Inflation/Deflation
Highlights Are Markets Too Pessimistic On U.S. Growth & Inflation? What Is China’s Economic Pain Threshold To Trigger A Policy Response? Have Central Banks Become Less Concerned About Financial Markets? Feature Happy New Year! 2019 has started much like 2018 ended, with elevated global market volatility. The combination of more evidence of slowing global growth – fueled by spillovers from U.S.-China trade tensions – and central banks perceived to be overly hawkish has crushed investor sentiment. Money has flooded out of risk assets like equities and corporate debt and shifted into the traditional safe haven assets – government bonds, surplus currencies like the Japanese yen and even gold. U.S. equities and credit, which had been a refuge from the global market weakness for much of last year, have underperformed sharply as markets have moved to price in the global economic softness reaching U.S. shores. These market trends obviously run counter to our recommended positioning for overall portfolio duration (below benchmark) and credit exposure (neutral overall, favoring the U.S. over Europe and Emerging Markets). Yet we advise staying the course with our recommendations, as market pricing has become too pessimistic relative to likely global growth and inflation outcomes. The bulk of the recent decline in global bond yields has come from falling inflation expectations, which have been linked to the sharp fall in oil prices seen in the final months of 2018 (Chart of the Week). This is shown in Table 1, which presents the breakdown of the decline in the 10-year benchmark government bond yields for the major developed markets since the peak in U.S. Treasury yields back on November 8. Real yields have fallen by a more modest amount than inflation expectations in most countries, even with the pullback in cyclical indicators like the global PMI. Expected 2019 rate hikes are now fully priced out of money market curves, most notably in the U.S. Chart of the WeekSlowing Growth Is Not Why Yields Have Plunged
Slowing Growth Is Not Why Yields Have Plunged
Slowing Growth Is Not Why Yields Have Plunged
Table 1Decomposing 10-Year Yield Changes Since The November 2018 Peak
Three Big Questions To Start Off 2019
Three Big Questions To Start Off 2019
In our view, there are three vital questions regarding the recent market turbulence that must be answered before determining the appropriate global fixed income investment strategy over the next 6-12 months. The answers lead us to maintain our current recommendations on duration, country allocation and credit exposure, even with the recent market turbulence. 1) Are Markets Too Pessimistic On U.S. Growth & Inflation? The December reading for the U.S. ISM Manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) released last week showed the largest single month deceleration since 2008 (Chart 2). All the main subcomponents of the ISM index fell, including the New Orders and Export indices which are now close to falling below the 50 threshold (Chart 3). Coming on the heels of China’s PMI dipping below 50, markets became more worried that the mighty U.S. economy was being dragged down to the weaker pace of growth seen outside the U.S. Chart 2Decomposing 10-Year Yield Changes Since The November 2018 Peak
Decomposing 10-Year Yield Changes Since The November 2018 Peak
Decomposing 10-Year Yield Changes Since The November 2018 Peak
Chart 3U.S. ISM Overstating U.S. Economic Weakness
U.S. ISM Overstating U.S. Economic Weakness
U.S. ISM Overstating U.S. Economic Weakness
Yet when looking a broader array of U.S. indicators, the domestic economy still appears to be in good shape, albeit with some lost growth momentum. Consumer confidence remains solid, employment growth is accelerating, household incomes are growing at a faster pace and the personal savings rate remains elevated – all of which provide support for a faster pace of consumer spending (third panel). At the same time, the U.S. Conference Board leading economic indicator is still pointing to a healthy above-trend pace of GDP growth in 2019. U.S. Treasury yields have fallen to levels consistent with the drift lower in the ISM index (top panel), with the market now discounting one full 25bp rate cut to occur within the next twelve months. That will not happen given the tightness of the U.S. labor market and persistence of underlying domestic inflation pressures. The robust December gain reported in last Friday’s U.S. Payrolls report (+312k) may have surprised the markets, but our U.S. Employment Growth model had been signaling a faster pace of job growth for the past several months (Chart 4). The year-over-year growth in Average Hourly Earnings rose to 3.2%, the highest level in nearly a decade. With the overall unemployment still at a historically low 3.9% as labor demand is increasing, wages are likely to remain under upward pressure in the next 6-12 months. Chart 4U.S. Employment & Wages Are Accelerating
U.S. Employment & Wages Are Accelerating
U.S. Employment & Wages Are Accelerating
Given this backdrop of economic growth that is likely to remain above-trend throughout 2019, it will be difficult to generate a sustained downturn in U.S. inflation this year, even given the lagged impact of the strong U.S. dollar and lower oil prices. While some decline in headline inflation measures is inevitable in the coming months given the rapid pace and magnitude of the 2018 oil plunge, BCA’s Commodity & Energy Strategy team continues to see a positive demand/supply balance helping push oil prices back towards the $80/bbl level in 2019.1 That would ensure that any decline in headline U.S. inflation would be short in duration, and of far less magnitude than the move that occurred after the 2014/15 oil plunge given the more robust domestic inflation backdrop (Chart 5). Chart 5This Is NOT A Repeat Of the 2015/16 Deflation Scare
This Is NOT A Repeat Of the 2015/16 Deflation Scare
This Is NOT A Repeat Of the 2015/16 Deflation Scare
A sober assessment of the U.S. economic and inflation data leads us to conclude that U.S. interest rate markets have swung too far to the dovish side. The inflation expectations component of U.S. Treasury yields is now too low, and the Fed rate cut that is now discounted in money markets will not materialize. Rate hikes are the more likely outcome, the repricing of which will put renewed upward pressure on Treasury yields. 2) What Is China’s Economic Pain Threshold To Trigger A Policy Response? Of the potential catalysts that could turn the current investor pessimism into optimism, signs of improving Chinese growth would likely top the list. China’s economy has lost considerable momentum, with year-over-year real GDP growth slowing to 6.5% in the third quarter of last year and higher frequency data showing a further deceleration in the fourth quarter. The profit warning issued by Apple last week, prompted by an unexpectedly sharp slowing of Chinese mobile phone demand, is a sign that Chinese consumer spending may be faltering. There are several causes for the growth slump, both domestic and foreign. Chinese authorities have been clamping down on domestic leverage given elevated private debt levels, while also taking action to reduce domestic pollution levels – policies that all have helped dampen industrial activity. More recently, and more importantly, the U.S.-China tariff war has started to have a real economic impact on the economy through slowing trade activity and diminished business confidence. Given the Chinese government’s perpetual interest in maintaining domestic stability by limiting any cyclical increases in unemployment, the incentive is there for policymakers to provide renewed stimulus to put a floor under economic growth. The last such boost came in 2015/16, when the Chinese government implemented an aggressive expansion of fiscal spending alongside monetary policy measures such as interest rate cuts, reductions in reserve requirement ratios and currency depreciation. That package was enough to cause a sharp reacceleration of the Chinese economy, but only after nominal GDP growth had fallen to an 16-year low of 6.4% at the end of 2015 (Chart 6). Chart 6Nominal China Growth Less Than 7.5% Should Trigger More Stimulus …
Nominal China Growth < 7.5% Should Trigger More Stimulus...
Nominal China Growth < 7.5% Should Trigger More Stimulus...
Policymakers will likely be forced into action again in 2019 if nominal GDP growth, which hit 9.6% in the third quarter of 2018, falls back below 7.5%. Forward-looking economic measures like our Li Keqiang leading indicator and the export orders component of China’s manufacturing PMI suggest that weaker growth outcome could occur by mid-2019. China’s policymakers are likely to announce some form of stimulus in the first half of the year help counteract the growth slump, which could help boost global investor confidence (especially if it is accompanied by a new trade agreement with the U.S.). While Chinese policymakers are now under more pressure to provide stimulus measures, the tools available to them are more limited than was the case in 2015/16 (Chart 7). Interest rate cuts could happen if growth continues to fall more rapidly than expected, but that would create a burst in private sector leverage that policymakers would seek to avoid. The currency could also be weakened further, but the USD/CNY exchange rate is already back to near the 7.0 level reached in the 2016 devaluation. Chart 7...Atlhough Policy Options Are More Limited Than 2016
...Atlhough Policy Options Are More Limited Than 2016
...Atlhough Policy Options Are More Limited Than 2016
That leaves additional cuts in the reserve requirement ratio and increases in fiscal spending as the two most likely means for China to stimulate its economy in the coming months. Yet even the fiscal channel has limits, given the much higher starting point for the budget deficit today (3.7% of GDP) than in 2015 (2%). So while the trigger for a China policy stimulus will likely be reached by mid-2019, the magnitude of the stimulus will be nowhere near as large as the 2015/16 measures. This will help stabilize global growth expectations, but likely not by enough to provide a major boost to global commodity prices or export demand from emerging market countries that are heavily dependent on China. This leads us to remain cautious on emerging market credit exposure, as we prefer to own U.S. corporate debt instead where the growth/profit outlook is better. 3) Have Central Banks Become Less Concerned About Financial Markets? A popular market narrative of late has been that the Fed “made a mistake” with its last rate hike in December. A similar argument was made for the ECB choosing the end its Asset Purchase Program last month with inflation still well short of its target and European growth decelerating. The idea that central banks had fallen “out of tune” with financial markets has spooked investors who fear that policymakers are carrying out a pre-conceived plan to normalize monetary policy without any regard to financial markets. We find this to be a highly dubious conclusion. Central bankers still care about financial markets – or, more accurately, financial conditions – but the hurdle for policymakers to respond to falling asset prices is higher now than in previous years because of a lack of spare economic capacity. Simply put, any tightening of financial conditions must be large enough to trigger a slowing of growth to a below-potential pace, resulting in rising unemployment and weaker inflation pressures. That has not been the case – yet – in the major developed economies. Financial conditions indices (FCIs) – which measure the combined impact of equity prices, credit spreads and currencies – typically lead economic growth by 2-3 quarters. The latest selloffs in equity and credit markets in the U.S. and Europe, while significant, have not been large enough to push FCIs for those regions to levels that would be consistent with below-trend growth, using the 2015/16 episode as a reference point (Chart 8). Chart 8Tightening Financial Conditions Not Signaling Below-Trend Growth...Yet
Tightening Financial Conditions Not Signaling Below-Trend Growth...Yet
Tightening Financial Conditions Not Signaling Below-Trend Growth...Yet
Financial conditions in the U.S. are much closer to that 2015/16 reference point than in Europe, where bond yields remain very depressed and the euro is still an undervalued currency. Yet the domestic U.S. economy is in a much better state than was the case in 2015/16, as discussed earlier in this report. It is highly likely that the level of the U.S. FCI that would trigger a move to below-trend U.S. growth is much different today than in 2015/16. In other words, it would take a bigger widening of U.S. corporate credit spreads, or a sharper selloff in U.S. equity values, to generate the same type of drag on U.S. growth relative to 2015/16. Yet U.S. interest rate markets have already responded as if there was no such change in the amount of FCI tightening that would result in a more dovish Fed policy. The U.S. money markets have gone from pricing three rate hikes in 2019 to one rate cut, while bond investors have largely neutralized their bearish Treasury duration positioning (Chart 9). Chart 9USTs Now Discounting Too Much Fed Dovishness
USTs Now Discounting Too Much Fed Dovishness
USTs Now Discounting Too Much Fed Dovishness
That swing in sentiment on the Fed’s next move flies in the face of the underlying health of the U.S. economic data, as well as our Fed Monitor which continues to signal the need for more Fed rate hikes (Chart 10). Our other Central Bank Monitors tell a similar story (outside of Australia), with the Monitors signaling no need for easier monetary policy but with money markets pricing out any probability of a rate hike over the next year. This leaves global government bond yields exposed to any sign that global growth momentum is stabilizing, particularly with the inflation expectations component of bond yields also vulnerable to a rebound in oil prices (Chart 11). Chart 10Bond Yields Are Now Exposed To A Repricing Of Rate Hikes
Bond Yields Are Now Exposed To A Repricing Of Rate Hikes
Bond Yields Are Now Exposed To A Repricing Of Rate Hikes
Chart 11Bond Yields Are Now Exposed To A Rebound In Oil Prices
Bond Yields Are Now Exposed To A Rebound In Oil Prices
Bond Yields Are Now Exposed To A Rebound In Oil Prices
Our conclusion is that financial conditions in the major economies have not yet tightened by enough to end the process of normalizing global monetary policy from the extraordinarily accommodative settings seen in recent years. In other words, bond yields have not yet peaked for this cycle. Robert Robis, CFA, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, “Oil Volatility Will Persist: 2019 Brent Forecast Lowered to $80/bbl”, dated January 3rd 2018, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
Three Big Questions To Start Off 2019
Three Big Questions To Start Off 2019
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Dear Client, We are sending you our last issue of the year, which contains a lighter fare than usual, highlighting 10 charts we find important. The first three charts tackle questions of Chinese growth, global activity and the outlook for the Federal Reserve. The other seven relate directly to the currency market. We will resume our regular publishing schedule on January 4th, 2019. The Foreign Exchange Strategy team would like to thank you for your continued readership and wish you and yours a joyful holiday season as well as a healthy, happy and prosperous 2019. Warm Regards, Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com Feature 1) Chinese Growth Outlook Since the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, Beijing has been focused on controlling debt growth. The Chinese leadership is worried that too much debt will lead to the dreaded middle-income trap, whereby a country’s development stalls once it achieves middle-income status. Because of Beijing’s laser focus on debt, Chinese growth, especially in the industrial sector, has slowed. Yet in the second half of 2018, Chinese policymakers have grown concerned by the deepening malaise in the domestic economy. Consequently, they have loosened policy, accelerating the issuance of local government bonds, letting the repo rate fall to 2.7% and cutting the reserve requirement ratio to 14.5%. Despite these measures, credit growth has continued to slow, hitting 16-year lows, and crucially, the shadow banking system is still contracting (Chart 1, left panel). While the supply of credit remains tepid, declining demand for credit is more concerning. China’s marginal propensity to save, as approximated by the gap between the growth of M2 and M1 money supply, is still rising. Historically, a rising marginal propensity to save leads to slowing industrial activity and slowing import growth (Chart 1, right panel). This implies that China will continue to weigh on global trade and global industrial activity. Thus, to turn growth around, Chinese policymakers will need to ease policy further. Chart 1AChinese Growth Will Slow Further (I)
Chinese Growth Will Slow Further (I)
Chinese Growth Will Slow Further (I)
Chart 1BChinese Growth Will Slow Further (II)
Chinese Growth Will Slow Further (II)
Chinese Growth Will Slow Further (II)
2) Global Growth And Inflation Outlook Already, the outlook for Chinese growth points to additional downside to global growth – something EM carry trades financed in yen are already sniffing out (Chart 2, left panel). The deterioration in the performance of those carry trades further amplifies the negative impulse emanating from China. If high-yielding EM currencies depreciate versus funding currencies like the yen, money is leaving those economies. Hence, EM liquidity conditions are tightening and financial conditions are deteriorating, reinforcing the leading property of EM carry trades vis-à-vis global industrial activity. Chart 2ASlowing Global Growth And Inflation (I)
Slowing Global Growth And Inflation (I)
Slowing Global Growth And Inflation (I)
Chart 2BSlowing Global Growth And Inflation (II)
Slowing Global Growth And Inflation (II)
Slowing Global Growth And Inflation (II)
Moreover, as telegraphed by the relative performance of EM bonds to EM equities, global inflation is set to peak soon, and then decelerate (Chart 2, right panel). This is a natural consequence of the deflationary impact of slowing Chinese growth and tightening EM liquidity conditions – the two most crucial factors lying behind the softness in global growth. Thus, financial markets are likely to remain volatile, at least until global policymakers have changed their tune enough to reverse global growth and inflation dynamics. 3) The Fed Is On Track To Hike More Than The Market Believes In its latest set of forecasts, the Federal Reserve may have been forced to adjust how much it will hike interest rates over the coming years. Nonetheless, by the end of 2020, the FOMC still anticipates having to increase interest rates by more than the -8 basis points currently priced into the futures curve. We are inclined to side with the Fed. U.S. growth may be slowing, but it will remain above trend in 2019. Additionally, the U.S. economy is most likely already at full employment, thus inflationary pressures are building. For the Fed, the labor market remains the fulcrum of potential inflation. As the left panel of Chart 3 shows, both the Atlanta Fed Wage Tracker and BLS average hourly earnings are growing at an accelerating pace, giving the Fed ammo to hike rates further. Moreover, the highly interest-sensitive housing sector has been a great source of concern for U.S. growth. However, now that this year’s surge in mortgage rates is being digested, mortgage applications are once again rebounding (Chart 3, right panel). This suggests that real estate activity will stabilize. Hence, even if the Fed pauses, it will still surprise markets to the upside over the coming 24 months. Chart 3AGood Reasons To Keep Hiking In 2019
Good Reasons To Keep Hiking In 2019
Good Reasons To Keep Hiking In 2019
Chart 3BGood Reasons To Keep Hiking In 2019
Good Reasons To Keep Hiking In 2019
Good Reasons To Keep Hiking In 2019
4) The Dollar Can Rally Even If U.S. Growth Falls Off A Cliff In our assessment, U.S. growth will slow next year, but will nonetheless remain above trend. However, if we are wrong and U.S. growth weakens much more, the dollar is unlikely to crater. As Chart 4 illustrates, periods of broad growth weakness – as measured by our U.S. economic diffusion index – often generate a strong – not weak – dollar. U.S. growth weakness often happens as global growth deteriorates. Since the U.S. economy exhibits a low beta to global industrial activity – the segment of the economy that contributes most to the variance in GDP growth – it follows that if a shock is global, the U.S. is likely to perform better than the rest of the world, leading to a strong dollar. Today, the downside risk is that the U.S. catches the cold that has hit the global economy. Hence, if U.S. growth has significantly more downside, it would suggest that economies outside the U.S. would suffer even more. The dollar should perform well in this environment. Chart 4The Dollar Doesn't Really Care If U.S. Growth Slows
The Dollar Doesn't Really Care If U.S. Growth Slows
The Dollar Doesn't Really Care If U.S. Growth Slows
5) The Dollar Versus Global Growth And Global Inflation The most important question to forecast the path of the dollar is where we stand in the global growth and inflation cycle. As Chart 5 shows, the dollar tends to perform most poorly early in the business cycle, when global growth is picking up but inflation remains muted (bottom-right quadrant), and late in the cycle when global growth has begun to weaken but inflation remains perky (top-left quadrant). The best time to hold the greenback is during global downturns, when both global growth and inflation are decelerating (bottom-left quadrant). With global industrial activity on a downtrend and inflation set to roll over soon, we are entering the bottom-left quadrant. As a result, the greenback should continue to rally on a trade-weighted basis, gaining most against the commodity currency complex. The yen may be the one currency bucking this trend, as in recent years it has become even more counter-cyclical than the dollar.
Chart 5
6) The Dollar Is A Momentum Currency One of the defining characteristics of the greenback is that from an investment-style perspective, it is a momentum currency. As the left panel of Chart 6 illustrates, among G-10 currencies, momentum continuation strategies work best for the USD. This is because of feedback loops present in the global economy.
Chart 6
Chart 6BMomentum Still Flashing A Greenlight For The Greenback (II)
Momentum Still Flashing A Greenlight For The Greenback (II)
Momentum Still Flashing A Greenlight For The Greenback (II)
Of the major economies, the U.S. is the least sensitive to global trade and global investment – a consequence of the low share of exports and manufacturing in GDP and employment. As a result, when global growth deteriorates, the U.S. economy experiences less of a slowdown and American rates of return decline less. Thus, money comes back into the U.S., lifting the dollar in the process. However, since there is USD 14-trillion in dollar-denominated foreign-currency debt, a rising dollar increases the cost of capital for these borrowers. The ensuing tightening in financial conditions hurts global growth, further enhancing the greenback’s appeal. The relationship goes in reverse once global growth improves. These powerful feedback loops explain why when the dollar strengthens, it remains stronger for longer than anyone anticipated, and vice versa when it weakens. Today, the momentum signal for the dollar remains positive (Chart 6, right panel). Along with slowing global growth, momentum was one of the key factors behind the dollar’s strength this year. If, as we expect, global inflation also weakens in the first half of 2019, the dollar will likely experience a beautiful first six months of the year. 7) Keep An Eye On Sino-U.S. Rate Differentials When one-year interest rate differentials between the U.S. and China widen, the DXY tends to strengthen (Chart 7, left panel). This is a reflection of global growth dynamics. U.S rates tend to rise relative to China when Chinese growth is decelerating. Since a slowing Chinese economy implies less intake of machinery and raw materials, a weaker China hurts Europe, Japan, EM and commodity producers a lot more than it affects the U.S. This lifts the dollar in the process. Moreover, so long as Chinese one-year interest rates keep falling versus the U.S., it also signals that any reflationary efforts by China have not yet had any impact on growth. Chart 7AU.S.-China Rate Differentials Point To A Stronger Dollar (I)
U.S.-China Rate Differentials Point To A Stronger Dollar (I)
U.S.-China Rate Differentials Point To A Stronger Dollar (I)
Chart 7BU.S.-China Rate Differentials Point To A Stronger Dollar (II)
U.S.-China Rate Differentials Point To A Stronger Dollar (II)
U.S.-China Rate Differentials Point To A Stronger Dollar (II)
This same rate differential between the U.S. and China also drives fluctuations in USD/CNY (Chart 7, right panel). Since falling relative Chinese rates are a symptom of a weaker Chinese economy, this relationship makes sense. Moreover, in recent years, more than against the dollar, Chinese policymakers have targeted the value of the CNY on a trade-weighted basis. Mechanically, if slowing Chinese growth flatters the trade-weighted dollar, it also forces USD/CNY up. This can further reinforce the strength in the broad trade-weighted dollar as a falling CNY is deflationary for the global economy. Because Chinese growth remains weak, we expect U.S. rates to continue to move higher vis-à-vis Chinese ones, lifting both the DXY and USD/CNY in the process. 8) EUR/USD: More Downside And A Complex Bottoming Process Ahead EUR/USD will suffer if global growth weakens and the dollar strengthens. On one hand, the European economy is much more sensitive to the Chinese and global industrial cycle than U.S. activity is. Our outlook for global growth therefore implies that the European Central Bank will find it difficult to raise rates in the fall of 2019, while the Fed is likely to surprise markets on the hawkish side. On the other hand, the simplest vehicle to bet on a strengthening dollar is to sell EUR/USD. Our fair-value model for EUR/USD currently pegs its equilibrium at 1.11 (Chart 8, left panel). However, EUR/USD never ends its downdrafts at its fair value – a consequence of its negative correlation with the dollar, a momentum currency that easily over- and under-shoots fair value. Thus, we expect the euro to find stability closer to 1.08. Chart 8AEUR/USD Will Bottom Later Next Year (I)
EUR/USD Will Bottom Later Next Year (I)
EUR/USD Will Bottom Later Next Year (I)
Chart 8BEUR/USD Will Bottom Later Next Year (II)
EUR/USD Will Bottom Later Next Year (II)
EUR/USD Will Bottom Later Next Year (II)
Moreover, inflationary dynamics do not suggest that EUR/USD is yet ripe for the taking. Since 2008, the gap between euro area and U.S. core CPI has been a reliable leading indicator for EUR/USD (Chart 8, right panel). In fact, this chart suggests that EUR/USD is more likely to bottom towards the second half of 2019; so as long as European inflation remains tepid, it will be hard for this currency to suddenly rebound and recoup the losses it has experienced this year. A complex bottom is more likely than a V-shaped one. 9) EUR/JPY: All About Bond Yields Even more so than USD/JPY, EUR/JPY remains beholden to trends in global bond yields (Chart 9). BCA’s view is that on a cyclical horizon of nine to 12 months, bond yields have upside. However, with global growth and inflation likely to decelerate further in the first half of 2019, safe haven assets could remain well bid over that timeframe. This implies the time to buy EUR/JPY is not now, and that a better buying opportunity will emerge once global growth stabilizes. Thus, we remain short EUR/JPY for the time being, a view we have held since the beginning of 2018. Chart 9Risks To Global Growth Equals EUR/JPY Downside
Risks To Global Growth Equals EUR/JPY Downside
Risks To Global Growth Equals EUR/JPY Downside
10) EUR/GBP Is At Risk At the current juncture, EUR/GBP is a binary bet: Either a hard Brexit comes to fruition, in which case U.K. real rates plummet and British inflation rises above 5%, creating a deeply pound-bearish environment. Alternatively, a soft Brexit (or even no Brexit) materializes, in which cases British real rates have upside, the Bank of England has a freer hand to combat inflationary pressures, and the pound can rally. With EUR/GBP currently trading toward the top of its historical distribution, we believe it is an attractive shorting opportunity (Chart 10). Marko Papic, BCA’s chief geopolitical strategist, assigns a less than 10% probability of a hard Brexit. As such, the pound is more likely to exist in a soft/no-Brexit world in 12 months than otherwise. This means the pound should be-revalued. Chart 10Sell EUR/GBP
Sell EUR/GBP
Sell EUR/GBP
We prefer playing the pound’s strength against the euro rather than the dollar, as we expect the dollar to rally further in the first half of 2019, so cable would be swimming against the tide. Moreover, when the dollar strengthens, historically EUR/GBP weakens, as the GBP has a lower beta to the dollar than the euro does. Hence, our dollar view is also consistent with a lower EUR/GBP. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights Asset allocation: Start 2019 with an overweight to industrial commodities versus equities. Await an oversold sell-off signal on the 65-day fractal dimension to go tactically overweight equities versus cash. Equities: Start 2019 with a cyclical equity sector tilt, but become more defensive as the global economy inevitably flips into a down-oscillation later in 2019. Start tactically overweight Italy’s MIB versus the Eurostoxx. Bonds: Initiate a bond yield convergence play: long 10-year Italian BTPs versus Spanish Bonos. Currencies: Start 2019 short EUR/JPY combined with long EUR/USD. There will be a great opportunity to buy the GBP, but not yet. Alternatives: A compelling buying opportunity for the cryptocurrencies Litecoin and Ethereum. Feature 2019 will present investors a mirror-image pattern to 2018. Through most of 2018, global growth was decelerating while inflation was accelerating. Now this configuration is flipping: global growth is rebounding while inflation is set to collapse. Growth To Rebound, Then Fade Global growth has entered an up-oscillation, for which the evidence is irrefutable: Industrial (non-oil) commodities are strongly outperforming equities, and rising even in absolute terms (Chart of the Week and Chart 2). Emerging markets are strongly outperforming developed markets (Chart 3). Financials are outperforming the broad equity market (Chart 4). Sweden’s manufacturing PMI – a bellwether of global activity – is rebounding strongly (Chart 5). Perhaps most importantly, China’s 6-month credit impulse has gone vertical (Chart 6). Chart of the WeekNon-Oil Commodities Are Strongly Outperforming Equities
Non-Oil Commodities Are Strongly Outperforming Equities
Non-Oil Commodities Are Strongly Outperforming Equities
Chart I-2Non-Oil Commodities Are Recovering In Absolute Terms Too
Non-Oil Commodities Are Recovering In Absolute Terms Too
Non-Oil Commodities Are Recovering In Absolute Terms Too
Chart I-3Emerging Markets Are Strongly Outperforming Developed Markets
Emerging Markets Are Strongly Outperforming Developed Markets
Emerging Markets Are Strongly Outperforming Developed Markets
Chart I-4Financials Are Outperforming
Financials Are Outperforming
Financials Are Outperforming
Chart I-5Sweden’s Manufacturing PMI Is Up Sharply
Sweden's Manufacturing PMI Is Up Sharply
Sweden's Manufacturing PMI Is Up Sharply
Chart I-6China’s 6-Month Credit Impulse Has Gone Vertical
China's 6-Month Credit Impulse Has Gone Vertical
China's 6-Month Credit Impulse Has Gone Vertical
Taken together, this is compelling evidence of a growth rebound, even if it is modest. Crucially, such up-oscillations tend to last at least six to eight months. Hence, equity sector performances, which always take their cue from global growth, will follow a mirror-image pattern in 2019 to that in 2018. Bottom Line: Start the year with an overweight to industrial commodities versus equities and a cyclical equity sector tilt, but prepare to fade to a more defensive tilt as the global economy inevitably flips into a down-oscillation later in 2019. Inflation Is The Dog That Will Not Bark There are not many things that are certain in the economy, but a racing certainty for early 2019 is that headline inflation will collapse. This is because the plunge in the crude oil price – 40 percent so far and getting worse by the day – is about to feed through into headline consumer price indexes (Chart 7 and Chart 8). Inevitably, it will seep through into core inflation too, via the impact on energy dependent prices such as transport costs. Chart I-7Headline Inflation Will Collapse In Europe
Headline Inflation Will Collapse In Europe
Headline Inflation Will Collapse In Europe
Chart I-8Headline Inflation Will Collapse In The U.S.
Headline Inflation Will Collapse In The U.S.
Headline Inflation Will Collapse In The U.S.
Coming at a time that central banks have professed a much greater reliance on “incoming data”, we can deduce that central banks will find it hard to tighten policy in the face of weaker headline and core inflation prints. Crucially though, the ECB and BoJ were not planning on tightening policy anyway, so the plunge in reported inflation will be much more impactful on the Fed. This makes the dollar vulnerable, leaving us a choice between the euro and yen as our preferred major currency. And on this head-to-head the yen still beats the euro given its lower political risk: Bottom Line: Start 2019 short EUR/JPY combined with long EUR/USD. Use ‘The Rule Of 4’ And Fractals To Predict Tipping-Points For Equities Investment strategists are obsessed with timing the next recession. The thinking is that by predicting the next recession they can predict the next equity bear market. The logic sounds fine, except that the causality rarely runs from economic downturns to financial market instabilities. The causality almost always runs the other way. Paul Volcker, arguably the greatest central banker of the modern era, correctly points out that the danger to the economy almost always comes from systemic financial disturbances. The last three downturns, in 2000, 2007 and 2011, all resulted from financial disturbances: the bursting of the dot com bubble, the gross mispricing of U.S. sub-prime mortgages, and the distortion of euro area sovereign debt markets respectively. Instead of timing the next recession to predict financial market instability, the correct approach is to flip the logic around and ask: is there a glaring source of financial instability that could cause the next recession? To which the answer is yes. The current glaring instability is the hyper-vulnerability of elevated risk-asset valuations to the global bond yield. Near the lower bound of bond yields, bond prices develop the same unattractive negative asymmetry as equities, removing the need for an equity risk premium, and justifying sharply higher equity valuations. But when the 10-year global bond yield rises back to around 2 percent – or equivalently when the sum of the 10-year U.S. T-bond, German bund and Japanese government bond approaches 4 percent ‘the rule of 4’ – the process viciously reverses: bond prices lose their negative asymmetry, re-requiring an equity risk premium and sharply lower equity valuations (Chart 9 and Chart 10). Chart I-9Equities Plunged In February After A Spike In Bond Yields
Equities Plunged In February After A Spike In Bond Yields
Equities Plunged In February After A Spike In Bond Yields
Chart I-10Equities Plunged In October After A Spike In Bond Yields
Equities Plunged In October After A Spike In Bond Yields
Equities Plunged In October After A Spike In Bond Yields
In 2019, just as in 2018, investors should use this dynamic to allocate tactically to equities versus cash as follows: 1. When the rule of 4 approaches 4 and the market’s 65-day fractal dimension signals an overbought rally, go underweight equities. 2. When the rule of 4 approaches 3 and the market’s 65-day fractal dimension signals an oversold sell-off, go overweight equities. 3. At all other times stay neutral. Bottom Line: With the rule of 4 now approaching 3, await an oversold sell-off signal on the 65-day fractal dimension to go tactically overweight equities versus cash. Britain Escalates EU Tensions, Italy De-Escalates The two points of political tension in Europe, the U.K. and Italy, have a common theme: brinkmanship with the EU. The Brexit tension remains high and may even intensify in early 2019 before a resolution. Hence, while 2019 will offer a great opportunity to buy the pound, it might require a little patience. In contrast, Italy is de-escalating its brinkmanship with Brussels over its budget deficit. Meanwhile the crux of Italy’s long-standing woes – its banking system – is also showing signs of healing. The proportion of bank loans that are non-performing is plummeting, while the solvency of the banking system continues to improve (Chart 11 and Chart 12). Chart I-11Italian Banks’ NPLs Are Plummeting…
Italian Banks' NPLs Are Plummeting...
Italian Banks' NPLs Are Plummeting...
Chart I-12…And Italian Banks’ Solvency Is Improving
...And Italian Banks' Solvency Is Improving
...And Italian Banks' Solvency Is Improving
Bottom Line: Initiate a bond yield convergence play: long 10-year Italian BTPs versus Spanish Bonos. And tactically overweight Italy’s MIB versus the Eurostoxx. Cryptocurrencies Will Rebound 60 Percent Cryptocurrencies are here to stay, because the underlying technology, the blockchain, is here to stay. Just as the internet’s major innovation was to decentralise and democratise information, the blockchain’s major innovation is to decentralise and democratise trust. Until now, counterparties without an established trust relationship could only transact through an intermediary who could provide the necessary trust overlay. But once each participant in a transaction trusts the blockchain itself, they no longer need to use a conventional intermediary, like a bank or a law firm. One major argument against the blockchain is that it is energy intensive and therefore prohibitively costly. But conventional intermediation also exacts a significant cost. Let’s say that the stock of excess savings that the banks intermediate to borrowers conservatively equals global GDP. If the risk-adjusted interest rate spread that banks charge for their intermediation role conservatively equals 1 percent, it means that this conventional intermediation is costing 1 percent of global GDP. Against this, global energy consumption equals roughly 5 percent of global GDP. So even if the blockchain consumed a fifth of the world’s energy, its cost might still be comparable to conventional intermediation. The plunge in cryptocurrencies during 2018 was exacerbated by the recent ‘hard fork’ in bitcoin protocol. But such hard forks are a necessary part of the evolutionary process – being analogous to a Darwinian mutation which eliminates the weakest protocols while allowing the strongest and fittest to thrive. In the latest fork, the battle was between those who want cryptocurrencies to remain a speculative asset with low long-term survival prospects, and those who want them to become a stable means of payment with high long-term survival prospects. A year ago almost to the day, we recommended selling bitcoin at a price of $18,000. Our rationale was that excessive herding required a price gap down to normalise liquidity. The subsequent decline in the price to $3500 today has rewarded that recommendation handsomely. But today, Litecoin and Ethereum are approaching an opposite tipping-point where the price may have to gap up to normalise liquidity (Chart 13 and Chart 14). Chart I-13Litecoin Is Oversold On A 65-Day Horizon
Litecoin Is Oversold On A 65-Day Horizon
Litecoin Is Oversold On A 65-Day Horizon
Chart I-14Litecoin Is Oversold On A 130-Day Horizon
Litecoin Is Oversold On A 130-Day Horizon
Litecoin Is Oversold On A 130-Day Horizon
Bottom Line: A compelling buying opportunity for the cryptocurrencies Litecoin and Ethereum. For a 50:50 basket, target a return of 60 percent. And on that positive note, I am signing off for the year. I do hope that you have enjoyed reading this year’s reports, but more importantly that you have found value in them. This publication’s philosophy is to think out of the box, independently and unconstrained, never to shirk from challenging the received wisdom, and ultimately to provide successful investment ideas. We promise to continue this way in 2019! It just remains for me to wish you a very happy holiday season and a prosperous new year. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model* As discussed in the main body of this report, this week’s recommended trade is to buy a 50:50 combination of Litecoin and Ethereum. Set a profit target of 60 percent with a symmetrical stop-loss. As also discussed in the main body of this report, remain tactically overweight Italy’s MIB versus the Eurostoxx. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment’s fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes.
Long MIB Vs. Euro Stoxx
Long MIB Vs. Euro Stoxx
* For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Asset Allocation Equity Regional and Country Allocation Equity Sector Allocation Bond and Interest Rate Allocation Currency and Other Allocation Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-2
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-3
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-4
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Interest Rate Chart II-5
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-6
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-7
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-8
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
HighlightsDuration: The Fed will probably signal a slowing of its +25 bps per quarter rate hike pace during the next few months. However, rate hikes will ramp up again after a brief pause, and the Fed will ultimately deliver more tightening than is currently priced. Maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration.Credit Spreads: Our checklist of global growth and monetary policy indicators does not yet signal a tactical buying opportunity in credit. A dovish message from the Fed tomorrow would bring us closer to meeting the criteria on our checklist.Fed Balance Sheet: It is likely that the Fed will continue running down its balance sheet throughout all of 2019. However, if it turns out that the amount of bank reserves demanded exceeds $1.1 trillion, it will force the Fed to halt the run-off next year. The timing will only become clear when the effective fed funds rate threatens to break above the upper-end of the Fed’s target band.FeatureThis will be the last U.S. Bond Strategy report of 2018. Publication will resume on January 8 with our Portfolio Allocation Summary for January 2019. Until then, we extend our best wishes for a wonderful holiday and a Happy New Year. With the stock market well off its highs and credit spreads in the midst of an uptrend, there is an uncommon amount of pressure on tomorrow’s FOMC meeting. For their part, interest rate curves have already moved to discount a substantial dovish shift in Fed policy. In fact, our 12-month fed funds discounter has fallen all the way down to 36 bps (Chart 1). Chart 1All Eyes On The Fed
All Eyes On The Fed
All Eyes On The Fed
With the market even more focused on the Fed than usual, there is a chance that a dovish signal tomorrow could spark a rally in risk assets. Conversely, a more hawkish Fed could prolong the market’s pain. Against that back-drop, in this week’s report we discuss what we are likely to hear from the Fed tomorrow and over the course of 2019.The Fed’s RoadmapIn our view, a recent speech from Fed Governor Lael Brainard gives a good indication of the Fed’s current thinking:1Our goal now is to sustain the expansion by maintaining the economy around full employment and inflation around target. The gradual path of increases in the federal funds rate has served us well by giving us time to assess the effects of policy as we have proceeded. That approach remains appropriate in the near term, although the policy path increasingly will depend on how the outlook evolves.This passage strongly suggests that the Fed is committed to delivering one more 25 basis point rate hike this week. But starting next year, the Fed is likely to abandon the predictable +25 bps per quarter rate hike pace that has been in place since December 2016, and shift to a regime in which rate hikes at any given meeting are much more dependent on the incoming economic and financial market data.What To Look For TomorrowFirst off, the Fed is very likely to deliver a rate hike tomorrow, a move that is widely anticipated. Failure to do so would constitute a major dovish surprise that would lead to a bounce in risk assets. We agree with the market that a rate hike tomorrow is highly probable.The DotsBeyond the actual policy move, the most important thing to watch will be the changes to FOMC participants’ forecasts for where the fed funds rate will be at the end of 2019, aka the 2019 dots. This is the easiest place to look to get a sense for how the recent market turmoil and global growth weakness is impacting the Fed’s thinking. At present, the median 2019 dot is between 3% and 3.25%. This suggests that, after lifting rates once more this week, the median Fed member anticipates three more rate hikes in 2019. We expect that the median 2019 dot will shift lower tomorrow, and that the magnitude of the shift will determine the reaction in financial markets. If the downward revision is considered sufficiently dovish, then expect risk assets to rally. If not, then risk assets could sell off.As always, it will be interesting to see whether Fed members revise their longer run rate expectations, i.e. their estimates of the neutral fed funds rate. However, we expect very little movement in neutral rate estimates tomorrow. In any case, the market will be much more focused on the expected policy path for 2019.The StatementIn tomorrow’s post-meeting statement, the following passage will likely be edited:The Committee expects that further gradual increases in the target range for the federal funds rate will be consistent with sustained expansion of economic activity, strong labor market conditions, and inflation near the Committee’s symmetric 2 percent objective over the medium term.The minutes from November’s FOMC meeting suggest that the committee is increasingly uncomfortable with the phrase “further gradual increases”. The Fed will probably remove this phrase from tomorrow’s statement and replace it with guidance that is more consistent with the above excerpt from Governor Brainard’s speech. In general, the Fed wants to signal that it is transitioning away from a predictable +25 bps per quarter rate hike pace and toward a reaction function that is much more data dependent.The Press ConferenceSince the beginning of his tenure, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell has preached a message of uncertainty and data dependence.2 These themes will be stressed again tomorrow and we expect his forward guidance will be consistent with what we already heard from Governor Brainard. As such, we view any revisions to the 2019 dots as having more potential to move markets than what Powell says in the press conference.Other BusinessAs was the case in June, tomorrow’s rate hike will result in a 25 bps shift higher in the target range for the fed funds rate, from 2%-2.25% to 2.25%-2.5%, but only a 20 bps increase in the interest rate paid on excess reserves (IOER). This means that the IOER will rise to 2.4%, 10 bps below the upper-end of the Fed’s target range.The smaller IOER increase will occur because the Fed is trying to pressure the effective fed funds rate back toward the middle of its target range. The funds rate has been creeping higher in recent months and the Fed is taking steps to limit its rise. This will continue to be an operational issue for the Fed next year, which we discuss in more detail below.Investment ImplicationsWe think tomorrow’s Fed meeting could be more important for credit spreads than for Treasury yields. In recent reports we discussed why the combination of weakening global growth and relatively hawkish Fed policy is causing credit spreads to widen, and suggested that a significant dovish turn from the Fed could prompt a recovery in global growth and a near-term rally in credit.Our checklist of global growth and monetary policy indicators (Charts 2A & Chart 2B) does not yet decisively signal a tactical buying opportunity in corporate credit, but we have seen the 12-month discounter fall and the gold price rally in recent weeks. A dovish message from the Fed tomorrow would bring us closer to meeting the criteria on our checklist, and thus closer to a near-term peak in spreads. Chart 2AChecklist For Peak Spreads: Global Growth
Checklist For Peak Spreads: Global Growth
Checklist For Peak Spreads: Global Growth
Chart 2BChecklist For Peak Spreads: Fed Capitulation
Checklist For Peak Spreads: Fed Capitulation
Checklist For Peak Spreads: Fed Capitulation
On the duration front, with the market already priced for essentially no further rate hikes in 2019 (after a rate hike tomorrow), we view any potential dovish move as already in the price. Since we expect the economic environment will support further rate hikes in 2019, we are inclined to maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration while we look for an opportunity to tactically buy credit.What To Expect In 2019More important for portfolios than what to expect from tomorrow’s Fed meeting is what to expect from the Fed over the course of next year. As we have already mentioned, the path for rate hikes will be much less predictable in 2019. An increased focus on the incoming data will replace the Fed’s current predilection for consistent quarterly rate hikes.The Fed will also hold a press conference after all eight FOMC meetings in 2019. Until now, press conferences have only occurred four times per year – in March, June, September and December – and the Fed has shown a reluctance to change interest rates at meetings without a scheduled press conference. Next year, with press conferences after every meeting, the Fed will have more flexibility to vary the pattern of hikes.But what will determine the number of rate hikes in 2019? We focus on three main areas.1) Financial ConditionsBy tightening policy, the Fed is trying to both prevent a future overshoot of its inflation target and tighten financial conditions at the margin. The Fed also increasingly recognizes the importance of financial conditions relative to inflation. As Governor Brainard noted in her recent speech:The last several times resource utilization approached levels similar to today, signs of overheating showed up in financial-sector imbalances rather than in accelerating inflation.But overheating is not the only concern. Excessive tightening in financial conditions could also force the Fed to adopt a more dovish policy stance. In fact, this is exactly what we see happening in the next few months. Financial conditions are already tightening (Chart 3), and will continue to do so until the Fed moderates its pace of rate hikes. At that point, financial conditions will probably ease, and that will allow the Fed to speed up the pace of hikes in the back half of 2019. Chart 3Financial Conditions Are Tightening
Financial Conditions Are Tightening
Financial Conditions Are Tightening
2) InflationCore inflation remains relatively close to the Fed’s target. While year-over-year core PCE fell back to 1.78% in October, year-over-year core and trimmed mean CPI came in at 2.24% and 2.22%, respectively, in November (Chart 4). We expect that inflation will move higher in 2019, but will remain relatively close to the Fed’s target. Base effects will pose a high hurdle for year-over-year inflation during the next few months, but inflationary pressures in the economy continue to rise. Survey data on firms’ input prices (Chart 4, panel 3) and planned selling prices (Chart 4, bottom panel) remain very strong. Chart 4Expect Higher Inflation In 2019
Expect Higher Inflation In 2019
Expect Higher Inflation In 2019
Long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates are at odds with the economy’s inflationary backdrop. They remain below levels that have historically been consistent with the Fed’s inflation target (Chart 4, panel 2). Relatively low TIPS breakeven rates give the Fed cover to slow the pace of rate hikes during the next few months. However, long-maturity breakevens can also rise quickly, and we anticipate that they will return to our target 2.3%-2.5% range in 2019.3) Recession SignalsIn last week’s Key Views for 2019 report, we discussed in detail why we think the Fed’s rate hike cycle will continue throughout 2019, and also why it will probably slow down during the next few months.3 In summary, we see tighter financial conditions causing the Fed to slow the pace of hikes in the near term, but we also doubt that interest rates will get high enough next year to send the U.S. economy into recession.That said, in our Key Views report we flagged several economic indicators to watch that could force us to change our view. Specifically, if the 12-month moving averages in housing starts and new home sales turn down, or if the unemployment rate rises, then it would suggest that a recession is closer than we currently anticipate.Concerning the unemployment rate, it will also be important to watch the trend in initial jobless claims (Chart 5). Rising claims tend to precede increases in the unemployment rate and claims have bounced during the past few weeks. We expect the bounce will prove temporary, but are monitoring it closely. Chart 5Rising Claims A Risk
Rising Claims A Risk
Rising Claims A Risk
Bottom Line: The Fed is likely to signal a slowing of its +25 bps per quarter rate hike pace during the next few months. This move will be in response to financial conditions that are tightening more quickly than is desirable. But after a pause, we see rate hikes resuming in the second half of 2019 and the Fed will ultimately deliver more rate hikes than are currently priced into the Treasury market.The Balance Sheet In 2019It is also possible that the Fed will have to take steps to deal with its balance sheet in 2019. Right now, the runoff of the balance sheet is proceeding quite smoothly, but as mentioned above, there is some concern that the effective fed funds rate has been creeping toward the upper-end of its target range.Table 1 shows the Fed’s balance sheet compared to just before it started to run down its assets. The table illustrates how the size of the Fed’s securities portfolio determines the amount of reserves supplied to the banking system. The concern is that for the Fed to maintain control of the funds rate using its current “floor system”, it needs to supply more reserves to the banking system than are demanded.4 If it fails to do so, then the fed funds rate will rise above the upper-end of its target range. Table 1A Simplified Federal Reserve Balance Sheet
The Fed In 2019
The Fed In 2019
A further complication is that the strict post-crisis regulatory regime makes it difficult to know what level of reserves are currently in demand. In essence, the Fed does not know when it will be time to stop shrinking its balance sheet. The plan appears to be that it will wait for signs that the effective fed funds rate is breaking above the upper-end of its target range, and will then decide that balance sheet run-off needs to stop.Last September, we projected that the Fed would continue to run down its balance sheet until bank reserves reached a steady state of $650 billion. Using that same assumption today, the Fed would shrink its portfolio until March 2021 and would still have combined Treasury and MBS holdings of $3 trillion at that time (Chart 6A). Chart 6AFed Balance Sheet: $650 Billion Steady-State Reserves
Fed Balance Sheet: $650 Billion Steady-State Reserves
Fed Balance Sheet: $650 Billion Steady-State Reserves
Chart 6BFed Balance Sheet: $1.1 Trillion Steady-State Reserves
Fed Balance Sheet: $1.1 Trillion Steady-State Reserves
Fed Balance Sheet: $1.1 Trillion Steady-State Reserves
However, the fact that the effective fed funds rate has mostly been near the upper-end of its target range this year has caused many market participants to revise their estimates for the steady state of bank reserves higher. In fact, we infer from responses to the New York Fed’s most recent Survey of Primary Dealers that most dealers think that the steady state for bank reserves is above $1 trillion.5If we use an assumption of $1.1 trillion for steady state bank reserves, then we project that the Fed will stop running down its portfolio in March 2020 and will have combined Treasury and MBS holdings of $3.3 trillion at that time (Chart 6B).Bottom Line: It is likely that the Fed will continue running down its balance sheet throughout all of 2019. However, if it turns out that the amount of bank reserves demanded exceeds $1.1 trillion, it will force the Fed to halt the run-off next year. The timing will only become clear when the effective fed funds rate threatens to break above the upper-end of the Fed’s target band. Ryan Swift, Vice PresidentU.S. Bond Strategyrswift@bcaresearch.comFootnotes1 https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/brainard20181207a.htm2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Powell Doctrine Emerges”, dated September 4, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, “2019 Key Views: Implications For U.S. Fixed Income”, dated December 11, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com4 For a detailed description of the floor system for controlling interest rates please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, “Cleaning Up After The 100-Year Flood”, dated June 10, 2014, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com5 The survey shows that the median dealer thought that a reserve balance of $1 trillion would cause IOER to trade 5.5 bps below the effective fed funds rate. In other words, reserve balances would be sufficiently scarce for the effective fed funds rate to rise relative to the rates controlled directly by the Fed. https://www.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/media/markets/survey/2018/nov-2018-spd-results.pdfFixed Income Sector PerformanceRecommended Portfolio Specification
… quick’s the word and sharp’s the action. Jack Aubrey1 Idiosyncratic supply-demand adjustments – some induced by head-spinning reversals of policy (e.g., the U.S. about-face on Iran oil export sanctions) – and uncertainty regarding monetary policy and trade will keep volatility in oil, metals and grains elevated in 2019. We remain overweight energy – particularly oil – expecting OPEC 2.0 to maintain production discipline, and for demand to remain resilient.2 We remain neutral base metals and precious metals, seeing the former relatively balanced, and the latter somewhat buoyant, even as the Fed continues its rates-normalization policy. We remain underweight ags, although weather-induced supply stress has reduced the global inventories some. While we continue to favor being long the energy-heavy S&P GSCI on a strategic basis, tactical positioning will continue to dominate commodity investing in 2019. Highlights Energy: Overweight. OPEC 2.0’s 1.2mm b/d of production cuts goes into effect in January vs. October levels, and should allow inventories to resume drawing. Base Metals: Neutral. Fundamentally, base metals are largely balanced, which is keeping us neutral going into 2019. Precious Metals: Neutral. Gold prices will remain sensitive to Fed policy and policy expectations. Palladium prices have soared as a growing physical deficit noted earlier widens.3 If China cuts sales taxes on autos again, demand could soar. Ags/Softs: Underweight. A strong USD will weigh on ag markets, particularly grains, next year. An agreement on contentious Sino – U.S. trade issues could re-open Chinese markets to U.S. exports. However, the arrest of the CFO of China’s Huawei Technologies in Canada for possible extradition to the U.S. complicates negotiations. Feature Going into 2019, commodity markets once again are sending conflicting signals. While we continue to favor exposure to commodities as an asset class by being long the energy-heavy S&P GSCI index, which fell 6% this year on the back of the collapse in crude oil prices and flattening of the forward curves in Brent and WTI. Nonetheless, we believe investors will continue to be rewarded by taking tactical exposure on an opportunistic basis. Volatility remains the watchword, particularly in 1H19, for the primary industrial commodities – oil and base metals. While idiosyncratic supply-demand adjustments will drive prices in each market, Fed policy also will contribute to volatility, as the U.S. central bank likely remains the only systemically important monetary authority following through on rates-normalization. In line with our House view, we expect the Fed to deliver its fourth rate hike of 2018 at its December meeting next week, and four additional hikes next year. On the back of Fed policy, we expect the broad trade-weighted USD to rise another 3-5% in 2019, following a 6% increase in 2018 (Chart of the Week). This will supress demand ex-U.S. for commodities priced in USD, by raising the USD cost of these commodities. Chart of the WeekStronger USD Pressures Commodity Demand
Stronger USD Pressures Commodity Demand
Stronger USD Pressures Commodity Demand
Below, we highlight the key themes we believe will dominate commodities in 2019. Oil Markets Still Re-Calibrating Fundamentals We continue to expect global oil demand to remain strong next year, despite the slight downgrading of global GDP growth earlier this year by the IMF. We expect EM import volumes – one of the key variables we track to proxy EM income levels – to hold up in 1H19, which supports our assessment commodity demand will grow, albeit at a slower rate than this year (Chart 2).4 Chart 2Slowing Trade Volumes Might Pre-sage Softer Commodity Demand
Slowing Trade Volumes Might Pre-sage Softer Commodity Demand
Slowing Trade Volumes Might Pre-sage Softer Commodity Demand
In 2H19, we see the volume of EM imports dipping y/y from higher levels, then recovering toward year-end. This indicates the all-important level of EM income – hence commodity demand – will remain resilient, but the rate of growth in incomes will slow. This is confirmed by the behavior of the Global Leading Economic Indicators we use to cross check our EM income expectation via import volumes (Chart 3). Chart 3Global Leading Economic Indicators Lead EM Import Volume Changes
Global Leading Economic Indicators Lead EM Import Volume Changes
Global Leading Economic Indicators Lead EM Import Volume Changes
There is a chance Sino – U.S. trade relations will thaw, which would remove a large uncertainty over the evolution of demand next year. This would be supportive for EM trade volumes generally, particularly imports. However, this is not a given, and we are not assuming any pick-up in demand in anticipation of such a development. We need to see concrete actions, followed by tangible trade improvement first. On the supply side, oil markets still are in the process of re-adjusting to an extraordinary policy reversal by the Trump administration on its Iranian oil-export sanctions last month – i.e., the last-minute granting of waivers to Iran’s largest oil importers. However, following OPEC 2.0’s decision last week to cut 1.2mm b/d of production to re-balance markets in 1H19, we continue to expect prices to recover. Indeed, going into the OPEC 2.0 meeting last week, we had already lowered our December 2018 production estimates for OPEC 2.0, and also reduced 2019 output estimates by ~ 1mm b/d, so the producer coalition’s action did not come as a surprise (Chart 4).5 Chart 4BCA's Global Oil Balances Anticipated OPEC 2.0 Cuts
BCA's Global Oil Balances Anticipated OPEC 2.0 Cuts
BCA's Global Oil Balances Anticipated OPEC 2.0 Cuts
In addition to the cuts by OPEC 2.0, the Alberta, Canada, government mandated production cuts, which will become effective January 1, 2019, to clear a persistent supply overhang that was decimating producers’ revenues in the province. We estimate there is ~ 200k b/d of trapped Alberta supply – i.e., excess production over takeaway capacity (pipeline and rail) – along with ~ 35mm bbls of accumulated excess production in storage the government intends to draw over the course of 2019 at a rate of ~ 96k b/d. This will lower overall OECD inventories, even if the Canadian barrels are transferred south. Net, in addition to the 1.2mm b/d of cuts from OPEC 2.0, the ~ 300k b/d coming from Canada next year will mean close to 1.5 mm b/d of production, or ~1.4mm b/d of actual supply when accounting for the inventory release, is being cut or curtailed from these two sources. We cannot, at this point, forecast over-compliance with the OPEC 2.0 accord, which was one of the signal features of the deal in 2017 and 1H18. The Trump administration’s waivers for Iran’s eight largest oil importers expire May 2019. We view it as highly unlikely the Trump administration will re-impose export sanctions in full on Iranian exports following the expiration of waivers, and fully expect they will be extended at least for 90 days. This is because oil fundamentals will remain tight next year, despite the massive de-bottlenecking of the Permian Basin in West Texas. While an additional 2mm b/d of new takeaway capacity will be added to the region, it will not be fully operational until 4Q19. We have ~ 300k b/d of additional supply coming out of the Permian after the pipeline expansions are done in 2H19. Even as pipeline capacity is filled, the U.S. still needs to significantly increase its deep-water oil-export capacity to get this crude to market.6 Bottom Line: We expect the oil market to re-balance in 1H19, as production falls by ~ 1.4mm b/d – the combination of OPEC 2.0 and Canadian production cuts – and consumption grows by a similar amount. The USD will continue to appreciate next year, which, at the margin, will temper demand growth and prices. Gold: Remaining Long Equity And Inflation Risks Trump Higher Rates in 2019 As the U.S. economic cycle matures and advances into its final innings, we continue to recommend holding gold in a diversified portfolio. U.S. inflationary pressure will surprise to the upside in 2019, per our House view, which will offset the effects of somewhat less accommodative U.S. monetary policy in the U.S. The October equity correction is a reminder that, when rising UST yields drag stocks down in late-cycle markets, gold works as an effective hedge against equity risks, and can outperform bonds. In fact, both of the corrections we saw in 2018 likely were caused by a sharp increase in bond yields. This convexity on the upside and downside is what makes gold our preferred portfolio hedge. Easy Monetary Policy + Rising Rate = Bullish Gold Prices Despite being negatively correlated with interest rates, gold tends to perform well when the fed funds rate is below r-star – known as the “natural rate of interest” – and is rising (Chart 5, panel 1).7 When this happens, policy rates are below the so-called natural interest rate consistent with a fully employed economy, which, all else equal, is inflationary. In these late-cycle environments, gold’s ability to hedge against inflation and equity risks dominate its price formation, while its correlation with U.S. real rates diminishes. Chart 5Gold Will Stay in Trading Range
Gold Will Stay in Trading Range
Gold Will Stay in Trading Range
In our view, gold will remain in an upward trading range until rates become restrictive enough to depress the inflation outlook (Chart 5, panel 2). Our U.S. strategists estimate the equilibrium fed funds rate is at ~ 3%, and project it will rise to ~ 3⅜% by end-2019. Therefore, despite our House view of four rate hikes next year, we expect the U.S. economy to remain in a below-r-star-and-rising phase for most of the year. Consistent with our House view, we believe U.S. inflation is likely to surprise to the upside next year, which will push gold prices higher (Chart 6, panel 1). The U.S. economy remains strong, particularly on the employment front. This means wage growth will work its way through inflation rates. Chart 6U.S. Inflation Likely to Surprise
U.S. Inflation Likely to Surprise
U.S. Inflation Likely to Surprise
Admittedly, this is not the consensus view. Investors are not worried about significantly higher inflation (Chart 6, panel 2). However, our Bond strategists argue that long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation is stuck below historical levels because of this abnormally low fear of elevated inflation (i.e. > 2.5%). Once inflation starts drifting higher, there will be an upward shift in investors’ inflation expectations. Any short-term dip in inflation on the back of lower oil prices will be transitory, given our view that oil prices will recover next year. If such a transitory dip, or concerns about a global growth slowdown spilling back into the U.S. causes the Fed to pause, we would add to our precious metal view position, given our assessment that this would raise the probability of an inflation overshoot. Lastly, gold prices recently have been depressed by an abnormally high correlation with the U.S. dollar (Table 1). We put this down to speculative positioning: Net speculative positions are stretched for both the U.S. dollar and gold, Table 1Gold Vs. USD Correlations Running Higher Than Normal
2019 Key Views: Policy-Induced Volatility Will Drive Markets
2019 Key Views: Policy-Induced Volatility Will Drive Markets
therefore, any change in expectations likely will be amplified by a reversal in positioning (Chart 7). In the medium-term, we expect the gold-dollar correlation to converge back to its average, which would mute the dollar’s impact on gold. This would, all else equal, raise inflation and equity risks factors. Chart 7Spec Positioning Stretched
Spec Positioning Stretched
Spec Positioning Stretched
Bottom Line: We continue to recommend gold as a portfolio hedge for investors, given its convexity – it outperforms during equity downturns, and participates on the upside (albeit not as much). Given our out-of-consensus House view for inflation, we believe gold also will provide a hedge against this risk. Palladium: China Tax Policy Could Lift Price Palladium soared to dizzying heights this year, on the back of an expanding physical deficit (Chart 8). Were it not for the loss of an automobile-tax break in China, which reduced the rate of growth in sales there to unchanged y/y, this deficit likely would have been considerably wider, inventories would have drawn even harder, and palladium prices would have been higher (Chart 9). Chart 8Palladium's Physical Deficit Expanding
Palladium's Physical Deficit Expanding
Palladium's Physical Deficit Expanding
Chart 9Palladium Inventories Collapse
Palladium Inventories Collapse
Palladium Inventories Collapse
Palladium’s demand is mainly driven by its use in catalytic converters for gasoline-powered cars, which dominate sales in the U.S. and China, the world’s two largest car markets (Chart 10). U.S. sales growth has leveled off this year (Chart 11), as has China’s. However, the China Automobile Dealers Association (CADA) is pressing policymakers to reduce the 10% auto sales tax by half, which could keep palladium demand elevated relative to supply, should it happen.8 Chart 10Auto Catalyst Demand Dominates Palladium
2019 Key Views: Policy-Induced Volatility Will Drive Markets
2019 Key Views: Policy-Induced Volatility Will Drive Markets
Chart 11China Car Sales Could Revive With Tax Cut
China Car Sales Could Revive With Tax Cut
China Car Sales Could Revive With Tax Cut
Russian producers, led by Norilsk Nickel, supply ~ 40% of the world’s palladium. Markets have been fearful U.S. sanctions could be imposed on Norilsk and other Russian producers throughout the year by the U.S., most recently in re Russia’s seizure of Ukrainian naval vessels in international waters, and over Russia’s response to the threatened withdraw from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty by the U.S., which could be keeping a risk premium firmly embedded in palladium prices.9 With platinum trading below $800/oz, or ~ 65% of palladium’s value, autocatalyst makers could begin to switch out their catalysts (Chart 12). Chart 12Platinum Could Fill Palladium Supply Gap
Platinum Could Fill Palladium Supply Gap
Platinum Could Fill Palladium Supply Gap
Base Metals: Trade Tensions, USD Cloud Outlook Base metals remain inextricably bound up with EM income growth. When EM incomes are growing, commodity demand – particularly for base metals – is growing, and vice versa. This typically shows up in EM GDP and import volume levels, which we use as explanatory variables in our base-metals price modeling (Chart 13). Chart 13Base Metals Demand Tied To EM Income, Trade Volumes
Base Metals Demand Tied To EM Income, Trade Volumes
Base Metals Demand Tied To EM Income, Trade Volumes
There are, in our view, two significant risks to EM income growth over the short and medium terms: Sino – U.S. trade disputes, which erupted earlier this year. They carry the risk of spreading globally and unwinding supply chains that have taken decades to develop between DM and EM economies;10 Fed monetary policy, which is immediately reflected in USD levels. A strong dollar raises the local-currency costs of commodities for consumers ex-U.S., and debt-servicing costs in EM economies. In addition, it lowers the local-currency costs of producing commodities ex-U.S., which incentivizes producers to raise production to capture this arbitrage, since they are paid in USD. The trade-war risk remains, despite the agreement between presidents Trump and Xi at the G20 in Buenos Aires to work on a trade deal. Even so, the actual level of tariffs imposed by both sides is trivial relative to the level of global trade, which is in excess of $20 trillion p.a. – ~$17 trillion for goods, $5 trillion for services, according to the WTO (Chart 14). Chart 14Sino – U.S. Tariffs Remain Trivial Relative to Overall Global Trade
2019 Key Views: Policy-Induced Volatility Will Drive Markets
2019 Key Views: Policy-Induced Volatility Will Drive Markets
Fed policy, on the other hand, is a threat of far greater moment to EM income growth, and, through this, import volumes, which we use to proxy that growth. The LMEX index, a gauge of base-metals prices traded on the LME, is extremely sensitive to changes in EM import volumes. This is not unexpected, given the income elasticity of trade for EM economies is greater than 1.0. Our modeling finds a 1% increase in EM import volumes translates to a 1.3% increase in the LMEX, which is consistent with the World Bank’s estimate of EM income elasticity of trade.11 Per our House view, we believe markets are too sanguine regarding the possibility of a Sino – U.S. trade deal. Such an event, should it occur, would immediately affect base metals markets, as China accounts for roughly half of base metals demand globally(Chart 15). Market participants’ default setting appears to be the U.S. and China will resolve their trade differences in short order – i.e., by the March 1, 2019, deadline agreed at the G20 meeting – resulting in a win-win for both countries and the world. We are hopeful this view is correct, but we would not take any positions in base metals in expectation of such an outcome. Instead, we think the substantive technological and strategic differences between the two countries, and underlying distrust, will result in a renewed escalation of tensions. Chart 15China Demand Remains Pivotal Base Metals Demand Could Wobble
China Demand Remains Pivotal Base Metals Demand Could Wobble
China Demand Remains Pivotal Base Metals Demand Could Wobble
Bottom Line: We remain neutral base metals going into 2019. Fundamentally, most of the metals in the LME index are in balance, or can get there in short order. The Fed’s rates-normalization policy continues to represent a larger short-term risk to EM income growth than Sino – U.S. trade tensions, but, longer term, we continue to expect tension between the world’s dominant economies to escalate. Ags: Trade Tensions, USD Cloud Outlook That’s not a typo in the sub-head above; ags – particularly soybeans – are dealing with the same headwinds bedeviling base metals. The agreement to work on a trade agreement reached at the G20 summit between the U.S. and China lifted grain markets, and supported the upward trend in grain and bean prices. All the same, Sino – U.S. trade relations are prone to go off the rails at any time. The Buenos Aries understanding, after all, only holds for 90 days. In addition to the hoped-for agreement to resolve trade-war issues, grain prices received support from the signing of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA). This helped align supply-demand fundamentals globally with prices. Focusing too much on China can obscure the fact that the USMCA, which replaces the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), eliminated major uncertainties over the fate of U.S. grain exports to Mexico, the second-largest destination for U.S grains, beans and cotton. In fact, Mexico accounts for 13% of all U.S. ag exports (Chart 16).12 Chart 16Trade Negotiations Hit American Farmers Hard
2019 Key Views: Policy-Induced Volatility Will Drive Markets
2019 Key Views: Policy-Induced Volatility Will Drive Markets
All the same, the Sino – U.S. trade war is hitting U.S. ags hard, particularly soybeans. The 25% tariff on China’s imports of U.S. grains created two parallel agriculture markets. In one market, China is scrambling to secure supplies, creating a deficit. In the other, U.S. farmers are struggling to market their produce overseas, suffering from storage shortages and in some cases left with no option but to leave their crops to rot. Close to 60% of U.S. bean exports historically went to China. The U.S. – China trade war caused a soybean shortage in Brazil, as demand from China for its crops soared, while a record 11% of American beans are projected to be left over after accounting for exports and domestic consumption (Chart 17). Chart 17Bean Shortage in Brazil, Supply Glut in the U.S.
Bean Shortage in Brazil, Supply Glut in the U.S.
Bean Shortage in Brazil, Supply Glut in the U.S.
A successful resolution to the U.S. – China trade tensions is unlikely to reverse the over-supply of beans globally (Chart 18). In fact, we expect beans stocks-to-use (STU) ratios to build next year, unlike global corn and wheat stocks (Chart 19). This will set a record for the soybean STU ratios, pushing them above 30%. Chart 18Expect Another Bean Surplus
Expect Another Bean Surplus
Expect Another Bean Surplus
Chart 19Bean STU Ratios Will Grow
Bean STU Ratios Will Grow
Bean STU Ratios Will Grow
As is the case for metals, the USD will weigh on ag markets, which will make U.S. exports more expensive than their foreign competition (Chart 20). As is the case for all of the commodities we cover, a strong dollar will weigh on prices at the margin. Chart 20A Strong USD Will Make U.S. Exports Expensive
A Strong USD Will Make U.S. Exports Expensive
A Strong USD Will Make U.S. Exports Expensive
Bottom Line: A thaw in the Sino – U.S. trade war should realign global grain markets, but will not keep soybeans from setting new global inventory records. A strong USD will be a headwind for ag markets, as it is for other commodity markets we cover. Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger, Senior Analyst Commodity & Energy Strategy HugoB@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 This is a fictional character in the movie Master and Commander, based on the novels of Patrick O’Brian. 2 OPEC 2.0 is the name we coined for the OPEC/non-OPEC coalition led by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and Russia. It was formed in November 2016 to manage oil production. 3 Please see “Silver, Platinum At Risk As Fed Tightens; Palladium Less So,” published by BCA Research’s Commodity & Energy Strategy February 15, 2018. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see “The Role of Major Emerging Markets in Global Commodity Demand,” published as a Special Focus in the IMF’s Global Economic Prospects in June 2018 for a discussion of income elasticities for oil, base metals and other commodities in large EM economies. 5 In our current forecast for 2019, we expect Brent to average $82/bbl next year, and for WTI to trade $6/bbl below that. Please see “All Fall Down: Vertigo In the Oil Market … Lowering 2019 Brent Forecast to $82/bbl,” published by BCA Research’s Commodity & Energy Strategy November 15, 2018. We will be updating our supply-demand balances and price forecast next week. 6 At 11.7mm b/d and growing, the U.S. is the largest crude oil producer in the world, having recently eclipsed Russia’s total crude and liquids production of 11.4mm b/d, and the U.S. EIA’s projected 2019 output of 11.6mm b/d. U.S. crude oil exports hit 3.2mm b/d for the week ended November 30, 2018, an all-time high, according to EIA data. It is worthwhile recalling crude oil exports were illegal until December 2015. U.S. product exports totalled 5.8mm b/d for the week ended November 30, and 6.3mm b/d the week before that. Total U.S. crude and product exports are running ~ 9mm b/d at present, which placed them just above total imports of crude and products – i.e., the U.S. became a net exporter of crude and products at the end of November. 7 The San Francisco Fed defines r-star as the inflation-adjusted “natural” rate of interest consistent with a fully employed economy, with inflation close to the Fed’s target. r-star is used to guide interest-rate policy consistent with long-term macro goals set by the Fed. Please see “R-star, Uncertainty, and Monetary Policy,” by Kevin J. Lansing, published in the FRBSF Economic Letter May 30, 2017. 8 Please see “Exclusive: Reverse gear - China car dealers push for tax cut as auto growth stalls,” published by reuters.com October 11, 2018. 9 Please see “Is Norilsk Nickel too big to sanction?” published by ft.com on April 19, 2018, and “U.S. to Tell Russia It Is Leaving Landmark I.N.F. Treaty,” published by nytimes.com October 19, 2018. 10 We discuss this in “Escalating Trade Disputes Pressuring Base Metals,” published July 12, 2018, in BCA Research’s Commodity & Energy Strategy. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 11 For a discussion of the World Bank’s trade elasticities, please see “Trade Wars, China Credit Policy Will Roil Global Copper Markets” published by BCA Research’s Commodity & Energy Strategy June 21, 2018. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 12 Canada makes up a smaller share of U.S. exports, at ~ 2%. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trade Recommendation Performance In 3Q18
2019 Key Views: Policy-Induced Volatility Will Drive Markets
2019 Key Views: Policy-Induced Volatility Will Drive Markets
Trades Closed in 2018 Summary of Trades Closed in 2017
2019 Key Views: Policy-Induced Volatility Will Drive Markets
2019 Key Views: Policy-Induced Volatility Will Drive Markets
Highlights The delay to the U.K. parliamentary vote on the current Brexit deal has edged up our assessed probability of no-deal to 20 percent. Our probability-weighted value of the GBP is still around 5 percent higher than today. Nevertheless, the optimal moment to buy the GBP lies ahead, as the Brexit catharsis cannot properly begin until the U.K. parliament expresses its will. Following the recent 35 percent plunge in the crude oil price, both headline and core inflation rates are very likely to fade in the coming months, but this fading is going to be less pronounced in Europe than in the United States. These relative inflation dynamics should give EUR/USD a leg up in 2019. But given the euro area’s connection with the U.K., await more clarity on Brexit before committing to EUR/USD. Chart of the WeekThe Pound Has Decoupled From British Public Opinion On Brexit
The Pound Has Decoupled From British Public Opinion On Brexit
The Pound Has Decoupled From British Public Opinion On Brexit
Feature Please note this report was written before the outcome of Conservative MPs vote of no confidence in Theresa May held on the evening of December 12. To assess the impact of Brexit on the financial markets, we are going to turn to a fundamental concept in physics – the concept of a ‘phase transition’. In physics, a phase transition is a disruptive tipping point at which a body transforms from one state into another. The classic example is when water transforms into ice. If the temperature drops from 10 degrees (Celsius) to a degree or so lower, you will experience no discernible difference in water. Even if the temperature drops to 2 degrees, the difference is only slight. But if the temperature drops to minus 2 degrees, water transforms into ice – and you will experience a huge difference as roads freeze over, pipes burst, and so on… Beware A Sudden Phase Transition We can draw a powerful analogy for how the various forms of Brexit would impact the British economy and financial markets. If the current membership of the EU equates to water at 10 degrees, a ‘Norway plus’ arrangement – European Economic Area (EEA) plus a customs union – might be a temperature only a degree or so lower, a barely noticeable difference. The Brexit deal negotiated by Theresa May (or an amended version of it) might be a temperature of 2 degrees, so a somewhat discernible change. But crashing out of the EU to WTO trading rules would equate to minus 2 degrees, or lower. This Brexit would be hard (Chart I-2). Its properties would be very different. Chart I-2Goods Still Dominate U.K. Exports
Goods Still Dominate U.K. Exports
Goods Still Dominate U.K. Exports
Also important is the speed of the phase transition. If winter arrives gradually, over the course of several weeks, we can generally prepare, and adapt our behaviour and habits. Thereby, we can even enjoy and thrive in a new climate. But if winter arrives overnight, it causes severe disruption and suffering.1 As Brexit reaches its denouement, the options for the future EU/U.K. relationship – full membership of the EU, a ‘Norway plus’ arrangement, the Brexit deal negotiated by Theresa May, or complete and overnight detachment – are each quite differentiated from the perspective of politics and law. For example, EEA plus a customs union is politically sub-optimal compared with the U.K.’s current full membership of the EU which includes the bonus of precious legal opt-outs. However, from the perspective of an investor in the markets, the first three types of arrangement are not really that different (Chart I-3). Only the last type – complete and overnight detachment from the EU – constitutes a severely disruptive phase transition. Chart I-3For Investors, Brexit Simplifies To A Binary Outcome
For Investors, Brexit Simplifies To A Binary Outcome
For Investors, Brexit Simplifies To A Binary Outcome
For Investors, Brexit Simplifies To A Binary Outcome We can simplify the various Brexit possibilities into a binary investment outcome: The complete and overnight detachment ‘no-deal’ outcome – in which GBP/EUR would collapse to below parity. All other outcomes – in which GBP/EUR would initially rally through 1.20, by liberating the BoE to remove its precautionary monetary policy (Chart I-4 and Chart I-5). Chart I-4U.K. Economic Fundamentals...
U.K. Economic Fundamentals...
U.K. Economic Fundamentals...
Chart I-5...Would Require Higher U.K. Interest Rates Absent The Risk Of A No-Deal Brexit
...Would Require Higher U.K. Interest Rates Absent The Risk Of A No-Deal Brexit
...Would Require Higher U.K. Interest Rates Absent The Risk Of A No-Deal Brexit
This makes the key question: what is the probability of no-deal? No-deal is the default outcome if a deal or extension to the Article 50 process is not agreed (by both sides) before March 29 2019. Therefore no-deal can happen either if: The U.K. parliament cannot coalesce a majority around a course of action that is also acceptable to the EU27. Or if: The Prime Minister and government – the executive branch – ignores the will of parliament and runs down the clock to no-deal regardless. Looking at the parliamentary arithmetic, it is conceivable that a majority could exist for either ‘Norway plus’, or a new referendum, or no confidence in the current government leading to a general election. As for the Prime Minister ignoring the will of parliament, this is legally possible though politically improbable. Nevertheless, the Article 50 clock is running down. The delay to the parliamentary vote on the current deal, possibly until January 21, has edged up our assessed probability of no-deal to 20%, slightly reducing our probability-weighted value of GBP/EUR to 1.175.2 On a one year horizon, this still offers respectable upside for the GBP versus the EUR or the USD (Chart of the Week). But the Brexit catharsis cannot properly begin until parliament gets a chance to express its will, meaning that the optimal moment to buy the pound still lies ahead. Explaining Central Banks’ Obsession With 2 Percent Inflation Back in 1979, Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky formalized a new branch of behavioural finance called Prospect Theory, which would ultimately win Kahneman the Nobel Prize for Economics. One of the key findings of Prospect Theory is that we are incapable of distinguishing the meaning of very small numbers. In the case of price inflation, we cannot really distinguish inflation rates between 0 percent and 2 percent. Anything within this range is indistinguishably perceived as ‘price stability’. Given that we cannot distinguish inflation rates between 0 percent and 2 percent, it is impossible for monetary policy to fine-tune our inflation expectations to a point-target such as 2 percent. And given that it is impossible to fine-tune our inflation expectations, it is also impossible to fine-tune inflation itself to a point-target such as 2 percent. Prospect Theory says it is much wiser to define price stability in terms of an inflation range such as 0-2 percent, because this is how we actually perceive price stability (Chart I-6). But despite this compelling Nobel Prize winning academic evidence, central banks remain obsessed with an inflation point-target, most commonly 2 percent. Why? Chart I-6Price Stability Means An Inflation Range Of 0-2 Percent, Not A Point-Target
Price Stability Means An Inflation Range Of 0-2 Percent, Not A Point-Target
Price Stability Means An Inflation Range Of 0-2 Percent, Not A Point-Target
The reason is that central banks have created a rod for their own back. Once a central bank has staked its credibility in terms of impossibly precise ‘data-dependency’ – such as an inflation point-target – it becomes extremely difficult to move the goalposts without risking accusations of bias, partiality and exceptionalism. Future generations will judge the inflation point-target as one of the monumental errors of early twenty-first century economic policy. But for the time-being this flawed policy will nonetheless govern central bank behaviour, and as investment strategists we must see it in that light. Following the recent 35 percent plunge in the crude oil price, both headline and core inflation rates are very likely to fade. But this fading is going to be less pronounced in Europe compared with the United States (Chart I-7 and Chart I-8). The main reason is that tax rates on fuel are much higher in Europe compared with the United States, and this attenuates the proportionate pass-through into European retail fuel prices from lower (or higher) oil prices. Chart I-7The Connection Between Falling Oil Inflation And Falling Core CPI Inflation Is Weak In Europe...
The Connection Between Falling Oil Inflation And Falling Core CPI Inflation Is Weak In Europe...
The Connection Between Falling Oil Inflation And Falling Core CPI Inflation Is Weak In Europe...
Chart I-8...But Strong In The U.S
...But Strong In The U.S
...But Strong In The U.S
The ECB has, in any case, committed to keep its policy rates on hold for most of 2019. By contrast, the Fed has been on a one hike per quarter tightening path. Hence, relative to this behaviour, the surprise could be that the Fed indicates an open-ended pause in its tightening. Even if this is discounted to some extent, weak prints on reported inflation in the coming months could still move the rates and currency markets. After a spectacular gain for the EUR in 2017, our stance turned broadly neutral in early 2018 by adding a short position in EUR/JPY to counterbalance a 50:50 long position in EUR/USD and SEK/USD. Overall, this has proved to be a successful strategy (Chart I-9). Chart I-9The Euro Consolidated In 2018. Another Leg-Up Is Likely In 2019
The Euro Consolidated In 2018. Another Leg-Up Is Likely In 2019
The Euro Consolidated In 2018. Another Leg-Up Is Likely In 2019
Looking ahead to the first half of 2019, the aforementioned relative inflation dynamics should give EUR/USD another leg up. But given the euro area’s connection with the U.K., await more clarity on Brexit before committing to EUR/USD. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model* This week, we have spotted an excellent tactical opportunity in EUR/NZD which is at a technical level that has signaled several previous tuning points. On this basis, the recommended trade is long EUR/NZD setting a profit target of 2.5% with a symmetrical stop-loss. In other trades, long EM versus DM achieved its profit target while long banks versus healthcare reached the end of its 65 day holding also in profit. Against this, long nickel versus palladium and short Australian telecoms versus insurance both reached their stop-losses. This leaves two open positions. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment’s fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-10
Long EUR/NZD
Long EUR/NZD
The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 This analogy can also apply to the arrival of spring. If the spring thaw arrives in one day, the consequent severe flooding can also cause terrible disruption and suffering. 2 1.225*0.8 + 0.98*0.2 Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Asset Allocation Equity Regional and Country Allocation Equity Sector Allocation Bond and Interest Rate Allocation Currency and Other Allocation Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Late-cycle pressures will keep pushing bond yields higher. Global growth will remain above trend in 2019, keeping unemployment rates low and preventing central banks from turning dovish. The unwind of crisis-era global monetary policies will continue. Slowing central bank asset purchases will worsen the supply/demand balance for government bonds, resulting in gentle upward pressure on yields via higher term premia. It is too early to worry about inverted yield curves. The time to be concerned about the recessionary implications of an inverted U.S. Treasury curve will come after the Fed has lifted real interest rates to above neutral (R*), which should occur in the latter half of 2019. Expect poor corporate bond returns from an aging credit cycle. While default risk is likely to stay benign through 2019, the greater risk for corporates could come from concerns over future credit downgrades, as well as diminished inflows in a “post-QE” world. Feature BCA’s annual Outlook report, outlining the main investment themes that will drive global asset markets in 2019, was sent to all clients in late November.1 In this Weekly Report, we discuss the four broad implications of those themes for global fixed income. In a follow-up report to be published next week, we will translate those themes into strategic investment recommendations and allocations within our model bond portfolio framework. Key View #1: Late-Cycle Inflation Pressures Will Keep Pushing Bond Yield Higher The main theme from last year’s BCA Outlook was that markets and policy would collide in 2018. This year’s Outlook concluded that those same frictions would persist in 2019, and for similar reasons. The global economy is likely to see another year of above trend growth, after the current deceleration phase bottoms out in the first half of the year. Tight labor markets will continue to force developed market central banks, who still strongly believe in the Phillips Curve relationship as the best way to forecast inflation, to move toward less dovish monetary policies, putting steady upward pressure on global bond yields. Our own Central Bank Monitors signal a need for tighter monetary policy (Chart of the Week), most notably in the U.S. That may sound strange given the recent softening of global growth momentum and plunge in oil prices. Yet economic survey data (like the global ZEW index) show a huge divergence between actual and expected growth, with real bond yields responding more to the former than the latter (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekStill A Bearish Bond Backdrop
Still A Bearish Bond Backdrop
Still A Bearish Bond Backdrop
Chart 2Global Yields Will Remain Resilient In 2019
Global Yields Will Remain Resilient In 2019
Global Yields Will Remain Resilient In 2019
The fear of a global economic downturn appears greater than the current reality - a trend likely magnified by the ongoing U.S.-China trade tensions and the sharp fall in oil prices which some are interpreting to be a sign of weaker demand. BCA’s commodity strategists view the oil decline as purely supply driven, and expect that a tighter demand/supply balance will result in oil prices recovering recent losses and rising smartly in 2019. This should lead to a rebound in the inflation expectations component of global bond yields later next year (bottom panel). As was argued in the 2019 BCA Outlook, the conditions for a deep pullback in global growth are not yet in place, especially in the U.S. where consumer fundamentals remain solid (strong income growth, booming net worth and a low debt service ratio). China, where growth is currently slowing, remains the biggest wild card for the world economy, especially given the degree to which emerging market economies are levered to Chinese growth. Yet the most likely outcome is that Chinese authorities will make enough policy adjustments to stabilize the economy in the first half of 2019, which will help put a floor under global growth. With over 80% of OECD economies now with an unemployment rate below estimates of “full employment”, the backdrop today is more conducive to sustained higher inflation than at any point since the 2008 Global Financial Crisis (Chart 3). This means that actual inflation readings are likely to be stickier to the upside, especially for domestically focused measures like wages and services which are accelerating in many countries. Chart 3Tight Labor Markets Will Prevent A Sharp Drop In Inflation
Tight Labor Markets Will Prevent A Sharp Drop In Inflation
Tight Labor Markets Will Prevent A Sharp Drop In Inflation
From the point of view of global central bankers, this means that as long as global growth does not slow sustainably below trend, then unemployment rates are unlikely to begin to rise. For policymakers who slavishly follow the Phillips Curve when forecasting inflation, that will make it difficult to shift to a more dovish policy bias, even if inflation remains below target for a time thanks to the recent pullback in oil prices (Chart 4). Chart 4Central Banks Who Believe In The Phillips Curve Can’t Turn Dovish
2019 Key Views: Normalization Is The "New Normal"
2019 Key Views: Normalization Is The "New Normal"
The degree of policy bias in 2019 will not be uniform, though, which was also the case in 2018. Central banks in countries with core inflation rates closer to policymaker targets (the U.S., Canada, the U.K. if the Brexit uncertainty fades, Sweden) will be more likely to raise rates than those where inflation is still well below target (Japan, the euro area, Australia). Relative government bond market performance over the course of 2019 should reflect those trends. U.S. Treasury yields will still most likely to see the largest increase from current levels as the Fed will lift rates over the full 2019 calendar by more than markets are currently discounting (only 33bps are currently priced in the U.S. Overnight Index Swap curve – a low hurdle to beat). Key View #2: The Unwind Of Crisis-Era Global Monetary Policies Will Continue Quantitative easing (QE) – central banks buying huge amounts of bonds to help keep yields low enough to sustain economic growth amid weak inflation expectations – has been a dominant feature of global bond markets since the 2009 recession. Policymakers have been forced to engage in such unusual activities to try and boost weak inflation expectations even after policy interest rates have been cut to 0% (and even lower in some cases). Now, a decade later, inflation expectations are more stable and much closer to central bank targets in most countries (except, as always, Japan). That means government bond returns are no longer negatively correlated to equity returns (Chart 5), reducing the value of bonds as a hedge to stocks. Chart 5Bonds Are A Less-Effective Hedge For Equities With More Stable Inflation
Bonds Are A Less-Effective Hedge For Equities With More Stable Inflation
Bonds Are A Less-Effective Hedge For Equities With More Stable Inflation
In the 2019 BCA Outlook, several other reasons were given as to why that correlation has been weakening, including a shift towards more consumption and less savings from aging populations entering their retirement years. The biggest change, however, has been the move from QE to “QT” (quantitative tightening) as central banks buy fewer bonds or, in the case of the U.S. Fed, actually letting bonds run of its massive balance sheet. The new year will bring an end to the net new buying phase of the European Central Bank (ECB) Asset Purchase Program. That represents a loss of €180 billion of liquidity into European bond markets compared to 2018 (twelve months at €15bn per month), both for government debt and investment grade corporates which are also part of the ECB’s program. This will come on top of reduced purchases from the Bank of Japan (BoJ), who will likely buy at a reduced ¥30 trillion pace in 2019 (down from around ¥40 trillion in 2018), and from the Fed who will let $600bn of maturing bonds run off its balance sheet ($360bn of which will be Treasuries). That slowing pace of central bank asset accumulation means that private investors must absorb an even greater supply of government bonds next year. The BCA Outlook estimated that the change in the supply of government bonds available to private investors would equal $1.2 trillion in 2019, a huge increase from the $400bn seen in 2018 (Chart 6). This will come at a time when new government bond issuance is set to increase once again thanks to wider U.S. budget deficits, further worsening the global supply/demand balance for government debt from the major developed economies. Chart 6Private Sector To Absorb More Bonds
Private Sector To Absorb More Bonds
Private Sector To Absorb More Bonds
The reduction in the pace of central bank bond buying will continue to put gentle upward pressure on government bond yields, as has been the case since the pace of ECB purchases peaked in 2016 (Chart 7). More importantly, the diminished central bank liquidity expansion means there will be less money going into risky assets via the portfolio balance channel (i.e. private investors taking the funds earned from selling bonds to central banks and placing that in equity and credit markets). Chart 7Upward Pressure On Yields & Vol From 'QT'
Upward Pressure On Yields & Vol From 'QT'
Upward Pressure On Yields & Vol From 'QT'
This creates a backdrop where volatility spikes will be more frequent, as has been the case in 2018 (bottom panel). Risky asset valuations will also be impacted from reduced inflows from yield-seeking investors who have sold government bonds to central banks. This suggests wider credit spreads and lower equity price/earnings multiples, all else equal (Chart 8). Chart 8Risk Asset Valuations Will Continue To Suffer From QT In 2019
Risk Asset Valuations Will Continue To Suffer From QT In 2019
Risk Asset Valuations Will Continue To Suffer From QT In 2019
Of course, all is not equal. A rebound in global growth could trigger a new wave of inflows into global equity and credit markets with valuations having cheapened in recent months. The important point is that, without central bank liquidity propping up asset prices, global risk assets will trade more off fundamentals in 2019 than has been the case during the past couple of years. Key View #3: Too Soon To Worry About Inverted Yield Curves “Yield curve inversions lead to recessions” is a well-known (if not well understood) relationship that has gained almost mythical status among investors. As the widely-watched spread between 2-year and 10-year U.S. Treasury yields (the 2/10 curve) has melted away during the course of 2018 – now sitting at a mere 13bps – the prognosticating power of the curve has many worried that a U.S. recession could be just around the corner. Especially after the Fed has raised the fed funds rate by 200 basis points over the past three years. Those fears are misguided, for several reasons: 1. The Treasury curve segment with the most successful track record in heralding U.S. recessions is the spread between the 10-year U.S. Treasury bond yield and the 3-month U.S. Treasury bill rate (Chart 9). That spread is still a firmly positive 42bps. We showed in a Special Report published last July that, on average, the length of time between the inversion of the 3-month/10-year Treasury curve and the beginning of a recession is seventeen months.2 Chart 9UST Curve Not Close To A True Recessionary Inversion Signal
UST Curve Not Close To A True Recessionary Inversion Signal
UST Curve Not Close To A True Recessionary Inversion Signal
2. The slope of the Treasury curve is unusually flat given the level of the fed funds rate measured in real (inflation-adjusted) terms. The previous three episodes where the 2-year/10-year Treasury curve has inverted over the past thirty years have occurred when the real fed funds rate was between 300-400bps (Chart 10). The current level of the real funds rate (deflated by headline CPI inflation) is near zero which, in the past, has occurred alongside a 2-year/10-year Treasury curve that had a positive slope between 150-200bps. Chart 10Global Yield Curves Look Too Flat Vs Real Policy Rates...
Global Yield Curves Look Too Flat Vs Real Policy Rates...
Global Yield Curves Look Too Flat Vs Real Policy Rates...
3. The depressed level of bond term premia is weighing on longer-dated Treasury yields and dampening the slope of the curve. This is happening not only in the U.S., but also in other major bond markets in Germany, the U.K. and Japan (Chart 11). The impact of global QE programs is the most likely common factor. Chart 11...With Global Term Premia Depressed
...With Global Term Premia Depressed
...With Global Term Premia Depressed
4. The 2-year/10-year U.S. Treasury curve has never been inverted without the real fed funds rate being above the neutral real rate, also known as R-star (Chart 12). Chart 12No 2/10 UST Inversion Before Real Rates Exceed R*
No 2/10 UST Inversion Before Real Rates Exceed R*
No 2/10 UST Inversion Before Real Rates Exceed R*
The implication for fixed income investing for 2019 is that it is too soon in the Fed’s monetary tightening cycle to expect an inverted yield curve driven by an overly tight monetary policy. That outcome is more likely by late 2019 after inflation expectations pick up and the Fed delivers at least another 75bps over the course of the year, pushing the funds rate into restrictive territory. Key View #4: Poor Corporate Returns From The Aging Credit Cycle The other major fixed income implication of the 2019 BCA Outlook is that global corporate bond markets are likely to see another year of poor returns (both in absolute terms and relative to government bonds). Spreads remain near historically tight levels across most spread product sectors, suggesting that credit risk premia will need to be repriced higher as the endgame of the multi-year credit cycle draws nearer (Chart 13). Both investors and policymakers have grown increasingly worried about the risks to the U.S. corporate bond market from high corporate leverage. However, as was discussed in the Outlook, U.S. corporate interest coverage remains well above levels that have preceded the end of previous credit cycles and BCA’s models suggest U.S. corporate profit growth will remain solid (albeit much slower than the rapid +20% growth seen in 2018). Chart 13Fading Support For Corporate Bonds From Growth & Policy
Fading Support For Corporate Bonds From Growth & Policy
Fading Support For Corporate Bonds From Growth & Policy
That does not mean that corporate bonds are without risk. With 50% of global investment grade bond indices now rated BBB (one notch above junk), the greater threat to corporates may come from downgrades. While those are less likely in a growing economy, investors in lower-rated investment grade bonds may require higher yields and spreads to compensate for the future risk of losses as those bonds could become “fallen angel” high-yield debt in the next economic downturn. This impact would be magnified as how many large fixed income managers have mandates that forbid investment in bonds rated below investment grade, thus creating forced selling in the event of downgrades. More fundamentally, the outlook for global corporate bonds, with spreads still much closer to historical tights than long-run averages, remains reliant on strong economic growth momentum and supportive monetary policy. On the former, we do not anticipate a move to sub-trend global growth, as discussed earlier, and corporate bond returns could stabilize once the current downtrend in the world economy subsides (Chart 14). This would likely represent a final period of calm, however. Tightening global monetary policies – both Fed hikes and diminished asset purchases – will create a more bearish backdrop for credit in the latter half of 2019 as markets begin to discount slower economic growth in 2020. Chart 14Fading Support For Corporate Bonds From Growth & Policy
Fading Support For Corporate Bonds From Growth & Policy
Fading Support For Corporate Bonds From Growth & Policy
Robert Robis, CFA, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see the December 2018 edition of The Bank Credit Analyst, “Outlook 2019 – Late Cycle Turbulence”, available at bca.bcaresearch.com and gfis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, “Three Frequently Asked Questions About Global Yield Curves”, dated July 31st 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
2019 Key Views: Normalization Is The "New Normal"
2019 Key Views: Normalization Is The "New Normal"
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) may consider a rate hike in 2019 if additional tightening of labor markets leads to higher wage inflation, which would help lift core inflation back to the midpoint of the RBA’s 2-3% target band. Reflation in China could also embolden the RBA to tighten monetary policy – though the odds of a more aggressive stimulus package will decline as long as China’s overall economy remains stable and the U.S. maintains its tariff ceasefire. The Labor Party is favored to win the federal election, which is most likely to occur in May. This is a low-conviction view, as polls are tight and economic improvement will help the ruling Liberal-National Coalition. Feature 2018 has been a challenging year for global financial markets, as investors have had to deal with greater economic uncertainty, less dovish central banks and more volatile asset prices. One country that has bucked the trend to some degree is Australia. The nation has famously avoided a recession since 1991 and last saw a tightening of monetary policy in 2010. While the recession streak is unlikely to be broken in 2019, there are growing risks that the era of interest rate tranquility will soon end. In this Special Report, jointly published with our colleagues at BCA Geopolitical Strategy, we update our views on Australia for 2019 – a year when the investment backdrop has the potential to become far more interesting, and volatile, due to election year uncertainty and a potential shift to a more hawkish bias for monetary policy. The Bond Outlook: What To Watch To Turn Bearish BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy has maintained an overweight stance on Australian government bonds since the end of 2017. That high-conviction view stemmed from our expectation that the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) would keep policy rates on hold for longer due to sluggish economic growth and underwhelming inflation. This recommendation has performed well, with Australian government bonds returning 2.4% (currency-hedged into U.S. dollars) in 2018 year-to-date, beating the Bloomberg Barclays Global Treasury index by 190bps. The benchmark 10-year Australian government is now yielding 36bps below the equivalent 10-year U.S. Treasury yield, the tightest spread since 1980 (Chart 1). Chart 1Australian Bonds Have Outperformed
Australian Bonds Have Outperformed
Australian Bonds Have Outperformed
Looking ahead, we still have a positive opinion on Australian debt relative to its global peers over the next six months. The RBA is unlikely to make any adjustments to the Cash Rate - which remains at a highly-accommodative level of 1.5% - without seeing some signs of accelerating inflation in both the Q4 2018 and Q1 2019 CPI reports. This is especially true given the political uncertainty with another federal election due by May 18,1 which could change the outlook for fiscal policy (as we discuss later in this report) and impact the RBA’s economic projections. In our view, the RBA will only be able to seriously consider an interest rate hike, warranting a downgrade of our recommended overweight stance, if all three of the following conditions occur: Australia’s underemployment rate falls below 8% China’s economy shows convincing evidence of reacceleration, especially in commodity-intensive industries like construction Core CPI inflation rises back to at least the midpoint of the RBA’s 2-3% target band We will now discuss each of these in turn. Underemployment Australia is a fairly open economy with a large export sector, but consumer spending is still the largest share of GDP (60%) so it matters most for growth. On that front, real consumption has grown in a narrow and uninspiring range between 2-3% over the past five years. Anemic wages and disposable incomes have been the problem, with the growth of both (in nominal terms) struggling to grow faster than low realized inflation, which now sits below the RBA’s inflation target range of 2-3% (Chart 2). Households have been forced to deploy a greater share of that modest income growth just to maintain spending, with the savings rate plunging from 8% at the end of 2014 to 1% this year and consumer debt piling up. Chart 2An Income-Fueled Pickup In Consumer Spending
An Income-Fueled Pickup In Consumer Spending
An Income-Fueled Pickup In Consumer Spending
The dynamics may be changing in a more positive direction, however. Growth rates of nominal wage (+2.3%) and disposable income (+3.1%) have accelerated this year to a pace faster than inflation. With real incomes perking up, the year-over-year growth rate of real consumer spending growth accelerated to 3% in Q3/2018, driving real GDP growth to similar levels. A sustained pickup in wage growth is necessary before the RBA would even contemplate a rate hike. For that to occur, there must be decisive evidence of a tightening Australian labor market and increased resource utilization. While the headline unemployment rate of 5.0% is below the OECD’s estimate of the full employment NAIRU for Australia (5.3%), broader measures of labor market slack are still at elevated levels. Specifically, the “underemployment” rate, which includes workers who are working fewer hours than they would like or at jobs below their skill levels, is still at an elevated 8.3% (Chart 3). That is down from the peak of just below 9% seen in early 2017, but well above the 2012 trough near 7% (when wage growth was close to 4%). Chart 3UNDERemployment Rate Matters More For Australian Wages
UNDERemployment Rate Matters More For Australian Wages
UNDERemployment Rate Matters More For Australian Wages
Australian wage growth tends to correlate more with the underemployment rate than the traditional unemployment rate (middle panel). This suggests that the recent blip higher in wage growth could be the beginning of a new trend, given that it has occurred alongside the recent drop in underemployment. Already, underemployment is back below the levels that prevailed when the RBA did its last interest rate cut back in 2016 (bottom panel). A further dip lower in the underemployment rate to below the 8% threshold would likely confirm that wage growth has more upside. That outcome would give the RBA greater confidence that consumer spending will gain more strength even with a low savings rate, and that CPI inflation will return back into the target range – both outcomes that would justify some removal of the RBA’s highly stimulative monetary accommodation. China Stimulus The main connection from China’s economy to Australia is through Chinese demand for Australian exports. There is also an indirect, but very important, link between Chinese demand boosting industrial commodity prices. The latter boosts Australian growth through positive terms-of-trade effects and increased capital spending in commodity-related sectors like mining. Iron ore is the most important of those commodities, representing 18% of total Australian goods exports, with 85% of those iron ore exports going to China. Australian export growth has decelerated during 2018 from the very robust 15% year-over-year pace to a still solid 10% rate. This has mirrored the trends seen in many other economies, where exports have slowed alongside diminished demand from China. If Chinese authorities change their current policy trajectory, and embrace more aggressive fiscal and credit stimulus, then they will reaccelerate the country’s flagging demand, which should benefit Australian exporters. If the increase in spending occurs in commodity-intensive parts of China’s economy, like construction, then Australia can also benefit from a terms-of-trade impact if commodity prices rise. However, BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy and China Investment Strategy remain skeptical that China will launch a major economic stimulus package along the lines of what occurred in 2015-16. That surge not only boosted Chinese GDP and import demand but also triggered a boost to global industrial commodity prices that benefitted many commodity exporters, including Australia. In recent months, there has been a pickup in overall Chinese import growth, as well as some acceleration of higher frequency growth indicators like the Li Keqiang index (Chart 4). Australian exports to China have not picked up though, and Chinese iron ore imports are contracting. Part of that is due to the elevated levels of Chinese iron ore inventories. More likely, there is little demand for additional iron ore given China’s reform agenda and the struggles of its construction sector (which accounts for roughly 35% of Chinese steel demand). Chart 4China Stimulus Not Helping Australia...Yet?
China Stimulus Not Helping Australia...Yet?
China Stimulus Not Helping Australia...Yet?
Our colleagues at BCA China Investment Strategy2 have noted that both weakening sales and tighter funding sources for real estate developers point to declining growth in property starts and construction. This will be negative for construction-related commodity markets and construction-related machinery. This is coming at a time when the Chinese government is trying specifically to address over-indebted industries like construction. As for the U.S.-China trade truce, a permanent de-escalation of tensions – which has not yet occurred – could provide a boost to Australian export demand, as with other export-focused countries. But the negative impact of bilateral U.S.-China tariffs on the global economy is much smaller than that of China’s attempt to limit indebtedness. Moreover, a trade truce will remove China’s primary incentive to adopt more aggressive stimulus. Nevertheless, from the RBA’s perspective, any boost to China’s construction-related activity would have a big impact on Australia’s economy and would strengthen the case for a rate hike in 2019. Core Inflation Australia’s headline CPI inflation has struggled to hit even the bottom end of the RBA’s 2-3% target band since 2015, reaching only 1.9% in Q3 of this year (Chart 5). The story is even worse for inflation excluding food and energy, with core CPI inflation now only at 1.2% after having drifted lower in two consecutive quarters. Both market-based and survey-based measures of inflation expectations are also hovering near 2%. Chart 5Australian Inflation Well Below RBA Target
Australian Inflation Well Below RBA Target
Australian Inflation Well Below RBA Target
When breaking down the CPI into tradeables (i.e. more globally-focused) and non-tradeables (i.e. more domestically-focused), the two types of inflation have not been accelerating at the same time since the 2009-11 period. Since then, faster tradeables inflation has occurred alongside slowing non-tradeables inflation, and vice versa. While volatility on the tradeables side should be expected given the correlation to swings in commodity prices and the Australian dollar, the weakness in non-tradeables is more directly related to the spare capacity in the domestic economy. Therefore, if wage growth continues to pick up as the labor market tightens, then non-tradeables inflation should follow suit and boost Australian CPI inflation back towards the RBA target range. The implication for the RBA is that a move in core CPI inflation back towards 2.5% (the midpoint of the RBA band), occurring after an acceleration in wage growth as described above, would give the central bank confidence that a higher Cash Rate is required. Bottom Line: The RBA has kept interest rates on hold for over two years, but may consider a rate hike in 2019 if additional tightening of labor markets leads to higher wage inflation, which would help lift core inflation back to the midpoint of the RBA’s 2-3% target band. A more aggressive fiscal and monetary stimulus package in China, while not our base case, would also embolden the RBA to tighten monetary policy. Risks From Australian Banks? Throughout 2018, the Australian financial industry has had to endure the slings and arrows of a government inquiry into its questionable business practices and misconduct. Revelations of bribery, fraud, the charging of fees for no service and from the accounts of deceased people, as well as board-level deception of regulators, have roiled Australia's financial sector since the explosive inquiry began in February. The final report of the Australian Financial Services Royal Commission will be published in February, but the impact is already being felt throughout the industry. Bank CEOs have been publically shamed, while other senior financial sector executives have been forced from their jobs. The chairman of National Australia Bank stated before the inquiry that customers’ trust in lenders had been “pretty well eroded to zero”, and that it could take as long as a decade to successfully overhaul the culture within the banks. The biggest impacts from the Commission will come through hits to banks’ earnings and funding costs, as well as the potential impact on lending standards for new loans. Australian banks will be less profitable because of fines, customer refunds, setting aside provisions for potential misconduct penalties and the government wanting increased competition. If banks also choose to be more conservative with the marking of loans, then higher loan-loss provisions could be an additional drag on bank earnings. Already, Australian bank stocks have severely underperformed the overall domestic market, and there has been some slowing of domestic credit growth (Chart 6). There are also signs of bank funding stresses from contracting bank deposit growth (second panel) and wider offshore funding costs like relatively elevated LIBOR-OIS spreads (bottom panel). Considering how heavily Australian banks rely on offshore funding, any squeeze in those markets could severely influence the availability of credit within the Australian economy. Chart 6Australian Banks Under Some Stress...
Australian Banks Under Some Stress...
Australian Banks Under Some Stress...
Looking ahead, if banks do tighten up their lending standards in response to the criticism and findings of the Commission, that will be from a starting point of very accommodative levels. In other words, getting a loan will likely still be “easy”, rather than “incredibly easy”. The reason is that Australian bank balance sheets remain in excellent condition. Credit crunches begin when banks are undercapitalized and are forced to retrench new loan activity as losses on existing loans pile up. That is not the case in Australia, where the major banks have Tier 1 capital ratios in the 10-12% range and non-performing loans are a tiny share of total lending. In our view, a true credit crunch would likely only occur after the Australian housing bubble bursts and the economy enters a severe downturn. That outcome would most likely be triggered by monetary policy tightening via multiple RBA rate hikes. Importantly, some of the steam has already been taken out of Australian house prices thanks to changes in regulations on new lending (Chart 7), potentially reducing some of the immediate risks to growth from a sharp plunge in home values. Chart 7...But No Credit Crunch Expected
...But No Credit Crunch Expected
...But No Credit Crunch Expected
Bottom Line: In 2019, the Australian government and its key financial regulators will have to work together to enforce responsible lending without triggering a catastrophic property market unwind. RBA policymakers are less likely to hike rates given their desire to maintain financial stability in the aftermath of the Commission – or at least until the inflation story forces their hand, as outlined in this report. The Federal Election: Polling Slightly Favors Labor Scandals in the financial sector are of utmost importance to the other major factor that could make 2019 a year of significant change in Australia: the federal election that looms most likely in the spring. Parliament is balanced on a knife’s edge, with the Australian Liberal Party’s loss of former Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s parliamentary seat in a Sydney by-election on October 20. The ruling Liberal-National Coalition no longer has a majority and must rely on independent MPs to survive any no-confidence vote. This precarious situation suggests that the election could come even sooner than May and that the slightest twist in the campaign could deliver at least a small majority to either of the top two parties. Indeed, at this early stage, a high-conviction view on the election outcome is not warranted. After all, the 2016 election was decided in the Coalition’s favor only after a shift in opinion in the final month! Chart 8Labor Party Narrowly Leads All-Party Opinion Polls
A Year Of Change In Australia?
A Year Of Change In Australia?
Nevertheless, with all due caveats, our baseline case is for a Labor majority in 2019, however slim it may be.3 Labor is slightly ahead of the Coalition in the primary opinion polling, which includes all parties (Chart 8). In two-party preference polling, Labor has gradually widened its general lead since the July 2016 election and now holds a 10% advantage in the federal polls – albeit only a 6% lead when a moving average is taken (Chart 9). Labor is also winning or tied in every major state. Chart 9Labor Has Large Lead In Two-Party Preference Polls
A Year Of Change In Australia?
A Year Of Change In Australia?
The dramatic shift in polling since August is significant because that is when the knives came out and the Coalition ousted Turnbull in favor of the current Prime Minister Scott Morrison. The purpose of this move was to give the party a facelift ahead of the election. It is true that public opinion views Morrison as the preferred prime minister to Labor’s Bill Shorten. Shorten has a negative net approval rating and has never been viewed as an inspiring politician, while Morrison is just barely net positive. This perception works against Labor’s lead in the party polling – which is very competitive anyway – and suggests the election will be close. Critically, the Liberal-National Coalition’s polling as a whole has not benefited from the change in leadership. And in fact the data does not support the two major Australian parties’ abiding belief that a leadership coup will boost their popularity: Australia has seen four of these coups since 2010, two from Labor and two from the Coalition, and the party in question lost an average of 8% of the popular vote and 14 seats in parliament in the succeeding election (Table 1). Table 1Intra-Party Coups Don’t Win Votes
A Year Of Change In Australia?
A Year Of Change In Australia?
Turnbull’s ouster also calls attention to another detrimental factor for the Coalition: the challenge on the right flank from minor and anti-establishment parties. Pauline Hanson’s One Nation has a relatively low support rate both historically and in today’s race, currently at 8%, but anti-establishment feeling may have forced the Coalition into an error. Judging by the party’s weak polling since August, the negative response to Turnbull’s ouster has been more detrimental than the nomination of Morrison, an immigration hardliner and social conservative, has been beneficial. Meanwhile, Labor’s momentum has been corroborated by a string of surprise victories in by-elections and a sweeping win in the Victoria state elections on November 24. In the latter case, the party not only defended its hold on government, as one might expect in this progressive state, but exceeded expectations to win 56 seats out of 88 in the lower House, while the Coalition lost nearly half of its seats, falling from 37 to 21. Still, Labor’s lead is by no means decisive. In the average of the various primary polls its edge over the Coalition is within the margin of error. Moreover, the Coalition holds more “safe” (uncompetitive) seats than Labor.4 The bottom line is that a small swing in either party’s favor can produce a thin majority. The Coalition’s best case is the economy. But as concerns about unemployment and job creation recede, voters will make other demands. The top issues in recent polling are the cost of living, health care, housing affordability, and wages. Some polls also emphasize social mobility and climate change and renewable energy. Will Shorten’s Labor Party be able to capture the median voter? It is highly significant that the party has taken a rightward turn on immigration and taxes even as it holds out a more left-wing agenda on health, education, regulation, and social benefits. Immigration has played a major role in Australian politics and Labor is currently positioned near the political center – in other words, if Morrison hardens his line to guard against populists, he risks over-hardening and moving away from the median voter (Chart 10). Shorten has proposed a large bipartisan task force to determine the proper limits to immigration and how to deal with congestion and infrastructure pressures. Shorten’s platform also calls attention to abuse of temporary visas by foreign workers. Chart 10Labor Is Not Too Soft On Immigration
A Year Of Change In Australia?
A Year Of Change In Australia?
On taxes, Shorten has attempted to separate small and big companies, again in a bid for the political center. When Prime Minister Morrison sought to establish his anti-tax credentials (Chart 11), Shorten met him halfway and proposed relief for middle class families and small and medium-sized enterprises. Yet he doubled down on higher taxes for multinational corporations and high-income earners. Chart 11Liberal-National Coalition Cutting Corporate Tax Rates
A Year Of Change In Australia?
A Year Of Change In Australia?
Critically, the latter redistributive stances are more in line with the median voter than the Liberal Party’s more conservative, supply-side, tax cut agenda. All of Australia’s parties, including the increasingly popular “minority parties,” have a more favorable attitude toward redistribution than the Coalition, which is the outlier (Chart 12). Indeed, the National Party is closer in line with the others than the Liberals, highlighting the divisions within the Coalition that have been jeopardizing votes. As for tax cuts on middle income earners and small businesses, Labor’s acceptance of them speaks to voter concerns about living costs, jobs, and wages. Chart 12The Coalition Is Out Of Synch On Taxes
A Year Of Change In Australia?
A Year Of Change In Australia?
Labor is also closer to the median voter on the aforementioned financial sector scandals. The Coalition stands to suffer because it has developed a reputation for being too cozy with the banks (Chart 13). This is one of the biggest perceived differences between the two major parties – in addition to the negative perception of intra-Coalition betrayal – and it is possibly one of the most salient issues in the election. This presents a serious danger for the Coalition. Chart 13Banks: The Coalition’s Ball And Chain
A Year Of Change In Australia?
A Year Of Change In Australia?
What would a Labor government bring? The market will be jittery about Shorten’s attempts to increase tax revenue, which threatens a non-negligible tightening of fiscal policy. Shorten wants to raise taxes on high income earners; remove or lower deductions and discounts (such as on capital gains); crack down on tax evasion; and tighten control over a range of tax practices specific to Australia (limiting “negative gearing” and cutting cash refunds for “franking credits”). He is also taking a tough position on banks and the energy sector. At the same time, it is clear from Labor’s proposals in 2016 (Chart 14) that there will be a hefty amount of new spending coming down the pike if a Labor government is formed – primarily on education, health, infrastructure and job training. The tax cuts that Shorten does support will go to those with a higher propensity to consume, as well as to SMEs that are responsible for job creation. Chart 14Labor’s Spending Plans Unlikely To Change Much
A Year Of Change In Australia?
A Year Of Change In Australia?
Ultimately, Australia’s recent history, taken in consideration with the global business cycle, does not suggest that the Labor Party is all that much more fiscally profligate than the Coalition – but the current budget balance does suggest that there is substantial room to increase deficits, which is convenient for a government that is predisposed to give voters more services (Chart 15). Hence fiscal easing is the path of least resistance - one that could make the RBA even more comfortable in raising interest rates if the conditions laid out earlier in this report come to pass. Chart 15Australia's Next Government Will Have Room To Spend!
Australia's Next Government Will Have Room To Spend!
Australia's Next Government Will Have Room To Spend!
Bottom Line: The Australian Labor Party is slightly favored to win the next Australian election. This is a low-conviction call given the tight competition in public opinion polling and other mixed indicators. Broadly speaking, Labor’s shift to the political center on immigration and some tax issues makes the party more electable relative to the Coalition; meanwhile its promise of more government services fits with voter demands. We do not accept the narrative that Shorten’s Labor Party will engage in substantial fiscal tightening. The path of least resistance is for tax cuts as well as revenue collection, and for greater government spending. On the other hand, if the Coalition capitalizes on the incumbent advantage and stays in power, larger tax cuts will be in store. Hence we expect Australia to see marginally larger-than-expected budget deficits and fiscal thrust as the one reliable takeaway of next year’s election. Fixed Income Investment Implications We continue to recommend an overweight stance on Australian government bonds in currency-hedged global bond portfolios. While we have laid out the conditions that would make us change that view in this report, it is still too soon to position for such a move. Our RBA Monitor, which measures the cyclical pressures on the central bank to change monetary policy settings, is modestly below the zero line (Chart 16). This indicates a need for easier policy, although the indicator is starting to rise driven by the inflation components in the Monitor (bottom panel). In terms of market pricing, there are only 15bps of rate hikes over the next year discounted in the Australian Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve, so markets are exposed to any shift to a more hawkish bias by the RBA as 2019 progresses. Chart 16Our RBA Monitor Starting To Turn Less Dovish
Our RBA Monitor Starting To Turn Less Dovish
Our RBA Monitor Starting To Turn Less Dovish
Looking purely at Australian government bond yields, the forward curves are priced for very little change in yields over the next year (Chart 17). This suggests that outright duration trades in Australia look uninteresting from a carry perspective of betting against the forwards. We continue to prefer Australian bonds on a relative basis to global developed market peers until there is more decisive evidence pointing to convergence of Australian growth and inflation to the other major economies (bottom panel). Chart 17Stay Overweight Australian Government Bonds
Stay Overweight Australian Government Bonds
Stay Overweight Australian Government Bonds
Over the past year, Global Fixed Income Strategy has recommended tactical trades in Australian money market futures to fade the pricing of RBA hikes that we did not expect to materialize. Specifically, we entered a long position in December 2018 Australian 90-Day Bank Bill futures on October 17, 2017, then switched to a long October 2019 90-Day Bank Bill futures position on May 29, 2017. The latter contract is now trading at implied interest rate levels just above the RBA’s 1.5% Cash Rate (Chart 18), suggesting that there is no more value in this trade. Chart 18Taking Profits On Our Long Bank Bill Futures Trade
Taking Profits On Our Long Bank Bill Futures Trade
Taking Profits On Our Long Bank Bill Futures Trade
We therefore take a profit of 21bps on the Bank Bill futures trade, while awaiting evidence from the “RBA Hike Checklist” introduced in this report before considering trades that will benefit from a more hawkish central bank. Robert Robis, CFA, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Matt Gertken, Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, CFA, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Technically the House of Representatives election could occur as late as November 2, while the half Senate election is due May 18, but the norm is to hold the election simultaneously. The 2016 election was a “double dissolution” involving the election of the entire Senate and House of Representatives. 2 Please see BCA China Investment Strategy Special Report, “China’s Property Market: Where Will It Go From Here?” dated September 13, 2018, available at cis.bcareserach.com. 3 We would slightly favor Labor leading a slim majority in the Senate as well as in the House. In the Senate, the half of the seats that are up for grabs are evenly split and the polling at this early stage favors Labor over the Coalition. The poor performance of the Greens, in recent polling and in the Victoria state election, suggests a positive development for Labor on the margin, whereas One Nation, whose polls are improving, poses a threat to the Coalition. 4 Labor is fighting for 15 “marginal” (hotly contested) seats and 28 “fairly safe” seats, while the Coalition is only fighting for 12 marginal seats and 14 fairly safe seats.
The lack of a discernible 2015-16 consumption boost after oil cratered upended the notion that the U.S. economy is as negatively correlated with oil prices as it has been cracked up to be, and the equity reaction also bucked the conventional wisdom (see…
Dear Client, Early next week, we will be sending you our BCA Outlook 2019 - our annual dialogue with the bearishly inclined Mr. X and his family. In this report, BCA editors will highlight the most impactful themes for the global economy next year, and the opportunities and risks they create for international asset markets. Next Friday, we will also send you our take on the implications of this discussion for the FX market. Best regards, Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy Highlights A bearish consensus is forming around the dollar for 2019 as U.S. growth is falling prey to global economic deterioration. However, slowing global growth and inflation create the best environment for the dollar, suggesting the greenback could perform very well in early 2019. While EUR/USD should trade below 1.10 before mid-2019, the dollar should be strongest against the AUD, the NZD and the SEK. The yen faces a trickier picture. With a low degree of conviction, we anticipate USD/JPY to depreciate; but with a high level of confidence, we foresee additional strength in the JPY against the AUD, the NZD and the SEK; EUR/JPY should move below 120. Close short CAD/NOK. Feature The end of the year is approaching, which means that like BCA, banks and research houses around the world are rolling out their major forecasts for the upcoming year. The near-uniform bearishness toward the greenback of the current vintage of forecasts has struck us. Our contrarian streak inclines us to re-assert our bullish dollar stance, but being contrarian for the sake of it is often the perfect recipe to lose money. Welcome To The Jungle A bearish tone on the dollar appears justified right now. Speculators hold near-record long bets on the dollar, yet U.S. economic data seem to finally be succumbing to the gravitational pull of slowing global economic activity. U.S. core inflation has disappointed, orders have been weak, capex intentions have softened, the Conference Board's leading economic indicator has rolled over, and financial conditions have tightened as junk bonds have sold off. This combination could easily generate the perfect recipe for the dollar to sell off. The dollar's strength has been rooted in the divergence of U.S. growth from a weak world economy (Chart I-1). As the narrative goes, without U.S. strength, the Federal Reserve will not be tightening policy anymore, and the dollar will sag. Interest rate markets are already on this page, as after the December meeting they only foresee one more rate hike over the coming two years. Chart I-1Will The Dollar Lose A Key Support?
Will The Dollar Lose A Key Support?
Will The Dollar Lose A Key Support?
Despite this tantalizing narrative, the dollar rarely weakens because of poor U.S. growth alone. To the contrary, dives in our diffusion index of 16 key U.S. economic variables are most often associated with a strengthening greenback (Chart I-2). The recent sharp fall in this diffusion index would actually point to an appreciating USD. Chart I-2The Plot Thickens
The Plot Thickens
The Plot Thickens
This relationship is obviously paradoxical. It exists because the dollar is not a normal currency: it is the premier reserve currency of the world. Resting at the center of the global financial system, the dollar is more sensitive to global growth and inflation conditions than to U.S. growth and policy alone. As Chart I-3 shows, the dollar's behavior is a function of where we stand in the global economic and inflation cycle. We looked at the performance of G-10 currencies versus the dollar since 1986, decomposing the period in four samples based on trends in global activity and global headline inflation. We observed the following patterns: When global growth is accelerating but inflation is decelerating, the dollar tends to weaken, especially against the very pro-cyclical AUD, NZD and SEK (Bottom right quadrant). This is often an environment observed in the early days of a business cycle recovery. When global growth and global inflation are both accelerating, the dollar also tends to weaken, but the pattern is much less clear than in the previous stage (Top right quadrant). This is generally a mid-cycle environment. When global growth is decelerating but global inflation is accelerating, the dollar weakens much more clearly than in the mid-cycle stage (Top left quadrant). In this stage, global growth has begun to decelerate but is still elevated. Risk assets are doing well, but some clouds are gathering on the horizon. European currencies perform best. The most distinct change in the dollar's behavior happens when both global growth and global inflation are decelerating (Bottom left quadrant). In this context, the dollar is strong across the board. This is an end-of-cycle environment where global growth is poor and inflation sags. Investors become very risk averse and they favor the dollar. Commodity currencies and Scandinavian currencies are the worst performers, while the yen is the best. We were surprised that the yen did not manage to appreciate during the periods described by the bottom-left quadrant. However, this is due to the long sample used (since 1986). Prior to the mid-1990s, the yen was a decidedly pro-cyclical currency. This taints the study's overall results. If we only use a shortened time span, the yen in fact appreciates in the last stage of the global business cycle. The yen is the only currency to experience such a sharp regime shift in its relationship to the global business cycle. Chart I-3The Dollar And The Global Business Cycle
Appetite For Destruction? FX Investing For Slowing Global Growth And Inflation
Appetite For Destruction? FX Investing For Slowing Global Growth And Inflation
Bottom Line: Dividing the business cycle into four periods shows that only when global growth and inflation are very weak can the dollar unequivocally rally. This is exactly what we would anticipate of a reserve currency. Investors flock to it when they are looking for safety. Moreover, since being the global reserve currency also means that most of the world's foreign-currency borrowing is in dollars, periods of tumult force debtors to repay their debt, prompting them to buy the greenback in the process. Finally, the low beta of the U.S. economy to the global industrial cycle only adds fuel to the fire, as it means that U.S. growth outperforms global growth when global activity deteriorates meaningfully. Paradise City Under this lens, the dollar's strength this year was rather impressive. We have seen global growth slow, but global inflation accelerate. This could have been a disastrous year for the dollar, but it was not. Markets have been sniffing out slower growth and its potentially deflationary impact; hence, the dollar has responded well. Moreover, the dollar started the year trading at a 5% discount to its fair value, and investors were massively short. Finally, as we have previously showed, the dollar is the epitome of momentum currencies within the G-10 space, and this year, our momentum measure flagged a very bullish signal for the dollar (Chart I-4).1 Chart I-4Momentum Has And Continues To Support The Greenback
Momentum Has And Continues To Support The Greenback
Momentum Has And Continues To Support The Greenback
While the dollar has already been strong, the next three to six months could generate considerably more dollar strength. The dollar may not be cheap anymore, but as we argued last week, it is not expensive either.2 Moreover, while investors are already very long the dollar - a source of concern for us - momentum still favors the greenback. Finally, the global economy might spend some time in the bottom-left quadrant described above where global growth and global inflation both decelerate - the quadrant where the dollar strengthens. Thus, both momentum and economics could line up to enhance the dollar's appeal. First, we have already highlighted that global growth is in the process of weakening. Under the weight of China's deleveraging efforts, of uncertainty surrounding global trade under the Trump administration, and of the tightening in EM financial conditions, global export growth has been flailing.3 Now, our global economic and financial advance/decline line shows that enough variables are pointing in a growth-negative direction that global industrial production - not just orders and surveys - is set to deteriorate sharply (Chart I-5). Chart I-5Global Growth Will Slow Materially In The First Half Of 2019
Global Growth Will Slow Materially In The First Half Of 2019
Global Growth Will Slow Materially In The First Half Of 2019
This message is confirmed by the OECD's leading economic indicator, which is falling faster than it was in late 2015. Most crucially, the very poor performance of EM carry trades financed in yen, which have been a reliable forecaster of global industrial activity, point to a sharp deterioration of our Global Nowcast (Chart I-6), an indicator that measures the evolution of global industrial activity while bypassing the long publishing lags inherent in global IP statistics. Chart I-6The Canaries Are Suffocating
The Canaries Are Suffocating
The Canaries Are Suffocating
Second, while global inflation has been on an uptrend, we expect it to soon relapse, potentially for six months or so. To begin with, we are already seeing some key global inflation measures soften. Recent U.S. core inflation releases have disappointed, Japan's GDP deflator has grown more negative, Germany's producer prices have decelerated, and both producer and core consumer prices in China are slowing sharply. If we are to believe financial markets, this development has further to run. The change in 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward U.S. inflation break-evens has collapsed, and the performance of U.S. industrial stocks relative to utilities suggest that global core inflation will soon decelerate noticeably (Chart I-7). Additionally, the annual total returns of EM equities relative to EM bonds, adjusted for their mutual volatility, has fallen, which normally also foreshadows a decline in underlying global inflation (Chart I-8). Chart I-7U.S. Financial Market Point To Slower Global Inflation...
U.S. Financial Market Point To Slower Global Inflation...
U.S. Financial Market Point To Slower Global Inflation...
Chart I-8...So Do EM Stocks And Bonds
...So Do EM Stocks And Bonds
...So Do EM Stocks And Bonds
The trend in some of the most important globally traded good prices is also very worrisome for inflation hawks, at least for the first half of 2019. Oil has fallen 26% since its October peak, but also, after rising nearly 90% from April to August, the Baltic Dry index has tumbled by nearly 45%. Another risk could exacerbate these deflationary forces: the Chinese yuan. The Chinese authorities are afraid of the potentially deeply negative impact on their economy of a trade war with the U.S. As a result, they have slowly been injecting monetary stimulus into the economy and are also adjusting fiscal policy to support the Chinese consumer. However, until now, these measures have not been enough to lift Chinese growth and investment. Chinese interest rates are thus likely to continue to lag behind U.S. rates. Deeper cuts to the reserve requirement ratio for commercial banks are also forthcoming. Historically, these developments have been associated with a weaker renminbi (Chart I-9). Chart I-9A Falling CNY Will Further Curtail Inflation
A Falling CNY Will Further Curtail Inflation
A Falling CNY Will Further Curtail Inflation
A softening CNY is deflationary for the world for three reasons: It decreases the purchasing power of China abroad; it cuts Chinese export prices; and it forces competitors to China to also lower their prices and let their currencies depreciate in order to maintain their own competitiveness in international markets. In other words, a falling yuan unleashes China's own deflationary forces onto the rest of the world. Bottom Line: While momentum has already been a tailwind for the dollar, now the global economy is likely to enter the quadrant where both growth and inflation decelerate. This means the greenback is likely to pick up an additional strong tailwind. Stay long the dollar. Nightrain Based on this analysis, the first half of 2019 could be very positive for the dollar. The Bottom left quadrant of Chart I-3 implies that EUR/USD is unlikely to suffer the greatest downside. Nonetheless, based on our preferred fair-value model for the euro - which is based on real short-rate differentials, yield curve slope differences, and the price of lumber relative to copper - the common currency needs to move below 1.1 before trading at a discount (Chart I-10). We expect the euro will settle between 1.10 and 1.05. Chart I-10EUR/USD Will Fall Below 1.1
EUR/USD Will Fall Below 1.1
EUR/USD Will Fall Below 1.1
If business cycle analysis is any guide, the dollar should shine most brightly against commodity currencies - the AUD and NZD in particular - and Scandinavian currencies. We closed our long NZD trades last week, and this week's analysis implies completely curtailing our positive bias toward the kiwi. Positive domestic economic results have lifted the AUD, but slowing global growth and inflation will hurt this very pro-cyclical economy. A key support for the expensive AUD will dissipate as quickly as it appeared. We had sold CAD/NOK, but this trade is not panning out. Global business cycle dynamics suggest that we should terminate this bet. Slowing global growth and inflation historically hurt the NOK more than the CAD. As Chart I-11 shows, under these circumstances, CAD/NOK does not depreciate, it appreciates. However, we remain committed to our long-term short AUD/CAD trade. This cross performs poorly in this quadrant of the global business cycle. This view is reinforced by the fact that Robert Ryan, BCA's head of commodities, continues to favor energy over base metals. Furthermore, the Canadian government unveiled C$14billion of corporate tax cuts this week, creating a marginal additional positive for the Canadian economy. We therefore do not expect AUD/CAD to break above the important technical resistance it currently faces. Instead, it is likely to embark on the last leg of a downtrend started in March 2017, which could culminate with AUD/CAD trading between 0.88 and 0.86 (Chart I-12). Chart I-11The Global Business Cycle Votes Nay To Short CAD/NOK, But Yea To Long AUD/CAD
Appetite For Destruction? FX Investing For Slowing Global Growth And Inflation
Appetite For Destruction? FX Investing For Slowing Global Growth And Inflation
Chart I-12Attractive Spot To Sell AUD/CAD
Attractive Spot To Sell AUD/CAD
Attractive Spot To Sell AUD/CAD
The yen is potentially the trickiest of all the currencies. At face value, the global business cycle analysis suggests the yen could depreciate against the dollar, but as we argued, this is an artefact of the long sample used in this analysis. A shorter sample would show the yen appreciating against the dollar. We are inclined to agree with this conclusion. Slowing global growth and inflation as well as a strong trade-weighted dollar could very well put a bid under the price of Treasury bonds over the next few months, especially as speculators are still large sellers of the whole U.S. government bond universe (Chart I-13). Since the yen remains broadly inversely correlated to Treasury yields, it may appreciate against the dollar over the coming three to six months. Chart I-13Extreme Positioning And A Poor Global Business Cycle Outlook Point To A Tactical Rally In Treasurys...
Extreme Positioning And A Poor Global Business Cycle Outlook Point To A Tactical Rally In Treasurys...
Extreme Positioning And A Poor Global Business Cycle Outlook Point To A Tactical Rally In Treasurys...
Our view has been and remains that the yen offers its most attractive reward-to-risk ratio on its crosses, not against the U.S. dollar. The business cycle analysis confirms that the yen has upside against all the other currencies when both global growth and inflation slows (Chart I-3, bottom left quadrant). The yen should, therefore, offer plentiful upside against the AUD, the NZD, the SEK and the NOK. Moreover, since the beginning of the year, a core view of this publication has been that EUR/JPY would depreciate4 - a trend that has materialized, albeit in a volatile fashion. Since the global business cycle is likely to put downward pressure on global yields for another three to six months, it should also push EUR/JPY lower (Chart I-14). Hence, a move in EUR/JPY below 120 is likely over the coming months. Chart I-14...Which Will Hurt EUR/JPY
...Which Will Hurt EUR/JPY
...Which Will Hurt EUR/JPY
Bottom Line: While EUR/USD could fall slightly below 1.1, the greenback is likely to experience its sharpest upside against the AUD, NZD, SEK and NOK. While selling CAD/NOK does not work when global growth and inflation decelerate, selling AUD/CAD does. The JPY is likely to experience more upside against the dollar, but the JPY is most attractive against commodity currencies and the euro. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, titled "Riding The Wave: Momentum Strategies In Foreign Exchange Markets", dated December 8, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Six Questions From The Road", dated November 16, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Clashing Forces: The Fed And EM Financial Conditions", dated October 19, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled "The Unstoppable Euro?", dated January 19, 2018, and Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled "The Yen's Mighty Rise Continues", dated February 16, 2018, available at fes.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
Recent data in the U.S. has been mixed: Capacity utilization came in above expectations, coming in at 78.4%. However, both initial jobless claims and continuing jobless claims surprised negatively, coming in at 224 thousand and 1.688 million. Finally, durable goods orders also disappointed expectations DXY has been roughly flat this week. Several indicators point to a slowdown on economic data. At face value this could imply that the dollar could fall. However, falling oil prices, point to a slowdown in global inflation. This factor, alongside slowing global growth has historically been very positive for the U.S. dollar. Thus, we maintain our long dollar position. Report Links: Six Questions From The Road - November 16, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 In Fall, Leaves Turn Red, The Dollar Turns Green - October 12, 2018 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 in the euro area has been mixed: Both core and headline inflation came in line with expectations, coming in at 1.1% and 2.2%, respectively. Headline inflation in Italy also came in line with expectations, at 1.6%. EUR/USD has risen by roughly 0.5% this week. Overall, we continue to be bearish on the euro, given that we expect an environment of declining growth and inflation, which usually is negative for EUR/USD. Moreover, large exposure to vulnerable emerging markets by European banks will continue to be a drag on how much the ECB can tighten policy. Report Links: Six Questions From The Road - November 16, 2018 Evaluating The ECB's Options In December - November 6, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 The 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 in Japan has been mixed: The All Industry Activity Index monthly change underperformed expectations, coming in at -0.9%. Meanwhile, national inflation ex-fresh food came in line with expectations at 1%. Finally, national inflation also came in line with expectations, coming in at 1.4%. USD/JPY has been flat this week. We remain positive on the trade-weighted yen, given that the continued slowdown in global growth, fueled by the dual tightening of policy by Chinese authorities and the Fed, will help safe haven currencies like the yen. Moreover, the current selloff in U.S. markets could also provide a boon for this currency if it forces the Fed to tamper its hawkishness. Report Links: Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Will Rising Wages Cause An Imminent Change In Policy Direction In Europe And Japan? - October 5, 2018 Rhetoric Is Not Always Policy - July 27, 2018 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP/USD has risen by 0.9% this week. The market reacted positively to the draft of the Brexit agreement. Even if risks have begun to decline, the all clear for the pound has not been reached as political risks will continue to regularly inject doses of volatility into British assets. Moreover, the strength in the dollar should continue to weigh on cable. Report Links: Six Questions From The Road - November 16, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Clashing Forces: The Fed And EM Financial Conditions - October 19, 2018 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD/USD has been flat this week. We are most negative on this currency within the G10, given that the AUD is highly sensitive to the Chinese industrial cycle, which will continue to slow down, as Chinese authorities keep cleaning credit excesses in the economy. Moreover, policy tightening by the Fed will provide a further headwind to cyclical plays like the AUD. We are short AUD/CAD within our portfolio, as we believe that global inflation will start to roll over. This deceleration in prices, coupled with slowing growth will provide a dangerous cocktail for this cross. Report Links: Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Policy Divergences Are Still The Name Of The Game - August 14, 2018 What Is Good For China Doesn't Always Help The World - June 29, 2018 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
NZD/USD has been flat this week. While we were positive the NZD and capitalized on this view, we are becoming more cautious. We cannot rule out any further short-term upside, but on a six month basis, the NZD will likely experience heavy downside, as slowing global growth and inflation are major hurdles for this currency. Report Links: Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Clashing Forces: The Fed And EM Financial Conditions - October 19, 2018 In Fall, Leaves Turn Red, The Dollar Turns Green - October 12, 2018 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
USD/CAD has risen by 0.6% this week. The weakness in oil prices have caused the Canadian dollar to be one of the worst performing currencies in the G10 in recent weeks. We are reticent to be too bullish on the CAD, given that markets are now pricing in a BoC that will be more hawkish than the Fed. Nonetheless the CAD tends to outperform other commodity currencies when the global business cycle slows. Report Links: Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Clashing Forces: The Fed And EM Financial Conditions - October 19, 2018 Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
EUR/CHF has fallen by 0.7% this week. While global volatility can temporarily support the swiss france versus the euro, w continue to be bearish on the franc on a 12 to 18 months basis, given that Swiss growth and inflation remain too tepid for the SNB to hike policy rates. This point is confirmed by the recent rollover in industrial production. Moreover, the SNB will also have to intervene in currency markets if the franc becomes more expensive in response to the current risk-off environment. Report Links: Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
USD/NOK has risen by 0.4% this week. Overall, we expect for the krone to have further downside as oil continues to fall while U.S. rates continue to rise. Moreover, if the fall in oil prices causes a large fall in inflation the krone could depreciate even more against the CAD, as this cross has historically fallen when this particular set of circumstances occur. Report Links: Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Clashing Forces: The Fed And EM Financial Conditions - October 19, 2018 Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
USD/SEK has been flat this week. Overall, we are bullish on the krona on a long-term basis. After all, the Riksbank is on the verge of beginning a tightening cycle, as imbalances in the Swedish economy are only growing more dangerous. The optimism on domestic factors is tempered by global risks. The krona tends to perform very poorly when global growth slows, as Sweden is very exposed to the gyrations of the global economy. Report Links: Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades