Policy
Highlights This week’s FOMC meeting confirmed that the Fed is on hold. We would downplay Powell’s reference to the decline in inflation as being “transitory”. Strictly speaking, he is correct. All of the decline in core inflation since last September has occurred in just two categories: financial services and clothing/footwear. The bigger point is that the Fed no longer sees fit to raise rates even though the unemployment rate is at a 50-year low and real rates are barely positive. Both the Fed and the markets have completely bought into two of Larry Summers’ core views, which are that the neutral rate of interest is much lower today than in the past, and that the Fed should wait to see the “whites of inflation’s eyes” before raising rates any further. We think the neutral rate will prove to be higher than widely believed and that the Fed will eventually find itself far behind the curve. Risk assets may see heightened volatility over the next few days as markets adjust to the fact that rate cuts are not forthcoming. Nevertheless, with rates still far below our estimate of neutral, the path of least resistance for global equities remains to the upside. The bull market in stocks will only end when inflation moves significantly higher, requiring the Fed to hike rates aggressively. That is unlikely to happen during the next 12 months. Feature Gentle Jay Ruffles The Markets … Transitorily This week’s FOMC statement confirmed that the Fed is on hold. In sharp contrast to his claim last October that rates were “a long way from neutral,” Chair Powell stressed during his press conference that there was no strong case for moving rates in “either direction.” Equities initially rose, while the dollar weakened, only to reverse direction following Powell’s subsequent comment that the recent decline in inflation was “transitory.” We would not make a big deal of Powell’s “transitory” remark. As a factual matter, he is correct. Table 1 shows that almost all of the decline in core PCE inflation from 2% in September 2018 to 1.6% in March 2019 can be explained by a drop in inflation in two categories: financial services and clothing/footwear. The former was weighed down by the steep decline in equity prices late last year (Chart 1). The latter was affected by a methodological change in how the Bureau of Labor Statistics calculates apparel prices.1 Table 1Weaker Core PCE Inflation Driven Mainly By Financial Services
Larry Summers: Shadow Fed Chair
Larry Summers: Shadow Fed Chair
Chart 1Stock Market Swings Feed Into Price Indices
Stock Market Swings Feed Into Price Indices
Stock Market Swings Feed Into Price Indices
The more important takeaway is that the Fed is now in a “wait and see” mode. Considering that the unemployment rate is at a 50-year low and real rates are barely positive, this is an extraordinary development. How to explain it? Two words: Larry Summers. Everyone Loves Larry Six years after President Obama dashed Larry Summers’ hopes of becoming the next Fed chair by anointing Janet Yellen instead, the former Treasury Secretary’s shadow hangs over the central bank like never before. Two of Summers’ key views – that the neutral rate of interest is much lower today than in the past, and that the Fed should wait to see the “whites of inflation’s eyes” before raising rates any further – have become accepted wisdom not just at the Fed, but on Wall Street as well. At the same time, another of Larry Summers’ core beliefs, that the Fed should aim for an inflation rate above the current target of 2%, is gaining traction. This raises an important question: What would it mean for investors if all these hypotheses turned out to be wrong? Let’s examine the arguments. How Low Is The Neutral Rate Of Interest? Conceptually, the interest rate on safe government securities should adjust to ensure that global savings equal investment. Interest rates will fall if either desired savings rise or desired investment declines (Chart 2). To the extent that some countries have more savings and/or fewer worthwhile domestic investment opportunities than others, they will run current account surpluses. Countries with less savings and better investment prospects will run current account deficits (Chart 3).
Chart 2
Chart 3
There is a strong case to be made that the neutral rate of interest has fallen over the past few decades. Potential GDP growth in developed economies has slowed. This has reduced the need for new capital investment. The advent of the digital age, or the “demassification” of the economy as Summers calls it, has also brought down the amount of physical capital firms need to function. Meanwhile, China’s entry into the global economy greatly expanded productive capacity without a concomitant increase in spending, thus creating the “savings glut” that Ben Bernanke first described in 2005. The question is how will these forces evolve over the coming years? According to the standard “accelerator” model, the optimal level of investment spending is determined by the growth rate of aggregate demand.2 As Chart 4 illustrates, most of the decline in trend real GDP growth in developed economies occurred between 1960 and 2000. Growth may decelerate further over the next decade, but not by much.
Chart 4
Chart 5Dependency Rates Are Rising Again In Developed Economies
Dependency Rates Are Rising Again In Developed Economies
Dependency Rates Are Rising Again In Developed Economies
Investment growth in China is likely to slow, but savings could also decline as a more robust consumer culture emerges and the government continues to take steps to strengthen the social safety net. Population aging in China and elsewhere could also erode savings. Falling fertility rates in most of the world starting in the early 1960s led to a decline in dependency rates in the 1980s and 1990s (Chart 5). However, now that baby boomers are starting to retire, dependency rates are rising. Once health care spending is included, consumption increases in old age, especially in the last few years of life (Chart 6). Globally, the ratio of workers-to-consumers peaked earlier this decade. The pace of the decline in this ratio is set to accelerate over the next few decades (Chart 7). More desired consumption relative to any given level of production implies less savings and a higher neutral rate of interest. Chart 6Savings Over The Life Cycle
Savings Over The Life Cycle
Savings Over The Life Cycle
Chart 7The Worker-To-Consumer Ratio Has Peaked Globally
The Worker-To-Consumer Ratio Has Peaked Globally
The Worker-To-Consumer Ratio Has Peaked Globally
Even in Japan, the neutral rate may be stealthily moving higher (Chart 8). Despite an influx of women into the labor market, the household savings rate has fallen from nearly 20% in the early 1980s to around 4% of late. The ratio of job openings-to-applicants has risen to a 45-year high. The trade balance has moved into deficit. Yet, 20-year inflation swaps are trading at 0.3%, implying that investors do not expect the Bank of Japan to achieve its 2% inflation target anytime soon. They may be in for a big surprise. Gauging The Cyclical Drivers Of The Neutral Rate At its core, the secular stagnation thesis is a theory about the long-term determinants of interest rates. It says little about the appropriate level of interest rates over cyclical horizons of a few years, even though that is the period over which monetary policy decisions tend to affect the economy. Today, aggregate demand in the United States is being buoyed by a number of cyclical forces. These include very loose fiscal policy, fairly strong credit growth (especially among corporates), high levels of asset prices, and faster wage growth at the bottom of the income distribution (Chart 9). All of these forces are helping to lift the neutral rate of interest. Chart 8Japan May Be Slowly Moving Towards Higher Inflation
Japan May Be Slowly Moving Towards Higher Inflation
Japan May Be Slowly Moving Towards Higher Inflation
Chart 9U.S.: Cyclical Forces Are Propping Up Demand
U.S.: Cyclical Forces Are Propping Up Demand
U.S.: Cyclical Forces Are Propping Up Demand
Consider the impact of looser fiscal policy. The IMF estimates that the U.S. structural budget deficit averaged 3.2% of GDP in 2015. In 2019, the IMF reckons it will average 5.2% of GDP. The budget deficit could rise further if Trump and Congress succeed in negotiating a new infrastructure package or if, as is likely, the Democrats insist on new spending measures as a condition for increasing the debt ceiling later this year. For the sake of argument, let us suppose that every $1 of additional fiscal stimulus adds $1 to aggregate demand. In this case, fiscal policy has added about 2% of GDP to annual aggregate demand over the past five years. Suppose that a one percentage-point increase in aggregate demand raises the appropriate level of interest rates by one percentage point, which is in line with the specification of the Taylor Rule that former Fed Chair Janet Yellen favored. This implies that fiscal policy alone has raised the neutral rate by over two percentage points over this time period. Laubach-Williams And The Fed Pause The discussion above suggests that the neutral rate of interest may be much higher than what the widely-used Laubach-Williams (LW) model implies. The LW model essentially calculates the trend growth rate of the economy in order to come up with its estimate for the neutral rate (Chart 10). It is an overly simplistic approach, as it ignores all the other factors influencing savings and investment decisions. Nevertheless, it seems to be driving the Fed’s thinking to a significant degree.
Chart 10
Chart 11Things That Make The Fed Go "Hmm"...
Things That Make The Fed Go "Hmm"...
Things That Make The Fed Go "Hmm"...
The real fed funds rate reached the LW estimate for the first time in 11 years last December (Chart 11). While we would not go as far as crediting the model for the Fed’s decision to go on hold – the sell-off in stocks and the flattening of the yield curve played a much larger role – the Fed’s reliance on the model does explain why it has maintained a dovish stance this year even as financial conditions have eased. Waiting For The Whites Of Inflation’s Eyes To his credit, John Williams, who helped develop the model more than 15 years ago, and now serves as the President of the New York Fed and the Vice Chair of the FOMC, has stressed that there is a wide band of uncertainty around any estimate of the neutral rate. Given this inherent uncertainty, a growing number of policymakers have shifted towards the Summers view that it is better to err on the side of caution and take a go-slow approach to raising rates. The rationale is straightforward: If the neutral rate turns out to be higher than expected and inflation starts to accelerate, central banks can always tighten monetary policy. In contrast, if the neutral rate is very low, the decision to raise rates could plunge the economy into a downward spiral. Historically, the Fed has cut rates by about six percentage points during recessions (Chart 12). At present rates of inflation, that would surely mean that the zero lower bound on interest rates would be reached, at which point monetary policy becomes increasingly impotent. Chart 12The Fed Is Worried About The Zero Bound
The Fed Is Worried About The Zero Bound
The Fed Is Worried About The Zero Bound
A major drawback to waiting too long to raise rates is that it can take up to 18 months for changes in monetary policy to affect the economy. Inflation is also a highly lagging indicator: It normally does not peak until after a recession has begun, and does not bottom until the recovery is well underway (Chart 13). By the time you realize that the economy is overheating, it may be too late to prevent inflation from rising.
Chart 13
Of course, in the minds of many influential economists, higher inflation would be a virtue rather than a vice. Summers has argued that the Fed should aim to bring inflation into a range of 3%-to-4% in order to ensure that real rates can fall far enough into negative territory during the next recession. Higher inflation could also alleviate the nominal wage rigidity problem, thus allowing real wages to adjust more readily in response to economic shocks. The risk of aiming for higher inflation is that you will get more of it than you bargained for. True, inflation was broadly stable in the mid-to-late 1980s at around 4%, but this followed a period of much higher inflation in the late 1970s/early 1980s (Chart 14). It may be more difficult to stabilize inflation after it has risen than after it has fallen. This is especially likely to be the case if the central bank has purposely taken steps to raise inflation. Chart 14Inflation Was Broadly Stable At Around 4% In The Mid-To-Late 1980s
Inflation Was Broadly Stable At Around 4% In The Mid-To-Late 1980s
Inflation Was Broadly Stable At Around 4% In The Mid-To-Late 1980s
Supersymmetry: Inflation Edition The Fed is not about to raise its inflation target anytime soon. It is, however, rethinking the manner in which it conducts monetary policy in a way that will probably lead to somewhat higher inflation. Under the Fed’s existing framework, its “symmetric” inflation target is not supposed to be backward-looking. Symmetry simply means that the Fed targets 2% inflation every year, allowing for an equal probability of inflation ending up overshooting its mark as undershooting it. If inflation has missed its target in the past, this does not give the Fed license to try to exceed it in the future. Bygones are bygones.
Chart 15
Chart 16Inflation Has Been Below The Fed's 2% Target For The Past 10 Years
Inflation Has Been Below The Fed's 2% Target For The Past 10 Years
Inflation Has Been Below The Fed's 2% Target For The Past 10 Years
This definition of symmetry is starting to shift to one that is both forward-looking and backward-looking. This effectively brings the Fed one step closer to adopting price-level targeting – an idea John Williams has spoken glowingly about. Under a price-level targeting regime, the Fed would try to keep the price level on a predetermined trend (Chart 15). Inflation undershoots would have to be rectified with overshoots, and vice versa. This is obviously relevant for the current environment. Chart 16 shows that the core PCE deflator is now 4.6% below where it would have been if it increased by 2% per year since the financial crisis. Even if the Fed did not change its inflation target, bringing the deflator back towards its pre-crisis trend would still require that inflation run above the Fed’s target over the next few years. As Neel Kashkari said earlier this year: “We officially have a symmetric target and actual inflation has averaged around 1.7%, below our 2% target, for the past several years. So if we were at 2.3% for several years that shouldn't be concerning.”3 Investment Conclusions Risk assets may see heightened volatility over the next few days as markets adjust to the fact that rate cuts are not forthcoming. Nevertheless, with rates still far below our estimate of neutral, the path of least resistance for global equities remains to the upside. Recessions typically do not occur when monetary policy is accommodative. The stock market, in turn, rarely falls in a sustained manner when the economy is expanding (Chart 17). This view prompted us to upgrade global equities in December. We remain cyclically bullish today. Chart 17Recessions And Bear Markets Usually Overlap
Recessions And Bear Markets Usually Overlap
Recessions And Bear Markets Usually Overlap
Regionally, we do not have any strong preferences at the moment, but expect to upgrade EM and Europe by this summer. Despite the occasional disappointment such as this month’s manufacturing ISM, a broad swath of the evidence suggests global growth is reaccelerating (Chart 18). EM and European stocks tend to outperform in that environment. The dollar tends to weaken when the global economy strengthens (Chart 19). Hence, the greenback should enter a soft patch over the coming months which could last until the second half of next year. Chart 18Global Growth Is Reaccelerating
Global Growth Is Reaccelerating
Global Growth Is Reaccelerating
Chart 19The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
Global bond yields will drift higher over the coming months as global growth surprises on the upside. Investors should position for somewhat steeper yield curves globally. The U.S. yield curve will flatten again late next year as inflation starts to reach levels that even a dovish Fed is not comfortable with. This will likely set the stage for an inversion of the yield curve in early 2021 and a global recession later that same year. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 “Government Economists Turn to Big Data to Track the Economy,” The Wall Street Journal, April 30, 2019. 2 In most economic models, the capital-to-output ratio is assumed to converge towards a stable level over time. By definition, the capital stock in Year t is determined by the capital stock in Year t-1 plus whatever net investment (gross investment minus depreciation) takes place in Year t. In general, the optimal net investment-to-GDP ratio will equal the product of the capital-to-output ratio and the growth rate of GDP. For example, suppose that the capital-to-output ratio is three (meaning that the capital stock is three times as large as GDP). If output does not change from one year to the next, no additional net investment would be necessary to maintain a stable capital-to-output ratio. However, if output is growing at 2%, net investment of 3X2%=6% of GDP would be required. 3 “Fed's Kashkari says some overshoot on inflation would not be alarming,” Reuters, April 11, 2019. Strategy & Market Trends MacroQuant Model And Current Subjective Scores
Chart 20
Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Yesterday, the Fed dashed the hopes of traders betting on an interest rate cut this year. The FOMC is on pause for now, and it will not respond to what it perceives as a transitory inflation slowdown. The Fed reaction function has also evolved. The Fed…
Highlights Open an equity market relative overweight to Europe versus China. Upgrade Denmark to neutral. Downgrade the Netherlands to underweight. Maintain Switzerland at overweight. With the Euro Stoxx 50 now up almost 20 percent from its January 3 low, the majority of this year’s absolute gains have already been made. Core euro area bond yields will edge modestly higher… …and EUR/USD will appreciate, as the backward-looking data on which the ECB depends catches up with the more perky real-time economic data. Feature Vertical charts scare us, as we contemplate falling over the edge. But they also excite us, as we contemplate a lucrative investment opportunity. Right now, the vertical chart that is causing us palpitations is technology versus healthcare (Chart of the Week). Chart of the WeekTechnology Versus Healthcare Has Gone Vertical!
Technology Versus Healthcare Has Gone Vertical!
Technology Versus Healthcare Has Gone Vertical!
The technology versus healthcare sector pair is critical, because it looms large in several stock markets’ ‘fingerprint’ sector skews. Meaning that the technology versus healthcare relative performance has unavoidable consequences for regional and country stock market allocation (Chart I-2 and Chart I-3). The technology versus healthcare sector pair is critical, because it looms large in several stock markets’ ‘fingerprint’ sector skews. Chart I-2When Technology Underperforms Healthcare, Netherlands Underperforms Switzerland
When Technology Underperforms Healthcare, Netherlands Underperforms Switzerland
When Technology Underperforms Healthcare, Netherlands Underperforms Switzerland
Chart I-3When Technology Underperforms Healthcare, China Underperforms Switzerland
When Technology Underperforms Healthcare, China Underperforms Switzerland
When Technology Underperforms Healthcare, China Underperforms Switzerland
Specifically, from a European stock market perspective, the Netherlands is overweight technology while Switzerland and Denmark are both overweight healthcare. Further afield, the U.S. is overweight technology while China is both overweight technology and underweight healthcare. Explaining Verticality And The Subsequent Fall What creates vertical charts? To answer the question, let’s turn it on its head: what prevents vertical charts? The answer is: the presence of value investors. In a healthy market, a cohort of value investors will sit on the side lines and only transact with the marginal seller when the price falls to a semblance of value. In other words, the value sensitive investors help to set the price, preventing verticality. But if the value sensitive cohort switches out of character to join a strong uptrend, the cohort will suddenly become value insensitive. In this case, the marginal seller will set the price higher and the formerly uninterested value sensitive buyer will now buy at the higher price. The market has morphed into a trend-following market. As more of the value cohort switch sides, the process adds rocket fuel to the rally. Driven by the ‘fear of missing out’ the marginal buyer will buy at larger and larger price increments, and the chart becomes vertical. What triggers the subsequent fall? When all of the value cohort have joined the uptrend, the fuel has run out: the marginal seller will no longer find a willing marginal buyer at the elevated price. At this critical point, one of two things will happen. Either: a completely new cohort of even deeper value investors will switch out of character and provide new fuel to the trend, allowing it to continue. Or: the deep value investors will stay true to character and will only deal with the marginal seller when the price falls, perhaps sharply, to a semblance of deep value. Technology versus healthcare is now at this critical technical point at which the probability of trend-reversal has significantly increased. Both the theoretical and empirical evidence suggests that at this critical point, the probability of trend-continuation decreases to about a third and the probability of a trend-reversal increases to about two-thirds. Technology versus healthcare is now at this critical technical point at which the probability of trend-reversal has significantly increased (Chart I-4). Chart I-4Technology Versus Healthcare: The Probability Of A Trend-Reversal Is High
Technology Versus Healthcare: The Probability Of A Trend-Reversal Is High
Technology Versus Healthcare: The Probability Of A Trend-Reversal Is High
Therefore, on a tactical horizon, it is now appropriate to underweight technology versus healthcare – which, to reiterate, carries unavoidable consequences for country and regional stock market allocation: Open an overweight to Europe versus China. Upgrade Denmark to neutral. Downgrade the Netherlands to underweight. Maintain Switzerland at overweight. Distinguishing Between Valuation And Growth Is Extremely Difficult There is another problem for value investors. Over short periods – meaning less than a year – it is very difficult, if not impossible, to decompose a price return into its two components: the component coming from the change in valuation and the component coming from the change in earnings growth expectations. A stock market’s actual earnings are highly sensitive to small changes in economic growth. This is universally the case but is especially true in Europe, because the European stock market’s skew towards growth-sensitive cyclicals gives it a very high operational leverage to GDP growth: a seemingly minor 0.5 percent change in economic growth translates into a major 25 percent change in stock market earnings growth (Chart I-5). The slightest improvement in economic growth expectations causes the market to upgrade its forecasts for earnings very sharply. Chart I-5A Minor Upgrade To Economic Growth = A Major Upgrade To Profits Growth
A Minor Upgrade To Economic Growth = A Major Upgrade To Profits Growth
A Minor Upgrade To Economic Growth = A Major Upgrade To Profits Growth
Given this very high operational leverage, the slightest improvement in economic growth expectations causes the market to upgrade its forecasts for earnings very sharply. Which of course lifts the market’s price, P, very sharply. In contrast, equity analysts’ forecasts for earnings, which drive the market’s ‘official’ forward earnings, E, adjust much more slowly. As my colleague, Chris Bowes explains: “analysts get married to a view and usually require overwhelming evidence to materially change it.” The upshot is that the P rises very sharply but the official forward E does not, meaning that the official forward P/E also rises very sharply. This gives the impression that the move is mostly valuation driven, but the truth is that the move is mostly earnings growth driven. In a similar vein, when central banks guide interest rates lower, how much of the equity market’s move is due to a higher valuation, and how much is due to improved prospects for economic growth resulting from the central bank policy change? Over relatively short periods of time, it is extremely difficult to tell. All of which provides an important lesson: over short periods, do not focus on separately forecasting the valuation change and earnings growth change of a stock market. Much better to forecast the stock market price directly, by focussing on the two main things which will drive it: changes to central bank policy, and changes to short-term real-time economic growth. Focus On Central Banks And Short-Term Economic Growth Central bank policy now ‘depends’ on relatively longer-term changes (say, year-on-year) in backward-looking data, most notably the consumer price index. Whereas the stock market’s earnings growth expectations take their cue from shorter-term changes in real-time economic indicators (Chart I-6). Chart I-6Quarter-On-Quarter Growth Is Rebounding
Quarter-On-Quarter Growth Is Rebounding
Quarter-On-Quarter Growth Is Rebounding
Hence, the ‘sweet spot’ for equity markets is when, in simple terms, year-on-year CPI inflation is decelerating, implying central banks will become more dovish, while quarter-on-quarter economic growth is accelerating, implying the market will upgrade earnings growth (Chart I-7). The stock market’s earnings growth expectations take their cue from shorter-term changes in real-time economic indicators. The ‘weak spot’ for equity markets is the exact opposite, when year-on-year CPI inflation is accelerating, implying central banks will become less dovish, while quarter-on-quarter economic growth is decelerating, implying the market will downgrade earnings growth. As 2019 progresses, our high-conviction prediction is that equity markets will move from a sweet spot to a weak spot. With the Euro Stoxx 50 now up almost 20 percent from its January 3 low, it implies that the majority of 2019’s gains have already been made in the first four months of the year – and the market is unlikely to be significantly higher at the end of the year. Compared to the equity market, the bond, interest rate, and currency markets are – almost by definition – much more dependent on central banks’ lagging reaction functions than on real-time growth. Which solves the mystery as to why bond yields are close to new lows while equity markets are close to new highs. It also solves the mystery as to why EUR/USD has lagged the very clear recovery in euro area real-time growth and in euro area stock markets (Chart I-8). Central banks are following lagging indicators. Chart I-7Stock Markets Take Their Cue from Real-Time Indicators
Stock Markets Take Their Cue from Real-Time Indicators
Stock Markets Take Their Cue from Real-Time Indicators
Chart I-8Central Banks Are Following Lagging Indicators, Stock Markets Are Following Real-Time Indicators
Central Banks Are Following Lagging Indicators, Stock Markets Are Following Real-Time Indicators
Central Banks Are Following Lagging Indicators, Stock Markets Are Following Real-Time Indicators
But as the backward-looking data, on which the ECB depends, catches up with the more perky real-time data, core euro area bond yields will edge modestly higher, and EUR/USD will gently appreciate. Next week, in lieu of the usual weekly report, I will be giving this quarter’s webcast titled ‘From Sweet Spot to Weak Spot?’ live on Wednesday May 8 at 10.00 AM EDT (3.00 PM BST, 4.00 PM CEST, 10.00 PM HKT). Through a series of key charts, the webcast will reveal the prospects and opportunities for all asset-classes through the remainder of 2019. At the end of the webcast, I will also unveil a brand new investment recommendation. So don’t miss it! Fractal Trading System* Supporting the arguments in the main body of this report, fractal analysis suggests that the recent rally in China’s stock market is at a technical point that has reliably signaled previous major reversals. Accordingly, this week’s recommended trade is a stock market pair trade, short China versus Japan. Set the profit target at 2.5 percent with a symmetrical stop-loss. We now have six 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-9Short China Vs. Japan
Short China VS. Japan
Short China VS. Japan
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. Dhaval Joshi, Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 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 The March data brought the first signs of a stabilization in China’s “hard” economic data, albeit from a weak level. The April PMIs disappointed, but they remained in expansionary territory; this is in addition to a continued significant improvement in the trade-related subcomponents of the official survey. Chinese credit growth is unlikely to relapse over the coming year, despite recent investor concerns that Chinese policymakers may dial back their stimulus efforts. The pace of growth may moderate, but halting the uptrend in growth this year would constitute a major policy mistake that we do not expect. Chinese stocks may trend flat-to-down in the very near term as investors await a signed trade deal with the U.S. and further signs of a recovery in activity. Over the next 6-12 months, however, an overweight stance is warranted, barring a major relapse in our leading indicator. Feature Tables 1 and 2 on pages 2 and 3 highlight key developments in China’s economy and its financial markets over the past month. On the growth front, March’s data brought the very first (albeit modest) signs of stabilization in actual Chinese economic activity. While the April manufacturing PMIs released earlier this week disappointed, the trade related components of the official survey continued to improve meaningfully, which implies that an improvement in domestic demand is still early. This conclusion is not particularly surprising given that the first green shoots in the actual data are emerging from a depressed level of activity. Credit growth has only recently picked up, implying that actual activity will strengthen over the coming 6-12 months followed a signed trade deal and a continued (modest) uptrend in credit. Table 1China Macro Data Summary
China Macro And Market Review
China Macro And Market Review
Table 2China Financial Market Performance Summary
China Macro And Market Review
China Macro And Market Review
Within financial markets, the most significant recent development has been that Chinese stocks have sagged somewhat due to concerns that policymakers may meaningfully dial back their stimulus efforts over the coming year. In our view, recent statements from policymakers, as well as the fact that the recovery in activity is only now beginning, underscores that credit growth is unlikely to relapse over the coming year. It may not grow at the breakneck pace observed in the first quarter, but beyond the near-term jitters that this may introduce into the equity market, we do not see it as a threat to an overweight stance towards Chinese stocks over the coming 6-12 months. In reference to Tables 1 and 2, we provide below several detailed observations concerning developments in China’s macro and financial market data: Chart 1 highlights that March brought the first sign of a stabilization in actual Chinese economic activity. When measured on a smoothed basis, the Li Keqiang index itself weakened further in March, but total import growth moved sideways and nominal manufacturing output ticked higher. We noted in our last Macro & Market review that future changes in activity measures were now more likely to reflect actual changes in underlying economic circumstances given that the previously beneficial tariff front-running effect had probably washed out of the data. March’s data confirms this view, and underscores that activity will pickup in the second half of the year. Chart 1The First (Albeit Tentative) Sign Of Economic Stabilization
The First (Albeit Tentative) Sign Of Economic Stabilization
The First (Albeit Tentative) Sign Of Economic Stabilization
Chart 2 shows that the uptrend in our leading indicator for Chinese economic activity is so far modest, but also that it is now at a 2-year high relative to its 12-month moving average. The indicator is being weighed-down by weak money growth (M2 and our definition of M3), even though monetary conditions remain easy and our measures of credit growth picked up sharply in Q1. We doubt that the trend in Chinese money and credit growth can sustainably decouple in a scenario where the latter is sustainably improving, as it would imply that all of the credit improvement was originating from non-bank financial institutions. As such, we expect money growth to catch up to credit growth in the coming months. The annual change in the PBOC’s pledged supplementary lending injection remained in negative territory in March, and both floor space started and sold decelerated modestly further. Construction and sales activity continue to diverge, with the latter still pointing to a further slowdown in the former. We will be updating our Chinese housing outlook in a Special Report next week. April’s Caixin and official manufacturing PMI disappointed, but this overshadowed a continued significant improvement in the new export orders and import components of the official PMI (Chart 3). In our view, this is consistent with a stabilization in the export outlook, but implies that Chinese domestically-oriented manufacturing activity is not yet booming. Nonetheless, a signed trade deal, improving importer/exporter sentiment, and an uptrend in credit growth still implies that activity will pick up meaningfully later in the year. Chart 2Our Leading Indicator Is Now Modestly Trending Higher
Our Leading Indicator Is Now Modestly Trending Higher
Our Leading Indicator Is Now Modestly Trending Higher
Chart 3Trade-Related Components Of The Official PMI Continue To Rise
Trade-Related Components Of The Official PMI Continue To Rise
Trade-Related Components Of The Official PMI Continue To Rise
Over the past month, Taiwanese and domestic Chinese stocks have been the best performers within “Greater China”, relative to the MSCI Hong Kong index, the MSCI China index, and the Hang Seng China Enterprises index. The latter in particular has lagged other Chinese equity indexes since late-March (Chart 4), and may be due for a catch-up. Over the nearer-term, Chinese stocks, especially the domestic market, have sagged due to concerns that Chinese policymakers may meaningfully dial back their stimulus efforts over the coming year. We discussed this risk in our April 17thWeekly Report,1 and noted that while we expected credit growth to moderate somewhat, a more meaningful slowdown, particularly if coupled with signals from policymakers that a much slower pace of growth is desired, could pose a risk to our overweight equity stance. The April manufacturing PMIs disappointed, but the trade-related components of the official survey continued to improve meaningfully. In our view, recent statements from policymakers, particularly from PBOC Deputy Governor Liu Guoqiang,2 underscores that credit growth is unlikely to relapse over the coming year; it will simply not be growing at the breakneck pace observed in the first quarter. Beyond the near-term jitters that this may introduce into the equity market, we do not see it as a threat to an overweight stance towards Chinese stocks over the coming 6-12 months. Chart 5 highlights that Chinese consumer stocks have been the clear winners since the beginning of the year, particularly in the domestic market. Consumer stocks, including staples, sold off substantially in 2H2018 as investors responded to shockingly weak consumer spending data. Stimulus measures targeted to Chinese households, along with a meaningful improvement in some measures of consumer spending, has helped restore investor confidence in consumer stocks (which had previously been viewed as a bullish “no-brainer” structural trade). Chart 4Is An H-Share Catchup##br## Looming?
Is An H-Share Catchup Looming?
Is An H-Share Catchup Looming?
Chart 5Chinese Consumer Stocks Have Been On Fire
Chinese Consumer Stocks Have Been On Fire
Chinese Consumer Stocks Have Been On Fire
The sharp rise in the 7-day interbank repo rate in April fed concerns among equity investors that Chinese policymakers might be in the process of paring back their stimulus efforts. However, as Chart 6 shows, China’s 7-day repo rate is extraordinarily volatile, and is affected by a variety of seasonal and technical factors. The chart shows that a 1-month moving average of the 7-day repo rate is broadly in line with the level that has prevailed over the past 9 months. In addition, the 3-month repo rate (which we have argued has been a more informative predictor of China’s monetary policy stance) remains well on the low end of its range over the past year. In short, despite investor concerns, Chinese interbank repo rates are not signaling a change in China’s monetary policy stance. Tighter monetary policy is not in the cards for this year. After having risen noticeably in late-March, Chinese onshore corporate bond spreads have fallen back to the low end of their trading range over the past 8 months. We continue to recommend that domestic investors hold a diversified portfolio of SOE corporate bonds, on the basis that actual bond defaults over the coming 6-12 months are likely to be materially lower than what investors are pricing in even though they are indeed likely to rise. Chart 7 shows that USD-HKD has eased somewhat over the past month from the top end of the band, and now trades closed at 7.845. This modest appreciation in HKD appears to have been catalyzed by a further reduction in the supply of interbank liquidity by the HKMA. While the appreciation in HKD is some modest good news for Hong Kong’s monetary authority, it remains reluctant to reduce liquidity in the system given how extremely weak loan growth is in Hong Kong. This implies that, barring a meaningful upturn in credit, a significant appreciation in HKD is not likely in the cards. Chart 6Interbank Repo Rates Are Not Trending Higher
Interbank Repo Rates Are Not Trending Higher
Interbank Repo Rates Are Not Trending Higher
Chart 7A Modest Appreciation In HKD (Which Is Not Likely To Continue)
A Modest Appreciation In HKD (Which Is Not Likely To Continue)
A Modest Appreciation In HKD (Which Is Not Likely To Continue)
Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report “In The Wake Of An Upgrade: An Investment Strategy Post-Mortem,” dated April 17, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 2 During a PBOC briefing on April 25, Deputy Governor Guoqiang noted that “no one can bear it if policy swings back and forth between tightening and loosening many times a year”. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights Fed: Fed policymakers are sending a unified message that they want to keep rates on hold until they see a significant increase in inflation. However, our reading of their recent remarks suggests that they will be reluctant to actually cut rates unless GDP growth falls to below its estimated potential. Economy: If we strip out the volatile net exports, government and inventory components of growth, we see that economic activity slowed to below potential in the first quarter. However, the timeliest data on consumer spending, nonresidential investment and residential investment all suggest that Q1 will be the trough for the year. All in all, economic growth should be comfortably above potential in 2019, keeping rate cuts at bay. Investment Strategy: Investors should keep portfolio duration low, avoiding the 5-year/7-year part of the Treasury curve. Investors should also overweight spread product versus Treasuries, with a focus on Baa and junk rated corporate bonds. Feature Since January, Federal Reserve policymakers have sent a strikingly unified message: Policy should remain “patient” in an effort to re-anchor inflation expectations and demonstrate the symmetry of the Fed’s 2 percent inflation target. Take for example, two excerpts from recent speeches by Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren and Chicago Fed President Charles Evans. Rosengren:1 My own preference is for the Federal Reserve to adopt an inflation range that explicitly recognizes the challenge of the effective lower bound. We might be forced to accept below-2-percent inflation during recessions, but we would commit to achieving above-2-percent inflation in good times, so as to provide more policy space to counteract the next recession. Evans:2 I think the Fed must be willing to embrace inflation modestly above 2 percent 50 percent of the time. Indeed, I would communicate comfort with core inflation rates of 2-1/2 percent, as long as there is no obvious upward momentum and the path back toward 2 percent can be well managed. The consensus appears to be not only that higher inflation is necessary before the Fed lifts rates again, but also that the Fed should explicitly target an overshoot of its 2 percent target. With trailing 12-month core PCE inflation running at only 1.55% as of March, it will undoubtedly take some time before these inflation goals are met. We think the Fed’s commitment to keeping rates steady could waver if financial conditions ease sufficiently.3 But for now, with the market priced for 36 basis points of rate cuts over the next 12 months, the more pertinent question is: What will it take for the Fed to lower rates from current levels? Expecting A Rate Cut? Don’t Hold Your Breath Our Fed Monitor has an excellent track record calling turning points in monetary policy, and at present it is very close to zero, consistent with the Fed’s “on hold” stance (Chart 1). The Monitor is comprised of 44 indicators of economic growth, inflation and financial conditions. In other words, for the Monitor to recommend rate cuts going forward we will need to see some further deterioration in either economic growth, inflation or financial markets (Chart 2). This is roughly consistent with how Chicago Fed President Evans described his reaction function in his speech from two weeks ago: Chart 1"On Hold" Stance Justified
"On Hold" Stance Justified
"On Hold" Stance Justified
Chart 2Fed Monitor Components
Fed Monitor Components
Fed Monitor Components
If growth runs close to or somewhat above its potential and inflation builds momentum, then some further rate increases may be appropriate over time… In contrast, if activity softens more than expected or if inflation and inflation expectations run too low, then policy may have to be left on hold – or perhaps even loosened – to provide the appropriate accommodation to obtain our objectives. Our interpretation of the Fed’s reaction function is that it wants to maintain an accommodative monetary policy to ensure that inflation and inflation expectations move higher over time. However, it will consider monetary policy to be accommodative as long as GDP growth stays close to, or above, estimates of its potential rate. In other words, while the Fed is in no rush to tighten, we probably need to see a significant period of below-potential GDP growth before rate cuts are on the table. In his speech, Evans indicates that his personal estimate of potential GDP growth is 1.75%. The March Summary of Economic Projections shows that the central tendency of FOMC participant estimates is 1.8% - 2%. Our view is that U.S. growth will easily surpass this threshold in 2019, keeping rate cuts at bay. Tracking U.S. Growth Markets were caught off guard last week when we learned that real GDP grew 3.17% in the first quarter, above consensus estimates and well above the 1.8% - 2% potential growth threshold. However, the headline Q1 figure was flattered by significant gains in a few volatile GDP components. Chart 3Underlying Growth Slowdown
Underlying Growth Slowdown
Underlying Growth Slowdown
Much like how core measures of inflation strip out volatile food and energy prices to give us a better sense of the underlying trend, we can also look at Real Final Sales To Domestic Purchasers (FSDP) to get a better sense of the underlying trend in economic growth. FSDP includes only consumer spending, nonresidential investment and residential investment. That is, it removes government spending, net exports and inventory investment from the overall number. Viewed this way, we see that the U.S. economy did experience a significant growth slowdown in the first quarter. Real FSDP grew only 1.45% in Q1, below the 1.8% - 2% potential growth threshold (Chart 3). Net Exports & Inventories Chart 4Net Exports & Inventories
Net Exports & Inventories
Net Exports & Inventories
First quarter GDP was boosted by a +1.03% contribution from net exports and a +0.65% contribution from inventory investment, neither of which is likely to be repeated in Q2 (Chart 4). The top panel of Chart 4 shows just how unusual it is to see such a large contribution from net exports, an event that becomes even less likely when you factor in the dollar’s recent appreciation (Chart 4, panel 2). Turning to inventories, a significant build was long overdue given the backlog of orders seen during the past two years. But the ISM Manufacturing Index’s backlog of orders component has now fallen back to a neutral level (Chart 4, bottom panel). This suggests that firms are comfortable with their current inventory stockpiles, and that no aggressive inventory increases are likely during the next few quarters. Interestingly, while net exports and inventories will almost certainly pressure GDP growth lower in Q2, back toward the growth rate in FSDP, the latter has probably already troughed for the year. Recent data on consumer spending, nonresidential investment and residential investment all appear to have turned a corner. Consumer Spending Consumer spending added a meager +0.8% to GDP in Q1, but core retail sales growth has recovered sharply after having plunged near the end of last year (Chart 5). What’s more, with consumer sentiment close to one standard deviation above its historical mean – whether we look at expectations or current conditions surveys – consumers don’t seem inclined to retrench in the months ahead (Chart 6). Chart 5Consumer Spending
Consumer Spending
Consumer Spending
Chart 6Buoyant Consumer Sentiment
Buoyant Consumer Sentiment
Buoyant Consumer Sentiment
Nonresidential Investment Chart 7Nonresidential Investment
Nonresidential Investment
Nonresidential Investment
We expected business investment to weaken in Q1, and its +0.4% growth contribution is low compared to recent readings. The decline was anticipated due to last year’s significant deterioration in global growth. Slower global growth necessarily causes firms to downgrade their profit expectations. Faced with lower expected profits, companies are much more inclined to curtail investment. However, considering the outlook heading into mid-year, we have already noticed signs of improvement in leading global growth indicators.4 More recently, we have even seen that improvement translate into stronger U.S. investment data. Core durable goods new orders grew +17% (annualized) in March, dragging the year-over-year rate up to +5.3% (Chart 7). Further, our BCA Composite New Orders Indicator – a weighted combination of ISM New Orders and NFIB Capital Spending Plans – has bounced during the past few months, returning close to its historical mean (Chart 7, panel 3). An average of Capital Spending Intentions from regional Fed surveys also remains close to one standard deviation above its historical average (Chart 7, bottom panel). Residential Investment Residential investment (aka Housing) has exerted a meaningful drag on GDP growth in each of the past five quarters, and it lowered GDP by -0.1% in Q1 (Chart 8). However, much like with consumer spending and nonresidential investment, the timely economic data suggest a turnaround is in the offing. Much like with consumer spending and nonresidential investment, the timely economic data suggest a turnaround is in the offing. Optimism has returned to housing since mortgage rates fell earlier this year. New home sales and mortgage purchase applications have jumped, and single-family housing starts are the only important housing-related data that haven’t yet rebounded. We expect that rebound to occur soon, as do homebuilders whose confidence has risen during the past few months. Homebuilder optimism surveys remain close to one standard deviation above their historical averages (Chart 9). Chart 8Residential Investment
Residential Investment
Residential Investment
Chart 9Buoyant Homebuilder Confidence
Buoyant Homebuilder Confidence
Buoyant Homebuilder Confidence
Bottom Line: Fed policymakers are sending a unified message that they want to keep rates on hold until they see a significant increase in inflation. However, our reading of their recent remarks suggests that they will be reluctant to actually cut rates unless GDP growth falls to below its estimated potential. Potential GDP growth is estimated to be in the 1.8% to 2% range. If we strip out the volatile net exports, government and inventory components of growth, we see that economic activity slowed to below potential in the first quarter. However, the timeliest data on consumer spending, nonresidential investment and residential investment all suggest that Q1 will be the trough for the year. All in all, economic growth should be comfortably above potential in 2019, keeping rate cuts at bay. Investment Implications To translate the above views on the economy and the Fed’s reaction function into a portfolio strategy, we first return to our Golden Rule of Bond Investing.5The Golden Rule states that if the Fed delivers more (fewer) rate hikes than are currently discounted in the market over the next 12 months, then the Treasury index will earn negative (positive) excess returns versus cash during that investment horizon (Chart 10). At present, this means that investors should only expect positive excess returns from taking duration risk in the event that the Fed cuts rates by more than 36 basis points during the next 12 months. Given our view that rate cuts are unlikely, investors should maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration. Chart 10The Golden Rule's Track Record
The Golden Rule's Track Record
The Golden Rule's Track Record
If we further assume that market expectations will shift to price-in fewer rate cuts, or even possibly some rate hikes, then we would expect 5-year and 7-year yields to rise the most (Chart 11). Investors should avoid those maturities and focus their Treasury exposure on the short and long ends of the curve. These barbell over bullet trades have the advantage of being positive carry, so they will earn money even if rate hike expectations are unchanged.6 Chart 11Avoid The 5- And 7-Year Maturities
Avoid The 5- And 7-Year Maturities
Avoid The 5- And 7-Year Maturities
Chart 12Investment Grade Spread Targets
Investment Grade Spread Targets
Investment Grade Spread Targets
Finally, the combination of above-potential GDP growth and a patient Fed is positive for spread product. Investors should remain overweight spread product versus Treasuries in bond portfolios, focusing on Baa and junk rated corporate bonds. Spreads for those credit tiers remain wide compared to historical median levels for this phase of the cycle (Charts 12 &13).7 Chart 13High-Yield Spread Targets
High-Yield Spread Targets
High-Yield Spread Targets
Ryan Swift, U.S. Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 https://www.bostonfed.org/news-and-events/speeches/2019/monetary-policymaking-in-todays-environment.aspx 2 https://www.chicagofed.org/publications/speeches/2019/risk-management-and-the-credibility-of-monetary-policy 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The New Battleground For Monetary Policy”, dated March 26, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Bond Kitchen”, dated April 9, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, “The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing”, dated July 24, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Paid To Wait”, dated February 26, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 For further details on how we calculate these spread targets please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Value In Corporate Bonds”, dated February 19, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Central bankers appear to be in a rush to boost inflation expectations before the next economic downturn. This in practice should be stimulative for the global economy. Historically, currencies of small, open economies are typically the first to benefit from rebounding global growth. Ditto for those whose output gaps have fully closed. However, there appears to be a shift in the behavior of certain currency pairs in the current cycle. For example, the U.S. dollar has tended to perform better in a low-volatility environment in recent years, a shift from the past. Correspondingly, its safe-haven status may have been marginally eroded. The U.S. decision not to extend waivers on Iranian oil exports beyond the May 2 deadline is bullish for petrocurrencies such as the RUB and NOK. The Bank of Canada kept rates on hold but will be hard pressed to meet its inflation mandate before the next downturn. This suggests standing aside on USD/CAD. Rising net short positioning on the yen and Swiss franc is making them attractive from a contrarian standpoint. Place a limit-buy on CHF/NZD at 1.45. Feature Chart I-1Volatility Is Due For A Bounce
Volatility Is Due For A Bounce
Volatility Is Due For A Bounce
The four most important financial variables that could give a near-complete snapshot of the world economy at any point in time are probably the level of the S&P 500, the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield, the trade-weighted dollar and a commodity bellwether, say, crude oil prices. Any permutation of these variables can identify what quadrant the world economy is operating in, with the two most important states being either boom or bust. Taking three of those variables today – the S&P 500 breaking to all-time highs, crude oil prices up 40% from their lows and U.S. 10-year Treasury yields off by almost 100 basis points from their October highs – it is hard to justify why the dollar has hardly budged, this week’s rally aside. Obviously, this is a very simplified view of an intricately complex world economy. But it highlights a point we have been making in recent bulletins: that extended periods of low currency volatility have been very unusual in the post-Bretton Woods world (Chart I-1). The typical narrative has been that as we enter a reflationary window, pro-cyclical currencies should outperform. The reason is simple enough: These economies are export-oriented and tied to the global cycle. So, a rising current account surplus as demand for their goods and services picks up provides underlying support for the currency. Should there be little slack in their domestic economies, this also raises the probability that the central bank tightens monetary policy to fend off future inflationary pressures. It does not hurt if these countries are also commodity producers, since rising terms of trade also provides an additional exchange-rate boost. The reality is that the world is not static, and some of these dynamics have been shifting. The evidence is in the counterfactual: At current levels, China’s credit injection should have lit a fire under pro-cyclical trades because they tend to work in real-time rather than with a lag. The foreign exchange market is one of the deepest and most liquid where new information tends to get digested and discounted instantaneously. As such, the lack of more pronounced strength in pro-cyclical currencies like the Australian, New Zealand and Canadian dollar exchange rates is genuine reason for concern and worth investigation. Why Is The Dollar Breaking Higher? Our Special Report1 on March 29th highlighted the fact that the dollar should be 5-10% higher simply based on measures of relative trends, and recent data corroborate this view. The growth differential between the U.S. and the rest of the world remains wide. Meanwhile, exports and industrial production from Southeast Asia continue to decelerate. Interbank rates in China are spiking higher, suggesting most of the monetary stimulus may have already been frontloaded. And on the earnings front, U.S. profit leadership also continues. It is unclear which of these catalysts was the actual trigger for dollar strength, since these have been in place for a while now, but confirmation from any and all of them was sufficient to reinvigorate the dollar bulls. That said, it is important to pay heed to shifting market forces, but it will be imprudent to change investment strategy on this week’s moves alone. Given these moves, a few observations are in order: Almost all currencies are already falling versus the U.S. dollar – a trend that has been in place for several months now (Chart I-2). This means most of the factors putting upward pressure on the dollar are well understood by the market. For example, global growth has been slowing for well over a year, based on the global PMI. Putting on fresh U.S. long positions is at risk of a washout from stale investors, just as it was back in 2015, a year after growth had peaked. Dollar technicals are also very unfavorable (Chart I-3). Speculators are holding near-record long positions, sentiment is stretched and our intermediate-term indicator is also flagging yellow. Over the past five years, confirmation from all three indicators has been followed by some period of U.S. dollar indigestion. This time should be no different. Chart I-2Is It Time To Initiate Fresh Dollar Longs?
Is It Time To Initiate Fresh Dollar Longs?
Is It Time To Initiate Fresh Dollar Longs?
Chart I-3Dollar Technicals Are Unfavourable
Dollar Technicals Are Unfavourable
Dollar Technicals Are Unfavourable
A breakout in the dollar along with rising equity markets suggests that the correlation is once again shifting. The dollar has tended to trade as a counter-cyclical currency for most of the time, with a negative correlation even to global equities (Chart I-4). Importantly, given current low levels of volatility and elevated equity market valuations, the dollar would have been a great insurance policy for any stock market correction. But with U.S. interest rates having risen significantly versus almost all G10 countries in recent years, the dollar has itself become the object of carry trades. This has also come with a good number of unhedged trades, as the rising exchange rate has lifted hedging costs (Table I-1). Chart I-4The Dollar Remains A 'Risk-Off' Currency
The Dollar Remains A 'Risk-Off' Currency
The Dollar Remains A 'Risk-Off' Currency
Chart I-
It will be difficult for the dollar to act as both a safe-haven and carry currency, because the forces that drive both move in opposite directions. For one, safe-haven assets tend to be lower-yielding but also during episodes of capital flight, investors choose to repatriate capital to pay down debt, with creditor nations having the upper hand. And given U.S. investors have already been repatriating close to $400 billion in assets over the past 12 months, it is unlikely this pace persists (Chart I-5). The bottom line is that investors who believe that the U.S. dollar has become a high-beta currency should be prepared to stampede out the door on any rise in volatility. Our bias remains that the U.S. dollar will ultimately weaken, given that the forces driving it higher are mostly behind us. Meanwhile, currencies such as the Japanese yen or even Swiss franc that have been used to fund carry trades are very ripe for short-covering flows. Putting everything together suggests at minimum building portfolio hedges. It will be difficult for the dollar to act as both a safe-haven and carry currency. One such hedge is going long CHF/NZD. This trade has a high negative carry, so we do not intend to hold it for longer than three months. But speculative positioning and relative economic trends also support this cross for the time being (Chart I-6). We are placing a limit-buy at 1.45. Chart I-5How Much More Will Repatriation Flows Help?
How Much More Will Repatriation Flows Help?
How Much More Will Repatriation Flows Help?
Chart I-6CHF/NZD Is An Attractive ##br##Hedge
CHF/NZD Is An Attractive Hedge
CHF/NZD Is An Attractive Hedge
A Shifting Landscape If the dollar eventually weakens, let’s consider the premise that the most export-dependent economies should benefit more from a rebound in global growth, and by extension, their currencies should appreciate the most. Within the G10 universe, this will be notably the European currencies led by the Swiss franc, the Swedish Krona, the euro and the pound (Chart I-7). However, from the trough in the global Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) in December 2008 until the peak in April 2010, it was the commodity currencies that outperformed. During that time frame, the Swiss franc actually fell. It is well known that Switzerland’s persistent trade surplus over the decades has been a key factor behind structural appreciation in the currency. However, at any point in time, other nuances such as whether the rebound is China or commodities driven, the starting point for valuations or even interest rate differentials take center stage in explaining currency moves. The lesson is that investors have to become nimble with currency investment strategy. The lesson is that investors have to become nimble with currency investment strategy. For pro-cyclical currencies, there have been dramatic shifts in the export share of GDP for various countries, according to World Bank data. Most euro area countries have massively expanded their export share of GDP as they have gained ground in value-added products and services. Meanwhile, the export share in Australian GDP has been stuck at 20% for many years, while that in Norway, New Zealand and Canada has seen a huge drop, even since 2009 (Chart I-8). At first blush, this suggests diminishing marginal returns to their currencies from global growth.
Chart I-7
Chart I-8A Shifting Export ##br##Landscape
A Shifting Export Landscape
A Shifting Export Landscape
Take the example of New Zealand, where commodities are over 75% of exports. Since the 2000s, the government has been actively trying to redistribute growth from net exports to domestic demand. This has been mainly via the skilled workers program. The result has been a collapse in the export share of GDP from 36% to about 26%. This means that the New Zealand dollar, which has typically been a higher-beta play on global growth, is giving way to other currencies such as the euro and the Swedish krone (Chart I-4). In addition to this, while global growth might eventually recover, part of the widespread deterioration since the global financial crisis may be structural. If the overarching theme over slowing global trade is a global economy that is trying to lift its precautionary savings and spend less, then the world may not see the high rates of trade growth registered in the 1990s anytime soon. This is because at a lower rate of potential GDP growth, trade elasticities also tend to fall.2 There are many reasons for this, including less willingness among creditor nations to finance current account deficits, the paradox of thrift or just outright saturation in the turnover of trade. All of this dampens marginal returns toward all pro-cyclical currency trades. Chart I-9Trade Volatility Has Fallen
Trade Volatility Has Fallen
Trade Volatility Has Fallen
The bottom line is that the overall magnitude and volatility of trade relative to GDP has fallen, at least until the recent China – U.S. trade spat (Chart I-9). This has had the effect of dampening the volatility of the corresponding mediums of trade exchanges. Part of this is clearly cyclical, but a part may be structural as well. If we embrace confirmation that the Chinese economy has bottomed, it will be important to monitor if this cycle plays out like those in the past. Notes On Petrocurrencies, And The BoC The U.S. has decided not to extend waivers on Iranian oil exports beyond the May 2 deadline. Supposedly, a coalition with both Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates would ensure that oil markets remain adequately supplied, though Saudi Arabia has since signaled they are in no rush to raise production. Overall, this increases the bullish narrative for oil. First, the Iranian response to a shutoff in their exports could be unpredictable. The U.S. threat of driving Iranian oil exports to zero increases the geopolitical risk premium in prices, as full implementation pushes Iran to a wall, raising the odds of retaliation. Chart I-10Iran Is A Meaningful Oil Supplier
Iran Is A Meaningful Oil Supplier
Iran Is A Meaningful Oil Supplier
Second, oil production is being curtailed at a time when Venezuelan output is rapidly falling, conflict in Libya is reviving and OPEC spare capacity remains tight. This could nudge the oil market dangerously close to a negative supply shock (Chart I-10). Meanwhile, there is the non-negligible risk of unplanned outages which have been rising in 2019, which is another source of risk for oil supply Oil futures have responded positively to the news, with both Brent and WTI making fresh 2019 highs. However, while initially reacting favorably, petrocurrencies such as the Canadian dollar, Russian ruble and Norwegian krone are selling off amid dollar strength. We think Brent will continue to trade at a premium to WCS crude. This bodes well for currencies tied to North Sea production. Hold short CAD/NOK and long NOK/SEK positions, despite the selloff this week. As for Canada, we are neutral on the loonie both short and medium term. The dovish shift by the BoC and looser fiscal policy are likely to be growth tailwinds. So is the rise in oil prices. However, there appears to be a genuine slowdown in the Canadian economy that is not yet fully reflected in economic forecasts. The key drivers for the CAD/USD exchange rate are interest rate differentials with the U.S. (which we think will compress further) and energy prices (which we think Canada benefits less from due to the discount Canadian oil sells for, and persistent infrastructure problems). As such, we think domestic conditions will continue to knock down whatever benefit comes from rising oil prices (Chart I-11). Chart I-11CAD/USD Will Benefit From##br## Rising Terms Of Trade
CAD/USD Will Benefit From Rising Terms Of Trade
CAD/USD Will Benefit From Rising Terms Of Trade
Chart I-12Can The BoC Hike Given ##br##This Backdrop? (1)
Can The BoC Hike Given This Backdrop? (1)
Can The BoC Hike Given This Backdrop? (1)
On the consumer side, real retail sales are deflating at the worst pace since the financial crisis, and demand for housing loans is falling off (Chart I-12). This is unlikely to improve if house prices continue to roll over (Chart I-13). A study by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand shows that on average, the elasticity of consumption growth to house price changes is asymmetric with negative housing shocks, hurting consumption by more than the boost received from positive shocks. This asymmetry may be due to the fact that at very elevated debt levels, leveraged gains are used to pay down debt aggressively, whereas leveraged losses hit bottom lines directly. There appears to be a genuine slowdown in the Canadian economy that is not yet fully reflected in economic forecasts. On the corporate side of the equation, the latest Canadian Business Outlook Survey is very telling. Firms’ expectations for sales have softened significantly, as businesses in several sectors are less optimistic about demand. This is driven by uncertainty in the oil patch, weak housing and weak external conditions. This in turn, has led to a steep drop in plans to increase capex (Chart I-14). For external investors, the large stock of debt in the Canadian private sector and overvaluation in the housing market are likely to continue leading to equity outflows on a rate-of-change basis. Chart I-13Can The BoC Hike Given This Backdrop? (2)
Can The BoC Hike Given This Backdrop? (2)
Can The BoC Hike Given This Backdrop? (2)
Chart I-14Can The BoC Hike Given This Backdrop? (3)
Can The BoC Hike Given This Backdrop? (3)
Can The BoC Hike Given This Backdrop? (3)
Technically, USD/CAD failed to break below the upward sloping trendline drawn from its 2017 lows. The next resistance zone is the 1.36-1.38 level. Our bias is that this zone will prove to be formidable resistance. We continue to recommend investors short the CAD, mainly via the euro. Housekeeping Our limit-buy on AUD/USD was triggered at 0.70. Place tight stops at 0.68 until further evidence that global growth has bottomed. Our short USD/SEK position garnered losses this week. The RiksBank’s dovish shift surprised the market, and triggered panic selling as important technical levels were broken. With a manufacturing PMI at 52.8, inflation at 1.8% and wages growing near 3%, this is not exactly the symptoms of an economy that needs more stimulus. We recommend holding onto positions, but will respect our stop loss a few hundred pips away. Finally, the dovish shift by the Bank of Japan does not change our thinking on the yen. The resilience in the currency might indicate the pool of yen bears has been exhausted. Chester Ntonifor, Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, titled “Tug Of War With Gold As Umpire,” dated March 29, 2019, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 2 Cristina Constantinescu, Aaditya Mattoo, and Michele Ruta, “The Global Trade Slowdown: Cyclical Or Structural?” IMF working paper (2015). Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1
USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
Chart II-2
USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
Recent data in the U.S. suggest a weaker housing market: In March, building permits contracted by 1.7% month-on-month, falling to 1.27 million; housing starts decreased by 0.3% month-on-month, coming in at 1.14 million. March new home sales grew by 4.5% month-on-month, coming in at 0.69 million. However, existing home sales contracted by 4.9% month-on-month, falling to 5.21 million. The house price index grew by 0.3% month-on-month in February, in line with expectations. MBA mortgage applications decreased by 7.3% in April. The Chicago Fed National Activity index fell to -0.15 in March, underperforming expectations. Durable goods orders increased by 2.7% in March, surprising to the upside. DXY index appreciated by 1% this week, hitting the highest level since June 2017. While a more accommodative monetary policy stance has been taken in China, global growth momentum remains weak, which is a cause for concern. Report Links: Beware Of Diminishing Marginal Returns - April 19, 2019 Not Out Of The Woods Yet - April 5, 2019 Tug OF War, With Gold As Umpire - March 29, 2019 The Euro Chart II-3
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
Recent data in the euro area continue to soften: Italian business confidence and consumer confidence in March fell to 100.6 and 110.5, respectively. April preliminary consumer confidence in the euro area fell to -7.9, below expectations. German IFO business climate fell to 99.2 in April; expectations and current assessment fell to 95.2 and 103.3, respectively. French business confidence improved to 105, while business climate decreased to 101 in April. Italian trade balance came in at a larger surplus of 3.42 billion euro in April. EUR/USD depreciated by 1% this week. The incoming data from the euro area and globally have been weaker than expected. The recent ECB Economic Bulletin remains positive for the growth outlook going forward, stating that “the supportive financing conditions, favorable labor market dynamics and rising wage growth should continue to underpin the euro area expansion.” Report Links: Reading The Tea Leaves From China - April 12, 2019 Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 A Contrarian Bet On The Euro - March 1, 2019 The Yen Chart II-5
JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
Chart II-6
JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
Recent data in Japan have been negative: Headline inflation and core inflation were unchanged at 0.5% and 0.4% year-on-year in March, respectively. Machine tool orders in March contracted by -28.5% year-on-year. All industry activity index fell by 0.2% month-on-month in February, in line with expectations. USD/JPY surged initially by 0.4% ahead of BoJ’s rate decision, then fell sharply, returning flat this week. The BoJ has decided to keep the interest rate on hold at -0.1%. The shift to a calendar-based form of forward guidance is unlikely to be a game-changer on its own. Moreover, the BoJ expects the Japanese economy to pick up through 2021 supported by highly accommodative financial conditions and government spending, despite the weakness of global growth and scheduled consumption tax hike. Report Links: Beware Of Diminishing Marginal Returns - April 19, 2019 Tug OF War, With Gold As Umpire - March 29, 2019 A Trader’s Guide To The Yen - March 15, 2019 British Pound Chart II-7
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
Recent data in the U.K. have been positive: Public sector net borrowing increased to 0.84 billion pounds in March. In April, the CBI retailing reported sales increased to 13. The CBI business optimism came in at -16 in April, an improvement compared to the last reading of -23. GBP/USD fell by 1% this week, mostly affected by the U.S. dollar’s broad strength. The pound is likely to rebound once we see more signs confirming the strength in global growth, given Brexit has been kicked down the road. Report Links: Not Out Of The Woods Yet - April 5, 2019 A Trader’s Guide To The Yen - March 15, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
Recent data in Australia have been negative: Headline inflation fell to 1.3% year-on-year in Q1, missing expectations. Trimmed mean inflation in Q1 fell to 1.6% year-on-year. AUD/USD fell by 2.3% this week, which triggered our limit buy order at 0.7 on Wednesday. Inflation is a lagging indicator. While the Q1 inflation number missed expectations, the Australian dollar is likely to bottom as Chinese stimulus plays out and global growth starts to pick up. Report Links: Beware Of Diminishing Marginal Returns - April 19, 2019 Not Out Of The Woods Yet - April 5, 2019 Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11
NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
Chart II-12
NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
Recent data in New Zealand has been negative: Credit card spending contracted by 5.1% year-on-year in March, underperforming expectations. NZD/USD fell by 1.36% this week. We remain bearish on the New Zealand dollar due to the Achilles’ heel of an overvalued housing market. Moreover, the Kiwi is still expensive compared to its fair value. Report Links: Not Out Of The Woods Yet - April 5, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13
CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
Chart II-14
CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
Recent data in Canada have been positive: Wholesale sales grew by 0.3% month-in-month in February, surprising to the upside. CFIB business barometer increased to 56.7 in April. USD/CAD surged by 0.95% this week. The Canadian dollar seems to be less responsive to the energy prices this week due to lots of concerns regarding the pipeline issue in Alberta. The Bank of Canada maintained its overnight interest rate target at 1.75% on Wednesday. In the April Monetary Policy Report, the BoC projects real GDP growth of 1.2% in 2019, and around 2% in 2020 and 2021. Given the current developments in household spending, energy investment, and trade conditions, a dovish stance by BoC is warranted. Report Links: A Shifting Landscape For Petrocurrencies - March 22, 2019 Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Swiss Franc Chart II-15
CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
Chart II-16
CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
Recent data in Switzerland have been mostly positive: Money supply M3 grew by 3.5% year-on-year in March, same as last month. ZEW survey expectations increased to -7.7 from the previous reading of -26.9. USD/CHF increased by 0.66% this week. While global growth is set to rebound, the uncertainties regarding geopolitical risks, trade conditions, and oil prices will weigh on the growth pace. We remain neutral on the Swiss franc against U.S. dollar, but acknowledge that the large short positioning is attractive from a contrarian standpoint. Report Links: Beware Of Diminishing Marginal Returns - April 19, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17
NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
Chart II-18
NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
There is no significant data from Norway this week. USD/NOK appreciated by 2.2% this week. We remain overweight the NOK based on our bullish outlook for oil. The Trump administration said they would not renew the waivers for Iranian oil exports, a move that roiled the energy market. The spike in oil prices will eventually benefit the Norwegian krone once global growth stabilizes. Report Links: A Shifting Landscape For Petrocurrencies - March 22, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Swedish Krona Chart II-19
SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
Chart II-20
SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
Recent data in Sweden suggest a more positive sentiment: Consumer confidence increased to 95.8 in April, surprising to the upside. Economic tendency survey increased to 102.7 in April. Moreover, the manufacturing confidence also improved to 108.4 in April. USD/SEK appreciated by 2.64% this week. The Riksbank has kept its interest rate unchanged at -0.25% this week, as widely expected. The dovish shift of central banks worldwide is likely to help the global economy, which will benefit the Swedish krona. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Global Liquidity Trends Support The Dollar, But... - January 25, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights The U.S. dollar will ultimately reach fresh cycle highs, but not before going through a weak phase starting this summer that could last 12 months. We closed our long DXY trade for a carry-adjusted return of 16.4% last week. We will go tactically short the index if it breaches 101 (about 3% above current levels). As a countercyclical currency, the dollar is likely to stumble in the second half of this year as global growth accelerates. Positioning and sentiment are currently very dollar bullish, which is likely to exacerbate any sell-off in the greenback. The dollar should begin to rally again late next year, as global growth decelerates while the Fed is forced to turn more hawkish in the face of rising inflation. Go long European banks as a tactical trade. Feature Moving To The Sidelines On The Dollar We closed our long DXY trade recommendation for a carry-adjusted gain of 16.4% at last Thursday’s close – too early it turns out, as the DXY has gained another 0.7% since then. The dollar is a high-momentum currency (Chart 1). The trend is the dollar’s friend at the moment, which makes betting against the greenback risky. Nevertheless, we would not chase the dollar higher at these levels. Long dollar positioning is highly stretched and sentiment is overly bullish (Chart 2). This makes a price reversal increasingly probable.
Chart 1
Perhaps more importantly, the macro fundamentals, which have worked in favor of the dollar since early 2018, will likely start working against it as the summer months approach. Chart 2There Are A Lot Of Dollar Bulls Out There
There Are A Lot Of Dollar Bulls Out There
There Are A Lot Of Dollar Bulls Out There
Stronger Global Growth Will Hurt The Greenback The dollar is a countercyclical currency, meaning that it tends to move in the opposite direction of global growth (Chart 3). Global growth has been decelerating since early 2018, and that has helped boost the dollar’s value. The dollar is a countercyclical currency, meaning that it tends to move in the opposite direction of global growth. Chart 3The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
If anything, the growth divergence between the U.S. and the rest of the developed world has increased over the past few months. Goldman’s Current Activity Indicator (CAI) for the U.S. has been rising since January, while the European and Japanese CAIs have continued to fall (Chart 4). Looking out, the rest of the world is likely to catch up to the United States. The Chinese CAI has already moved sharply higher thanks in part to an acceleration in Chinese credit growth. Chart 4Growth Is Recovering In The U.S. And China
Growth Is Recovering In The U.S. And China
Growth Is Recovering In The U.S. And China
Chart 5China: Credit Is Growing At A Moderately Faster Pace Than GDP
China: Credit Is Growing At A Moderately Faster Pace Than GDP
China: Credit Is Growing At A Moderately Faster Pace Than GDP
We would downplay recent market speculation that the Chinese authorities are preparing to restart their deleveraging campaign. Credit growth is now running only modestly above nominal GDP growth (Chart 5). With the ratio of debt-to-GDP broadly stable, there is no need to further clamp down on credit formation. The Chinese government also wants to keep the economy buoyant in order to gain negotiating leverage in trade talks with the Trump administration. Better Chinese Data Will Benefit The Rest Of The World Fluctuations in Chinese growth usually affect Europe with a lag of around six months (Chart 6). This suggests that European exports should strengthen starting this summer. Meanwhile, European domestic demand should benefit from an easing of fiscal policy of around 0.5% of GDP. Chart 6Europe Will Benefit From Improving Chinese Growth
Europe Will Benefit From Improving Chinese Growth
Europe Will Benefit From Improving Chinese Growth
Chart 7Swings In Interest Rate Differentials Explain Some Currency Moves
Swings In Interest Rate Differentials Explain Some Currency Moves
Swings In Interest Rate Differentials Explain Some Currency Moves
Faster growth in the U.S. in relation to the euro area has caused the spread in expected interest rates to widen between the two regions. The spread in one-month, five-year forward OIS rates now stands at 202 bps, similar to the highs seen in late-2016 (Chart 7). If euro area growth recovers this summer, the market will price in a bit of tightening from the ECB starting late next year. This will cause the spread to narrow, leading to a stronger euro. A revival in Chinese growth should also help EM and commodity currencies. The market is currently pricing in 44 basis points of rate cuts in Australia, 33 bps of cuts in New Zealand, and 21 bps of cuts in Canada over the next 12 months. While domestic concerns around high household debt levels and overvalued real estate markets will keep central banks on guard in all three economies, a more robust global growth backdrop should allow some of the expected easing to be priced out. Japan remains a bit of a wildcard due to the government’s stated intention to raise the sales tax this October. We see little justification for increasing the sales tax given that inflation expectations are still nowhere close to the BOJ’s target. Japan needs easier, not tighter, fiscal policy. There is still an outside chance that the tax hike will be postponed, but even if it is, rising bond yields in the rest of the world will still hurt the yen. The BOJ has no intention of abandoning its yield curve targeting system anytime soon. In fact, it introduced new forward guidance at this week’s monetary policy meeting promising not to raise rates at least until the spring of 2020. Investors looking to trade the yen should consider going long EUR/JPY or AUD/JPY. We recommend going long European banks outright for a tactical trade. Bottom Line: If global growth accelerates later this year, the dollar will probably weaken. Accordingly, investors should use this week’s rally in the dollar to scale back exposure to the currency. We are also putting in a limit order to go short the DXY index if it reaches 101 (about 3% above its current level). Looking Further Out… Chart 8Low Odds Of An Imminent Major Inflationary Upswing In The U.S.
Low Odds Of An Imminent Major Inflationary Upswing In The U.S.
Low Odds Of An Imminent Major Inflationary Upswing In The U.S.
Mini-cycles within the broader global business cycle tend to last around 12-to-18 months. If this pattern continues to hold, global growth will probably falter again in the second half of next year. At that point, the dollar is likely to strengthen again. By how much can the dollar rise? That depends on what the Fed does. A stronger dollar would entail a tightening in financial conditions. Normally that would cause the Fed to turn more dovish, limiting the upside for the greenback. The risk is that rising inflation prevents the Fed from turning more accommodative. Inflation is not much of a concern now. Leading indicators of inflation such as core intermediate goods prices and the prices paid component of the ISM remain well contained (Chart 8). Wage growth has picked up, but productivity growth has risen even more. As a result, unit labor costs, which tend to lead core inflation, have been decelerating since the middle of last year. If the U.S. economy continues to grow above trend, however, inflation could begin to break out late next year. That would force the Fed to start raising rates more aggressively than it would like, even in the face of slower growth. Such a stagflationary outcome will be awful for equities and other risk assets. As U.S. financial conditions tighten, global growth will slow, giving the dollar a further boost. The upshot is that the dollar could see a meaningful rally starting late next year. Stay Bullish On Stocks For Now… Until that fateful day arrives, we are inclined to maintain our bullish equity bias. We upgraded global stocks to overweight in December after having moved to the sidelines in June. Despite the run-up in stock prices, the forward P/E ratio on the MSCI All-Country World Index is still 7% below where it was at the start of 2018 and 3% below its long-term (30-year) average (Chart 9). Earnings estimates are also finally starting to increase (Chart 10). Accelerating global economic growth will ensure that profits continue to rise into year-end. Chart 9Global Stocks Are Not That Expensive
Global Stocks Are Not That Expensive
Global Stocks Are Not That Expensive
Chart 10Earnings Estimates Have Turned The Corner
Earnings Estimates Have Turned The Corner
Earnings Estimates Have Turned The Corner
… And Buy Some European Banks For A Tactical Trade European banks are trading at distressed valuations (Chart 11). One can debate the long-term prospects for the European banking sector, but in the near term, one thing is clear: If European growth begins to surprise on the upside, bond yields in core European markets will rise, which should help European bank stock prices (Chart 12). Stronger economic growth will also translate into more credit demand and lower non-performing loans. This will boost bank earnings (Chart 13). With all this in mind, we recommend going long European banks outright for a tactical trade. Chart 11European Banks: A Good Value Play
European Banks: A Good Value Play
European Banks: A Good Value Play
Chart 12Euro Area: Higher Bond Yields Bode Well For Bank Stocks
Euro Area: Higher Bond Yields Bode Well For Bank Stocks
Euro Area: Higher Bond Yields Bode Well For Bank Stocks
Chart 13More Credit, Fatter Bank Earnings
More Credit, Fatter Bank Earnings
More Credit, Fatter Bank Earnings
Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com Strategy & Market Trends MacroQuant Model And Current Subjective Scores
Chart 14
Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
The upturn we anticipated in China’s industrial output in the wake of fiscal and monetary stimulus is becoming more visible. Accommodative central banks, along with a likely resolution of the Sino – U.S. trade war, will continue to be positive for Chinese growth, which will bolster trade and commodity demand in general, base metals’ demand in particular. However, not all base metals will benefit equally from this fortuitous confluence of fiscal and monetary stimulus, and the renewed credit growth directed at China’s small and mid-sized enterprises (SMEs). Of the metals we follow, copper likely will benefit most from Chinese stimulus and the knock-on effects from increased trade, with aluminum running a close second. Zinc and nickel will not enjoy as much of a lift, based on our analysis. We are adding a tactical long aluminum position to our open long copper position. Highlights Energy: Overweight. The Trump administration’s decision to let waivers expire on U.S. oil-export sanctions leveled on Iran will give OPEC 2.0 greater control over the Brent forward curve. In the near term, markets will not tighten sharply. However, longer term, the continued loss of Iran’s and Venezuela’s exports, further increases in Libyan tensions and unplanned outages will lift the odds refiners will have to draw inventories harder than expected going into the high-demand Northern Hemisphere summer. We expect this to backwardate the Brent curve further, and accelerate the full backwardation of the WTI forward curve. Presently, OPEC 2.0 holds ~ 1.5mm b/d of ready spare capacity, due to recent production cuts made to drain global inventory. There is ~ 1.5mm b/d of additional spare capacity in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) that would take longer to bring on line. The ready spare capacity can cover the ~ 1.3mm b/d or so that could be removed by the Iran waivers’ expiration. But, with global commodity demand remaining robust (see base metals analysis below), further unplanned outages – on top of the falling Venezuelan output and mounting tensions in Libya – will stress the supply side of the market. KSA this week communicated it would coordinate with other producers to keep oil markets balanced.1 Russia’s recent threat to reignite a market-share war also reminded the market OPEC 2.0 has capacity it can quickly bring to the market should it choose to do so. The expiration of waivers on the Iran export sanctions strengthens OPEC 2.0’s hand by allowing it to calibrate the rate of growth in flowing oil supply at a level that forces refiners and traders to draw inventory. The growing backwardation will lift implied volatilities in crude and products markets. Iran’s reaction remains to be seen.2 This geopolitical uncertainty also will contribute to price volatility as well. We will be publishing a Special Report on the implications of the Trump administration’s waivers decision next week with our colleagues at BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy. Base Metals: Neutral. We expect copper to benefit from Chinese fiscal and monetary stimulus, moreso than the other base metals we follow (aluminum, nickel and zinc). We explore this in depth below. Precious Metals: Neutral. Gold prices continue to face downward pressures, the latest coming from Venezuela’s sale of ~ $400 million worth of the metal (~ 9 tons) last week, despite international sanctions.3 Going forward, China’s credit stimulus should revive global growth, which will negatively affect the counter-cyclical U.S. dollar. Our Global Investment strategists closed their long U.S. dollar recommendation last week. This will support gold in the 2H19. Feature The evolution of China’s credit cycle is key to our base-metals view, and integral to our high-conviction call commodity demand will surprise to the upside. Globally, the real economy is once again finding its groove. Maybe not as groovy as 2017, but still better than 2018. China is implementing tax cuts amounting to almost $300 billion (~ 2 trillion RMB), and loosening the credit screws that last year ground economic activity lower.4 Central banks around the world either are accommodative, or are not aggressively tightening. The evolution of China’s credit cycle is key to our base-metals view, and integral to our high-conviction call commodity demand will surprise to the upside beginning in the current quarter and extending into 2H19. And China’s credit growth has been stout this year. Aggregate China financing came in stronger than expected for March, registering a 12.3% year-over-year gain, versus an increase of 11.6% in February, based on calculations made by our colleagues in BCA’s Global Investment Strategy (GIS) service.5 The pick-up in the rate of growth – the so-called credit impulse – typically leads the import component of China’s manufacturing PMI, according to our GIS colleagues. This is good news for firms exporting to China, as well, as it indicates industrial activity ex-China also will pick up as fiscal and monetary stimulus take hold in the Middle Kingdom. So, putting it together: China’s fiscal and monetary stimulus will radiate outward to EM markets generally and DM export-oriented economies, which will lift base metals markets generally. China’s demand still dominates global demand, which means it also impacts prices globally (Chart of the Week).
Chart 1
Base Metals Sensitivity To Fundamental Information Given its importance to global growth, we again look at China’s effect on base metals prices – via demand – by ranking the metals we closely follow based on their sensitivity to China’s industrial activity and credit, along with our BCA Global Industrial Activity (GIA) Index. Table 1 shows the relationships between the year-on-year (y/y) percent changes in base metals, and the LME index versus the big correlates we have identified over the years with these metals: BCA’s GIA Index, our China credit policy gauge, China construction proxy, internally developed risky-versus-safe haven currency ratio and the Li Keqiang Index (LKI) of domestic Chinese industrial activity. We look at these from 2000 to now, and in the post-GFC period (2010 to now). Table 1Correlations Of Base Metals’ Prices (y/y % Change) Vs. Key Economic Variables
Copper Will Benefit Most From Chinese Stimulus
Copper Will Benefit Most From Chinese Stimulus
Two things stand out in this analysis: The GIA index, which is heavily weighted to EM demand, is a key driver for all of the LME base metals prices, and the LME Index itself;6 Copper is the most sensitive to all of these variables vs. the other base metals. The LME Index (LMEX) is the next-most-sensitive gauge. In the case of the latter, it likely is copper’s weight in the index driving this result (copper is 31.2% of the LMEX), and the fact that other metals tend to follow copper’s lead. Post-GFC, the correlations with BCA’s GIA index, our China Construction proxy and the LKI index all become stronger, suggesting rising Chinese demand and the global quantitative easing have had a fundamental effect on base metals prices. The weakening of the correlations once the analysis moves beyond copper and the LMEX indicates either the other base metals are not processing information from the market – supply-demand fundamentals and global monetary data – or these commodities’ fundamentals are more opaque than those available from the copper market. The other outstanding feature of this analysis is that post-GFC, the correlations with BCA’s GIA index, our China Construction proxy and the LKI index all become stronger, suggesting rising Chinese demand and the global quantitative easing have had a fundamental effect on base metals prices. We will be examining this in future research. Bottom Line: China’s impact on base metals prices is complex. Its internal demand obviously is significant, which is not unexpected for the market that accounts for ~ 50% of base metals demand globally. We also see evidence China’s economy influences EM ex-China, and DM economies – most likely those heavily reliant on exports to China. Fiscal and monetary stimulus in China will radiate outward and influence global growth – in EM and DM economies. This is a positive fundamental for base metals. Robert P. Ryan, Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger, Senior Analyst Commodity & Energy Strategy HugoB@bcaresearch.com Appendix: Global Base Metals Balances
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Footnotes 1 Please see “Saudi Arabia says to coordinate with other producers to ensure adequate oil supply,” published by reuters.com April 22, 2019. 2 According to the state-run Fars news agency, Iran’s head of the Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy force threatened it will close the Strait of Hormuz if the country is prevented from using it. Please see “Iran Raises Stakes in U.S. Showdown With Threat to Close Hormuz,” published April 22, 2019 by bloomberg.com. 3 Please see “Venezuela Is Said to Sell $400 Million in Gold Amid Sanctions,” published April 15, 2019 by bloomberg.com. 4 We added a measure of China’s credit cycle to our Global Industrial Activity (GIA) index last month. We noted China’s credit cycle was showing signs of bottoming. We now are expecting to see growth in the current quarter. Please see “Bottoming Of China’s Credit Cycle Bullish For Copper Over Near Term,” published by BCA Research’s Commodity & Energy Strategy March 14, 2019. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 5 GIS’s aggregate financing measure excludes equity financing and other items but includes local government bond issuance. Please see “Chinese Debt: A Contrarian View,” published by BCA Research’s Global Investment Strategy April 19, 2019. It is available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 6 This is because the index is constructed to be sensitive to EM industrial-commodity demand growth. Please see “Oil, Copper Demand Worries Are Overdone,” where we introduce and discuss the GIA index. The article was published February 14, 2019, in BCA Research’s Commodity & Energy Strategy. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades TRADE RECOMMENDATION PERFORMANCE IN 2019 Q1
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Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2019 Summary of Closed Trades
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The central bank tweaked some of its lending facilities to further loosen financial conditions. It also “clarified” its forward guidance by promising to keep both short- and long-term interest rates extremely low “…at least through around spring 2020”. …
Highlights The recent dovish shift in tone from central banks around the world is here to stay this year, providing support for global growth. As a result, stock prices will benefit from a combination of easy policy and rebounding activity, while safe-haven yields will grind higher. The recent deterioration in profit margins is not due to rising costs but reflects weaknesses in pricing power. Pricing power is pro-cyclical: If global growth improves and the dollar weakens, margins should recover. Overweight financials and energy. We are upgrading European equities to neutral, and placing them on a further upgrade watch. Feature Easy Does It The global monetary environment has eased over the past four months. Some major central banks like the Federal Reserve and the Bank of Canada have backed away from tightening. Others, like the Bank of Japan, the Reserve Bank of Australia, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and the Swedish Riksbank have provided very dovish forward guidance. And one major policy setting institution – the European Central Bank – has even eased policy outright by announcing a large-scale injection of liquidity in the banking sector through its TLTRO-III operation that will begin in September. This phenomenon is not limited to advanced economies. Important EM central banks are also targeting easier liquidity conditions. The Reserve Bank of India has cut interest rates by 50 basis points; the Monetary Authority of Singapore is now targeting a flat exchange rate; and the Bank of Korea has issued a somewhat dovish forward guidance. Most importantly, Chinese policymakers are once again forcing debt through the system, with total social financing flows amounting to RMB 2.9 trillion last quarter, more than the RMB 2.4 trillion pumped through the economy in the first quarter of 2016. These reflationary efforts will bear fruit. Policy easing, especially when it relies as largely on forward guidance as the current wave does, should result in lower forward interest rates. And as Chart I-1 illustrates, when a large proportion of global forward rates are falling, a rebound in global economic activity typically follows. This time will not be different. Chart I-1Monetary Guardians Are Coming To The Rescue
Monetary Guardians Are Coming To The Rescue
Monetary Guardians Are Coming To The Rescue
The S&P 500 and global equities have already rebounded by 18.9% and 17.2%, respectively since late December. Have markets already fully discounted the growth improvement that lies ahead, leaving them vulnerable to disappointments? Or do global stocks have more upside? While a rest may prove necessary, BCA anticipates that global equity prices have more upside over the coming 12 months. Are Central Banks About To Abandon Their Newfound Dovish Bias? We sincerely doubt it. Reversing the recent tone change soon would only hurt the battered credibility that central banks are fighting so hard to maintain. In the case of the U.S., the most recent FOMC minutes were clear: The Fed does not intend to tighten policy soon, even if growth remains decent. The minutes confirmed the idea we espoused last month, that FOMC members are focused on avoiding a Japan-like outcome for the U.S. where low expected inflation begets low realized inflation. Such an outcome would greatly increase the probability that an entrenched deflationary mindset develops in the U.S. in the next recession. As a result, we anticipate that the Fed will refrain from tightening policy until inflation expectations move back up toward their historical range (Chart I-2). Further justifying the Fed’s new stance, a small rebound in productivity is keeping unit labor costs at bay, despite a pick-up in wages. This is likely to put a lid on core inflation for now (Chart I-3). Chart I-2Inflation Expectations: Too Low For The FOMC's Comfort
Inflation Expectations: Too Low For The FOMC's Comfort
Inflation Expectations: Too Low For The FOMC's Comfort
Chart I-3A Whiff Of Disinflation
A Whiff Of Disinflation
A Whiff Of Disinflation
There is little reason for the ECB to adopt a more hawkish stance either. The euro area PMIs have stabilized but are still flirting with the boom/bust line. Realized core inflation is a paltry 0.8% and the ECB’s own forecast is inconsistent with its definition of price stability, which dictates that the inflation rate should be “below but close to 2% over the medium term.” Our ECB Monitor captures these dynamics, remaining in the neutral zone (Chart I-4). In China, the case for quickly removing credit accommodation is weak. Property developer stocks have rebounded 41% from their October lows, but sales of residential floor space remain soft, keeping real estate speculation in check. Meanwhile, our proxy for the marginal propensity to consume of Chinese households – based on the ratio of demand deposits to time deposits – continues to deteriorate (Chart I-5). The recent pick up in credit growth should put a floor under those trends, but it will take some time before these variables overheat enough to call for policy tightening. Chart I-4Our ECB Monitor Supports An ECB Standing Still
Our ECB Monitor Supports An ECB Standing Still
Our ECB Monitor Supports An ECB Standing Still
Chart I-5Key Domestic Variables Argue Against Tightening Policy In China
Key Domestic Variables Argue Against Tightening Policy In China
Key Domestic Variables Argue Against Tightening Policy In China
Bottom Line: The three most important policymakers in the world are not set to suddenly slam on the brake pedal. As a result, the global policy backdrop will remain accommodative for at least two to three quarters. The few economic green shoots observed around the world should therefore blossom into a full-fledge global growth pick-up. From Green Shoots To Green Gardens If central banks adopt an easier bias but global growth is slowing sharply without any end in sight, stock prices are unlikely to find a floor. After all, stock prices represent the discounted value of future cash flows. If those cash flows are expected to decline at a faster pace than the risk-free rate, then stock prices can fall – even if policy is becoming more accommodative. However, if economic activity is stabilizing, easier policy should generate substantial equity gains. Stimulative financial conditions will result in an improvement in global activity indicators, including emerging economies (Chart I-6, top panel). This is very important as emerging markets were at the epicenter of the slowdown in global trade, and because they historically lead global industrial activity (Chart I-6, bottom panel). The few economic green shoots observed around the world should therefore blossom into a full-fledge global growth pick-up. Policy easing in China is of particular significance. Our Chinese activity indicator is still slowing, but BCA’s Li-Keqiang Leading Indicator, which mostly tracks developments in the credit sector, has stabilized (Chart I-7, top panel). The rebound in the credit impulse also points to an acceleration in Chinese nominal manufacturing output (Chart I-7, bottom panel). This should lift Chinese imports, resulting in a positive growth impulse for the rest of the world. Chart I-6The Dance Of FCI And Activity
The Dance Of FCI And Activity
The Dance Of FCI And Activity
Chart I-7Chinese Industrial Activity Will Rebound Soon
Chinese Industrial Activity Will Rebound Soon
Chinese Industrial Activity Will Rebound Soon
At the moment, the euro area remains weak, but it will become a key beneficiary of improving growth. As the top panel of Chart I-8 illustrates, the Eurozone’s exports to China tend to follow the trend in the Chinese Adjusted Total Social Financing impulse. Moreover, European exports to the rest of the world are set to enjoy a recovery, as highlighted by the upturn in the diffusion index of our Global Leading Economic Indicator (Chart I-8, bottom panel). This external-sector improvement is happening as the euro area domestic credit impulse is rebounding, and as the region’s fiscal thrust increases from roughly zero to 0.4% of GDP. In the U.S., it is unlikely that 2019 growth will top that of 2018, but activity should nonetheless rebound from a lukewarm first quarter. Importantly, the fed funds rate is holding below its equilibrium (Chart I-9). Additionally, household fundamentals remain solid. A tight labor market means that wages have upside and household debt levels and debt servicing costs are all well behaved relative to disposable income (Chart I-10). Moreover, housing dynamics are generally stronger than reported by the press, as mortgage applications for purchases are making cyclical highs and the NAHB Homebuilder confidence index is rebounding (Chart I-11). Offsetting some of these positives, capex intentions – a robust forecaster of actual corporate investments – have rolled over from their heady mid-2018 levels. Even so, they remain consistent with positive capex growth. Also, U.S. fiscal policy is becoming increasingly less growth-friendly starting in mid-2019. Netting it all out, U.S. growth should remain above-trend, at about 2.5%. Chart I-8Europe Will Benefit From Stabilizing Growth Elsewhere
Europe Will Benefit From Stabilizing Growth Elsewhere
Europe Will Benefit From Stabilizing Growth Elsewhere
Chart I-9U.S. Policy Remains Accommodative
U.S. Policy Remains Accommodative
U.S. Policy Remains Accommodative
Chart I-10U.S. Households Are Doing Alright
U.S. Households Are Doing Alright
U.S. Households Are Doing Alright
Chart I-11Forward-Looking Housing Indicators Point To A Pick-Up
Forward-Looking Housing Indicators Point To A Pick-Up
Forward-Looking Housing Indicators Point To A Pick-Up
Bottom Line: While U.S. growth may be weaker than in 2018, it should not fall below trend. Meanwhile, Chinese credit trends suggest that growth there should clearly pick up in the coming months, which should also lead to stronger activity in Europe. In other words, exactly as central banks have removed policy constraints, global growth is set to re-accelerate. This is a positive backdrop for risk assets over the coming 12 months. What Does It Mean For Asset Prices? Simply put, a dovish shift in policy along with a tentative stabilization in growth should result in both higher stock prices and rising safe-haven bond yields. First, a rebound in global economic activity means that depressed profit growth expectations could easily be bested (Chart I-12, top panel). Bottom-up estimates point to EPS growth of 3.4% in the U.S. and 5.3% in the rest of the world in 2019, using MSCI data. However, profits are extremely pro-cyclical, and a combination of easy financial conditions and improving growth conditions in the second half of the year should result in better-than-expected earnings. Chart I-12Profit Expectations Are Low
Profit Expectations Are Low
Profit Expectations Are Low
Second, the Fed is extending its pause, as other global central banks are also adopting more accommodative policies. This implies that global real interest rates, both at the short- and long-end of the curve, will remain below equilibrium for longer than would have been the case if policy had remained on its previous path. Consequently, not only do lower real rates decrease the discount factor for stocks, they also imply a longer business cycle expansion. This should result in narrower risk premia for stocks and higher multiples. Since they offer cheaper valuations than those in the U.S., international equities may stand to benefit more from policy-led multiple expansion (Chart I-12, bottom panel). Third, the global duration indicator developed by BCA’s Global Fixed Income Strategy service is forming a bottom.1 This gauge – levered to global growth variables like the Global ZEW growth expectations survey, our Global Leading Economic Indicator and the Global LEI’s diffusion index – has perked up in response to green shoots around the globe. An upturn in global safe-haven yields is imminent (Chart I-13). Additionally, the global Policy Uncertainty Index is currently recording very high readings, congruent with depressed yields (Chart I-14). A benign resolution to the Sino-U.S. trade tensions along with the low likelihood of the implementation of a No-Deal Brexit should push this indicator down, lifting yields in the process. Chart I-13Global Dynamics Argue For Fading The Bond Rally
Global Dynamics Argue For Fading The Bond Rally
Global Dynamics Argue For Fading The Bond Rally
Chart I-14Policy Uncertanity Is At An Apex: Look The Other Way
Policy Uncertanity Is At An Apex: Look The Other Way
Policy Uncertanity Is At An Apex: Look The Other Way
Fourth, while we expect the Fed to stay on pause for the remainder of 2019 and probably through the lion’s share of 2020 as well, this is a more hawkish forecast than what the market is currently pricing in (Chart I-15). As we argued last month, a fed funds rate that turns out to be higher over the next year than what is currently discounted often results in the underperformance of Treasurys relative to cash. Finally, a rebound in global growth, even if the Fed proves more hawkish than the market anticipates, generally pushes the dollar lower (Chart I-16). Since speculators currently hold large net short bets on the euro, the AUD, the CAD, and so on, the probability is high that this historical pattern will assert itself. The recent period of dollar strength is unlikely to last more than a couple of weeks. A weak dollar, easy policy and rebounding growth should boost commodity prices, especially metals and oil. The latter should benefit most from this set up as the end of the waivers of U.S. sanctions on Iran will constrain the availability of crude in international markets.
Chart I-15
Chart I-16The Dollar Last Hurrah Will End Very Soon
The Dollar Last Hurrah Will End Very Soon
The Dollar Last Hurrah Will End Very Soon
Rebounding global growth should also allow equity prices to be resilient in the face of rising bond yields, up to a point. When yields and inflation expectations are low, multiples and equity prices tend to move in tandem. This is because in an environment where central banks are frightened by deflationary risks, monetary authorities do not lift rates as quickly as nominal activity would warrant. Thus, improving nominal growth lifts the growth component of equity multiples more than it raises yields. In other words, we expect yields and stocks to rise together because low but rising inflation expectations, but not surging real rates, will drive the upside in bond yields. Obviously, this cannot last forever. Once the Fed starts suggesting that rates will rise again, and the entire yield curve moves closer to neutral, higher yields will curtail equity advances. This is a constructive cyclical setup; but the tactical environment is murkier. The problem is that equity prices have already moved up significantly over the past four months. With volatility across asset classes having once again plunged toward historical lows, risk assets display a high degree of vulnerability to disappointing economic data. This means that unless growth rebounds strongly and quickly, stocks could experience a short-term correction in the coming months. While staying overweight equities, it is nonetheless prudent to buy some protection. Investors should also wait on the sidelines to deploy any excess cash. Rebounding global growth should also allow equity prices to be resilient in the face of rising bond yields, up to a point. Bottom Line: The current environment is favorable for risk assets on a cyclical basis. Low real rates will not only continue to nurture the nascent improvement in the global economy. They also imply lower discount rates. Meanwhile, improving economic activity and a decline in policy uncertainty will push safe-haven yields higher. Consequently, it remains sensible to be long stocks and underweight bonds for the remainder of the year, even if the risk of a short-term stock correction has risen. Within fixed-income portfolios, a below-benchmark duration makes sense, especially as oil prices are rising, Sino-U.S. trade negotiations should end in a benign outcome, and a No-Deal Brexit remains unlikely. Margins Are The Greatest Risk At the current juncture, the biggest risk for stocks is that profits fall short of depressed analysts’ estimates for 2019 – not because revenue growth disappoints, but because profit margins contract. Our U.S. Equity Sector Strategy service has recently highlighted that the S&P 500 operating earnings margin stands at 10.1% after having peaked at 12% in Q3 2018 (Chart I-17).2 Despite this decline, margins remain both elevated by historical standards and above their long-term upward-sloping trend. As Chart I-18 illustrates, the decline in margins is not an S&P 500-only phenomenon: It is an economy wide one as well, as the pattern is repeated using national accounts data. Chart I-17Will This Margin Deterioration Continue?
Will This Margin Deterioration Continue?
Will This Margin Deterioration Continue?
Chart I-18Margins: All About Labor Costs Versus Selling Prices
Margins: All About Labor Costs Versus Selling Prices
Margins: All About Labor Costs Versus Selling Prices
At first glance, the Fed’s current pause may undermine profit margins. As Chart I-19 shows, when the unemployment rate stands below NAIRU, on average, wages grow faster than when the labor market is not at full employment. Since the unemployment gap stands as -0.8% today, we are likely to see continued wage pressures in the U.S. economy. Chart I-19Wages Have Upside
Wages Have Upside
Wages Have Upside
The problem with this story is that productivity has been accelerating – from a -0.3% annual rate in the second quarter of 2016 to 1.8% in the fourth quarter of 2018. Because wage inflation did not experience as large a change, unit labor cost inflation is still growing at 1% annually, as they did in Q2 2016. In fact, real unit labor costs are currently contracting at a 0.4% pace. The pick-up in capex over the past three years suggests that productivity can continue to improve over the coming quarters. Consequently, as has been the case over the past two years, rising wages will only have a limited negative impact on margins. The key source of variance in profit margins has been, and will likely remain over the next year or so, corporate pricing power, which today stands at its lowest level since the deflationary episode of 2015-2016 (Chart I-20). As was the case back then, the slowdown in global growth has played a role, since it has resulted in falling global export prices. Not only do they affect foreign revenues for U.S. businesses, they also impact the price of goods sold at home, and thus have a broad impact on aggregate pricing power. Chart I-20Pricing Power Follows The Global Business Cycle
Pricing Power Follows The Global Business Cycle
Pricing Power Follows The Global Business Cycle
Last year’s dollar strength amplified those headwinds. A strengthening dollar affects profitability through four channels. First, it negatively impacts global growth by tightening financial conditions for foreign borrowers who fund themselves in USD. They are thus more financially constrained when the dollar appreciates. Second, a strong dollar hurts commodity prices and industrial goods prices. Third, a strong dollar negatively impacts the competitiveness of U.S. firms, forcing them to cut their prices to stay competitive. Finally, a strong dollar hurts the translation of overseas earnings back into USDs. As a result, a strong dollar weighs on earnings estimates (Chart I-21). Chart I-21The Dollar Amplified Margins Problems
The Dollar Amplified Margins Problems
The Dollar Amplified Margins Problems
Since we anticipate global growth to improve and the greenback to buckle, the current pricing power problem faced by corporate America should fade and profit margins should rebound in the second half of 2019. This suggests that for now, declining profit margins remain a risk that needs to be monitored – not a base case to embrace. Our U.S. Equity Sector Strategy service has highlighted that the tech sector has the poorest earnings outlook within the S&P 500. An economic upswing could counteract some of the recent declines in tech margins, but the much more pronounced rise in labor costs in Silicon Valley than in other sectors suggests that tech profits could lag behind other heavyweights like financials and energy. Consequently, BCA recommends a neutral allocation to tech stocks. We instead recommend overweighting financials and the energy sector. Financials will benefit from an easy monetary policy setting that should help credit growth. Moreover, net interest margins are at cycle highs of 3.5%, as banks have prevented interest costs on deposits from rising in line with short rates. Finally, buybacks by financial services firms are rising and will likely battle the tech sector’s buybacks for the pole position this year (Chart I-22).3 Chart I-22Why Are We Neutral On Tech?
Why Are We Neutral On Tech?
Why Are We Neutral On Tech?
Our positive stance on energy stems from undue pessimism surrounding the sector. Bottom-up analysts currently pencil in such a large contraction in earnings for this group that, according to their forecasts, energy will curtail 2019 S&P 500 earnings by 18%. With WTI prices back above $65/bbl, rising per-well productivity and easing financing costs, the hurdle to beat is already low. Moreover, the end of U.S. waivers on Iranian sanctions further supports oil prices. In this context, if global growth rebounds and the dollar depreciates, energy stocks could catch fire. Bottom Line: The biggest risk to our positive stance on equities is that earnings are dragged down by declining margins. While the recent softness in margins is concerning, it does not reflect an increase in labor costs. Instead, it is a consequence of eroding pricing power. Falling pricing power is itself a symptom of the slowdown in global growth and a stronger dollar. As both these ills pass, margins should recover in the second half of 2019. Within equities, we prefer financials and energy, as their earnings prospects outshine tech stocks. Upgrading European Equities To Neutral, And Looking For More For equity investors competing against a global benchmark, there is a simple way to express the view that global growth will rebound, safe-haven yields have upside, the dollar will weaken, and that profit margins are a risk to monitor. It is to abandon underweight allocations to European equities and overweight positions to U.S. stocks. This month, we are upgrading European equities to neutral and downgrading U.S. stocks to neutral. Even after this upgrade, we are putting European equities on a further upgrade watch. First, the euro area is much more sensitive than the U.S. to Chinese growth. This also has implication for equities. As Chart I-23 shows, when the ratio of M1 to M2 money supply in China perks up, as it is currently doing, European stocks end up outperforming their U.S. counterparts. This is because the M1-to-M2 ratio ultimately reflects the growth of demand deposits relative to savings deposits in the Chinese banking sector. It therefore informs how spending is likely to evolve. Currently, China’s reflationary efforts point toward a pickup in spending that should lift European exports, and European profits as well. Chart I-23Monetary Dynamics In China Favor Fading Euro Area Bearishness
Monetary Dynamics In China Favor Fading Euro Area Bearishness
Monetary Dynamics In China Favor Fading Euro Area Bearishness
Second, European exports have upside, and unsurprisingly, the bottoming in the BCA Boom/Bust indicator – which captures global growth dynamics beyond just China – is also flagging the end of European equity underperformance (Chart I-24, top panel). Moreover, if the global reflationary period is sustained, the decline in forward interest rates will reverse. This too is consistent with a period of outperformance for European equities (Chart I-24, bottom panel). Third, our overweight stance on financials relative to tech equates to European equities beating their U.S. counterparts. This simply reflects the fact that financials constitute 17.9% of the MSCI euro area index, while tech stocks account for 9.2%. The same sectors represent 12.9% and 26.8% of the U.S. market, respectively. Not only are European banks trading at 0.6-times book value compared to 1.2-times for U.S. lenders, but European banks stand to benefit more than U.S. banks from rising bond yields as they garner a larger share of their income from lending activity. Fourth, European profit margins are toward the bottom third of their distribution relative to U.S. profit margins. As Chart I-25 shows, European profit margins tend to rise when euro area unit labor costs lag U.S. ones. Since the euro area output gap is not as positive as that of the U.S., it is unlikely that European wages will outpace U.S. wages this year. Also, since European stocks are more heavily weighted toward industrials, materials and energy, the sectors that suffered the greatest loss of pricing power during the global economic slowdown, pricing power in Europe could rebound more strongly than in the U.S. This too should flatter European profit margins relative to the U.S. Chart I-24European Equities To Benefit From Rebounding Global Growth
European Equities To Benefit From Rebounding Global Growth
European Equities To Benefit From Rebounding Global Growth
Chart I-25European Profit Margins Can Experience A Further Cyclical Lift
European Profit Margins Can Experience A Further Cyclical Lift
European Profit Margins Can Experience A Further Cyclical Lift
Finally, even after adjusting for sectoral composition, European equities trade at a discount to U.S. stocks. On an equal-sector basis, the 12-month forward P/E ratio is 14.2, and the price-to-book ratio is 2.0. For the U.S., the same multiples stand at 20.7 and 4.0, respectively. This means that European stocks are not yet pricing in an improving outlook. Be warned: The positive outlook for European equities relative to the U.S. is a cyclical story. As Section II of this report argues, poor demographics and an excessively large capital stock suggest that European rates of return will continue to lag the U.S. As a result, the return from investing in European stocks is unlikely to beat that of the U.S. beyond 12 to 18 months. Bottom Line: Within a global equity portfolio, we are upgrading the euro area from underweight to neutral at the expense of the U.S., which moves to neutral. We are also putting European equities on a further upgrade watch. Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst April 25, 2019 Next Report: May 30, 2019 II. Europe: Here I Am, Stuck In A Liquidity Trap An aging population, a banking sector in poor health, and a private sector focused on building up savings are the key factors undermining euro area growth on a structural basis. A large manufacturing sector makes the euro area vulnerable to EM competition. Unlike the U.S., the region’s tech sector is held back by regulatory burdens, taxes and heavy dependence on bank funding. The euro area growth faces decades of low growth and inflation. Euro area rates will stay depressed, but paradoxically, the euro can still experience structural appreciation. Euro area equities are cheap for a good reason, and banks will continue to weigh on performance. Over the past 10 years, the euro area has gone through a sovereign debt crisis, a double-dip recession, persistent below-target inflation, and most recently, yet another major growth slowdown. Moreover, this economic malaise materialized despite highly stimulative monetary policy, including negative interest rates. The ongoing economic weakness has raised the specter that the euro area is the new Japan. Nearly three decades after the bursting of the Nikkei bubble, the Land of the Rising Sun remains mired in low growth and mild but persistent deflation. Consequently, charts showing that European policy rates or bond yields are tracking Japanese developments with a 17-year lag (Chart II-1) have not only become commonplace, they elicit fears that European growth, interest rates and asset valuations will lag the rest of the world for decades to come. Chart II-1Europe Is Following The Japanese Example
Europe Is Following The Japanese Example
Europe Is Following The Japanese Example
In this piece, we discuss the various forces that explain why the euro area economy has been so weak this decade, and why such low interest rates have had so little impact on growth. We also study what sets the U.S. and euro area apart, and whether or not Europe will follow the trail blazed by Japan nearly 30 years ago. The Three Headwinds Three ills have kept European growth particularly depressed this cycle and are likely to remain significant headwinds into the foreseeable future: demographics, the banking sector’s poor health, and nonfinancial private sector balance sheet cleansing. 1) Demographics This is the most well understood and acknowledged problem impacting Europe today. Since 2008, the European population has grown by 2%, or only 0.2% a year, with the working age population having peaked around that year. Going forward, the picture will only deteriorate: The UN expects Europe’s population to contract by 12% over the next 27 years, and the working age population to fall by 15%. This also means that the dependency ratio – the number of individuals aged less than 15 and above 65 per 100 working-age people – will approximately double over the coming 40 years. This is a clear parallel with Japan. As Chart II-2 illustrates, Europe’s population, the number of working-age individuals and the dependency ratio are all tracking Japan with a 17-year lag. Like Japan, Europe’s trend growth will thus only deteriorate further. Not only will Europe not be able to add as many workers as the U.S. to its total, but it will need to build even fewer schools, malls, office buildings or units of housing. Consequently, both the supply and demand sides of the economy will lag due to this factor alone. 2) Banking Sector Health The poor health of the euro area banking sector is well known. BCA’s Global Asset Allocation service published an in-depth analysis of the European banking sector last December.4 The piece demonstrated that European banks have been much slower to recognize non-performing loans, curtail credit and rebuild capital than their U.S. counterparts. U.S. bank loans to the private sector fell by 13% in the two years during the crisis, while in Europe, these same loans have only fallen by 2% since 2008. Euro area banks generally remain burdened with significant non-performing loans as a percentage of regulatory capital. Moreover, net interest margins are also dismal, implying that the income cushion against bad loans is thin. Consequently, outside of France, Finland and Germany, European banks have either not grown their loan books to the private sector or, as is the case with Spain, Portugal, and Ireland, these books are continuously shrinking (Chart II-3). Chart II-2Same Demography In Europe Now Than In Japan Then
Same Demography In Europe Now Than In Japan Then
Same Demography In Europe Now Than In Japan Then
Chart II-3Peripheral Banks Continue To Curtail Credit
Peripheral Banks Continue To Curtail Credit
Peripheral Banks Continue To Curtail Credit
The poor health of the European banking system is now constraining the supply of new credit to the rest of the economy. This is a much bigger problem than is the case in the U.S. given that in Europe, 72% of corporate funding comes from the banking system while 88% of household liabilities are also funded this way. In the U.S., the share of bank funding for these sectors is 32% and 29%, respectively (Chart II-4). A weak euro area banking system prevents the nonfinancial private sector from growing as robustly as it could.
Chart II-4
3) Nonfinancial Private Sector Balance Sheet Cleanse Another major drag on European growth has been the continued efforts of the European private sector to rebuild its balance sheet. To use the terminology developed by our upcoming conference speaker Richard Koo, the euro area has been in the thralls of a powerful balance sheet recession. Households in the euro area, Japan and the U.S. are all accumulating more financial assets than liabilities. However, only in the U.S. is the nonfinancial corporate sector building more liabilities than it is accumulating assets (Chart II-5). In Japan and Europe, the nonfinancial corporate sector is also a source of savings for the economy. Moreover, in Europe, the government runs a much smaller financial deficit. The current account balance tells this story vividly. A country’s current account is equal to the private sector’s savings minus investment and minus government deficits. As Italy, Spain, and other peripheral economies increased their aggregate savings after 2008, their large current account deficits vanished. Meanwhile, the governments of countries like Germany or the Netherlands, which sported healthy public finances, did not increase their spending in a commensurate way. This adjustment transformed an overall euro area current account deficit of 1.5% in 2008 into a surplus of 3.0% of GDP today, sending some of Europe’s excess savings abroad. This mimics the post-1990 Japanese experience. In the U.S., where the private sector savings did not rise as durably as in Europe, the current account stopped improving meaningfully in 2010 (Chart II-6). Chart II-5European Businesses Are Savers, Like In Japan
European Businesses Are Savers, Like In Japan
European Businesses Are Savers, Like In Japan
Chart II-6The Current Account Dynamics Epitomise The Savings Dynamics
The Current Account Dynamics Epitomise The Savings Dynamics
The Current Account Dynamics Epitomise The Savings Dynamics
A private sector squarely focused on rebuilding its balance sheet liquidity can lead to a liquidity trap. In this state, monetary policy can become ineffective as spending does not respond to lower interest rates. This is where Europe is currently stuck, explaining why the European Central Bank is finding that inflation and growth are not experiencing much lift, despite seemingly incredibly accommodative monetary conditions. Why Such An Urge To Save? The fact that the household sector is a net saver is not surprising, as this is a normal state of affairs across most economies. But why is the European nonfinancial corporate sector still trying to improve its balance sheet liquidity by accumulating more assets than liabilities? Like Japanese businesses 30 years ago, European firms have large debt loads. Another problem is the lack of capex opportunities in Europe. Why do we make this assertion? The return on assets in Europe has been at rock-bottom levels ever since the introduction of the euro (Chart II-7). In the decade from 1998 to 2008, this was a non-issue. Strong global growth flattered European sales, and easy access to credit meant that via rising leverage euro area-listed nonfinancial corporations were able to generate returns on equity comparable to U.S. firms (Chart II-8, top panel). Once European banks got cold feet and European nonfinancial businesses began focusing on deleveraging, the low level of return on assets became more apparent. Part of the problem is that European profit margins are much closer to Japanese than U.S. levels (Chart II-8, middle panel). Even more damning, asset turnover – how much sales are generated by a unit of assets – has been structurally lower in Europe than in both Japan and the U.S. for multiple decades (Chart II-8, bottom panel). Chart II-7Europe Suffers From A Lower RoA
Europe Suffers From A Lower RoA
Europe Suffers From A Lower RoA
Chart II-8DuPont's Decomposition Shows Why The Euro Area RoA Is Poor
DuPont's Decomposition Shows Why The Euro Area RoA Is Poor
DuPont's Decomposition Shows Why The Euro Area RoA Is Poor
The first factor weighing on the level of asset utilization and returns in Europe is the elevated level of capital stock. As Chart II-9 illustrates, the capital stock as a share of output in Italy, Spain and France dwarfs that of Japan, China or the U.S. Even Germany’s capital stock, which stands well below that of other large euro area economies, is nearly 100 percentage points of GDP larger than the U.S’s. Europe has too large a pool of assets to make any additional investments profitable, especially in light of its poor demographic profile.
Chart II-9
The second factor weighing on European asset utilization and returns is the poorer level of labor productivity. From the 1950s to the early 1980s, European GDP per worker rose relative to the U.S., albeit peaking at 92% of the levels across the Atlantic. Due to falling working hours in Europe relative to the U.S. since the 1980s, relative output per hour continued to rise until the mid-1990s, peaking at 105% of the U.S. level. However, since their respective zeniths, both relative productivity measures have collapsed (Chart II-10, top panel). Chart II-10Another Symptom Of Europe's Misallocation Of Capital In The 2000s
Another Symptom Of Europe's Misallocation Of Capital In The 2000s
Another Symptom Of Europe's Misallocation Of Capital In The 2000s
These collapses are in fact worse than Japan’s performance since its lost decades began. As the second panel of the chart shows, since the early 1990s, Japan’s relative output per hour and per worker have flattened – not declined – at around 65% and 72%, respectively, of U.S. levels. Instead, relative European productivity levels are currently converging toward Japanese levels (Chart II-10, third and fourth panels). The particularly poor level of European asset utilization and productivity principally reflects the duality between the peripheral as well as French economies on one side, and Germany as well as the Netherlands on the other side. The exceptionally large capital stock outside of Germany is a legacy of the years directly after the euro’s introduction. Back then, the ECB kept rates low to help Germany, the then-sick man of Europe. These rates were too low for the rest of Europe, encouraging large capital stock build-ups. Moreover, this capital was misallocated, as demonstrated by the tepid growth of output per hour and output per capita in Europe post 2000. Since funds were poorly allocated, the output-to-capital ratio in the periphery collapsed. In other words, the peripheral capital-stock-to-GDP ratios continued rising because the denominator, GDP, lagged. An additional problem for Europe’s asset utilization has been its large manufacturing sector. Even after declining, 20% of Europe’s GDP still comes from the secondary sector versus less than 12% in the U.S. (Chart II-11). This has two consequences for Europe’s asset utilization relative to the U.S. First, a large manufacturing sector requires a much larger asset base than a large service or tech sector. Second, the manufacturing sector is more exposed to competition from emerging markets than the tech sector, or than the domestically-focused service sector. Chart II-11Europe Is Left Exposed To EM Competition
Europe Is Left Exposed To EM Competition
Europe Is Left Exposed To EM Competition
In other words, not only has the U.S. experienced less capital misallocation than a large swath of the European economy, it has also re-aligned its economy to make it more robust in the face of competition from emerging economies, while Europe mostly has not. Consequently, hurt by foreign competition and unable or unwilling to re-invent itself, Europe has been left with dwindling relative productivity levels and poor degrees of asset utilization and returns. Why Did The U.S. Economy Transition Better than Europe To A Globalized World? There are many reasons why the U.S. has maintained higher RoAs and has been more successful at transitioning away from a manufacturing-led economy than the euro area. Europe has too large a pool of assets to make any additional investments profitable, especially in light of its poor demographic profile. First, the level of product and service market regulation in Europe is highly punitive. As Chart II-12 illustrates, like Japan, most euro area countries fare poorly in the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business survey. In fact, Italy scores even lower than China! Meanwhile, the U.S. ranks near the top, not far from Singapore. This means that starting new businesses, competing, and so on is easier in the U.S. than in Europe, helping foster a greater level of entrepreneurialism. Consequently, established businesses have been able to maintain the status quo longer in Europe than in the U.S., preventing creative destruction from purging the system of bad assets.
Chart II-12
Second, most large euro area economies are burdened by heavy taxes. As Chart II-13 shows, while the U.S. public sector extracts taxes equal to 27.1% of GDP, German, Italian and French taxes equal 37.5%, 42.4% and 46.2% of GDP, respectively, well above the OECD average of 34.2%. Such high levels of taxation disincentivize risk-taking. Lower levels of risk taking by individuals further prevented the degree of creative destruction necessary for Europe to better use its capital stock.
Chart II-13
Third, and linked to the previous point, government spending equals 34.9% of GDP in the U.S., compared to 48.2% and 56.0% in Italy or France, respectively. A large government has historically stifled innovation and favored the status quo. By no means does this implies that the U.S. system is free of imbalances, but it highlights that compared to two of the three largest European economies, the U.S. public sector has had a less deleterious impact on growth conditions and entrepreneurialism. Moreover, Italy and France have been in deep need of structural reforms that have been lacking. On this front, while the outlook is improving in France under Macron’s presidency, Italy remains mired in immobilism. Fourth, the financing structure in the U.S. favors investing in new businesses and industries, especially when compared to the euro area. Equities represent 78% of the capital structure of nonfinancial corporations in the U.S. while they represent only 61% in the euro area. Moreover, within debt-financing, capital markets account for 68% of sourced funds in the U.S. compared to 28% in the euro area. In fact, junk bond market capitalization only accounts for 2.2% of GDP in Europe compared to 6.0% in the U.S. This suggests that financing risky ventures – and entrepreneurialism is inherently risky – is tougher in Europe than in the U.S. In fact, as a share of GDP, the European venture capital business is less than a sixth the size of the U.S.’s (Chart II-14), a gap that has existed for more than 30 years. Chart II-14U.S. Financing Allows For Greater Risk Taking
U.S. Financing Allows For Greater Risk Taking
U.S. Financing Allows For Greater Risk Taking
With all these hurdles, it is unsurprising that Europe has taken more time to make its economy more dynamic in the globalized economy of the 21st century. It also explains why Europe might be suffering more from EM competition than the U.S. Interestingly, this last point may be changing as U.S. voters seem to want to move back toward a larger manufacturing sector. This transition is unlikely to happen without more protectionism. This is a topic for another report. Is Europe Doomed To Japanification… Or Worse? It is easy to see why Europe cannot hope to grow as fast as the U.S., and therefore why the ECB will not be able to lift rates as high as the Fed and why bund yields are likely to lag Treasurys for years to come. Europe has a much more dire demographic profile than the U.S. It needs to purge its capital stock and invigorate its economy through reforms, a smaller public sector, and more diversified financing channels. But can the euro area fare better than Japan has over the past 30 years? On three fronts, the euro area looks better than Japan. First, as Chart II-15 shows, the overall European nonfinancial private sector entered its crisis in 2008 with lower leverage than Japan’s in the early 1990s. Additionally, European stocks were much cheaper in 2007 than the Nikkei was in 1989 (Chart II-16, top panel). Even Spanish real estate was more reasonably valued in 2007 than Japanese real estate in the early 1990s (Chart II-16, bottom panel). This combination means that now that the acute part of the crisis is over, the hole in the European private sector’s balance sheet is much smaller than the one Japan needed to plug 30 years ago. Thus, from a balance-sheet perspective, the need to rebuild savings is lower in Europe than Japan, and we could expect the current period of elevated savings to be shorter in the euro area than it has been in Japan.
Chart II-15
Chart II-16...And European Assets Were Not As Expensive As Japanese Ones At The Onset Of The Crisis
...And European Assets Were Not As Expensive As Japanese Ones At The Onset Of The Crisis
...And European Assets Were Not As Expensive As Japanese Ones At The Onset Of The Crisis
Second, despite former ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet’s policy mistake of raising interest rates in 2011, the ECB was much quicker to implement extreme easing policy measures than the Bank of Japan was in its day. It took 10 years for the BoJ to cut rates to zero after the Nikkei peaked in December 1989. It took one year for the ECB to do so after stock prices peaked in 2007. It took nine years for the BoJ to expand its balance sheet aggressively, but it took less than two years for the ECB to do so. One of the key benefits of this greater European proactivity has been to keep European inflation expectations much higher than in Japan, curtailing real interest rates in the process. Third, Europe purged economic excesses much more quickly than Japan. The Japanese unemployment rate increased from 2% to 6% between 1990 and 2010. In peripheral Europe, where the worst pre-crisis excesses existed, unemployment rose from 7.5% in 2008 to 18% in 2013 (Chart II-17, top panel). Meanwhile, real wages never adjusted in Japan, but fell 27.0% at their worst in Spain and 32.5% in Greece (Chart II-17, bottom panel). Moreover, the Rajoy reforms in Spain and the Macron reforms in France show that outside of Italy, European governments have been reforming their economies faster than Japan did after the bubble burst in 1990. Chart II-17Bigger Labor Market Purge In Europe Than Japan
Bigger Labor Market Purge In Europe Than Japan
Bigger Labor Market Purge In Europe Than Japan
However, on three fronts Europe is faring worse than Japan. First, up until the last 10 years, Japan benefited from a robust global economy where trade grew strongly. Europe is entering its second decade of low growth in an environment where global economic activity is much weaker, as potential U.S. GDP growth has slowed and China is not growing at a double-digit pace anymore. Moreover, budding protectionism in the U.S. is creating another hurdle for European economic output. Second, the excess capital stock in the European periphery is in fact greater than was the case in Japan in 1990. This suggests that the periphery needs to curtail investments by a greater margin than Japan did. Consequently, peripheral growth will continue to exert downward pressure on aggregate European activity for an extended period. Third, the European fiscal response will not match Japan’s. Investors often decry Japan’s large government debt of 238.2% of GDP as a sign of profligacy. It is not. It is mainly a mirror image of the private sector’s savings surplus. The Japanese government’s ability to run large deficits has prevented a larger fall in output – one that would have equaled the annual savings of the private sector. Without the government’s dissaving, the Japanese private sector would have found its debt load even more onerous to service, and the need to curtail spending would have been even greater as economy-wide cash flows would have been even smaller. Europe does not have a unified fiscal authority that can run such large-scale deficits. Instead, each nation’s government has a limited capacity to accumulate debt as investors worry that overly-indebted governments may very well redenominate what they have borrowed in much weaker currencies than the euro. This risk is made even greater by the fact that there is no euro-area wide deposit insurance scheme. Since Italian and Spanish banks hold large amounts of BTPs and Bonos, respectively, a so-called doom-loop exists that links the health of banks in those countries to the health of their governments, further limiting the public sector’s ability to act as a spender of last resort. This makes the efforts of the private sector in Italy, France, and Spain to increase its savings and bring down its excess capital stock more difficult, and thus, likely to last longer. Even if 10 years after the crisis first emerged, Europe has done more to purge its economy from its pre-crisis excesses than Japan had after its first lost decade, a lack of unified fiscal lever in Europe nullifies this positive. Thus, so long as the European integration efforts remain on the backburner, euro area growth, inflation, and interest rates will continue to look more like Japan’s have over the past 30 years than the U.S. This is likely to cause a big problem once the next recession emerges. Europe will enter that slowdown without any ammunition to reflate growth. Therefore, the next recession is likely to prove very deflationary and test the recent improvement in support for the euro seen across all euro area nations (Chart II-18). If the euro area survives this crisis, and we suspect it will, the probability of a fiscal union will only grow.2 After all, it has been through various crises that Europe has moved closer together, and the rise of a multipolar geopolitical environment dominated by large countries makes this imperative ever more vital. Chart II-18Support For The Euro Is Resilient
Support For The Euro Is Resilient
Support For The Euro Is Resilient
Bottom Line: We expect European growth and inflation to continue to lag well behind the U.S. for years to come if not a full decade. Ultimately, bringing down the expensive capital stock in the European periphery will be a slow process, especially if governments remain tight fisted. Investment Implications First, core euro area interest rates are likely to remain well below U.S. levels. As long as the European private sector pares back investments in order to normalize its capital stock-to-GDP ratio - a phenomenon that will be most pronounced in the periphery and France - European growth and inflation will lag behind the U.S. This also means that as long as European governments remain shy spenders and do not compensate for the lack of spending from the private sector, in the euro area periphery, European banks will suffer from depressed net interest margins and be structural underperformers. Second, the euro is likely to experience a structural upward drift. The euro is trading at a 10.5% discount to its purchasing power parity. Moreover, high private sector savings not only weigh on inflation, they will also push Europe’s net international investment position higher via an accumulated current account surplus. Both these factors are long-term bullish for the euro. Moreover, the fact that the euro area will soon become a net creditor nation, along with a lack of room to stimulate growth via monetary easing in times of recessions, means that the euro could increasingly become a counter-cyclical currency like the yen. So long as the European integration efforts remain on the backburner, euro area growth, inflation, and interest rates will continue to look more like Japan’s have over the past 30 years than the U.S. Third, European equities are trading at a discount to U.S. equities, but we do not think this guarantees long-term outperformance. European equities are cheap because European growth prospects are poor. If Japan is any guide, European stocks may be set to continue underperforming. This is especially true as financials are over-represented in European equity benchmarks, and banks stand at the epicenter of the European economic malaise. Fourth, European stocks will remain slaves to the global business cycle. Since the crisis, European growth has become hypersensitive to global growth, making European equities very responsive to the global business cycle. The same phenomenon happened in post-1990 Japan. In other words, the beta of European stocks is likely to continue to rise. This phenomenon could be exacerbated if the euro indeed does become a counter-cyclical currency, in which case the euro and European equities would become negatively correlated, like the yen and the Nikkei. Finally, the period from 1999 to 2005 showed how ECB policy targeted at supporting Germany resulted in imbalances that boosted real estate and equity returns in the periphery – in Spain and Ireland in particular. Today, the periphery is the worst offender when it comes to poor bank health and private sector balance sheet rebuilding. This means that the ECB is likely to keep monetary conditions too accommodative for Germany, where balance sheets are more robust and where the capital stock is not as excessive. As a result, financial market plays linked to German real estate are likely to continue outperforming other European domestic plays. They therefore warrant an overweight within European portfolios. Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst III. Indicators And Reference Charts The S&P 500 is retesting its all-time high made last fall. While our indicators suggest that U.S. equity have additional upside, the violence of the rally since December argues that a period of digestion may first be needed. Our Willingness-to-Pay (WTP) indicator for the U.S. and Japan continues to improve, while for the euro area, it is flat-lining after a tentative rebound. The WTP indicators track flows, and thus provide information on what investors are actually doing, as opposed to sentiment indexes that track how investors are feeling. The current readings in major advanced economies thus suggest that investors are still inclined to add to their stock holdings. Our Revealed Preference Indicator (RPI) is not echoing this message. The RPI combines the idea of market momentum with valuation and policy measures. It provides a powerful bullish signal if positive market momentum lines up with constructive signals from the policy and valuation measures. Conversely, if constructive market momentum is not supported by valuation and policy, investors should lean against the market trend. The pick-up in global growth remains too feeble for the RPI to validate the advance in stocks. This is why we worry that a correction is likely until economic activity around the globe confirms the rally in stocks. According to BCA’s composite valuation indicator, an amalgamation of 11 measures, the U.S. stock market remains slightly overvalued from a long-term perspective. Nonetheless, the S&P 500 is not at nosebleed valuation levels anymore. Hence, we are betting that once global growth picks up, stocks will be able to move even higher and any correction will prove temporary. Moreover, our Monetary Indicator remains into stimulative territory. The Fed has reiterated its dovish message and global central banks have all engaged in dovish talks, thus monetary conditions should stay supportive. As a result, our speculation indicator has also now fully moved out of the “speculative activity” zone. Our Composite Technical indicator for stocks had broken down in December, but it has now moved back above its 9-month moving average. This positive cyclical signal reinforces our confidence that any correction in stocks should prove tactical in nature, and that on a nine- to twelve-month basis equities have upside. According to our model, 10-year Treasurys are slightly expensive. However, we should not read too much into this. Essentially, yields are currently within their neutral range. Moreover, our technical indicator flags a similar picture. That being said, since BCA expects that over the next 24 months, the Fed will lift rates more than the OIS curve anticipates, and since the term premium is incredibly low, once green shoots for global growth fully bloom, bonds could suffer a violent selloff. Since our duration indicator has begun to deteriorate, it is probably a good time to begin moving out of safe-haven bonds. On a PPP basis, the U.S. dollar has only gotten more expensive. Additionally, our Composite Technical Indicator is becoming increasingly overbought. This combination suggests that the greenback could experience further downside this year. However, this downside will only materialize once global growth shows greater signs of strength. EQUITIES: Chart III-1U.S. Equity Indicators
U.S. Equity Indicators
U.S. Equity Indicators
Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk
Willingness To Pay For Risk
Willingness To Pay For Risk
Chart III-3U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators
U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators
U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators
Chart III-4Revealed Preference Indicator
Revealed Preference Indicator
Revealed Preference Indicator
Chart III-5U.S. Stock Market Valuation
U.S. Stock Market Valuation
U.S. Stock Market Valuation
Chart III-6U.S. Earnings
U.S. Earnings
U.S. Earnings
Chart III-7Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Chart III-8Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
FIXED INCOME: Chart III-9U.S. Treasurys And Valuations
U.S. Treasurys And Valuations
U.S. Treasurys And Valuations
Chart III-10Yield Curve Slopes
Yield Curve Slopes
Yield Curve Slopes
Chart III-11Selected U.S. Bond Yields
Selected U.S. Bond Yields
Selected U.S. Bond Yields
Chart III-1210-Year Treasury Yield Components
10-Year Treasury Yield Components
10-Year Treasury Yield Components
Chart III-13U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
Chart III-14Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Chart III-15Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
CURRENCIES: Chart III-16U.S. Dollar And PPP
U.S. Dollar And PPP
U.S. Dollar And PPP
Chart III-17U.S. Dollar And Indicator
U.S. Dollar And Indicator
U.S. Dollar And Indicator
Chart III-18U.S. Dollar Fundamentals
U.S. Dollar Fundamentals
U.S. Dollar Fundamentals
Chart III-19Japanese Yen Technicals
Japanese Yen Technicals
Japanese Yen Technicals
Chart III-20Euro Technicals
Euro Technicals
Euro Technicals
Chart III-21Euro/Yen Technicals
Euro/Yen Technicals
Euro/Yen Technicals
Chart III-22Euro/Pound Technicals
Euro/Pound Technicals
Euro/Pound Technicals
COMMODITIES: Chart III-23Broad Commodity Indicators
Broad Commodity Indicators
Broad Commodity Indicators
Chart III-24Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Chart III-25Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Chart III-26Commodity Sentiment
Commodity Sentiment
Commodity Sentiment
Chart III-27Speculative Positioning
Speculative Positioning
Speculative Positioning
ECONOMY: Chart III-28U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop
U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop
U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop
Chart III-29U.S. Macro Snapshot
U.S. Macro Snapshot
U.S. Macro Snapshot
Chart III-30U.S. Growth Outlook
U.S. Growth Outlook
U.S. Growth Outlook
Chart III-31U.S. Cyclical Spending
U.S. Cyclical Spending
U.S. Cyclical Spending
Chart III-32U.S. Labor Market
U.S. Labor Market
U.S. Labor Market
Chart III-33U.S. Consumption
U.S. Consumption
U.S. Consumption
Chart III-34U.S. Housing
U.S. Housing
U.S. Housing
Chart III-35U.S. Debt And Deleveraging
U.S. Debt And Deleveraging
U.S. Debt And Deleveraging
Chart III-36U.S. Financial Conditions
U.S. Financial Conditions
U.S. Financial Conditions
Chart III-37Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Chart III-38Global Economic Snapshot: China
Global Economic Snapshot: China
Global Economic Snapshot: China
Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst Footnotes 1 Please see Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, “A Sustainable Bottom In Global Bond Yields,” dated April 9, 2019, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Have SPX Margins Peaked?” dated March 25, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Mixed Signals,” dated April 22, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report "Euro Area Banks: Value Play Or Value Trap?" dated December 14, 2018, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com 5 The European Commission Eurobarometer Surveys show that Europeans overwhelmingly see Europe as a peace project and as a way to maintain a voice in a world dominated by huge players like the U.S., China, or Russia, a world where France, Germany, or Italy individually are marginal players. In 2016, the U.K. population did not share this opinion. Moreover, even after what amounts to a depression, the support for the euro continues to rise in Greece, showing the growing commitment of Europeans to the euro, and the resilience of this commitment to economic shocks. EQUITIES:FIXED INCOME:CURRENCIES:COMMODITIES:ECONOMY: