers are reluctantly allowing the RMB to appreciate. Indeed, Chinese policymakers have been both vocal and public about their understanding of Japan's experience with deleveraging, and specifically the mistake made by Japanese policymakers of allowing the yen to appreciate in the early 1990s. As most know, deflationary forces stemming from the combined effects of deleveraging and currency appreciation set off a formidable deflationary adjustment in Japan in the 1990s. Given Japan's experience, our conjecture is that Chinese policymakers would rather opt for a stable-to-mildly weaker currency. This has been one of the cornerstones of our bullish bias on the U.S. dollar versus emerging Asian currencies. If China allows the RMB to appreciate further versus the U.S. dollar, a potential U.S. dollar rally versus EM currencies will be delayed. In turn, this will likely allow EM equity, currency and credit markets to outperform their DM peers. That said, a strong currency will add to the ongoing policy tightening in China. The cumulative impact of this policy tightening combined with currency appreciation will weigh on China's growth later this year. As such, our fundamental thesis on China-slowdown is still valid in the medium term. However, political interference in the currency markets could delay EM risk assets' response to it. Bottom Line: The near-term risk to our negative stance on EM risk assets is a scenario where Beijing allows further RMB appreciation to head off potentially major protectionist threats from the U.S. May 2006 Redux? The current riot in global stocks resembles the May 2006 correction to a certain extent. Back in the spring of 2006, then Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke had just taken the helm at the Fed. Global growth was strong, the U.S. dollar was selling off, and global share prices were surging and overbought. Chart I-4May 2006 And Now: EM Stocks, ##br##U.S. Bond Prices And U.S. Dollar In May-June 2006, markets sold off because of the then-prevailing narrative that Chairman Bernanke would be too dovish and would allow U.S. inflation to get out of hand. U.S. bond yields spiked, inflicting particular damage on EM. It seems that February 2018 may play out like May 2006. It will not be exactly the same, but there are enough similarities to draw parallels: Global growth is robust, inflationary pressures are accumulating. DM bond yields are rising and the greenback is selling off. The new Fed Chairman, Jerome Powell, just took over the reins at the Fed, and there are growing odds that U.S. inflation will soon begin to rise, justifying more Fed rate hikes. Chart I-4 illustrates the similarities between financial market dynamics in 2005-2006 and now. If we take 2006 as a guide, we can infer that the selloff is not yet over. In a matter of only five weeks EM share prices plunged by 25% in U.S. dollar terms, and the S&P 500 dropped by 7%. From a big-picture perspective, the May 2006 selloff was a sharp correction in a bull market that lasted for another year or so. Importantly, the 25% plunge in EM share prices that took place in 2006 occurred despite EM corporate profit growth expanding at a double-digit rate in 2006-'07. All that said, the 2006 selloff marked an important regime shift in the global economic landscape - the rate of U.S. growth peaked in the second quarter 2006, and began to decelerate. We believe that the current equity market riot will likely mark a bottom in U.S. inflation and the beginning of a slowdown in China. The U.S. Bond Market Selloff Is Not Over... Yet The selloff in the U.S./DM bond markets has not yet run its course: The U.S. inflation model - constructed by our colleagues in the Foreign Exchange Strategy service and based on U.S. capacity utilization and broad money supply - is pointing to higher inflation in the months ahead (Chart I-5). U.S. bond yields will likely move higher as forthcoming inflation prints validate our expectations for higher U.S. inflation. Fiscal stimulus amid robust growth and a tight labor market in the U.S. as well as record-high optimism among consumers and businesses have created fertile ground for rising inflation. The weak dollar of the past 12 months will also manifest in rising inflationary pressures. The U.S. bond term premium is still extremely low. Yet, budding uncertainty over inflation and the gradual end of QE programs in DM, will likely cause the U.S. bond term premium to rise from current depressed levels. Finally, simple DM bond markets technicals are still pointing to higher yields ahead (Chart I-6). Chart I-5U.S. Core Inflation Set To Rise Chart I-6U.S. Bond Yields: The Path ##br##Of Least Resistance Is Up Overall, the path of least resistance for DM bond yields is up. This will make EM local currency bond yields less attractive versus DM and especially versus U.S. Treasurys. Yield differentials between EM and the U.S. are already at a 10-year low (Chart I-7). Low risk premiums on EM local bonds and rising global financial market volatility suggest that flows to EM fixed income markets will slow over the course of this year. That said, near-term risks still remain due to the massive inflows that previously went into EM funds, and might not have been deployed yet. China's Tightening And Pending Slowdown It is not unusual for an equity market riot to begin with inflation and high-interest-rate fears and then culminate with a growth scare - with a rebound in between. 2018 may shape up to fit this pattern. Global equity markets seem to be immersed with inflation and policy tightening in the U.S. - and potentially in China. At some point, share prices could well stage a rebound but then relapse again as materially slower Chinese growth spills over to global trade.1 We have discussed our view on China and its spillover effect on EM in past reports, and will not reiterate our views and analysis here. We will only bring to clients' attention that manufacturing production volume in Asia has already been weakening for a couple of months (Chart I-8). Chart I-7EM Local Currency Bonds Over ##br##U.S. Treasurys: Yield Differential Chart I-8Asia's Manufacturing ##br##Production Growth Is Slowing Leadership changes in the equity markets occur amid selloffs. Hence, it is reasonable to expect a leadership shift within global equity market sectors and countries as well as currency markets. One major equity leadership shift could be that EM begins underperforming DM. A combination of rising U.S. inflation and bond yields and a slowdown in China are negative for EM financial markets, especially relative to DM ones. Reading Markets' Tea Leaves It remains to be seen how much further this selloff in global equities will last and whether this is the beginning of a major downtrend in EM risk assets. It is impossible to have perfect foresight. To help investors in their portfolio decisions, we combine our fundamental analysis with tools that assist us in forecasting business cycles as well as various chart patterns that may be indicative of the market's potential trajectory. The following charts illustrate that the EM and commodities equity rally may be facing formidable technical resistance. These equity markets have to break out decisively through these technical resistance lines to confirm the sustainability of the bull market. Global energy stocks have corrected after reaching their long-term moving average (Chart I-9, top panel). The latter served as a floor in the 2008 crash. It was a key technical level in the 2014-'15 bear market that did not hold up and was followed by a collapse in crude prices. Similarly, global steel stocks are exhibiting the same pattern (Chart I-9, bottom panel). Relative performance of emerging Asian share prices versus the global equity benchmark is also at a similar critical juncture (Chart I-10, top panel). Chart I-9Global Energy And Steel Stocks: ##br##A Technical Resistance Chart I-10Select EM Equity Markets ##br##Are Facing A Critical Test Finally, Brazilian share prices in U.S. dollar terms have also reached a crucial technical threshold (Chart I-10, bottom panel). Bottom Line: Share prices of a few equity sectors and markets that are imperative to the EM equity outlook are at important technical junctures. Failure to break above these technical resistance lines will corroborate our negative stance on EM/China growth and related financial markets. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 We elaborated the relationship between China/EM and DM growth in November 29, 2017 Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, the link is available on page 12. Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Equities suffered a sizable setback over the past three trading sessions correcting from peak-to-trough 10% (top panel). While several reasons can be blamed for the recent drawdown, we continue to believe that sentiment went to extremes and it is now just correcting lower (please refer to our January 22nd Weekly Report for the five signposts we identified that were worth monitoring for a tactical pullback). Likely a capitulation was hit as all of the Nasdaq 100 and DOW 30 stocks were in the red and just two S&P 500 stocks were positive after Monday's plunge, trading volumes spiked, and the VIX futures curve (3rd month/front month) collapsed to a level even below the August 24th 2015 nadir. Encouragingly, the bond market reacted as one would expect, and investors sought the safety of the global risk free asset, 10-year Treasurys, pushing yields sharply lower (middle panel). Caution is still warranted in the near-term, and our strategy remains to book gains in our high-conviction list high-flyers once trailing stops get triggered. On Monday, our high-conviction underweight in the S&P utilities sector got stopped out for a gain of 18% (bottom panel), and we are thus taking profits and removing it from the high-conviction underweight list. From a risk management perspective, we are also compelled to lift the trailing stop on the high-conviction underweight S&P semi equipment index from 15% to 20% in order to protect profits. Nevertheless, from a cyclical 9-12 month perspective we remain constructive on the broad market given our view of the continuation of the business cycle expansion and our investment strategy is to "buy this dip". Stay tuned.
Special Report Dear Client, In light of recent market turbulence, we are publishing our weekly report earlier than usual. Caroline Miller, Garry Evans, and I will also be hosting a webcast Wednesday morning at 10am EST to discuss the investment outlook. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights Monday's stock market rout was largely driven by technical factors. Strong economic growth and positive earnings surprises should keep the equity bull market intact. Nevertheless, investors need to adjust to the fact that volatility is likely to pick up, just as it did in the last few years of the 1990s bull market. The market's expectations of where the funds rate will be over the next two years have almost converged with the Fed dots. In the near term, this will limit the ability of the 10-year Treasury yield to rise much above 3%. Looking further out, inflation is likely to move above the Fed's target early next year, setting the stage for a recession starting in late 2019. A modest overweight on global risk assets is warranted for now, but investors should consider reducing risk exposure later this year. Feature VIX Kicks Last week's Global Investment Strategy report, entitled "Take Out Some Insurance," argued that equities had become dangerously overbought and were highly vulnerable to a correction.1 We noted that the VIX had likely bottomed for the cycle and that going long volatility had now become an attractive hedge against stock market declines. As many of my colleagues have noted, betting on continued low volatility had become an increasingly crowded trade in recent years. Back in January, we observed that net short volatility positions had reached record-high levels (Chart 1). We warned that "traders have been able to reap huge gains over the past few years by betting volatility will decline. The problem is that if volatility starts to rise, those same traders could start to unload their positions, leading to even higher volatility."2 Precisely such a vicious cycle erupted on Monday, causing the S&P 500 to suffer its worst daily percentage loss since August 18, 2011. The question is where do we go from here? So far, the sell-off in stocks looks largely technical in nature. Chart 2 shows that the VIX soared by roughly four times more on Monday than one would have expected based solely on the decline in equity prices. This suggests that the spike in volatility caused the stock market plunge, rather than the other way around. The relatively muted reaction of other "risk gauges" such as junk bonds, EM stocks, and gold prices over the past few days is consistent with this thesis. Chart 1Volatility Is Back Chart 2Monday's VIX Spike Was Abnormally Large Cyclical Outlook Still Solid It is impossible to know if today's rebound will persist or if the correction still has further to run. What we do know is that the cyclical underpinnings for the bull market remain intact. Leading economic data remain buoyant (Chart 3). Corporate earnings continue to come in above expectations (Chart 4). Chart 3Global Economic Backdrop Remains Buoyant Chart 4Optimism Over 2018 Earnings Growth None of our recession-timing indicators are flashing red (Chart 5). The Conference Board's LEI is rising at a healthy 5.5% y/y pace. Historically, a decisive break below zero in the year-over-year change in the LEI has been a reliable recession indicator. Likewise, while the U.S. 2/10-year Treasury curve has flattened, it has not inverted yet. Moreover, even once the yield curve inverts, the lags can be quite long before the recession begins. For example, in the last cycle, the yield curve inverted in early 2006, but the recession did not begin until December 2007. This does not mean that everything will be smooth sailing from here. Monday's sell-off marked an inflection point in the low-volatility world that has prevailed over the past few years. The VIX Humpty-Dumpty has been irrevocably broken. Going forward, volatility will remain elevated relative to what investors have come to expect. As the experience of the 1990s shows, stocks can still go up when volatility is trending higher (Chart 6), but this is going to make for a much more challenging investment environment. Chart 5No Signs Of An Imminent End To This Business Cycle Chart 6Volatility Can Increase As Stock Prices Rise The Powell Put? How the Fed and other central banks react to this new world will be critical. It is perhaps not a complete coincidence that Monday's crash occurred on the first day that Jay Powell took over the helm of the Fed. Investors are increasingly worried that the Fed will turn from friend to foe. The faster-than-expected increase in average hourly earnings in January put those fears in stark relief. Accelerating wage growth suggests supply-side constraints are beginning to bite. This, in turn, means that the runway for low inflation and easy monetary policy may not be as long as some had hoped. As BCA editors discussed in our 2018 Outlook, "Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," central banks are in the process of winding down the extraordinary stimulus that investors have gotten used to.3 Whether this undermines the case for holding stocks and other risk assets depends on how quickly the adjustment occurs. On the plus side, we continue to think the adjustment will be fairly gradual, at least for the time being. Core CPI inflation outside of shelter is still running at 0.7% (Chart 7). This gives the Fed plenty of wiggle room. Just like Janet Yellen, Jay Powell will seek to build a consensus among his colleagues. Granted, the composition of the FOMC is likely to shift in a somewhat more hawkish direction. However, the evolution will be slow. In the meantime, the recommendations of career Fed staff will represent an important, and often underappreciated, source of continuity. As in the past, the Fed will continue to monitor incoming economic and financial data and react accordingly. The stock market rout has led to some tightening in financial conditions, but FCIs in the U.S. and most other countries remain more expansionary than they were six months ago (Chart 8). Chart 7Core Inflation Outside Housing Is Still Low Chart 8Financial Conditions Have Tightened Recently, But Are Still Easier Than They Were Last Year Just as importantly, the implosion of volatility funds is unlikely to reverberate across the financial system in the same way as it did during the financial crisis. What made the mortgage crisis so toxic was that the losses were concentrated in the books of highly leveraged financial institutions. In the case of volatility funds, that does not appear to be the case. Investment Implications Global bond yields remain quite low by historic standards and this should continue to support stocks. Indeed, even after the recent bond sell-off, average global bond yields are still close to half of what they were in 2011 - a time when global excess capacity was much greater than it is today (Chart 9). In keeping with our structurally bearish view on bonds, which we first articulated on July 5, 2016 in a note entitled "The End of 35-Year Bond Bull Market," we expect global bond yields to grind higher.4 However, in rate-of-change terms, the swift repricing of yields over the past few months has likely run its course. Chart 10 shows that market expectations of where the funds rate will be at the end of 2018 and 2019 have almost converged with the Fed dots. This convergence helped our short December-2018 fed funds futures trade, which we closed at our stop for a gain of 70 bps last Friday. A sustained move above 3% on the 10-year Treasury yield will require a more durable increase in inflation. Ultimately, we do expect core inflation to move above 2%, forcing the Fed to lift interest rates into restrictive territory. However, this is likely to be a story for 2019 rather than 2018. Stocks tend to peak about six months before the start of recessions (Table 1). If the next recession occurs in late 2019, as we expect, the equity bull market could last a while longer. A modest overweight on global risk assets is warranted for now, but investors should consider reducing risk exposure later this year. Chart 9Yields Are Still Low By Historic Standards Chart 10Market Pricing Has Almost Caught Up To The Fed's Dots Table 1Too Soon To Get Out Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Take Out Some Insurance," dated February 2, 2018. 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Will Bitcoin Be DeFANGed?" dated January 12, 2018. 3 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst, "2018 Outlook - Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," dated November 20, 2017. 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "End Of The 35-Year Bond Bull Market," dated July 5, 2016. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Special Report Dear Client, In light of recent market turbulence, we are publishing our weekly report earlier than usual. Caroline Miller, Garry Evans, and I will also be hosting a webcast Wednesday morning at 10am EST to discuss the investment outlook. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights Monday's stock market rout was largely driven by technical factors. Strong economic growth and positive earnings surprises should keep the equity bull market intact. Nevertheless, investors need to adjust to the fact that volatility is likely to pick up, just as it did in the last few years of the 1990s bull market. The market's expectations of where the funds rate will be over the next two years have almost converged with the Fed dots. In the near term, this will limit the ability of the 10-year Treasury yield to rise much above 3%. Looking further out, inflation is likely to move above the Fed's target early next year, setting the stage for a recession starting in late 2019. A modest overweight on global risk assets is warranted for now, but investors should consider reducing risk exposure later this year. Feature VIX Kicks Last week's Global Investment Strategy report, entitled "Take Out Some Insurance," argued that equities had become dangerously overbought and were highly vulnerable to a correction.1 We noted that the VIX had likely bottomed for the cycle and that going long volatility had now become an attractive hedge against stock market declines. As many of my colleagues have noted, betting on continued low volatility had become an increasingly crowded trade in recent years. Back in January, we observed that net short volatility positions had reached record-high levels (Chart 1). We warned that "traders have been able to reap huge gains over the past few years by betting volatility will decline. The problem is that if volatility starts to rise, those same traders could start to unload their positions, leading to even higher volatility."2 Precisely such a vicious cycle erupted on Monday, causing the S&P 500 to suffer its worst daily percentage loss since August 18, 2011. The question is where do we go from here? So far, the sell-off in stocks looks largely technical in nature. Chart 2 shows that the VIX soared by roughly four times more on Monday than one would have expected based solely on the decline in equity prices. This suggests that the spike in volatility caused the stock market plunge, rather than the other way around. The relatively muted reaction of other "risk gauges" such as junk bonds, EM stocks, and gold prices over the past few days is consistent with this thesis. Chart 1Volatility Is Back Chart 2Monday's VIX Spike Was Abnormally Large Cyclical Outlook Still Solid It is impossible to know if today's rebound will persist or if the correction still has further to run. What we do know is that the cyclical underpinnings for the bull market remain intact. Leading economic data remain buoyant (Chart 3). Corporate earnings continue to come in above expectations (Chart 4). Chart 3Global Economic Backdrop Remains Buoyant Chart 4Optimism Over 2018 Earnings Growth None of our recession-timing indicators are flashing red (Chart 5). The Conference Board's LEI is rising at a healthy 5.5% y/y pace. Historically, a decisive break below zero in the year-over-year change in the LEI has been a reliable recession indicator. Likewise, while the U.S. 2/10-year Treasury curve has flattened, it has not inverted yet. Moreover, even once the yield curve inverts, the lags can be quite long before the recession begins. For example, in the last cycle, the yield curve inverted in early 2006, but the recession did not begin until December 2007. This does not mean that everything will be smooth sailing from here. Monday's sell-off marked an inflection point in the low-volatility world that has prevailed over the past few years. The VIX Humpty-Dumpty has been irrevocably broken. Going forward, volatility will remain elevated relative to what investors have come to expect. As the experience of the 1990s shows, stocks can still go up when volatility is trending higher (Chart 6), but this is going to make for a much more challenging investment environment. Chart 5No Signs Of An Imminent End To This Business Cycle Chart 6Volatility Can Increase As Stock Prices Rise The Powell Put? How the Fed and other central banks react to this new world will be critical. It is perhaps not a complete coincidence that Monday's crash occurred on the first day that Jay Powell took over the helm of the Fed. Investors are increasingly worried that the Fed will turn from friend to foe. The faster-than-expected increase in average hourly earnings in January put those fears in stark relief. Accelerating wage growth suggests supply-side constraints are beginning to bite. This, in turn, means that the runway for low inflation and easy monetary policy may not be as long as some had hoped. As BCA editors discussed in our 2018 Outlook, "Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," central banks are in the process of winding down the extraordinary stimulus that investors have gotten used to.3 Whether this undermines the case for holding stocks and other risk assets depends on how quickly the adjustment occurs. On the plus side, we continue to think the adjustment will be fairly gradual, at least for the time being. Core CPI inflation outside of shelter is still running at 0.7% (Chart 7). This gives the Fed plenty of wiggle room. Just like Janet Yellen, Jay Powell will seek to build a consensus among his colleagues. Granted, the composition of the FOMC is likely to shift in a somewhat more hawkish direction. However, the evolution will be slow. In the meantime, the recommendations of career Fed staff will represent an important, and often underappreciated, source of continuity. As in the past, the Fed will continue to monitor incoming economic and financial data and react accordingly. The stock market rout has led to some tightening in financial conditions, but FCIs in the U.S. and most other countries remain more expansionary than they were six months ago (Chart 8). Chart 7Core Inflation Outside Housing Is Still Low Chart 8Financial Conditions Have Tightened Recently, But Are Still Easier Than They Were Last Year Just as importantly, the implosion of volatility funds is unlikely to reverberate across the financial system in the same way as it did during the financial crisis. What made the mortgage crisis so toxic was that the losses were concentrated in the books of highly leveraged financial institutions. In the case of volatility funds, that does not appear to be the case. Investment Implications Global bond yields remain quite low by historic standards and this should continue to support stocks. Indeed, even after the recent bond sell-off, average global bond yields are still close to half of what they were in 2011 - a time when global excess capacity was much greater than it is today (Chart 9). In keeping with our structurally bearish view on bonds, which we first articulated on July 5, 2016 in a note entitled "The End of 35-Year Bond Bull Market," we expect global bond yields to grind higher.4 However, in rate-of-change terms, the swift repricing of yields over the past few months has likely run its course. Chart 10 shows that market expectations of where the funds rate will be at the end of 2018 and 2019 have almost converged with the Fed dots. This convergence helped our short December-2018 fed funds futures trade, which we closed at our stop for a gain of 70 bps last Friday. A sustained move above 3% on the 10-year Treasury yield will require a more durable increase in inflation. Ultimately, we do expect core inflation to move above 2%, forcing the Fed to lift interest rates into restrictive territory. However, this is likely to be a story for 2019 rather than 2018. Stocks tend to peak about six months before the start of recessions (Table 1). If the next recession occurs in late 2019, as we expect, the equity bull market could last a while longer. A modest overweight on global risk assets is warranted for now, but investors should consider reducing risk exposure later this year. Chart 9Yields Are Still Low By Historic Standards Chart 10Market Pricing Has Almost Caught Up To The Fed's Dots Table 1Too Soon To Get Out Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Take Out Some Insurance," dated February 2, 2018. 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Will Bitcoin Be DeFANGed?" dated January 12, 2018. 3 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst, "2018 Outlook - Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," dated November 20, 2017. 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "End Of The 35-Year Bond Bull Market," dated July 5, 2016. Strategy & Market Trends* Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Trades Closed In 2015-2018