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Inflation/Deflation

Highlights The kiwi will continue to benefit from a pandemic-free recovery and normalization in monetary policy from the RBNZ. However, the kiwi is becoming expensive according to most of our models. This will begin to impact growth via the trade channel. For the rest of the year, the NZD/USD could hit 75 cents, but will likely underperform other developed market currencies. Feature Chart I-1NZD And Relative Economic Growth NZD AND RELATIVE ECONOMIC GROWTH NZD AND RELATIVE ECONOMIC GROWTH New Zealand has been one of the few countries to get the COVID-19 pandemic under control in short order. Since June of last year, the number of new infections has been practically zero. The vaccination program is lagging most other developed countries, but the authorities expect most citizens will be inoculated by the end of this year. The travel bubble with Australia has opened up the service sector to a recovery that remains the envy of most other developed economies. The New Zealand dollar has responded in tandem with the improvement in domestic conditions (Chart I-1). While the USD is up this year, NZD has still appreciated by about 1% against the dollar. From the March lows last year, the kiwi is up 22%, only trailing the Australian dollar and Norwegian krone within the G10. In this report, we explore the outlook for the kiwi, looking at key drivers such as the pandemic, the commodities boom, and the prospect for monetary policy amidst a hot housing market. In our view, the NZD still faces upside, but less so than other developed market currencies. A Robust Recovery Together with Singapore and Australia, Bloomberg ranks New Zealand as one of the safest places to be during the pandemic. This has allowed the manufacturing PMI in New Zealand to hit fresh highs, easily surpassing very robust activity in the US. Relative economic performance between New Zealand and its trading partners has tended to define the trend in the currency. The services sector is still trailing behind, as most of the world remains under lockdown (Chart I-2). However, a travel bubble has opened up with Australia, and it is fair to assume that service-sector activity is a coiled spring ready to rebound, especially as tourism constitutes a non-negligible share of New Zealand GDP (Chart I-3). Chart I-2A Recovery In Services Underway A RECOVERY IN SERVICES UNDERWAY A RECOVERY IN SERVICES UNDERWAY Chart I-3Tourism Will Boost NZ GDP TOURISM WILL BOOST NZ GDP TOURISM WILL BOOST NZ GDP Employment in New Zealand has already seen a sizeable recovery. The unemployment rate hit 4.9% in December, very close to the Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s (RBNZ) own estimate of NAIRU. Next week’s release should show an even more robust rebound. Inflation remains well contained at 1.5%, but as the economy begins to bump against supply-side constraints, this should change. The quarterly employment survey showed that wages are rising at a 4% clip. Eventually, a labour market that has fully recovered, burgeoning inflationary pressures and an economy open for business will mean the need for the RBNZ to maintain emergency monetary policy settings will be eliminated. A Terms-Of-Trade Boom While the domestic economy has benefited from strong government support, and very accommodative monetary policy settings, the external environment has also provided a gentle tailwind for the New Zealand economy. Over the last few decades, one of the key primary drivers of the NZD exchange rate has been terms of trade. New Zealand’s top exports are predominantly in agricultural commodities. Strong export growth has boosted the trade balance, both in volume and price terms (Chart I-4). An increasing trade balance naturally means that NZDs are being buffeted with demand. China has led the pack in imports from New Zealand vis-à-vis other countries by simple virtue of the fact that the authorities started injecting stimulus much earlier on, which helped ease domestic financing conditions. China is also New Zealand’s biggest export market. While the credit impulse in China is set to slow this year, demand for foodstuffs is less sensitive compared to demand for other higher-beta commodities. This will support New Zealand exports. At the same time, there has been a supply component to the boom in agricultural commodity prices. Adverse weather has impacted the planting season for many agricultural goods. As a result, stock-to-use ratios have begun to roll over, particularly in some of the goods that New Zealand exports (Chart I-5). This is likely to reverse, as farmers take advantage of higher prices and increase productivity. Chart I-4A Terms Of Trade ##br##Boom A TERMS OF TRADE BOOM A TERMS OF TRADE BOOM Chart I-5Falling Stocks Have Boosted Agricultural Prices FALLING STOCKS HAVE BOOSTED AGRICULTURAL PRICES FALLING STOCKS HAVE BOOSTED AGRICULTURAL PRICES In a nutshell, the outperformance of the kiwi has been a combination of supply shocks in the agricultural market, and an economy that has had an impressive rebound. Going forward, the kiwi should continue to do well versus the dollar as economic momentum picks up. The Housing Mandate Housing prices in New Zealand have been on a tear (Chart I-6). As a result, the government has mandated that house price considerations be tied into monetary policy decisions. The direct implication of this is that interest rates in New Zealand are set to increase. In the coming months, the labor market mandate for the RBNZ is about to become a lot tougher, because of the opposing forces between financial and economic stability. Tightening monetary policy too fast and too soon will expose the economy to a potential relapse in growth. But allowing housing prices to continue to become unaffordable for most residents is both politically untenable and economically unsustainable. The end game is likely to be as follows: The RBNZ will be quick to tighten monetary policy on domestic grounds and housing market concerns. This will provide a further boost to the kiwi. Yields in New Zealand are already among the highest in the G10, which will only accelerate with tighter monetary conditions. By the same token, the Chinese economy will likely slow as the credit impulse is peaking. This means New Zealand domestic growth will become more important for the NZD than external conditions. Countries with relatively easier monetary policy will see some benefit. Particularly, the Reserve Bank of Australia might lag the RBNZ. If this eventually benefits the Aussie economy, it might hurt the AUD/NZD cross now, but might make way for fresh long positions later (Chart I-7). Chart I-6A Housing Market Boom A HOUSING MARKET BOOM A HOUSING MARKET BOOM Chart I-7Where Next For AUD/NZD? WHERE NEXT FOR AUD/NZD WHERE NEXT FOR AUD/NZD Historically, housing prices in New Zealand have correlated quite strongly with the exchange rate. If the RBNZ is successful in engineering lower housing prices, it will also succeed in weakening the NZD (Chart I-8). Chart I-8House Prices And The Kiwi HOUSE PRICES AND THE KIWI HOUSE PRICES AND THE KIWI We were stopped out of our long AUD/NZD trade last week for a modest profit of 2.3%. We are standing aside for the time being, but will be buyers of the cross at 1.05. This will likely be realized towards the end of this year when optimism on the kiwi is likely to peak. How High Can The NZD Bounce? Another reason why the rise in the NZD might soon face strong upside resistance is valuation. Usually, a rise in the NZD over a cycle goes uninterrupted until the cross becomes expensive. On this basis, the kiwi might soon peak. Our purchasing power parity (PPP) models point to a 10% overvaluation in the New Zealand dollar (Chart I-9) versus the USD. Chart I-9The NZD Is Expensive THE NZD IS EXPENSIVE THE NZD IS EXPENSIVE One of our favorite metrics for the kiwi’s fair value is its real effective exchange rate relative to its terms of trade. On this basis, the New Zealand dollar is around fair value. On a longer-term real effective exchange rate basis (REER), the kiwi is 7.4% expensive, or 0.7 standard deviation above the mean (Chart I-10). Chart I-10The NZD Is Expensive THE NZD IS EXPENSIVE THE NZD IS EXPENSIVE The equity market in New Zealand looks particularly vulnerable. Heavily weighted in defensive sectors, this bourse will be particularly vulnerable to a rise in yields that will derail potential equity inflows (Chart I-11). Chart I-11Kiwi Stocks Are Expensive KIWI STOCKS ARE EXPENSIVE KIWI STOCKS ARE EXPENSIVE Chart I-12CHF/NZD Could Rise With Volatility CHF/NZD COULD RISE WITH VOLATILITY CHF/NZD COULD RISE WITH VOLATILITY Another opportunity is to buy the CHF/NZD cross, which looks attractive at current levels (Chart I-12). Should markets experience some form of turbulence, the cross will benefit. Meanwhile, CHF/NZD just dipped to the upward sloping trend line that has dictated support levels for this cross since 2007. Thus, we recommend investors initiate a long position in CHF/NZD.   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 The data out of the US were mildly positive this week. Quarter-on-quarter annualized GDP growth came in at 6.4% in Q1, rising from 4.3% in the previous quarter. Initial jobless claims fell to 553K in the week ended April 23, from 566K the previous week. Consumer Confidence for April came in at 121.7 beating the expected 113. The S&P/Case-Shiller House Price Index rose 11.9% year-on-year in February. Fed maintained the target range for the Fed Funds rate at 0 to 0.25%. The US dollar DXY index was flat this week. Although the dollar advanced earlier in the week with treasury yields posting small gains, it weakened on Wednesday ahead of the Fed meeting. Compared to the record-breaking preliminary PMIs of last Friday, milder data this week and the dovish tone of the Fed aren’t helping the downward trend of the dollar. Report Links: Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears - March 19, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar? - February 19, 2021 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 Recent euro area data have been soft. The IFO Business Climate Index inched up only 0.2 points to 96.8 and disappointed expectations of a much more significant increase to 97.8.  The BNB Business Barometer of Belgium surprised to the upside and jumped to a decade high of 4.4 from a revised 1.04. The German GfK Consumer Confidence contracted to -8.8 for May and the French Consumer Confidence stayed the same in April. The euro strengthened by 0.5% against the US dollar this week. The uneven data out of Europe reflects differences in COVID restrictions throughout the region. Tighter measures were announced in some German regions and Belgium is easing restrictions. However, overall, we remain optimistic on the outlook for the entire region as the accelerating vaccination effort should support the economy reopening this summer. We are long EUR/CHF. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 The data out of Japan was scant this week. Bank of Japan maintained interest rates at -0.1%. Retail Sales in March grew 5.2% year-on-year, beating forecasts of 4.7%. The Japanese yen weakened by 0.5% this week. Due to the current state of emergency throughout the country, the Bank of Japan is ready to further ease monetary policy as needed and warned of the likelihood for consumption to stay depressed. That said, our intermediate term indicator is hinting at a rebound in the currency. Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 The data out of the UK this week was positive. The Confederation of British Industry (CBI) retail sales volume balance rose to 20 in April from -45 in March, recording the sharpest growth since 2018. The British pound rose by 0.7% against the US dollar this week. The strong retail sales numbers came amidst lockdowns being lifted. While May will continue to see further restrictions eased, cable faces threats from its own success so far this year as well as UK’s recent political turmoil. Also, both the speculative positioning and our intermediate-term indicator are at elevated levels.  Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 The data out of Australia have been soft lately. CPI in Q1 rose 0.6% versus Q4 last year, below the expected 0.9%. The year-on-year growth of 1.1% also undershot the 1.4% forecast. Trimmed mean CPI grew 0.3% on the prior quarter and 1.1% versus a year ago, both failing to beat expectations.  The Q1 export price index rose 11.2% over the prior quarter, compared to the 5.5% rise in Q4. The Australian dollar rose by 1% against the US dollar this week. In addition to both CPI measures disappointing to the downside, a foreseeable peak in the commodity market driven by the slowdown in China can also be a downward drag on the currency especially when the sentiment on the Aussie is elevated. We are short AUD/MXN and were stopped out of our long AUD/NZD trade. Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields & The Currency? - January 20, 2021 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 The data out of New Zealand have been neutral. Trade Balance in March improved by NZD 33M over a month ago and NZD 1690M a year ago.  ANZ business confidence came in at -2 in April, higher than the -4.1 the prior month. The New Zealand dollar strengthened by 1% against the US dollar this week. We discuss the kiwi at length in the front section of this week’s report. The conclusion is that NZD faces near-term upside, but will lag other procyclical currencies over the longer term. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 The data out of Canada this week continue to be positive. Both Retail Sales and Core Retail Sales in February grew 4.8% over the prior month, comfortably exceeding the expectations of 3.7% and 4% growth, respectively. The Canadian dollar rose 0.8% against the US dollar this week. The loonie reacted positively to the strong retail numbers as it continues its path upward on strong inflation data of recent months and a hawkish Bank of Canada. However, even as the COVID case count appears to have peaked, there remains downside risks of very elevated commodity prices and our intermediate-term indicator still just off a recent peak. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? - February 12, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 CHF Technicals 1 CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 CHF Technicals 2 CHF Technicals 2 There was scant data out of Switzerland this week. ZEW expectations for April came in at 68.3, slightly higher than the 66.7 from the prior month. The Swiss franc rose 0.4% against the US dollar this week. While the waning of investors’ sentiment and net speculative positioning may point to some softening in the near term, the recent COVID crisis in India can provide support to this risk-off currency. We are long EUR/CHF. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 The data out of Norway this week was positive. Core Retail Sales came in unchanged in March versus the prior month, but beat expectations of a 0.9% decline. The Norwegian krone was 0.8% higher against the USD this week. Norway fits the bill in terms of a post-pandemic boom. New COVID-19 cases are under control, the economy is rebounding, oil prices are strong and the central bank is on a path the raise interest rates this year. Being long the NOK is one of our strongest convictions calls in FX. We are long NOK/USD and NOK/EUR. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 Data out of Sweden this week have been mixed.  The Riksbank maintained the policy rate at 0%. Trade Balance in March came in at SEK4.1B versus SEK6B in the prior month. Retail sales in March grew by 2.6% month-on-month and 9.1% year-on-year, both an improvement versus the prior period. The unemployment rate in March rose to 10% versus 9.7% the prior month. The Swedish Krona strengthened 0.5% against the US dollar this week, continuing its upward momentum throughout April. The recent accommodative signals from the Riksbank meeting were within expectations amidst elevated COVID case counts and restrictions. Despite its commendable gains so far this month, we remain optimistic on this high beta currency as the eurozone recovery and global reflation are in sight. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Highlights Developed economies continue to transition towards a post-pandemic state. Europe has further to go, but it is lagging the US at a constant rate and is thus merely delayed – not on a different path. This ongoing transition is also reflected in the global macro data, which continues to surprise to the upside. Widespread optimism about the outlook for economic activity and earnings over the coming year has led some investors to ask whether an imminent peak in the rate of growth could be a potentially negative inflection point for richly valued risky asset prices. Using our global leading economic indicator as a guide, we find that a peak in growth momentum in and of itself is not likely to be enough of a catalyst for meaningful risky asset underperformance versus government bonds. A sizeable shock to sentiment would likely be required, causing either a very serious growth slowdown, outright fears of recession, or some other event that negatively impacts earnings growth or raises the equity risk premium (“ERP”). We can identify several candidates for such a shock, including the emergence of new, vaccine-resistant variants of COVID-19, the impact of higher taxes on earnings, overtightening in China, and a potentially hawkish shift in monetary policy in the developed world. But none of these risks individually appears to be likely enough to warrant reducing cyclical portfolio exposure. We continue to expect positive absolute single-digit returns from stocks over the coming 6-12 months, and would recommend that investors remain overweight stocks versus bonds in a multi-asset portfolio. We remain overweight global ex-US equities vs. the US, but expect that euro area stocks will have to do the heavy lifting, driven either by the underperformance of global technology stocks or the outperformance of euro area financials. Within a fixed-income portfolio, we recommend a modestly short duration stance, but do so primarily on a risk-adjusted basis. Feature Chart I-1Europe Is Behind The US, But On The Same Path Europe Is Behind The US, But On The Same Path Europe Is Behind The US, But On The Same Path Over the past month, developed economies have continued to transition towards a post-pandemic state. While the number of new confirmed COVID-19 cases remains relatively high on a per capita basis in the US and Europe, there continues to be significant progress on the vaccination front in all Western advanced economies. Europe continues to lag the US and the UK in terms of the share of the population that has received at least one dose of vaccine, but Chart I-1 highlights that the gap has remained constant at approximately six weeks (to the US). Panel 2 of Chart I-1 highlights that the US and UK both experienced either falling or a stable number of new cases once the number of first doses reached current European levels; Israel required significant further gains in the breadth of vaccinations before it altered COVID-19’s transmission dynamics in that country, but this appears to have occurred because of a much higher pace of spread earlier this year. The negative impact on advanced economies from reduced services activity is strongly linked to pandemic control measures (such as stay-at-home orders, curfews, forced business closures, etc). We have argued that, outside of the US, the implementation and removal of these measures is being driven by the impact of the pandemic on the medical system, rather than the sheer number of new cases and deaths. Chart I-2 highlights that, based on this framework, Europe still has further to go – current per capita hospitalizations remain much higher in France and Italy than in the US, UK, or Canada. But the nature of the disease means that hospitalizations begin to fall even if case counts remain relatively stable, and fall rapidly once new cases trend lower. Given the steady gains that European countries are making in providing first vaccine doses to their populations, it seems likely that hospitalizations there will peak sometime in the coming four to six weeks. This underscores that Europe is not on a different path than that of the US, it is simply further behind in the process (and will ultimately catch up). The transition towards a post-pandemic state is also reflected in the global macro data, which continues to positively surprise in all three major economies (Chart I-3). In Europe, the April services PMI rose back above the 50 mark, April consumer confidence surprised to the upside, and February retail sales came in better than expected (Table I-1). In the US, the March services PMI was also very strong, the labor market continued to meaningfully improve, and several measures of inflation surprised to the upside. Chart I-2Euro Area Hospitalizations Remain High, But Will Soon Decline Euro Area Hospitalizations Remain High, But Will Soon Decline Euro Area Hospitalizations Remain High, But Will Soon Decline Chart I-3The Macro Data Continues To Positively Surprise The Macro Data Continues To Positively Surprise The Macro Data Continues To Positively Surprise   Table I-1Services PMIs And The Labor Market Continue To Meaningfully Improve May 2021 May 2021 Chart I-4China's Current Contribution To Global Demand Is Strong China's Current Contribution To Global Demand Is Strong China's Current Contribution To Global Demand Is Strong In China, the recent tick higher in the surprise index likely reflects the recognition of some data series whose release was delayed due to the Chinese New Year, as well as significant base effects (compared with Q1 2020) in many data series recorded in year-over-year terms. On a quarter-over-quarter basis, Chinese economic activity decelerated last quarter to 0.6% from the upwardly revised 3.2% in Q4 2020 – which was below the anticipated 1.4% q/q. Still, Chinese RMB-denominated import growth closely matches (lagging) data on global exports to China (in US$ terms), with the former suggesting that China’s current contribution to global external demand remains strong (Chart I-4). This is also consistent with rising producer prices, which had fallen back into deflationary territory last year (panel 2). Peaking Growth Momentum: Should Investors Be Worried? The continued increase in the number of vaccine doses administered, positive data surprises, and bullish global growth forecasts for this year have understandably led to extremely optimistic investor sentiment. It has also naturally raised the question of “what could go wrong?”, with some investors pointing to an imminent peak in the rate of growth as a potentially negative inflection point for richly valued risky asset prices. Chart I-5 addresses this question by examining 12 episodes of waning growth momentum since 1990, defined as an identifiable peak in our global leading economic indicator. Panel 2 shows the 12-month rate of change in the relative performance of global equities versus a US$-hedged 7-10 year global Treasury index. Chart I-5Is Peaking Growth Momentum A Risk For Stocks? Is Peaking Growth Momentum A Risk For Stocks? Is Peaking Growth Momentum A Risk For Stocks? At first blush, the chart does support the notion that a peak in growth momentum is generally negative for risky asset prices. The subsequent 12-month relative return from stocks versus bonds following a peak in the LEI has been negative in 8 out of the 12 episodes, suggesting that the risks of an equity correction are currently quite elevated. However, there is more to the story than this simple calculation implies (Table I-2). First, two of the twelve episodes saw the global LEI peak in the context of an eventual US recession, so it is not surprising that stocks underperformed bonds in those episodes. Second, out of the six non-recessionary episodes, only two of them involved significant underperformance, in 2002 and in 2015. Table I-2Peak Growth Momentum Is An Insufficient Catalyst For Equity Underperformance May 2021 May 2021 US equities underperformed in the former case because of the persistently damaging impact of corporate excesses that built up during the dot-com bubble, and predominantly global ex-US equities underperformed bonds in the latter case because of a combination of the significant impact on global CAPEX from the 2014 dollar and oil price shock, as well as a major decline in global bond yields. In the four other non-recessionary examples of equity underperformance, stocks only modestly underperformed bonds, and often this occurred in the context of significant events: surprising Fed hawkishness in 1994, the Asian financial crisis in 1997, a major slowdown in China in 2013, and the combination of a domestically-driven Chinese economic slowdown coupled with the Sino/US trade war in 2017/2018. The key point for investors is that a peak in growth momentum is in and of itself not enough of a catalyst for meaningful risky asset underperformance versus government bonds. A sizeable shock to sentiment would likely be required, causing either a very serious growth slowdown, outright fears of recession, or some other event that negatively impacts earnings growth or raises the equity risk premium (“ERP”). What Else Could Go Wrong? There are four other plausible risks that we can identify to a bullish stance towards risky assets over the coming 6-12 months. We discuss each of these risks below. New COVID-19 Variants Chart I-6 highlights that bottom up analysts expect global earnings per share to be 12% higher than their pre-pandemic level in 12-months’ time. This expectation is driven by extraordinarily easy fiscal and monetary policy, but also the view that vaccination against COVID-19 will allow social distancing policies to end and services activity to fully recover. However, as India is clearly – and tragically – demonstrating at present, the emerging world is lagging in terms of vaccinating its population. India’s per capita case count has soared (Chart I-7), which is surprising given that the country’s COVID-19 infection rate has been significantly below that of more advanced economies over the past year. It is therefore likely that India’s case count explosion is due to new variants of the disease, and periodic outbreaks in less developed countries – as well as vaccine hesitancy in more developed economies – risks the emergence of even newer variants that may be partially or substantially vaccine-resistant. Chart I-6Earnings Expectations Already Price In A Normalization In Services Activity Earnings Expectations Already Price In A Normalization In Services Activity Earnings Expectations Already Price In A Normalization In Services Activity Chart I-7India's COVID-19 Situation Is Tragic, And Concerning India's COVID-19 Situation Is Tragic, And Concerning India's COVID-19 Situation Is Tragic, And Concerning   New variants of COVID-19 may prove to be less deadly, but the economic impact of the pandemic has come mainly from its potential to collapse the medical system via high rates of serious illness requiring hospitalization, not strictly from its lethality. As such, potentially new vaccine-resistant variants of the disease resulting in similar or higher rates of hospitalization pose a risk to a bullish economic outlook. Taxation Both corporate and individual tax rates are set to rise in the US over the coming 12-18 months which, at first blush, could certainly qualify as a non-recessionary event that negatively impacts earnings or raises the ERP. Corporate taxes are set to rise first as part of the American Jobs Plan, which our political strategists have argued will probably take the Biden administration most of this year to pass. The plan involves a proposed increase in the domestic corporate income tax rate to 28% from 21%, a higher minimum tax on foreign profits, and a 15% minimum tax on “book income”. In addition, as part of the American Families Plan, Biden is proposing to increase the top marginal income tax rate for households earning $400,000 or more to 39.6% (from 37%), and to substantially increase the capital gains tax rate for those earning $1 million or more from a base rate of 20% to 39.6%. The 3.8% tax on investment income that funds Obamacare would be kept in place, which would bring the total capital gain tax rate to 43.4% for that income group. Peter Berezin, BCA’s Chief Global Strategist, made two points about higher corporate taxes in a recent report.1 First, he noted that the changes would likely result in an 8% decline in forward earnings if passed as currently proposed, but that various tax credits as well as opposition to a 28% corporate tax rate from Democratic Senator Joe Manchin would likely cap the impact at 5%. Second, he argued that the behavior of 12-month forward earnings and the performance of stocks that benefitted the most from President Trump’s corporate tax cuts suggest that very little impact from these changes has been priced in. Peter argued in his report that the effect of strong economic growth will likely offset the negative impact of higher taxes on earnings, and we are inclined to agree. Chart I-8 highlights that a 5% reduction in 12-month forward earnings would reduce the equity risk premium by roughly 20-25 basis points, which would not be disastrous on its own. Still, the fact that these changes have not been priced in means that corporate tax hikes could be a more meaningful driver of lower stock prices if the impact is ultimately larger than we currently expect or if the growth outlook suddenly shifts in a negative direction. In terms of changes to individual taxes, our sense is that the proposed increase in the capital gains tax rate is more significant than the modest proposed change to the top marginal income tax rate for higher-income households. For individuals earning $1 million or more, Chart I-9 highlights that the proposed change to the capital gains rate would bring it to the highest level seen since the late 1970s. Given the rich valuation of equities, it seems inconceivable that such a change would not trigger some short-term selling of equities to lock in long-term gains at lower tax rates. Chart I-8Higher Corporate Taxes Will Only Modestly Reduce the Equity Risk Premium Higher Corporate Taxes Will Only Modestly Reduce the Equity Risk Premium Higher Corporate Taxes Will Only Modestly Reduce the Equity Risk Premium Chart I-9Biden's Capital Gains Tax Proposal Would Lead To Some Selling Of Stocks... Biden's Capital Gains Tax Proposal Would Lead To Some Selling Of Stocks... Biden's Capital Gains Tax Proposal Would Lead To Some Selling Of Stocks...   But like upcoming changes to corporate taxes, we see the potential for higher taxes on wealthy individuals as a risk to the equity market and not as a likely driver of stock prices over a cyclical time horizon. First, our political strategists see 50/50 odds that the American Families Plan will be passed this year, meaning that short-term tax avoidance selling may be postponed until 2022. In addition, Chart I-10 highlights that over the longer term, the relationship between the maximum capital gains tax rate and the ERP is weak or nonexistent. The chart highlights that the perception of a positive relationship rests entirely on the second half of the 1970s, when the maximum capital gains tax rate was between 30-40%. However, it seems clear from the chart that the stagflationary environment of that period was responsible for a high ERP, as the capital gains rate fell from 1977 to 1982 without any significant decline in risk premia. It took until the end of the 1982 recession and the beginning of the structural disinflationary period for the equity risk premium to decline, suggesting that there is effectively no relationship between the two (and therefore no reason to believe that higher capital gains taxes will lead to sustained declines in stock market multiples). Chart I-10…But The Effect Would Not Likely Last May 2021 May 2021 Overtightening In China Chart I-11Leading Indicators Of China's Economy Are Pointing Down, Not Up Leading Indicators Of China's Economy Are Pointing Down, Not Up Leading Indicators Of China's Economy Are Pointing Down, Not Up Even though Chart I-4 highlighted that Chinese import demand is currently strong, we expect China’s growth impulse to weaken in the second half of the year. Chart I-11 highlights that our leading indicator for China’s Li Keqiang index has done a good job of predicting Chinese import growth, and the indicator is now in a clear downtrend. Panel 2 presents the components of the indicator, and shows that all three are trending lower. Monetary conditions are potentially rebounding from extremely weak levels (due to past deflation and a rise in the RMB versus the US dollar and other Asian currencies), but money supply and credit measures are deteriorating. Leading indicators for China’s economy are deteriorating because Chinese policymakers have already tightened liquidity conditions in response to the country’s rebound from the pandemic and following a surge in the credit impulse. The 3-month repo rate returned to pre-pandemic levels in the second half of last year (Chart I-12), and consequently the private sector credit impulse (particularly that of corporate bond issuance) fell despite robust medium-to-long term loan growth. Chart I-12Chinese Interest Rates Have Already Returned To Pre-COVID Levels Chinese Interest Rates Have Already Returned To Pre-COVID Levels Chinese Interest Rates Have Already Returned To Pre-COVID Levels We noted in our January report that China’s credit impulse has consistently followed a 3½-year cycle since 2010, and this year has been no different. This cycle is not exogenous or mystical; it has been caused by the repeated “oversteering” of activity by Chinese policymakers who frequently oscillate between the need to fight deflation and the strong desire to curb additional private sector leveraging. Our base case view is that policymakers will not accidentally overtighten the economy, and that the credit impulse will settle somewhere between late 2019 levels and the peak rate reached in the latter half of last year. But the risk of significant oversteering cannot be ruled out, and will likely remain a downcycle risk for investors for several years to come. A Hawkish Shift In Monetary Policy In Developed Markets Last week the Bank of Canada announced that it would taper its pace of government debt purchases from 4 billion to 3 billion CAD per week. The announcement was noteworthy for many investors, as it suggested that asset purchase reductions could also be announced by the Fed and other major central banks by the end of the second or third quarter. Many investors are sensitive to the tapering question because of what transpired during the “Taper Tantrum” episode of 2013. During an appearance before Congress in late May of that year, then Chair Ben Bernanke stated that the Fed could “step down” the pace of its asset purchases in the next few FOMC meetings if economic conditions continued to improve. The result was that 10-year Treasurys fell roughly 10% in total return terms over the subsequent three-month period. While stocks rallied in response to the growth-positive implications of the move, this occurred from a much higher ERP starting point than exists today. The risk, in the minds of some investors, is that tapering today could thus lead to a correction in stock prices. There are two counterpoints to this view. First, bonds have already sold off meaningfully over the past several months in response to a significant improvement in the economic outlook, and investors already expect the Fed to raise interest rates earlier than it is publicly forecasting. It is thus difficult to see how an announcement of tapering from the Fed would significantly alter the outlook for monetary policy over the coming 6-18 months. Chart I-13Another Taper Tantrum-Like Selloff Would Necessitate Higher Expectations For R-star Another Taper Tantrum-Like Selloff Would Necessitate Higher Expectations For R-star Another Taper Tantrum-Like Selloff Would Necessitate Higher Expectations For R-star Second, it is notable that the “Taper Tantrum” began at yield levels at the front end of the curve that are roughly similar to what prevails today. 5-year/5-year forward bond yields stood at roughly 3% at the beginning of the “Tantrum”, compared with 2.3% today. Chart I-13 highlights how high forward bond yields would need to rise in order to generate another selloff of similar magnitude from 10-year Treasury yields (roughly 3.65%). In our view, a rise to this level over the coming year is essentially impossible without a major shift in investor expectations about the natural rate of interest. We highlighted the risk of such a shift in last month’s report,2 but for now it would likely necessitate hard evidence of little-to-no permanent damage to the labor market from the pandemic. This is not our base case view, but it will be an important possibility to monitor as the decisive end to social distancing and other pandemic control measures draws nearer. Investment Conclusions As noted above, there are several identifiable risks to a bullish outlook for risky assets, but none of these risks individually appear to be likely. Given this, we continue to expect positive absolute single-digit returns from stocks over the coming 6-12 months, and would recommend that investors remain overweight stocks versus bonds in a multi-asset portfolio. We favor value versus growth stocks, cyclical versus defensive sectors, and small versus large cap stocks, although there is more return potential over the coming year in value versus growth than the latter two positions. We also remain short the US dollar over a cyclical time horizon. Within a global equity portfolio, we remain overweight global ex-US equities vs the US, but this position has moved against us over the past two months. Chart I-14 highlights that global ex-US equities have given back all of their October – January gains versus US equities, most of which has occurred since late-February. The chart also highlights that all of this underperformance has been driven by emerging market stocks, as euro area equity performance has been mostly stable year-to-date. Chart I-15 highlights that EM underperformance has occurred both in the broadly-defined tech sector as well as when measured in ex-tech terms. To us, this suggests that EM stocks are responding to the deterioration in leading indicators for the Chinese economy that we noted above, which implies that they are not likely to lead global ex-US equity performance higher over the course of the year barring an imminent shift in Chinese policy. We continue to expect that euro area stocks will have to do the heavy lifting, driven either by the underperformance of global technology stocks or the outperformance of euro area financials – which are extremely cheap relative to US banks and have much further scope for earnings to normalize as the pandemic draws to a close. Chart I-14Emerging Markets Have Caused Global Ex-US Stocks To Underperform Emerging Markets Have Caused Global Ex-US Stocks To Underperform Emerging Markets Have Caused Global Ex-US Stocks To Underperform Chart I-15EM's Underperformance Has Been Broad-Based EM's Underperformance Has Been Broad-Based EM's Underperformance Has Been Broad-Based   As a final point, investors should note that we are recommending a modestly short duration stance within a fixed-income portfolio, but that we make this recommendation primarily on a risk-adjusted basis. Chart I-16 highlights that Treasury market excess returns (relative to cash) have historically been driven by whether the Fed funds rate increases by more or less than what is currently priced into the market. Over the past 12 months, the Treasury index has very substantially underperformed cash without a hawkish surprise, and the rate path that is currently implied by the OIS curve is already more hawkish than the Fed is (for now) projecting. On this basis, a neutral duration stance could be justified, but we would still prefer a modestly short duration stance due to the risk of a potential increase in investor expectations for the neutral rate of interest late this year or in early 2022. Chart I-16Policy Rate Surprises Tend To Drive The Duration Call Policy Rate Surprises Tend To Drive The Duration Call Policy Rate Surprises Tend To Drive The Duration Call Jonathan LaBerge, CFA Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst April 29, 2021 Next Report: May 27, 2021   II. In COVID’s Wake: Government Debt And The Path Of Interest Rates The US fiscal outlook has deteriorated substantially over the past two decades, as a consequence of the fiscal response to both the global financial crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic. US government debt-to-GDP is now nearly as high as it was at the end of the Second World War, and is projected by the US Congressional Budget Office (CBO) to explode higher over the coming 30 years. Some investors argue that extreme levels of government debt now virtually guarantee that interest rates will remain structurally low, and we test this claim alongside a scenario that limits the projected rise in the primary deficit. We find that US fiscal reform, when it eventually occurs, will likely be negative for health care stocks. We also note that even in a scenario where the US limits the size of its future primary budget deficit, net interest outlays will likely rise to elevated levels compared to history. A comparison with the Canadian experience in the 1990s suggests a structurally negative outlook for the US dollar, from an overvalued starting point. Finally, we note that the US fiscal outlook does not necessarily prevent an increase in interest rates over the coming few years in a scenario where investors raise their expectations for the neutral rate of interest, a possibility that we discussed in last month’s report. This scenario is not our base case view, but it is plausible and should actively be monitored by investors over the coming one to two years. For now, we do not expect that rising interest rates pose a risk to stocks over the coming 6-12 months. Investors should remain cyclically overweight equities within a multi-asset portfolio, and should maintain a below-benchmark level of duration on a risk-adjusted basis. In 2001, US government debt held by the public as a share of GDP stood at 31.5%, after having fallen roughly 16 percentage points from early 1993 levels. Today, as a result of both the global financial crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic, the debt to GDP ratio has risen to a whopping 100%, and is projected to rise meaningfully higher over the coming decades. In this report we review the long-term US fiscal outlook in the wake of the pandemic, with a focus on the implications for interest rates. Some investors argue that extreme levels of government debt now virtually guarantee that interest rates will remain structurally low, and we test this claim alongside a scenario that limits the projected rise in the primary deficit. We find that US fiscal reform, when it eventually occurs, will likely be negative for health care stocks, whose fundamental performance has outstripped that of the broad equity market since the mid-1990s (reflecting pricing power that stands to be curtailed through regulation). We also note that even in a scenario where the US limits the size of its future primary budget deficit, net interest outlays will likely rise to elevated levels compared to history. A comparison with the Canadian experience in the 1990s suggests a structurally negative outlook for the US dollar, from an overvalued starting point. Finally, we note that the US fiscal outlook does not necessarily prevent an increase in interest rates over the coming few years in the hypothetical scenario that we described in last month’s report,3 i.e., an environment where the narrative of secular stagnation is challenged and investor expectations for the neutral rate rise closer to trend rates of economic growth. This scenario is not our base case view, but it is plausible and should actively be monitored by investors over the coming one to two years. For now, investors should remain cyclically overweight equities within a multi-asset portfolio, and should maintain a below-benchmark level of duration on a risk-adjusted basis. Debt Sustainability, And The CBO’s Baseline Projection When analyzing the US fiscal outlook, the Congressional Budget Office’s Long-Term Budget Outlook report is typically the reference point for investors. The report provides annual projections for the budget deficit and the debt-to-GDP ratio for the next three decades, as well as a breakdown of the projected deficit into its primary (i.e., non-interest) and net interest components. Charts II-1 and II-2 present the most recent baseline projections from the CBO, which clearly present a dire long-term outlook. The deficit and debt-to-GDP ratio are projected to be relatively stable over the next decade, but explode higher over the subsequent 20 years. In 2051, the CBO’s baseline projects that the budget deficit will be roughly 13% of GDP, with net interest costs accounting for approximately two-thirds of the deficit. Chart II-1The CBO’s Fiscal Outlook Is Extremely Negative The CBO's Fiscal Outlook Is Extremely Negative The CBO's Fiscal Outlook Is Extremely Negative Chart II-2In 2051, The CBO Projects A 13% Annual Budget Deficit May 2021 May 2021 In order to understand what is driving the CBO’s dire long-term budget and debt forecast, it is important to review the government debt sustainability equation shown below. The equation highlights that the change in a government’s debt-to-GDP ratio is approximately equal to 1) the primary deficit plus 2) net interest costs as a share of GDP, the latter being defined as the product of last year’s debt-to-GDP ratio and the difference between the average interest rate on the debt and the rate of GDP growth. Δ Debt-To-GDP Ratio ≈ Primary Deficit As A % Of GDP4 + (r-g)*(Prior Period Debt-To-GDP Ratio) Where: r = Average interest rate on government debt and g = Nominal GDP growth The equation highlights that expectations of a persistently rising debt-to-GDP ratio must occur either because of expectations of a persistent primary deficit, or expectations that interest rates will persistently exceed the rate of economic growth (or some combination of the two). This underscores why debt sustainability analysis often focuses on the primary budget balance, as a country’s debt-to-GDP ratio will be stable if no primary deficit exists and interest costs are at or below the prevailing rate of economic growth. Chart II-3 illustrates the source of the CBO’s projected rise in debt-to-GDP beyond 2031, by presenting the two components of the debt sustainability equation alongside the projected annual change in the debt-to-GDP ratio. The chart makes it clear that while the CBO is forecasting a sizeable primary deficit to continue, it is projected to grow at a slower pace than the debt-to-GDP ratio itself. The increasing rate at which the debt-to-GDP ratio is projected to grow in the latter years of the CBO’s forecast period is clearly driven by the interest rate component, meaning that “r” is projected to be greater than “g”. Chart II-4 presents this point directly, by highlighting that the CBO is forecasting the average interest rate on government debt to exceed that of nominal GDP growth in 2038, and to continue to exceed growth (by an increasing amount) thereafter. Chart II-3Decomposing The CBO's Projected Change In The Debt-To-GDP Ratio Decomposing The CBO's Projected Change In The Debt-To-GDP Ratio Decomposing The CBO's Projected Change In The Debt-To-GDP Ratio Chart II-4The CBO's Projections Rest, In Part, On Rates Eventually Exceeding Growth The CBO's Projections Rest, In Part, On Rates Eventually Exceeding Growth The CBO's Projections Rest, In Part, On Rates Eventually Exceeding Growth   Three Adjustments To The CBO’s Baseline We make three adjustments to the CBO’s baseline in order to assess how the US fiscal outlook shifts under an interest rate path that is different than that projected by the CBO. First, we adjust the CBO’s projected budget deficit over the coming few years based on deficit forecasts from our US Political Strategy service following the passage of the American Recovery Plan act.5 Chart II-5We Test The Effect Of An Initially Higher, But More Sustainable, Rate Path We Test The Effect Of An Initially Higher, But More Sustainable, Rate Path We Test The Effect Of An Initially Higher, But More Sustainable, Rate Path Next, we adjust the interest component of the total budget deficit based on a new path for short- and long-term interest rates that models a scenario in which the neutral rate of interest rises to, but not above, GDP growth (Chart II-5). In last month’s report we outlined a scenario in which this could feasibly occur,3 and the hypothetical path for interest rates shown in Chart II-5 thus incorporates both the negative budgetary impact of an earlier rise in interest rates and the positive budgetary impact of “r” never rising above “g”. We explicitly exclude any crowding out effect on long-term interest rates, based on the view that term premia are likely to remain muted in a world of low potential economic growth, unless a fiscal crisis appears to be imminent (see Box II-1). Box II-1 Arguing Against The CBO’s Crowding Out Assumption The CBO’s projection that interest rates will ultimately rise above the rate of economic growth rests on the view that increased government spending will absorb savings that would otherwise finance private investment (a “crowding out” effect). We agree that crowding out can occur over the course of the business cycle, especially in a scenario where increased government spending pushes output above its potential (creating a cyclical acceleration in inflation and eventually an increase in interest rates). But the CBO is assuming that high government debt-to-GDP ratios will crowd out private investment on a structural basis, and on this basis we disagree. First, Chart Box II-1 highlights that there is essentially no empirical relationship across countries between a country’s debt-to-GDP ratio and its long-term government bond yield. Japan is a clear outlier in the chart, but including Japan implies that the relationship is negative, not positive. Chart Box II-1There Is No Empirical Relationship Between Debt-To-GDP And Interest Rates May 2021 May 2021 In addition, given that central banks directly control interest rates at the short-end of the curve, a structural crowding out effect can only manifest itself in the form of an elevated term premium embedded in longer-term government bond yields. Our bet is that term premia are likely to stay low in a world of low falling nominal growth, as evidenced by the experience of the past decade.6 Finally, we model the impact of two changes, beginning in 2031, that would work towards reducing the primary deficit: an increase in average government revenue to 20% of GDP (its peak level reached in 2000), and a slower pace of increase on major health care program spending. Despite the fact that population aging will increase mandatory spending on social security and health care over the coming three decades, the CBO has highlighted that the majority of the increase in spending towards these programs is projected to occur due to rising health care costs per person (Chart II-6). We thus model the impact of medical care cost control by limiting the rise in net mandatory outlays on health care programs between 2021 and 2051 to roughly half of what the CBO baseline projects. This adjustment does not prevent mandatory spending on health care programs from rising, given the strong political challenges involved in limiting spending increases that are caused by an aging population. Chart II-6The US Structural Primary Balance Is Heavily Impacted By Medical Costs May 2021 May 2021 Charts II-7 and II-8 illustrate how these three adjustments impact the long-term US fiscal outlook. Relative to the CBO’s baseline projections, the American Recovery Plan (ARP) budget deficit forecasts from our US Political Strategy service imply that the debt-to-GDP ratio will be approximately three to four percentage points higher over the very near term, and roughly ten points higher over the long term. Chart II-7Even With Higher Rates, The Fiscal Outlook Is Meaningfully Less Bad… Even With Higher Rates, The Fiscal Outlook Is Meaningfully Less Bad... Even With Higher Rates, The Fiscal Outlook Is Meaningfully Less Bad... Relative to this new baseline, an increase in interest rates to, but not above, the projected rate of nominal economic growth increases the debt-to-GDP ratio by an additional ten percentage points (20 points higher versus the CBO’s baseline) in the middle of the forecast period, but it lowers the debt-to-GDP ratio over the longer run by eliminating the effect of outsized interest rates magnifying a persistent primary deficit. Still, the debt-to-GDP ratio is projected to rise to a whopping 207% of GDP by 2051 in this scenario, with a budget deficit in excess of 10% of GDP. The third adjustment shown in Charts II-7 and II-8 underscores the impact on the US fiscal outlook of actions aimed at reducing the primary deficit. Increases in government revenue and the prevention of rising health care costs per person results in the debt-to-GDP ratio that is 64 percentage points lower in 2051 than in our normalized interest rate scenario. The budget deficit in this scenario still increases to approximately 6% of GDP thirty years from today, but in this case most of the deficit is due to the net interest component rather than the primary deficit, meaning that the debt-to-GDP ratio would be increasing at a much slower rate if interest rates were no higher than the rate of economic growth. Chart II-8 highlights that net interest spending in this scenario would rise to 4.5% of GDP, which would be meaningfully higher than the prior high of roughly 3% in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Chart II-8...With Higher Taxes And Medical Cost Control ...With Higher Taxes And Medical Cost Control ...With Higher Taxes And Medical Cost Control Chart II-9A Meaningful, But Not Unprecedented, Rise In Net Interest Outlays A Meaningful, But Not Unprecedented, Rise In Net Interest Outlays A Meaningful, But Not Unprecedented, Rise In Net Interest Outlays But that is far from unprecedented or necessarily consistent with a fiscal crisis. Chart II-9 also shows that Canada’s public debt charges rose to 6.5% of GDP in the early 1990s without triggering a public debt crisis. It is true that Canada subsequently embarked on a painful fiscal consolidation program in order to reduce its public debt burden, but this, in part, occurred because of a cyclically-adjusted primary deficit of approximately 3% - twice as large as that projected for the US in 2051 in our adjusted scenario shown in Charts II-7 and II-8. Revenue And Health Care Cost Reform Our third adjustment to the CBO’s long-term budget outlook involved changes to revenue and health care cost control to reduce the US’ projected primary deficit. Are these adjustments achievable? In our view, the answer is yes: As noted above, our scenario modeled these changes taking place a decade from today, which allows for policymakers and stakeholders to have a substantial amount of time to act and adjust to these changes. On the revenue front, we noted above that US government revenue has reached 20% of GDP in the past, in the year 2000. Chart II-10 highlights that while raising taxes will likely reduce US competitiveness, the US maintains a sizeable tax advantage relative to other advanced economies, and that this was true prior to the tax cuts that took place under the Trump administration. On the health care cost front, Chart II-11 highlights that US healthcare expenditure is much larger as a share of GDP than other countries, which was not the case prior to the 1980s. Chart II-12 highlights that this cost difference is entirely due to inpatient (i.e., hospital) and outpatient (i.e., drug) costs. While it is not clear what form it will take, it seems likely that future reforms by policymakers to eliminate rising health care costs per person will occur and can be achieved. Chart II-10The US Government Can Afford To Raise Revenue The US Government Can Afford To Raise Revenue The US Government Can Afford To Raise Revenue Chart II-11The US Spends Much More On Health Care Than Other Countries The US Spends Much More On Health Care Than Other Countries The US Spends Much More On Health Care Than Other Countries   Chart II-12The US Significantly Outspends The World On Hospital And Drug Costs May 2021 May 2021 The key point for investors is not whether these changes should or should not occur, but whether there are any feasible scenarios in which spiraling government debt and interest payments are avoided without the Fed purposely maintaining monetary policy at levels persistently below the rate of economic growth – and thus risking major inflationary pressure. Our analysis above highlights that there are; the question is when policymakers will choose to act and in what form. A potential tipping point may be when US government spending on net interest as a % of GDP exceeds its prior high, which occurs in 2026 in the scenario modeled in Chart II-8. In a scenario where reforms fail to materialize or where financial markets force policymakers to act, a fiscal risk premium could certainly emerge in longer-term government bond yields, which could lead the Fed to maintain lower short-term interest rates than it otherwise would. But this scenario is only likely to emerge after interest rates converge towards rates of economic growth, as US government debt will remain highly serviceable for some time if "r" remains meaningfully lower than "g". Investment Conclusions There are three potential investment implications of our research. First, the fact that rising medical costs have such a significant impact on the CBO’s projections of the primary deficit implies that fiscal reform, when it eventually occurs, will be negative for US health care stocks. Chart II-13 highlights that US health care sector earnings have outperformed broad market earnings since the mid-1990s, and that the sector has consistently delivered an above-average return on equity. This historical performance likely reflects the sector’s pricing power, which stand to be curtailed through regulatory efforts in a world where rising health care costs per person collide with fiscal belt-tightening. Interestingly, Chart II-12 highlighted that US per capita spending on medical goods is not significantly higher than in other developed markets, suggesting that the health care equipment & supplies industry may fare better over a very long term time horizon than overall health care. Second, Charts II-7 and II-8 highlighted that even if the US does raise revenue as a share of GDP and limits excessive growth in medical costs, a primary deficit will still exist and net interest outlays will still rise to elevated levels compared to what has historically been the case. We noted that Canada experienced a higher public debt burden in the 1990s and did not suffer from a fiscal crisis, but Chart II-14 highlights that the fiscal situation did weigh on the Canadian dollar, which progressively traded 10-20% below its PPP-implied fair value level over the course of the 1990s. Thus, the implication is that eventual fiscal reform in the US may be structurally negative for the US dollar, from an overvalued starting point (panels 3 and 4 of Chart II-14). Chart II-13Eventual Fiscal Reform Will Likely Be Negative For Health Care Stocks Eventual Fiscal Reform Will Likely Be Negative For Health Care Stocks Eventual Fiscal Reform Will Likely Be Negative For Health Care Stocks Chart II-14The US Fiscal Outlook, Even With Some Reforms, Is Dollar-Negative The US Fiscal Outlook, Even With Some Reforms, Is Dollar-Negative The US Fiscal Outlook, Even With Some Reforms, Is Dollar-Negative   Finally, our scenario analysis highlights that very elevated levels of government debt do not guarantee that interest rates will remain structurally low, especially over the next decade when the US primary deficit is projected to remain relatively stable. For investors focused on forecasting the direction of 10-year Treasury yields from the perspective of valuation, it should be noted that the next decade is the relevant projection period for the Fed funds rate, not what occurs to net interest outlays in the two decades that follow. Over the very long run, it is true that there may ultimately be very strong political pressure on the Fed to keep interest rates below the prevailing rate of economic growth, as policymakers in 2030 will be able to avoid a structural adjustment to the primary deficit of roughly 1.1-1.3% of GDP for every percentage point that average interest rates on government debt are below nominal GDP growth. However, we noted above that this pressure is unlikely to build before the second half of this decade even in a scenario where interest rates rise significantly over the coming few years, and it remains an open questions whether the Fed will acquiesce to this pressure given its strong potential to fuel excess private sector leveraging. Over the coming one to two years, the key conclusion is that the US fiscal outlook is not likely to prevent an increase in interest rates over the coming few years in the hypothetical scenario that we described in last month’s report, i.e., an environment where the narrative of secular stagnation is challenged and investor expectations for the neutral rate rise closer to trend rates of economic growth. This remains a risk to our overweight stance towards risky assets and is not our base case view. But it does highlight the importance of monitoring long-dated rate expectations over the coming year, and argues, on a risk-adjusted basis, for a below-neutral duration stance within a fixed-income portfolio. Jonathan LaBerge, CFA Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst III. Indicators And Reference Charts BCA’s equity indicators highlight that the “easy” money from expectations of an eventual end to the pandemic have already been made. Our technical, valuation, and sentiment indicators are very extended, highlighting that investors should expect positive but more modest returns from stocks over the coming 6-12 months. Our monetary indicator has aggressively retreated from its high last year, reflecting a meaningful recovery in government bond yields. The indicator remains above the boom/bust line, however, highlighting that monetary policy remains supportive for risky asset prices. Forward equity earnings already price in a complete earnings recovery, but for now there is no meaningful sign of waning forward earnings momentum. Net revisions remain positive, and positive earnings surprises have risen to their strongest levels on record. Within a global equity portfolio, EM stocks have dragged down global ex-US performance, likely in response to deteriorating leading indicators for the Chinese economy. This implies that they are not likely to lead global ex-US equity performance higher over the course of the year barring an imminent shift in Chinese policy. We continue to expect that euro area stocks will have to do the heavy lifting, driven either by the underperformance of global technology stocks or the outperformance of euro area financials – which are extremely cheap relative to US banks and have much further scope for earnings to normalize as the pandemic draws to a close. The US 10-Year Treasury yield has edged lower over the past month, after having risen to levels that were extremely technically stretched. Despite this pause, our valuation index highlights that bonds are still expensive, and that yields could move higher over the cyclical investment horizon. We expect the rise to be more modest than our valuation index would imply, but we would still recommend a modestly short duration stance within a fixed-income portfolio. Commodity prices, particularly copper, lumber, and agricultural commodities, are screaming higher. This reflects bullish cyclical conditions, but also pandemic-induced supply shortages that are likely to wane later this year. Commodity prices are technically extended and sentiment is extremely bullish for most commodities, suggesting that a breather in commodity prices is likely at some point over the coming several months. US and global LEIs remain in a solid uptrend, and global manufacturing PMIs are strong. Our global LEI diffusion index has declined significantly, but this likely reflects the outsized impact of a few emerging market countries (whose vaccination progress is lagging). Strong leading and coincident indicators underscore that the global demand for goods is robust, and that output is below pre-pandemic levels in most economies because of very weak services spending. The latter will recover significantly later this year, as social distancing and other pandemic control measures disappear. EQUITIES: Chart III-1US Equity Indicators US Equity Indicators US Equity Indicators Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk Willingness To Pay For Risk Willingness To Pay For Risk Chart III-3US Equity Sentiment Indicators US Equity Sentiment Indicators US Equity Sentiment Indicators   Chart III-4Revealed Preference Indicator Revealed Preference Indicator Revealed Preference Indicator Chart III-5US Stock Market Valuation US Stock Market Valuation US Stock Market Valuation Chart III-6US Earnings US Earnings US Earnings Chart III-7Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Chart III-8Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance   FIXED INCOME:   Chart III-9US Treasurys And Valuations US Treasurys And Valuations US Treasurys And Valuations Chart III-10Yield Curve Slopes Yield Curve Slopes Yield Curve Slopes Chart III-11Selected US Bond Yields Selected US Bond Yields Selected US Bond Yields Chart III-1210-Year Treasury Yield Components 10-Year Treasury Yield Components 10-Year Treasury Yield Components Chart III-13US Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor US Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor US Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor Chart III-14Global Bonds: Developed Markets Global Bonds: Developed Markets Global Bonds: Developed Markets Chart III-15Global Bonds: Emerging Markets Global Bonds: Emerging Markets Global Bonds: Emerging Markets   CURRENCIES: Chart III-16US Dollar And PPP US Dollar And PPP US Dollar And PPP Chart III-17US Dollar And Indicator US Dollar And Indicator US Dollar And Indicator Chart III-18US Dollar Fundamentals US Dollar Fundamentals US Dollar Fundamentals Chart III-19Japanese Yen Technicals Japanese Yen Technicals Japanese Yen Technicals Chart III-20Euro Technicals Euro Technicals Euro Technicals Chart III-21Euro/Yen Technicals Euro/Yen Technicals Euro/Yen Technicals Chart III-22Euro/Pound Technicals Euro/Pound Technicals Euro/Pound Technicals   COMMODITIES: Chart III-23Broad Commodity Indicators Broad Commodity Indicators Broad Commodity Indicators Chart III-24Commodity Prices Commodity Prices Commodity Prices Chart III-25Commodity Prices Commodity Prices Commodity Prices Chart III-26Commodity Sentiment Commodity Sentiment Commodity Sentiment Chart III-27Speculative Positioning Speculative Positioning Speculative Positioning   ECONOMY: Chart III-28US And Global Macro Backdrop US And Global Macro Backdrop US And Global Macro Backdrop Chart III-29US Macro Snapshot US Macro Snapshot US Macro Snapshot Chart III-30US Growth Outlook US Growth Outlook US Growth Outlook Chart III-31US Cyclical Spending US Cyclical Spending US Cyclical Spending Chart III-32US Labor Market US Labor Market US Labor Market Chart III-33US Consumption US Consumption US Consumption Chart III-34US Housing US Housing US Housing Chart III-35US Debt And Deleveraging US Debt And Deleveraging US Debt And Deleveraging   Chart III-36US Financial Conditions US Financial Conditions US Financial Conditions Chart III-37Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Chart III-38Global Economic Snapshot: China Global Economic Snapshot: China Global Economic Snapshot: China   Jonathan LaBerge, CFA Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst Footnotes 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy "Taxing Woke Capital," dated April 16, 2021, available at gis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Special Report "R-star, And The Structural Risk To Stocks," dated March 31, 2021, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Special Report "R-star, And The Structural Risk To Stocks," dated March 31, 2021, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 4 Presented in this fashion, a budget deficit (surplus) is recorded with a positive (negative) sign. 5 For more information, please see US Political Strategy report “Biden’s Pittsburgh Speech And Legislative Agenda,” dated April 1, 2021, available at usp.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see “Term premia: models and some stylised facts”, by Cohen, Hördahl, and Xia, BIS Quarterly Review, September 2008.
Highlights Higher copper prices will follow in the wake of China's surge in steel demand, which lifted Shanghai steel futures to an all-time high just under 5,200 RMB/MT earlier this month, as building and infrastructure projects are completed this year (Chart of the Week). Copper will register physical deficits this year and next, which will pull inventories even lower and will push demand for copper scrap up in China and globally. High and rising copper prices could prompt government officials to release some of China's massive state holdings of copper – believed to total some 2mm MT – if the current round of market jawboning fails to restrain demand and price increases. Strong steel margins and another round of environmental restraints on mills are boosting demand for high-grade iron ore (65% Fe), which hit a record high of just under $223/MT earlier this week. Benchmark iron ore prices (62% Fe) traded at 10-year highs this week, just a touch below $190/MT. We are lifting our copper price forecast for December 2021 to $5.00/lb from $4.50/lb. In addition, we are getting long 2022 CME/COMEX copper vs short 2023 CME/COMEX copper at tonight's close, expecting steeper backwardation. Feature Government-mandated reductions of up to 30% in steel mill operations for the rest of the year in China's Tangshan steel hub to reduce pollution will tighten an already-tight market responding to a construction and infrastructure boom (Chart 2). This boom triggered a surge in steel prices, and, perforce, in iron ore prices (Chart 3). As it has in the past, this sets the stage for the next leg of copper's bull run. Chart of the WeekSurging Steel Presages Stronger Copper Prices Surging Steel Presages Stronger Copper Prices Surging Steel Presages Stronger Copper Prices In our modeling, we have found a strong relationship between steel prices, particularly for reinforcing bar (rebar), and copper prices, as can be seen in the Chart of the Week. Steel goes into building and infrastructure projects at the front end (in the concrete that is reinforced by steel and in rolled coil products), and then copper goes into the completed project (in the form of wires or pipes). Chart 2Copper Bull Market Will Continue Copper Bull Market Will Continue Copper Bull Market Will Continue In addition to the building and construction boom, continued gains in manufacturing will provide a tailwind for copper prices, which will be augmented by the global recovery in activity 2H21. Chart 4 shows the relationship between nominal GDP levels and copper prices. What's important here is economic growth in Asia (including China) and ex-Asia is, unsurprisingly, cointegrated with copper prices – i.e., economic growth and industrial commodities share a long-term equilibrium, which explains their co-movement. Chart 3Steel Boom Lifts Iron Ore Prices Steel Boom Lifts Iron Ore Prices Steel Boom Lifts Iron Ore Prices Media reports tend to focus on the effects of Chinese government spending as a share of GDP – e.g., total social financing relative to GDP – to the exclusion of the economic, particularly when trying to explain commodity price movements. To the extent the Chinese government is successful in further expanding the private sector – on the goods and services sides – organic economic growth will become even more important in explaining Chinese commodity demand. Chart 4Global Economic Grwoth Will Boost Copper Prices Global Economic Grwoth Will Boost Copper Prices Global Economic Grwoth Will Boost Copper Prices In our copper modeling, we find copper prices to be cointegrated with nominal Chinese GDP, EM Asian GDP and EM ex-Asian GDP, along with steel and iron ore prices, which, from a pure economics point of view, is what would be expected. On the other hand, there is no cointegration – i.e., no economic co-movement or a shared trend – between these industrial commodity prices and total social financing as a percent of nominal China GDP. These models allow us to avoid spurious relationships, which offer no help in explaining or forecasting these copper prices. Chart 5Iron Ore, Copper Demand Will Lift With The "Green Energy" Buildout Copper Headed Higher On Surge In Steel Prices Copper Headed Higher On Surge In Steel Prices Chart 6Renewables Dominate Incremental New Generation Copper Headed Higher On Surge In Steel Prices Copper Headed Higher On Surge In Steel Prices Longer term, as we have written in past research reports, the transition to a low-carbon energy mix favoring distributed renewable electricity generation, more resilient grids and electric vehicles (EVs) will be a major source of demand growth for bulks like iron ore and steel, and base metals, particularly copper (Chart 5).1 Already, renewable generation represents the highest-growth segment of incremental power generation being added to the global grid (Chart 6). Copper Supply Growth Requires Higher Prices Copper supply will have a difficult time accommodating demand in the short term (to end-2022) when, for the most part, the buildout in renewables and EVs will only be getting started. This means that over the medium (to end-2025) and the long terms (2050) significant new supply will have to be developed to meet demand. In the short term, the supply side of refined copper – particularly the semi-refined form of the metal smelters purify into a useable input for manufactured products (condensates) – is running extremely low, as can be seen in the longer-term collapse of Treatment Charges and Refining Charges (TC/RC) at Chinese smelters (Chart 7). At ~ $22/MT last week, these charges were the lowest since the benchmark TC/RC index tracking these charges in China was launched in 2013, according to reuters.com.2 Chart 7Copper TCRCs Fall As Supplies Fall, Pushing Prices Higher Copper TCRCs Fall As Supplies Fall, Pushing Prices Higher Copper TCRCs Fall As Supplies Fall, Pushing Prices Higher The copper supply story also can be seen in Chart 8, which converts annual supply and demand into balances, which will be mediated by the storage market. The International Copper Study Group (ICSG) estimates mine output again registered flat year-on-year growth last year, while refined copper supplies were up a scant 1.5% y/y. Chart 8Physical Deficits Will Draw Copper Stocks... Physical Deficits Will Draw Copper Stocks... Physical Deficits Will Draw Copper Stocks... Consumption was up 2.2%, according to the ICSG's estimates, which expects a physical deficit this year of 456k MT, after adjusting for Chinese bonded warehouse stocks. This will mark the fourth year in a row the copper market has been in a physical deficit, which, since 2017, has averaged 414k MT. The net result of this means inventories will once again be relied on to fill in supply gaps, and global stockpiles, which are down ~25% y/y, and will continue to fall (Chart 9). With mining capex weak and copper ore quality falling, higher prices will be required to incentivize significant new investment in production (Chart 10). However, the lead time on these projects is five years in the best of circumstances, which means miners have to get projects sanctioned with final investment decisions made in the near future (Chart 11). Chart 9...Which After Four Years Of Physical Deficits Are Low ...Which After Four Years Of Physical Deficits Are Low ...Which After Four Years Of Physical Deficits Are Low Chart 10Higher Copper Prices Required To Reverse Weak Capex, Falling Ore Quality Higher Copper Prices Required To Reverse Weak Capex, Falling Ore Quality Higher Copper Prices Required To Reverse Weak Capex, Falling Ore Quality Chart 11Falling Lead Times To Bring New Mines Online, But Time Is Short Copper Headed Higher On Surge In Steel Prices Copper Headed Higher On Surge In Steel Prices Investment Implications Our focus on copper is driven by the simple fact that it spans all renewable technologies and will be critical for EVs as well, particularly if there is widespread adoption of this technology (Chart 12). We continue to expect copper supply challenges across the short-, medium- and long-term investment horizons. To cover the short term, we recommended going long December 2021 copper on 10 September 2020, and this position is up 39.2%. To cover the longer term, we are long the S&P Global GSCI commodity index and the iShares GSCI Commodity Dynamic Roll Strategy ETF (COMT), recommended 7 December 2017 and 12 March 2021 , respectively, which are down 2.3% and 0.8%. Chart 12Widespread EV Uptake Will Create All New Copper Demand Copper Headed Higher On Surge In Steel Prices Copper Headed Higher On Surge In Steel Prices At tonight's close, we will cover the medium-term opportunity of the copper supply-demand story developed above by getting long the 2022 CME/COMEX copper futures strip and short 2023 CME/COMEX copper futures strip, given our expectation the continued tightening of the market will force inventories to draw, leading to a steeper backwardation in the copper forward curve. The principal risks to our short-, medium- and long-term positions above are a global failure to contain the COVID-19 pandemic, which, we believe is a short-term risk. Second among the risks to these positions is a large release of strategic copper concentrate reserves held by China's State Reserve Bureau (aka, the State Bureau of Minerial Reserves). In the case of the latter risk, the actual holdings of the Bureau are unknown, but are believed to be in the neighborhood of 2mm MT.3 Bottom Line: We remain bullish industrial commodities, particularly copper. Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com   Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish Texas is expected to add 10 GW of utility-scale solar power by the end of 2022, according to the US EIA. Texas entered the solar market in a big way in 2020, installing 2.5 GW of capacity. The EIA expects The Great State to add ~ 5GW per year in the next two years, which would take total solar capacity to just under 15 GW. Roughly 30% of this new capacity is expected to be built in the Permian Basin, home to the most prolific oil field in the US. By comparison, the leading producer of solar power in the US, California, will add 3.2 GW of new solar capacity, according to the EIA (Chart 13). To end-2022, roughly one-third of total new solar generation in the will be added in Texas, which already is the leading wind-powered generator in the country. Wind availability is highest during the nighttime hours, while solar is most abundant during the mid-day period. Precious Metals: Bullish Palladium prices, trading ~ $2,876/oz on Wednesday, surpassed their previous record of $2,875.50/oz set in February 2020 and are closing in on $3,000/oz, as supply expectations continue to be lowered by Russian metals producer Nornickel, the largest palladium producer in the world (Chart 14). Earlier this week, the company updated earlier guidance and now expects mine output to be down as much as 20% this year in its copper, nickel and palladium operations, due to flooding in its mines. Palladium is used as a catalyst in gasoline-powered automobiles, sales of which are expected to rebound as the world emerges from COVID-19-induced demand destruction and a computer-chip shortage that has limited new automobile supply. In addition, production of platinum-group metals (PGMs) is being hampered by unreliable power supply in South Africa, which has forced the national utility suppling most of the state's power (> 90%) to revert to load-shedding schemes to conserve power. We remain long palladium, after recommending a long position in the metal 23 April 2020; the position is up 35.6%. Chart 13 Copper Headed Higher On Surge In Steel Prices Copper Headed Higher On Surge In Steel Prices Chart 14 Palladium Prices Palladium Prices     Footnotes 1     Please see, e.g., Renewables, China's FYP Underpin Metals Demand, which we published 26 November 2020.  It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com.   2     Please see RPT-COLUMN-Copper smelter terms at rock bottom as mine squeeze hits: Andy Home published by reuters.com 14 April 2021.  The report notes direct transactions between miners and smelters were reported as low as $10/MT, in a sign of just how tight the physical supply side of the copper market is at present. 3    Please see Column: Supercycle or China cycle? Funds wait for Dr Copper's call, published by reuters.com 20 April 2021.    Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2021 Summary of Closed Trades Higher Inflation On The Way Higher Inflation On The Way
In lieu of next week’s strategy report, I will be presenting the first Counterpoint webcast titled ‘Mega-Themes, Coming Shocks, And Top Trades’. I hope you can join. Highlights Standard economic theory assumes that money is perfectly fungible. But in practice, money is not fungible, because people attach different emotions to their income and savings mental accounts. This is known as ‘mental accounting bias.’ Mental accounting bias means that we are more likely to use the massive stockpile of savings accumulated during the pandemic to pay down debt than to spend. Mental accounting bias also means that we are overpaying for high-yielding equities. Long-term investors should avoid banks, and they should avoid ‘value.’ Correctly calculated, the equity risk premium is now almost non-existent. US long-term bond yields have much more scope to move down than to move up. Fractal trade shortlist: equities versus bonds, PKR, and New Zealand equities. Feature Chart of the WeekConsumption Is Explained By Wages... Consumption Is Explained By Wages... Consumption Is Explained By Wages... Chart of the Week...Not By Stimulus Checks ...Not By Stimulus Checks ...Not By Stimulus Checks Many economists predict that, once economies fully reopen, the massive stockpile of household savings accumulated during the pandemic will unleash a tsunami of household spending. But economists are not the right people to make this prediction. The answer to whether households will, or will not, spend their stockpile of accumulated savings does not fall into the realm of Economics. It falls into the realm of Psychology. Whether We Spend Money Depends On Which ‘Mental Account’ It Occupies In A Major Anomaly In The Bond Market we pointed out that the propensity to spend out of income is high, but the propensity to spend out of wealth is low. Meaning that whether unspent income gets spent depends on whether households categorise it as additional income or additional wealth. This raised a follow-up question. How can the decision to spend money depend on whether someone categorises it as income or wealth? The answer comes from Psychology, and a phenomenon known as ‘mental accounting bias.’ Nobel Laureate psychologist Daniel Kahneman points out that we categorise our money into different accounts, which are sometimes physical, sometimes only mental – and that there is a clear hierarchy in our willingness to draw on these accounts for spending. There is a clear hierarchy in our willingness to spend from our ‘mental accounts’. At the top of the hierarchy comes our monthly wage check, followed by the money in our current (checking) account. These ‘income’ accounts we are willing to spend. Further down the hierarchy comes our savings account and our investment portfolio. These ‘savings’ or ‘wealth’ accounts we are unwilling to spend. Standard economic theory assumes that money is perfectly fungible, so that a pound in a current account is no different to a pound in a savings account. But in practice, money is not fungible, because people attach different emotions to their income and savings mental accounts. When we move money from our wages or our current account into our savings account, our willingness to spend it collapses. This explains why consumption closely tracks the wages that dominate our income mental account, but has no meaningful connection with stimulus checks which largely end up in our savings mental account (Chart of the Week and Chart I-2). Chart I-2Stimulus Checks Had No Meaningful Impact On Consumption Trends Stimulus Checks Had No Meaningful Impact On Consumption Trends Stimulus Checks Had No Meaningful Impact On Consumption Trends Yet while we are unwilling to spend our savings mental account, we are willing to pay down debt with it. Indeed, realising this emotional connection between our savings and our debt, many lenders offer mortgages which ‘offset’ a savings account against the mortgage debt. Pulling all of this together, the stockpile of household savings accumulated during the pandemic is unlikely to boost consumption trends. More likely, it will be used to reduce household debt. In which case, part of the recent rise in public debt will just end up paying down private debt, as happened in Japan during the 1990s (Chart I-3). Chart I-3In Japan, Public Debt Ended Up Paying Down Private Debt In Japan, Public Debt Ended Up Paying Down Private Debt In Japan, Public Debt Ended Up Paying Down Private Debt This spells trouble for bank asset growth. ‘Value’ Offers No Value Mental accounting bias also explains the dominant phenomenon in the financial markets of recent years – the so-called ‘search for yield’. At first glance, the search for yield makes sense, but on deeper thought the distinction between yield and capital appreciation is irrational. Just like income and wealth, the money that comes from an investment’s yield and the money that comes from its capital appreciation is perfectly fungible (assuming am equal tax treatment). Yet, in practice, many investors put yield and capital appreciation into separate mental accounts, categorising an investment’s yield as spending money, and its capital as saving money. Hence, those investors – say retirees – who want their assets to generate money for their spending mental account have an irrational bias towards investments that generate yield. Whereas those investors that want their assets to boost their saving mental account have a bias towards investments that generate capital growth. To reiterate, given that money is perfectly fungible, these mental accounts are irrational.  Under normal circumstances, these irrational biases are not a problem because there are enough investments available for both the spending and the saving mental accounts. But in recent years, the assets that would normally generate the safe income for the spending account – cash and government bonds – are no longer doing so. Hence, in the ensuing stampede for yield, income fixated investors have suffered a dangerous tunnel vision. By fixating on an equity’s yield rather than on its prospective total return, yield seeking investors are overpaying for high-yielding equities, and thereby sacrificing their long-term wealth. By fixating on an equity’s yield rather than on its prospective total return, investors are overpaying for high-yielding equities. Case in point. The 8 percent forward earnings yield on global financials appears to offer considerably more value than the 5 percent on healthcare and the 3.5 percent on technology. But what really matters is how that forward earnings yield translates into prospective total return. On this basis, the apparent value in financials turns out to be a mirage. Using the post financial crisis relationship between forward earnings yield and prospective return, high-yielding financials were, until very recently, priced to deliver a lower return than low-yielding technology. And financials are still priced to deliver a lower return than lower-yielding healthcare. To deliver the same long-term return as healthcare, the valuation of financials would have to decline by 20 percent (Chart I-4 - Chart I-6). Chart I-4Financials' 8 Percent Earnings Yield = A 2 Percent Prospective Return Financials' 8 Percent Earnings Yield = A 2 Percent Prospective Return Financials' 8 Percent Earnings Yield = A 2 Percent Prospective Return Chart I-5Healthcare's 5 Percent Earnings Yield = An 8 Percent Prospective Return Healthcare's 5 Percent Earnings Yield = An 8 Percent Prospective Return Healthcare's 5 Percent Earnings Yield = An 8 Percent Prospective Return Chart I-6Tech Is Expensive Tech Is Expensive Tech Is Expensive Therefore, mental accounting bias is a double whammy for banks. It spells trouble for bank asset growth, and it makes investors overpay for high-yielding equities. This creates the ultimate paradox of investment. The defining feature of ‘value’ is that it offers no value! Long-term investors should avoid banks, and they should avoid value. US Bond Yields Have More Scope To Move Down Than Up The foregoing analysis also carries important implications on the correct approach to value equities, and specifically the equity risk premium – meaning, the prospective excess return on equities versus high-quality bonds. The common incorrect approach is to take the forward earnings yield on equities and subtract the 10-year bond yield. Using a US forward earnings yield of 4.5 percent, this would suggest the equity risk premium is a comfortable 3 percent versus the nominal bond yield of 1.5 percent. Or a very comfortable 5.5 percent versus the real bond yield of -1 percent. The glaring error with this approach is that it is subtracting apples from oranges. The 10-year bond yield is the return you will receive from the bond over the next 10 years. But as you have just seen, the forward earnings yield is not the return you will receive from equities over the next 10 years. To subtract apples from apples we must first translate the forward earnings yield into a prospective 10-year total return. The current translation turns out to be a 2 percent nominal return (Chart I-7 - Chart I-8) or a 0 percent real return (Chart I-9 - Chart I-10). Comparing these with the nominal or real bond yields, we find that the equity risk premium is almost non-existent. Chart I-7Convert The Earnings Yield Into A Prospective Nominal Return... Convert The Earnings Yield Into A Prospective Nominal Return... Convert The Earnings Yield Into A Prospective Nominal Return... Chart I-8…To Find That The Equity Risk Premium Is Almost Non-Existent ...To Find That The Equity Risk Premium Is Almost Non-Existent ...To Find That The Equity Risk Premium Is Almost Non-Existent Chart I-9Convert The Earnings Yield Into A Prospective Real Return... Convert The Earnings Yield Into A Prospective Real Return... Convert The Earnings Yield Into A Prospective Real Return... Chart I-10...To Find That The Equity Risk Premium Is Almost Non-Existent ...To Find That The Equity Risk Premium Is Almost Non-Existent ...To Find That The Equity Risk Premium Is Almost Non-Existent The almost non-existent equity risk premium means that equities are richly valued, and that this rich valuation is contingent on bond yields not rising significantly. Moreover, it is not just equities that are richly valued. As we pointed out in The Road To Inflation Ends At Deflation the valuation of $300 trillion of global real estate is also highly contingent on bond yields not rising significantly. Equities are richly valued, and this rich valuation is contingent on bond yields not rising significantly. We conclude that, from current levels, US long-term bond yields have much more scope to move down than to move up. Candidates For Countertrend Reversal The strong rally in equities versus bonds since the pandemic low has reached a point of fractal fragility like that seen at the end of the 2013 bull run and the end of the early 2020 bear run (Chart I-11). As such, the current rally is due a breather. Chart I-11The Rally In Equities Versus Bonds Is Due A Breather The Rally In Equities Versus Bonds Is Due A Breather The Rally In Equities Versus Bonds Is Due A Breather In the Asia Pacific region, we note that the recent strong performance of the Pakistan rupee is susceptible to a countertrend sell-off (Chart I-12). Chart I-12Underweight The PKR Underweight The PKR Underweight The PKR Lastly, the ultra-defensive New Zealand stock market has massively underperformed over the past year. But fragility on both its 130-day and 65-day fractal structures suggests that it is ripe for a countertrend outperformance (Chart I-13). Chart I-13Overweight New Zealand Overweight New Zealand Overweight New Zealand Accordingly, this week’s recommendation is to overweight New Zealand versus the world, setting the profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 4 percent.   Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System Fractal Trades 6-Month Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Equity Market Performance   Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - ##br##Euro Area Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - ##br##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 - ##br##Asia Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - ##br##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    
Highlights Duration: The pace of rate hikes currently priced into the market is reasonable. However, we see strong odds that market expectations will move higher in the coming months, the result of continued strong economic data and the Fed starting to talk about tapering its asset purchases. Investors should maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration. MBS: MBS remain unattractive compared to other US spread products. But within an underweight allocation to MBS, an up-in-coupon bias makes sense. Inflation: Year-over-year CPI inflation was pushed higher by base effects in March, but the report also showed evidence of mounting inflationary pressures beyond simple base effects. Feature After a sizeable drop last Thursday, Treasury yields are now significantly off their recent highs. The 10-year Treasury yield peaked at 1.74% on March 31st but ended last week at only 1.59%. What makes the drop puzzling is that yields are down despite a string of very strong US economic data (Chart 1). This recent development bears a resemblance to the famous 2004/05 bond conundrum when Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan struggled to understand why long-maturity Treasury yields were falling even as the Fed lifted short rates.1 Today, investors are also struggling to understand why long-maturity Treasury yields are falling, only this time the “conundrum” is that they are falling in the face of strong economic data. From our perch, both conundrums have the same answer: The market has already discounted a lot of the news. On June 29th, 2004 – the day before the first rate hike of that cycle – the overnight index swap (OIS) curve was priced for 243 bps of Fed rate hikes for the following 12 months. The Fed went on to deliver 200 bps of rate hikes during that timeframe, slightly less than the market expected. In that environment it is entirely consistent that bond yields should fall (Chart 2). Chart 1Yields Down On Strong Data Yields Down On Strong Data Yields Down On Strong Data Chart 2The 2004/05 Bond Conundrum The 2004/05 Bond Conundrum The 2004/05 Bond Conundrum Today, the OIS curve is priced for the Fed to lift rates off the zero bound in December 2022 and for a total of 86 bps of rate hikes by the end of 2023 (Chart 3). Given the Fed’s new Average Inflation Targeting regime, this sort of rate hike cycle will only be achieved if there is a very strong US economic recovery. The incoming US data are so far confirming that narrative but haven’t been strong enough to move rate expectations even higher. Chart 3Market Priced For December 2022 Liftoff Market Priced For December 2022 Liftoff Market Priced For December 2022 Liftoff As we wrote in last week’s report, we think that the market’s current rate hike expectations look reasonable.2 However, we see a meaningful risk that they could move higher in the coming months as the rapid US economic recovery continues and the Fed starts to back away from its extremely dovish messaging. Chart 4US Will Hit 75% Vaccination Well Before September US Will Hit 75% Vaccination Well Before September US Will Hit 75% Vaccination Well Before September For example, Fed Chair Jay Powell has said repeatedly that it is too soon to talk about tapering the Fed’s asset purchases. We worry, however, that this tone might be giving investors a false sense of security. If the economic recovery continues at its current pace, we fully expect the Fed to start talking about tapering this year and to begin the process either by the end of 2021 or in early 2022. Last week, St. Louis Fed President Jim Bullard said he would be comfortable starting discussions about tapering when 75%-80% of the US population has been vaccinated. We estimate that if vaccinations continue at a linear pace, we will hit 75% vaccination by September (Chart 4). Given the exponential trend in vaccinations so far, we are likely to reach 75% well before September. The bottom line is that we see the pace of rate hikes currently priced into the market as reasonable. However, we also see strong odds that market expectations will move higher in the coming months, the result of continued strong economic data and the Fed starting to talk about tapering its asset purchases. Investors should maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration. MBS: Stay Up In Coupon Unsurprisingly, the reflation trade has been beneficial for risk assets. Within US fixed income, spread products have generally outperformed Treasuries since bond yields bottomed last August. However, certain spread sectors have fared better than others. Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities, for example, have not done that well. Conventional 30-year Agency MBS have only outperformed a duration-matched position in Treasury securities by 73 bps since bond yields bottomed on August 4th, 2020 (Chart 5). This compares to 446 bps of outperformance for Aaa-rated corporates, 342 bps of outperformance for Aa-rated corporates (Chart 5, panel 2) and 232 bps of outperformance for Agency CMBS (Chart 5, panel 3). Only notoriously low-risk Aaa-rated consumer ABS have delivered less outperformance than Agency MBS (Chart 5, bottom panel). While Agency MBS have not performed well overall, certain segments of the coupon stack have delivered decent excess returns. Specifically, higher coupon MBS have performed much better than low coupon MBS during the recent back-up in yields. Since last August, 4% coupon MBS have outperformed duration-matched Treasuries by 176 bps and 4.5% coupons have outperformed by 257 bps. Meanwhile, 2.5% coupons have underperformed by 10 bps and 3% coupons have underperformed by 15 bps (Chart 6). Chart 5Spread Product Performance Since Trough In Bond Yields Spread Product Performance Since Trough In Bond Yields Spread Product Performance Since Trough In Bond Yields Chart 6Favor Premium Coupons In Rising Rate Environment Favor Premium Coupons In Rising Rate Environment Favor Premium Coupons In Rising Rate Environment The divergent performance between high and low coupons is easily explained by the risk characteristics of those bonds. Looking at the difference between the 2.5% and 4% coupons, for example, we see that the 2.5% coupons have significantly higher duration and significantly lower convexity (Chart 6, bottom 2 panels). The higher duration means that rising yields hurt 2.5% coupons more and the lower convexity means that rising yields will cause the gap between 2.5% coupon duration and 4% coupon duration to widen further. In short, a rising yield environment is terrible for low-coupon MBS. Conversely, high duration and low convexity are desirable attributes in a falling yield environment. If bond yields fall meaningfully going forward, then low-coupon MBS will outperform the high coupons. Chart 7A shows how option-adjusted spread (OAS) varies with duration across the conventional 30-year Agency MBS coupon stack. We see that the lowest coupons have the highest durations and the lowest OAS. Premium coupons have low durations and high OAS. Chart 7AAgency MBS 30-Year Conventional Coupon Stack: OAS vs. Duration A New Conundrum A New Conundrum Chart 7B shows how OAS varies with convexity across the coupon stack. Here we see that the 2%, 2.5% and 3% coupons have the most negative convexities. This makes sense as those coupons are closest to the current mortgage rate of 3.04%. A further increase in the mortgage rate would make those coupons less likely to refinance, causing durations to extend meaningfully. Conversely, a drop in the mortgage rate would lead to greater refinancings for those coupons, causing durations to shorten. Notice that 1.5% coupon MBS have relatively high convexity. This is because refinancing is already unattractive for those bonds, and the duration of the 1.5% index has already extended. Chart 7BAgency MBS 30-Year Conventional Coupon Stack: OAS vs. Convexity A New Conundrum A New Conundrum Given our view that US Treasury yields will be flat-to-higher for the next 6-12 months, we recommend an up-in-coupon bias within Agency MBS. Specifically, the 2%, 2.5% and 3% coupons have the most scope for duration extension in a rising yield environment and should be avoided. The 4% and 4.5% coupons, on the other hand, are less negatively convex and are better able to weather the storm of rising bond yields. In a flat bond yield environment, the best performing coupons are likely to be those with the widest OAS. This makes the 4% and 4.5% coupons look much more attractive than the 1.5% coupons, even though they have similar convexities. Overall, we recommend owning the 4% and 4.5% coupons within the conventional 30-year Agency MBS coupon stack and avoiding the 2%, 2.5% and 3% coupons. One final point worth making is that we also continue to recommend an underweight allocation to MBS within a US bond portfolio. That is, though higher coupon MBS look better than the low coupons, the entire sector looks unattractive compared to alternatives like consumer ABS, Agency CMBS and even investment grade corporate bonds. Chart 8 shows a version of our Excess Return Bond Map, a visual guide that is useful for quickly assessing the risk/reward trade-off between different US spread products.3 The Map shows OAS as a measure of expected return on the Y-axis, and a proprietary risk measure called the “Risk Of Losing 100 Bps” on the X-axis. A higher number on the X-axis indicates less risk of losing 100 bps and vice-versa. Chart 8Excess Return Bond Map A New Conundrum A New Conundrum Our Bond Map makes it clear that only 4% and 4.5% coupon MBS come close to offering a risk/reward balance that is comparable to other spread sectors. MBS coupons below 4% offer far too little expected return given the amount of risk. Bottom Line: Remain underweight MBS within a US bond portfolio, but favor 4% and 4.5% coupons over 2%, 2.5% and 3% coupons within the Agency MBS coupon stack. March CPI More Than A Base Effect It was well known heading into last week’s March CPI release that the year-over-year inflation number was going to be very strong. This is due to base effects that will persist through to the end of May. That is, 12-month inflation is bound to rise as the negative monthly inflation prints from March, April and May 2020 fall out of the 12-month rolling sample. Year-over-year inflation numbers did indeed rise sharply in March (Chart 9). 12-month headline CPI jumped from 1.68% to 2.64% and 12-month core CPI increased from 1.28% to 1.65%. Base effects exert less influence over the trimmed mean CPI, and that index rose only from 2.04% to 2.12%. The gap between 12-month core CPI and 12-month trimmed mean CPI remains wide, but it should close by May when the impact from last year’s base effects is exhausted (Chart 9, bottom panel). Chart 9Annual Inflation Annual Inflation Annual Inflation Chart 10Monthly Inflation Monthly Inflation Monthly Inflation But base effects were only part of the story last week. Month-over-month inflation also came in very strong for the headline, core and trimmed mean measures. Headline CPI rose 0.62% in March, core CPI rose 0.34% and the trimmed mean rose 0.24% (Chart 10). To put those numbers in context, if those monthly prints are repeated in April and May, 12-month headline CPI will rise to 4.75% by May and 12-month core CPI will rise to 2.79%. Even if we assume more typical 0.15% inflation rates for April and May, we would still expect 12-month headline CPI to reach 3.77% by May and 12-month core CPI to reach 2.41%. Overall, the message from March’s CPI report is that the economy is showing signs of mounting inflationary pressures beyond simple base effects. We have previously written about the ample evidence of bottlenecks in both the goods and service sectors, and we now appear to be seeing those bottlenecks show up in the price data.4 There’s little doubt that 12-month inflation will fall somewhat between May and the end of the year. However, we anticipate that inflation will still be close to the Fed’s target by the end of 2021. This will certainly be the case if the monthly inflation figures remain consistent with March’s print. The main investment implication from this view is that low inflation will not prevent the Fed from tapering its asset purchases either late this year or early next year, and it also won’t prevent the Fed from lifting rates in 2022. Footnotes 1 Greenspan’s remarks: https://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/hh/2005/february/testimony.htm 2 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Overshoot Territory”, dated April 13, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 For more details on the Bond Map please see page 16 of US Bond Strategy Portfolio Allocation Summary, “It’s A Boom!”, dated April 6, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Limit Rate Risk, Load Up On Credit”, dated March 16, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com   Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Chart of the WeekThe Bond Bear Mantle Being Passed To Canada? The Bond Bear Mantle Being Passed To Canada? The Bond Bear Mantle Being Passed To Canada? US Treasuries: The steady climb of US bond yields has left longer-maturity Treasuries in an oversold position. However, underlying growth and inflation momentum remains bond bearish and the Fed is likely to begin preparing the market later this year for a tapering of asset purchases in 2022. Maintain a medium-term defensive posture towards US Treasuries (below-benchmark duration and an underweight country allocation). Canada: The Canadian economy is gaining significant positive momentum, with an increased pace of vaccinations boosting optimism despite a third wave of COVID-19. We now see a growing risk of the Bank of Canada shifting to a less dovish policy stance sometime in the next few months, led by a tapering of its bond buying – perhaps even before the Fed does the same (Chart of the Week). Downgrade Canadian government bonds to underweight in global fixed income portfolios. US Treasuries: The Pause That Refreshes Chart 2UST Yield Uptrend Has Paused UST Yield Uptrend Has Paused UST Yield Uptrend Has Paused After leading the global government bond market selloff over the past several months, US Treasury yields have calmed down of late. The 10-year Treasury yield is down 14bps from the most recent peak of 1.74% reached March 31, while the 30-year Treasury yield is down 16bps from the peak of 2.45% reached on March 18. These moves have been concentrated in the real yield component, with inflation breakevens stable, as the 10yr and 30yr TIPS yields are down -15bps and -20bps, respectively, since the dates of those peaks in nominal yields (Chart 2). The drift lower in US yields has occurred in the face of an explosive surge in US economic data. Retail sales rose +9.8% in March compared to February and a staggering +27.7% on a year-over-year basis. The Fed’s regional manufacturing surveys showed very robust results for April, with the New York Empire State index hitting the highest level since October 2017 and the Philadelphia Fed headline index surging to a level last seen in 1973. This follows the very strong payrolls and ISM data for March that came out in early April. Yet the US economic data is not unanimously positive. The latest readings from the University of Michigan consumer confidence and NFIB small business optimism surveys both remained well below pre-pandemic peaks (Chart 3). Annual core CPI inflation only inched up 0.2 percentage points in March to 1.6%, a tepid move compared to the base effect driven surge that took year-over-year headline CPI inflation from 1.7% in February to 2.6%. Chart 3Some Mixed Messages From Recent US Data Some Mixed Messages From Recent US Data Some Mixed Messages From Recent US Data Chart 4Fewer Positive US Data Surprises Fewer Positive US Data Surprises Fewer Positive US Data Surprises The overall flow of US economic data has been disappointing versus elevated expectations, as evidenced by the almost uninterrupted decline in the Citigroup US data surprise index since peaking in July of 2020 (Chart 4). This indicator reliably correlated to the momentum of US Treasury yields prior to the COVID-19 outbreak and now, given the bullish growth combination of vaccine optimism and fiscal stimulus, the bond market’s focus is returning to how US data evolves versus expectations - and what that means for the Fed’s future moves on monetary policy. The most senior leadership at the Fed continues to send a consistent message on policy, with no rate hikes expected before 2024 and no hints at when the tapering of quantitative easing (QE) could begin. Yet some Fed officials have started to be a bit more vocal about their comfort level with the current accommodative policy stance and the associated risks to financial stability and inflation. Last week, Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan noted that he would like to see the Fed begin to withdraw its support for the economy “at the earliest opportunity”. St. Louis Fed President James Bullard was even more specific, noting that once the share of vaccinated Americans reaches “herd immunity” levels of 75-80%, it will be time for the Fed to debate tapering QE. At the moment, however, there is no need for the Fed to move preemptively. Our Fed Monitor - comprised of economic, inflation and financial market data that would signal pressure for the Fed to ease or tighten policy – is at a neutral level (Chart 5). Our 12-month Fed discounter, which measures the change in interest rates over the next year that is priced into the US overnight index swap (OIS) curve, is at 7bps, consistent with a stand-pat Fed. The latest read this month from the New York Fed’s Survey of Primary Dealers (and Survey of Market Participants) showed no change in the median longer-run expectation for the fed funds rate of 2.25% that has prevailed over the past year (middle panel) – despite a sharp recovery in US growth expectations. Chart 5UST Valuations A Bit Stretched UST Valuations A Bit Stretched UST Valuations A Bit Stretched The market pricing of the Fed’s next move is still relatively benign, with liftoff not expected until February 2023. This suggests that a pause in the trend of rising Treasury yields was essentially the market getting a bit ahead of itself in pricing in higher longer-term yields. This can be seen by looking at various valuation measures. For example, the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield now sits at 2.4%, which is at the high end of the range of longer-run fed funds rate expectations from the Primary Dealer survey. Also, various measures of the term premium on 10-year Treasury yields have returned to the above-zero levels last seen during the Fed’s 2016-2018 rate hiking cycle – even with the Fed not signaling any need to tighten policy in response to rising inflation expectations. Despite these signs of stretched near-term UST valuation, there is still no sign of major global bond investors being comfortable with increasing exposure to Treasuries. For example, despite yields on 10-year Treasuries (hedged into euros and yen) looking historically attractive compared to the near-zero yields on JGBs and sub-zero yields on German Bunds, the US Treasury’s capital flow data shows that foreign investors remain net sellers of Treasuries (Chart 6). It is possible that those foreign buyers need more evidence of a sustained decrease in US bond volatility before moving money into US Treasuries, where duration losses from higher US yields could wipe out the yield pickup from moving into US bonds. While valuations are a bit stretched for Treasuries, technicals appear very oversold. Both the deviation of the 10-year Treasury yield from its 200-day moving average, and the 6-month rate of change of the Bloomberg Barclays US Treasury total return index, are at levels seen only four previous times since 2010 (Chart 7). The JP Morgan client duration positioning surveys and the Market Vane Treasury sentiment index are also approaching post-2010 bearish extremes. It should be noted that both of those measures reached even more bearish extremes during the latter half of the Fed’s 2026-2018 tightening cycle, so there is potential for Treasury sentiment to become even more bearish once the Fed starts to tighten monetary policy – a scenario looking increasingly likely over the next 6-12 months. Chart 6No Foreign Bid For USTs (Yet) No Foreign Bid For USTs (Yet) No Foreign Bid For USTs (Yet) Chart 7USTs Are Technically Oversold USTs Are Technically Oversold USTs Are Technically Oversold We continue to expect a robust US economy and rising inflation to force the Fed to begin preparing the market in the latter half of 2021 for QE tapering in 2022, with the first rate hike of the next tightening cycle coming in late 2022. As that outcome appears largely consistent with current market pricing, amid oversold technicals, it is likely that Treasury yields will continue to move sideways over at least the next few weeks. Yet there is little to suggest that yields have peaked and are about to enter a new downtrend, given the accelerating pace of US vaccinations that is boosting optimism on an eventual end to the US leg of the pandemic. Stay defensive on US Treasury exposure, as the cyclical rise in yields is not over yet. Bottom Line: The steady climb of US bond yields has left longer-maturity Treasuries in an oversold position. However, underlying growth and inflation momentum remain bond bearish and the Fed is likely to begin preparing the market later this year for tapering of asset purchases in 2022. Maintain a medium-term defensive posture towards US Treasuries (below-benchmark duration and an underweight country allocation). Canada: Downgrade To Underweight In a Special Report published back in February along with our colleagues at BCA Foreign Exchange Strategy, we outlined the case for placing Canadian government debt on “downgrade watch” in global fixed income portfolios.1 We expected Canadian bond yields to continue rising along with the rise in global bond yields and, hence, we maintained our below-benchmark recommended duration exposure within Canada. Chart 8Canada: A High Beta Bond Market Once Again Canada: A High Beta Bond Market Once Again Canada: A High Beta Bond Market Once Again However, we concluded that it was too soon to shift to a full-blown underweight stance on Canadian government bonds with COVID-19 cases still raging through the country, the vaccination program off to a very slow start, and the Bank of Canada (BoC)’s QE program preventing Canadian bonds from returning to their usual “high-beta” status within developed economy bond markets. It now appears that we were too cautious on that front. Canadian government bonds have been one of the worst performing markets year-to-date within the Bloomberg Barclays Global Government bond index, delivering a local currency return of –4.1% - worse than the -3.5% return earned on US Treasuries so far in 2021.2 It is clear that the Canadian government bonds are once again a market more sensitive to global interest rate moves (Chart 8). In that February Special Report, we laid out three factors that could prompt the BoC to move to a less dovish, and more bond bearish, monetary policy stance faster than we expected. Much of that list has already started to come to fruition. 1) Good News On The Vaccine Rollout Sadly, Canada is suffering a third wave of COVID-19 cases that has resulted in the nation’s most populous province, Ontario, implementing the harshest lockdown yet seen during the pandemic. Yet the pace of vaccinations has also been rising with the share of Canadians receiving at least one jab is now 21% (Chart 9) - higher than that of the overall European Union (EU). Canada is now administering more daily vaccinations than both the UK and EU. The quickening pace of vaccinations is already providing a major lift to Canadian economic confidence. The Bloomberg Nanos consumer confidence index is at an all-time high (Chart 10), while the BoC’s Business Outlook Survey for the spring of 2021 was incredibly solid. Two-thirds of firms in that survey expect sales to exceed pre-pandemic levels, even with the latest upturn in COVID-19 cases. Chart 9Canadian Vaccine Rollout Improving Some Bond Bearish Tales From Both Sides Of The 49th Parallel Some Bond Bearish Tales From Both Sides Of The 49th Parallel Chart 10Booming Optimism Booming Optimism Booming Optimism The BoC’s Q1/2021 Consumer Survey showed similar levels of optimism. 74% of Canadians surveyed aged 25-54 are planning to engage in levels of social and economic activities equal to, or greater than, those seen prior to the pandemic once the majority is vaccinated (Chart 11). A net majority (18%) of those surveyed plan to spend more on the types of “high-touch” service spending unavailable during the pandemic, like travel, movies and dining in restaurants, once a majority is vaccinated (Chart 12). Chart 11Canadians Are Ready To Have Fun Once Again Some Bond Bearish Tales From Both Sides Of The 49th Parallel Some Bond Bearish Tales From Both Sides Of The 49th Parallel All of the Canadian survey data is sending a clear message: a faster vaccine rollout will leader to much faster spending by consumers and businesses. 2) Signs Of Financial Stability Risks Highly-indebted Canadians' love affair with real estate has always concerned the BoC. While a combination of cutting policy interest rates to zero and ramping up QE helped stabilize Canadian financial markets during the 2020 pandemic shock, it has also set off a new surge of housing speculation. According to the Bloomberg Nanos consumer survey, 67% of Canadians now expect house prices to appreciate. The demand for homes has given a lift to the Canadian economy through a surge in new housing starts (residential investment is 8% of Canadian real GDP), while pushing national house price inflation back above 10% (Chart 13). Chart 12A Surge In "High-Touch" Spending Awaits Canadian Herd Immunity Some Bond Bearish Tales From Both Sides Of The 49th Parallel Some Bond Bearish Tales From Both Sides Of The 49th Parallel As already indebted Canadian households pile on more debt to partake in another national home-buying party, the BoC must now concern itself with the potential financial stability risks from a too-rapid rise in housing values. Chart 13Yet Another Canadian Housing Boom Yet Another Canadian Housing Boom Yet Another Canadian Housing Boom In a recent speech, BoC Deputy Governor Toni Gravelle noted that the BoC had to introduce QE in 2020 to help fight COVID-related dysfunction across a variety of Canadian financial markets, including government bonds where liquidity dried up.3 Gravelle also noted that the BoC would begin to dial back QE once it was clear that financial markets no longer needed the support from QE. With Canadian equities booming and Canadian corporate bond spreads near the lowest levels of the past decade (Chart 14), it seems clear that the BoC can begin dialing back its government bond purchase program if it is no longer necessary and likely fueling another housing bubble. 3) Additional Large Fiscal Stimulus The governing Canadian Liberal government of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau delivered a massive amount of fiscal stimulus to the pandemic-stricken Canadian economy in 2020. In the 2021/22 federal budget announced yesterday, another huge burst of spending was introduced, equal to C$101bn or 4.2% of Canadian GDP over the next three years. The spending was described as another COVID relief package, but included many long-term programs like national child care, raising the minimum wage and boosting green investments. According to the projections from the latest IMF World Fiscal Monitor, the “fiscal thrust” for Canada – the change in the cyclically-adjusted primary budget balance as a share of GDP - was projected to turn from a stimulus of +9% in 2020 to a drag of -2% in 2021 (Chart 15). The spending announced in the latest budget will effectively eliminate that drag for the next three years. This will provide a major lift to an economy already likely to see booming post-pandemic growth. Chart 14BoC QE No Longer Necessary BoC QE No Longer Necessary BoC QE No Longer Necessary Chart 15No Fiscal Drag Now Expected In 2021 Some Bond Bearish Tales From Both Sides Of The 49th Parallel Some Bond Bearish Tales From Both Sides Of The 49th Parallel Chart 16Canadian Real Yields Are Too Low Canadian Real Yields Are Too Low Canadian Real Yields Are Too Low Given the combination of expanding vaccinations, surging confidence, a renewed housing boom and soaring financial markets, it will be difficult for the BoC to maintain its current policy settings for much longer. This is a central bank that engaged in QE reluctantly last year and numerous BoC officials have stated – even in the worst days of the global pandemic - that they would begin to remove accommodation once it was no longer needed. Interest rate markets have already moved to price in a full-blown BoC tightening cycle. The Canadian OIS curve now discounts “liftoff” (a full 25bp rate hike) in October 2022, with 163bps of rate hikes priced in to the end of 2024 (Chart 16). The projected path of rates is below the BoC’s inflation forecasts to 2023. Thus, the implied Canadian real policy rate is expected to remain negative over the next two years – even though the BoC estimates that the neutral policy rate range is 1.75% to 2.75%, or -0.25% to +0.75% in real terms after subtracting the midpoint of the BoC’s 1-3% inflation target band. In other words, Canadian interest rate markets are vulnerable to any BoC shift in a less dovish direction, as seems increasingly likely sometime in the next few months. Our BoC Monitor is rapidly moving out of the “easier policy required” zone (Chart 17), and the rapid improvement in the Canadian employment situation suggests the BoC will be under more pressure to begin signaling a path towards withdrawing policy accommodation. This will start with an announced tapering of QE purchases, perhaps even ahead of any signals from the Fed that it is doing the same (Chart 18). This justifies a more cautious stance on Canadian fixed income exposure. Chart 17Downgrade Canadian Government Bonds To Underweight Downgrade Canadian Government Bonds To Underweight Downgrade Canadian Government Bonds To Underweight Chart 18Could The BoC Start Tapering Before The Fed? Could The BoC Start Tapering Before The Fed? Could The BoC Start Tapering Before The Fed? While a BoC tapering announcement before the Fed would likely put upward pressure on the Canadian dollar versus the US dollar, that would be something the BoC could live with if the economy was rapidly gaining strength – especially as our currency strategists believe the “loonie” to be undervalued. Thus, we are formally downgrading our strategic recommended allocation to Canadian government bonds to underweight (2 out of 5, see table on page 16). We are also maintaining our recommended below-benchmark duration exposure within dedicated Canadian bond portfolios. We are also cutting the allocation to Canada to underweight in our model bond portfolio and placing the proceeds in both, the US and core Europe (see pages 14-15). Bottom Line: The Canadian economy is gaining significant positive momentum, with an increased pace of vaccinations boosting optimism despite a third wave of COVID-19. We now see a growing risk that the Bank of Canada shifts to a less dovish policy stance sometime in the next few months, led by a tapering of its bond buying. Downgrade Canadian government bonds to underweight in global fixed income portfolios.   Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Research Foreign Exchange Strategy/Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle?", dated February 12, 2021, available at fes.bcaresearch.com and gfis.bcaresearch.com. 2 That Canadian return is virtually the same after hedging into US dollars, hence that local currency return can be compared to the US dollar denominated Treasury market return. 3https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2021/03/market-stress-relief-role-bank-canadas-balance-sheet Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Some Bond Bearish Tales From Both Sides Of The 49th Parallel Some Bond Bearish Tales From Both Sides Of The 49th Parallel Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights On a timeframe of a few years, a net deflationary shock is a near-certainty even if we do not know its precise nature or its precise timing. Hence, investors must build such a deflationary shock or shocks into their long-term investment strategy. Specifically: The 10-year T-bond yield will ultimately reach zero, and the 30-year T-bond yield will ultimately reach 0.5 percent. For patient investors, this presents a mouth-watering 100 percent return on the long-duration T-bond. The structural bull market in equities will continue until T-bond yields reach their ultimate low. Patient equity investors should steer towards ‘growth’ sectors that will surge on the ultimate low in T-bond yields. Fractal trade shortlist: Taiwan versus China, Netherlands versus China, and Sweden versus Finland. Feature Chart I-1For Long-Term Investors, A Shock Is A Near-Certainty How To Predict Shocks How To Predict Shocks Predicting shocks is easy. The precise nature and timing of shocks is not predictable, but the statistical distribution of shocks is highly predictable. This means that the longer our investment timeframe, the more certain we are of encountering at least one shock – even if we cannot predict its precise nature or timing. Many economists and strategists blame their forecasting errors on shocks, such as the pandemic, which they point out are ‘unforecastable.’ Absent the shocks, they argue, their predictions of the economy and the markets would have turned out right. This is a valid excuse for short-term forecasting errors, but it is not a valid excuse for long-term forecasting errors. On a long-term horizon, encountering a major shock, or several major shocks, is a near-certainty. Hence, economists and strategists who are not incorporating the well-defined statistical distribution of shocks into their long-term investment forecasts and strategies are making a mistake. Individual Shocks Are Not Predictable In the 21 years of this century so far, there have been five shocks whose economic/financial consequences have been felt worldwide: the dot com bust (2000); the global financial crisis (2007/8); the euro debt crisis (2011/12); the emerging markets recession (2014/15); and the global pandemic (2020). To these we can add two wide-reaching political shocks: the Brexit vote (2016); and Donald Trump’s shock victory in the US presidential election (2016). In total, this constitutes seven shocks, four economic/financial, two political, and one natural (Chart I-2). Chart I-2The Seven Global Shocks Of The Century (So Far) The Seven Global Shocks Of The Century (So Far) The Seven Global Shocks Of The Century (So Far) Some people argue that economic/financial shocks are predictable, because they arise from vulnerabilities in the economy or financial markets, which should be easy to spot. Unfortunately, though such vulnerabilities are obvious in hindsight, the greatest economic minds cannot see them in real time. The greatest economic minds cannot see economic vulnerabilities. Infamously, on the eve of the global financial crisis, Ben Bernanke was insisting that “there’s not much indication that subprime mortgage issues have spread into the broader mortgage market.” Equally infamously, on the eve of the euro debt crisis, Mario Draghi was asking “what makes you think that the ECB must become lender of last resort to governments to keep the eurozone together?” (Chart I-3 and Chart I-4) Chart I-3Bernanke Couldn't See The GFC Bernanke Couldn't See The GFC Bernanke Couldn't See The GFC Chart I-4Draghi Couldn't See The Euro Debt Crisis Draghi Couldn't See The Euro Debt Crisis Draghi Couldn't See The Euro Debt Crisis Which begs the question, what is the current vulnerability that today’s great economic minds cannot see? As we have documented many times, most recently in The Rational Bubble Is Turning Irrational, the current vulnerability is the exponential relationship between rising bond yields and the risk premiums on equities and other risk-assets (Chart I-5 and Chart I-6). Meaning that $500 trillion of risk-assets are vulnerable to any substantial further rise in bond yields. Chart I-5A 1.5 Percent Decline In The Bond Yield Had A Smaller Impact On The Earnings Yield When The Bond Yield Started At 4 Percent... A 1.5 Percent Decline In The Bond Yield Had A Smaller Impact On The Earnings Yield When The Bond Yield Started At 4 Percent... A 1.5 Percent Decline In The Bond Yield Had A Smaller Impact On The Earnings Yield When The Bond Yield Started At 4 Percent... Chart I-6...Than When The Bond Yield Started ##br##At 3 Percent ...Than When The Bond Yield Started At 3 Percent ...Than When The Bond Yield Started At 3 Percent The second type of shock – political shocks – should be predictable as they mostly arise from well-defined events such as elections and referenda, which an army of political experts analyses ad nauseam. Yet the greatest political minds could not see Brexit or President Trump coming. Indeed, even ‘Team Brexit’ didn’t see Brexit coming, because it had no plan on how to implement Brexit once the vote was won. The third type of shocks – natural shocks – are clearly unpredictable as individual events. Nobody knows when the next major pandemic, earthquake, volcano eruption, tsunami, solar flare, or asteroid strike is going happen. Yet, to repeat, while the precise nature and timing of shocks is not predictable, the statistical distribution of shocks is highly predictable. The Statistical Distribution Of Shocks Is Highly Predictable The good news is that shocks follow well-defined statistical ‘power laws’ which allow us to accurately forecast how many shocks to expect in any long timeframe. The 7 shocks experienced through the past 21 years equates to a shock every three years on average, or 3.33 shocks in any 10-year period. The expected wait to the next shock is three years. The next few paragraphs delve into some necessary mathematics, but don’t worry, you don’t need to understand the maths to appreciate the key takeaways. If the past 21 years is representative, we propose that the number of shocks in any 10-year period follows a so-called Poisson distribution with parameter 3.33. From this distribution, it follows that the probability of going through a 5-year period without a shock is just 19 percent, and the probability of going through a 10-year period without a shock is a negligible 4 percent (Chart of the Week). The result is that if you are a long-term investor, then encountering a shock is a near-certainty and should be built into your investment strategy. How can we test our assumption that the number of shocks follows a Poisson distribution? The maths tells us that if the number of shocks follows a Poisson distribution with parameter 3.33, then the ‘waiting time’ between shocks follows a so-called Exponential distribution also with parameter 3.33. On this basis, 63 percent of the waits between shocks should be up to three years, 23 percent should be four to six years, and 14 percent should be over six years. Now we can compare this expected distribution with the actual distribution of waits between the 7 shocks encountered so far in this century. We find that the theory lines up closely with the practice, validating our assumption of a Poisson distribution (Chart I-7 and Chart I-8). Chart I-7The Theoretical Waiting Time Between Shocks… How To Predict Shocks How To Predict Shocks Chart II-8…Is Close To The Actual Waiting Time Between Shocks How To Predict Shocks How To Predict Shocks To repeat the key takeaways, on a long-term timeframe, encountering at least one shock is a near-certainty, and the expected wait to the next shock is three years. A Shock Is A Near-Certainty, And It Will End Up Deflationary Nevertheless, there remains a pressing question: Will the next shock(s) be deflationary or reflationary? It turns out that all shocks end up with both deflationary and reflationary components: either a deflationary impulse followed by a reflationary backlash or, as we highlighted in The Road To Inflation Ends At Deflation, a reflationary impulse followed by a deflationary backlash. But the crucial point is that the deflationary component will swamp the reflationary component. In the seven shocks of this century so far, six have been deflationary impulses with a weaker reflationary backlash; and one – the reflation trade of 2017-18 – was a reflationary impulse with a stronger deflationary backlash. It is our high conviction view that in the next shock(s), the deflationary component will continue to hold the upper hand (Chart I-9). Chart I-9Each Shock Has A Deflationary And Reflationary Component... But The Deflationary Component Tends To Dominate Each Shock Has A Deflationary And Reflationary Component... But The Deflationary Component Tends To Dominate Each Shock Has A Deflationary And Reflationary Component... But The Deflationary Component Tends To Dominate The simple reason is that as financial asset prices, real estate prices, and debt servicing costs get addicted to ever lower bond yields, the economy and financial markets cannot tolerate bond yields reaching previous tightening highs and, just like all addicts, need a new extreme loosening to feel any stimulus. This means that when the next shock comes – as it surely will – it will require lower lows and lower highs in the bond yield cycle. Let’s sum up. On a timeframe of a few years, a shock is a near-certainty even if we do not know its precise nature – economic/financial, political, or natural – or its precise timing. Furthermore, the shock will be net deflationary. Hence, investors must build such a deflationary shock or shocks into their long-term investment strategy. Specifically: The 10-year T-bond yield will eventually reach zero, and the 30-year T-bond yield will ultimately reach 0.5 percent. For patient investors, this constitutes a mouth-watering 100 percent return on the long-duration T-bond. The 10-year T-bond yield will eventually reach zero. The structural bull market in equities will continue until T-bond yields reach their ultimate low. Patient equity investors should tilt towards ‘growth’ sectors that will surge on the ultimate low in T-bond yields. Candidates For Countertrend Reversals This week we have noticed an unusual decoupling among the tech-heavy markets of Taiwan, Netherlands, and China (Chart I-10). Chart I-10An Unusual Decoupling Between Tech-Heavy Netherlands And China An Unusual Decoupling Between Tech-Heavy Netherlands And China An Unusual Decoupling Between Tech-Heavy Netherlands And China Among these three markets, the strong short-term outperformance of both Taiwan and Netherlands are due to supply bottlenecks in the semiconductor sector that have boosted Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing and ASML, but we expect these bottlenecks ultimately to resolve.  On this basis and combined with extremely fragile 130-day fractal structures, Taiwan versus China and Netherlands versus China are vulnerable to reversals (Chart I-11 and Chart I-12). Chart I-11Underweight Taiwan Versus China Underweight Taiwan Versus China Underweight Taiwan Versus China Chart I-12Underweight Netherlands Versus China Underweight Netherlands Versus China Underweight Netherlands Versus China Our first recommended trade is to underweight Netherlands versus China, setting a profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 5 percent. Another outperformance that looks fragile on its 130-day fractal structure is Sweden versus Finland, driven by industrials and financials versus energy and materials (Chart I-13). Chart I-13Underweight Sweden Versus Finland Underweight Sweden Versus Finland Underweight Sweden Versus Finland Our second recommended trade is to underweight Sweden versus Finland, setting a profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 4.7 percent.   Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System Fractal Trades 6-Month Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Asset Performance Equity Market Performance   Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - ##br##Euro Area Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - ##br##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 - ##br##Asia Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - ##br##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    
Dear Client, Next week I will be hosting a series of Roundtable discussions with BCA’s clients in both Europe and Asia. Our next report published on April 28th will be a recap of my observations from these meetings. Best regards, Jing Sima China Strategist Highlights The sharp uptick in Chinese producer prices should be transitory, unlikely to trigger a policy response. There are two scenarios under which Chinese manufacturers’ profit margins will benefit: either Chinese exporters will raise export prices and pass input costs onto American customers, or the RMB will depreciate versus the US dollar and commodities prices will experience a setback. The second scenario is more likely in the next 3-6 months. After a pandemic-driven boost in 2020, US imports from China will likely moderate in the second half of 2021 and into 2022. President Biden’s grand infrastructure spending plan, even if approved later this year, will not be a game changer for China’s exports or economy. The strength in the USD may intensify in the near term, and Chinese policymakers will be happy to allow the RMB to depreciate mildly. Stay underweight Chinese stocks. Feature Last week’s China’s producer price index (PPI) was more elevated than the market expected. However, it does not warrant a policy response, given that the increase was mostly driven by supply constraints rather than an overheating domestic economy. Chinese manufacturers have had a tough time passing on mounting input prices to customers, which raises the question about how profit margins will be maintained. For exporters, the answer may be a combination of increasing export prices in USD terms and depreciating the RMB.  The rate of growth in US demand for Chinese export goods may moderate in the second half of 2021 and into 2022 after a pandemic-driven boost in 2020. China’s economic growth and interest rate differentials with the US will continue to narrow in the rest of this year. We expect the RMB to face headwinds against the USD, at least in the next quarter or two. Meanwhile, global investors should continue to underweight Chinese stocks. The PBoC Will Not React To Supply-Side Price Pressures Chart 1Marchs Strong PPI Does Not Reflect An Overheating Domestic Economy Marchs Strong PPI Does Not Reflect An Overheating Domestic Economy Marchs Strong PPI Does Not Reflect An Overheating Domestic Economy Despite above-expectation readings in China’s PPI, the domestic economy shows no signs of overheating. The upside pressure on producer prices reflects the impact of both the global rally in commodities and base effects (Chart 1). In March, strength in the PPI was also accentuated by seasonality due to a resumption in construction and real estate activity following the Chinese New Year holiday. While base effects and global supply bottlenecks will continue to buoy PPI prints throughout Q2, these effects are likely transitory and would not justify a policy response. At 0.4% year-over-year in March, core CPI remains significantly below the central bank’s 3% target and does not indicate any demand-side pressure. Instead, the inability for Chinese producers to pass on higher input prices to consumers highlights the relatively subdued state of domestic demand (Chart 1, bottom panel). Chart 2Current Macro Policy Works To Cap The Upsides In Both The Price And Quantity Of Money Current Macro Policy Works To Cap The Upsides In Both The Price And Quantity Of Money Current Macro Policy Works To Cap The Upsides In Both The Price And Quantity Of Money At this point there are little signs that rising producer prices are spilling over to consumer prices. We expect Chinese authorities to continue its current policy trajectory, which intends to keep a steady interbank rate while keeping money supply growth at or below the rate of nominal GDP expansion (Chart 2). China’s Deteriorating Terms Of Trade Chinese export prices climbed slightly in USD terms, but not by enough to offset the RMB’s relentless appreciation from the second half of last year, as indicated by falling export prices in RMB terms (Chart 3). A deteriorating terms of trade (ToT), defined as export prices relative to import costs, means that Chinese producers must export a greater number of units to purchase the same number of imports (Chart 4).  The declining ToT can be a powerful deflationary force for China’s manufacturing sector. Chart 3Chinese Export Prices Are Rising In USD Terms But Falling In Local Currency Terms Chinese Export Prices Are Rising In USD Terms But Falling In Local Currency Terms Chinese Export Prices Are Rising In USD Terms But Falling In Local Currency Terms Chart 4Terms Of Trade Have Been Falling Terms Of Trade Have Been Falling Terms Of Trade Have Been Falling Chart 5Chinese Output Prices Lead US Consumer Inflation By A Year Chinese Output Prices Lead US Consumer Inflation By A Year Chinese Output Prices Lead US Consumer Inflation By A Year While there are limited choices for China to improve its ToT, manufacturers could raise export prices in USD terms and “recycle” cost-push inflation back to the US. Chinese PPI normally leads US consumer inflation by 12 to 18 months (Chart 5). Hence, it is possible that the US will see import prices from China picking up more momentum by the middle of next year. The RMB’s performance is a key macro driver for manufacturing-related output prices. A depreciation in the RMB can be a meaningful reflationary force for manufacturers. There has been a clear negative correlation between the trade-weighted RMB and Chinese manufacturers' output prices and industrial profits, as shown in Chart 6. In this scenario, the USD will continue to appreciate against the RMB and possibly emerging market currencies, a headwind to global trade (Chart 7). Chart 6A Falling RMB Can Be Reflationary To Chinese Producers A Falling RMB Can Be Reflationary To Chinese Producers A Falling RMB Can Be Reflationary To Chinese Producers Chart 7A Stronger USD Will Be Headwinds For Global Trade A Stronger USD Will Be Headwinds For Global Trade A Stronger USD Will Be Headwinds For Global Trade Maintaining a strong RMB can partly mitigate the pain stemming from escalating commodity import prices.  However, in our view it is the least preferred option by policymakers. In previous cycles a rapidly strengthening RMB did not have a major impact on Chinese exporters' competitiveness, mainly because declines in commodities prices effectively offset a rising RMB (Chart 8 and Chart 9). Therefore, Chinese exporters did not need to boost prices in USD terms to maintain their profit margins. Chart 8RMB Appreciations Did Not Hurt Chinas Share In Global Trade RMB Appreciations Did Not Hurt Chinas Share In Global Trade RMB Appreciations Did Not Hurt Chinas Share In Global Trade Chart 9...Because Declines In Commodities Prices Were Able To Offset A Rising RMB ...Because Declines In Commodities Prices Were Able To Offset A Rising RMB ...Because Declines In Commodities Prices Were Able To Offset A Rising RMB Bottom Line: Chinese exporters can either raise prices and pass the inflation onto American customers, or the PBoC will allow further depreciation in the RMB to maintain Chinese producers’ competitiveness. Appreciating the RMB is the least preferred option. Don’t Count On A US Buying Spree  Market participants in China are pricing in large windfalls from the US$1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan and proposed US$2.4 trillion American Jobs Plan.1 A positive export tailwind in Q1 this year boosted China’s economic activity beyond what measures of domestic money and credit would have predicted, as shown in Chart 10. However, given the strongly positive relationship between the export sector and real investment in China, it is concerning that any deceleration in US demand for Chinese export goods would seriously challenge the sanguine view for China’s economy this year (Chart 11). Chart 10Export Strength Appears To Be Propping Up The LKI Export Strength Appears To Be Propping Up The LKI Export Strength Appears To Be Propping Up The LKI Chart 11China's Export Sector Is Highly Investment-Intensive From Deflation To Inflation … What’s Next? From Deflation To Inflation … What’s Next? Moreover, US demand for Chinese export goods is subject to several countervailing forces, at least in the second half of 2021: The USD currently benefits from widening real interest differentials and stronger US growth relative to the rest of the world. For the next quarter or two, persistent strength in the USD and US Treasury yields will be headwinds to global trade and may cause a temporary setback for the global manufacturing sector (Chart 7 on Page 4). Residential and business investment in the US may not regain much vigor despite large stimulus checks. Our colleagues at BCA US Investment Strategy expect US residential investment to match the long-run trend growth, but the increase will be largely offset by below-trend growth in non-residential investment. More working-from-home options will continue to drive demand for single-family homes in the suburbs and beyond. On the other hand, demand will suffer for office space in central business districts and dwellings in urban centers. Brick-and-mortar retail construction is also going to crater. Consumption for goods in the US may also see below-trend growth in the second half of 2021 and into 2022, whereas the service sector will benefit most from the coming recovery in US business and social activities. Table 1 shows that goods spending rose in 2020 despite an overall decline in consumption, because households dramatically shifted their consumption into goods from services. As such, 2020’s pandemic-driven dividend for Chinese exporters is likely to become a drag on tradeable goods exports to the US in 2021 and/or 2022. Table 1US Consumer Spending Gap Is Almost Entirely On The Services Side From Deflation To Inflation … What’s Next? From Deflation To Inflation … What’s Next? It is also important for investors to put the US$2.4 trillion infrastructure spending budget proposed in the American Jobs Plan into prospective. The US lags far behind China in infrastructure spending. In the past 10 years, US public infrastructure investment (federal and state combined) has declined to an average of about $450 billion.2 This compares with China’s US $1.9 trillion yearly spending on infrastructure (Chart 12). China currently consumes seven to eight times more industrial metals than the US (Chart 13). As such, even if the US infrastructure investment plan will be approved later this year, it is unlikely to be a game changer for global commodity prices or Chinese exports. Chart 12Infrastructure Spending, China Vs. The US From Deflation To Inflation … What’s Next? From Deflation To Inflation … What’s Next? Chart 13US Consumption Of Industrial Metals Is Too Small Relative To China From Deflation To Inflation … What’s Next? From Deflation To Inflation … What’s Next? The proposed US$1.2 trillion spending on the US nation’s roads, bridges, green spaces, water, electricity, and universal broadband will be spread over the next eight years.  The additional $150 billion per annum to the US public infrastructure investment will only boost the US spending from 24% to about 32% of China’s annual infrastructure investment. Furthermore, the fiscal multiplier effect from the extra public spending on investment from the US private sector and overall economy may not be as positive as the market has priced in, depending on the size of corporate tax hikes in the final bill. Bottom Line: After a pandemic-driven boost in 2020, growth in US imports from China will likely moderate in the second half of 2021 and into 2022. The proposed infrastructure spending plan in the US will benefit Chinese exports, but the magnitude of the windfall may be disappointing. Investment Implications As discussed in a previous report, rising US bond yields will have a muted effect on their Chinese counterparts. Tightened regulations on the real estate industry and a new round of environmental protection laws in China will continue to suppress the domestic credit demand.  As a result, interest rate differentials between China and the US will continue to narrow. The strength in the USD has not run its course and the RMB will face slight depreciation pressures in Q2 and possibly into Q3. A declining RMB will provide reflationary benefits to China’s industrial profits, but with about a six-month time lag. In the meantime, we recommend global investors to continue underweighting Chinese stocks (Chart 14A and 14B). Chart 14AContinue Underweighting Chinese Stocks Continue Underweighting Chinese Stocks Continue Underweighting Chinese Stocks Chart 14BContinue Underweighting Chinese Stocks Continue Underweighting Chinese Stocks Continue Underweighting Chinese Stocks   Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1According to the OECD, recent US stimulus will boost US GDP growth by almost 3 percentage points in the first full year (from 2021Q2 to 2022Q2). The knock-on effect from the stimulus on other economies is projected to be significant, including a half percentage point addition to China’s GDP during the same period. 2The Congressional Budget Office estimated that combined federal, state and local spending on infrastructure was (in 2019 dollars) $441 billion as of 2017. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights Duration: Treasury yields look fairly valued on several different valuation metrics and the yield curve discounts a much quicker pace of rate hikes than is currently signaled by the Fed’s “dot plot”. However, the economic data continue to beat expectations by a wide margin. This suggests that bond yields could overshoot their fair value in the near term. Maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration. Employment: The US employment boom is just getting started. Total employment is still 8.4 million below pre-pandemic levels, but 37% of missing jobs are from the Leisure & Hospitality sector where demand is about to surge. Fed: The US economy will reach the Fed’s definition of “maximum employment” in 2022. This will cause the Fed to lift rates before the end of 2022, an event that will be preceded by an announcement of asset purchase tapering either late this year or early next year. Feature Chart 1Price Pressures Building Price Pressures Building Price Pressures Building The past two weeks brought us a couple of interesting developments directly related to the Treasury market. First, long-dated Treasury yields declined somewhat, presumably because many investors concluded that the yield curve is already priced for the full extent of future Fed rate hikes. Second, we received further evidence – from March’s +916k employment report, the 12% year-over-year increase in producer prices and continued elevated readings from PMI Prices Paid indexes – that economic activity is recovering more quickly than even the most optimistic forecasters anticipated (Chart 1). These two opposing forces highlight a tension in the current outlook for US Treasury yields. Yields now look fairly valued on several different valuation metrics, a fact that justifies keeping bond portfolio duration close to benchmark. However, cyclical economic indicators are surging, a fact that suggests yields will keep rising in the near-term, causing them to overshoot fair value for a time. This week’s report looks at this tension between valuation indicators and cyclical economic indicators through the lens of our Checklist To Increase Portfolio Duration. While we think there are convincing arguments in favor of both “At Benchmark” and “Below Benchmark” portfolio duration stances on a 6-12 month investment horizon, we are deciding to stick with our recommended “Below Benchmark” stance for now, until the economic data are more in line with market expectations. Checking In With Our Checklist Back in February, following the big jump in bond yields, we unveiled a Checklist of several criteria that would cause us to increase our recommended portfolio duration stance from “Below Benchmark” to “At Benchmark”.1 As is shown in Table 1, the Checklist contains seven items that can be grouped into two categories: Valuation Indicators that compare the level of Treasury yields to some estimate of fair value Cyclical Indicators that look at whether trends in the economic data are consistent with rising or falling bond yields Table 1Checklist For Increasing Duration Overshoot Territory Overshoot Territory Valuation Indicators Chart 2Valuation Indicators Valuation Indicators Valuation Indicators As mentioned above, valuation indicators show that Treasury yields are roughly consistent with fair value, suggesting that a neutral duration stance is appropriate. First, consider the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield relative to survey estimates of the long-run neutral fed funds rate (Chart 2). Last week, survey estimates from the New York Fed’s Survey of Market Participants and Survey of Primary Dealers were updated to March, and while there was some upward movement in the estimated long-run neutral rate ranges, the median estimates in both surveys were unchanged from January. The result is that the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield remains near the top-end of its survey-derived fair value band (Chart 2, top 2 panels). Second, the same two surveys also ask respondents to forecast what the average fed funds rate will be over the next 10 years. We can derive an estimate of the 10-year term premium by subtracting those forecasts from the 10-year spot Treasury yield (Chart 2, bottom 2 panels). In this case, respondents did raise their average fed funds rate forecasts and our term premium estimates were revised down as a result. While both term premium estimates are now below their 2018 peaks, they remain elevated compared to recent historical averages. Third, we turn to the front-end of the yield curve to look at what sort of Fed rate hike path is priced into the market (Chart 3). We see that the market is currently priced for Fed liftoff in December 2022 and for a total of four 25 basis point rate hikes by the end of 2023. Only a handful of FOMC participants forecasted a similar path at the March Fed meeting. Chart 3Market Priced For December 2022 Liftoff Market Priced For December 2022 Liftoff Market Priced For December 2022 Liftoff We discussed the wide divergence between market expectations and the Fed’s “dot plot” in a recent report.2 Essentially, the divergence boils down to the Fed focusing more on actual economic outcomes while the market takes its cues from economic forecasts. We think there’s good reason for optimism about the economy, and therefore expect that the Fed will revise its interest rate forecasts higher in the coming months as the “hard” economic data improve. However, we should point out that respondents to the New York Fed’s Survey of Primary Dealers and Survey of Market Participants also have much more benign interest rate forecasts than the market, and respondents to those surveys do not share the Fed’s bias toward actual economic outcomes. Table 2 shows that the average respondent to the Survey of Market Participants only sees a 35% chance that the Fed will lift rates before the end of 2022 and the Survey of Primary Dealers displays a similar result. Table 2Odds Of A Fed Rate Hike By End Of Year Overshoot Territory Overshoot Territory The wide gap between rate hike expectations embedded in the yield curve and forecasts from both the FOMC and the New York Fed’s surveys suggests that Treasury yields are at least fairly valued, and perhaps too high. However, the most important question is whether the market’s rate hike expectations look lofty compared to our own forecast. As is explained in the below section (titled “The Employment Boom Is Just Getting Started”), we think that the jobs market will be strong enough for the Fed to lift rates before the end of 2022 and that the market’s anticipated rate hike path looks reasonable. However, even this view is only consistent with a neutral stance toward portfolio duration. Chart 4Higher Inflation Is Priced In Higher Inflation Is Priced In Higher Inflation Is Priced In For our final valuation indicator we focus specifically on the outlook for inflation compared to what is already priced into the forward CPI swap curve (Chart 4). The forward CPI swap curve is priced for headline CPI inflation to rise to 2.7% by May 2022 before falling back down only slightly. In reality, year-over-year headline CPI will probably spike to even higher levels during the next two months but will then recede more quickly. We think it’s reasonable to expect headline CPI inflation to be between 2.4% and 2.5% in 2022, a range consistent with the Fed’s 2% PCE target, but the forward CPI swap curve reveals that this outcome is already priced. All in all, the message from the valuation indicators in our Checklist is that a robust economic recovery is already reflected in market prices. Thus, even with our optimistic economic outlook, Treasury yields look fairly valued, consistent with an “At Benchmark” portfolio duration stance.  Cyclical Indicators While valuation indicators perform well over longer time horizons, they are notoriously bad at pinpointing market turning points. It’s for this reason that we augment our Checklist with cyclical economic indicators, specifically high-frequency cyclical economic indicators that correlate tightly with bond yields. First, we look at the ratio between the CRB Raw Industrials commodity price index and gold (Chart 5). The CRB index is a good proxy for global economic growth and gold is inversely correlated with the stance of Federal Reserve policy – gold falls when policy is perceived to be getting more restrictive and rises when policy is perceived to be easing. This ratio has shown little evidence of rolling over and further gains are likely as the economy emerges from the pandemic. We also look at other high-frequency global growth indicators like the relative performance between cyclical and defensive equities and the performance of Emerging Market currencies (Chart 5, panels 2 & 3). The trend of cyclical equity sector outperformance continues while EM currencies have shown some tentative signs of weakness. The US dollar is one particularly important indicator for bond yields. As US yields rise relative to yields in the rest of the world it makes the US bond market a more attractive destination for foreign investors. When US yields are attractive enough, these foreign inflows can stop them from rising. One good indication that US yields are sufficiently high to attract a large amount of foreign interest is when investor sentiment toward the dollar turns bullish. For now, the survey of dollar sentiment we track shows that investors are still bearish on the US dollar (Chart 5, bottom panel). Bearish dollar sentiment supports further increases in bond yields. Chart 5Cyclical Indicators Cyclical Indicators Cyclical Indicators Chart 6Data Surprises Still Positive Data Surprises Still Positive Data Surprises Still Positive Finally, we track the US Economic Surprise Index as an excellent summary indicator of the US data flow relative to market expectations. The index also correlates tightly with changes in bond yields (Chart 6). Though the index has fallen significantly from the absurd highs seen late last year, it is still elevated compared to typical historical levels. In general, bond yields tend to rise when the economic data are beating expectations, as indicated by a positive Surprise Index. All in all, we see that the cyclical indicators in our Checklist are sending a very different signal than the valuation indicators. This suggests a high probability that yields could overshoot fair value in the near term. Bottom Line: Treasury yields look fairly valued on several different valuation metrics and the yield curve discounts a much quicker pace of rate hikes than is currently signaled by the Fed’s “dot plot”. However, the economic data continue to beat expectations by a wide margin. This suggests that bond yields could overshoot their fair value in the near term. Maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration. The Employment Boom Is Just Getting Started Chart 7Defining "Maximum Employment" Defining "Maximum Employment" Defining "Maximum Employment" The Fed has conditioned the first rate hike of the cycle on both (i) 12-month PCE inflation being at or above 2% and (ii) the labor market being at “maximum employment”. As we’ve previously written, we see strong odds that the inflation trigger will be met in time for a 2022 rate hike.3 This week, we assess the likelihood that “maximum employment” will be reached in time for the Fed to lift rates next year. Fed communications have made it clear that the FOMC’s definition of “maximum employment” is equivalent to an environment where the unemployment rate is between 3.5% and 4.5% - the range of FOMC participants’ NAIRU estimates – and the labor force participation rate has made a more-or-less complete recovery to pre-pandemic levels (Chart 7). Following March’s blockbuster employment report, we update our calculations of the average monthly nonfarm payroll growth that must occur to hit “maximum employment” by different future dates (Tables 3A-3C). Table 3AAverage Monthly Nonfarm Payroll Growth Required For The Unemployment Rate To Reach 4.5% By The Given Date Overshoot Territory Overshoot Territory Table 3BAverage Monthly Nonfarm Payroll Growth Required For The Unemployment Rate To Reach 4% By The Given Date Overshoot Territory Overshoot Territory Table 3CAverage Monthly Nonfarm Payroll Growth Required For The Unemployment Rate To Reach 3.5% By The Given Date Overshoot Territory Overshoot Territory For example, to reach the Fed’s definition of “maximum employment” by December 2022, nonfarm payroll growth must average between +410k and +487k per month between now and then. To reach “maximum employment” by the end of this year, payroll growth must average between +701k and +833k over the remaining nine months of 2021. It’s probably unrealistic to expect a return to “maximum employment” by the end of this year, but we do expect at least a couple more monthly payroll reports that are even stronger than last month’s +916k. Our optimism stems from the industry breakdown of the current jobs shortfall. Table 4 shows the change in overall nonfarm payrolls between February 2020 and March 2021. In total, we see that the US economy is missing 8.4 million jobs compared to pre-pandemic. We also see that 3.1 million (or 37%) of those jobs come from the Leisure & Hospitality sector. That sector is predominantly made up of restaurants and bars, two services where demand is about to ramp up significantly as COVID vaccination spreads across the US. A few months in a row of 1 million or more jobs added is highly likely in the near future. Table 4Employment By Industry Overshoot Territory Overshoot Territory Bottom Line: We see the boom in employment as just getting started and we expect that the US economy will reach the Fed’s definition of “maximum employment” in 2022. This will cause the Fed to lift rates before the end of 2022, an event that will be preceded by an announcement of asset purchase tapering either late this year or early next year.   Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 https://www.bcaresearch.com/webcasts/detail/387 2 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Fed Looks Backward While Markets Look Forward”, dated March 23, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Limit Rate Risk, Load Up On Credit”, dated March 16, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights The Swiss economy will benefit from the pickup in global growth. The recent weakness in the franc has been a welcome development for the Swiss National Bank, but technicals suggest a coiled spring rally in CHF is likely. However, as a low-beta currency, the Swiss franc will lag the upturn in other pro-cyclical currencies over the longer term. We remain long EUR/CHF as a tactical trade but maintain tight stops at 1.095. Long CHF/NZD and CHF/GBP positions look attractive at current levels. Similar to our short EUR/JPY position, this is an excellent portfolio hedge. Feature Chart I-1The Swiss Economy Is On The Mend The Swiss Economy Is On The Mend The Swiss Economy Is On The Mend The Swiss economy has recovered smartly. As of March, the manufacturing PMI was at 66.3, the highest since 2006. If past manufacturing sentiment is prologue, the Swiss economy is about to experience its biggest rebound in decades (Chart I-1). This will quell any deflationary fears about domestic conditions in Switzerland and begin to re-anchor inflation expectations upwards. This will also be a very welcome development for the SNB. The Swiss franc has been one of the worst performing currencies this year, but that might be about to change. For one, dollar sentiment has been reset with the rise in the DXY index this year. Second, the global economy is transitioning from disinflationary to a gentle tilt towards inflation. This will lift global prices, including import prices into Switzerland. Rising import prices will ease the need for the SNB to maintain emergency monetary settings. Finally, the weakness in the currency has eased financial conditions for Swiss concerns. The Reopening Trade Most economies are entering into a third wave of the Covid-19 pandemic and the Swiss economy is no exception. However, the Swiss authorities have been able to bring the number of new infections down to levels below the euro area in general and Sweden in particular. Vaccinations are progressing smoothly with almost 20% of the population inoculated as of today. This provides a coiled springboard to lift the Swiss economy into robust growth later this year. Switzerland is one of the most open economies in the G10. Exports of goods and services account for over 65% of Swiss GDP, much higher than the euro area (Chart I-2). The constituent of Swiss exports tends to be defensive (medical goods, gold, watches, jewelry) so the franc does not necessarily outperform in a global growth upswing, but definitely does better than the dollar which anchors a more closed economy. Inflation dynamics in Switzerland will be particularly beholden to improvement in the private sector. As we show in Chart I-1, employment should remain robust in the months ahead, which will support wages. Import prices in Switzerland are also about to catapult upwards, which will help lift the consumer price basket (Chart I-3). For a small, open economy like Switzerland, the exchange rate often dictates the trend in domestic inflation, and the weakness in the franc has been a beneficial cushion for good prices. The rise in global tradeable prices is also acting as a catalyst. For the first time in many years, the pendulum might be swinging towards a worry about inflation in SNB corridors. Chart I-2Switzerland Has A Huge Exposure To Trade Switzerland Has A Huge Exposure To Trade Switzerland Has A Huge Exposure To Trade Chart I-3Swiss Inflation Will Rise Swiss Inflation Will Rise Swiss Inflation Will Rise Particularly, a rise in Swiss inflation will lessen the need for the SNB to keep rates at the -0.75 level in place for over half a decade. It will also lessen to need for the SNB to fight against franc strength.  Global Developments In A CHF Context There are some additional tailwinds to a strong CHF in today’s context. Volatility has collapsed, with the VIX index well below 20. If one could predict with absolute certainty what will happen with global growth, equity prices, bond yields, or even Covid-19, then low volatility makes sense. However, in the current context of elevated valuations, high uncertainty and a precarious health landscape, it almost makes perfect sense that volatility should rise. The franc tends to do well in an environment where volatility is rising (Chart I-4). Chart I-4The Swiss Franc Tracks The VIX The Swiss Franc Tracks The VIX The Swiss Franc Tracks The VIX Chart I-5Long-Term Support On CHF/NZD Has Held Long-Term Support On CHF/NZD Has Held Long-Term Support On CHF/NZD Has Held In fact, from a broad picture perspective, a rotation from US growth outperformance to other parts of the globe that are also stimulating their domestic economies could be met with higher dollar volatility. This has historically been beneficial for the Swiss franc (Chart I-6). Ergo, being long the franc could constitute a “heads, I win; tails I do not lose too much” proposition. Rising global growth and a lower dollar will help the franc, but so will a rise in volatility. Chart I-6CHF/NZD Tracks Dollar Volatility CHF/NZD Tracks Dollar Volatility CHF/NZD Tracks Dollar Volatility Our Geopolitical Strategy team has also been recommending long Swiss franc positions since February as they believe the Biden administration faces several imminent and serious foreign policy tests, namely over Russia’s military buildup on the Ukraine border, China’s military pressure tactics against Taiwan, and Middle East tensions ahead of any revived US-Iran nuclear deal. They see a 60% chance of some kind of crisis – if not war – over the Taiwan Strait and any of these other issues could also motivate safe haven demand for the rest of this year.  With regard to CHF/GBP, an upside surprise for the Scottish National Party in the May 6 parliamentary election could also hurt the pound since it would herald a second Scots independence referendum in the not-too-distant future. Trading Dynamics As A Safe Haven Chart I-7CHF And The Copper/Gold Ratio CHF AND THE COPPER/GOLD RATIO CHF AND THE COPPER/GOLD RATIO Switzerland ticks off all the characteristics of a safe-haven currency. Its large net international investment position of over 100% of GDP generates huge income inflows. Meanwhile, rising productivity over the years has led to a structural surplus in its trading balance and a rising fair value for the currency. Consequently, the franc has tended to have an upward bias over the years, supercharged during periods of risk aversion. This makes the franc a useful constituent of any currency portfolio. More specifically, the franc has tracked the gold-to-copper ratio in recent years. Copper is a good barometer for global economic health while gold is a good proxy for the demand for safety. If the overarching theme is that complacency reigns across markets, a nudge towards safety will benefit flows into the franc (Chart I-7). The current interest-rate regime could also affect the franc-dollar relationship. Global yields have risen. To the extent that we are due for some reprieve, the franc will benefit, given its “low beta” status. Meanwhile, net portfolio flows into Switzerland suffered from the Trump tax cuts that pushed US affiliates in Switzerland to repatriate investments. President Biden’s tax reform will halt and/or reverse this process. SNB Action And Market Implications The past weakness in the franc has been a welcome development for the SNB. In fact, since the start of this year, Swiss central bankers have not had to ramp up asset purchases. Both the dollar and the euro have been relatively strong (Chart I-8). In other words, global dynamics have eased monetary conditions for the Swiss authorities. The latest Article IV report from the IMF also justifies the SNB’s monetary stance. Currency intervention was cited as a viable tool should the SNB do a policy review, especially given the potential inefficacies from QE due to the small bond market in Switzerland. Herein lies the key takeaway for the franc – while it could appreciate in an environment where the dollar resumes its downtrend, it will likely lag other pro cyclical currencies over the longer term. This is because the SNB will be loath to see the franc unanchor inflation expectations. We are long EUR/CHF on this basis, but are keeping tight stops at 1.095. Three key factors suggest this trade could still work well in the coming 12-18 months. Rising interest rates benefit EUR/CHF (Chart I-9). With interest rates in Switzerland well below other countries, the Swiss franc rapidly becomes a funding currency for carry trades. Carry trades, especially towards peripheral bonds in Europe hurt the franc. Chart I-8A Weaker Franc Is Doing The Heavy Lifting For The SNB A Weaker Franc Is Doing The Heavy Lifting For The SNB A Weaker Franc Is Doing The Heavy Lifting For The SNB Chart I-9EUR/CHF Tracks German ##br## Yields EUR/CHF Tracks German Yields EUR/CHF Tracks German Yields The Swiss trade balance has suffered in the face of a global slowdown. It will also lag the European rebound (Chart I-10). In a downturn, commoditized goods prices are the first to drop and recover, while more specialized goods prices eventually gain ground later. Swiss goods are not easily substitutable which is a benefit, but prices are also slower to adjust. Our models suggest the franc is still about 5% overvalued versus the euro. Over the history of the model, this has been a modest premium, but allows the euro to outperform the Swiss franc (Chart I-11). Chart I-10Structural Appreciation In The Swiss Franc Structural Appreciation In The Swiss Franc Structural Appreciation In The Swiss Franc Chart I-11EUR/CHF Is Still Cheap EUR/CHF Is Still Cheap EUR/CHF Is Still Cheap Economically, the SNB has to walk a fine line between a predominantly deflationary backdrop in Switzerland and a rising debt-to-GDP ratio that pins it among the highest in the G10 (Chart I-12). Too little stimulus and the economy runs the risk of entering a debt-deflation spiral, as inflation expectations are revised downwards. Too much stimulus and the result will be a build-up of imbalances, leading to an eventual bust. Chart I-12Lots Of Private Debt In Switzerland Lots Of Private Debt In Switzerland Lots Of Private Debt In Switzerland Today, the SNB is in a sweet spot. Almost every other G10 country is providing the fiscal and monetary stimulus necessary to lift Switzerland from its deflationary paradigm. Investment Conclusions Chart I-13Structural Appreciation In The Franc Still Possible Structural Appreciation In The Franc Still Possible Structural Appreciation In The Franc Still Possible Our long-term fair value models suggest the Swiss franc is currently cheap versus the dollar (Chart I-13). This makes it attractive from a strategic perspective. Usually, the Swiss franc tends to be more of a dormant currency, gently appreciating towards fair value but periodically interspersed with bouts of intense volatility. Interestingly, we may be entering such a riot point. The VIX is low and countries are reintroducing lockdowns, yet overall sentiment remains unequivocally bullish. Finally, Switzerland ticks off all the characteristics of a safe-haven currency. As such, while the dollar has benefited from its reserve status, the franc remains an appropriate hedge in any currency portfolio. In a nutshell, our recommendations are as follows: USD/CHF will stay under parity. EUR/CHF can hit 1.2. NZD/CHF is a sell in the short-term. So is GBP/CHF. The Scandinavian currencies will outperform the franc on a 12-18 month horizon.   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 US economic data has been spectacular this week: Starting with the jobs report, the US added 916K jobs in March versus a consensus of 660K jobs. The unemployment rate fell from 6.2% to 6% and wages increased by 4.2% year-on-year. The boost to domestic demand dented the trade balance. The deficit widened from $68.2bn to $71.1bn in February. The FOMC minutes were a non event for markets. The DXY index is giving back some of the gains it accumulated this year, rising over 1% this week. With the US 10-year yield now facing strong resistance near the 1.7% level, the case for a stronger USD is fading. As consensus forecasts coagulate towards a stronger USD, positioning has also been reset towards USD long positions auguring for some volatility in the months ahead. Report Links: Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears - March 19, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar? - February 19, 2021 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 Recent data from the euro area are mending: The Sentix investor index catapulted from 5 to 13.1 in April. The Eurozone remains the unsung hero in this recovery. PPI increased to 1.5% year-on-year in February from 0% last month. The euro rose by 1.2% against the dollar this week. To be clear, there are still stale euro longs among more fundamental holders of the currency. This suggests the flushing out of weak hands has more to go. However, the balance of evidence suggests euro area data could reward long positions later this year.  Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 Recent data from Japan has been improving: PMI indices remain under 50, but reflect a possible coiled-spring rebound underway. Consumer confidence rebounded from 33.8 to 36.1 in March. The Eco Watchers survey was also encouraging. Sentiment rebounded from 41.3 to 49 in March. The Japanese yen rose by 1.24% against the US dollar this week, and remains the strongest G10 currency in recent trading days. Falling yields have seen Japanese investors retreat from overseas markets such as the UK, pushing up the yen. Speculative positioning is also net yen bearish, which is constructive from a contrarian standpoint. Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 Recent data out of the UK have been positive: Car registrations are picking up smartly, suggesting durable demand might be returning to the UK. Registrations rose 11.5% year-on-year in March versus -35.5% the year before. The UK construction PMI hit a high of 61.7, the highest since 2014. The pound fell by almost 2% versus the euro this week. The violent correction in EURGBP might be a harbinger of the rotation brewing for both UK and US assets versus their global counterparts. Stay tuned. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 Recent data in Australia was robust: The RBA kept rates unchanged at 0.1%. Both the services and manufacturing PMIs remained at an expansionary 55.5 level. The Aussie rose by 0.4% this week. We like the AUD, and are long AUD/NZD as a trade. However, the outperformance of the US economy is also handsomely rewarding AUD/MXN shorts. Mexico benefits a lot more from a pick-up in the US economy than Australia. Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields & The Currency? - January 20, 2021 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 Recent data out of New Zealand have been positive: The ANZ commodity price index ticked up by 6.1% in March. ANZ Business confidence deteriorated in March. The activity outlook fell from 16.6 to 16.4 and confidence fell from -4.1 to -8.4. The New Zealand dollar rose by 60bps against the US dollar this week. New Zealand will start taking the back seat in the coming economic rotation as other economies play catch up. The improvement in kiwi terms of trade has been a boon for the currency, and will limit downside on NZD. However, shorting the NZD at the crosses remains an attractive proposition. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 There was scant data out of Canada this week: The Bloomberg Nanos confidence index continues to suggest that Canadian GDP will surprise to the upside. The index rose from 63.7 to 64.1 last week. Demand for Canadian goods remains robust. The trade surplus came in at C$1.04bn in February. The Ivey purchasing managers’ index catapulted to 72.9 from 60 in March. The Canadian dollar was flat against the US dollar this week. While this might come as a surprise, three reasons explain this performance. First, the loonie is one of the best-performing G10 currencies this year and some specter of rotation was in play this week. Second, the correction in oil prices hurt the loonie. Finally, should US economic optimism become more widespread, other currencies could benefit. Report Links: Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? - February 12, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 CHF Technicals 1 CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 CHF Technicals 2 CHF Technicals 2 There was scant data out of Switzerland this week: Sight deposits were relatively flat at CHF700bn last week. The Swiss Franc rose by 2% against the US dollar this week. This week’s piece is dedicated to the possibility that the franc has a coiled-spring rebound in the near term. Safe-haven currencies are now benefitting from the drop in yields, while the franc has underperformed other currencies this year. This is welcome news for the SNB.  We have been long EUR/CHF on this expectation, and recommend investors stick with this trade. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 There was scant data out of Norway this week: The March DNB manufacturing PMI came in at 56.1 from 57.5. Industrial production rose by 5.9% year-on-year versus expectations of a 1.5% increase. The NOK rose by 0.75% against the dollar this week. Norway has handled the Covid-19 crisis admirably and it is an added boon that oil prices, a key export and income valve for Norway, are rising smartly. This has prompted the Norges bank to rapidly bring forward rate hike expectations. This leaves little scope for the NOK to fall durably. We are long the Norwegian krone as a high-conviction bet against both the dollar and the euro. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 Swedish data releases were above expectations: The Swedbank manufacturing PMI came in at 63.7 in March versus expectations of 62.5. Industrial orders came in at 8.5% year-on-year versus expectations of 5.3% in February. The Swedish krona rose by 2% this week ranking it as the best performing G10 currency. Sweden needs to do a better job at containing the Covid-19 crisis, which will unlock tremendous value in the krona. As a positive, the global manufacturing cycle continues humming and will buffeting Swedish industrial production. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades