Fixed Income
Highlights US consumer spending will stall this summer in response to the rising number of Covid cases. Worries about the looming fiscal cliff could also dampen sentiment. Markets are likely to trade nervously over the coming days, but ultimately, stocks will resume their uptrend. The number of new cases already seems to be peaking in some southern US states, and there is no political will to rescind fiscal stimulus. Many institutional investors missed out on the equity rally and will be keen to “buy the dip” on any opportunity. The drop in government bond yields since the start of the year has more than offset the decline in earnings expectations. As odd as it sounds, the pandemic may have raised the fair value of equities. If one wants to challenge this conclusion, one needs to demonstrate that: 1) earnings estimates have not fallen enough; 2) government bond yields have been artificially suppressed; or 3) the post-pandemic world justifies a higher equity risk premium. While there is some truth to all three arguments, they are unlikely to hold much sway over the next 12 months, provided that global growth rebounds and governments and central banks maintain ultra-accommodative fiscal and monetary policies. Investors should remain overweight global equities, while tilting their exposure to beaten-down cyclically-geared stocks and non-US markets. The equity bull market will only end when central banks get panicky about rising inflation, which is unlikely to happen for the next three years. From ROMO To FOMO People often talk about FOMO (the Fear of Missing Out). But for many institutional investors, the past four months has been more about ROMO – the Reality of Missing Out. Chart 1Many Investors Are Bearish On Stocks
Many Investors Are Bearish On Stocks
Many Investors Are Bearish On Stocks
Many investment professionals missed the rally that began in March, and not much has changed since then. The July BofA Merrill Lynch Survey of Fund managers revealed that fund managers are almost one standard deviation overweight cash and nearly one standard deviation underweight equities. In fact, cash allocations increased further since June. The latest sentiment survey conducted by the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) tells a similar story. Bears exceeded bulls by 15 points in this week’s tally, one of the highest spreads on record (Chart 1). This is not what market tops look like. Near-Term Worries Granted, risks abound. The Google Mobility Index has hooked lower, reflecting the worsening Covid outbreak in the sunbelt states and parts of the Midwest. This real time index tends to track economic activity quite well (Chart 2). At this point, it is reasonable to expect the recovery in US consumer spending to stall this summer. Chart 2Covid Outbreak Is Weighing On Spending
Global Equities Can Still Go Higher
Global Equities Can Still Go Higher
Worries about the fiscal cliff could also dampen sentiment. Unemployment benefits for the average American worker are set to fall by more than 60% at the end of July. The funds in the Paycheck Protection Program for small businesses are also running out. To make matters worse, many state and local governments, which began their fiscal year in July, are facing a severe cash crunch due to evaporating tax revenues and rising social spending obligations. Meanwhile, the US elections are only four months away. If the Democrats win the White House and take control of the Senate, the Trump tax cuts will be in jeopardy. Joe Biden has pledged to lift corporate tax rates halfway back to their original levels. This would reduce S&P 500 EPS by about 6%. Risks In Perspective While the discussion above suggests that stocks could trade nervously over the coming days, we should keep things in perspective. The number of new Covid cases has been trending lower in Arizona over the past week and may be close to peaking in the other southern states (Chart 3). Positive news on the vaccine front could also buoy sentiment. Chart 3A Snapshot Of The Number Of New Cases In The Most Afflicted US States
Global Equities Can Still Go Higher
Global Equities Can Still Go Higher
With respect to the fiscal cliff, there is a very high probability that Congress will reach a deal on a new aid package worth around $2.5 trillion. Table 1 shows stimulus remains politically popular nationwide and, more importantly, in the swing states. Table 1There Is Much Public Support For Fiscal Stimulus
Global Equities Can Still Go Higher
Global Equities Can Still Go Higher
If Democrats prevail in November and raise corporate taxes, most of the revenue gained will be plowed back into the economy. Given that empirical estimates suggest that the spending multiplier from the corporate tax cuts was quite small, the net effect will probably be stimulative.1 The risk of an all-out trade war with China would also decline under a Biden administration, which is something the stock market would welcome. Some might contend that stocks are already pricing in a very rosy outlook. However, as we argue below, it is far from clear that this is the case. Has All The Good News Been Priced In? An NPV Analysis The fair value of the stock market can be represented as the expected stream of cash flows that shareholders will receive, deflated by an appropriate discount rate. The discount rate, in turn, can be expressed as a risk-free rate plus an equity risk premium (ERP). The ERP compensates investors for holding riskier stocks compared to safer government bonds. At the start of the year, Wall Street analysts expected S&P 500 earnings to increase by 9% in 2020 and by 11% in both 2021 and 2022. Today, analysts expect earnings to shrink by 23% in 2020, but then rebound by 29% in 2021. This would essentially take earnings back to last year’s levels. Looking further out, analysts expect earning to recover a further 17% in 2022, which would put them on track to reach their pre-pandemic trend by 2024. In contrast, market participants see little scope for a recovery in bond yields (Chart 4). According to the forward curve, the US 10-year is poised to rise from 0.62% at present to just 1.3% in five years’ time. At the start of 2020, investors thought the 10-year yield would be 2.5% in 2025. Along the same vein, the 30-year bond yield is down 106 bps since the start of the year. The 30-year TIPS yield has fallen by 82 bps. Since stocks are a long duration asset, the TIPS yield is a good proxy for the inflation-adjusted, risk-free component of the discount rate. Chart 4After Nosediving, Bond Yields Aren’t Expected To Rise By Much
After Nosediving, Bond Yields Aren't Expected To Rise By Much
After Nosediving, Bond Yields Aren't Expected To Rise By Much
Chart 5 shows that if we combine the change in analyst earnings expectations with the drop in the TIPS yield, the net present value (NPV) of S&P 500 earnings has risen by a staggering 16.2% since the start of the year. Chart 5The Present Value Of Earnings: A Scenario Analysis
Global Equities Can Still Go Higher
Global Equities Can Still Go Higher
Really? It might seem preposterous to conclude that the fair value of the S&P 500 may have increased at a time when the US and the rest of the world have plunged into the deepest recession since the 1930s. Yet, it naturally flows from the premise that the hit to earnings from the pandemic will be temporary, while the decline in bond yields will be much longer lasting. If one wants to challenge this conclusion, one needs to demonstrate that: 1) earnings estimates have not fallen enough; 2) government bond yields have been artificially suppressed; or 3) the post-pandemic world justifies a much higher equity risk premium. Let us examine all three arguments in turn. Are Earnings Estimates Too Optimistic? The short answer is yes. However, this does not say very much. As Chart 6 shows, analysts are usually too optimistic. They typically start every year with overinflated estimates, and subsequently have to scale them down. This happens even during economic expansions. Thus, if estimates end up being trimmed over the coming months, this will not necessarily prevent stocks from moving higher. Chart 6Earnings Estimates Tend To Be Revised Down Even In The Best Of Times
Are Earnings Estimates Too Optimistic? Earnings Estimates Tend To Be Revised Down Even In The Best Of Times
Are Earnings Estimates Too Optimistic? Earnings Estimates Tend To Be Revised Down Even In The Best Of Times
Of course, magnitudes matter a lot. If analysts end up having to revise estimates down more than usual, this could hurt stocks. But will they? That is far from a foregone conclusion. Earnings usually follow the path of nominal GDP. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) expects the level of nominal GDP to be just half a percentage point lower in 2021 than it was in 2019. In this light, the notion that earnings next year will be on par with last year’s levels does not seem that farfetched. Moreover, one should also note that health care and technology are highly overrepresented on Wall Street compared to Main Street. Together, they account for 42% of S&P 500 market capitalization. Outside these two sectors, S&P 500 earnings are expected to be 9% lower in 2021 relative to 2019. In any case, the conclusion that the pandemic has increased the fair value of equities would not change much if we were to assume that earnings recover more slowly than anticipated. The red colored bar in Chart 5 shows the impact on the NPV in a scenario where earnings only return to their pre-pandemic trend by 2030: the NPV still rises by 13.5%. Even if we assume that earnings permanently remain 5% below their pre-pandemic forecast, the NPV would still increase by 9.2% (blue colored bar). In order to push down the NPV by a considerable amount, one would need to assume that the pandemic will not only reduce the level of corporate earnings, but it will reduce the growth rate of earnings as well. For example, if the pandemic reduces earnings growth by one percentage point, this would cause the NPV to fall by 7.5% (gray colored bar). Is this a sensible assumption, however? We don’t think so. While the pandemic will reduce capital spending temporarily, it is unlikely to damage the long-term growth rate of either productivity or the labor force, the two key drivers of potential output. Chart 7 shows that even after the Great Depression, per capita income eventually returned to its long-term trend. Chart 7No Clear Evidence That The Great Depression Lowered Long-Term Trend Growth
No Clear Evidence That The Great Depression Lowered Long-Term Trend Growth
No Clear Evidence That The Great Depression Lowered Long-Term Trend Growth
Are Bond Yields Distorted To The Downside? The notion that the pandemic may have increased the fair value of the stock market hinges critically on the view that the discount rate has fallen substantially this year. We will get to the question of what the appropriate level of the equity risk premium should be in a moment, but let us first examine the risk-free component of the discount rate. Many pundits argue that central bank bond purchases have pushed down yields below where they ought to be. That may be true, but it is not clear why that matters. If one is making present value calculations, one should look at the actual bond yield, not the yield that accords with one’s preconception of what is appropriate. Granted, if bond yields were to rise sharply in the future, the present value of future earnings would probably end up falling. However, this is unlikely to occur anytime soon. It will take a while for unemployment to return to pre-pandemic levels, during which time inflation will remain dormant. And even once inflation starts rising, central banks will likely refrain from hiking rates because they have been concerned about excessively low inflation for nearly two decades. Central banks could also face pressure from governments to keep rates low in order to suppress interest costs. As a result, real rates could fall initially, which would be supportive of stocks. The bull market in equities will only end when inflation reaches a level that makes markets nervous that central banks will have to raise rates. This is unlikely to happen for the next three years. The Equity Risk Premium Is More Likely To Fall Than Rise Chart 8Non-US Stocks Look Cheaper Than Their US Peers In Both Absolute Terms And In Relation To Bond Yields
Non-US Stocks Look Cheaper Than Their US Peers In Both Absolute Terms And In Relation To Bond Yields
Non-US Stocks Look Cheaper Than Their US Peers In Both Absolute Terms And In Relation To Bond Yields
As noted above, there are many risks confronting investors. The key question is whether the stock market’s perception of these risks will subside or intensify. If it is the former, the equity risk premium will probably shrink, pushing stocks higher. If it is the latter, stocks will fall. Our bet is on the former. We have already learned a lot about the virus. We will learn even more over the coming months. This should reduce the cone of uncertainty investors are facing. On the economic side, central bank asset purchases, combined with large-scale fiscal stimulus, have reduced the tail risk of another market meltdown. If policy stays supportive for the next few years, as we expect, the equity risk premium will shrink. Starting points matter, too. Globally, the equity risk premium, which we calculate by subtracting the real bond yield from the cyclically-adjusted earnings yield, was quite high at the start of the year and is even higher now (Chart 8). This suggests that investors should favor stocks over bonds. A Weaker Dollar Will Give Non-US Stocks An Edge The ERP is particularly elevated outside the US. Thus, valuations tend to favor non-US stocks. Of course, it helps to have factors other than valuations on your side when making investment decisions. In the case of regional and sector allocation, the outlook for the US dollar is critical. Chart 9 shows that cyclical stocks tend to outperform defensives when the dollar is weakening, while non-US stocks tend to do better than their US peers. There are five reasons to expect the US dollar to depreciate over the next 12 months. First, as a countercyclical currency, a revival in global growth should hurt the dollar (Chart 10). Second, the US has been harder hit by the virus over the past few months than most other economies. Thus, the spread between overseas growth and US growth is likely to widen more than usual (Chart 11). Chart 9Cyclical Sectors Should Outperform Defensives As Global Growth Recovers... And A Weaker Dollar Should Also Help Non-US Stocks
Cyclical Sectors Should Outperform Defensives As Global Growth Recovers... And A Weaker Dollar Should Also Help Non-US Stocks
Cyclical Sectors Should Outperform Defensives As Global Growth Recovers... And A Weaker Dollar Should Also Help Non-US Stocks
Chart 10A Revival In Global Growth Should Hurt The Dollar
A Revival In Global Growth Should Hurt The Dollar
A Revival In Global Growth Should Hurt The Dollar
Chart 11The Dollar Will Also Weaken On The Widening Gap Between Overseas Growth And US Growth
The Dollar Will Also Weaken On The Widening Gap Between Overseas Growth And US Growth
The Dollar Will Also Weaken On The Widening Gap Between Overseas Growth And US Growth
Chart 12Interest Rate Differentials No Longer Favor The Dollar
Interest Rate Differentials No Longer Favor The Dollar
Interest Rate Differentials No Longer Favor The Dollar
Third, interest rate differentials no longer favor the dollar, now that the Fed has brought rates down to zero (Chart 12). Fourth, momentum is not on the greenback’s side anymore (Chart 13). Fifth, the dollar is expensive based on measures such as purchasing power parity exchange rates (Chart 14). Chart 13Momentum Is Not On The Greenback’s Side
Global Equities Can Still Go Higher
Global Equities Can Still Go Higher
The right trade over the past few years was to be long the dollar and overweight US stocks. It is time to flip this trade and do the opposite. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Chart 14USD Is Not Cheap
USD Is Not Cheap
USD Is Not Cheap
Footnotes 1 An IMF analysis of the use of funds of listed companies found that only about one fifth of the increase in corporate cash since the adoption of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) was used for capex and R&D. The rest was utilized for share buybacks, dividend payouts, and other activities. The same study also noted that actual GDP and business investment growth in 2018 fell short of the predicted impact of the TCJA based on empirical studies of postwar US tax changes. Please see Emanuel Kopp, Daniel Leigh, Susanna Mursula, and Suchanan Tambunlertchai, "U.S. Investment Since the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017," IMF Working Paper, May 31, 2019. Global Investment Strategy View Matrix
Global Equities Can Still Go Higher
Global Equities Can Still Go Higher
Current MacroQuant Model Scores
Global Equities Can Still Go Higher
Global Equities Can Still Go Higher
Banks continue to raise their loss provisions on their credit books because the depressed level of economic activity is increasing the risk of bankruptcies among their borrowers. For now, stalwarts like JP Morgan or US Bancorp are indicating that loss…
BCA Research's Global Fixed Income Strategy service is upgrading its allocation to EM USD-denominated corporates and sovereigns to neutral. A weaker USD and a clear bottom in growth are required to buy EM USD-denominated sovereign and corporate debt.…
Even at the current low level of yields, government bonds still have a place in a balanced portfolio as a source of diversification against equity and credit risk. However, are govies attractive as standalone assets? In aggregate, our valuation models show…
Highlights Q2/2020 Performance Breakdown: Our recommended model bond portfolio outperformed the custom benchmark by +11bps during the second quarter of the year. Winners & Losers: The government bond side of the portfolio outperformed by +8bps, led by overweights in the US (+4bps), Canada (+4bps) and Italy (+3bps). Spread product generated a small outperformance (+3bps), with overweights in US investment grade (+43bps) offsetting underweights in emerging market debt (-35bps). Scenario Analysis For The Next Six Months: We are sticking close to benchmark on overall duration and spread product exposure, focusing more on relative value between countries and sectors to generate outperformance amid economic uncertainties caused by the growing spread of COVID-19. We continue favoring markets where there is direct buying from central banks, but we are also increasing our recommended exposure to EM USD-denominated debt versus US investment grade corporates. Feature The first half of 2020 has been one of rapid market moves and regime shifts for global fixed income markets. In the first quarter, developed market government debt provided the best returns as bond yields plunged with central banks racing to support collapsing economies through rate cuts and liquidity injections. In Q2, corporate credit delivered the top returns, as economies started to emerge from the COVID-19 lockdowns and, more importantly, the Fed and other major central banks delivered direct support to frozen credit markets through asset purchases. Now, even as an increasing number of global growth indicators are tracing out a "V"-shaped recovery, new cases of COVID-19 are surging though the southern US and major emerging economies like Brazil and India. This raises new challenges for investors for the second half of 2020. A second wave of the coronavirus could jeopardize the nascent global economic recovery, even after the massive easing of monetary and fiscal policies, at a time when valuations on many risk assets appear stretched. In this report, we review the performance of the BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy (GFIS) model bond portfolio during the second quarter of 2020. We also present our recommended portfolio positioning for the next six months. Given the lingering uncertainties from the renewed spread of COVID-19, we continue to take a more measured approach in our portfolio allocations. That means focusing more on relative value between countries and sectors while staying closer to benchmark on overall global duration and spread product exposure versus government bonds (Table 1). Table 1GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Recommended Positioning For The Next Six Months
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Selective Optimism
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Selective Optimism
As a reminder to existing readers (and to new clients), the model portfolio is a part of our service that complements the usual macro analysis of global fixed income markets. The portfolio is how we communicate our opinion on the relative attractiveness between government bond and spread product sectors. We do this by applying actual percentage weightings to each of our recommendations within a fully invested hypothetical bond portfolio. Q2/2020 Model Portfolio Performance Breakdown: Slight Outperformance For Both Sovereigns And Credits Chart 1Q2/2020 Performance: Modest Gains From Relative Positioning
Q2/2020 Performance: Modest Gains From Relative Positioning
Q2/2020 Performance: Modest Gains From Relative Positioning
The total return for the GFIS model portfolio (hedged into US dollars) in the second quarter was 3.22%, modestly outperforming the custom benchmark index by +11bps (Chart 1).1 In terms of the specific breakdown between the government bond and spread product allocations in our model portfolio, the former generated +8bps of outperformance versus our custom benchmark index while the latter outperformed by +3bps. That government bond return includes the small gain (+2bps) from inflation-linked bonds, which we added as a new asset class in our model portfolio framework on June 23.2 In a world of very low bond yields (Table 2), our preference for the higher-yielding government bond markets in the US, Canada, the UK and Italy was the main source of outperformance, delivering a combined excess return of +13bps (including inflation-linked bonds). Our underweight in Japan delivered a surprising positive excess return of +4bps as longer-dated JGB yields – which do not fall under the Bank of Japan’s yield curve control policy – rose during the quarter. Underweights in the low-yielding core euro area countries of Germany and France were a drag on the portfolio (a combined -10bps), particularly the latter where longer-maturity French bonds enjoyed a very strong rally in Q2. Table 2GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Overall Return Attribution
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Selective Optimism
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Selective Optimism
In spread product, our overweights in US investment grade corporates (+43bps), UK investment grade corporates (+7bps) and US commercial MBS (+5bps) squeezed out a combined small gain versus underweights in emerging markets (EM) USD-denominated credit (-35bps), euro area high-yield (-8bps) and lower-rated US high-yield (-6bps). In a world of very low bond yields (Table 2), our preference for the higher-yielding government bond markets in the US, Canada, the UK and Italy was the main source of outperformance. That modest outperformance of the model bond portfolio versus the benchmark is in line with our cautious recommended stance on what are always the largest drivers of the portfolio returns: overall duration exposure and the relative allocation between government debt and spread product. We have stuck close to benchmark exposures on both, eschewing big directional bets on bond yields or credit spreads while focusing more on relative opportunities between countries and sectors. This conservative approach is how we are approaching what we have dubbed “The Battle of 2020” between the opposing forces of coronavirus contagion (which is bullish for government bonds and bearish for credit) and policy reflation (vice versa).3 The bar charts showing the total and relative returns for each individual government bond market and spread product sector are presented in Charts 2 & 3. Chart 2GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Government Bond Performance Attribution
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Selective Optimism
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Selective Optimism
Chart 3GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Spread Product Performance Attribution By Sector
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Selective Optimism
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Selective Optimism
The most significant movers were: Biggest Outperformers Overweight US investment grade industrials (+28bps) Overweight US investment grade financials (+12bps) Overweight UK investment grade corporates (+7bps) Overweight US CMBS (+5bps) Underweight Japanese government bonds with maturity greater than 10 years (+5 bps) Biggest Underperformers Underweight EM USD denominated corporates (-24bps) Underweight EM USD denominated sovereigns (-10bps) Underweight EUR high-yield corporates (-8bps) Underweight French government bonds with maturity greater than 10 years (-5bps) Underweight US B-rated high-yield corporates (-4bps) Chart 4 presents the ranked benchmark index returns of the individual countries and spread product sectors in the GFIS model bond portfolio for Q2/2020. Returns are hedged into US dollars (we do not take active currency risk in this portfolio) and adjusted to reflect duration differences between each country/sector and the overall custom benchmark index for the model portfolio. We have also color coded the bars in each chart to reflect our recommended investment stance for each market during Q2/2020 (red for underweight, dark green for overweight, gray for neutral).4 Ideally, we would look to see more green bars on the left side of the chart where market returns are highest, and more red bars on the right side of the chart were returns are lowest. Chart 4Ranking The Winners & Losers From The GFIS Model Bond Portfolio In Q2/2020
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Selective Optimism
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Selective Optimism
The top performing sectors in our model bond portfolio universe in Q2 were all spread product: EM USD-denominated sovereign (+12.9% in USD-hedged terms, duration-matched to the custom model portfolio benchmark index), EM USD-denominated corporate debt (+12.6%), UK investment grade corporates (+11.3%), US investment grade corporates (+10.9%), and high-yield corporates in the euro area (+6.7%) and US (+5.6%). The top performing sectors in our model bond portfolio universe in Q2 were all spread product. During the quarter, we maintained relative exposures to those sectors within an overall small above-benchmark allocation to global spread product – overweight US and UK investment grade versus underweight emerging market credit, neutral overall US high-yield (favoring Ba-rated debt) versus underweight euro area high-yield. Those allocations were motivated by our theme of “buying what the central banks are buying”, like the Fed purchasing US investment grade corporates. Importantly, we had limited exposure to the worst performing sectors during Q2: underweight government bonds in Japan (index return of -0.47% in USD-hedged, duration-matched terms) and Germany (+0.47%), a neutral allocation to Australian sovereign debt (-0.07%) and an underweight in US Agency MBS (+0.20%). The latter two positions came after we downgraded US MBS to underweight in early April and cut our long-held overweight in Australia to neutral in mid-May. Bottom Line: Our model bond portfolio modestly outperformed its benchmark index in the second quarter of the year by +11bps – a positive result driven by our relative positioning that favored higher yielding government debt and spread product sectors directly supported by central bank purchases. Future Drivers Of Portfolio Returns Chart 5Overall Portfolio Allocation: Slightly Overweight Credit Vs Governments
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Selective Optimism
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Selective Optimism
Typically, in these quarterly performance reviews of our model bond portfolio, we make return forecasts for the portfolio based off scenario analysis and quantitative predictions of various fixed income asset classes. However, the current environment is unprecedented because of the COVID-19 outbreak. Not only is there now elevated economic uncertainty, but central banks are running extreme monetary policies in response - including direct intervention in markets through purchases of both government bonds and spread product. Thus, we are reluctant to rely on historical model coefficients and correlations to estimate expected fixed income returns. Instead, we will focus on the logic behind our current model portfolio allocations and the expected contribution to overall portfolio performance over the next six months. At the moment, the main factors that will drive the performance of the model bond portfolio over the next six months are the following: Our recommended overweight stance on relatively higher-yielding sovereigns like the US, Canada and Italy versus low-yielders like Germany, France and Japan; Our allocation to inflation-linked bonds out of nominal government debt in the US, Italy and Canada; Our recommended overweight stance on spread product backstopped by central bank purchases - US investment grade corporates, US Agency CMBS, US Ba-rated high-yield, and UK investment grade corporates; Our recommended underweight stance on riskier spread product - euro area high-yield, US B-rated and Caa-rated high-yield, and EM USD-denominated corporates and sovereigns. The portfolio currently has a small aggregate overweight allocation to spread product relative to government bonds, equal to three percentage points (Chart 5). We feel that is an appropriate allocation to credit versus sovereigns in an environment that is still highly uncertain concerning the spread of COVID-19 and how global growth will evolve over the next 6-12 months. This also leaves room to increase the spread product allocation should the news on the virus and the global economy take a turn for the better. We also remain neutral on overall portfolio duration exposure. Our Global Duration Indicator, which contains growth data like our global leading economic indicator and the global ZEW expectations index, has rebounded sharply and is signaling that bond yields should bottom out in the second half of 2020 (Chart 6). A rise in yields will take longer to develop, however, with virtually all major central banks signaling that policy rates will stay near 0% for an extended period. Chart 6Our Global Duration Indicator Says Bond Yields Will Bottom Out In H2/2020
Our Global Duration Indicator Says Bond Yields Will Bottom Out In H2/2020
Our Global Duration Indicator Says Bond Yields Will Bottom Out In H2/2020
Chart 7Within Governments, Overweight Inflation-Linked Bonds Vs. Nominals
Within Governments, Overweight Inflation-Linked Bonds Vs. Nominals
Within Governments, Overweight Inflation-Linked Bonds Vs. Nominals
The recent moves in developed market government bonds are interesting in terms of the underlying drivers of yields – real yields and inflation expectations. Longer-maturity inflation breakevens – the spread between the yields of nominal and inflation-linked government debt – have drifted higher since late March after major central banks began rapidly easing monetary conditions. At the same time, the actual yields on inflation-linked bonds, i.e. real yields, have moved lower and largely offset the gains in inflation breakevens (Chart 7). Nominal yields have been stuck in very narrow ranges as a result. We do not see that dynamic changing, at least in the near term. Inflation breakevens are too low on our models across all developed markets, and are likely to continue inching higher in the coming months on the back of a pickup in global growth and rising energy prices. At the same time, central banks will be staying on hold for longer while continuing to buy large quantities of nominal bonds, helping push real yields lower. Given these opposing forces on nominal government bond yields, we think it is far too soon to contemplate reducing overall duration – even with equity and credit markets having rallied sharply off the lows and global economic indicators rebounding. Thus, we are maintaining an overall duration exposure close to benchmark in the model portfolio (Chart 8). At the same time, we are playing for wider breakevens and lower real bond yields through allocations to markets where our models indicate better value in being long breakevens: US TIPS, Italian inflation-linked BTPs, and Canadian Real Return Bonds. Within the government bond side of the model bond portfolio, we continue to recommend focusing more on country allocation to generate outperformance. That means concentrating exposures in relatively higher yielding markets like the US, Canada and Italy while maintaining underweights in low-yielding core Europe and Japan. Turning to spread product allocations, we continue to recommend focusing more on policymaker responses to the COVID-19 recession, and its uncertain recovery, rather than the downturn itself. The now double-digit year-over-year growth in global central bank balance sheets - which has led global high-yield and investment grade excess returns by one year in the years after the Global Financial Crisis (Chart 9) – is pointing to additional global corporate bond market outperformance versus governments over the next 6-12 months. Chart 8Overall Portfolio Duration: Close To Benchmark
Overall Portfolio Duration: Close To Benchmark
Overall Portfolio Duration: Close To Benchmark
In other words, we are focusing on global QE rather than global recession, while maintaining a modest recommended overall weighting on global spread product. That allocation could be larger, but we suggest picking the lowest hanging fruit in the credit universe rather than going for the highest beta credit markets like Caa-rated US high-yield that have already seen significant spread compression relative to higher-rated US junk bonds (bottom panel). Chart 9Global QE Supporting Credit Markets
Global QE Supporting Credit Markets
Global QE Supporting Credit Markets
Chart 10Overall Credit Allocation: Keep Buying What The Central Banks Are Buying
Overall Credit Allocation: Keep Buying What The Central Banks Are Buying
Overall Credit Allocation: Keep Buying What The Central Banks Are Buying
We continue to focus our recommended spread product allocations on the parts of global credit markets where central banks are directly buying. We continue to focus our recommended spread product allocations on the parts of global credit markets where central banks are directly buying (Chart 10). In the US, that means overweighting US investment grade corporate bonds (particularly those with maturities of less than five years), US Ba-rated high-yield that the Fed can hold in its corporate bond buying program, US Agency CMBS that is also supported by Fed programs, and UK investment grade corporate bonds that the Bank of England is buying. We also put Italian government bonds into this category, with the ECB buying greater amounts of BTPs as part of its COVID-19 monetary support efforts. What about emerging market debt? We have expressed reservations in recent months about upgrading EM USD-denominated sovereign and corporate debt, even within our portfolio theme of being “selectively opportunistic” about recommended spread product allocations. We have long felt that the time to buy those markets would be when the US dollar had clearly peaked and global growth had clearly bottomed. The latter condition now appears to be in place, and the strong upward momentum in the US dollar is starting to weaken. This forces us to reconsider our stance on EM debt in the model portfolio. Even after the powerful Q2 rally in EM corporate and sovereign debt, EM credit spreads still look relatively attractive using one of our favorite credit valuation metrics – the percentile rankings of 12-month breakeven spreads. Those breakeven spreads are calculated, as the amount of spread widening that would make the return of EM credit equal to duration-matched US Treasuries over a 12-month horizon. We then compare those spreads to their own history to determine how attractive current spread levels are now on a “spread volatility adjusted” basis. Current 12-month breakeven spreads for EM USD-denominated sovereigns and corporates are in the upper quartile of their own history. This compares favorably to other spread products in our model bond portfolio universe, particularly US investment grade corporates where the 12-month breakevens are now just below the long-run median (Chart 11). Chart 11A Comparison Of Credit Sectors Using 12-Month Breakeven Spreads
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Selective Optimism
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Selective Optimism
The current Bloomberg Barclays EM corporate benchmark index option-adjusted spread (OAS) is around 300bps above that of the US investment grade corporate index OAS. That spread still has room to compress further if global growth continues to rebound and the US dollar softens versus EM currencies. Leading growth indicators like the China credit impulse, which has picked up sharply as Chinese authorities have ramped up economic stimulus measures, are now back to levels last seen in 2016 when EM credit strongly outperformed US investment grade corporates (Chart 12). Chart 12Upgrade EM Credit Versus US Investment Grade
Upgrade EM Credit Versus US Investment Grade
Upgrade EM Credit Versus US Investment Grade
Chart 13Overall Portfolio Yield: Close To Benchmark
Overall Portfolio Yield: Close To Benchmark
Overall Portfolio Yield: Close To Benchmark
This week we are upgrading our weighting on EM USD-denominated corporates and sovereigns to neutral, from underweight, in our model bond portfolio. Although we acknowledge that the EM story has been made more complicated by the rapid spread of COVID-19 through the major EM economies, an underweight stance – particularly versus US investment grade credit – is increasingly unwarranted. Therefore, this week we are upgrading our weighting on EM USD-denominated corporates and sovereigns to neutral, from underweight, in our model bond portfolio (see the updated table on pages 17-18). That new allocation will be “funded” by reducing our overweight in US investment grade corporates. Model bond portfolio yield and tracking error considerations Importantly, the selective global government bond and credit allocations we have just outlined do not come at a cost in terms of forgone yield. The portfolio yield after our upgrade of EM debt will be slightly above that of the custom benchmark index (Chart 13), indicating no “negative carry” even when avoiding parts of the US and euro area high-yield markets. Chart 14Overall Portfolio Risk: Moderate
Overall Portfolio Risk: Moderate
Overall Portfolio Risk: Moderate
Finally, turning to the risk budget of the model portfolio, we are aiming for a “moderate” overall tracking error, or the gap between the portfolio’s volatility and that of the benchmark index. The portfolio volatility has fallen dramatically from the surge seen during the global market rout in March, moving lower alongside realized market volatility. The tracking error now sits at 64bps, well below our self-imposed limit of 100bps and within the 50-70bps range we are targeting as a “moderate” level of overall portfolio risk (Chart 14). Bottom Line: We are sticking close to benchmark on overall duration and spread product exposure, focusing more on relative value between countries and sectors to generate outperformance amid economic uncertainties caused by the growing spread of COVID-19. We continue favoring markets where there is direct buying from central banks. We are also increasing our recommended exposure on EM USD-denominated debt to neutral, funded by a reduced allocation to US investment grade corporates where valuations are less attractive. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, CFA Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The GFIS model bond portfolio custom benchmark index is the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index, but with allocations to global high-yield corporate debt replacing very high quality spread product (i.e. AA-rated). We believe this to be more indicative of the typical internal benchmark used by global multi-sector fixed income managers. 2 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "How To Play The Revival Of Global Inflation Expectations'", dated June 23 2020, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Contagion Vs. Reflation: The Battle Of 2020 Rages On", dated June 30, 2020, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Note that sectors where we made changes to our recommended weightings during Q2/2020 will have multiple colors in the respective bars in Chart 4. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Selective Optimism
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2020 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Selective Optimism
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Energy Bond Model: This report presents models for both investment grade and high-yield Energy bond excess returns. The models are based on overall corporate bond index spreads and the oil price. They can be used to generate Energy bond excess return forecasts for investment horizons up to 12 months. IG Energy Bonds: Our model suggests that investment grade Energy bond excess returns will be strong during the next 12 months under likely economic scenarios. We recommend an overweight allocation to investment grade Energy bonds. HY Energy Bonds: Our models imply positive excess return outcomes for high-yield Energy bonds, but we remain concerned about near-term default risk for lower-rated issuers. We advise a cautious (neutral) allocation for now. Part 2 of this Special Report, to be published next week, will dig further into the high-yield Energy index on an issuer-by-issuer basis. Feature Table 1Energy Bond Excess Return* Scenarios (12-Month Investment Horizon)
The Outlook For Energy Bonds Part 1: A Model Of Energy Bond Excess Returns
The Outlook For Energy Bonds Part 1: A Model Of Energy Bond Excess Returns
During the past couple of months we’ve published several reports that take more detailed looks at specific industry groups within both the investment grade and high-yield corporate bond markets. So far, we’ve published reports on: Banks1 Healthcare & Pharmaceuticals2 Technology3 This week and next week, we continue our series with a deep dive into Energy bonds that is split between two Special Reports. This week’s report develops a model for Energy bond excess returns based on overall corporate bond index excess returns and the oil price. In next week’s report, we look more deeply into the characteristics of the investment grade and high-yield Energy indexes. We also consider the outlooks for the five sub-categories of Energy debt: Independent, Integrated, Oil Field Services, Refining and Midstream. A Model Of Energy Bond Excess Returns A good starting point for modeling the excess returns of any corporate bond sector is to combine the sector’s Duration-Times-Spread (DTS) ratio with the excess returns of the overall corporate bond index.4 Please note that “excess returns” refers to returns relative to a duration-matched position in Treasury securities. The DTS-only model explains 86% of the variance in monthly investment grade Energy excess returns. Considering only a sector’s DTS ratio, we can define the following model for monthly investment grade Energy excess returns: EXSENRG = (DTSENRG / DTSCORP) * EXSCORP Where: EXSENRG = Monthly investment grade Energy excess returns versus duration-matched Treasuries (DTSENRG / DTSCORP) = The investment grade Energy sector’s DTS ratio EXSCORP = Monthly investment grade corporate index excess returns versus duration-matched Treasuries For example, the current DTS for the investment grade Energy sector is 18. The DTS for the overall corporate index is 12. This means that the DTS ratio for the Energy sector is 18/12 = 1.5. According to our simple model, we would expect Energy sector excess returns to be 1.5 times corporate index excess returns in any given month. It turns out that our simple model performs quite well. Chart 1 shows monthly investment grade Energy sector excess returns versus our model’s prediction. Our sample period spans from 1997 to the present. Specifically, we find that our model explains 86% of the variance in monthly investment grade Energy excess returns. Chart 1Investment Grade Energy Monthly Excess Returns*: DTS-Only Model**
The Outlook For Energy Bonds Part 1: A Model Of Energy Bond Excess Returns
The Outlook For Energy Bonds Part 1: A Model Of Energy Bond Excess Returns
The simple (DTS-only) model’s performance is admirable, but we can do slightly better if we also incorporate the oil price. Chart 2 shows a statistically significant relationship between the residual from the DTS-only model and the monthly change in the Brent crude oil price. Chart 2Residual From DTS-Only Model* Versus Oil Price
The Outlook For Energy Bonds Part 1: A Model Of Energy Bond Excess Returns
The Outlook For Energy Bonds Part 1: A Model Of Energy Bond Excess Returns
Combining the models shown in Charts 1 and 2, we get a model for investment grade Energy monthly excess returns based on both corporate index excess returns and the oil price: EXSENRG = (DTSENRG / DTSCORP) * EXSCORP + (376.84 * ∆ ln Oil) – 1.0587 Where excess returns are measured in basis points and (∆ ln Oil) = the monthly change in the natural logarithm of the Brent crude oil price. Chart 3 shows the historical performance of this complete model. Note that the model now explains 91% of the historical variance of investment grade Energy excess returns, 5% more than the initial DTS-only model. Chart 3Investment Grade Energy Monthly Excess Returns*: Complete Model (DTS & Oil)**
The Outlook For Energy Bonds Part 1: A Model Of Energy Bond Excess Returns
The Outlook For Energy Bonds Part 1: A Model Of Energy Bond Excess Returns
Robustness Checks We performed the same analysis for 3-month, 6-month and 12-month excess returns and found very consistent results (Table 2). The oil price adds significant explanatory power to the model in each case, but the bulk of variation in investment grade Energy excess returns is determined by trends in the overall corporate index spread. Table 2Investment Grade Energy Excess Returns*: Model Results Using Different Return Frequencies (1997 - Present)
The Outlook For Energy Bonds Part 1: A Model Of Energy Bond Excess Returns
The Outlook For Energy Bonds Part 1: A Model Of Energy Bond Excess Returns
We also find consistent results when looking at high-yield Energy returns (Table 3). Once again, the bulk of excess return variation is explained by multiplying the DTS ratio and the benchmark index’s excess returns. The oil price also adds a statistically significant amount of extra explanatory power. Table 3High-Yield Energy Excess Returns*: Model Results Using Different Return Frequencies (1997 - Present)
The Outlook For Energy Bonds Part 1: A Model Of Energy Bond Excess Returns
The Outlook For Energy Bonds Part 1: A Model Of Energy Bond Excess Returns
One final observation is that oil explains a greater proportion of the variation in Energy sector excess returns if we limit our sample period to the past few years. Specifically, we re-ran the monthly iterations of both the investment grade and high-yield models from July 2014 to present. We found that the DTS component of the model explains the same amount of excess return variation as it did for the full sample. However, we also found that the oil price has a much greater impact if the sample is limited to the past six years (Table 4). Table 41-Month Excess Return* Models: Full Sample (1997 - Present) Versus Recent Sample (2014 - Present)
The Outlook For Energy Bonds Part 1: A Model Of Energy Bond Excess Returns
The Outlook For Energy Bonds Part 1: A Model Of Energy Bond Excess Returns
Energy Excess Return Scenarios Finally, using our 12-month excess return models for investment grade and high-yield Energy, we can project likely outcomes for Energy excess returns versus Treasuries for the next 12 months. All we have to do is assume different outcomes for the overall benchmark index spread (either the investment grade or High-Yield index, depending on the model) and the oil price.5 The results of this scenario analysis are shown in Table 1. Starting with investment grade Energy, we see that all scenarios where the investment grade corporate index spread tightens lead to positive Energy excess returns. This is true even in a scenario where the oil price falls by $20 during the next year. Our model also suggests that a $10-$20 increase in the oil price during the next 12 months will keep Energy excess returns positive, even in a modest “risk off” scenario where the corporate index spread widens by 25 bps. All scenarios where the investment grade corporate index spread tightens lead to positive Energy excess returns. The story is similar in high-yield, though returns are much more variable. For example, high-yield Energy is projected to lose money relative to Treasuries in a scenario where the junk index spread tightens 50 bps and the oil price falls by $20. There are no scenarios where benchmark index spread tightening coincides with negative Energy excess returns in the investment grade model. Chart 4Watch For Falling Inventories
Watch For Falling Inventories
Watch For Falling Inventories
In terms of likely scenarios for the next 12 months, we anticipate further spread tightening for corporate bonds rated Ba & above. But we also view B-rated and lower spreads as too tight given the default outlook for the next 12 months and the fact that these lower-rated issuers usually can’t access the Fed’s emergency lending facilities.6 With that in mind, we would confidently bet on investment grade index spread tightening during the next 12 months, but can envision high-yield spread widening driven by the lower credit tiers. On oil, our Commodity & Energy Strategy service forecasts an average Brent crude oil price of $65 in 2021, a sizeable increase relative to the current price of $43.27.7 Our strategists expect a significant supply contraction in the second quarter of this year that will cause the oil market to enter a physical deficit in the second half of 2020. Investors can look for falling storage levels in the coming months to confirm whether that forecast is playing out (Chart 4). Escalating tensions between the US and Iran pose an additional near-term upside risk to oil prices. This risk increased during the past few weeks as a string of mysterious explosions struck several Iranian military and economic facilities.8 However, with major oil producers now operating significantly below capacity, any net impact on oil prices from a supply disruption in the Persian Gulf would likely be short-lived. Investment Conclusions All in all, our bullish outlook for both investment grade corporate bond spreads and the oil price makes us inclined to overweight investment grade Energy bonds on a 12-month horizon. Within high-yield, our model also suggests that we should have a bullish bias toward Energy, but we remain concerned about default risk for lower-rated (B & below) Energy issuers during the next few months. We will dig into the high-yield Energy index on an issuer-by-issuer basis in Part 2 of this report, to be published next week. For now, we advise a more cautious stance toward high-yield Energy. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Negative Oil, The Zero Lower Bound And The Fisher Equation”, dated April 28, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Assessing Healthcare & Pharma Bonds In A Pandemic”, dated June 9, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Take A Look At High-Yield Technology Bonds”, dated June 23, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Duration-Times-Spread (DTS) is a simple measure that is highly correlated with excess return volatility for corporate bonds. The DTS ratio is the ratio of a sector’s DTS to that of the benchmark index. It can be thought of like the beta of a stock. A DTS ratio above 1.0 signals that the sector is cyclical (or “high beta”), a DTS ratio below 1.0 signals that the sector is defensive or (“low beta”). For more details on the DTS measure please see: Arik Ben Dor, Lev Dynkin, Jay Hyman, Patrick Houweling, Erik van Leeuwen & Olaf Penninga, “DTS (Duration-Times-Spread)”, Journal of Portfolio Management 33(2), January 2007. 5 We translate changes in benchmark index spread into 12-month excess returns using the formula: excess return = option-adjusted spread – (duration * change in option-adjusted spread) 6 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “No Holding Back”, dated June 16, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, “Low Vol, High Uncertainty Keeps Oil-Price Rally On Tenterhooks”, dated June 18, 2020, available at ces.bcaresearch.com 8 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Alert, “Cyber-Rattling In The Middle East”, dated July 10, 2020, available at gps.bcaresearch.com
BCA Research's European Investment Strategy service's fractal trading model has given them a sell signal on the stock-to-bond ratio. Since 2015, a collapsed 65-day fractal structure of the German stock-to-bond ratio has reliably presaged a change in trend,…
Feature Over the last several years when I travelled to Europe, I would meet with Ms. Mea, an outspoken client of the Emerging Markets Strategy service. We have published our conversations with Ms. Mea in the past and this semi-annual series has complemented our regular reports. She has challenged our views and convictions, serving as a voice for many other clients. In addition, these conversations have highlighted nuances of our analysis, for her and to the benefit of our readers. With travel restrictions in force, this time we had to resort to an online meeting with Ms. Mea. Below are the key parts of our conversation from earlier this week. Ms. Mea: Let’s begin with your main thesis, which over the past several years has been as follows: China’s growth drives EM business cycles and financial markets overall. Indeed, as long as China’s growth dithers, EM growth and asset prices languish. However, since the pandemic started China has stimulated aggressively and there are clear signs that the economy is recovering. The latest surge in Chinese share prices confirms that a robust recovery is underway. Why do you not think China’s economy is on the upswing? Answer: True, we believe China’s business cycle is instrumental to EM economies’ growth and balance of payments. We upgraded our outlook for Chinese growth in our May 28 report as the National People’s Congress set the objective for monetary policy in 2020 to significantly accelerate the growth rate of broad money supply and total social financing relative to last year. Indeed, broad money growth as well as both private and public credit have accelerated since April and will continue to increase (Chart I-1). Domestic orders have also surged though export orders are still languishing (Chart I-2). Chart I-1China: Money And Credit Will Continue Accelerating
China: Money And Credit Will Continue Accelerating
China: Money And Credit Will Continue Accelerating
Chart I-2China: Improvement In Domestic Orders But Not In Export Ones
China: Improvement In Domestic Orders But Not In Export Ones
China: Improvement In Domestic Orders But Not In Export Ones
That said, financial markets, including the ones leveraged to China, have run ahead of fundamentals and a pullback is overdue. We have been waiting for such a setback to turn more positive on EM risk assets and currencies. Further, the snapback in business activity following the lockdown should not be confused with an economic expansion. As economies around the world reopened, business activity was bound to improve. Were any asset markets priced to reflect months or a whole year of closures? Even at the nadir of the global equity selloff in late March, we do not think risk assets were priced for extended lockdowns. The Chinese economy will likely eventually experience a robust expansion later this year but the nearterm outlook for global risk assets and commodities remains risky. In our view, the rally in global stocks and commodities has been much stronger than is warranted by the near-term economic conditions in a majority of economies around the world. In short, we have not been surprised at all by the economic data that has emerged since economies have reopened, but we have been perplexed by the markets’ response to these data. Even in China, which is ahead of all other countries in regards to the reopening and normalization of business activity, the level and thrust of economic activity remains worrisome. Specifically: China's manufacturing PMI new orders and the backlog of orders sub-components remain below the neutral 50 line (Chart I-3). The imports subcomponent of the manufacturing PMI has shown signs of peaking below the 50 line, portending a risk to industrial metals prices (Chart I-4). Chart I-3China Manufacturing PMI: Measures Of Orders Are Still Below 50
China Manufacturing PMI: Measures Of Orders Are Still Below 50
China Manufacturing PMI: Measures Of Orders Are Still Below 50
Chart I-4A Yellow Flag For Commodities
A Yellow Flag For Commodities
A Yellow Flag For Commodities
Marginal propensity to spend for both enterprises and households continues to trend lower (Chart I-5). These gauge the willingness of consumers and companies to spend and, hence, reflect the multiplier effect of the stimulus. These indicators contend that the multiplier so far remains low/weak. Finally, with the exception of new economy stocks (such as Ali-Baba and Tencent) that have been exceptionally strong worldwide, Chinese share prices leveraged to capital expenditure and consumer discretionary spending had not been particularly strong before last week, as illustrated in Chart I-6. Chart I-5Marginal Propensity To Spend Among Chinese Households And Enterprises
Marginal Propensity To Spend Among Chinese Households And Enterprises
Marginal Propensity To Spend Among Chinese Households And Enterprises
Chart I-6Chinese Stocks Had Been Languishing Till Late Outside New Economy Ones
Chinese Stocks Had Been Languishing Till Late Outside New Economy Ones
Chinese Stocks Had Been Languishing Till Late Outside New Economy Ones
In a nutshell, the Chinese economy will likely eventually experience a robust expansion later this year but the near-term outlook for global risk assets and commodities remains risky. As to EM risk assets, the key risk to our stance is a FOMO-driven rally buoyed by the “visible hand” of governments. Ms. Mea: What is your interpretation of the latest policy push in China for higher share prices? Is it also a part of the “visible hand” of government? Don’t you think this could create another strong multi-month run like it did in early 2015? Answer: Yes, this is one of many instances of the “visible hand” of governments around the world. It is not clear why Beijing is boosting investor sentiment and explicitly promoting higher share prices given how badly similar efforts in 2015 ultimately ended. At the moment, we can only speculate that one or several of the following reasons are behind this move: Beijing is preparing for an escalation in the US-China geopolitical confrontation ahead of the US presidential elections. This latter is highly probable in our opinion.1 To limit the impact of this confrontation on their economy, they want to ensure that the stock market remains in an uptrend. The same can be said for the US authorities. Apparently, the “visible hands” of both Washington and Beijing have and will continue to push share prices higher in their domestic markets. Robust equity markets will become a prominent feature of the geopolitical confrontation between the US and China. In the long run, however, this is a very negative phenomenon for the world because the two of the largest and most prominent stock markets could increasingly be driven by the “visible hand” of their governments rather than by fundamentals. As a result, equity markets could regularly send wrong price signals and will no longer serve as an efficient mechanism of capital allocation. Chart I-7Foreign Inflows Into China Have Accelerated This Year
Foreign Inflows Into China Have Accelerated This Year
Foreign Inflows Into China Have Accelerated This Year
Beijing has been luring foreign investors to buy onshore stocks and bonds and this strategy has become more vital in expectation of an escalation in the US-China confrontation. Chart I-7 shows that net inflows into onshore stocks and bonds have been surging. The more US investors buy into mainland markets, the more these investors will exercise pressure on the current and future US administrations to go soft on China. Like those US companies relying on Chinese demand, large US investment funds will have a notable exposure to Chinese financial markets and will accordingly lobby the White House and Congress to take a less adversarial stance toward China. This will reduce the maneuvering room of US politicians in this geopolitical confrontation. Finally, it is also possible that these latest media reports encouraging a bull market in China were not initiated by leaders in Beijing but were in fact spurred by mid-level bureaucrats. If that is the case, a full-blown mania akin to the one in 2015 will not be repeated and the latest frenzy surrounding Chinese stocks could end up being the final surge before a correction sets in. In brief, Chinese stocks, like other bourses worldwide, are in a FOMO-driven mania that might last for a while. Nevertheless, regardless of the direction of Chinese stocks in absolute terms, we reiterate our overweight stance on Chinese equities within the EM benchmark. Also, we have a strong conviction with respect to the merits of a long Chinese/short Korean stocks trade. Both these positions were initiated on June 18 before the latest surge in Chinese stocks. The “visible hands” of both Washington and Beijing have and will continue to push share prices higher in their domestic markets. Ms. Mea: What will it take for you to go long EM risk assets and currencies in absolute terms? Answer: EM equities, credit markets and currencies are driven by three, or more recently four, factors. We need to witness or foresee an imminent improvement in three out of four of these to go outright long. These factors include: (1) China’s business cycle and its impact on EM via global trade; (2) each individual EM country’s domestic fundamentals (inflation/deflation, balance of payments, return on capital, domestic economic cycles, monetary and fiscal policies, health of the banking system, domestic politics, etc.); (3) global risk-on and risk-off cycles that drive portfolio flows into EM. The direction of the S&P500 is an important trendsetter for these risk-on and risk-off cycles; (4) swings in geopolitical confrontation between the US and China. The first element – China’s impact on EM – is becoming positive. There could be a minor setback in mainland business cycles in the near term, but this should be used as a buying opportunity. As to structural problems in China like credit/money and property bubbles as well as the misallocation of capital, ongoing money and credit growth acceleration will fill in holes and kick the can down the road. That said, those structural problems will become even more challenging in the years to come. In short, Beijing is making credit, money and property bubbles even bigger. The second factor – domestic fundamentals in EM ex-China, Korea and Taiwan – remain downbeat. The COVID-19 outbreak has been out of control in a number of EM economies (Chart I-8). In addition, outside of China, Korea and Taiwan, EM fiscal stimulus has not been as large as in DM economies. Critically, the monetary transmission mechanism has been broken in several developing economies. In particular, central banks’ rate cuts have not translated to lower lending rates in real terms (Chart I-9). Chart I-8The COVID-19 Pandemic Has Not Peaked In Several Major EM Economies
The COVID-19 Pandemic Has Not Peaked In Several Major EM Economies
The COVID-19 Pandemic Has Not Peaked In Several Major EM Economies
Chart I-9Lending Rates Are Still High In EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan
Lending Rates Are Still High In EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan
Lending Rates Are Still High In EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan
The basis is two-fold: First, banks saddled with non-performing loans are reluctant to bring down their lending rates and lend more; and second, the considerable decline in EM inflation has pushed up real lending rates (Chart I-9). The third variable driving EM financial markets – the S&P 500 – remains at risk of a material setback. If the S&P drops more than 10 or 15%, EM stocks, currencies and credit markets will also sell off markedly. Finally, there is the fourth aspect of the EM view – geopolitics – which could be critical in the coming months. The US-China confrontation will likely heighten leading up to the US elections. This will likely involve North and South Korea and Taiwan. Chart I-10EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Stocks And Currencies
EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Stocks And Currencies
EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Stocks And Currencies
Chinese investable stocks as well as Korean and Taiwanese equities altogether make up 65% of the MSCI EM benchmark. Hence, a flareup in geopolitical tensions will weigh on these three bourses. Outside these markets, EM share prices and currencies have already rolled over (Chart I-10). In sum, out of the four factors listed above only the Chinese business cycle warrants an upgrade on overall EM. The other three drivers of the EM view are still negative. This keeps us on the sidelines for now. Importantly, we have been gradually moving our investment strategy from bearish to neutral on EM. Specifically, we: Took profits on the long EM currencies volatility trade on March 5. Took large profits on the long gold / short oil and copper trade on March 11. Booked gains on the short position in EM stocks on March 19. Recommended receiving long-term (10-year) swap rates (or buying local currency bonds while hedging the exchange rate risk) in many EMs on April 23. Upgraded EM sovereign credit from underweight and booked profits on our short EM corporate and sovereign credit / long US investment grade bonds strategy on June 4. The only asset class where we have not yet closed our shorts is EM currencies. In fact, we now recommend shifting our short in EM currencies (BRL, CLP, ZAR, TRY, KRW, PHP and IDR) from the US dollar to an equal-weighted basket of the Swiss franc, the euro and the Japanese yen. Unlike the March selloff, the dollar could depreciate even if the S&P 500 and global stocks drop. Ms. Mea: What is the rationale behind switching your short positions in EM currencies against the US dollar to short positions versus the Swiss franc, the euro and Japanese yen? Wouldn’t the selloff in global stocks drive the greenback higher? Answer: We have been bullish on the US dollar since 2011, consistent with our negative view on EM and commodities prices and recommendation of favoring the S&P 500 versus EM. What is making us question this strategy are the following, in order of importance: First, the Federal Reserve is monetizing US public and some private debt. The amount of US dollars is surging. Meanwhile, the pace of broad money supply growth is much more timid in the euro area, Switzerland and Japan. Broad money growth is 23% in the US, 9% in the euro area, 2.5% in Switzerland, 5% in Japan and 11% in China. This will reduce investors’ willingness to hold dollars as a store of value, incentivizing them to switch to other DM currencies. Second, the pandemic is out of control in the US and this will damage its near-term growth outlook. More fiscal stimulus and more debt monetization will be required to revive the economy. Third, the Fed will not hike interest rates even if inflation rises well above their 2% target in the next several years. This implies that the Fed will prefer to be behind the inflation curve in the years to come, which is bearish for the greenback. Finally, the yen and the euro as well as EM currencies are cheaper than the US dollar (Chart I-11 and Chart I-12). Chart I-11The US Dollar Is Expensive, The Yen Is Cheap
The US Dollar Is Expensive, The Yen Is Cheap
The US Dollar Is Expensive, The Yen Is Cheap
Chart I-12EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Currencies Are Cheap
EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Currencies Are Cheap
EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Currencies Are Cheap
The broad trade-weighted US dollar has yet to break down as per the top panel of Chart I-13, but we are becoming nervous about it. Unlike the March selloff, the dollar could depreciate even if the S&P 500 and global stocks drop. Ms. Mea: That is interesting. Has there ever been an episode where the US dollar depreciated while the S&P 500 sold off? Answer: Yes, it occurred in late 2007 and H1 2008. The 2007-08 bear market in global stocks can be split into two periods. During the initial phase of that bear market, the US dollar depreciated substantially despite the drawdowns in global equity and credit markets (Chart I-14, top and middle panels). Chart I-13Trade-Weighted Dollar And Asian Currencies: At A Critical Juncture
Trade-Weighted Dollar And Asian Currencies: At A Critical Juncture
Trade-Weighted Dollar And Asian Currencies: At A Critical Juncture
Chart I-14In Late 2007 And H1 2008: The US Dollar Fell Amid An Equity Bear Market
In Late 2007 And H1 2008: The US Dollar Fell Amid An Equity Bear Market
In Late 2007 And H1 2008: The US Dollar Fell Amid An Equity Bear Market
EM stocks performed in line with DM ones during the first phase (Chart I-14, bottom panel). The economic backdrop was characterized by the US recession and US banks tightening credit. In fact, EM growth was still robust during that phase even though the US economy was shrinking. Remarkably, commodities prices were surging – oil reached $140 per a barrel and copper $4 per ton in June 2008. The second phase of that bear market commenced in autumn of 2008 when Lehman went bust. The orderly bear market in global stocks gave way to an acute phase – a crash in all global risk assets. Business activity collapsed worldwide and the US dollar surged. In the current cycle, the order will likely be the reverse of the 2007-08 bear market. March 2020 witnessed a crash in global risk assets and the global economy plunged similar to the second phase of the 2007-08 bear market while the US dollar surged. The second stage of this recession could resemble the first phase of the 2007-08 bear market. There will be neither worldwide lockdowns nor a crash in business activity. However, the level of activity might struggle to recover as rapidly as markets have priced in or there might be relapses in economic conditions in certain parts of the world. This is especially true for the US and other countries where the pandemic has not been effectively contained. On the whole, the second downleg in the S&P 500 and global stocks will be less dramatic but could last for a while and still be meaningful (more than 10-15%). Critically, unlike the March 2020 selloff, the greenback will likely struggle during this episode for the reasons we outlined above. Ms. Mea: What about overweighting EM equities and credit versus their DM peers? Will EM equities, credit and currencies underperform their DM peers in the potential selloff that you expect? Wouldn’t USD weakness help EM risk assets to outperform even in a broad risk selloff? Answer: Yes, we can see a scenario where EM stocks and credit markets perform in line or better than their DM peers in a potential selloff. The key is the dollar’s dynamics. If the dollar rebounds, EM stocks and credit markets will underperform their DM counterparts. If the dollar weakens during this selloff, EM stocks and credit will likely perform in line with or better than their DM peers. In sum, a technical breakdown in the broad trade-weighted dollar and a breakout in the emerging Asian currency index – both shown in Chart I-13 – would lead us to upgrade our EM allocation in both global equity and credit portfolios. For now, we are only switching our shorts in EM currencies from the US dollar to an equally-weighted basket of the Swiss franc, the euro and the Japanese yen. Ms. Mea: What are some of your other current observations on financial markets? Answer: The breadth and thrust of this global equity rally has already peaked and is weakening. It is just a matter of time before a narrowing breadth translates into lower aggregate stock indexes for both EM and DM equities as illustrated by our advance-decline lines in Chart I-15. Chart I-15EM and DM Equity Breadth Measures Have Rolled Over
EM and DM Equity Breadth Measures Have Rolled Over
EM and DM Equity Breadth Measures Have Rolled Over
Chart I-16Cyclicals And High-Beta Stocks Have Been Struggling
Cyclicals and High-Beta Stocks Have Been Struggling
Cyclicals and High-Beta Stocks Have Been Struggling
Consistently, there has already been a decoupling between various sectors and industries. The rally has been solely focused on tech and new economy stocks. Equity prices in China and Taiwan have been surging while the rest of the EM equity index has been languishing. In the DM equity space, global industrials, US high-beta stocks and micro caps have already rolled over (Chart I-16). Further, our Risk-On/Safe-Haven currency index is flashing red for EM equities (Chart I-17). Chart I-17A Red Flag For EM Equities?
A Red Flag For EM Equities?
A Red Flag For EM Equities?
Chart I-18Long Gold / Short Stocks
Long Gold / Short Stocks
Long Gold / Short Stocks
Finally, EM share prices have outperformed DM stocks since late May mostly due to the sharp rally in Chinese, Korean and Taiwanese stocks. Hence, the breadth of EM equity outperformance has been subdued. Ms. Mea: To wrap up our conversation, I want to ask you what is your strongest conviction trade for the coming months? Answer: Our strongest conviction trade is long gold / short global or EM stocks (Chart I-18). This trade will do well regardless of the direction of global share prices, the US dollar, and bond yields. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report "Watch Out For A Second Wave (Of US-China Frictions)," dated June 10, 2020, available at gps.bcaresearch.com Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
Please note that I will be hosting a webcast on Friday July 17 and that the webcast will replace next week’s report. Highlights Go tactically short stocks versus bonds. But express it as short DAX versus the US 10-year T-bond, given the greater scope for compression in US bond yields than in German bond yields. Target a profit of 10 percent but apply a stop-loss if stock versus bond outperformance continues for another 10 percent. There is now a strong incentive for short-term investing and a strong disincentive for long-term investing, forcing formerly long-term investors to think and behave like traders. Don’t obsess with the Covid-19 mortality rate. Focus instead on the morbidity, or hospitalization, rate. Covid-19 is unlikely to kill you, but it can make you ill and, in some unlucky cases, permanently ill. Feature Chart of the WeekA Sell Signal For Stocks To Bonds
A Sell Signal For Stocks To Bonds
A Sell Signal For Stocks To Bonds
Financial markets have reached an absurdity. It is now more rewarding to be a short-term trader who holds investments for just three months than it is to be a long-term investor who buys and holds them for ten years. And just to be clear, we are comparing cumulative returns over the entire holding period of three months versus one that is forty times longer at ten years. The case for buying and holding most mainstream investments has collapsed. Investors seeking attractive long-term returns can no longer rely on mainstream bond and stock markets. Nowadays, the long-term investment story is about sectors and themes, and we will continue to tell this story in our regular reports. However, this week we will focus on the implications of short-termism in the mainstream markets. Short-Term Returns Now Beat Long-Term Returns Through the past year, anybody who has bought the German 10-year bund, with the intention of holding it until it redeems in 2029 is guaranteed a deeply negative return. Yet there have been many three-month periods in which the bund has generated a high single-digit return (Chart I-2). Chart I-23-Month Returns Now Beat 10-Year Returns!
3-Month Returns Now Beat 10-Year Returns!
3-Month Returns Now Beat 10-Year Returns!
Likewise, anybody who owns the US 10-year T-bond has made almost as much money in the first three months of this year as they mathematically can by holding it for ten years! By extension, the same principle also applies to mainstream stock markets which are priced for feeble long-term returns – yet can rally by 20-30 percent in the space of a few weeks. It is now more rewarding to be a short-term trader who holds investments for three months than it is to be a long-term investor who buys and holds them for ten years. Admittedly, these are nominal returns, and the long-term real returns could be boosted by deflation. Nevertheless, the economy would have to experience Great Depression levels of deflation to make the long-term real returns genuinely attractive. Yet it wasn’t always like this. Until recent years, the cumulative returns available from long-term investing were many multiples of those available from short-term investing – as they should be (Chart I-3 and Chart I-4). But today, the incentive structure is back-to-front. There is a strong disincentive for long-term investing and a strong incentive for short-term investing, forcing formerly long-term investors to think and behave like traders. Albeit traders that must get their timing right. Chart I-3Today, There Is A Strong Disincentive For Long-Term Investing...
Today, There Is A Strong Disincentive For Long-Term Investing...
Today, There Is A Strong Disincentive For Long-Term Investing...
Chart I-4...And A Strong Incentive For Short-Term Investing
...And A Strong Incentive For Short-Term Investing
...And A Strong Incentive For Short-Term Investing
Unfortunately, when everybody behaves like traders there are worrying implications for financial market liquidity and stability. Short-Termism Destroys Market Liquidity We have been brought up to believe that agreement and consensus create peace and harmony, whereas disagreement and opposition create conflict and discord. Hence, it is natural to think that agreement and consensus also create calm and stability in the financial markets. Yet nothing could be further from the truth. A calm and stable market requires disagreement. Disagreement is the source of market liquidity and stability. Meaning, the ability to convert stocks into cash, or cash into stocks, quickly and in volume without destabilising the stock price. For an investor to convert a large amount of stocks into cash without destabilising the price, a mirror-image investor must be willing to take the opposite position. It follows that market liquidity comes from a disagreement about the attractiveness of the investment at a given price. As an aside, we often read comments such as ‘investors are moving out of stocks into cash’, or vice-versa. Such comments are nonsensical. If one investor is selling stocks, then a mirror-image investor must be buying stocks. The stocks cannot just vanish into thin air! A market which loses its variation of investment horizons loses its liquidity and stability. If institutional investors are selling, then a mirror-image investor must be buying. The mirror-image buyer could be less savvy retail investors, in which case we might interpret the institutional selling as a sell signal. Or the mirror-image buyer could be ‘smart money’ hedge funds, in which case we might interpret the institutional selling as a buy signal. It follows that unless we know the identity of both the seller and the buyer, the ‘flows’ information is useless. The much more useful information is the variation of investment horizons in the market. This is because a market which possesses a variation of investment horizons also possesses the disagreement required for liquidity and stability. Conversely, a market which lacks this variation of investment horizons could soon run out of liquidity and undergo a change in trend. Investors with different time horizons disagree about the attractiveness of an investment at a given price because they interpret the same facts and information differently. For example, a day-trader will interpret an outsized rally as a ‘momentum’ buy signal, whereas a value investor will interpret the same information as a ‘loss of value’ sell signal. Therefore, the market possesses liquidity and stability when its participants possess a variation of investment horizons. For example, both a 1-day horizon and a 3-month (65 business days) horizon. The corollary is that the market’s liquidity and stability disappear when its participants no longer possess this healthy variation in horizons. In technical terms, this occurs when the market’s fractal structure collapses. In the above example, it would be signalled by the 65-day fractal dimension collapsing to its lower limit (Chart I-5). Chart I-5The Stock-To-Bond Fractal Structure Has Collapsed
The Stock-To-Bond Fractal Structure Has Collapsed
The Stock-To-Bond Fractal Structure Has Collapsed
All of which brings us to our tactical stock-to-bond sell signal. A Sell Signal For Stocks To Bonds Since 2015, a collapsed 65-day fractal structure of the German stock-to-bond ratio has reliably presaged a change in trend, implying either a sell or buy signal based on the direction of the preceding trend. The two most recent occurrences happened this year on January 2, a sell signal, and March 9, a buy signal (Chart of the Week). A collapsed 65-day fractal structure of the German stock-to-bond ratio has reliably presaged a change in trend. The 65-day fractal structure of the German stock-to-bond ratio has collapsed once again, reinforced by a similar observation in the US stock-to-bond ratio. This suggests that the recent 40 percent rally in stocks versus bonds is approaching exhaustion and is susceptible to a tactical reversal (Chart I-6). Chart I-6The 40 Percent Rally In Stocks Versus Bonds May Be Near Exhaustion
The 40 Percent Rally In Stocks Versus Bonds May Be Near Exhaustion
The 40 Percent Rally In Stocks Versus Bonds May Be Near Exhaustion
Hence, go tactically short stocks versus bonds. But express it as short DAX versus the US 10-year T-bond, given the greater scope for compression in US bond yields than in German bond yields. Target a profit of 10 percent but apply a stop-loss if the outperformance continues for another 10 percent. One caveat is that bullish fundamentals can swamp fragile fractal structures. Hence, the strong outperformance of stocks versus bonds would persist if, for example, a breakthrough treatment or vaccine suddenly emerged for Covid-19. On the other hand, it is worth noting that US hospitalizations for the disease are rising once again, even if deaths, so far, are not (Chart I-7). Nevertheless, we reiterate that the Covid-19 morbidity (severe illness) rate is much more important than the mortality rate, for two reasons. Chart I-7US Hospitalizations For Covid-19 Are Rising Again
A Sell Signal For Stocks To Bonds
A Sell Signal For Stocks To Bonds
First, it is morbidity rather than mortality that swamps the finite and limited intensive care unit (ICU) capacity in healthcare systems. Second, the evidence now suggests that many recovered Covid-19 victims suffer long-term damage to their lungs and/or other vital organs such as kidneys, the liver, and the brain. This is the case even for apparently mild cases of the disease that do not require hospitalization. Therefore, don’t obsess with the Covid-19 mortality rate. Focus instead on the morbidity, or hospitalization, rate. The threat from Covid-19 is not that it will kill you. It almost certainly won’t. The threat is that it will make you ill and, in some unlucky cases, permanently ill. Fractal Trading System* As discussed, this weeks recommended trade is short DAX versus 10-year T-bond, setting a profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 10 percent. Chart I-8GBP/RUB
GBP/RUB
GBP/RUB
In other trades, long GBP/RUB is within a whisker of its 3 percent profit target. The rolling 1-year win ratio now stands at 59 percent 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. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Dhaval Joshi Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
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 - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
BCA Research's US Bond Strategy service re-iterates its overweight stance on municipal bonds. Municipal bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 68 basis points in June, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to -582 bps (before…