Financials
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Upgrade capital markets stocks to overweight and put them on the high-conviction list. Capital formation is poised to accelerate in the second half of the year. Our Indicators suggest that demand for media services will continue to improve. Stay overweight both the movies and entertainment and cable and satellite indexes. Recent Changes S&P Investment Banking & Brokerage - Upgrade to overweight and add to the high-conviction overweight list. S&P Consumer Finance - Remove from the high-conviction overweight list. Table 1Sector Performance Returns (%)
Falling Correlations
Falling Correlations
Feature The S&P 500 continues to churn near its highs. Following a robust earnings season, the onus is now on the economy to provide confidence that the corporate profit recovery will prove durable, thereby justifying thinning equity risk premia. While slumping commodity prices suggest that global end-demand has downshifted a notch, the former boost real purchasing power and provide a reflationary support for stocks, particularly since resource-dependent sectors do not have a market leadership role. In fact, financial conditions remain sufficiently accommodative to expect a growth reacceleration in the back half of the year. It is notable that the recent selloff in the Treasury market has been driven by the real component, while inflation expectations have moved sideways. As a result, there is little pressure on the Fed to normalize at a faster pace than currently discounted in the forward curve. Thus, we expect the window for additional equity price appreciation to remain open this summer, unless growth reaccelerates sufficiently to stir inflation fears. Nevertheless, selectivity will become even more critical. Cross asset correlations have collapsed. Diminishing global macro tail risks have reduced the dominance of the beta-oriented "risk on/risk off" trade as a source of return. Empirical evidence suggests that asset correlations and the broad equity market are inversely correlated. This message is corroborated by falling correlations between regional stock market returns. Receding equity index correlations have been associated with positive S&P 500 returns (middle panel, Chart 1). This inverse correlation is also mirrored in the CBOE's implied correlation index, which tracks the correlation of the S&P 500 stocks with one another: tumbling correlations imply solid overall equity returns (top panel, Chart 1). These relationships are intuitive. Diminished macro tail risks bring earnings fundamentals to the forefront as the key driver of returns, and reward differentiation and discrimination in sector/region/asset class selection. While an eerie calm has dominated markets of late, as our Asset Class Volatility Indicator has collapsed to a multi-decade low (bottom panel, Chart 1), a more bullish explanation is that all-time highs in equities are synonymous with all-time lows in the VIX. This can be viewed as a contrary warning sign, but history shows that the VIX can stay depressed for a prolonged period. Our Equity Market Internal Dynamics Indicator (EMIDI), first introduced in late-March, has tentatively troughed, suggesting that sub-surface dynamics are becoming more supportive of the broad market (Chart 2). The EMIDI, which comprises relative bank, relative transport, small/large and industrials/utilities share prices, has been coincident to the leading market indicator, especially since the GFC. Chart 1Tumbling Correlations = Rising Stock Returns
Tumbling Correlations = Rising Stock Returns
Tumbling Correlations = Rising Stock Returns
Chart 2Sub-Surface Dynamics Have Turned The Corner
Sub-Surface Dynamics Have Turned The Corner
Sub-Surface Dynamics Have Turned The Corner
In that light, this week we are further augmenting our cyclical portfolio exposure by lifting another interest rate-sensitive group to overweight and are also updating the early cyclical media index and its major components. Capital Markets Stocks Have Rally Potential Two weeks ago, we recommended using this year's financial sector underperformance to boost allocations to overweight. This week we are further augmenting our exposure by upgrading the S&P investment banks & brokerage index to above benchmark. While the equity bull market is in the later innings, our view is that the overshoot will be extended for a while longer as a consequence of the overall sales and profit recovery and low probability that monetary conditions will tighten meaningfully in the near run. If this plays out, there is an opportunity for capital markets stocks to recover from their recent consolidation. This sub-index thrives when investor risk appetites are healthy and the business sector is moving from retrenchment to expansion mode, and vice versa. The outlook for increased capital formation has improved considerably. The corporate sector financing gap is beginning to widen anew (Chart 3), reflecting the surge in business and consumer confidence since the pro-business U.S. Administration took power. The widening financing gap is particularly notable because it is occurring alongside improving profit growth. In other words, the wider financing gap reflects accelerating capex demand, not weak corporate cash flows. This is confirmed by BCA's Capital Spending Indicator, which signals an increase in business investment ahead. Consequently, corporate sector demand for external capital should accelerate. The latter is the lifeblood of capital markets profitability. The nascent recovery in total bank credit growth after a period of malaise reinforces that working capital requirements are on the upswing (Chart 3).1 As businesses shift from maintenance capital spending to a more expansionist mindset, and companies reach further for growth to justify high stock valuations, capital markets activity could accelerate in the second half of the year. After all, investor confidence is high. Corporate bond spreads have tightened and corporate bond issuance is soaring. The Equity Risk Premium is steadily narrowing (shown inverted, second panel, Chart 4), reducing the cost of equity capital. New stock issuance is following on the heels of corporate bond issuance. Stocks are outperforming bonds by a comfortable margin and total mutual fund assets have grown sharply (Chart 3). The upshot is that access to corporate sector capital should stay healthy. As flows into equities advance, it will fuel a reacceleration in M&A activity (Chart 5). Chart 3Capital Markets Activity Is...
Capital Markets Activity Is...
Capital Markets Activity Is...
Chart 4...Firing On All Cylinders
...Firing On All Cylinders
...Firing On All Cylinders
Chart 5ROE On The Upswing
ROE On The Upswing
ROE On The Upswing
Capital markets return on equity (ROE) is highly levered to business and investor risk appetite. Fees earned on M&A activity heavily influence overall profitability. As such, it is normal for ROE to expand when M&A activity picks up, and shrink when financial conditions tighten and takeovers dry up. Currently, M&A transactions represent an historically elevated share of GDP, but that is not a barrier to an increased rate of takeover activity. Companies are no longer using their balance sheets to repurchase their own shares en masse. Instead, there is an incentive to pursue business combinations as the global economy reaccelerates, underscoring that capital allocation should shift in favor of capital markets firms. Indeed, Chart 5 shows that ROE also follows the trend in our global leading economic indicator, and the current message is bullish. Even capital markets companies themselves confirm that their pipelines are full. Hiring activity remains robust. Pro-cyclical firm headcount rises quickly alongside revenue opportunities, and is just as quick to shrink when the outlook darkens. Ergo, we interpret headcount growth as a net positive. While trading activity is always a wildcard, and could be a source of weakness if bond market, and generalized asset class, volatility stays muted, the upbeat outlook for fee generation from increased capital formation provides us with confidence to use share price weakness as an opportunity to build a bigger position. Bottom Line: Lift the S&P investment banking & brokerage index to overweight, adding to our recent decision to upgrade the overall financials sector to above-benchmark. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are BLBG: S5INBK - GS, MS, SCHW, RJF, ETFC. Media Stocks: Temporary Pressure Media stocks have come under pressure recently, giving back all of this year's relative gains. Investor worries have centered around two thorny issues: cord-cutting and ad spending. Cord-cutting is not new, but weak overall Q1 TV subscriber numbers have refocused investors' attention on the secular challenges ahead. In addition, a number of companies noted softening ad spending on Q1 conference calls. According to media executives, this slowdown is not isolated to the automotive segment. Is it time to pull the plug or is a worst case scenario already priced into the group? We side with the latter. In aggregate, demand for media services is brisk. Consumer outlays on media have soared to a two decade high, hitting a double digit annual growth rate. S&P media sales are tightly correlated with media spending (second panel, Chart 6). Despite coming off the boil recently after hitting unusually high growth rates, media pricing power also remains in expansionary territory. Importantly, buoyant demand is boosting industry productivity gains. The third panel of Chart 6 shows that our media productivity proxy has reaccelerated. Meanwhile, an improving economic backdrop also bodes well for media earnings prospects. The ISM services new orders sub component has been an excellent leading indicator of relative profit growth expectations and the current message is positive (middle panel, Chart 7). If the overall economy bounces smartly from the weak Q1 print, as we expect, then an earnings-led recovery should sustain the valuation re-rating phase (bottom panel, Chart 7). Chart 6Buoyant Media Demand
Buoyant Media Demand
Buoyant Media Demand
Chart 7Valuation Re-Rating Looms
Valuation Re-Rating Looms
Valuation Re-Rating Looms
Our Ad Spending Indictor (ASI) incorporates all of these key media profit drivers, including consumption and overall corporate profits. The ASI has recently hooked up, signaling that earnings estimates should continue to rise (bottom panel, Chart 8). Nevertheless, sub-media group returns have been bifurcated, with the S&P movies and entertainment index exerting downward pressure on the overall sector of late. Relative performance has mostly treaded water since our upgrade last summer, but hit a soft patch after recent quarterly results. Before rushing to make a bearish judgment, it is notable that the relative forward P/E remains close to an undervalued extreme, signaling that it will be increasingly difficult to disappoint. Historically cheap valuations exist despite depressed expectations, which should serve to artificially inflate valuations: both top and bottom line are expected to lag the broad market, representing a very low hurdle (Chart 9). Chart 8Rosier EPS Prospects Lie Ahead
Rosier EPS Prospects Lie Ahead
Rosier EPS Prospects Lie Ahead
Chart 9Unloved And Undervalued
Unloved And Undervalued
Unloved And Undervalued
Beyond the positive consumer spending backdrop (Chart 10), we are inclined to stick with overweight positions in this sub-component for four major reasons. First, merger and acquisition activity should reduce capacity, and by extension, support pricing power, especially if the AT&T/Time Warner deal clears the regulatory hurdle. There is scope for additional M&A that could further reduce shares outstanding (Chart 11). Chart 10Improving Demand...
Improving Demand...
Improving Demand...
Chart 11...And M&A Activity Are An EPS Tonic
...And M&A Activity Are An EPS Tonic
...And M&A Activity Are An EPS Tonic
Second, content providers are adapting to the competitive threat. New online-only offerings and slimmer/nimbler packages should stem the drag from the likes of Netflix and other streaming services. Consumer spending on electronics continues to surge, suggesting that content providers have ample opportunity to fill increasing demand. Third, there is no substitute for live TV. News and live sports are two sticky offerings that will continue to be cash cows for the industry and drive select subscriber growth. Fourth, media giants have stepped up focus on other segments with higher growth potential, such as studios and franchises highlighting increasingly diversified revenue streams. Moreover, CEOs have been aligning cost structures to the new realities of cord-cutting, exercising strict cost control. Companies have also been careful with capex allocation decisions. All of this suggests that any shakeout in this media subgroup is a good entry point for building new positions with a compelling valuation starting point. Unlike the S&P movies and entertainment index, the S&P cable and satellite group has been relentlessly grinding higher, underpinning the broad media index. The multiyear share price advance has been cash flow driven. As a consequence, cable stocks still trade at a 25% discount to the broad market on a price/cash flow basis and the relative multiple is hovering near the historical mean (third panel, Chart 12). Cable and satellite sales growth has surged to healthy low double-digit growth rates after a one year lull. Encouragingly, soaring pricing power signals that recent revenue momentum is sustainable (second panel, Chart 12). As mentioned above, consumer outlays on cable services have had a V-shaped recovery, underscoring that the latest upleg in selling prices is demand driven (bottom panel, Chart 12). It is remarkable that the industry has consistently raised selling prices at a faster pace than overall inflation for decades (Chart 13). This impressive track record reflects cable operators' ability to continually evolve offerings and provide attractive content, even in the face of cord-cutting. Chart 12Cash Flow Driven Outperformance
Cash Flow Driven Outperformance
Cash Flow Driven Outperformance
Chart 13The Cable Signal Is As Strong As Ever
The Cable Signal Is As Strong As Ever
The Cable Signal Is As Strong As Ever
Meanwhile, content inflation rates have remained within the range of the past few years, underscoring that threats to robust profit margins are limited (bottom panel, Chart 13). More recently, news that Comcast and Charter will come together and cooperate on a wireless offering adds another layer of defense in effectively combating cord-cutting. How? By increasing the bundle offering beyond cable and internet services, cable providers are positioned to attract new clients by offering a one stop shop triple-play solution. A move into wireless service offerings would also assist in retaining existing customers. In sum, most of our indicators suggest that the demand outlook for media services continues to improve. Our Ad Spending Indicator is climbing, underscoring that fears of a deep and widespread slump are overblown. Bottom Line: The media index remains an overweight and we continue to recommend an above benchmark exposure both in the S&P movies and entertainment and S&P cable and satellite sub-groups. The ticker symbols for the stocks in these two indexes are BLBG: S5MOVI - DIS, TWX, FOXA, FOX, VIAB and BLBG: S5CBST - CMCSA, CHTR, DISH, respectively. 1 Please see BCA U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Payback Period In Corporate Bonds," dated April 11, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps and stay neutral growth over value.
The financial sector is poised to make a run to new relative performance highs in the coming months. The combination of slumping credit creation, falling inflation expectations, a narrowing yield curve and sluggish economic growth have undermined the sector in 2017, but these drags should steadily recede as the year progresses. Financial conditions have continued to ease, aided by tightening credit spreads, decline in oil prices, U.S. dollar softness and rise in equity prices. Easier monetary conditions should ensure that the recovery in overall corporate sector profits stays on track. In turn, that will sustain both consumer and corporate credit quality at high levels, and pave the way for a more expansionary mindset. Credit demand already appears to be turning the corner, as evidenced by the budding upturn in total bank credit growth. Thus, financial sector profits will benefit from this year's easing in financial conditions, sustaining the positive correlation between relative performance and the Bloomberg Financial Conditions Index. We reiterate our recent upgrade to overweight.
Easing Financial Conditions = Buy Financial Stocks
Easing Financial Conditions = Buy Financial Stocks
Highlights The global credit impulse is 4 months into a mini-downswing, and it is too soon to position for the next mini-upswing. The euro area economy will remain one of the better performers in a global growth pause. Underweight German bunds in a global bond portfolio. Stay long the euro, especially euro/yuan. Go long euro area Financials versus U.S. Financials, currency unhedged, as a first foray into a beaten-up sector. Feature First the good news: the ECB's latest bank lending data indicate that the euro area 6-month bank credit impulse is stabilizing after a modest but clear decline in recent months (Chart I-2). Now the bad news: the global bank credit impulse continues to weaken. The upshot is that the euro area economy - even with 1.5% growth - will remain one of the better performers in what is now a very clear global growth pause. Chart of the WeekThe Global Bond Yield Has Shown ##br##A Regular Wave Like Pattern
The Global Bond Yield Has Shown A Regular Wave Like Pattern
The Global Bond Yield Has Shown A Regular Wave Like Pattern
Chart I-2The 6-Month Credit Impulse Has Stabilized In The ##br##Euro Area... But Not In The U.S. Or China
The 6-Month Credit Impulse Has Stabilized In The Euro Area... But Not In The U.S. Or China
The 6-Month Credit Impulse Has Stabilized In The Euro Area... But Not In The U.S. Or China
How To Play The Euro Area's Economic Outperformance In a global growth pause, the best way to play euro area economic outperformance is through relative positions in the bond markets and through currencies. Specifically, underweight German bunds in a global bond portfolio but stay long the euro, especially euro/yuan. The implication for euro area equities is more ambiguous. The Eurostoxx50 has a very low exposure to Technology, which tends to perform defensively in a growth pause. Conversely, the Eurostoxx50 has a high exposure to Financials, whose relative performance reduces to a play on the bond yield (Chart I-3). Given that the global credit impulse is still weakening, it is premature to expect a sustained absolute rally in Financials anywhere. Therefore, the strong knee-jerk absolute rally in European banks after the French election first round is unlikely to last. That said, with the euro area economy likely to outperform in a global growth pause, and euro area Financials still near a 50-year relative low versus U.S. Financials, euro area bank equities can now outperform banks in other markets (Chart I-4). Chart I-3Global Bond Yield = ##br##Financials Vs. Market
Global Bond Yield = Financials Vs. Market
Global Bond Yield = Financials Vs. Market
Chart I-4T-Bond/German Bond Spread Compression =##br## Euro Area Financials Outperform U.S. Financials
T-Bond/German Bond Spread Compression = Euro Area Financials Outperform U.S. Financials
T-Bond/German Bond Spread Compression = Euro Area Financials Outperform U.S. Financials
As a first foray into a beaten-up sector, go long euro area Financials versus U.S. Financials, currency unhedged. (Caveat: all of this assumes that Emanuel Macron beats Marine Le Pen to the French Presidency on Sunday, as we expect.) Don't Rely On Year On Year Comparisons Nature provides many of our units of time. The earth's orbit around the sun gives us a year; the moon's orbit around the earth gives us a month; the earth's rotation on its axis gives us a day. But there is absolutely no reason why economic and financial cycles should follow nature's cycles. Yet most analysts persist at looking for patterns and cycles in economic and financial data using yearly, monthly, or daily rates of change. Unfortunately, by focusing on years, months and days, they risk completely missing some of the strongest patterns and cycles in the economy and markets. Think about a clock pendulum. If you look at it once a second, it will always seem to be in the same position, motionless. You will miss the cycle. Likewise, if an economy regularly accelerates for 6 months and then symmetrically decelerates for 6 months, the yearly rate of change will be a constant, giving the false appearance that nothing is happening. It will miss the cycle. It turns out that the global economy does indeed regularly accelerate and decelerate - and that each half-cycle averages about 8 months. The strongest evidence of this very clear oscillation comes from the remarkably regular wave like pattern in the global bond yield, illustrated in the Chart of the Week and Chart I-5 and Chart I-6. Chart I-5The Global Bond Yield Has Shown A ##br##Regular Wave Like Pattern...
The Global Bond Yield Has Shown A Regular Wave Like Pattern...
The Global Bond Yield Has Shown A Regular Wave Like Pattern...
Chart I-6...Which Is Easier To See ##br##When Detrended
...Which Is Easier To See When Detrended
...Which Is Easier To See When Detrended
Furthermore, the acceleration and deceleration of bank credit flows - as measured in the global credit impulse - also exhibits a remarkably regular wave like pattern, with each half-cycle lasting about 8 months. But crucially, a half-cycle length of less than a year means that a year on year analysis would miss this very clear oscillation. Hence, our analysis always uses the 6-month credit impulse (Chart I-7). Chart I-7The Global Credit Impulse Has Also Shown A Regular Wave Like Pattern
The Global Credit Impulse Has Also Shown A Regular Wave Like Pattern
The Global Credit Impulse Has Also Shown A Regular Wave Like Pattern
Mini Half-Cycles Average Eight Months It is not a coincidence that the bond yield and bank credit impulse exhibit near identical half-cycle lengths. The bond yield and credit impulse cycles are inextricably embraced in a perpetual feedback loop. A higher bond yield will initiate a mini down cycle. All else being equal, the higher cost of credit will weigh on credit flows. This will slow economic growth, which will then show up in GDP (and other hard) data. The bond yield will respond by readjusting down. In turn, a lower bond yield will then initiate a mini up cycle. And so on... But each stage in the sequence comes with a delay. For a change in the cost of credit to register with households and firms and fully impact credit flows, it clearly takes time. The credit flows do not generate instantaneous economic activity either. Fully spending the credit flows also takes time. Once you accept these assumptions of internal regulating feedback combined with delays in economic response, the economy has to be a naturally-oscillating system whose half-cycle length depends on the delays in economic response. And the important point is that these delays have little connection with nature's cycles. For those who are mathematically inclined, Box I-1 shows the differential equations which define the economic mini-cycle and its half-cycle length. Box 1The Mathematics Of Mini-Cycles
Why Europe's 1.5% Growth Will Look Stellar
Why Europe's 1.5% Growth Will Look Stellar
Still, some commentators counter that credit flows don't just depend on the cost of credit. They also depend on so-called "animal spirits" - optimism or pessimism about the future. These commentators point to sentiment and survey data which show that animal spirits have soared. Our response is yes, for credit flows, heightened animal spirits in isolation are indeed a tailwind. But any rise in the cost of credit is a headwind. It follows that the net impact on credit flows depends on the relative strengths of the tailwind from heightened animal spirits and the headwind from the higher cost of credit. It is the net effect on the 6-month credit impulse - rather than heightened animal spirits per se - that determines the cyclical direction of the economy. We would suggest that the tailwind from heightened animal spirits has been countered by an even stronger headwind - the sharpest proportional rise in borrowing costs for at least 70 years (Chart I-8). Chart I-8The Sharpest Proportional Rise In Borrowing Costs For At Least 70 Years!
The Sharpest Proportional Rise In Borrowing Costs For At Least 70 Years!
The Sharpest Proportional Rise In Borrowing Costs For At Least 70 Years!
As anticipated in our 16th February report The Contrarian Case For Bonds, incoming GDP data from the world's largest economies - the U.S., U.K. and France - now confirm this. First quarter growth (at annualised rates) sharply decelerated to 0.7%, 1.2% and 1.0% respectively. And this is not just about so-called first quarter "residual seasonality" as 6-month growth rates have also lost momentum. The global credit impulse is 4 months into a mini-downswing; the global bond yield is 2 months into a mini-downswing. Previous half-cycles have averaged 8 months, with the shortest at around 5 months. Hence, we feel it is somewhat premature to position for the next mini-upswing. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President European Investment Strategy dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model* The rally in Portuguese sovereign bonds appears technically overextended. Go short Portuguese sovereign 10-year bonds versus Spanish sovereign 10-year bonds with a profit target and stop loss of 2.5% . 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-9
10-Year Bonds: Short Portugal / Long Spain
10-Year Bonds: Short Portugal / Long Spain
* 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 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. 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
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-7Indicators To Watch ##br##- Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
The financials sector has given back roughly 50% of its post-election surge this year. The main culprits have been a calming in Fed interest rate hike expectations, a flattening yield curve and softening inflation expectations. Moribund credit creation has also created earnings uncertainty. Nevertheless, the corrective phase appears to be drawing to a close. The hiatus in the U.S. dollar bull market is a significant positive catalyst, if it arrests the decline in inflation expectations. The yield curve is making an effort to stabilize, suggesting that the risks of falling back close to the deflationary precipice are low. There are already signs of a positive reversal in euro area financials, which had led the U.S. financial sector on the way down after peaking late last year. The euro area has been in a deleveraging phase with acute deflationary risks, underscoring that the signal from share price stabilization in this region is worth noting. The key to a sustained recovery in sector profits is economic reacceleration. Corporate sector profits are healing as a consequence of the pickup in global final demand and the peak in the U.S. dollar, which should ensure that labor market slack does not imminently build. We recommend using this year's selloff to augment positions to overweight, via the bank index, as discussed in yesterday's Weekly Report.
Upgrading Financials
Upgrading Financials
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Upgrade the financials sector to overweight. This year's consolidation phase is drawing to a close as inflation expectations stabilize. Lift the S&P banks index to overweight. Leading indicators of credit creation are signaling a reacceleration as the year progresses. Trim the S&P health care sector to neutral via profit-taking in medical equipment stocks. Recent Changes S&P Financials - Upgrade to overweight from neutral. S&P Banks Index - Upgrade to overweight from underweight. S&P Health Care - Downgrade to neutral. S&P Health Care Equipment - Downgrade to neutral. Table 1
Girding For A Breakout?
Girding For A Breakout?
Feature Chart 1Yields Are Not Yet Restrictive
Yields Are Not Yet Restrictive
Yields Are Not Yet Restrictive
The S&P 500 is challenging the top end of its range. A playable breakout looks increasingly probable, albeit the exact timing is difficult. First quarter profit results have been strong, corporate guidance has been solid and monetary conditions are unlikely to become tight enough in the short run to dent renewed profit optimism. The latest string of economic disappointments is seen as providing the Fed with ample leeway, and investors are willing to overlook ongoing sluggishness because earnings are outperforming the economy via margin expansion. As discussed in detail in recent weeks, earnings growth is supported by a broad-based recovery in sales and pricing power. Top-line growth is critical to sustaining the overall equity market overshoot given sky-high valuations. Indeed, the appeal of equities stems from their attractiveness relative to other asset classes rather than in absolute terms. History shows that an asset preference shift can take time to play out, and push valuations higher than seems justified on fundamentals alone as long as recession is not an imminent risk. The Treasury market can provide clues as to when vulnerabilities will intensify. According to BCA's Treasury Bond Valuation Model, yields usually need to be at least one standard deviation above normal before stocks, and the economy, are at risk of a major downturn (Chart 1). At those turning points, inflation concerns are typically running hot, forcing the Fed to tighten enough to slow growth and undermine economic activity. This simple rule of thumb warned of the most recent stock market peaks, as well as equity slumps in the early-1990s, 1987, and the early-1980s, and supported bond vs. equity outperformance. Recently, the 10-year Treasury yield has returned to fair value, and the U.S. dollar has come off the boil. The implication is that there is no monetary roadblock to halt the upward momentum in equities at the moment. There is ample room for yields to rise before becoming restrictive, especially if the primary driver is the real component. In this light, we will continue with our program of transitioning to a more balanced equity portfolio from its previous defensive tilt. This week we downgrade a defensive sector to neutral and redeploy capital into the financials sector. Upgrade The Financials Sector... The financials sector has given back roughly 50% of its post-election surge this year. The main culprits have been a calming in Fed interest rate hike expectations, a flattening yield curve and softening inflation expectations. Moribund credit creation has also created earnings uncertainty (Chart 2). Nevertheless, the corrective phase appears to be drawing to a close, because financials sector profits are increasingly likely to surpass those of the overall corporate sector going forward. Traditionally, the financials sector benefited from a strong U.S. dollar. A strong dollar exerted downward pressure on interest rates, which spurred domestic economic strength, loan demand and a steepening yield curve. However, since the GFC, the opposite has been true. Zero interest rates and intense deflationary risks were exacerbated by U.S. dollar appreciation, as the corporate sector and commodities suffered. In other words, with the economy operating on a knife's edge between deflation and inflation, a strong currency weighed heavily on financial shares. Thus, the hiatus in the U.S. dollar bull market is a significant positive catalyst, if it arrests the decline in inflation expectations. The yield curve is making an effort to stabilize, suggesting that the risks of falling back close to the deflationary precipice are low. There are already signs of a positive reversal in euro area financials, which had led the U.S. financial sector on the way down after peaking late last year (Chart 2). The euro area has been in a deleveraging phase with acute deflationary risks, underscoring that the signal from share price stabilization in this region is worth noting. The key to a sustained recovery in sector profits is economic reacceleration. Corporate sector profits are healing as a consequence of the pickup in global final demand and the peak in the U.S. dollar, which should ensure that labor market slack does not imminently build. That is necessary to sustain credit quality and generate faster credit demand, and can be illustrated through the positive correlation between the output gap and relative share price performance (Chart 3), at least until the gap grows too large to generate inflationary pressures and by extension, tight monetary policy. Chart 2Earnings Uncertainty...
Earnings Uncertainty...
Earnings Uncertainty...
Chart 3...But A Narrowing Output Gap...
...But A Narrowing Output Gap...
...But A Narrowing Output Gap...
Leading economic indicators are consistent with erring on the side of optimism (Chart 4). Our proxy for the supply/demand balance for C&I loans confirms a positive bias for future loan growth (Chart 4). The upturn in the financial sector sales/employment ratio is encouraging (Chart 4). Productivity improvement has begun prior to a reacceleration in loan creation, suggesting that additional upside looms as balance sheets expand. Any unlocking of the regulatory shackles would be a bonus. Strength in our Financials Cyclical Macro Indicator confirms that profits should best those of the overall corporate sector. The financial sector is contributing more to overall GDP growth than it did even during the credit binge/housing bubble (Chart 5), despite the headwind of ultralow interest rates. Chart 4...And Leading Indicators ##br##Are Positive Offsets
...And Leading Indicators Are Positive Offsets
...And Leading Indicators Are Positive Offsets
Chart 5Market Cap ##br##Gains Loom
Market Cap Gains Loom
Market Cap Gains Loom
Even though financials represent an ever increasing share of the broad economy, the sector still garners less than its historic median market cap weight (Chart 5). The upshot is that if the economy stays resilient, the correction in relative share price performance should fully reverse, and we recommend further upgrading allocations to overweight via the heavyweight bank group. ...And Bank On Faster Growth Bank profit growth is supported by three main pillars: the quantity, price and quality of credit. All three are set to improve. While seven out of eight lending categories are experiencing a negative credit impulse, forward looking indicators are sending a more positive message. Business and consumer confidence have skyrocketed (Chart 6). If the revival in animal spirits lifts real economic activity later this year, capital demands could finally break out of their slump and reinvigorate moribund loan growth (Chart 6). Importantly, our U.S. Capital Spending Indicator (CSI) snapped back into positive territory. This primarily reflects both the firming in the ISM manufacturing survey and tightness in the labor market. Credit growth has not yet troughed, but should recover in the second half of the year based on our CSI's reading (Chart 6, top panel). Other leading indicators are heralding a pickup in credit demand. A steepening yield curve and the soaring ISM new orders index have an excellent track record in leading the Fed's Senior Loan Officer Survey for overall credit demand (Chart 6). Solid house price inflation and a tight labor market should ensure that consumer credit growth also firms (Chart 7), pointing to the potential for a broad-based bank balance sheet expansion. Overall household leverage has fallen back to 2003 levels and the household debt-service ratio is at multi-decade lows. Chart 6A Turning Point For Loans...
A Turning Point For Loans…
A Turning Point For Loans…
Chart 7...As Demand Recovers
…As Demand Recovers
…As Demand Recovers
Bank deposits are still growing, outpacing nominal GDP by 200bps, and the sector is extremely well capitalized. The loan-to-deposit ratio remains low by historical standards (Chart 8). Bank holdings of risk free securities comprise about 15% of the sector's assets, well above the historic average (Chart 8). The upshot is that there is plenty of firepower to crank up credit creation. True, a rundown in Treasury holdings would result in mark-to-market losses, but banks are well positioned to navigate through rising interest rates. According to the FDIC, net interest income as a share of total revenue has climbed steadily at commercial banks with assets greater than $1bn (Chart 9). Thus, if a better economy and rising inflation materialize in the back half of the year, then higher interest rates will boost profitability (Chart 9). Chart 8Banks Have Dry Powder
Banks Have Dry Powder
Banks Have Dry Powder
Chart 9A Durable NIM Expansion
A Durable NIM Expansion
A Durable NIM Expansion
Table 2 shows a sample of the four largest U.S. banks' earnings sensitivity to interest rate changes. Banks profit from overall rising interest rates in two ways: reinvesting at higher yields and assets repricing at a faster pace than deposits. Table 2Top Four Banks' Interest Rate Sensitivities
Girding For A Breakout?
Girding For A Breakout?
Thus, a steepening yield curve would signal that bank profit estimates should experience a re-rating, provided the yield lift at the long end of the curve was gradual and did not choke off growth via a sudden spike (Chart 9). In terms of credit quality, non-performing loans and charge-offs are sinking from already low levels. It would take a significant deterioration in the labor market to warn that credit quality was about to become a profit drag (Chart 10). Chart 10Credit Quality Is Not An Issue, For Now
Credit Quality Is Not An Issue, For Now
Credit Quality Is Not An Issue, For Now
Importantly, the reserve coverage ratio has climbed to near 100%, as non-current loans have fallen faster than banks have released reserves. Historically, credit quality improvement has been positively correlated with rising valuations (Chart 10). This message is corroborated by return on equity (ROE). Bank ROE has recouped most of the losses since the GFC on the back of recovering productivity gains. However, valuations do not yet reflect the ROE improvement. History shows that after a financial crisis, it can take a prolonged period of improved ROE before investors reward the sector with a valuation expansion, as occurred in the early-1990s (Chart 7, bottom panel). Bottom Line: Boost the S&P financials sector to overweight from neutral. Lift the S&P banks index to overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the S&P banks index are: BLBG: S5BANKX - WFC, JPM, BAC, C, USB, PNC, BBT, STI, MTB, FITB, CFG, RF, KEY, HBAN, CMA, ZION, PBCT. Take Health Care Equipment Down A Notch We are making room for the financials sector upgrade by trimming the health care sector to neutral. As discussed in recent weeks, a modest shift away from a defensive to a more balanced portfolio has been on our radar and the surge in equities over the past week suggests that the consolidation phase is now ending in a bullish fashion, as expected. At the beginning of the year we added the S&P health care equipment (HCE) index to our high-conviction overweight list for three main reasons: valuations had undershot owing to health care reform uncertainty, domestic sales were set to improve and leading indicators of foreign sourced revenue also painted a rosy picture. What has changed? Relative share prices have undergone a V-shaped snapback, all of which can be attributed to a valuation expansion. A flurry of recent M&A activity has also buoyed relative valuations, as takeover premiums have been significant. Relative performance is now at a natural spot to expect a breather. On the operating front, a number of positive profit drivers are still intact. The industry's shipments-to-inventories ratio remains at multi-decade highs and the backlog of medical equipment orders is robust (top and bottom panels, Chart 11). HCE exports are primed to accelerate in the coming months likely irrespective of the U.S. dollar's move. In particular, Europe matters most to S&P HCE constituents, as roughly half of international sales originate in the old continent. Forward-looking indicators of European demand are upbeat, especially with the surge in German medical equipment orders (Chart 11). However, domestic sales indicators have downshifted. New health care facility construction has dropped sharply, warning that investment in medical equipment may soon follow suit (Chart 12, second panel). Consumables demand growth may also take a breather. Consumer outlays at hospitals have nosedived on a growth rate basis. This suggests that the growth in patient visits has dried up, and may be a warning that medical equipment new order growth will also decelerate (Chart 12). Moreover, as outlined in recent Weekly Reports, the broad corporate sector has regained pricing power, but medical equipment suppliers have lagged. Chart 12 shows that relative selling prices are contracting at an accelerating pace. This is significant, as deflation concerns could undermine revenues, and halt the valuation expansion. If domestic medical equipment demand cools, then it will sustain downward pressure on industry activity (Chart 13). Already, medical equipment industrial production (IP) has collapsed, in marked contrast with the expansion in overall IP. Chart 11Export Prospects Are Positive...
Export Prospects Are Positive...
Export Prospects Are Positive...
Chart 12...But Domestic Blues...
...But Domestic Blues...
...But Domestic Blues...
Chart 13...Will Weigh On Activity
...Will Weigh On Activity
...Will Weigh On Activity
Worrisomely, the HCE new orders-to-inventories ratio has also lost steam, warning that a recovery in future production growth may not be imminent. The implication is that productivity gains are petering out, denting our confidence in a further valuation re-rating. Bottom Line: Downgrade the S&P health care equipment index and remove it from the high-conviction overweight list for an 9% gain. This also pushes the broad health care index to neutral. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HCEP: MDT, ABT, DHR, SYK, BDX, BSX, ISRG, BAX, ZBH, EW, BCR, IDXX, HOLX, VAR. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps and stay neutral growth over value.
The financial sector is regaining some momentum after this year's consolidation, and the S&P asset management and custody bank (AMCB) index has the potential to take a leadership role. AMCB remains one of the most undervalued of all the financial sector groups, even though its main profit drivers are experiencing a synchronized improvement. There is a budding shift from bond to equity products, which should gather steam based on the steady improvement in global economic sentiment, as measured by the stock-to-bond ratio (second panel). The latter is already supporting strong M&A activity and a surge in margin debt to new highs. Both of these factors suggest that AMCB earnings drivers are accelerating. The bottom line is that the undervalued AMCB index has significant catch-up potential, especially if interest rate expectations stabilize near current levels. Stay overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the S&P asset manager & custody banks index are: BLBG: S5AMGT-BK, BLK, STT, AMP, NTRS, TROW, BEN, IVZ, AMG.
Asset Managers Are Due For A Catch Up Phase
Asset Managers Are Due For A Catch Up Phase
Bank stocks have been under pressure for the past six weeks, undermined by uninspiring bank earnings, a flattening yield curve and jump in global geopolitical uncertainty. As the Economic Surprise Index mean reverts, commodity prices correct and inflation expectations ease, there could be some additional near-term underperformance risk. Nevertheless, improving value should eventually lead to a buying opportunity. U.S. banks are adequately capitalized owing to the Fed's strict supervision, non-performing loans are at cycle lows and charge-offs remain muted. If the jump in animal spirits begins to lift real economic activity later this year, capital demands could finally break out of their slump and reinvigorate moribund loan demand. We remain underweight, but will look for buying opportunities. The S&P banks index is now on upgrade alert. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the S&P banks index are: BLBG: S5BANKX - WFC, JPM, BAC, C, USB, PNC, BBT, STI, MTB, FITB, CFG, RF, KEY, HBAN, CMA, ZION, PBCT.
Is The Bank Correction Almost Over?
Is The Bank Correction Almost Over?
Highlights The July 2016 to January 2017 doubling of the global bond yield was possibly the sharpest ever 6-month spike in modern economic history. Its toll is a global growth pause - evidenced by the post February 2017 synchronized retracement of bond yields, commodity prices, steel production, and cyclical equity prices. Until bank credit flows stabilize, stay cyclically overweight bonds - especially T-bonds... ...and stay underweight bank equities, but overweight real estate equities. Fade any knee-jerk move in the CAC40 after the French Presidential Election first round result. Feature Since February, world bond yields have edged down in synchronized fashion; commodity prices - including the global bellwether Dr. Copper - have fallen together (Chart I-2); global steel production has suffered an abrupt reversal; and cyclical sectors in the stock market have rolled over (Chart I-3). Chart of the WeekSharpest Proportionate Change In Bond Yields... Ever?
Sharpest Proportionate Change In Bond Yields... Ever?
Sharpest Proportionate Change In Bond Yields... Ever?
Chart I-2Compelling Evidence Of A Global Growth Pause: ##br##Bond Yields And Commodity Prices Have Rolled Over
Compelling Evidence Of A Global Growth Pause: Bond Yields And Commodity Prices Have Rolled Over
Compelling Evidence Of A Global Growth Pause: Bond Yields And Commodity Prices Have Rolled Over
Chart I-3Steel Production And Cyclical Equity##br## Sectors Have Rolled Over Too
Steel Production And Cyclical Equity Sectors Have Rolled Over Too
Steel Production And Cyclical Equity Sectors Have Rolled Over Too
For us, the synchronized decline in the four separate indicators - bond yields, commodity prices, steel production, and cyclical equity prices - can mean only one thing: a global growth pause. The Largest Proportionate Increase In Bond Yields Ever... To make sense of what is happening, let's ask a simple but crucial question. If interest rates go up, from say 1% to 2%, is it the absolute increase - of 1% - that matters more for the economy, or is it the proportionate increase - a doubling - that matters more? We ask this simple question because the 0.75% absolute increase in the global government bond yield through July 2016 to January 2017 amounted to one of the sharpest rises in the past decade (Chart I-4). But when it comes to the proportionate increase, the doubling of the global yield in 6 months was the sharpest spike in at least 70 years, and quite possibly the sharpest 6-month spike ever in economic history! (Chart I-5 and Chart of the Week). Chart I-4A Sharp Absolute Spike In ##br##Global Bond Yields...
A Sharp Absolute Spike In Global Bond Yields...
A Sharp Absolute Spike In Global Bond Yields...
Chart I-5...But An Extremely Sharp ##br##Proportionate Spike
...But An Extremely Sharp Proportionate Spike
...But An Extremely Sharp Proportionate Spike
Anybody with a mortgage knows that it is not the absolute change in the mortgage rate that matters for your budget; it is the proportionate change that matters. A 1% rise in rates hurts much less when rates start high than when they start low. One way to see this is that to note that a 1% spike in U.K. bond yields over six months was extremely common in the 1970s and 80s - when the level of yields was already high. But outside this era of high nominal numbers, a 1% yield spike over six months is almost unheard of (Chart I-6 and Chart I-7). Chart I-6A 1% Rise In Bond Yields Over Six Months Was Very Common In The 70s And 80s
A 1% Rise In Bond Yields Over Six Months Was Very Common In The 70s And 80s
A 1% Rise In Bond Yields Over Six Months Was Very Common In The 70s And 80s
Chart I-7But Today A 1% Rise Equates To An Extreme Proportionate Increase
But Today A 1% Rise Equates To An Extreme Proportionate Increase
But Today A 1% Rise Equates To An Extreme Proportionate Increase
Some people might counter that interest payments are just a transfer from borrowers to savers. For every borrower who complains at a doubling of his interest outlays, there is a mirror-image saver who rejoices at a doubling of his interest income. But understand that higher interest rates do not just redistribute spending power from borrowers to savers. The much more important economic effect almost always comes from the impact on bank lending. Fractional reserve banking allows banks to create money out of thin air. When a bank issues a new loan, the borrower's spending power instantaneously goes up, but there is no equal and opposite saver whose spending power goes down. ...Takes Its Toll On Bank Lending Our thesis is that the change in bank lending depends on the proportionate change in long-term interest rates. If long-term rates rise by, say, 1% then a certain proportion of investment projects will suddenly become unprofitable. Firms (and households) would stop borrowing for such projects, and the drop in borrowing would equal the proportion of projects impacted. It should be clear that the distribution of investment project returns is much wider in an era of high nominal numbers when interest rates are, say, 10% than in an era of low nominal numbers when interest rates are, say, 1%. So the impact on borrowing of a 1% rise in rates is much less when rates are high - as they were in the 1970s and 80s - than when rates are low - as they are today. In other words, the impact depends on the proportionate increase in interest rates. And this explains why a 1% spike in U.K. bond yields over six months was extremely common in the 1970s and 80s, but is almost unheard of now. Some commentators point out that working in the other direction are so-called "animal spirits" - increased optimism about the future and the returns that all investment projects will generate. But as we explained in Credit Slumps While Animal Spirits Soar, Why? 1 the greatest proportionate 6-month increase in global bond yields for at least 70 years has understandably trumped these putative animal spirits. Bank credit flows have slumped. In practice, changes in borrowing can take 3-6 months to impact spending. For this reason, we tend to monitor the change in the credit flow in the last 6 months versus the preceding 6 months. Recently, this global 6-month credit impulse has headed sharply lower (Chart I-8). Chart I-8The Global 6-Month Credit Impulse Has Headed Sharply Lower
The Global 6-Month Credit Impulse Has Headed Sharply Lower
The Global 6-Month Credit Impulse Has Headed Sharply Lower
Putting this all together, the sharpest spike in global bond yields in living memory has taken an understandable toll on bank credit creation and the global 6-month credit impulse. In turn, the slump in the credit impulse is now weighing on the global growth mini-cycle - as signaled by the synchronized retracement in bond yields, commodity prices, steel production and cyclical equity performance. The evidence compellingly suggests that we are two months into a global growth pause. But mini down-cycles tend to last, on average, about six months. So for the time being, and at least until bank credit flows stabilize, own bonds - especially T-bonds - and avoid cyclical equity exposure. Furthermore, as we presciently argued in our February 16 report The Contrarian Case For Bonds, when bond yields decline, bank equities are losers and real estate equities are winners. These arguments still hold. A Brief Comment On Upcoming Elections: France And The U.K. Ahead of the French Presidential Election first round on April 23, we would like to remind readers of two facts. First, the CAC40, like most mainstream European equity indexes, is a collection of large multinational companies. As such, it is not a play on French economics or politics. Indeed, compared to other European indexes, the CAC40 underexposure to banks actually makes it one of the more defensive European equity indexes. Given the loose connection between the index and domestic economics and politics, fade any knee-jerk move that happens after the first round result: sell any relative rally; buy any relative dip. Second, euro area sovereign credit spreads must ultimately relate to the relative competitiveness of their national economies, as this is what would determine the size and direction of redenomination were the euro to break up. In this regard, there is now no difference in competitiveness between France and Spain (Chart I-9), yet Bonos still yield more than OATs. So for long-term investors, it is still right to be long Spanish Bonos versus French OATs. Chart I-9France And Spain Have Converged On Competitiveness
France And Spain Have Converged On Competitiveness
France And Spain Have Converged On Competitiveness
We will wait until the more important second round vote on May 7 to present a more detailed assessment of the impact of French politics on the European economic and investment landscape. Lastly, a quick comment on the likely snap U.K. General Election on June 8: the conventional wisdom states that U.K. politics will drive the type of Brexit; and the type of Brexit will drive the long-term destiny of the U.K. economy. But for us, the causality runs the other way round. The U.K. economy will drive the type of Brexit - the weaker the economy gets, the softer that Brexit will get (and vice-versa); and the type of Brexit will drive the long-term destiny of U.K. politics. Therefore, for us, the General Election does not appear to be a game changer - unless it delivers a shock result. I am on holiday right now, so I will cover this topic in more depth on my return next week. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President European Investment Strategy dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 Published on March 30, 207 and available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model There are no new trades this week, but all three open positions are now in profit, having produced classic liquidity-triggered trend reversals. 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-10
Short Basic Materials Equities
Short Basic Materials Equities
* 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 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. 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
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Chinese capex and EM domestic demand will falter again in the second half of this year. This is not contingent on a growth slowdown in the advanced economies, but due to a further slowdown in bank lending in EM and lower commodities prices. The direction of EM share prices in absolute terms and relative to the S&P 500 is determined by EPS trajectory, not equity valuations. We expect EM EPS to drop in absolute terms and to underperform U.S. EPS. India's deleveraging cycle is well advanced, especially when compared with other EM economies. Maintain an overweight position in Indian equities within the EM universe. Continue betting on yield curve steepening. Stay long the Czech koruna versus the euro. Feature EM/China growth will relapse in the second half of this year. Share prices, presuming they are forward-looking, will roll over beforehand. Chinese interest rates have risen, which typically heralds a downtrend in the mainland's credit impulse and business cycle (Chart I-1). Chinese interest rates are shown as an annual percentage change, inverted and advanced. This is a typical relationship between interest rates and credit cycles, and there is currently no reason why it will play out any differently in China. Given the mainland has a lingering credit bubble, rising borrowing costs and regulatory tightening of banks and the shadow banking system are guaranteed to lead to a relapse in credit origination, and in turn economic growth. China's yield curve has been flattening in recent months. This often precedes a selloff in both EM share prices and industrial metals (Chart I-2). Chart I-1China: Interest Rates ##br##And Credit/Business Cycles
China: Interest Rates And Credit/Business Cycles
China: Interest Rates And Credit/Business Cycles
Chart I-2A Flattening Yield Curve In China Is ##br##A Bad Omen For EM And Commodities
A Flattening Yield Curve In China Is A Bad Omen For EM And Commodities
A Flattening Yield Curve In China Is A Bad Omen For EM And Commodities
The Chinese yield curve has been experiencing bear flattening - front-end rates have risen more than long-term rates. Bear flattening in yield curves typically occurs before a major top in growth, when current conditions are still robust but the fixed-income market begins to question growth sustainability going forward. A flattening yield curve is consistent with our assessment: a lack of follow-through from last year's stimulus combined with the recent policy tightening will cause growth to downshift materially very soon. EM narrow (M1) money growth has rolled over decisively, and historically it has been a good leading indicator for EM earnings per share (EPS) (Chart I-3). The former has historically led the latter by about nine months. Chart I-3EM EPS To Roll Over In the Second Half 2017
EM EPS To Roll Over In the Second Half 2017
EM EPS To Roll Over In the Second Half 2017
The same is true in the case of China - the M1 impulse (the second derivative of M1) leads industrial profits by about six months and heralds an imminent reversal (Chart I-4). Chart I-4China's Industrial Profit Growth Recovery Is At A Risk
China's Industrial Profit Growth Recovery Is At A Risk
China's Industrial Profit Growth Recovery Is At A Risk
The commodities currency index (an equally weighted average of AUD, NZD and CAD) has relapsed against the greenback. This index points to global growth deceleration in the second half of this year (Chart I-5). Similarly, these commodities currencies also lead commodities prices, and presently signal a top in the commodities complex (Chart I-6). Chart I-5Commodities Currencies Signify Weakness In Global Trade
Commodities Currencies Signify Weakness In Global Trade
Commodities Currencies Signify Weakness In Global Trade
Chart I-6Commodities Currencies Point To Relapse In Commodities Prices
Commodities Currencies Point To Relapse In Commodities Prices
Commodities Currencies Point To Relapse In Commodities Prices
In EM ex-China, Korea and Taiwan, bank loan growth has still been decelerating despite the global growth recovery of the past 12 months (Chart I-7, top panel). Besides, retail sales volume growth in EM ex-China, Korea and Taiwan has not ameliorated yet (Chart I-7, bottom panel). All of these economic aggregates are equity market cap-weighted. Similarly, auto sales in EM ex-China, Korea and Taiwan have been stabilizing at very low levels but have not recovered at all (Chart I-8). Hence, we infer that domestic demand in EM ex-China has stabilized, but it has not recovered. For example, manufacturing production in Brazil, Russia, South Africa and Indonesia has been rather subdued (Chart I-9). Chart I-7EM Ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: ##br##Domestic Demand Has Not Recovered
EM Ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Domestic Demand Has Not Recovered
EM Ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Domestic Demand Has Not Recovered
Chart I-8EM Ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: ##br##Auto Sales Are Stabilizing At Low levels
EM Ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Auto Sales Are Stabilizing At Low levels
EM Ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Auto Sales Are Stabilizing At Low levels
Chart I-9Synchronized Global Recovery?
Synchronized Global Recovery?
Synchronized Global Recovery?
As EM ex-China credit growth decelerates further due to the lingering credit excesses and poor banking system health, their domestic demand will disappoint. This is a major risk to the EM profit outlook. Bottom Line: Chinese and EM domestic demand and by extension corporate earnings will falter again in the second half of this year. This view is not contingent on a growth slowdown in the advanced economies but will be the outcome of further slowdown in bank lending in EM and lower commodities prices. A reversal in Chinese imports from other EM is the link that explains how a relapse in the mainland's growth in the second half this year will hurt the rest of the world in general, and EM in particular. Profits Hold The Key Chart I-10Profits, Not Valuations, Hold The Key
Profits, Not Valuations, Hold The Key
Profits, Not Valuations, Hold The Key
Emerging markets' relative performance versus the S&P 500 has historically been driven by EPS (Chart I-10). In the past 12 months, EM EPS has improved modestly but has not outperformed U.S. EPS in U.S. dollar terms. Consistently, EM stocks have failed to outperform the S&P 500 in common currency terms; they have been flat at low levels in the past 12 months. An important message from this chart is that equity valuations are not critical to EM versus U.S. relative equity performance. It is all about corporate profit cycles. The widely held view within the investment community is that EM stocks are cheaper than those in the U.S., and therefore will outperform based on more attractive valuations. The fact that EM stocks are indeed cheaper versus the S&P 500 only reflects the fact that U.S. equity valuations are expensive and EM equity valuations are neutral in absolute terms. Equity valuations may affect the degree of out- and underperformance, but they do not determine the direction of relative performance as vividly illustrated by Chart I-10. The same can be said about EM stocks' absolute performance. Equity valuations do not determine the direction of share prices; the latter rise when profits expand, and fall when EPS contracts. However, valuations affect the magnitude of the move in equity prices: cheap valuations and growing EPS will produce a larger rally compared to neutral equity valuations and identical growth in EPS. We discussed EM equity valuations at great length in our Weekly Report published two weeks ago.1 In absolute terms, EM equity valuations are presently neutral. Therefore, they have no bearing on the direction of share prices. If EM EPS expands, stocks will continue to rally. If EPS growth stalls or turns negative, EM stocks will stumble. As Charts I-3 and I-4 on page 3 illustrate, EM EPS will soon relapse. In addition, U.S. return on equity (RoE) remains well above EM's RoE (Chart I-11), reflecting better equity capital utilization in the U.S. versus the EM. Looking forward, one variable that has had a reasonably good track record in gauging relative performance of EM versus U.S. share prices is the ratio of industrial metals to U.S. lumber prices (Chart I-12). Industrial metals prices are a proxy for economic growth in China/EM, while U.S. lumber prices are indicative of America's business cycle. Industrial metals prices (the LMEX index) have lately underperformed U.S. lumber prices, pointing to renewed EM underperformance versus the S&P 500. Chart I-11EM RoE Is Below U.S. RoE
EM RoE Is Below U.S. RoE
EM RoE Is Below U.S. RoE
Chart I-12EM Stocks To Underperform The S&P 500
EM Stocks To Underperform The S&P 500
EM Stocks To Underperform The S&P 500
Our view is that EM EPS growth will contract again within a cyclical investment horizon (over the next 12 months). While not all sectors' earnings are set to shrink, our view is that banks' profits will decline driven by credit growth deceleration and a rise in non-performing loans in a number of countries. Besides, commodities producers' EPS will drop anew if, as we expect, commodities prices head south again. Table I-1 illustrates the weights of each EM equity sector within total EM-listed companies' profits. Financials account for 24%, while energy and materials comprise 7.5% each of the aggregate EM equity market cap, respectively. In aggregate, these sectors make up 50% of EM EPS and 40% of the stock index. Table I-1EM Sectors: Equity Market Caps ##br##And EPS's Share Of Total EPS
Signs Of An EM/China Growth Reversal
Signs Of An EM/China Growth Reversal
We remain positive on the technology/internet sector's growth outlook. While this sector's weight in terms of both market cap and EPS is very large, it is not yet sufficient to lift the overall EM equity index if other large sectors falter. In fact, technology/internet stocks have already rallied dramatically and are presently overbought. They will likely correct along with the rest of the universe. Nevertheless, we continue to recommend an overweight stance in technology stocks within the EM benchmark. Bottom Line: The direction of EM share prices in absolute terms and relative to the S&P 500 is determined by EPS trajectory, not equity valuations. We expect EM EPS to drop in absolute terms and to underperform U.S. EPS. Consistently, we maintain our long-standing strategy of being short EM / long the S&P 500. Taking Profits On Short Korean Auto Stocks Initiated on July 3, 2013, this recommendation has generated a 35% gain (Chart I-13, top panel). Notably, Korean auto stocks have failed to rally in the past 12 months. Furthermore, Korean auto stocks have underperformed the overall EM equity index by a whopping 22% since our recommendation (Chart I-13, bottom panel). For dedicated investors, we recommend lifting the allocation to this sector from underweight to neutral. In regard to allocation to the KOSPI overall, we maintain our overweight stance within an EM equity portfolio for now. Geopolitical volatility could create near-term disturbance but the primary trend in Korea's relative performance against the EM benchmark is up (Chart I-14). Within the KOSPI, we continue to overweight technology stocks, companies with exposure to DM growth and domestic industries. Meanwhile, companies with exposure to China's capital spending should be avoided. Chart I-13Take Profits On Short ##br##Korean Stocks Recommendation
Take Profits On Short Korean Stocks Recommendation
Take Profits On Short Korean Stocks Recommendation
Chart I-14Korean Equities ##br##Relative To EM Overall
Korean Equities Relative To EM Overall
Korean Equities Relative To EM Overall
Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please refer to the Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, titled "EM Equity Valuations Revisited", dated March 29, 2017, link available on page 21. India: Beyond De-Monetization The growth-dampening effects from India's de-monetization program are beginning to dissipate. Both services and manufacturing PMIs are recovering (Chart II-1). As more cash is injected back into the system, consumer sector growth will improve. Beyond the recovery in consumption, however, capital spending - the key driver of productivity and non-inflationary growth - is still anemic because of structural reasons that began well before de-monetization was announced (Chart II-2). Chart II-1PMIs Are Recovering
PMIs Are Recovering
PMIs Are Recovering
Chart II-2Capital Spending Is Depressed
Capital Spending Is Depressed
Capital Spending Is Depressed
Public Banks: Is Deleveraging Advanced? The Indian authorities appear serious about restructuring their public banks, and the banking downturn cycle is likely approaching its final stages (Chart II-3). As and when India's public banks find themselves on more solid footing, industrial credit growth will pick up meaningfully and capital expenditures will follow. The previous credit boom that occurred in the infrastructure, mining, and materials sectors left a large number of failed and stalled projects. Chart II-4 shows the number of stalled projects remains stubbornly high and is not yet declining. These mal-investments have ended up as non-performing loans primarily on public banks' balance sheets: Non-performing loans (NPLs) currently amount to 11.8% and distressed assets (DRA) stand at around 4% of total loans on Indian public banks' balance sheets. This has forced public banks to curtail credit growth to the industrial sector (Chart II-5). Chart II-3Bank Credit Growth Is At All Time Low
Bank Credit Growth Is At All Time Low
Bank Credit Growth Is At All Time Low
Chart II-4Plenty Of Projects Stalled
Plenty Of Projects Stalled
Plenty Of Projects Stalled
Chart II-5Bank Credit Growth To Industries Is Contracting
Bank Credit Growth To Industries Is Contracting
Bank Credit Growth To Industries Is Contracting
Public banks' NPLs and DRAs have spiked because the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is forcing commercial banks to acknowledge and provision for these bad loans via the central bank's Asset Quality Review (AQR) program. This is eroding public banks' capital and constraining their ability to grow their loan book. However, the program is bullish for India's economy in the long run and stands in stark contrast to other EM countries where authorities are turning a blind eye on banks attempting to window dress their NPLs. India's government and the RBI are currently working with commercial banks and proposing measures to recover loans from defaulters. The government is also injecting capital into public banks. It has announced 100 billion INR in capital injections for this fiscal year and will inject more if needed. It is also forcing banks to raise more capital by ridding their books of non-core businesses. We have performed a scenario analysis on public banks (presented in Table II-1) to gauge their stock valuations. In all scenarios, we assume that DRAs will be constant at 5% of total loans, and also assume a 70% recovery rate on DRAs. We examine various scenarios for NPLs - the latter vary from 12-15% of total loans (the current actual NPL rate is 11.8%). Equity valuations are very sensitive to the recovery rate on NPLs. We stress test for recovery rates of 30%, 40%, 50% and 60%. If one assumes a 12% NPL ratio and a recovery rate of 60%, public bank stocks would be 30% cheap - their adjusted (post provisions, capital impairment, and recapitalization) price-to-book value (PBV) ratio will be 0.7, which is 30% less than its historical mean PBV ratio for public banks of 1.0. By contrast, assuming a 15% NPL ratio and a 30% recovery rate, banks' equity valuations would be 50% expensive - their adjusted (post provisions, capital impairment, and recapitalization) PBV ratio would be 1.5. Table II-1Under/Overvaluation (In %) Of Public Banks Stocks For A Given NPL Ratio And Recovery Ratio*
Signs Of An EM/China Growth Reversal
Signs Of An EM/China Growth Reversal
Our bias is to believe that the NPL ratio is somewhere between 14-15% and the recovery rate near 40%. In such a case, public bank stocks would presently be 10-20% expensive. This does not offer a great buying opportunity at current levels, but suggests the downside is probably smaller than in other EM bank stocks. Overall, India is much more advanced in terms of recognizing and provisioning for NPLs as well as re-capitalization of its banking system than many other EM countries. Therefore, we believe India's deleveraging cycle is well advanced, especially when compared with other EM economies. Due to this and the fact that this economy is not exposed to China/commodities prices, we still recommend an overweight position in Indian equities within the EM universe. Inflation And Fixed-Income Strategy While headline inflation is easing due to temporarily lower food prices, core inflation remains sticky. The central government's overall and current expenditures - which often drive inflation - are rising rapidly (Chart II-6). Likewise, state governments' current expenditures are also booming and state development loans - borrowing by state governments - are growing at an extremely fast pace. In addition, in June 2016, the Indian central government announced it will raise salaries, allowances and pensions of government employees by 23%. The central government also raised the minimum wage for non-agriculture laborers by 42% in August 2016, and the Ministry of Labor followed by doubling the minimum wage of agricultural workers in March 2017. All of this will entail accumulating inflationary pressures, even if oil and food prices remain tame. The central bank hiked the reverse repo rate last week to absorb excess liquidity from the banking system. Even though it cited service sector inflation as a concern, we believe it will lag behind accumulating inflationary pressures. This warrants a steeper yield curve. Investors should continue to bet on yield curve steepening by paying 10-year swaps / receiving 1-year swap rates (Chart II-7). Chart II-6Government Expenditures Are Rising
Government Expenditures Are Rising
Government Expenditures Are Rising
Chart II-7Bet On A Yield Curve Steepening
Bet On A Yield Curve Steepening
Bet On A Yield Curve Steepening
Rising inflationary pressures and higher bond yields could weigh on Indian stocks in absolute terms, but will likely not preclude them outperforming the EM equity benchmark. Ayman Kawtharani, Associate Editor aymank@bcaresearch.com Stay Long Czech Koruna Versus Euro On September 28th 2016, we recommended going long CZK / short EUR on the back of expectations that the Czech National Bank (CNB) would abandon its currency peg. Last week, the CNB has floated the koruna. We expect this currency to appreciate versus the euro further and suggest keeping this position. Inflationary pressures in the Czech economy are genuine and heightening. The 1.5% appreciation in the koruna versus the euro since last week will not tighten monetary conditions enough to cap inflation. As such, we expect the CNB to eventually start raising interest rates, leading to further koruna appreciation versus the euro (Chart III-1). The output gap is turning positive, which historically has led to a rise in core inflation (Chart III-2). Chart III-1The Czech Koruna Has More Catch-Up To Do
The Czech Koruna Has More Catch-Up To Do
The Czech Koruna Has More Catch-Up To Do
Chart III-2Output Gap And Inflation
Output Gap And Inflation
Output Gap And Inflation
The labor market is tight - the Czech unemployment rate is the lowest in Europe. Both wages and until labor costs growth are robust and trimmed-mean consumer price inflation is accelerating (Chart III-3). The CNB's foreign exchange reserve accumulation has generated an overflow of liquidity in the Czech financial/banking system (Chart III-4). Chart III-3Inflationary Pressures Are Broad-Based
Inflationary Pressures Are Broad-Based
Inflationary Pressures Are Broad-Based
Chart III-4Money And Credit Growth Are Very Strong
Money And Credit Growth Are Very Strong
Money And Credit Growth Are Very Strong
The rapid expansion of liquidity has led to strong credit growth (Chart III-4, bottom panel), and a rapid appreciation in real estate prices. This warrants higher interest rates to prevent the formation of a bubble. Furthermore, the Czech economy has been benefiting from the recovery in European economic growth in general and manufacturing in particular. Tourist arrivals have also been robust. Notably, the nation's current account surplus stands at 1% of GDP. Chart III-5The Koruna Is Mildly Cheap
The Koruna Is Mildly Cheap
The Koruna Is Mildly Cheap
With regards to currency valuations, the koruna is silently cheap and as such has further room to appreciate (Chart III-5). Either the koruna will gradually appreciate over the next few months, tightening monetary conditions to an extent where the CNB does not need to hike interest rates, or the CNB is eventually forced to hike rates considerably. The latter will push up the value of the Czech currency. We suspect that the CNB is still intervening in the forex market in order to prevent a dramatic appreciation in the koruna. The central bank has stated in its last press conference that it stands ready to intervene to mitigate exchange rate fluctuations if needed. However, in an economy with open capital account, the central bank cannot target the exchange rate and interest rates simultaneously. If the CNB desires to cap inflation, it has to hike interest rates or allow the currency to appreciate considerably. If it chooses the former, the koruna will still rally dramatically. Bottom Line: Stay long the Czech koruna versus the euro. Stephan Gabillard, Senior Analyst stephang@bcaresearch.com Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights Portfolio Strategy A window has opened up for utilities outperformance. Upgrade to overweight on a short-term (1-3 month) view. Leading indicators of beverage sales have improved, heralding an upgrading in depressed expectations. Stay overweight. The pullback in consumer finance stocks appears to be contagion from the overall financial sector selloff than a reflection of deteriorating industry-specific fundamentals. Buy on weakness. Recent Changes S&P Utilities - Boost to overweight from neutral on a tactical basis. Table 1
Great Expectations?
Great Expectations?
Feature Our view remains that stocks are in a consolidation phase, waiting for economic/profit confirmation that earnings will grow into the latest valuation expansion. Thin equity market risk premia can be justified if the economy has embarked on an extended and strong non-inflationary growth path that will spawn robust corporate profitability. Chart 1A Second Half Squeeze?
A Second Half Squeeze?
A Second Half Squeeze?
On this note, the third mini-economic up-cycle since the Great Recession has been underway since last year. The first two bursts of economic strength fizzled quickly, eventually requiring a new dose of stimulus to reinvigorate growth. The current up-cycle may have more legs given that the rest of the world is now participating and the U.S. economy at full employment, but it would be dangerous to become complacent. The stock-to-bond ratio has crested on a growth rate basis, and its mean reversion properties suggest that key macro gauges such as the ISM index may cool as the year progresses (Chart 1). Odds of growth-propelling fiscal stimulus, that equities have already bought and paid for, may now fade following Congress' failure to move on health care reform. Total bank credit growth is decelerating on a broad basis. Chart 1 shows that of the 8 major bank loan categories, only 1 has a positive credit impulse (the annual change in the 52-week rate of change), the other 7 are negative, i.e. it isn't simply C&I loan weakness driving the credit deceleration. Traditionally, credit and economic growth move together, so the current gap warrants close attention. Meanwhile, the reflationary impulse over the past 18 months from China is set to fade as the authorities tap the brakes, particularly in the housing market, which may throw a wrench into new construction. Chinese property prices have been especially correlated with global economic up-cycles. Real estate inflation downturns have been important global economic signals (Chart 1). Consequently, the second half of the year may 'feel' slower from a growth perspective and challenge the reflation hypothesis. Some trepidation about the durability/breadth of the economic expansion is becoming evident in internal market behavior. Our Intermediate Equity Indicator (IEI) has continued to weaken as breadth and participation thin (Chart 2). If the IEI drops below zero, the odds of a meaningful pullback will rise substantially. Keep in mind there is a lot of air between the S&P 500 index and its 40-week moving average. The number of S&P 500 groups with a positive 52-week rate of change has pulled back to post-Great Recession lows (Chart 2). Last week we showed a composite of relative industry and sector performance that also heralded a choppy period ahead for the broad averages. All of these factors suggest that a tactical consolidation needs time to play out, especially with first quarter reporting season fast approaching and optimism in the outlook bursting at the seams. While trading sentiment is not overly stretched, the truest measure of sentiment is asset valuations and expectations. On this front, our Global Economic Sentiment Index, which contrasts equity and government bond valuations in the major economies, has reached the 'extreme optimism' zone (Chart 3, middle panel). Such a reading does not automatically foretell of an imminent major equity peak, but reinforces that there is little margin for disappointment. Chart 2Deteriorating Internals
Deteriorating Internals
Deteriorating Internals
Chart 3Early Signs Of Overconfidence?
Early Signs Of Overconfidence?
Early Signs Of Overconfidence?
In addition, the trend in analyst earnings expectations is also consistent with an overriding theme of exuberance. Cyclical earnings estimates have tentatively peaked after a steep upgrade over the last few quarters, and are now sitting below 5-year growth expectations, suggesting overwhelming confidence in the longevity of the expansion. The last three times that cyclical (12-month) profit growth estimates diverged negatively from lofty long-term estimates was in 2000, 2007 and 2015 (Chart 3). Each episode coincided with ebullient global economic sentiment, and heralded market turbulence, with varying lags. The point is that when financial conditions tighten enough to undermine the cyclical growth outlook but fail to dent conviction in the long-term outlook, it is a signal of overconfidence. The good news is that financial conditions have remained historically easy and should only tighten gradually, such that the risk of a policy-induced slowdown is not acute. In sum, we expect the tactical consolidation phase to persist, especially if economic momentum cools. Exuberant expectations argue for a digestion phase, which should continue to broadly support defensive over cyclical sector positioning, a stance that has paid off nicely since late last year. We may look to selectively increase cyclical and financial sector exposure in the coming weeks if the U.S. dollar remains tame and inflation expectations perk back up, but for now, we are making a tactical addition to the defensive side of the ledger. Utilities Are Powering Up We booked sizable gains in the S&P utilities index and downgraded to neutral last summer, because of our view that bond yields were bottoming on the back of economic stabilization. Since then, relative performance collapsed by 20%, but it has recently started showing some signs of life. Is it time to re-enter this overweight position on a tactical basis? The short answer is yes. There are five reasons to buy utilities at the current juncture with a tactical (1-3 month) time horizon. A possible cooling in economic momentum will redirect capital into the sector. Last week we highlighted that the economically-sensitive transportation index may be heralding mean reversion in key activity gauges, such as the ISM manufacturing index (Chart 4). If the run of positive economic surprises reverses, utilities stocks should receive a sizeable relative performance boost. Transport stock underperformance typically means utility stock outperformance (Chart 4, bottom panel). A cycle-on-cycle analysis of relative utilities performance and the ISM manufacturing survey reveals that is pays to overweight utilities when the latter hits the current level. This has occurred seven times since the early 1990s, and the S&P utilities sector outperformed in the subsequent 3 and 6 months by an average of 3 and 5%, respectively. Only one period generated negative returns (Table 2). Chart 4Utilities Win When Transports Lose
Utilities Win When Transports Lose
Utilities Win When Transports Lose
Table 2Contrary Alert: Buy Utilities
Great Expectations?
Great Expectations?
Market-based inflation expectations have crested, aided by the dip in oil prices. Relative share prices have been inversely correlated with inflation expectations, owing to the link to long-dated Treasury yields. Importantly, the University of Michigan's survey inflation expectations, both short and long term, have been drifting lower signaling that the recent backup in CPI headline inflation will likely prove transitory (inflation expectations shown inverted, Chart 5). The flattening yield curve is also sending a tactical buy signal for utilities stocks (shown inverted, Chart 5). Natural gas prices are strengthening. Nat gas prices are the marginal price setter for non-regulated utilities, and the recent price spike has boosted utilities pricing power. Sell-side analysts have taken notice, aggressively ratcheting EPS numbers higher. Nevertheless, the relative EPS growth bar still remains low, signaling that a relative profit outperformance period looms (Chart 6). Chart 5External Support As...
External Support As...
External Support As...
Chart 6... Earnings Recover
... Earnings Recover
... Earnings Recover
One risk to our tactically bullish utilities view is stagnant electricity generation growth. However, if overall output growth recedes in the next quarter or two, then the non-cyclical power demand profile will shine through, offsetting low utility utilization rates in absolute terms. Bottom Line: There is scope for a playable relative performance rally in the coming one-to-three months. Boost the niche S&P utilities sector to overweight. Soft Drinks Are About To Pop Indiscriminate selling of all consumer staples immediately after the Trump victory restored value in a number of defensive consumer groups. They have stealthily outperformed for most of this year. Chart 7 shows a number of valuation yardsticks. Soft drink stocks are yielding more than both 10-year Treasurys and the broad market. Similarly, the relative P/S and P/E ratios have dipped comfortably below their respective historical means. From a technical standpoint, relative share price momentum has been pushed to a bearish extreme (Chart 7). Against this valuation and technical backdrop, any whiff of operating traction should trigger a playable outperformance phase. Industry pricing power has rebounded smartly, exiting the deflation zone (Chart 8). This firming in selling prices appears to be demand driven. Growth in relative consumer outlays on food and non-alcoholic beverages has improved. Actual industry sales growth has returned to positive territory and beverage output growth is outpacing other non-durable goods industries (Chart 8). While export trends have been a sore spot for beverage companies, the tide should soon turn. The greenback has depreciated versus emerging market (EM) currencies since mid-December, permitting EM central banks to ease monetary policy. That heralds a recovery in consumer goods exports and a reversal of negative translation FX effects (Chart 9, middle panel). Chart 7Cheap And Washed Out
Cheap And Washed Out
Cheap And Washed Out
Chart 8Inflection Point
Inflection Point
Inflection Point
Chart 9Export Drag Should Reverse
Export Drag Should Reverse
Export Drag Should Reverse
The improvement in top-line leading indicators is particularly noteworthy given that cost inflation remains muted. Food input prices are contracting and ethylene prices, a primary packaging ingredient, are also deflating. With headcount under control (Chart 9, bottom panel), there is scope for margin expansion at a time when overall profit margins face a steady squeeze from rising wage inflation. This brightening backdrop, especially in relative terms, has not yet been embraced by the analyst community. Not only are earnings slated to trail the broad market by 7% in the coming year, but 5-year relative EPS growth has plummeted to all-time lows. Such pessimism is unwarranted. All of this implies that while recent beverage shipment growth has been soft, a recovery is likely as the year progresses. That will set the stage for a series of positive surprises, supporting share price outperformance. Bottom Line: The compellingly valued S&P soft drinks index has troughed and has a very attractive reward/risk profile. Were we not already overweight, we would lift exposure to above benchmark today. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the S&P soft drinks index are: BLBG: S5SOFD-KO, PEP, MNST, DPS. Consumer Finance: Cast Aside, But For No Good Reason Like all financials, consumer finance stocks have underperformed the broad market in recent weeks. High intra-financial sector correlations are understandable early in a corrective phase, especially given the magnitude of the initial post-election rally. However, as time passes, correlations should recede because significant discrepancies exist among industry profit drivers. For instance, any meaningful broad market correction could undermine capital markets activity via reduced appetite for new equity issues, less M&A activity and smaller trading fees, taking a bite out of investment banking profits. Elsewhere, banks have been riding hopes for higher net interest margins and an easing regulatory burden. However, without any corresponding improvement in credit growth they are now giving back those gains because bond yields have stalled, the yield curve has narrowed and expectations for deregulation are being watered down to a dilution of terms These factors justify the pullback in both banks and capital markets stocks, even if temporary. On the flipside, the consumer finance group has also been dragged down, even though leading indicators of profitability have continued to improve. As shown in past research, the credit card interest rate spread has low sensitivity to shifts in the yield curve. As such, receivables growth matters more to profits than the slope of the yield curve. Whether consumers embark on debt-financed consumption is heavily dependent on job security, debt-servicing costs, and household wealth. When consumer comfort rises, the personal savings rate tends to decline, indicating a greater propensity to spend. Household net worth has set a new all time high on the back of buoyant financial markets and recovery in house prices (Chart 10). Debt service payments remain historically depressed as a share of disposable income, underscoring that the means to re-leverage exist (Chart 10). Typically credit card charge-offs stay muted until well after debt servicing requirements hit a much higher level, either through reduced incomes or higher interest rates, or a combination of the two. At the moment, both are working in favor of credit quality, not against it. In fact, house prices have reaccelerated sharply in the past few months, which heralds share price outperformance (Chart 11, top panel). Moreover, the steady increase in housing starts bodes well for additional gains in outlays on durable goods, a positive omen for consumer credit demand. Chart 10Credit Quality Remains Strong
Credit Quality Remains Strong
Credit Quality Remains Strong
Chart 11Bullish Leading Indicators
Bullish Leading Indicators
Bullish Leading Indicators
The latter is already growing at a solid clip, in contrast with other lending categories such as C&I loan growth (Chart 11), which is weak and dragging down total bank credit. The surge in consumer income expectations points to an expanded appetite for debt (Chart 11). Consequently, the sell-off in the S&P consumer finance index should be treated as indiscriminate contagion from the rest of the financials sector rather than a reflection of deteriorating fundamentals. Recent value creation represents a buying opportunity. Bottom Line: Stick with a high-conviction overweight in the S&P consumer finance index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the S&P consumer index are: BLBG: S5CFINX-AXP, COF, DFS, SYF, NAVI. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps and stay neutral growth over value.