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Inflation/Deflation

Executive Summary Compared to output, income and net worth, aggregate consumer indebtedness is at the low end of its twenty-first century range. Modest indebtedness and low interest rates have made it easy for households to service their debt and leave them with room to take on more. Low-income households are beginning to show some signs of strain and it appears most of them have used up their pandemic savings. Loans have been underwritten more rigorously since the crisis, however, and borrower quality has been rising, especially since the pandemic began. Loan performance always deteriorates during recessions, but attention-getting claims about credit busts appear to be overheated. Consumer borrowers are on solid footing, and the financial system is not particularly vulnerable to a consumer credit downturn. The White House is reportedly mulling some measure of student loan forgiveness for a targeted set of households at the lower end of the wealth and income distributions. The overall package will have to be small, but it may make a difference for some of the more vulnerable borrowers. Consumers Are Starting From A Good Place Consumers Are Starting From A Good Place Consumers Are Starting From A Good Place Bottom Line: Reports of the American consumer’s demise have been greatly exaggerated. Consumer credit is way down on the list of things to worry about in the current environment, and investors should not be distracted by sensationalized claims about bursting bubbles. Feature Our internal research meeting last Monday, live-streamed and archived in the Live & Unfiltered section of BCA's website, addressed media reports of an increase in auto repossessions. The juiciest report featured the anecdotal observations of Lucky Lopez, YouTuber and owner of Automotive Life, a Las Vegas-based auto-related company with a somewhat ambiguous mission. Lopez’s LinkedIn profile indicates that he has a wide range of experience in the automotive industry as an owner/operator of auto repair shops, an auto body shop, a rental car company and a car dealership, though he is now a consultant and coach for all automotive businesses. Although a cursory Google search indicates that the customer experience at his past businesses has not been uniformly happy, his January YouTube video, “Used Car Market Bubble Popped !!!” has garnered over 300,000 views, raising his profile beyond the bounds of the Internet’s echo chambers. That article also referenced the work of a professor, now at New York’s Cardozo Law School, who has warned that pandemic aid merely delayed the onset of an auto-loan crisis. “The bubble is beginning to show signs of bursting soon,” she said in the column. According to Google Scholar, her 2021 paper, “Bursting the Auto Loan Bubble in the Wake of COVID-19,” has subsequently been cited by three other papers, two of which she co-authored. She and the other people featured in the column pointed to reports of surging repossessions as a cause for alarm, but repo data are hard to come by and delinquency patterns don’t suggest that default rates are headed meaningfully higher. The internal discussion motivated us to look more deeply into consumer creditworthiness. After considering the level and composition of household indebtedness, borrower quality and borrower performance, we conclude that consumer credit is in a good place. It will worsen when the recession arrives, but it will start from a better than usual position and therefore poses less of a threat to financial markets and economic output than it typically would. Our findings reinforce the idea that the economy is not beset by imbalances that increase its vulnerability to an especially nasty recession. Household Indebtedness In contrast to the murky world of auto repos, there are several lengthy data series that allow us to evaluate households’ aggregate financial position. As a share of GDP, household debt is back to the 75% level it first reached 20 years ago (Chart 1), driven by the deleveraging that followed the financial crisis (the pandemic spike was about sudden GDP contraction, not increased borrowing). Adjusted for disposable income, the after-tax cash flowing to consumers to service their obligations, the pattern is the same, as mortgage indebtedness has unwound its crisis excesses while other consumer debt has remained steady (Chart 2). The growth in household borrowing has failed to keep up with appreciating asset values and debt as a share of household net worth fell to multi-decade lows at the end of the first quarter (Chart 3). Chart 1Household Balance Sheets Have Been Strengthening For A Decade Household Balance Sheets Have Been Strengthening For A Decade Household Balance Sheets Have Been Strengthening For A Decade Chart 2A 20-Year Round Trip A 20-Year Round Trip A 20-Year Round Trip Chart 3Debt Is Markedly Lower As A Share Of Net Worth, ... Debt Is Markedly Lower As A Share Of Net Worth, ... Debt Is Markedly Lower As A Share Of Net Worth, ... Chart 4... And Falling Rates Have Made It Especially Easy To Service ... And Falling Rates Have Made It Especially Easy To Service ... And Falling Rates Have Made It Especially Easy To Service Low levels of indebtedness, combined with low interest rates, have eased households’ debt service burden, with the share of their disposable income that goes to interest and principal repayments falling to multi-decade lows (Chart 4). No matter how you slice it, the debt yoke is as light as it has been heading into the last four recessions. From a composition perspective, mortgages maintain the dominant position, accounting for nearly three-fourths of household debt (Chart 5), while student loans (11%), auto loans (8%) and credit cards (6%) comprise nearly all the rest. Although those warning of an auto bubble cite rising auto loan balances as a sign of trouble, they have been mostly steady as a share of disposable income since 2015 and remain well short of their 2002-to-2005 peak.   Chart 5Consumer Credit Has Moved In Step With Disposable Income For The Last 20 Years Consumer Credit Has Moved In Step With Disposable Income For The Last 20 Years Consumer Credit Has Moved In Step With Disposable Income For The Last 20 Years Bottom Line: Household indebtedness is much more manageable now than it was ahead of the last four recessions, thanks to reduced balances relative to income and wealth and lower interest rates. Borrower Quality As household balance sheets strengthen, consumer borrowers become better credits, but loan quality is also a function of lenders’ appetites. Bad loans are made in good times, according to the bank examiner’s mantra, but the corollary is also true. Reluctant lenders make sound loans and banks lost some of their appetite after the crisis while regulators took away much of what was left of it. Basel III standards clipped banks’ wings by applying onerous capital charges to all but the most straightforward lending activity and Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s aggressive stance on returning defaulted residential mortgages to their originators over an uncompromisingly strict reading of representation and warranty claims have forced banks to scrutinize prospective homeowners’ credentials. Increased scrutiny has shown up in the vastly improved risk profile of mortgage originations (Chart 6), which are now overwhelmingly tilted in favor of prime-plus (FICO score of 720 to 780) and superprime (greater than 780) borrowers and away from near prime (600 to 660) and subprime borrowers (less than 600). It is understandable that investors who lived through the trauma of the financial crisis just over a decade ago remain sensitive to housing market vulnerability, but we think the FICO score data forcefully rebut any lingering concerns about residential mortgages. Chart 6Residential Mortgage Originations By FICO Score How Creditworthy Are American Consumers? How Creditworthy Are American Consumers? The remainder of household debt, detailed in the Fed’s monthly consumer credit reports, is primarily concentrated in student loans, auto loans and credit cards. Student loan balances, adjusted for disposable income, surged in the wake of the financial crisis to surpass declining credit card balances, which slid further in the early stages of the pandemic, and stable auto loans. Student loan borrowers at the lower end of the wealth and income distributions may soon have some of their obligations canceled, which may help consumer credit performance at the margin (Box), though the resumption of paused monthly payments will likely make the net effect a wash. The biggest banks’ customers are beginning to carry slightly higher credit card balances and though the banks have surely eased their standards to make more of their most profitable loans, we do not foresee cards as a systemic vulnerability. BOX Student Loan Debt: Pause, Play Or Erase Student loan borrowers have been able to pause making payments on their loans since the CARES Act took effect in April 2020, but the seventh extension of the temporary pause expires at the end of August and there will not be another. The Biden administration is grappling with whether to make good on a campaign promise to cancel at least some student debt held by the federal government. Washington holds over 80% of outstanding student loans and could wipe out any or all of it via executive order but the political calculus is complicated and perilous: the Democrats would like to appeal to young voters before the midterms, as well as women, who are on the hook for almost 60% of student debt, without alienating less well-off voters who might view cancellation as a giveaway to wealthy elites. Our US Political Strategy service expects that cancellation will be limited and targeted, too small to move the needle on aggregate household finances but perhaps providing the most vulnerable borrowers temporary relief to allow them to better service their other debt and/or maintain their consumption in the face of high food and fuel prices. That leaves auto loans as the swing factor within consumer credit performance. Despite the auto bubble-watchers’ assertions, anonymized Equifax data compiled by the New York Fed for its quarterly Household Debt and Credit Report do not indicate that auto lending standards have been eased: since 2017, the share of auto loan originations made to near-prime and subprime borrowers has steadily declined while the share of prime-plus and superprime originations has risen (Chart 7). Auto lenders did relax their standards in 2013 through 2016, once they got some distance from the crisis, but they reversed the trend in 2017 and tightened the screws even more when the pandemic arrived, as per the moves in a diffusion index calculated by subtracting the share of below-prime originations from the share of above-prime originations (Chart 8). Chart 7Auto Loan Originations By FICO Score How Creditworthy Are American Consumers? How Creditworthy Are American Consumers? Chart 8Tighter Standards On Showroom Floors And Used-Car Lots How Creditworthy Are American Consumers? How Creditworthy Are American Consumers? Chart 9Collateral Values Have Surged Collateral Values Have Surged Collateral Values Have Surged The increase in the value of the collateral securing outstanding auto loans, which have an average term of nearly six years, should help contain lender losses in the event of default (while encouraging borrowers not to default). Per the Manheim Used Vehicle Value Index, used car prices have risen between 150% and 180% since the 2016-2019 vintages of outstanding auto loans were issued (Chart 9). Cars driven for the last five or six years have been depreciating with each mile driven, so they would not bring 150-180% of their initial value if their lenders repossessed and sold them, but the unforeseen price appreciation does mean their loan-to-value ratios (LTVs) must be tiny if borrowers have kept up with their payments. Loans issued after used-car prices exploded higher in late 2020 are vulnerable on an LTV basis and are likely to generate larger-than-normal losses given default once vehicle prices come back to earth, but lenders are well insulated from losses on their older outstanding loans. Bottom Line: Borrower quality is robust relative to history. Mortgage lending standards have tightened considerably since the financial crisis and auto borrower quality has been improving since 2017. The most vulnerable student loan borrowers are likely to get some relief in the form of debt forgiveness and soaring used car prices will help shield auto lenders from losses on the loans they issued before the pandemic. Borrower Performance Monthly delinquencies across consumer borrowing categories support the idea that households are on firmer financial footing than they were before COVID-19. TransUnion’s publicly available data show that 60-day mortgage delinquencies have cratered, spending the last fourteen months at around one-half of their February 2020 level (Chart 10, bottom panel). 90-day credit card delinquencies, after rising from unprecedented lows, have settled over the last six months at about two-thirds of their February 2020 level (Chart 10, second panel). 60-day auto loan delinquencies are back to their pre-pandemic level (Chart 10, top panel), but they are a far cry from what alarmist claims would suggest. As we noted in the previous section, better borrowers and used car appreciation should help insulate lenders from losses on loans that were issued before car prices soared. Chart 10Consumer Delinquencies Remain Well-Behaved How Creditworthy Are American Consumers? How Creditworthy Are American Consumers? The Road Ahead As a SIFI bank CFO put it last week when discussing his company’s second quarter earnings, no cracks in consumer borrower performance have shown up yet. Credit performance frays when growth decelerates and deteriorates when the economy contracts. The coming recession will be no different but what’s different this time is the starting point for consumer credit. Consumers often stretch their credit to the limit by the time output peaks but they are in a comfortably sustainable spot today. This time around, lenders did not abandon their credit standards to maintain market share in an increasingly overheated environment. The borrowing performance rule of thumb is that consumers will pay their debts unless they lose their jobs, get divorced or suffer catastrophic illness. Much therefore depends on employment, and the job market still looks strong. Initial jobless claims are still close to record-low levels, surveys indicate that businesses still have ambitious hiring intentions and plenty of positions need to be filled if the leisure and hospitality industry is going to meet pent-up demand. We will continue to monitor every data series that might lead consumer spending and consumer credit performance. The SIFI banks’ second-quarter earnings releases and calls end today with Bank of America and we will present our July 2022 Big Bank Beige Book report next week. Bank management teams don’t have crystal balls, but they do gain a wealth of insight into consumers’ appetites and businesses’ investment plans, and they often share some of it during their earnings calls with sell-side analysts. The macro backdrop remains fluid and fraught, and consumer credit prospects look a lot like the overall economy – far from perfect, but better than the financial market selloff and persistent gloom would imply. We remain more constructive than the consensus on the twelve-month outlook for financial markets and the economy. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com
Listen to a short summary of this report.     Executive Summary The TIPS Market Foresees A Sharp Deceleration In Inflation What If The TIPS Are Right? What If The TIPS Are Right? TIPS breakevens are pointing to a rapid decline in US inflation over the next two years. If the TIPS are right, the Fed will not need to raise rates faster than what is already discounted over the next six months. Falling inflation will allow real wages to start rising again. This will bolster consumer confidence, making a recession less likely. The surprising increase in analyst EPS estimates this year partly reflects the contribution of increased energy profits and the fact that earnings are expressed in nominal terms while economic growth is usually expressed in real terms. Nevertheless, even a mild recession would probably knock down operating earnings by 15%-to-20%. While a recession in the US is not our base case, it is for Europe. A European recession is likely to be short-lived with the initial shock from lower Russian gas flows counterbalanced by income-support measures and ramped-up spending on energy infrastructure and defense. We are setting a limit order to buy EUR/USD at 0.981. Bottom Line: Stocks lack an immediate macro driver to move higher, but that driver should come in the form of lower inflation prints starting as early as next month. Investors should maintain a modest overweight to global equities. That said, barring any material developments, we would turn neutral on stocks if the S&P 500 were to rise above 4,050. US CPI Surprises to the Upside… Again        Investors hoping for some relief on the inflation front were disappointed once again this week. The US headline CPI rose 1.32% month-over-month in June, above the consensus of 1.1%. Core inflation increased to 0.71%, surpassing consensus estimates of 0.5%. The key question is how much of June’s report is “water under the bridge” and how much is a harbinger of things to come. Since the CPI data for June was collected, oil prices have dropped to below $100/bbl. Nationwide gasoline prices have fallen for four straight weeks, with the futures market pointing to further declines in the months ahead. Agriculture and metals prices have swooned. Used car prices are heading south. Wage growth has slowed to about 4% from around 6.5% in the second half of last year. The rate of change in the Zillow rent index has rolled over, albeit from high levels (Chart 1). The Zumper National Rent index is sending a similar message as the Zillow data.  All this suggests that inflation may be peaking. The TIPS market certainly agrees. It is discounting a rapid decline in US inflation over the next few years. This week’s inflation report did little to change that fact (Chart 2). Chart 1Some Signs That Inflation Has Peaked Some Signs That Inflation Has Peaked Some Signs That Inflation Has Peaked Chart 2Investors Expect Inflation To Fall Rapidly Over The Next Few Years What If The TIPS Are Right? What If The TIPS Are Right? TIPS Still Siding with Team Transitory If the TIPS market is right, this would have two important implications. First, the Fed would not need to raise rates more quickly over the next six months than the OIS curve is currently discounting (although it probably would not need to cut rates in 2023 either, given our higher-than-consensus view of where the US neutral rate lies) (Chart 3). The second implication is that real wages, which have declined over the past year, will start rising again as inflation heads lower. Falling real wages have sapped consumer confidence. As real wage growth turns positive, confidence will improve, helping to bolster consumer spending (Chart 4). To the extent that consumption accounts for nearly 70% of the US economy – and other components of GDP such as investment generally take their cues from consumer spending – this would significantly raise the odds of a soft landing.  Chart 3The Fed Is Signaling That It Will Raise Rates To Almost 4% In 2023 The Fed Is Signaling That It Will Raise Rates To Almost 4% In 2023 The Fed Is Signaling That It Will Raise Rates To Almost 4% In 2023 Chart 4Positive Real Wage Growth Will Provide A Boost To Consumer Confidence Positive Real Wage Growth Will Provide A Boost To Consumer Confidence Positive Real Wage Growth Will Provide A Boost To Consumer Confidence Chart 5Long-Term Inflation Expectations Remain Well Anchored Long-Term Inflation Expectations Remain Well Anchored Long-Term Inflation Expectations Remain Well Anchored Of course, the TIPS market could be wrong. Bond traders do not set prices and wages. Businesses and workers, interacting with each other, ultimately determine the direction of inflation. Yet, the view of the TIPS market is broadly in sync with the view of most households and businesses. Expected inflation 5-to-10 years out in the University of Michigan survey has risen since the pandemic began, but at about 3%, it is close to where it was for most of the period between 1995 and 2015 (Chart 5). As we pointed out in our recently published Third Quarter Strategy Outlook, and as I discussed in last week’s webcast, the fact that long-term inflation expectations are well anchored implies that the sacrifice ratio – the amount of output that must be forgone to bring down inflation by a given amount — may be quite low. This also raises the odds of a soft landing. Investors Now See Recession as the Base Case Our relatively sanguine view of the US economy leaves us in the minority camp. According to recent polling, more than 70% of US adults expect the economy to be in recession by year-end. Within the investment community, nearly half of retail traders and three-quarters of high-level asset allocators expect a recession within the next 12 months (Chart 6). Chart 6Many Investors Now See Recession As Baked In The Cake What If The TIPS Are Right? What If The TIPS Are Right? Reflecting the downbeat mood among investors, bears exceeded bulls by 20 points in the most recent weekly poll by the American Association of Individual Investors (Chart 7). A record low percentage of respondents in the New York Fed’s Survey of Consumer Expectations believes stocks will rise over the next year (Chart 8). Chart 7Bears Exceed The Bulls By A Wide Margin Bears Exceed The Bulls By A Wide Margin Bears Exceed The Bulls By A Wide Margin Chart 8Households Are Pessimistic On Stocks Households Are Pessimistic On Stocks Households Are Pessimistic On Stocks Resilient Earnings Estimates Admittedly, while sentiment on the economy and the stock market has soured, analyst earnings estimates have yet to decline significantly. In fact, in both the US and the euro area, EPS estimates for 2022 and 2023 are higher today than they were at the start of the year (Chart 9). What’s going on? Part of the explanation reflects the sectoral composition of earnings. In the US, earnings estimates for 2022 are up 2.4% so far this year. Outside of the energy sector, however, 2022 earnings estimates are down 2.2% year-to-date and down 2.9% from their peak in February (Chart 10). Chart 9US And European EPS Estimates Are Up Year-To-Date US And European EPS Estimates Are Up Year-To-Date US And European EPS Estimates Are Up Year-To-Date Another explanation centers on the fact that earnings estimates are expressed in nominal terms while GDP growth is usually expressed in real terms. When inflation is elevated, the difference between real and nominal variables can be important. For example, while US real GDP contracted by 1.6% in Q1, nominal GDP rose by 6.6%. Gross Domestic Income (GDI), which conceptually should equal GDP but can differ due to measurement issues, rose by 1.8% in real terms and by a whopping 10.2% in nominal terms in Q1. Chart 10Soaring Energy Prices Have Boosted Earnings Estimates Soaring Energy Prices Have Boosted Earnings Estimates Soaring Energy Prices Have Boosted Earnings Estimates How Much Bad News Has Been Discounted? Historically, stocks have peaked at approximately the same time as forward earnings estimates have reached their apex. This time around, stocks have swooned well in advance of any cut to earnings estimates (Chart 11). At the time of writing, the S&P 500 was down 25% in real terms from its peak on January 3. Chart 11Unlike In Past Cycles, Stocks Peaked Well Before Earnings What If The TIPS Are Right? What If The TIPS Are Right? This suggests that investors have already discounted some earnings cuts, even if analysts have yet to pencil them in. Consistent with this observation, two-thirds of investors in a recent Bloomberg poll agreed that analysts were “behind the curve” in responding to the deteriorating macro backdrop (Chart 12). Chart 12Most Investors Expect Analyst Earnings Estimates To Come Down What If The TIPS Are Right? What If The TIPS Are Right? Nevertheless, it is likely that stocks would fall further if the economy were to enter a recession. Even in mild recessions, operating profits have fallen by about 15%-to-20% (Chart 13). That is probably a more severe outcome than the market is currently discounting. Chart 13Even A Mild Recession Could Significantly Knock Down Earnings Estimates Even A Mild Recession Could Significantly Knock Down Earnings Estimates Even A Mild Recession Could Significantly Knock Down Earnings Estimates Subjectively, we would expect the S&P 500 to drop to 3,500 over the next 12 months in a mild recession scenario where growth falls into negative territory for a few quarters (30% odds) and to 2,900 in a deep recession scenario where the unemployment rate rises by more than four percentage points from current levels (10% odds). On the flipside, we would expect the S&P 500 to rebound to 4,500 in a scenario where a recession is completely averted (60% odds). A probability-weighted average of these three scenarios produces an expected total return of 8.3% (Table 1). This is enough to warrant a modest overweight to stocks, but just barely. Barring any material developments, we would turn neutral on stocks if the S&P 500 were to rise above 4,050. Table 1A Scenario Analysis For The S&P 500 What If The TIPS Are Right? What If The TIPS Are Right? What’s the Right Framework for Thinking About a European Recession? Whereas we would assign 40% odds to a recession in the US over the next 12 months, we would put the odds of a recession in Europe at around 60%. With a recession in Europe looking increasingly probable, a key question is what the nature of this recession would be. The pandemic may provide a useful framework for answering that question. Just as the pandemic represented an external shock to the global economy, the disruption to energy supplies, stemming from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, represents an external shock to the European economy. In the initial phase of the pandemic, economic activity in developed economies collapsed as millions of workers were forced to isolate at home. Over the following months, however, the proliferation of work-from-home practices, the easing of lockdown measures, and ample fiscal support permitted growth to recover. Eventually, vaccines became available, which allowed for a further shift to normal life. Just as it took about two years for vaccines to become widely deployed, it will take time for Europe to wean itself off its dependence on Russian natural gas. Earlier this year, the IEA reckoned that the EU could displace more than a third of Russian gas imports within a year. The more ambitious REPowerEU plan foresees two-thirds of Russian gas being displaced by the end of 2022. In the meantime, some Russian gas will be necessary. Canada’s decision over Ukrainian objections to return a repaired turbine to Germany for use in the Nord Stream 1 gas pipeline suggests that a full cutoff of Russian gas flows is unlikely. Chart 14The Euro Is 26% Undervalued Against The Dollar Based On PPP The Euro Is 26% Undervalued Against The Dollar Based On PPP The Euro Is 26% Undervalued Against The Dollar Based On PPP During the pandemic, governments wasted little time in passing legislation to ease the burden on households and businesses. The European energy crunch will elicit a similar response. Back when I worked at the IMF, a common mantra in designing lending programs was that one should “finance temporary shocks but adjust to permanent ones.” The current situation Europe is a textbook example for the merits of providing income support to the private sector, financed by temporarily larger public deficits. The ECB’s soon-to-be-launched “anti-fragmentation” program will allow the central bank to buy the government debt of Italy and other at-risk sovereign borrowers without the need for a formal European Stability Mechanism (ESM) program, provided that the long-term debt profile of the borrowers remains sustainable. Get Ready to Buy the Euro All this suggests that Europe could see a fairly brisk rebound after the energy crunch abates. If the euro area recovers quickly, the euro – which is now about as undervalued against the dollar as anytime in its history (Chart 14) – will soar. With that in mind, we are setting a limit order to buy EUR/USD at 0.981.   Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Follow me on  LinkedIn & Twitter   Global Investment Strategy View Matrix What If The TIPS Are Right? What If The TIPS Are Right? Special Trade Recommendations Current MacroQuant Model Scores What If The TIPS Are Right? What If The TIPS Are Right?
Executive Summary China's Unemployment Questions From The Road Questions From The Road Over the past week we have been visiting clients along the US west coast. In this report we hit some of the highlights from the most important and frequently asked questions. Xi Jinping is seizing absolute power just as the country’s decades-long property boom turns to bust. He will stimulate the economy but Chinese stimulus is less effective than it used to be. The US and Israel are underscoring their red line against Iranian nuclear weaponization. If Iran does not freeze its nuclear program, the Middle East will begin to unravel again. The UK’s domestic instability is returning, with Scotland threatening to leave the union. Brexit, the pandemic, and inflation make a Scottish referendum a more serious risk than in the past. Shinzo Abe’s assassination makes him a martyr for a vision of Japan as a “normal country” – i.e. one that is not pacifist but capable of defending itself. Japan’s rearmament, like Germany’s, points to the decline of the WWII peace settlement and the return of great power competition. Bottom Line: Investors need a new global balance to be achieved through US diplomacy with Russia, China, and Iran. That is not forthcoming, as the chief nations face instability at home and a stagflationary global economy. Feature The world is becoming less stable as stagflation combines with great power competition. Global uncertainty is through the roof. From a macroeconomic perspective, investors need to know whether central banks can whip inflation without triggering a recession. From a geopolitical perspective, investors need to know whether Russia’s conflict with the West will expand, whether US-China and US-Iran tensions will escalate in a damaging way, and whether domestic political rotations in the US and China this fall will lead to more stable and productive economies. China: What Will Happen At The Communist Party Reshuffle? General Secretary Xi Jinping will cement another five-to-10 years in power while promoting members of his faction into key positions on the Politburo and Politburo Standing Committee. By December Xi will roll out a pro-growth strategy for 2023 and the government will signal that it will start relaxing Covid-19 restrictions. But China’s structural problems ensure that this good news for global growth will only have a fleeting effect. China’s governance is shifting from single-party rule to single-person rule. It is also shifting from commercially focused decentralization to national security focused centralization. Xi has concentrated power in himself, in the party, and in Beijing at the expense of political opponents, the private economy, and outlying regions like Hong Kong, the South China Sea, and Xinjiang. The subordination of Taiwan is the next major project, ensuring that China will ally with Russia and that the US and China cannot repair or deepen their economic partnership. Related Report  Geopolitical StrategyWill China Let 100 Flowers Bloom? Only Briefly. Xi and the Communist Party began centralizing political power and economic control shortly after the Great Recession. At that time it became clear that a painful transition away from export manufacturing and close relations with the United States was necessary. The transition would jeopardize China’s long-term economic, social, political, and geopolitical stability. The Communist Party believed it needed to revive strongman leadership (autocracy) rather than pursuing greater liberalization that would ultimately increase the odds of political revolution (democratization). The Xi administration has struggled to manage the country’s vast debt bubble, given that total debt standing has surged to 287% of GDP. The global pandemic forced the government to launch another large stimulus package, which it then attempted to contain. Corporate and household deleveraging ensued. The property and infrastructure boom of the past three decades has stalled, as the regime has imposed liquidity and capital requirements on banks and property developers to try to avoid a financial crisis. Regulatory tightening occurred in other sectors to try to steer investment into government-approved sectors and reduce the odds of technological advancement fanning social dissent. China’s draconian “zero Covid” policy sought to limit the disease’s toll, improve China’s economic self-reliance, and eliminate the threat of social protest during the year of the twentieth party congress. But it also slammed the brakes on growth. China is highly vulnerable to social instability for both structural and cyclical reasons. Chinese social unrest was our number one “Black Swan” for this year and it is now starting to take shape in the form of angry mortgage owners across the country refusing to make mortgage payments on houses that were pre-purchased but not yet built and delivered (Chart 1). Chart 1China: Mortgage Payment Boycott Questions From The Road Questions From The Road The mortgage payment boycott is important because it is stemming from the outstanding economic and financial imbalance – the property sector – and because it is a form of cross-regional social organization, which the Communist Party will disapprove. There are other social protests emerging, including low-level bank runs, which must be monitored very closely. Local authorities will act quickly to stop the spread of the mortgage boycott. But unhappy homeowners will be a persistent problem due to the decline of the property sector and industry. China’s property sector looks uncomfortably like the American property sector ahead of the 2006-08 bust. Prices for existing homes are falling while new house prices are on the verge of falling (Chart 2). While mortgages only make up 15% of bank assets, and household debt is only 62% of GDP, households are no longer taking on new debt (Chart 3). Chart 2China's Falling Property Prices China's Falling Property Prices China's Falling Property Prices ​​​​​​ Chart 3China's Property Crisis China's Property Crisis China's Property Crisis ​​​​​​ Chart 4China's Unemployment China's Unemployment China's Unemployment Most likely China’s property sector is entering the bust phase that we have long expected – if not, then the reason will be a rapid and aggressive move by authorities to expand monetary and fiscal stimulus and loosen economic restrictions. That process of broad-based easing – “letting 100 flowers bloom” – will not fully get under way until after the party congress, say in December. Unemployment is rising across China as the economy slows, another point of comparison with the United States ahead of the 2008 property collapse (Chart 4). Unemployment is a manipulated statistic so real conditions are likely worse. There is no more important indicator. China’s government will be forced to ease policy, creating a positive impact on global growth in 2023, but the impact will be fleeting. Bottom Line: The underlying debt-deflationary context will prevail before long in China, weighing on global growth and inflation expectations on a cyclical basis. Middle East: Why Did Biden Go And What Will He Get? President Biden traveled to Israel and now Saudi Arabia because he wants Saudi Arabia and the Gulf Arab members of OPEC to increase oil production to reduce gasoline prices at the pump for Americans ahead of the midterm elections (Chart 5). Chart 5Biden Goes To Israel And Saudi Arabia Biden Goes To Israel And Saudi Arabia Biden Goes To Israel And Saudi Arabia True, fears of recession are already weighing on prices, but Biden embarked on this mission before the growth slowdown was fully appreciated and he is not going to lightly abandon the anti-inflation fight before the midterm election. Biden also went because one of his top foreign policy priorities – the renegotiation of the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran – is falling apart. The Iranians do not want to freeze their nuclear program because they want regime survival and security. While Biden is offering a return to the 2015 deal, the conditions that produced the deal are no longer applicable: Russia and China are not cooperating with the US and EU to isolate Iran. Russia is courting Iran, oil prices are high and sanction enforcement is weak (unlike 2015). The Iranians now know, after the Trump administration, that they cannot trust the Americans to give credible security guarantees that will last across parties and administrations. The war in Ukraine also underscores the weakness of diplomatic security guarantees as opposed to a nuclear deterrent. Hence the joint US and Israeli declaration that Iran will never be allowed to obtain nuclear weapons. The good news is that this kind of joint statement is precisely what needed to occur – the underscoring of the red line – to try to change Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s calculus regarding his drive to achieve nuclear breakout. In 2015 Khamenei gave diplomacy a chance to try to improve the economy, stave off social unrest, prepare the way for his eventual leadership succession process, and secure the Islamic Republic. The bad news is that Khamenei probably cannot make the same decision this time, as the hawkish faction now runs his government, the Americans are unreliable, and Russia and China are offering an alternative strategic orientation. The Saudis will pump more oil if necessary to save the global business cycle but not at the beck and call of a US president. The drop in oil prices reduces their urgency. The Americans can reassure the Saudis and Israel as long as the deal with Iran is not going forward. That looks to be the case. But then the US and Israel will have to undertake joint actions to underline their threat to Iran – and Iran will have to threaten to stage attacks across the region so as to deter any attack. Bottom Line: If a US-Iran deal does not materialize at the last minute, Middle Eastern instability will revive and a new source of oil supply constraint will plague the global economy. We continue to believe a US-Iran deal is unlikely, with only 40% odds of happening. Europe: Will Russia Turn Back On The Natural Gas? Russia’s objective in cutting off European natural gas is to inflict a recession on Europe. It wants a better bargaining position on strategic matters. Therefore we assume Russia will continue to squeeze supplies from now through the winter, when European demand rises and Russian leverage will peak. If Russia allows some flow to return, then it will be part of the negotiating process and will not preclude another cutoff before winter. It is possible that Russia is merely giving Europe a warning and will revert back to supplying natural gas. The problem is that Russia’s purpose is to achieve a strategic victory in Ukraine and in negotiations over NATO’s role in the Nordic countries. Russia has not achieved these goals, so natural gas cutoff will likely continue. Russia also hopes that by utilizing its energy leverage – while it still has it – it will bring forward the economic pain of Europe’s transition away from reliance on Russian energy. In that case European countries will experience recession and households will begin to change their view of the situation. European governments will be more likely to change their policies, to become more pragmatic and less confrontational toward Russia. Or European governments will be voted out of power and do the same thing. Other states could join Hungary in saying that Europe should never impose a full natural gas embargo on Russia. Russia would be able to salvage some of its energy trade with Europe over the long run, despite the war in Ukraine and the inevitable European energy diversification. In recent months we highlighted Italy as the weakest link in the European chain and the country most likely to see such a shift in policy occur. Italy’s national unity coalition had lost its reason for being, while the combination of rising bond yields and natural gas prices weighed on the economy. The Italian bond spread over German bunds has long served as our indicator of European political stress – and it is spiking now, forcing the European Central Bank to rush to plan an anti-fragmentation strategy that would theoretically enable it to tighten monetary policy while preventing an Italian debt crisis (Chart 6). The European Union remains unlikely to break up – Russian aggression was always one of our chief arguments for why the EU would stick together. But Italy will undergo a recession and an election (due by June 2023 but that could easily happen this fall), likely producing a new government that is more pragmatic with regard to Russia so as to reduce the energy strain. Chart 6Italy's Crisis Points To EU Divisions On Russia Italy's Crisis Points To EU Divisions On Russia Italy's Crisis Points To EU Divisions On Russia Italy’s political turmoil shows that European states are feeling the energy crisis and will begin to shift policies to reduce the burden on households. Households will lose their appetite for conflict with Russia on behalf of Ukrainians, especially if Russia begins offering a ceasefire after completing its conquest of the Donetsk area. If Russia expands its invasion, then Europe will expand sanctions and the risk of further strategic instability will go up. But most likely Russia will seek to quit while it is ahead and twist Europe’s arm into foisting a ceasefire onto Ukraine. Bottom Line: A change of government in Italy will increase the odds that the EU will engage in diplomacy with Russia in the coming year, if Russia offers, so as to reach a new understanding, restore natural gas flows, and salvage the economy. This would leave NATO enlargement unresolved but a shift in favor of a ceasefire in Ukraine in 2023 would be less negative for European assets and the euro. UK: Who Will Replace Boris Johnson? Last week UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson fell from power and now the Conservative Party is engaging in a leadership competition to replace him. We gave up on Johnson after he survived his no-confidence vote and yet it became clear that he could not recover in popular opinion. The inflation outburst destroyed his premiership and wiped away whatever support he had gained from executing Brexit. In fact it reinforced the faction that believed Brexit was the wrong decision. Going forward the UK will be consumed with domestic political turmoil as the cost of stagflation mounts, and geopolitical turmoil as Scotland attempts to hold a second independence referendum, possibly by October 2023. Global investors should focus primarily on Scotland’s attempt to secede, since the breakup of the United Kingdom would be a momentous historical event and a huge negative shock for pound sterling. While only 44.7% of Scots voted for independence in 2014, now they have witnessed Brexit, Covid-19, and stagflation, producing tailwinds for the Scots nationalist vote (Chart 7). Chart 7Forget Bojo's Exit, Watch Scotland Questions From The Road Questions From The Road There are still major limitations on Scotland exiting, since its national capabilities are limited, it would need to join the European Union, and Spain and possibly others will threaten to veto its membership in the European Union for fear of feeding their own secessionist movements. But any new referendum – including one done without the approval of Westminster – should be taken very seriously by investors. Bottom Line: Johnson’s removal will only marginally improve the Tories’ ability to manage the rebellion brewing in the north. A snap election that brings the Labour Party back into power would have a greater chance of keeping Scotland in the union, although it is not clear that such a snap election will happen in time to affect any Scottish decision. The UK faces economic and political turmoil between now and any referendum and investors should steer clear of the pound. (Though we still favor GBP over eastern European currencies). Britain will remain aggressive toward Russia but its ability to affect the Russian dynamic will fall, leaving the US and EU to decide the fate of Russian relations. Japan: What Is The Significance Of Shinzo Abe’s Assassination? Former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was assassinated by a lone fanatic with a handmade gun. The significance of the incident is that Abe will become a martyr for a certain vision of Japan – his vision of Japan, which is that Japan can become a “normal country” that moves beyond the shackles of the guilt of its imperial aggression in World War II. A normal country is one that is economically stable and militarily capable of defending itself – not a pacifist country mired in debt-deflation. Abe stood for domestic reflation and a proactive foreign policy, along with the normalization of the Japanese Self-Defense Forces (JSDF). True, economic policy can become less dovish if necessary to deal with inflation. Some changes at the Bank of Japan may usher in a less dovish shift in monetary policy in particular. But monetary policy cannot become outright hawkish like it was before Abe. And Abe’s fiscal policy was never as loose as it was made out to be, given that he executed several hikes to the consumption tax. Japan’s structural demographic decline and large debt burden will continue to weigh on economic activity whenever real rates and the yen rise. The government will be forced to reflate using monetary and fiscal policy whenever deflation threatens to return. Debt monetization will remain an option for future Japanese governments, even if it is restrained during times of high inflation. Chart 8Shinzo Abe's Legacy Questions From The Road Questions From The Road ​​​​​​​ This is not only because Japanese households will become depressed if deflation is left unchecked but also because economic growth must be maintained in order to sustain the nation’s new and growing national defense budgets. Japan’s growing need for self defense stems from China’s strategic rise, Russia’s aggression, and North Korea’s nuclearization, plus uncertainty about the future of American foreign policy. These trends will not change anytime soon. Indeed the Liberal Democratic Party’s popularity has increased under Abe’s successor, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, who will largely sustain Abe’s vision. The Diet still has a supermajority in favor of constitutional revision so as to enshrine the self-defense forces (Chart 8). And the de facto policy of rearmament continues even without formal revision. Bottom Line: Any Japanese leader who attempts to promote a hawkish BoJ, and a dovish JSDF, will fail sooner rather than later. The revolving door of prime ministers will accelerate. As Japan’s longest-serving prime minister, Shinzo Abe opened up the reliable pathway, which is that of a dovish BoJ and a hawkish foreign policy. This is important for the world, as well as Japan, because a more hawkish Japan will increase China’s fears of strategic containment. The frozen conflicts in Asia will continue to thaw, perpetuating the secular rise in geopolitical risk. We remain long JPY-KRW, since the BoJ may adjust in the short term and Chinese stimulus is still compromised, but that trade is on downgrade watch. Investment Takeaways Russia’s energy cutoff is aimed at pushing Europe into recession so as to force policy changes or government changes in Europe that will improve Russia’s position at the negotiating table over Ukraine, NATO, and other strategic disputes. Hence Russia is unlikely to increase the natural gas flow until it believes it has achieved its strategic aims and multiple veto players in the EU will prevent the EU from ever implementing a full-blown natural gas embargo. Chinese stimulus cannot be fully effective until it relaxes Covid-19 restrictions, likely beginning in December or next year when Xi Jinping uses his renewed political capital to try to stabilize the economy. However, China’s government powers alone are insufficient to prevent the debt-deflationary tendency of the property bust. The Middle East faces rising geopolitical tensions that will take markets by surprise with additional energy supply constraints. The implication is continued oil volatility given that global growth is faltering. Once global demand stabilizes, the Middle East’s turmoil will add to existing oil supply constraints to create new price pressures. The odds are not very high of the Federal Reserve achieving a “soft landing” in the context of a global energy shock and a stagflationary Europe and China.   Matt Gertken Chief Geopolitical Strategist mattg@bcaresearch.com ​​​​​​​ Strategic Themes Open Tactical Positions (0-6 Months) Open Cyclical Recommendations (6-18 Months) Regional Geopolitical Risk Matrix "Batting Average": Geopolitical Strategy Trades () Section II: Special (EDIT this Header) Section III: Geopolitical Calendar
In lieu of next week’s report, I will host the monthly Counterpoint Webcast on Monday, July 25. Please mark the date in your calendar, and I do hope you can join. Executive Summary Central banks face a ‘Sophie’s choice’. Inflation at 2 percent, or full employment? If they choose inflation at 2 percent, they will have to take the economy into recession. To take the economy into recession, bond yields and energy prices do not need to move any higher. They just need to stay where they are. The stock market has not yet discounted a recession. With stocks and bonds having become equally ‘cheaper’ this year, but stocks now vulnerable to substantial downgrades to their profits, stocks are likely to underperform bonds over the coming 6-12 months. In the event of recession followed by plunging inflation, a valuation uplift for bonds will also underpin stock prices and limit further downside in absolute terms. The biggest loser will be commodities. On a 6-12 month horizon, the optimal asset allocation is: overweight bonds, neutral stocks, underweight commodities. Fractal trading watchlist: Ethereum. The Bear Market Is A Valuation Bear Market. Profits Are Not Discounting A Recession… Yet Stocks Caught Between Scylla And Charybdis Stocks Caught Between Scylla And Charybdis Bottom Line: On a 6-12 month horizon, overweight bonds, neutral stocks, underweight commodities. Feature The Greek mythological sea monsters, Scylla and Charybdis, sat on opposite sides of the narrow Strait of Messina, with one monster likened to a shoal of rocks, the other to a vortex. Avoiding the rocks meant getting too close to the vortex, and avoiding the vortex meant getting too close to the rocks. In today’s stock market, if Scylla is the monster of high bond yields, then Charybdis is the monster of falling profits. Whether the stock market can safely navigate these twin monsters without further damage depends on a sequence of questions. In today’s stock market, if Scylla is the monster of high bond yields, then Charybdis is the monster of falling profits. If the market can escape high bond yields, can it also escape falling profits? The answer to this depends on a second question. Can central banks guide inflation back to 2 percent without taking the economy into recession? The answer to this depends on a third question. Is 2 percent inflation still consistent with full employment? Central Banks Face A ‘Sophie’s Choice’ – Low Inflation, Or Full Employment? In the US, the main transmission mechanism from employment to inflation is through so-called ‘rent of shelter’. Because, to put it bluntly, you need a steady job to pay the rent. And rent comprises 41 percent of the core inflation basket. For the past couple of decades, the Fed could have its cake and eat it: full employment and inflation running close to 2 percent. This was because full employment was consistent with rent of shelter inflation running at 3.5 percent, which itself was consistent with core inflation running at 2 percent. The Fed faces a ‘Sophie’s choice’. Inflation at 2 percent, or full employment? If it chooses inflation at 2 percent, then the Fed will have to take the economy into recession. But recently, there has been a phase-shift between the employment market and rent of shelter inflation. The current state of full employment equates to rent of shelter inflation running not at 3.5 percent, but at 5.5 percent (Chart I-1). Chart I-1Central Banks Face A 'Sophie's Choice' - Low Inflation, Or Full Employment? Central Banks Face A 'Sophie's Choice' - Low Inflation, Or Full Employment? Central Banks Face A 'Sophie's Choice' - Low Inflation, Or Full Employment? Hence, the Fed faces a ‘Sophie’s choice’. Inflation at 2 percent, or full employment? If it chooses inflation at 2 percent, the unemployment rate will have to rise by 2 percent. Meaning, the Fed will have to take the economy into recession. The Economy Tries The ‘Cold Pressor Test’ To take the economy into recession, bond yields and energy prices do not need to move any higher – they just need to stay where they are. This is because the damage from elevated bond yields and energy prices doesn’t come just from their level. It comes from their level multiplied by the length of time that they stay elevated. Try putting your hand in a bucket of ice water. For the first few seconds, or even tens of seconds, you will not feel any discomfort. After a few minutes though, the pain becomes excruciating. This so-called ‘cold pressor test’ tells us that your discomfort results not just from the temperature level of the ice water, but equally from the length of time that you keep your hand in it. Likewise, a short-lived spike in the mortgage rate or in the price of natural gas, or a short-lived collapse in your stock market wealth will not cause any discomfort. But the longer the mortgage rate stays elevated, and more and more people are buying or refinancing a home at a much higher rate, the greater becomes the economic pain. In the same vein, most Europeans will not notice the sky-high prices of natural gas in the summer when the heating is off. But come the cold of October and November, many people will have to choose literally between physical or economic pain. Some commentators counter that the “war chest of savings” accumulated during the pandemic will buffer households against higher mortgage rates and energy prices. We strongly disagree. The savings accumulated during the pandemic just added to, and became indistinguishable from, other wealth. Yet now, in case you hadn’t noticed, wealth has been pummelled. In case you hadn’t noticed, wealth has been pummelled. The impact of wealth on spending is a huge topic which we will expand upon in a future report. In a nutshell, most spending comes from income and income proxies. Wealth generates income, but it also generates an income proxy via capital gain. So, to the extent that wealth can drive spending growth, the biggest contributor comes from the change in capital gain, also known as the ‘wealth impulse’. Unfortunately, the wealth impulse is now in deeply negative territory (Chart I-2). Chart I-2The Wealth Impulse Is In Deeply Negative Territory The Wealth Impulse Is In Deeply Negative Territory The Wealth Impulse Is In Deeply Negative Territory The Stock Market Has Not Yet Discounted A Recession Coming back to the stock market, does the 2022 bear market mean that it has already discounted a recession? No, this year’s bear market is entirely due to a collapse in valuations. Since the start of the year, US profit expectations have held up. If the bear market were front running profit downgrades, then it would be underperforming its valuation component, but it is not. The counterargument is that analysts are notoriously slow to downgrade their profit estimates. Isn’t the bear market the ‘real-time’ stock market ‘front running’ big downgrades to these profit estimates? Again, no. If the market were front running profit downgrades, then it would be underperforming its valuation component, but it is not (Chart I-3). Chart I-3The Bear Market Is A Valuation Bear Market. Profits Are Not Discounting A Recession...Yet The Bear Market Is A Valuation Bear Market. Profits Are Not Discounting A Recession...Yet The Bear Market Is A Valuation Bear Market. Profits Are Not Discounting A Recession...Yet The bear market in the S&P 500 has near-perfectly tracked the bear market in its valuation component, the 30-year T-bond price. The valuation component of the S&P 500 is the 30-year T-bond price because the duration of the S&P 500 equals the duration of the 30-year T-bond. Several clients have asked how to prove that the duration of the S&P 500 equals that of the 30-year T-bond. We can do it either a difficult theoretical way, or an easy empirical way. The difficult theoretical way is to take the projected cashflows, and calculate the weighted average time to those cashflows, where the weights are the discounted values of those cashflows. The much easier empirical way is to show that the S&P 500 tracks its profits multiplied by the 30-year T-bond price more faithfully than if we use a shorter maturity bond, such as the 10-year T-bond (Chart I-4 and Chart I-5) Chart I-4The S&P 500 Tracks Profits Multiplied By The 30-Year T-Bond Price More Faithfully... The S&P 500 Tracks Profits Multiplied By The 30-Year T-Bond Price More Faithfully... The S&P 500 Tracks Profits Multiplied By The 30-Year T-Bond Price More Faithfully... Chart I-5...Than Profits Multiplied By The 10-Year T-Bond Price ...Than Profits Multiplied By The 10-Year T-Bond Price ...Than Profits Multiplied By The 10-Year T-Bond Price One important upshot is that any valuation comparison of the S&P 500 with a bond other than the 30-year T-bond is a fundamental error of duration mismatch. Most strategists compare the S&P 500 with the 10-year T-bond because it is convenient. But the duration mismatch makes this ‘apples versus oranges’ valuation comparison one of the most common mistakes in finance. Overweight Bonds, Neutral Stocks, Underweight Commodities All of this is important to answer a crucial question about stock market valuations. With the stock market 20 percent down this year when expected profits have held up, it might appear that stocks have become much cheaper. The truth is more nuanced. Relative to expected profits over the next 12 months the US stock market is indeed much cheaper (Chart I-6). The caveat is that these expected profits are vulnerable to substantial downgrades in the event of a recession. Chart I-6The US Stock Market Is Cheaper Versus Expected Profits, But These Profits Are Too Optimistic The US Stock Market Is Cheaper Versus Expected Profits, But These Profits Are Too Optimistic The US Stock Market Is Cheaper Versus Expected Profits, But These Profits Are Too Optimistic Chart I-7The US Stock Market Is Not Cheaper Versus The 30-Year T-Bond The US Stock Market Is Not Cheaper Versus The 30-Year T-Bond The US Stock Market Is Not Cheaper Versus The 30-Year T-Bond But relative to the equal duration 30-year T-bond, the US stock market is not cheaper. Since, the start of the year, the uplift in the stock market’s (forward earnings) yield is precisely the same as the that on the 30-year T-bond yield (Chart I-7).  Relative to the equal duration 30-year T-bond, the US stock market has not become cheaper. With stocks and bonds having become equally ‘cheaper’ this year, but stocks now vulnerable to substantial downgrades to their profits, stocks are likely to underperform bonds over the coming 6-12 months. The good news is that a valuation uplift for bonds will also underpin stock prices, and limit further downside in absolute terms. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for commodities, whose real prices are still close to the upper end of their 40-year trading range (Chart I-8) Chart I-8The Real Price Of Metals Is Still At The Upper End Of Its 40-Year Trading Range The Real Price Of Metals Is Still At The Upper End Of Its 40-Year Trading Range The Real Price Of Metals Is Still At The Upper End Of Its 40-Year Trading Range In the event of recession followed by plunging inflation, the biggest winner will be bonds and the biggest loser will be commodities. Therefore, on a 6-12 horizon, the optimal asset allocation is: Overweight bonds. Neutral stocks. Underweight commodities. Fractal Trading Watchlist This week we are adding Ethereum to our watchlist, as its 130-day fractal structure is approaching the capitulation point that signalled previous major trend reversals in 2018 (a bottom) and 2021 (a top). The full watchlist of 27 investments that are approaching, or at, potential trend reversals is available on our website: cpt.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Watchlist: New Additions Chart I-9Fractal Trading Watch List Fractal Trading Watch List Fractal Trading Watch List Chart 1CNY/USD At A Potential Turning Point CNY/USD At A Potential Turning Point CNY/USD At A Potential Turning Point   Chart 2US REITS Are Oversold Versus Utilities US REITS Are Oversold Versus Utilities US REITS Are Oversold Versus Utilities Chart 3CAD/SEK Is Vulnerable To Reversal CAD/SEK Is Vulnerable To Reversal CAD/SEK Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 4Financials Versus Industrials Has Reversed Financials Versus Industrials Has Reversed Financials Versus Industrials Has Reversed Chart 5The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Biotech Has Ended The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Biotech Has Ended The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Biotech Has Ended Chart 6The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Healthcare Has Ended The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Healthcare Has Ended The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Healthcare Has Ended Chart 7FTSE100 Outperformance Vs. Euro Stoxx 50 Is Vulnerable To Reversal FTSE100 Outperformance Vs. Euro Stoxx 50 Is Vulnerable To Reversal FTSE100 Outperformance Vs. Euro Stoxx 50 Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 8Netherlands' Underperformance Vs. Switzerland Is Ending Netherlands' Underperformance Vs. Switzerland Is Ending Netherlands' Underperformance Vs. Switzerland Is Ending Chart 9The Sell-Off In The 30-Year T-Bond At Fractal Fragility The Sell-Off In The 30-Year T-Bond At Fractal Fragility The Sell-Off In The 30-Year T-Bond At Fractal Fragility Chart 10The Sell-Off In The NASDAQ Is Approaching Fractal Fragility The Sell-Off In The NASDAQ Is Approaching Fractal Fragility The Sell-Off In The NASDAQ Is Approaching Fractal Fragility Chart 11Food And Beverage Outperformance Is Exhausted Food And Beverage Outperformance Is Exhausted Food And Beverage Outperformance Is Exhausted Chart 12German Telecom Outperformance Vulnerable To Reversal German Telecom Outperformance Vulnerable To Reversal German Telecom Outperformance Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 13Japanese Telecom Outperformance Vulnerable To Reversal Japanese Telecom Outperformance Vulnerable To Reversal Japanese Telecom Outperformance Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 14ETH Is Approaching A Possible Capitulation ETH Is Approaching A Possible Capitulation ETH Is Approaching A Possible Capitulation Chart 15The Strong Trend In The 18-Month-Out US Interest Rate Future Has Ended The Strong Trend In The 18-Month-Out US Interest Rate Future Has Ended The Strong Trend In The 18-Month-Out US Interest Rate Future Has Ended Chart 16The Strong Downtrend In The 3 Year T-Bond Has Ended The Strong Downtrend In The 3 Year T-Bond Has Ended The Strong Downtrend In The 3 Year T-Bond Has Ended Chart 17A Potential Switching Point From Tobacco Into Cannabis A Potential Switching Point From Tobacco Into Cannabis A Potential Switching Point From Tobacco Into Cannabis Chart 18Biotech Is A Major Buy Biotech Is A Major Buy Biotech Is A Major Buy Chart 19Norway's Outperformance Has Ended Norway's Outperformance Has Ended Norway's Outperformance Has Ended Chart 20Cotton Versus Platinum Has Reversed Cotton Versus Platinum Has Reversed Cotton Versus Platinum Has Reversed Chart 21Switzerland's Outperformance Vs. Germany Has Ended Switzerland's Outperformance Vs. Germany Has Ended Switzerland's Outperformance Vs. Germany Has Ended Chart 22USD/EUR Is Vulnerable To Reversal USD/EUR Is Vulnerable To Reversal USD/EUR Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 23The Outperformance Of MSCI Hong Kong Versus China Has Ended The Outperformance Of MSCI Hong Kong Versus China Has Ended The Outperformance Of MSCI Hong Kong Versus China Has Ended Chart 24A Potential New Entry Point Into Petcare A Potential New Entry Point Into Petcare A Potential New Entry Point Into Petcare Chart 25GBP/USD At A Potential Turning Point GBP/USD At A Potential Turning Point GBP/USD At A Potential Turning Point Chart 26US Utilities Outperformance Vulnerable To Reversal US Utilities Outperformance Vulnerable To Reversal US Utilities Outperformance Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 27The Outperformance Of Oil Versus Banks Is Exhausted The Outperformance Of Oil Versus Banks Is Exhausted The Outperformance Of Oil Versus Banks Is Exhausted Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System Fractal Trades Stocks Caught Between Scylla And Charybdis Stocks Caught Between Scylla And Charybdis Stocks Caught Between Scylla And Charybdis Stocks Caught Between Scylla And Charybdis 6-12 Month Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed   Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations 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  
Executive Summary Don’t Try Catching Falling Euros Don"t Try Catching Falling Euros Don"t Try Catching Falling Euros The euro is inexorably moving toward parity. However, many positives could still save EUR/USD, a cheap currency that will benefit if the fears of a global recession recede and if European inflation peaks by the fall. Nonetheless, many fundamental risks still weigh on the euro, including the dollar’s momentum and the continuing ructions in the European energy market. Moreover, technical vulnerabilities are likely to amplify the potential weakness in the euro. There is greater than a 30% chance that EUR/USD will fall to 0.9 or below. As a result, it is preferable to stay on the sidelines and opt for a neutral stance on the EUR/USD. Selling EUR/JPY offers a more attractive reward-to-risk ratio than EUR/USD. The GBP remains under threat. Bottom Line: Don’t be a hero. At this juncture, the EUR/USD outlook remains particularly uncertain. While EUR/USD possesses ample upside over the coming 12 months, there is roughly a 1/3 chance that it will plunge to 0.9 by the winter. Investors should sell EUR/JPY instead.   The euro’s race toward parity continues. From May 12 to July 1, EUR/USD attempted to form a triple bottom at 1.0375 that could have marked the end of this year’s decline. Alas, the euro did not hold that floor and now traders are inexorably pushing the common currency lower. The outlook for the euro is complex. At current levels, it is inexpensive and discounts many negative developments affecting both the global and European economies. However, the EUR/USD’s weakness is also a story of dollar strength, and the deteriorating global economic momentum remains the Greenback’s best friend, to the euro’s detriment. For now, we stick to our mantra of the past few months: don’t be a hero. The euro may soon bottom, but enough risks lie ahead that a move below 0.9 against the dollar should not be discarded. The risk-reward from bottom fishing is therefore poor. Instead, investors should sell EUR/JPY, for which downside remains ample. What We Like About The Euro… Despite the pervasive negativity engulfing the euro, there are plenty of positives that will soon help EUR/USD form a bottom. First, the euro is cheap on most metrics. The Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) model developed by BCA’s Foreign Exchange Strategists adjust for the different consumption baskets in the Eurozone and the US. It currently shows that EUR/USD trades 25% below fair value, its deepest discount since 2001. This degree of undervaluation is associated with a high probability of strong long-term returns for the euro (Chart 1). Based on interest rate parity and risk aversion, the euro also trades well below its fair value. Steep discounts are often followed by an imminent rebound in the currency (Chart 2). However, the euro hit a similar discount in January, but failed to rally because of the problems in the energy markets prompted by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Chart 1Strong Long-Term Returns based on PPP Strong Long-Term Returns based on PPP Strong Long-Term Returns based on PPP Chart 2Oversold on Many Metrics Oversold on Many Metrics Oversold on Many Metrics Second, the euro is oversold. Both BCA’s Intermediate-Term Technical Indicator and the Citi FX Euro PAIN Index are very depressed, which indicates pervasive negative sentiment toward the euro (Chart 2, bottom two panels). This kind of extremes in momentum are often followed by a euro rally. Chart 3Global Recession Fears Hurt EUR/USD Global Recession Fears Hurt EUR/USD Global Recession Fears Hurt EUR/USD Third, global economic pessimism is widespread. EUR/USD is a pro-cyclical pair, which mostly reflects the counter-cyclicality of the dollar and the great liquidity of the euro. It is therefore not surprising that spikes in global recession concerns are associated with a weakening EUR/USD (Chart 3). The recent wave of depreciation happened contemporaneously with a spike in Google searches for the word “recession.” If these fears, which reached extreme levels, subside further in the months ahead, the euro may benefit greatly. Fourth, pessimism toward China may ease, which would lift the euro in the process. Last week, it was announced that Beijing is considering allowing local governments to sell RMB1.5 trillion of special government bonds in the second half of the year to fund infrastructure spending. The news caused a rebound in the AUD, Brazilian assets, and copper. Europe too would benefit from greater activity in China. Chart 4Chinese Salvation? Chinese Salvation? Chinese Salvation? Chinese monetary conditions are also easing, which historically supports industrial activity in Europe relative to the US (Chart 4, top panel). The change in approach in the implementation of the zero-COVID policy is helping Chinese PMIs rebound, which will eventually translate into higher European shipments to China. Moreover, the rate of change of the performance of real estate stocks relative to the broad market has turned the corner, which may facilitate a stabilization of Chinese real estate transactions (Chart 4, second panel). Ultimately, the expanding excess reserves in the Chinese banking system point toward a stabilization of the performance of EUR/USD later this year (Chart 4, bottom panel). Fifth, our expectation that European inflation will peak by the autumn will prove the greatest help to the euro. The EUR/USD’s weakness over the past twelve months has coincided with a surge in European inflation surprises (Chart 5, top panel). This relationship reflects the negative impact on European real rates of both stronger realized and expected inflation (Chart 5, second panel). Investors understand that Europe’s inflation crisis is driven by a relative price shock in the energy market that greatly hurts economic activity in the Eurozone. Hence, even if they expect the ECB to increase interest rates, they believe policy rates will lag inflation because of Europe’s poor growth outlook. This is particularly true when compared to the US Fed. As a result, European real rates continue to lag far behind US ones and the European yield curve is steeper than that of the US, because traders foresee easier policy on the Eastern shores of the Atlantic (Chart 5, panel three and four). Chart 5Inflation Hurts the Euro Inflation Hurts the Euro Inflation Hurts the Euro Chart 6Declining Inflation Expectations? Declining Inflation Expectations? Declining Inflation Expectations? Declining Inflation Expectations? Declining Inflation Expectations? Declining Inflation Expectations? This situation is fluid and inflation expectations have begun to decrease. The recent easing in energy prices has contributed to a decline in long-term inflation expectations (Chart 6). We argued last week that the energy inflation is arithmetically set to decrease over the coming twelve months, which suggests further downside in inflation expectations is likely. Moreover, four of the five largest weights in the Eurozone HICP are running hot, but all are linked to commodity inflation, which confirms our bias that European inflation will soon peak (Chart 7). A top in both headline and core inflation will drag short- and long-term inflation expectations lower, which will help European real rates (Chart 8). Meanwhile, lower imported energy inflation will limit the damage to European economic activity, allowing the ECB to increase rates anyway.   Chart 7Key HICP Components Key HICP Components Key HICP Components Chart 8A durable Decline In Expected Inflation Depends On Realized Inflation A durable Decline In Expected Inflation Depends On Realized Inflation A durable Decline In Expected Inflation Depends On Realized Inflation Chart 9Balance Of Payment Support Balance Of Payment Support Balance Of Payment Support Bottom Line: The euro benefits from important tailwinds that suggest EUR/USD will be higher 12 to 18 months from now. It is cheap and oversold and the pervasive gloom among investors about the state of the global economy indicates that many negatives are already embedded in its pricing. Moreover, the Chinese economy could stabilize in the second half of 2022 and into 2023, which will hurt the dollar and boost the euro. Crucially, a peak in European inflation will allow European real rates to recover and curtail the handicap keeping EUR/USD under pressure, especially as the basic balance of payment remains in the euro’s favor (Chart 9).   … And What We Don’t EUR/USD may benefit from some important tailwinds, but it is still burdened by massive handicaps. The first problem that will place downward pressure on the euro is that its weakness is not unique and that it reflects broad-based dollar strength (Chart 10). This is a problem for the euro because the dollar (and the yen) is the foremost momentum currency in the G10. Its strength begets further strength, and the momentum signal from moving average crossovers remains dollar-bullish.  This headwind for the euro could even intensify in the coming months. JP Morgan EM FX Index is breaking down to new lows, which points to further tightening in EM financial conditions. Historically, tighter EM FCIs translate in both weaker Eurozone stock prices and a weaker EUR/USD, which reflects the closer link between the Euro Area and EM economies than between the US and EM (Chart 11). Chart 10The Dollar's Strength Is Broad-Based The Dollar's Strength Is Broad-Based The Dollar's Strength Is Broad-Based Chart 11More Trouble In Store More Trouble In Store More Trouble In Store This phenomenon is exacerbated by the underlying weakness in global economic activity. Arthur Budaghyan, BCA’s EM Chief Strategist, often reminds us that Asian exports remain soft. Additionally, the deterioration in US economic activity is likely to continue, as suggested by the weakness in the ISM new orders-to-inventories ratio and by the poor readings from the Regional Fed Surveys. Slowing US growth will generate a further decline in the business-sales-to-inventory ratio, which often coincides in a strong dollar and a weak euro. Chart 12Past Chinese Weaknesses Linger Past Chinese Weaknesses Linger Past Chinese Weaknesses Linger The second problem for EUR/USD is that China’s economic outlook may be improving in the future, but, for now, the impact of the recent Chinese slowdown continues to hamper Europe. More specifically, the recent decline in Chinese import volumes is consistent with a euro-bearish backdrop for the remainder of this year (Chart 12, top panel). In fact, even if the CNY remains stable against the USD, this does not guarantee a positive outcome for the euro as the past weakness in Chinese import volumes is also consistent with a depreciating EUR/CNY (Chart 12, bottom panel) The third euro-negative force is the natural gas market. As we showed last week, Dutch natural gas prices must settle between EUR500-600/MWh this upcoming winter to have the same inflationary impact as they did over the past 18 months. This is unlikely to happen, even according to the direst forecasts of BCA’s Commodity and Energy strategists. However, there is a greater than 30% chance that Europe must ration electricity this winter, which would cause a violent output contraction. As a result, any fluctuation in natural gas flows in Europe will cause the market-based odds of a European recession to swing widely. Consequently, the negative correlation between EUR/USD and TTF prices observed over the past twelve months is likely to remain intact (Chart 13). Related Report  European Investment StrategyQuestions From The Road The fourth issue hurting the euro is the US’s comparative isolation from the energy market’s travails. The US is a haven of relative economic stability today. Yes, its growth will slow further, but it is nonetheless set to outperform the Eurozone. The US is not under threat of rationing energy this winter. Moreover, the US terms of trades benefit from rising energy prices, unlike Europe (Chart 14). Furthermore, the US output gap is closing faster than that of in the Eurozone (Chart 14, bottom panel). As a result, the odds of dovish surprises by the ECB are much greater than those by the Fed. Chart 13Neutral Gas Is Still A Drag Neutral Gas Is Still A Drag Neutral Gas Is Still A Drag Chart 14The US As A Haven Of Stability The US As A Haven Of Stability The US As A Haven Of Stability The US’s relative resilience might also impact equity flows over the next few months in a euro-bearish fashion. US EPS have been stable relative to Euro Area ones, even in local currency terms. Interestingly, because relative EPS reflect broader economic forces, EUR/USD follows them (Chart 15). Thus, if the European economic outlook deteriorates further relative to that of the US, chances are high that Eurozone EPS estimates will be revised down relative to the US, which will coincide with a lower EUR/USD. In fact, the recent underperformance of Eurozone small-cap stocks (which are domestically focused) relative to European large-cap equities (which derive a greater proportion of their sales abroad) and US small-cap shares also confirms the worsening relative economic outlook between Europe and the US, and thus portend significant near-term risks to EUR/USD (Chart 16). Chart 15Follow Earnings Estimates Follow Earnings Estimates Follow Earnings Estimates Chart 16Small Caps Indicate More EUR Selling Small Caps Indicate More EUR Selling Small Caps Indicate More EUR Selling Chart 17An ECB Bungle Would Burden The Euro An ECB Bungle Would Burden The Euro An ECB Bungle Would Burden The Euro The last major fundamental risk weighing on EUR/USD is the significant probability that the ECB will disappoint markets with respect to its anti-fragmentation tool to be announced in July. Investor expectations are lofty. However, internal divisions within the ECB Governing Council remain, and, most importantly, the ECB is hamstrung by previous ECJ and German Constitutional Court rulings on bond purchases. Thus, our base case remains that the development of an appropriate bond purchase program will be an iterative process resulting from a back-and-forth between market tensions and ECB responses. As a result, there are risks of further widening in Italian spreads as well as European corporate bond spreads. These developments would further hurt the euro (Chart 17). Chart 18Much Selling To Be Unleashed Sentiment Could Get More Negative Much Selling To Be Unleashed Sentiment Could Get More Negative Much Selling To Be Unleashed Sentiment Could Get More Negative These fundamental problems with EUR/USD do not guarantee that the euro will punch below parity. After all, there are also plenty of positives with this currency. However, the risk of a violent selloff is elevated, at around 30%, because of underlying technical vulnerabilities. Global market liquidity has deteriorated in recent years, and this phenomenon is also impacting FX markets, resulting in sudden jumps being more frequent. Most crucially, the odds are high that automatic selling will be triggered if the euro tests parity, which would result in a cascading decline for a euro entering territory that has not been charted for the past 20 years. Specifically, speculators are marginally short the euro (Chart 18, top panel) and 1-month and 3-month risk reversals in the option markets are not yet at a capitulation point (Chart 18, bottom panel). Thus, if panic sets in, the euro could easily fall below 0.9, where the strongest supports lie. In essence, we worry that a sudden crash in the euro is becoming a growing threat. Bottom Line: The combination of the dollar’s momentum, the lagging impact of China’s economic woes, the risks to Europe’s energy supplies, the relative stability of the US economy, and the heightened chance that the ECB underdelivers with respect to its anti-fragmentation tool later next week all point to significant risks to the euro in the coming months. Moreover, the technical vulnerabilities present in the FX market suggest that, if further downside takes place, it will not only be large but also rapid. Investment Conclusions The dilemma between views and strategy is greatest with the euro today. There are many positives highlighted in this report that suggest that the euro has upside on a 12-month basis. However, the risks are abundant, and the potential downside in the coming six months not only carries a large probability, it is also likely to be pronounced if it takes place. As a result of this configuration, we fall back to the strategy we had adopted for European equities earlier this year: don’t be a hero. Even if the euro bottoms tomorrow, the risks are such that capital preservation remains paramount. Consequently, we recommend that investors stay on the sideline and maintain a neutral stance on EUR/USD. It is just as risky to try to bottom fish this pair as it is to chase it lower from current levels. Chart 19Sell EUR/JPY Sell EUR/JPY Sell EUR/JPY Instead, we follow BCA’s Foreign Exchange Strategists recommendation to go short EUR/JPY as a bet with a lower risk-reward ratio. Global recession worries and weakening commodity inflation are likely to allow for greater downside in global yields, which often results in a lower EUR/JPY (Chart 19). Additionally, investors do not expect much out of the BoJ this year, but if recession risks intensify in Europe because of energy rationing this winter, there is room to curtail the interest rate pricing for the ECB embedded in the €STR curve. Furthermore, the JPY is the cheapest currency in the G10. Finally, investors wanting to build greater exposure to European currencies should do so via the Swiss franc. We argued three weeks ago that the CHF enjoys significant structural tailwinds because of the Swiss economy’s strong productivity. Additionally, the SNB is no longer intervening to limit the CHF upside, as demonstrated by the decline in its current deposits. Instead, a stronger Swiss franc is the most potent weapon in the SNB’s arsenal to combat inflation. Moreover, the CHF offers a hedge against both recession risks in the Eurozone and further widening in European spreads. Bottom Line: Don’t be a hero. EUR/USD’s outlook is uniquely uncertain now. While many factors point to positive returns on a 12-to-18 month basis, if the euro hits parity in response to the many clouds still hanging over Europe, technical factors could plunge this currency to EUR/USD 0.9 into a steep decline. Instead, the clearer call is to sell EUR/JPY. Investors who want to assume a European FX exposure today should do so through the Swiss franc, not the euro. A Few Words On The UK Last week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson resigned. The initial response of the pound was to rebound. This reaction should fade. BCA Geopolitical strategists argue that, even though the person sitting at 10 Downing Street is about to change, the fundamental problems with the UK remain the same. The Labour Party is ascending, but it will still have to deal with the Brexit aftermath, rising populism, and popular discontent across the country. The economy is still fragile and engulfed in an inflationary spiral. Meanwhile, the risks created by a looming Scottish independence referendum are much more significant than was the case in 2014. As a result, the pound is likely to remain under stress over the coming quarters.   Mathieu Savary, Chief European Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com Tactical Recommendations Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations
Executive Summary Economic growth is decelerating and recession talk is unavoidable, but the data series the business cycle dating committee tracks suggest the expansion is still alive and kicking. Despite unacceptably high inflation readings and a wildly swinging near-term outlook, intermediate- and long-term inflation expectations have remained well anchored all year. Market-based measures have been remarkably well behaved and the preliminary reading from the University of Michigan consumer survey that spooked the Fed was revised down to a more comfortable level. The FOMC minutes for June left no doubt that the committee is prepared to accept a recession as the price of subduing inflation, but markets already discounted that in their June swoon. The swiftness with which financial conditions have tightened in response to the beginning of the Fed’s rate-hiking campaign is unprecedented. It may have the effect of reducing the lag between FOMC actions and economic impacts while front-loading the pain from the inevitable slowdown. It Won't Be Easy To Get Worse It Won't Be Easy To Get Worse It Won't Be Easy To Get Worse Bottom Line: The domestic economic backdrop is challenging and international uncertainties could make things worse, but a severe recession and bear market are not inevitable. The consensus is underestimating the potential for upside surprises that could lead equities to outperform fixed income and cash over the next three-to-twelve months. Feature Feed a cold, starve a fever is a simple prescription with an obvious read-through for monetary policymakers. If growth is sluggish, a central bank can stimulate its economy by lowering interest rates to encourage consumption and investment. If the economy is overheating, it can raise interest rates to cool household and business spending and dial back activity to a more sustainable level. Related Report  US Investment StrategyA Difference Of Opinion Things get hairy when it’s a sluggish economy that needs to be slowed. The specter of stagflation – stagnant growth and high inflation – has been haunting financial markets as consumer prices have increased by at least 7% year-over-year every month since December amidst a clear deceleration in growth. Economic activity contracted in the first quarter, in terms of real GDP, and the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model projects that it did so again in the second quarter. According to the definition every introductory economics student learns, two consecutive quarters of contraction make a recession. Financial markets are a forward discounting mechanism and stocks’ and bonds’ ugly first-half performances may have foreshadowed the expansion's demise. We suspect the immediate future might not be as bad as financial market performance would imply, though we acknowledge that the risks to our comparatively constructive view have risen. We do not think that everything is hunky-dory; as we’ve previously noted, inflation will likely ease to 4% of its own accord, but getting it back down to the 2% target will require the Fed to squash the economy. That will bring about the definitive end to the expansion and risk assets’ extended romp. Our best guess is that the policy day of reckoning will not become apparent until 2024 and that the S&P 500 can recover a meaningful amount of ground between now and next July. We therefore remain overweight equities over the twelve-month cyclical timeframe, in contrast to the neutral house view. Recession Already? Probably Not Chart 1The Expansion Looks Sound The Expansion Looks Sound The Expansion Looks Sound Despite the Econ 101 rule of thumb, business cycles are defined by the National Bureau of Economic Research’s Business Cycle Dating Committee, not the ups and downs of real GDP. The committee considers a broad range of activity measures when determining economic peaks and troughs, with employment (Chart 1, top panel), income and consumption (Chart 1, second panel), industrial production (Chart 1, third panel) and real manufacturing and trade sales (Chart 1, bottom panel) drawing particular attention. Those series do not warn of a recession now, and neither does still-positive real final domestic demand growth (Chart 2), which backs inventory adjustments and net exports out of GDP to provide a better read on the domestic economy. Per its dual mandate, the Fed is charged with maintaining price stability and full employment. Now that inflation is unacceptably high and growth is slowing, several clients have remarked on the incompatibility of the individual mandates. The Fed can choose price stability and kill the economy, a la Volcker in the early eighties, or it can protect employment at the cost of inflation. We have limited faith in central bankers’ ability to fine-tune economic outcomes with the blunt tools at their disposal, but there is room for the labor market to cool without denting the economy too terribly. Chair Powell has cited the ratio of job openings to unemployed workers as a metric that’s well beyond full-employment levels and has mused that it might offer an avenue for the Fed to engineer a soft landing. It eased a bit in May, as per the JOLTS job openings data released last week, and the labor market would presumably remain robust if it fell to a level at or around 1 (Chart 3). Getting the ratio to settle in the desired range is easier said than done, of course, but if a meaningful share of the working-age Americans who remain AWOL come back to the work force, it will be possible for payrolls to continue to expand even as the unemployment rate rises to the Fed’s estimated long-run full employment level of 4.1%. Chart 2Real Final Domestic Demand Is Still Growing Real Final Domestic Demand Is Still Growing Real Final Domestic Demand Is Still Growing ​​​​​ Chart 3The Job Market Can Cool Without Shrinking The Job Market Can Cool Without Shrinking The Job Market Can Cool Without Shrinking ​​​​​ Inflation Expectations Remain Contained We view longer-run inflation expectations as an important driver of economic participants’ actions. If households, businesses and investors expect that inflation will not be an issue over the long run, they will not alter their behavior to protect themselves from it. If they begin to believe that high inflation will linger for an extended period, they will take actions that serve to entrench it. The evolution of long-run inflation expectations, then, can provide advance warning that a vicious circle in which high prices beget higher prices is brewing. They also offer insight into the course of monetary policy. Chair Powell regularly cites inflation expectations as an important driver of the Fed’s actions, and the prospect that inflation expectations could become unanchored would prompt Volcker-like moves that would surely throttle financial markets and the economy. Powell explicitly cited the 3.3% preliminary long-run inflation expectation reading from the University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey as a catalyst for the FOMC’s eleventh-hour decision to hike the fed funds rate by 75 basis points in June. The final reading was revised down to a less noteworthy 3.1%, but the episode showed that the Fed responds to any suggestion that inflation expectations are at risk of breaking out. We monitor the CPI swaps market, and the TIPS and nominal Treasury markets, to get a read on investors’ and businesses’ intermediate- and long-term inflation expectations. Despite wild swings in 2-year expectations, which made a run at 5% in late March before setting (Chart 4, top panel) or approaching (Chart 5, top panel) new 2022 lows last week, 3-to-5- and 6-to-10-year expectations have been remarkably well behaved. TIPS break-evens imply intermediate- (Chart 4, middle panel) and long-term (Chart 4, bottom panel) inflation expectations that are 20 basis points (bps) below the 2.3-2.5% range consistent with the Fed’s 2% inflation target. Intermediate- and long-term expectations derived from the CPI swaps curve sit about 30 bps higher, but their path has been similar, with the former making a new year-to-date low last week (Chart 5, middle panel) and the latter nearing one (Chart 5, middle panel). Chart 4Investors' Longer-Run Expectations Remain Well-Anchored, ... Investors' Longer-Run Expectations Remain Well-Anchored, ... Investors' Longer-Run Expectations Remain Well-Anchored, ... ​​​​​ Chart 5... And Businesses' Do, Too ... And Businesses' Do, Too ... And Businesses' Do, Too ​​​​​​ The bottom line is that investors and the Fed should take some comfort from how well anchored inflation expectations have remained all year. They will not remain that way indefinitely if real-time inflation does not head convincingly lower soon, but apparently no longer-run damage has been done yet. For all the things that have turned out worse than expected this year, longer-run inflation expectations have been a meaningfully positive surprise. The Fed’s Next Moves Chart 6Act On The Rumor, Ignore The News Act On The Rumor, Ignore The News Act On The Rumor, Ignore The News While watching Chair Powell’s press conference following the June FOMC meeting, we were struck by how doggedly he stuck to the theme that price stability was the committee’s foremost concern. In a performance that must have warmed the heart of anyone who’s ever worked as a behind-the-scenes aide, he unwaveringly hammered the primary talking point he’d been coached to hit. Last week’s release of the June meeting’s minutes revealed that he was speaking for the full committee when he emphasized that nothing could dissuade it from restoring inflation to its target level. Though FOMC members’ hawkish/dovish leanings occupy a broad spectrum, the minutes painted a picture of a committee unified by its concern about inflation. Although the minutes made it clear that the committee is willing to sacrifice growth to gain control over inflation, and media coverage trumpeted that theme, they didn’t tell us anything new. They may have been a bit outdated, now that the Michigan survey’s final inflation expectations turned out not to be a big deal, and subsequent price action in real and financial asset markets suggest inflation pressures are easing, but markets already discounted the consequences of the Fed’s hawkish pivot when the committee let it be known that it was considering a 75-bps hike. The S&P 500 fell 12% in just seven sessions, culminating in its year-to-date closing low the day after the meeting concluded, 23.5% below its all-time closing high set at the beginning of January (Chart 6, top panel). Treasuries had embarked on a wild ride ahead of the meeting, as well, with the 10-year yield rising 45 bps in three sessions to 3.49% on the first day of the two-day meeting before bottoming for the time being at 2.82% last week (Chart 6, bottom panel). The minutes underlined members’ understanding of the tradeoff involved in crushing inflation and their resolve to enter into it. “Most [participants] agreed that risks to inflation were skewed to the upside … [while assessing] that the risks to … growth were skewed to the downside.” Despite the stagflation risks, “[p]articipants concurred that the economic outlook warranted moving to a restrictive stance of policy, and they recognized the possibility that an even more restrictive stance could be appropriate if elevated inflation pressures were to persist.” We have no doubt that the Fed will induce a recession if it proceeds along the course it has charted, but that doesn’t mean that it will be a severe one, or that it will begin imminently, leaving room for equities and credit to rally in the interim. About That Monetary Policy Lag Chart 7It's Hard To Keep Missing A Progressively Lower Target It's Hard To Keep Missing A Progressively Lower Target It's Hard To Keep Missing A Progressively Lower Target Our contention that risk assets have a path to rally over the next twelve months underpins our recommendation to overweight equities within a multi-asset portfolio over that timeframe. We are not saying that skies are blue and everything is great; we simply think that the gloom has gone too far and the equity selloff is overdone. As the saying goes, more money is made owning stocks from terrible to bad than it is from good to great. Judging by the economic surprise index, the bar for getting more terrible has been set pretty high (Chart 7). The unprecedentedly rapid tightening of financial conditions at the outset of a rate-hiking campaign also raises questions. It is widely assumed that Fed actions take around twelve months to filter their way through the economy. While the prime rate moves higher immediately after the FOMC meeting, rates impacting households can be slow to reset, and it typically takes some time to reverse spending and investing momentum. If households and businesses foresee an extended series of rate hikes, the first ones may be stimulative in the near term as they line up to deploy their consumption and investment capital while they can obtain it on relatively favorable terms. Chart 8No Lag This Time No Lag This Time No Lag This Time Financial conditions do not typically become maximally tight until a couple of years after the Fed completes its rate hike campaigns (Chart 8). The swiftness with which financial conditions have tightened this time has us wondering if they have already reached peak tightness or are about to do so. If activity troughs around the time the financial conditions index peaks, is it possible that the worst of the downturn isn’t far away? The conditions that have attended this cycle are unique, and all we can say for sure is that Treasury yields, corporate bond spreads, equity indexes and the dollar have combined to tighten financial conditions to the tune of about two-and-a-half percentage points of real GDP1 solely on anticipation. Financial markets’ proactive moves may have been hasty. We are closely monitoring the ongoing flow of data to determine if it will vindicate or discredit our thesis, but we remain more open to positive surprises than the consensus.   Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1      Goldman Sachs’ Financial Conditions Index is calibrated such that a one-point move in the index is meant to be equivalent to a one-percentage-point move in real GDP.
Executive Summary Global risk assets are oversold, and investor sentiment is downbeat. In this context, a technical equity rebound cannot be ruled out. However, we do not think it will be the beginning of a major cyclical rally. The Fed and the stock market remain on a collision course. An equity rally and easing financial conditions would make the Fed even more resolute to continue hiking interest rates. There are many similarities between dynamics that prevailed in US tech stocks and in previous bubbles. While it is not our baseline view, the odds of a protracted bear market are nontrivial. Resource prices and commodity plays have more downside. The History Of Financial Bubbles: Is This Time Different? On A Bull Case, Bubbles And Commodity Prices On A Bull Case, Bubbles And Commodity Prices Bottom Line: The decline in commodity prices and the relentless US dollar rally will ensure that EM currencies, bonds and stocks continue to sell off even if the US equity market rebounds in the near term. Feature Among the most frequently discussed topics in recent client calls are the upside and downside risks to our baseline view. We elaborate on these risks in this report. To recap, our baseline view is as follows: EM and DM stocks have another 15% downside in USD terms, the US dollar will continue overshooting and commodity prices will fall. Global yields are topping out, and the US yield curve will soon invert. Hence, defensive positioning for absolute-return investors is still warranted, and global equity and fixed-income portfolios should continue to underweight EM. The rationale is that US and EU demand for goods ex-autos, and hence global trade, is about to contract while the Fed is straightjacketed by high and broad-based inflation. China’s economy will be struggling to recover. In EM ex-China, domestic demand will relapse. Chart 1Will The S&P 500's Technical Support Hold? Will The S&P 500's Technical Support Hold? Will The S&P 500's Technical Support Hold? If one believes that the US equity bull market that began in 2009 is still alive (i.e. the March 2020 selloff is a short-lived red herring), odds are that the S&P 500 drawdown is over. The reasoning is that the S&P 500 is already down 23% from its 2021 peak, on par with the selloffs that occurred in 2011, 2015-16 and 2018 (Chart 1). However, if one believes that the structural bull market is over, the magnitude of the current equity selloff is likely to exceed the ones in 2011, 2015-16 and 2018. Hence, a bearish stance is still warranted. As we argue below, after a 12-year bull run, the excesses in the US equity market in general, and US tech stocks in particular, have become extreme. There are many signs of a bubble, or at least of a major top. Even though we risk overstaying in our negative view, our bias is that the global equity market rout is not yet over. A Bullish Scenario A (hypothetical) bullish case would look something like this: Weakening global and US growth and falling commodity prices bring down US inflation and Treasury yields. As US bond yields drop further, the S&P 500 rallies given their negative correlation of the past 18 months or so. As US inflation declines rapidly, the Fed makes a dovish pivot, reinforcing the risk asset rally and reversing the US dollar’s uptrend. Finally, Chinese stimulus produces a robust business cycle recovery in China that propels commodity prices higher and lifts the rest of EM out of the abyss. Chart 2Keep An Eye On Rising US Trimmed-Mean Inflation Keep An Eye On Rising US Trimmed-Mean Inflation Keep An Eye On Rising US Trimmed-Mean Inflation In our opinion, this scenario has no more than a 25% chance of playing out. Even if there are apparent signs of a US/global slowdown, elevated US core inflation and accelerating wages and unit labor costs would keep the Fed from dialing down its hawkishness Critically, even though US core PCE inflation has rolled over and will likely decline further, its trimmed-mean PCE inflation is rising (Chart 2). The latter means that inflation is broadening even as some volatile items like food, energy and used-auto prices deflate. As we have written extensively, wages and inflation are lagging variables. Despite the ongoing slowdown in the US economy, it will take many months before the underlying core inflation rate drops below 3%. We maintain that the Fed and the stock market remain on a collision course. An equity rally and easing financial conditions would make the Fed even more resolute to hike interest rates. The basis is that even if core inflation falls in the coming months, it would still be well above the Fed’s target of 2%. Notably, the Fed has recently communicated that its commitment to bring down inflation to 2% is unconditional. Chart 3The Anatomy Of The US Equity Bear Market In 2000-2002 The Anatomy Of The US Equity Bear Market In 2000-2002 The Anatomy Of The US Equity Bear Market In 2000-2002 This policy stance represents a major departure from the past several decades when the Fed was very sensitive to any tightening in financial conditions and often eased preemptively. In short, with inflation still well above its target, the Fed will, for now, err on the side of hawkishness if financial conditions ease. Importantly, US corporate profits will likely contract even if US real GDP does not shrink. As US corporate top-line growth slows and unit labor costs accelerate, profit margins will shrink. For example, the 2001-2002 recession was very mild – consumer spending did not contract at all, and housing boomed (Chart 3, top two panels). Yet, the S&P 500 operating earnings dropped by 30%, and the S&P 500 fell by 50% (Chart 3, bottom two panels). In brief, a devastating bear market does not necessarily require a hard landing. Concerning China, the recovery will likely be U-shaped rather than V-shaped with risks skewed to the downside. Finally, contracting global trade and falling commodity prices will continue, which are negative for EM currencies and assets. Notably, industry data from Taiwan’s manufacturing PMI suggest that the slowdown in the Asian and global economies is widespread. Taiwan’s substantial trade linkages with mainland China signify that the slowdown is not limited to the US and the EU but includes China too. Taiwanese PMI export orders of both semiconductor and basic material producers have plunged to 40 and 30, respectively (Chart 4). Barring a quick turnaround, global semiconductor and basic materials stocks have more downside. Even as US Treasury yields drop, the dollar will continue firming versus EM currencies, including those of Emerging Asian countries. In such a scenario, EM stocks and bonds will weaken further (Chart 5).  Chart 4A Broad-Based Contraction In Global Trade Is In The Cards A Broad-Based Contraction In Global Trade Is In The Cards A Broad-Based Contraction In Global Trade Is In The Cards Chart 5A Free Fall In EM Ex-China Stocks And Currencies A Free Fall In EM Ex-China Stocks And Currencies A Free Fall In EM Ex-China Stocks And Currencies   Bottom Line: The S&P 500 is oversold, and investor sentiment is downbeat. In this context, a technical equity rebound can occur at any moment. However, we do not think it will be the beginning of a major cyclical rally. A Bearish Case: Are US TMT Stocks A Bubble? What is a more bearish scenario than our baseline case? The bursting of bubbles or the unwinding of excesses would entail a more protracted and devastating bear market than the 15% drop in global share prices we currently expect. We can identify two major excesses in the global economy and financial system: In US TMT (Technology, Media & Entertainment and Internet & Catalog Retail) stocks and private equity In Chinese real estate. We have written extensively about property market excesses in China. Below we discuss the recent sharp selloff in commodities, which is partially linked to Chinese property construction. We also present the case for major excesses in US stocks. Chart 6 illustrates the history of bubbles of the past several decades: The Nifty-fifty (involving the 50 US large-cap stocks) bubble occurred in the 1960s and burst in the 1970s (not shown in the chart). The commodity bubble took place in the 1970s and burst in the 1980s. Japanese equity and property prices rose exponentially in the 1980s and deflated in the 1990s. The Nasdaq bubble occurred in the 1990s and was shattered in the early 2000s. Commodities/EM/China were the leaders of the 2000s, and they were devastated in the 2010s. We use iron ore in this chart because its price surged the most in the 2000s. FAANGM stocks, the Nasdaq 100 index and private equity were by far the biggest beneficiaries of the 2010s. No one can be certain about bubbles in real time because there are always superior fundamentals or persuasive stories that justify exponential price appreciation. That said, there are a lot of similarities between dynamics prevailing in US tech and private equity and in previous bubbles: In the past decade, FAANGM stocks, the Nasdaq 100 index and private equity companies registered gains comparable to the bubbles of the previous 60 years. Furthermore, as Chart 6 illustrates, the equal-weighted FAANGM index in inflation-adjusted terms rose 30-fold, much more than the bubbles of the previous decades. The Nasdaq 100 index and share prices of Blackstone, the largest private equity company, have risen by nearly 10-fold in real (inflation-adjusted terms) between 2010 and the end of 2021. Chart 6The History Of Financial Bubbles: Is This Time Different? On A Bull Case, Bubbles And Commodity Prices On A Bull Case, Bubbles And Commodity Prices The final phase of bubbles is often characterized by growing retail investor participation. This is exactly what happened with US tech/new economy stocks. Chart 7US TMT Stocks: Exponential Growth Rarely Ends Well US TMT Stocks: Exponential Growth Rarely Ends Well US TMT Stocks: Exponential Growth Rarely Ends Well Toward the end of the decade, not only retail but also institutional capital stampedes into the winners of the decade. This played out with US large-cap tech stocks as well as in private equity and private debt spaces. Inflows into private equity and private debt have been enormous. As a result of these inflows into US large-cap stocks, the market cap share of US TMT stocks as a percentage of total US market cap has surpassed 40%, its peak in 2000 (Chart 7). Bubbles often thrive during periods of low interest rates and crash when the cost of capital rises. This is exactly what has been happening in global financial markets since early 2019. The parameters of the overall US equity market were also excessive prior to this bear market. As of last year, the S&P 500 stock prices in real (inflation-adjusted) terms became as elevated relative to their long-term time trend as they were in the late 1960s and the late 1990s − the peaks of previous secular bull markets (Chart 8, top panel).   Chart 8The S&P 500 and Operating Profits: A Long-Term Perspective The S&P 500 and Operating Profits: A Long-Term Perspective The S&P 500 and Operating Profits: A Long-Term Perspective Chart 9Equity Issuance Marks Market Tops Equity Issuance Marks Market Tops Equity Issuance Marks Market Tops The S&P 500’s operating earnings in real terms have surpassed two standard deviations above its time trend (Chart 8, bottom panel). Some sort of mean reversion to its long-term trend is in the cards. US corporate profits have benefited from fiscal/monetary stimulus, low labor costs and pricing power. All of these are now working against profits.   Finally, new share issuance in the US mushroomed in 2021, another sign of a major top (Chart 9). Bottom Line: We are not entirely convinced that US TMT stocks are a bubble waiting to burst. Yet, the odds of this happening are nontrivial. This time might not be different. A Word On Commodities The selloff in the commodity space has been broad-based. Odds are that it will continue for the following reasons: A global business cycle downtrend is always bearish for commodity prices. In fact, oil prices are often lagging and are typically the last shoe to drop during global slowdowns. US sales of gasoline have started to contract. Besides, Saudi Arabia will likely increase its oil output and shipments following President Biden’s visit to the Kingdom next week. Chart 10Investors Have Been Long Commodity Futures Investors Have Been Long Commodity Futures Investors Have Been Long Commodity Futures As we have argued in recent months, China’s demand for commodities was contracting and, in our opinion, the rally in resource prices over the past 12 months was supported by investment demand for commodities, i.e., financial inflows into the commodity space. Many portfolios have bought commodities as an inflation hedge. When a hedge becomes a consensus trade and crowded, it stops being a hedge. Chart 10 demonstrates that net long positions in 17 commodities have been very elevated. The speed at which liquidation is taking place corroborates our thesis that it is investors not producers or consumers who have been caught being long commodities. China’s business cycle recovery will be U-shaped at best. Domestic orders point to weaker import volumes in the months ahead (Chart 11, top panel). ​​​​​​​Corporate loan demand has plunged suggesting that liquidity provisions by the PBoC might fail to produce a meaningful recovery in credit growth (Chart 11, bottom panel). Finally, technicals bode ill for commodity prices. As Chart 12 illustrates, copper prices and global material stocks have probably formed medium-term tops, and risks are skewed to the downside.  Chart 11China: The Economy Is Struggling To Gain Traction China: The Economy Is Struggling To Gain Traction China: The Economy Is Struggling To Gain Traction Chart 12A Major Top In Commodity Prices? A Major Top In Commodity Prices? A Major Top In Commodity Prices?   Bottom Line: Commodity prices and their plays have more downside. Investment Strategy The decline in commodity prices and the relentless US dollar rally will ensure that EM currencies, bonds and stocks continue to sell off even if the US equity market rebounds in the near term driven by lower Treasury yields. Global equity and fixed-income portfolios should continue underweighting EM. We also continue to short the following currencies versus the USD: ZAR, COP, PEN, PLN, PHP and IDR; as well as HUF vs. CZK, and KRW vs. JPY. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Strategic Themes (18 Months And Beyond) Equities Cyclical Recommendations (6-18 Months) Cyclical Recommendations (6-18 Months)
Executive Summary Our recommended model bond portfolio outperformed its custom benchmark index by +24bps in Q2/2022, improving the year-to-date outperformance to a solid +72bps. The Q2 outperformance came entirely from the credit side of the portfolio (+35bps), led by underweights to US investment grade corporates (+28bps) and EM hard currency debt (+24bps). The rates side of the portfolio was down slightly (-11bps), with gains from underweights in US and UK inflation-linked bonds (a combined +24bps) helping offset the hit from overweights to German and French government bonds (a combined -30bps). Looking ahead, we continue to see more defensive positioning in growth-sensitive credit sectors like US investment grade corporate bonds and EM hard currency debt, rather than duration management, as providing the better opportunity to generate alpha in bond portfolios over the latter half of 2022. GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Recommended Positioning For The Next Six Months GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense Bottom Line: In our model bond portfolio, we are maintaining an overall neutral duration stance and a moderate underweight of spread product versus developed market sovereign bonds. We are, however, reducing the recommended tilts in inflation-linked bonds by upgrading US TIPS to neutral and downgrading Canadian linkers to neutral. Feature Dear Client, We are about to take a mid-summer publishing break, as this humble bond strategist moves his family into a new home in a new city. Next week, you will be receiving a report written by BCA Research’s Chief US Bond Strategist, Ryan Swift. The following week, there will be no Global Fixed Income Strategy report published. Our next report will be published on July 26, 2022. Regards, Rob Robis Bond investors are running out of places to hide to avoid losses in 2022. The total return on the Bloomberg Global Aggregate index (hedged into USD) in the second quarter of this year was -4%, nearly matching the -6% loss seen in Q1. No sector, from government bonds to corporate debt to emerging market credit, could avoid the damage caused by hawkish central bankers belated responding to the worst bout of global inflation since the 1970s. Related Report  Global Fixed Income StrategyGFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2022 Review & Outlook: Trading The Consolidation Phase Global inflation rates will soon peak, led by slowing growth of goods prices and commodity prices. However, inflation will remain well above central bank targets across the bulk of the developed world, supported by more domestic sources like services prices, housing costs and wages. This will limit the ability for important central banks like the Fed and ECB to quickly pivot in a more dovish direction to support weakening growth – and bail out foundering bond markets. With that backdrop in mind, we present our quarterly review of the BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy (GFIS) model bond portfolio for the second quarter of 2022. We also present our recommended positioning for the portfolio for the next six months, as well as portfolio return expectations for our base case and alternative investment scenarios. 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. Q2/2022 Model Bond Portfolio Performance: All About Credit Chart 1Q2/2022 Performance: Gains From Defensive Credit Positioning Q2/2022 Performance: Gains From Defensive Credit Positioning Q2/2022 Performance: Gains From Defensive Credit Positioning The total return for the GFIS model portfolio (hedged into US dollars) in the second quarter was -4.3%, outperforming the custom benchmark index by +24bps (Chart 1).1 In terms of the specific breakdown between the government bond and spread product allocations in our model portfolio, the former generated -11bps of underperformance versus our custom benchmark index while the latter outperformed by +35bps. In our previous quarterly portfolio performance review in April, we noted that the greater opportunities to generate outperformance for fixed income investors would come from more defensive allocations to spread product, rather than big directional moves in government bond yields. That forecast largely panned out, as global credit markets moved to price in the growing risk of a deep economic downturn. Declining nominal government bond yields provided some modest relief at the end of June, with markets modestly pricing out some of the rate hikes discounted over the next year amid deepening global recession fears. While we maintained a neutral stance on overall portfolio duration during the quarter, we did benefit from the fact that the decline in global bond yields in late June was concentrated more in lower inflation expectations than falling real yields. Thus, our underweight positioning in inflation-linked bonds, focused on the US and UK, helped add a combined +25bps of outperformance versus the benchmark (Table 1). Table 1GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Overall Return Attribution GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense The bar charts showing the total and relative returns for each individual government bond market and spread product sector in our model portfolio are presented in Charts 2 & 3. Chart 2GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Government Bond Performance Attribution GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense Chart 3GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Spread Product Performance Attribution By Sector GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense Biggest Outperformers: Underweight US investment grade Industrials (+19bps) Underweight UK index-linked Gilts (+15bps) Underweight US TIPS (+9bps) Underweight US investment grade Financials (+7bps) Underweight US MBS (+6bps) Underweight US Treasuries with maturities beyond ten years (+6bps) Biggest Underperformers: Overweight euro area investment grade corporates (-19bps) Overweight German government bonds with maturities beyond ten years (-14bps) Overweight French government bonds with maturities beyond ten years (-8bps) Overweight UK Gilts with maturities beyond ten years (-6bps) Overweight US CMBS (-4bps) Chart 4 presents the ranked benchmark index returns of the individual countries and spread product sectors in the GFIS model bond portfolio for Q2/2022. 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 (red for underweight, dark green for overweight, gray for neutral). Chart 4Ranking The Winners & Losers From The GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Universe In Q2/2022 GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense 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. That pattern largely held true in Q2/2022, especially at the tail ends of the chart. During a quarter where all the major asset classes in our portfolio lost money on a hedged and duration-matched basis, we outperformed by selectively underweighting the worst performers within the credit side of the benchmark portfolio universe. Notably, we were underweight EM USD-denominated Sovereigns (-1099bps), EM USD-denominated corporates (-816bps) and US investment grade corporates (-686bps) on the extreme right side of the chart. Some of our key overweight positions did relatively well, led by overweights in US CMBS (-148bps), Australian government bonds (-288bps) and euro area investment grade corporates (-378bps), all of which were on the left side of Chart 4. One of our key recommendations throughout the first half of 2022 - overweighting German government bonds (-517bps) and French government bonds (-657bps) versus underweighting US Treasuries (-283bps) - performed poorly in Q2. This was due to investors rapidly pricing in a far more aggressive series of ECB rate hikes than we expected, resulting in some convergence of US-European bond yield differentials. Importantly, core European bond yields have pulled back substantially over the last month, and by much more than US yields have declined. Most notably, the 2-year German yield, which began Q2 at minus-7bps and hit a peak of 1.2% on June 14, has now fallen all the way back to 0.4% as this report went to press. The 2-year US-Germany yield differential has already widened by 35bps in the first week of July, suggesting that our overweight core Europe/underweight US allocation is already contributing positively to the model bond portfolio returns for Q3. Bottom Line: Our model bond portfolio outperformed its benchmark index in the second quarter of the year by +24bps – a positive result coming largely from underweight positions in US corporate bonds, EM spread product and inflation-linked bonds in the US and UK. Future Drivers Of Model Bond Portfolio Returns Just as in Q2/2022, the performance of the model bond portfolio in Q3/2022 will be driven more by relative allocations between countries and spread product sectors, rather than big directional moves in bond yields or credit spreads. Overall Duration Exposure Chart 5A More Stable Backdrop For Global Bond Yields A More Stable Backdrop For Global Bond Yields A More Stable Backdrop For Global Bond Yields In terms of portfolio duration, we still see a stronger case for global bond yields to be more rangebound than trending, especially in the US. There has already been a major downward adjustment to global bond yields via lower inflation expectations and reduced rate hike expectations. A GDP-weighted average of major developed market 10-year inflation breakevens has already fallen from an April 2022 peak of 281bps to 216bps (Chart 5). That aggregate breakeven is now back to the levels that began 2022, before the Russian invasion of Ukraine that triggered a surge in global energy prices. We anticipate that additional declines in global inflation expectations – and the associated reductions in central bank rate hike expectations – will be harder to achieve over the latter half of 2022. “Stickier” inflation from services, housing costs and wages will remain strong enough to keep overall inflation rates above central bank targets, even as decelerating goods and commodity price inflation act to slow headline inflation rates. Our Global Duration Indicator, which is comprised of growth indicators like the ZEW expectations index for the US and Europe as well as our own global leading economic indicator, has fallen substantially and is signaling a decline in global bond yield momentum once realized inflation rates peak (Chart 6). Chart 6Our Duration Indicator Calling For Slowing Global Yield Momentum Our Duration Indicator Calling For Slowing Global Yield Momentum Our Duration Indicator Calling For Slowing Global Yield Momentum ​​​​​​ Chart 7Overall Portfolio Duration: Stay Neutral Overall Portfolio Duration: Stay Neutral Overall Portfolio Duration: Stay Neutral We see that as signaling more of a sideways action in bond yields over the next six months, rather than a big downward move, especially in the US. Thus, we are keeping the duration of the model bond portfolio close to that of the benchmark index (Chart 7). Government Bond Country Allocation We are sticking with our view that, for countries with active central banks (i.e. everyone but Japan), favoring markets where interest rate expectations are above plausible estimates of neutral policy rates should lead to outperformance from country allocation. In Chart 8, we show 10-year bond yields and 2-years-forward 1-month Overnight Index Swap (OIS) rates for the US, euro area, UK, Canada and Australia. The shaded regions in the chart represent estimates of the range of neutral policy rates. In the case of the US, rate expectations and Treasury yields are now below the upper level of the range of neutral fed funds rates estimates, between 2-3%, taken from the latest set of FOMC economic projections. Hence, we are sticking with an underweight stance on US Treasuries with yields offering less protection against the Fed following through on its current guidance and lifting the funds rate into restrictive territory above 3%. In the other countries, rate expectations are above the range of neutral rate estimates, which suggests that bond yields have a bit more protection against hawkish central bank actions. That leads us to stay overweight core Europe, the UK and Australia in the government bond portion of the model bond portfolio. We are only keeping Canada at neutral, however, as we suspect that the Bank of Canada is more willing than other central banks to follow the Fed’s lead on taking rates to a restrictive level to help bring down elevated Canadian inflation. For other countries, we are staying neutral on Italian government bond exposure, for now, and underweight Japan (Chart 9). Chart 8Favor Countries Where Markets Expect Above-Neutral Rates Favor Countries Where Markets Expect Above-Neutral Rates Favor Countries Where Markets Expect Above-Neutral Rates ​​​​​​ Chart 9Underweight JGBs, Stay Neutral Italy (For Now) Underweight JGBs, Stay Neutral Italy (For Now) Underweight JGBs, Stay Neutral Italy (For Now) ​​​​​​ For Italy, we await news from the July 21 ECB meeting on the details of a proposal to help support Italian bond markets in the event of additional yield increases or spread widening versus Germany. It is clear from the history of the past decade that Italian bond returns suffer when the ECB is either hiking rates or slowing the growth of its balance sheet (top panel). In other words, it is difficult to recommend overweighting Italian bonds without the support of easy ECB monetary policy. Chart 10Our Inflation-Linked Bond Country Allocations Our Inflation-Linked Bond Country Allocations Our Inflation-Linked Bond Country Allocations For Japan, our recommendation is strictly related to our view on the move in overall global bond yields. The Bank of Japan is bucking the worldwide trend to tighten monetary policy because core Japanese inflation remains weak. This makes Japanese government bonds (JGBs) a good place for bond investors to “hide out” in when global bond yields are rising. Given our view that global bond yield momentum will slow – in line with the signal from our Global Duration Indicator – we do not see a strong cyclical case for overweighting low-yielding JGBs. On inflation-linked bonds, we are maintaining a cautious overall stance, with commodity prices decelerating, realized inflation momentum set to soon peak and central banks signaling more tightening ahead (Chart 10). This week, we are closing out our lone overweight recommendation on inflation-linked bonds in Canada, where we downgrading to neutral (3 out of 5, see the model bond portfolio table on page 24).2 At the same time, we are neutralizing our underweight stance on US TIPS, moving the allocation to neutral. We still see shorter-term TIPS breakevens as having downside from here, but longer-maturity breakevens have already made enough of a downward adjustment, in our view. Global Spread Product Turning to credit markets, we are maintaining our moderately cautious view on the overall allocation to credit versus government bonds. Slowing global growth momentum and tightening global monetary policy is not an environment where credit spreads can narrow, especially for growth-sensitive credit like corporate bonds and high-yield (Chart 11). Having said that – the spread widening seen in US and European corporate bond markets has introduced a better valuation cushion into spreads. Our preferred measure of spread product valuation – the historical percentile ranking of the 12-month breakeven spread – shows that investment grade spreads in the euro area are now in the top quartile (85%) of its history on a risk-adjusted basis (Chart 12). US investment grade spreads are now up into the second quartile (64%), which is a big improvement from the start of 2022 but not as much as seen in Europe. Chart 11Global Monetary Backdrop Turning More Negative For Credit Global Monetary Backdrop Turning More Negative For Credit Global Monetary Backdrop Turning More Negative For Credit ​​​​​ Chart 12Corporate Spread Valuations Have Improved In The US & Europe Corporate Spread Valuations Have Improved In The US & Europe Corporate Spread Valuations Have Improved In The US & Europe ​​​​​ European credit spreads likely need to be wide as a risk premium against the numerous risks the region is facing right now – slowing growth, an increasingly hawkish ECB, soaring energy prices and the lingering uncertainties stemming from the Ukraine war. However, a lot of bad news is now discounted in European spreads and, as a result, we are maintaining our overweight stance on European investment grade corporates, especially versus US investment grade where we remain underweight. High-yield spreads on both sides of the Atlantic look more attractive on a 12-month breakeven spread basis, but also on a default-adjusted spread basis (Chart 13). Assuming a moderate increase in the high-yield default rates in the US and Europe - consistent with a sharp slowing of economic growth but no deep recession - the current level of high-yield spreads net of expected default losses over the next year is above long-run averages. It is too soon to move to an overweight stance on high-yield, with the Fed and ECB set to tighten more amid ongoing growth uncertainty, but given the improved valuation cushion we see a neutral allocation to junk in both the US and Europe as appropriate in our model portfolio. Chart 13Junk Spreads Offer Value If Recession Can Be Avoided Junk Spreads Offer Value If Recession Can Be Avoided Junk Spreads Offer Value If Recession Can Be Avoided Finally, we remain comfortably underweight emerging market USD-denominated sovereign and corporate debt. The backdrop is poor for emerging market bond returns, given slowing global growth, softening commodity prices, a tightening Fed and a strengthening US dollar (Chart 14). Chart 14Staying Cautious On EM Debt Exposure Staying Cautious On EM Debt Exposure Staying Cautious On EM Debt Exposure ​​​​​​ Summing It All Up The full list of our recommended portfolio allocations can be seen in Table 2. The portfolio enters the second half of 2022 with the following high-level characteristics: Table 2GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Recommended Positioning For The Next Six Months GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense Chart 15Overall Portfolio Allocation: Underweight Spread Product Vs Governments GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense the overall duration exposure remains at-benchmark (i.e. neutral) the portfolio has an underweight allocation to overall spread products versus government bonds, equal to four percentage points of the portfolio (Chart 15) the tracking error of the portfolio, or its expected volatility in excess of that of the benchmark, is 77bps – below our self-imposed 100bps tracking error limit (Chart 16) the portfolio now has a yield below that of the custom benchmark index, equal to -31bps on a currency-unhedged basis but a more modest “carry gap” of -10bps on a USD-hedged basis given the gains from hedging into USD (Chart 17). Chart 16Overall Portfolio Risk: Moderate Overall Portfolio Risk: Moderate Overall Portfolio Risk: Moderate ​​​​​​ Chart 17Overall Portfolio Yield: Below-Benchmark Overall Portfolio Yield: Below-Benchmark Overall Portfolio Yield: Below-Benchmark ​​​​​​ Bottom Line: Looking ahead, our model bond portfolio performance will continue to be driven by the same factors in Q3/2022 as in the previous quarter: the relative performance of US bonds versus European equivalents for both government debt and corporate bonds, and the path for emerging market credit spreads. Portfolio Scenario Analysis For The Next Six Months After making the modest changes to our inflation-linked bond allocations in the US and Canada, which can be seen in the tables on pages 23-24, we now turn to our regularly quarterly scenario analysis to determine the return expectations for the portfolio for the next six months. On the credit side of the portfolio, we use risk-factor-based regression models to forecast future yield changes for global spread product sectors as a function of four major factors - the VIX, oil prices, the US dollar and the fed funds rate (Table 3A). For the government bond side of the portfolio, we avoid using regression models and instead use a yield-beta driven framework, taking forecasts for changes in US Treasury yields and translating those in changes in non-US bond yields by applying a historical yield beta (Table 3B). Table 3AFactor Regressions Used To Estimate Spread Product Yield Changes GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense Table 3BEstimated Government Bond Yield Betas To US Treasuries GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense For our scenario analysis over the next six months, we use a base case scenario plus two alternate “tail risk” scenarios. In the current environment, our scenarios center around the pace of global growth. Base Case (Slow Global Growth) Global growth momentum slows substantially, with firms cutting back on hiring and investing activity due to slowing corporate profit growth. An outright recession is avoided because softening energy prices help ease the drag on real spending power for consumers. China introduces more monetary and fiscal stimulus measures to boost growth. Global inflation peaks and eases on the back of slowing growth of goods prices and commodity prices, but the floor on inflation in the US and other developed markets is higher than central bank inflation targets due to sticky domestic price pressures. The Fed continues to hike at every policy meeting in H2/2022. There is a very mild bear flattening of the US Treasury curve, but with longer-term yields remain broadly unchanged over the full six month scenario period with the Fed not hiking by more than currently discounted. The Brent oil price retreats by -10%, the US dollar modestly appreciates by 2%, the VIX stays close to current levels at 28 and the fed funds rate reaches 3.25% by year-end. Resilient Growth Scenario Consumer spending surprises to the upside in the US and even Europe, as softer momentum of energy prices eases the relentless downward pressure on real incomes. Labor demand remains sold across the developed world, particularly with firms reluctant to do mass layoffs because of a perceived scarcity of quality labor. China enacts more policy stimulus with growth likely to fall below 2022 government targets. The Fed is forced to be more aggressive on rate hikes, given resilient US growth and inflation staying well above the Fed’s 2% target. The US Treasury curve bear-flattens into outright inversion, but with Treasury yields rising across the curve. The Brent oil price rises +20%, the VIX index climbs to 30, the US dollar appreciates by +3% thanks to a more aggressive Fed that lifts the funds rate to 3.75% by year-end. Recession Scenario A toxic combination of contracting corporate profits and negative real income growth drags the major developed economies into outright recession. Global inflation rates slow rapidly from current elevated levels, fueled by a rapid decline in commodity prices, but remain above central bank targets making it hard for the Fed and other major central banks to pivot dovishly to support growth. Chinese policymakers belatedly act to ease monetary and fiscal policy, but not by enough to offset the slow response from developed market policymakers. The Treasury curve moderately bull-steepens, although the absolute decline in nominal Treasury yields is relatively modest as the Fed will not pivot quickly to signaling policy easing with inflation still likely to remain above 2%. The Brent oil price falls -20%, the VIX index soars to 35, the US dollar depreciates by -3% (as lower US rates win out over slowing global growth) and the Fed pushes the funds rate to 2.75% before pausing after September. The excess return scenarios for the model bond portfolio, using the above inputs in our simple quantitative return forecast framework, are shown in Table 4A. The US Treasury yield assumptions are shown in Table 4B. For the more visually inclined, we present charts showing the model inputs and Treasury yield projections in Chart 18 and Chart 19, respectively. Table 4AGFIS Model Bond Portfolio Scenario Analysis For The Next Six Months GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense Table 4BUS Treasury Yield Assumptions For The 6-Month Forward Scenario Analysis GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense Chart 18Risk Factor Assumptions For The Scenario Analysis Risk Factor Assumptions For The Scenario Analysis Risk Factor Assumptions For The Scenario Analysis ​​​​​ Chart 19US Treasury Yield Assumptions For The Scenario Analysis US Treasury Yield Assumptions For The Scenario Analysis US Treasury Yield Assumptions For The Scenario Analysis ​​​​​​ Given our neutral overall duration stance, the return scenarios will be driven by mostly by the credit side of the portfolio. In the recession scenario where Treasury yields decline, there is a modest projected outperformance from the rates side of the portfolio coming through the underweight to low-beta JGBs. In all scenarios, financial market volatility is expected to stay at, or above, current levels as central banks will be unable to ease policy, even in the event of an actual recession, because of lingering high inflation. Thus, the return on the credit side of the model portfolio will be the main driver of performance, delivering a range of excess return outcomes between +47bps and +60bps. Bottom Line: The model bond portfolio should benefit in H2/2022 from the ongoing cautious stance on global spread product, focused on underweights to US investment grade corporates and EM hard currency debt.   Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@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     We are also closing out our Canadian breakeven widening trade in our Tactical Overlay portfolio. GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Recommended Positioning     Active Duration Contribution: GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. Custom Performance Benchmark GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Global Fixed Income - Strategic Recommendations* GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q2/2022 Review & Outlook: Winning By Playing Defense
Executive Summary Financial markets have buckled under the weight of 40-year highs in inflation that have forced the Fed and other major central banks to promise no quarter in their fight against inflation, spooking investors with visions of Volcker-like monetary policy. Well-anchored long-run inflation expectations suggest that the Fed may not have to throttle the economy before the year is out to achieve “clear and convincing evidence” that inflation is trending lower. The labor market may be in a sweet spot in which jobs are plentiful, but workers lack the leverage to drive compensation high enough to initiate a wage-price spiral. Corporate earnings may be more resilient than many investors fear. An earnings recession is not inevitable, as S&P 500 earnings have grown at a robust rate when year-over-year consumer prices have risen between 3.5 and 7%. Not As Bad As We First Thought Not As Bad As We First Thought Not As Bad As We First Thought Bottom Line: A once-in-a-century global pandemic, unprecedented fiscal and monetary policy responses and war have produced an especially uncertain macroeconomic backdrop. We acknowledge that financial markets could go either way, but we think the bearish consensus presents an opportunity to outperform by overweighting risk assets over the next twelve months. Feature 2022 has been a gloomy year for the economy and financial assets of all stripes. The reckoning from the excessive monetary and fiscal stimulus that allowed the economy to come through the pandemic mostly unscathed while fueling the greatest eight-quarter stretch of real household net worth gains on record, arrived ahead of schedule, hurried along by war in eastern Europe. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine took a bite out of global grain and energy supplies, sending the prices of select commodities soaring and contributing to the worst developed-nation inflation in four decades. Global equity and bond markets have been upended by apprehension over just how forcefully the Fed and other central banks will have to squeeze their economies to keep inflation from taking lasting root. No investor should take the Fed lightly, but the sense of gloom pervading general media, financial media, Wall Street broker-dealers, our clients and their clients is at risk of going a little too far if it hasn’t already. This is a fraught moment, and the uncertainty is heightened by the unprecedented events of the last two years, but we perceive the backdrop as far more mixed than it’s being made out to be. As a result, we think there’s much more potential for positive surprises over the next year than most investors perceive. To give clients a chance to see it our way, we are getting out of the way. This week’s report belongs to the charts and we present them with a minimum of commentary. We do not know how things will turn out – the backdrop is unprecedented and leaves all of us to find our way without historical antecedents to guide us – and we are approaching our job with elevated humility and lower-than-normal conviction. We have been advising clients to be prepared to shorten the holding periods of their positions just as we are prepared to change our mind swiftly if incoming data fail to validate our view. For now, however, we continue to believe that the potential for positive surprises is greater than market pricing acknowledges and we recommend overweighting equities in multi-asset portfolios over the next twelve months.   Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Chart 1Omicron Has Produced A Lot Of Infections,... Omicron Has Produced A Lot Of Infections,... Omicron Has Produced A Lot Of Infections,... Chart 2... But They've Been Decidedly Less Serious ... But They've Been Decidedly Less Serious ... But They've Been Decidedly Less Serious Chart 3Core Inflation Will Cool As Demand Shifts To Services, ... Core Inflation Will Cool As Demand Shifts To Services, ... Core Inflation Will Cool As Demand Shifts To Services, ... Chart 4...And Households Maintain Their Discipline ...And Households Maintain Their Discipline ...And Households Maintain Their Discipline Table 1The Term Structure Of Inflation Expectations … Chartbook Chartbook Chart 5… Remains Comfortably Inverted Chartbook Chartbook Chart 6Households See It Like Investors ... Households See It Like Investors ... Households See It Like Investors ... Chart 7... For Now, Anyway ... For Now, Anyway ... For Now, Anyway Chart 8Real Wages Have Been Falling For A Year And A Half ... Real Wages Have Been Falling For A Year And A Half ... Real Wages Have Been Falling For A Year And A Half ... Chart 9... As Workers Are At The Bottom Of A Steep Structural Hill ... As Workers Are At The Bottom Of A Steep Structural Hill ... As Workers Are At The Bottom Of A Steep Structural Hill Table 2Excess Savings Provide A Cushion Against Rising Food And Fuel Costs Chartbook Chartbook Chart 10High-End Households Have Had A Good Pandemic, Too High-End Households Have Had A Good Pandemic, Too High-End Households Have Had A Good Pandemic, Too Chart 11Businesses Haven't Taken Down The Help Wanted Signs ... Businesses Haven't Taken Down The Help Wanted Signs ... Businesses Haven't Taken Down The Help Wanted Signs ... Chart 12... And There's No Lack Of Supply To Fill The Positions ... And There's No Lack Of Supply To Fill The Positions ... And There's No Lack Of Supply To Fill The Positions     Table 3Inflation Isn’t So Bad For Nominal Earnings … Chartbook Chartbook Chart 13... And Companies May Be Re-Learning That Now ... And Companies May Be Re-Learning That Now ... And Companies May Be Re-Learning That Now Chart 14Originators Have Lent To Good Borrowers … Chartbook Chartbook Chart 15... On Proper Terms This Time Around ... On Proper Terms This Time Around ... On Proper Terms This Time Around ​​​​​​​ Footnotes
Listen to a short summary of this report.       Executive Summary A Tremendous Inflow Into US Government Bonds A Tremendous Inflow Into US Government Bonds A Tremendous Inflow Into US Government Bonds Multiple frameworks exist for managing currencies. These include forecasting growth differentials, watching central banks, gauging terms of trade and balance of payment dynamics or even assigning a probability to the occurrence of black swans. For us, the most useful tool has been to simply track portfolio flows. In today’s paradigm, portfolio flows into US equities are rapidly dwindling, while those flowing into fixed income have picked up meaningfully. Gauging what happens next will be critical for the dollar call (Feature chart). The Fed is being viewed as the most credible central bank to curb inflation. As a result, US rates have risen more than in other markets. This has also pushed valuation and sentiment of the dollar to very elevated levels. If inflation peaks and the world economy achieves a soft landing, downside in the dollar will be substantial. On sentiment, being a contrarian can make you a victim, but when the stars are aligned where valuation, sentiment and the appropriate macro analysis point towards a single direction, our framework proves extremely useful. In a nutshell, many currencies, especially the euro, are already pricing in a nasty recession into their respective economies. If a recession does occur, they could undershoot. If one does not, they are poised for a coiled spring rebound. Bottom Line: Tactical investors should be neutral to overweight the dollar in the near term, as the probability of a recession rises. Longer-term investors should be slowly accumulating assets in countries where fundamentals make sense, and their currencies are deeply undervalued. Feature The real neutral rate of interest in the US is difficult to estimate ex ante, but Chart 1 highlights that the real Fed Funds rate is well below many estimates of neutral. In a world where inflation has become a widespread problem, and a few economies (like the US) are overheating, markets have moved to test the credibility of their respective central banks. The consensus has been that the Federal Reserve will be the most credible in taming runaway inflation by being able to raise rates faster than other central banks (Chart 2). This is especially the case as many European economies remain at firing range from the Russia-Ukraine conflict and, as such, face more supply-side driven inflation. Chart 1The Fed Has Scope To Tighten Further The Fed Has Scope To Tighten Further The Fed Has Scope To Tighten Further Chart 2Interest Rates Have Moved In Favor Of The Dollar Interest Rates Have Moved In Favor Of The Dollar Interest Rates Have Moved In Favor Of The Dollar The typical pattern for the dollar is that it tends to rise when growth is falling and inflation is also subsiding, which triggers tremendous haven flows into US Treasurys. Right now, inflation remains strong but growth is rolling over, which has historically painted a mixed picture for the dollar (Chart 3). Chart 3The Dollar Rises On Falling Growth A Lens For Managing Currencies In Today’s Paradigm A Lens For Managing Currencies In Today’s Paradigm What happens next is critical. The dollar tends to rise 10%-15% during downturns. We are already there. The DXY index is up 8.8% this year, and up 16.3% from the trough last year. European currencies like the SEK and the EUR have already priced in a recession as deep as in 2020. If this indeed proves to be the case, commodity currencies will be next, which could push the DXY to fresh highs. But as we outline below, even in a pessimistic scenario, a systematic approach to looking at currencies warns against fresh bets in favor of the dollar. Inflation And Central Banks One of the key themes we outlined in our outlook for this year is that inflation is a global problem, and not centric to the US. So, while supply side factors have had an outsized effect on energy deficient countries like Germany, the UK, Sweden and, to an extent Japan, inflation is also well above target in Canada, Australia, Norway, New Zealand, and many other developed and emerging market countries. In fact, the inflation impulse is slowing in the US, relative to a basket of G10 countries (Chart 4). Related Report  Foreign Exchange StrategyLessons From Fed Interest Rate Hikes Falling inflation will be a welcome relief valve from the tension in markets over much tighter financial conditions. It will also lower the probability of a global recession. For currency markets however, the starting point is that the market has priced the Fed to continue leading the tightening cycle until something breaks. If inflation does subside, then hawkish expectations by the Fed will be heavily priced out of the curve, which will remove a key source of support for the greenback. From a chartist point of view, the dollar has already overshot the level of rates the markets expect from the Fed, relative to more dovish central banks (Chart 5). This suggests a hefty safety premium is already embedded in the dollar. Chart 4US Inflation Is Peaking, Relative To Other ##br##Economies US Inflation Is Peaking, Relative To Other Economies US Inflation Is Peaking, Relative To Other Economies Chart 5The Dollar Has Overshot The Path Implied By Interest Rates The Dollar Has Overshot The Path Implied By Interest Rates The Dollar Has Overshot The Path Implied By Interest Rates The Dollar And Global Growth If the Fed and other central banks tame the inflation genie, then we will have achieved a soft landing. The dollar has tended to track the path of the US yield curve, and a flattening usually underscores longer-term worries about a recession (Chart 6). A steepening curve will signal mission accomplished. In the view of the Foreign Exchange Strategy service, recession risks could be relatively balanced. While major central banks have been tightening policy (the US and most of the G10), China, a big whale in terms of its monetary policy impact, has been easing monetary conditions. Chart 7 highlights that most procyclical currencies have tracked the Chinese credit impulse tick for tick. Bond yields in China are near the lows for the year. Unless China enters another economic down-leg in growth that matches the 2015 slowdown, we might just witness a rotation in economic vigor from the US towards other economies, led by China, allowing the world to achieve a soft landing. Chart 6The Dollar Is Tracking The US Yield ##br##Curve The Dollar Is Tracking The US Yield Curve The Dollar Is Tracking The US Yield Curve Chart 7Commodity Currencies Are Tracking The Chinese Credit Impulse Commodity Currencies Are Tracking The Chinese Credit Impulse Commodity Currencies Are Tracking The Chinese Credit Impulse   In the currency world, typical recessionary indicators are not yet flashing red. Cross-currency basis swaps remain well contained, suggesting dollar funding pressures, or that the ability to service dollar debt abroad remains healthy. The Fed’s liquidity swap lines, which allow foreign central banks to obtain dollar funding, also remain untapped (Chart 8). That said, currency put-call ratios are rising, suggesting the cost of obtaining downside protection has increased. Chart 8The Fed"s Recession Models Are Still Sanguine The Fed"s Recession Models Are Still Sanguine The Fed"s Recession Models Are Still Sanguine The Dollar And Portfolio Flows Aside from hedging against downside protection for the EUR, the AUD or even the CAD, one driver of dollar strength has been huge portfolio inflows into US Treasurys (Chart 9). That has occurred while equity inflows have collapsed. Admittedly, this took us by surprise since by monitoring the big Treasury whales (Japan and China), holdings have been rolling over for quite some time (Chart 10). This has also occurred amidst an accumulation of speculative short positions on US Treasurys. Chart 9A Tremendous Inflow Into US Government Bonds A Tremendous Inflow Into US Government Bonds A Tremendous Inflow Into US Government Bonds Chart 10Japan And China Remain Treasury Sellers Japan And China Remain Treasury Sellers Japan And China Remain Treasury Sellers Historically, bond inflows are the driver of portfolio flows into the US, but the equity market has also dictated the trend in the dollar from time to time. Overall, the basic balance in the US, sum of all portfolio flows, has done a good job capturing turning points in the dollar. Our focus on equity flows this time around is due to the conundrum the US faces. Relative profits tend to drive the performance of relative stock prices, and US profits tend to be more defensive – rising on a relative basis when bond yields and commodity prices are collapsing and falling otherwise (Chart 11). As such, the rise in bond yields has already derated US equity multiples but profits have held up remarkably well. An underperformance in US equities during a downturn has been unprecedented with a strong dollar since the end of the Bretton Woods system. So should a market shakeout lead to a violent rotation out of US equities, the profile for the dollar could be a mirror image of what we witnessed in 2008 or even 2020. The conundrum for bond inflows is that according to traditional measures, real rates in the US remain deeply negative, but they have improved significantly under the lens of market-based measures (Chart 12). This partly explains the dollar overshoot. A scenario of faster growth outside the US could see real rates improve more quickly abroad. Chart 11US Profits Have Held Up Remarkably Well US Profits Have Held Up Remarkably Well US Profits Have Held Up Remarkably Well Chart 12Market-Based Real Yields In The US Have Improved A Lens For Managing Currencies In Today’s Paradigm A Lens For Managing Currencies In Today’s Paradigm A final point: managing currencies is about anticipating the next macroeconomic driver. In our view, this could be fears about balance of payments dynamics, especially as the world becomes marginally less globalized. Since the 1980s, we have never had a configuration where the dollar is very overvalued, US real rates are extremely low, and the trade deficit is near a record high (meaning it needs to be financed externally). A bet on US exceptionalism has a natural limit, as competitiveness abroad is improving tremendously vis-à-vis many of the goods and services the US exports. Currencies And Valuations Currencies should revert to fair value. The question then becomes "which fair value should they mean-revert to?" In our view, simple works best – purchasing power parity values. A simple chart shows that selling the dollar when it is expensive and buying it when cheap according to its purchasing power generates alpha over the long term (Chart 13). In A Simple Trading Rule For FX Valuation Enthusiasts, we showed that a shorter-term trading strategy also based on valuation adds value. Granted, the dollar started to become overvalued in 2015, but it is now sitting close to a historical extreme. A fair assessment is that currencies will revert to their fair value, but that takes time (3-5 years). As such, longer-term investors should be slowly accumulating assets in countries where fundamentals make sense, and their currencies are deeply undervalued. These include Japan, Australia, Sweden and even Mexico (Chart 14). Chart 13The Dollar Is Overvalued On a PPP Basis The Dollar Is Overvalued On a PPP Basis The Dollar Is Overvalued On a PPP Basis Chart 14The Real Effective Exchange Rate For The Dollar Is High A Lens For Managing Currencies In Today’s Paradigm A Lens For Managing Currencies In Today’s Paradigm The Dollar And Momentum There is quite simply a dearth of dollar bears. Internally at BCA, a lot of strategists who see more downside to US (and global) equities, simply cannot be negative on the dollar. Within the foreign exchange strategy, we have been short the DXY index since 104.8, and are sticking with that bet on a 12-18-month horizon. For risk management purposes, our stop loss is at 107. First, we are seeing record long positions by speculators (Chart 15). Fielding clients, or even the media, no one wants to be a dollar bear when the Fed is clearly an inflation vigilante. If inflation keeps surprising to the upside, then speculators will keep bidding up the dollar. But it is also fair to say that most investors who want to be long the greenback at this point already have that position on.  Our intermediate-term indicator, a combination of technical variables, also warns against initiating dollar-long positions at the current juncture (Chart 16). This series mean-reverts quite quickly, so it does not dictate the trend in the dollar, but warns of capitulation extremes. Chart 15Speculators Are Very Long The Dollar Speculators Are Very Long The Dollar Speculators Are Very Long The Dollar Chart 16Technical Dollar Indicators Are Overbought Technical Dollar Indicators Are Overbought Technical Dollar Indicators Are Overbought Finally, the dollar has been used as a bet on rising volatility. The dollar is well above levels that a correction in the S&P 500 index would dictate (Chart 17). It has also moved in tandem with bond volatility (Chart 18). This suggests much of equity downside risk has been priced into the dollar. Chart 17The Dollar Has More Than Compensated For The Drawdown In Equities The Dollar Has More Than Compensated For The Drawdown In Equities The Dollar Has More Than Compensated For The Drawdown In Equities Chart 18The Dollar Is Tracking ##br##Volatility The Dollar Is Tracking Volatility The Dollar Is Tracking Volatility Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Cyclical Holdings (6-18 months) Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary