Policy
Highlights The best recession indicators are not flashing red, but volatility is rising as the end of the cycle approaches; U.S. fiscal policy is surprising to the upside, as we expected; The next recession will usher in an inflationary political paradigm shift, with wealth transferred from Baby Boomers to Millennials; Expect a new U.K. election ahead of March 2019, but do not expect a second referendum unless popular opinion swings decisively against Brexit; Stay short U.S. 10-year Treasuries versus German bunds; short Fed Funds Dec 2018 futures; and initiate a short GBP/USD trade. Feature February has been tough for global markets, with the S&P 500 falling by 5.9% since the beginning of the month. Several clients have pointed out that the market may be sniffing out a recession and that the "buy the dip" strategy is therefore no longer applicable. It is true that markets and recessions go together (Chart 1), but it is not clear from the data that the equity market alone predicts recessions correctly. Chart 1Bear Markets & Recessions: Unclear Which One Leads The Other
Bear Markets & Recessions: Unclear Which One Leads The Other
Bear Markets & Recessions: Unclear Which One Leads The Other
BCA's House View is that a recession is likely at the end of 2019.1 This view is in no small part based on our political analysis.2 President Trump ran on a populist electoral platform and populist policymakers globally have a successful track record of delivering higher nominal GDP growth than their non-populist counterparts (Chart 2). We assume that the Powell Fed will respond to such higher growth and inflation prospects no differently from the Yellen Fed and that it will restrict monetary policy to an extent that will usher in a mild recession by the end of next year. Chart 2Populists Deliver (Nominal) GDP Growth
Bear Hunting And A Brexit Update
Bear Hunting And A Brexit Update
Of course, predicting recessions is extraordinarily difficult. Being six months early or late would still be an achievement, but the implications for the equity market would likely be considerably different. If our "late 2019" call is actually an "early 2019" recession, then equity markets may indeed be at or near their cyclical peaks. A "buy on dips" strategy may work for the next quarter or so, but superior returns over the course of the year may be achieved with a bearish strategy. To help guide clients through the uncertainty, our colleague Doug Peta, chief strategist of BCA's Global ETF Strategy, has recently updated BCA's methodology for identifying the inflection points that usher in a recession.3 In our 70-year history as an investment research house, we have picked up two definitive truths: valuation and technical indicators cannot call a recession. So what can? We encourage clients to pick up a copy of Doug's analysis.4 The report highlights the three BCA Research recession indicators: the orientation of the yield curve, the year-over-year change in the leading economic indicator (LEI),5 and the monetary policy backdrop. Charts 3, 4, and 5 show how successful the three indicators are in calling recessions. In our 50-year sample period, the yield curve has successfully called all seven recessions with just one false positive. However, it tends to be overly eager, preceding the onset of a recession by an average of nearly twelve months. When we combine the yield curve indicator with the LEI, the false positives go away. Chart 3The Yield Curve Has Called Seven Of The Last Eight Recessions...
The Yield Curve Has Called Eight Of The Last Seven Recessions...
The Yield Curve Has Called Eight Of The Last Seven Recessions...
Chart 4... And So Has The Leading Economic Indicator
...And So Has The Leading Economic Indicator
...And So Has The Leading Economic Indicator
To confirm the recession signal and make it more robust, we also consider the monetary policy backdrop. Over the nearly 60 years for which BCA's equilibrium fed funds rate model has calculated an estimate of the equilibrium policy rate, every recession has occurred when the fed funds rate exceeded our estimate of equilibrium. In other words, recessions only occur when monetary policy settings are restrictive. Today, none of the indicators are even close to pointing to a recession, with the LEI at a cyclical peak. However, the yield curve and monetary policy are directionally moving towards the end of the cycle. Taken together, they suggest that the only controversy about our late 2019 recession call is that it is so early. So why the market volatility? Because wage growth in the U.S. has begun to pick up in earnest (Chart 6), revealing that BCA's concerns about inflation may at last be coming true. Investors, after more than a year of rationalizing weak inflation by means of dubious concepts (Amazon, AI, robots, etc.), may be reassessing their forecasts in real time, causing market turbulence. Chart 5Tight Policy Is A Necessary,##br## If Not Sufficient, Recession Ingredient
Tight Policy Is A Necessary, If Not Sufficient, Recession Ingredient
Tight Policy Is A Necessary, If Not Sufficient, Recession Ingredient
Chart 6Wages Picking##br## Up In Earnest
Wages Picking Up In Earnest
Wages Picking Up In Earnest
There is of course a political explanation as well. Our colleague Peter Berezin correctly called the end of the 35-year bond bull market on July 5, 2016.6 The timing of the call - mere days after the U.K. EU membership referendum - was not a coincidence. As Peter mused at the time, "the post-Brexit shock running through policy circles leads to a further easing in fiscal and monetary policy." He was not speaking about the U.K. alone, but in global terms. Indeed, the populists have begun to deliver. Ever since President Trump's election, we have cautioned clients not to doubt the White House's populist credentials.7 After a surge in bond bearishness immediately following the election, investors lost faith in the populist narrative due to the failure of Congress to pass any significant legislation, as if Congress has ever been a nimble institution under previous presidents. But investors are beginning to realize that their collective political analysis was extremely wrong. Not only have profligate tax cuts been passed, as we controversially expected throughout 2017, but Congress is now on the brink of a monumental two-year appropriations bill that will add nearly 1% of GDP worth of fiscal thrust in 2018 higher than what the IMF expected for the U.S. (Chart 7). In addition, Congress has set in motion the process to re-authorize the use of "earmarks" - i.e. legislative tags that direct funding to special interests in representatives' home districts (Chart 8).8 Chart 72018 Fiscal Thrust Was Unexpected
Bear Hunting And A Brexit Update
Bear Hunting And A Brexit Update
Chart 8Here Comes Pork!
Bear Hunting And A Brexit Update
Bear Hunting And A Brexit Update
By our back-of-the-envelope accounting, Congress is about to authorize just shy of $400bn in extra spending over the next two years.9 If earmarks are allowed back into the legislative process, we could see up to another $50bn in spending. An infrastructure deal, which now also looks likely given that the Democrats have realized that their "resistance"/ "outrage" strategy does not work against the Trump White House, could add significantly to that total. We are already positioned for these political developments through two fixed-income recommendations. We are short U.S. 10-year Treasuries vs. German Bunds, a recommendation that has returned 27.7 bps since September 2017. In addition, we are short the Fed Funds December 2018 futures, a recommendation that has returned 43.17 bps since the same initiation date. In addition, we went long the U.S. dollar index (DXY) on January 31, right before the stock market correction and precisely when the greenback appeared to bottom. Should investors prepare for runaway inflation this cycle? Is it time to load up on gold? We do not think so. The fiscal impulse from the two-year budget deal will become negative in 2020. The capex incentives from the tax cut plan are also front-loaded. The paradigm-shifting impact on inflation will require a policy paradigm shift. And we expect such a shift only after the next recession. To put it bluntly, U.S. voters elected a TV game show host due to angst at a time when unemployment stood at 4.6% (the rate on November 2016). Who will they elect with unemployment rising to 6% in the aftermath of the next recession, or God forbid if that next recession is worse than we think it will be? Policymakers are unlikely to sit around and wait for an answer to that question. Extraordinary measures will be taken to prevent the median voter from lashing out against the system when the next recession hits. Inflation, which is a redistributive mechanism, will be employed to transfer wealth from savers (mainly well-to-do retirees) to consumers (their children). In large part, this will be a generational wealth transfer between Baby Boomers (or at least those with some savings) and their Millennial children. Given that Millennials have become the largest voting bloc in the U.S. as of the 2016 election, this will be a populist policy with firm backing in the electorate. The next recession will therefore usher in the inflationary era of the next decade, regardless of how painful the actual recession is. In the meantime, we recommend that clients with a 9-to-12 month horizon continue to "buy on dips," given that a recession is not on the horizon. However, with the U.S. 10-year yield approaching 3%, China moderately slowing down (with considerable risk to the downside), and the U.S. dollar slide arrested, we think that the outperformance of EM equities is over. Brexit: We Can't Work It Out10 The EU agreed on January 29 to its negotiation guidelines for the temporary transition period after the U.K. officially leaves the bloc in March 2019.11 The British press predictably balked at the conditions - the term "vassal state" has been liberally bandied about - which in our view included absolutely nothing out of the expected. The EU conditions for the transition period are not the fundamental problem. Rather, the problem is that the "Vote Leave" campaign was never honest with its promises. Boris Johnson, the most prominent supporter of Brexit ahead of the vote and now the foreign minister in Prime Minister Theresa May's cabinet, famously quipped after the referendum that "there will continue to be free trade and access to the single market."12 The problem with that promise, however, was that it was predicated on using London's "superior negotiating position" vis-à-vis the EU in order to force the Europeans to redefine what membership in the Common Market means. As we pointed out in our net assessment ahead of the Brexit referendum, the problem with exiting the EU but remaining in the Common Market is that the issue of sovereignty is not resolved (Diagram 1).13 As such, Johnson and other Brexit supporters argued that they could change the relationship by forcing the EU to change how the Common Market works. Diagram 1Common Market Membership Is Illogical
Bear Hunting And A Brexit Update
Bear Hunting And A Brexit Update
Except for one problem: the U.K.'s negotiating position is not, never was, nor ever will be, superior. Anyone with a rudimentary understanding of how trade works can understand this. For example, the U.K. is a significant market for Germany, at 6% of German exports (right in line with the 6% of total EU exports that go to the U.K.). However, the EU is a far greater destination for British exports, with 47% of all exports going to the bloc.14 As we expected, the EU has surprised the conventional wisdom by remaining united in the face of negotiations. And as we also predicted, the Tories are now completely divided.15 PM May will attempt to hammer out an internal deal on how to approach the transition deal. But her political capital is so drained by the disastrous early election results that there is practically no way that she can produce a set of negotiating guidelines that will not be pilloried in the press. As such, we expect a new election to take place in the U.K. ahead of March 2019, perhaps sooner. We do not see how May's negotiating position will satisfy all wings of the Conservative Party. In addition, we see no scenario by which the ultimate exit deal with the EU gets enough votes in Westminster. Investors betting on that election replacing a second Brexit referendum would be wrong. A Jeremy Corbyn-led, Labour government will only turn against Brexit once the polls definitively turn against it. This has not yet happened, as the gap between supporters and opponents of Brexit in the polls, while widening in favor of opponents, remains within a margin of error (Chart 9). As such, Corbyn would scrap the Tory-led negotiations with the EU and ask Brussels for even more time - and thus more market uncertainty! - in order to produce a Labour-led Brexit deal.16 In order for the probability of Brexit to definitively decline, the polls have to show that "Bregret" or "Bremorse" is setting in. Without a move in the polls, U.K. politicians will continue to pursue Brexit, no matter how flawed their tactics may be. Policymakers are ultimately not the price makers but the price takers. On the issue of Brexit, the U.K. median voter is only slightly miffed regarding the outcome. Current polls suggest that Labour could win the next election, albeit needing to rule with a coalition (Chart 10). This would prolong the uncertainty facing the economy. Not only is Corbyn the most left-leaning politician in a major European economy since François Mitterand, but also his coalition would likely include the Scottish National Party and potentially the Liberal Democrats. Keeping all their priorities aligned could be even more difficult than the balancing act PM May is performing between soft-Brexiters, hard-Brexiters, and the Democratic Unionist Party. Chart 9Bremorse: Rising, But Not Definitive
Bremorse: Rising, But Not Definitive
Bremorse: Rising, But Not Definitive
Chart 10Anti-Brexit Forces On The Rise
Anti-Brexit Forces On The Rise
Anti-Brexit Forces On The Rise
Meanwhile, on the economic front, the situation is not much better. Our colleague Rob Robis, BCA's chief bond strategist, recently penned a critical assessment of the U.K. economy.17 As Rob pointed out, the OECD leading economic indicator is decelerating steadily and pointing to a real GDP growth rate below 2% in 2018 (Chart 11). The biggest factors that will weigh on growth will be a sluggish consumer and softer capex. Household consumer growth has been slowing since early 2017, driven by diminishing consumer confidence (Chart 12, top panel). High realized inflation, which has sapped the purchasing power of U.K. workers who have not seen matching increases in wages, is weighing on confidence (third panel). Consumers were able to maintain a decent pace of spending during a period of stagnant real income growth by drawing on savings, but that looks to be tapped out now with the saving rate down to a 19-year low of 5.5% (bottom panel). Chart 11U.K. Growth Set To Slow
U.K. Growth Set To Slow
U.K. Growth Set To Slow
Chart 12The U.K. Consumer Looks Tapped Out
The U.K. Consumer Looks Tapped Out
The U.K. Consumer Looks Tapped Out
Making matters worse, U.K. consumers are not seeing much of a wealth effect from the housing market. The January 2018 readings of the year-over-year growth rate of U.K. house prices from the Halifax and Nationwide indexes came in at 1.9% and 3.1% respectively (Chart 13). In addition, the net balance of national house price expectations from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) has steadily declined since mid-2016 and now sits just above zero (i.e. equal number of respondents expecting higher prices and falling prices). The same indicator for London was a staggering -47% in January 2018. Apparently, foreigners are no longer interested in a Brexit discount. Our global bond team goes on to point out that political uncertainty is also weighing on U.K. business investment spending. Capital expenditure growth slowed to 4.3% year-over-year in nominal terms in Q3 2017 and is even lower in real terms (Chart 14). Chart 13No Wealth Effect ##br## From Housing
No Wealth Effect From Housing
No Wealth Effect From Housing
Chart 14Brexit Gloom Trumps ##br##Export Boom For U.K. Companies
Brexit Gloom Trumps Export Boom For U.K. Companies
Brexit Gloom Trumps Export Boom For U.K. Companies
Putting all of this together, neither our global bond team nor our foreign exchange team expect the Bank of England to raise interest rates, despite the market pricing in 36 bps of rate hikes over the next twelve months. As Chart 15 illustrates, inflation across a broad swath of components is likely to slow sharply in the coming months as the trade-weighted pound has stopped depreciating. Thus, the pass-through from a lower exchange rate is beginning to dissipate.18 In the long-term, we understand why investors are itching to bet on Brexit never happening. But to get from here to there, the market will have to riot. And that means more downside to U.K. assets. Chart 15U.K. Inflation:##br## Less Pass-Through From The Pound
U.K. Inflation: Less Pass-Through From The Pound
U.K. Inflation: Less Pass-Through From The Pound
Chart 16GBP:##br## Stuck In A Rut
GBP: Stuck In A Rut
GBP: Stuck In A Rut
Bottom Line: BCA's FX strategist, Mathieu Savary, has pointed out that the trade-weighted pound is testing the upper bound of its post-Brexit trading range (Chart 16). As our FX and bond teams show in their respective research, the economics currently at play make it unlikely that the pound will be able to punch above the ceiling of this range. Our political assessment adds to this view. In fact, we expect that the coming political uncertainty, including an early election prior to March 2019, is likely to take the pound back to the floor of its trading range. As such, we are recommending that clients short cable, GBP/USD. Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Timing Of The Next Recession," June 16, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Special Report, "Beware The 2019 Trump Recession," dated March 7, 2017, and "2018 Outlook - Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," dated November 20, 2017, available at bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Special Report, "Timing The Next Equity Bear Market," dated January 24, 2014, and "Timing Equity Bear Markets," dated April 6, 2011, available at bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Global ETF Strategy Special Report, "A Guide To Spotting And Weathering Bear Markets," dated August 16, 2017, available at etf.bcaresearch.com. 5 The ten components of leading economic index for the U.S. include: 1. Average weekly hours, manufacturing; 2. Average weekly initial claims for unemployment insurance; 3. Manufacturers' new orders, consumer goods and materials; 4. ISM® Index of New Orders; 5. Manufacturers' new orders, nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft orders; 6. Building permits, new private housing units; 7. Stock prices, 500 common stocks; 8. Leading Credit Index TM; 9. Interest rate spread, 10-year Treasury bonds less federal funds; and 10. Index of consumer expectations. Source: The Conference Board. 6 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "End Of The 35-Year Bond Bull Market," dated July 5, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "U.S. Election: Outcomes & Investment Implications," dated November 9, 2016, and "Constraints & Preferences Of The Trump Presidency," dated November 30, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Upside Risks In U.S., Downside Risks In China," dated January 17, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 9 We are referring to the Senate deal struck last week to authorize additional military spending ($80bn in FY2018 and $85bn in FY2019) and discretionary spending ($63bn in FY2018 and $68bn in FY2019), as well as to provide disaster relief in the amount of $45bn for both fiscal years. 10 Life is very short, and there's no time ... For fussing and fighting, my friend ... 11 Please see European Council, "Brexit: Council (Article 50) adopts negotiating directives on the transition period," dated January 29, 2018, available at consilium.europa.eu. 12 Please see "UK will retain access to the EU single market: Brexit leader Johnson," Reuters, dated June 26, 2016, available at uk.reuters.com. 13 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and European Investment Strategy Special Report, "With Or Without You: The U.K. And The EU," dated March 17, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 14 This is not a coincidence. The whole point of the EU is that it is the world's richest consumer market. As such, it has massive negotiating leverage with all trade partners. As a side note, this throws into doubt the logic that the U.K. can get better trade deals by leaving the bloc. The first test of that premise will be its negotiations with the EU itself. 15 Please see BCA Special Report, "Break Glass To Brexit: A Fact Sheet," dated June 17, 2016, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 16 Investors should remember that Westminster voted decisively 319 to 23 to reject the Liberal Democrats' amendment seeking a referendum on the final Brexit agreement. Only nine Labour MPs voted in favor of the amendment after Jeremy Corbyn instructed his party to abstain. 17 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "A Melt-Up In Equities AND Bond Yields?" dated January 23, 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 18 Please see BCA Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "The Euro's Tricky Spot," dated February 2, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights Japan Economy & Inflation: Japan is in the midst of a solid cyclical upturn, driven by strong exports and rising investment spending. Yet despite signs that the economy is running at an above-potential pace with no spare capacity in labor or product markets, inflation remains tame. This puts no immediate pressure on the Bank of Japan (BoJ) to move away from its easy policy stance. Future BoJ Options: When the BoJ does finally consider a shift in its monetary policy, the first thing it will do is raise its yield target on the 10-year JGB. Before doing that, three things must happen - yen weakness, higher core Japanese inflation and much higher non-Japanese global bond yields. Feature Chart 1A 'Non-Systemic' Vol Spike
A 'Non-Systemic' Vol Spike
A 'Non-Systemic' Vol Spike
Global financial markets appear to be calming down a bit after the Great Volatility Scare of 2018. While the equity market sell-off and spike in volatility was intensely compacted into a brief period of time, the changes has been relatively modest when looked at against the broader history of the past decade (Chart 1). This may have been a serious market tremor, but it is not clear that this was the beginning of "The Big One." What could turn investor sentiment into a more permanently bearish state would be a sign of a coordinated move to tighter monetary policy by all the major global central banks. The Federal Reserve is in the midst of a prolonged tightening cycle, while the European Central Bank (ECB) is more openly debating the future of its asset purchase program. Yet amidst all the current investor worries about higher inflation and rising global bond yields, any sign that the hyper-easy BoJ is openly moving to a less accommodative monetary policy could be the trigger for the next wave of market volatility. The BoJ's current policy is to manage short-term interest rates and asset purchases to keep the benchmark 10-year Japanese Government Bond (JGB) yield around 0%. What would it take for the BoJ to make a change to that policy? In this Special Report, we take a look at the current cyclical dynamics for Japanese economic growth and inflation, and determine what it would take to force the BoJ to consider altering its current policy. We conclude that three things that must ALL happen before the BoJ could possibly change its strategy: The USD/JPY exchange rate must increase back to at least the 115-120 range Japanese core CPI inflation and nominal wage inflation must both rise sustainably above 1.5% The 10-year JGB yield must reach an overvalued extreme versus the 10-year U.S. Treasury Strong Japanese Growth, But Where's The Inflation? If it was strictly a growth story, the BoJ could have a case to begin formally removing monetary accommodation relatively soon. The Japanese economy is enjoying a broad-based upturn led by robust export demand and a pickup in capital spending (Chart 2). Private consumption and government spending have also provided smaller, but still positive, contributions to Japanese GDP growth in the current cycle. The BoJ stated in its latest Outlook for Economic Activity and Prices (January 2018) that Japan's economy has entered a virtuous cycle from income to spending that would support continued growth this year. The leading economic indicator estimated by Japan's Cabinet Office is expanding at a solid rate that suggests real GDP growth could accelerate to a well-above potential pace around 2.5% in 2018. The manufacturing PMI is now at the highest level in four years, while the December Tankan survey was the highest reading since Japan's asset bubble burst in the early 1990s. The cyclical upturn in growth has boosted corporate profits, business confidence and capital spending (Chart 3). This is especially so on the manufacturing side of the Japanese economy, where machinery orders and capacity utilization are at the highest levels in almost three years and the level of industrial production is now back to pre-crisis highs. The high level of capacity utilization is a boost both to the economy - through capital spending, as firms need to invest to keep up with underlying demand - and to corporate profits as companies can spread their fixed costs of production over more units sold. Against this backdrop, it is no surprise that Japanese business confidence is solid (bottom panel). Chart 2Lots Of Good Economic News In Japan
Lots Of Good Economic News In Japan
Lots Of Good Economic News In Japan
Chart 3A Cyclical Rise In Production & Confidence
A Cyclical Rise In Production & Confidence
A Cyclical Rise In Production & Confidence
Japan's economy remains highly levered to global growth, as the pickup in machinery orders has been focused on foreign demand (Chart 4, bottom panel). With the global leading economic indicator still in a steady uptrend, however, overall export growth should remain in good shape in the next few quarters. For most countries, a solid economic upturn like Japan is currently enjoying would potentially trigger some inflationary pressures. Alas, Japan is not most countries. Over the past several years, the BoJ has consistently projected that Japanese inflation will be on a path to reach its 2% target. That can be seen in Chart 5, which shows Japanese core CPI inflation (ex fresh food) with the annual forecasts produced by the BoJ each year (the dotted lines). Yet the only time that core inflation got remotely close to that level was in 2014 - and, only then, after global oil prices had breached the $100/bbl level. Inflation expectations momentarily rose at that time, but plunged in 2015 as oil prices collapsed. Since then, CPI swaps have struggled to trade much above 0%, only starting to perk up last year as oil prices began rising once again (bottom panel). Chart 4Japan Is Benefiting From##BR##Strong Global Growth
Japan Is Benefiting From Strong Global Growth
Japan Is Benefiting From Strong Global Growth
Chart 5Watch Oil & The Yen,##BR##Not The BoJ Inflation Forecasts
Watch Oil & The Yen, Not The BoJ Inflation Forecasts
Watch Oil & The Yen, Not The BoJ Inflation Forecasts
Having inflation consistently below its target rate is frustrating to the BoJ. By its own estimates, Japan's output gap closed in 2016 and now sits at +1.35% - levels that have been consistent with headline CPI inflation rates of 2% or greater since the mid-1980s (Chart 6, top panel). Our own Japan headline CPI diffusion index, which measures the breadth of the moves in inflation across ten CPI sectors, is struggling to stay above the 50 line, unlike those previous periods where Japan had a large positive output gap. The main reason for this is that Japanese service sector inflation, consisting of around ½ of the total Japanese CPI index, remains anemic at 0.8% or a massive 2.3 percentage points below the rate of goods inflation (bottom panel). The odds of the BoJ successfully seeing Japanese inflation reach its target are low without any meaningful pickup in services inflation. The latter requires a boost to household purchasing power, which is next to impossible without faster wage growth. One of the fundamental reasons for Japan's low inflation continues to be the surprising lack of wage inflation despite strong Japanese profitability and a very tight labor market. Japanese firms are enjoying an extended period of robust earnings growth, with corporate profits up nearly 500% since the trough during the 2009 recession (Chart 7, top panel). Moreover, firms have not been cutting back on labor over that period. The jobs-to-applicant ratio has steadily climbed and is now at the highest level since 1974, and while the annual rate of employment growth remains well above the historical average (2nd panel). The result is an unemployment rate that is currently at 2.8%, well below the OECD's estimate of the full employment NAIRU at 3.6% (3rd panel). Yet despite firms remaining desperate to hire new employees to fill empty or newly created positions, at a time when there is no spare labor capacity, wage growth remains stagnant. Nominal wage growth is only 0.6%, or -0.6% in real terms. The problem of low real wage growth is not unique to Japan, of course (bottom panel), but it is unusual given how far the Japanese unemployment rate is below NAIRU. The subject of persistent low wages has become an important political matter for Japanese PM Shinzo Abe, given that breaking Japan out of its low inflation trap has become critical to the long-term success of his "Abenomics" program. Our colleagues at BCA Geopolitical Strategy discussed this exact topic in a Special Report published last week, noting that: Wages will be a decisive factor in Abe's economic success .... In this spring's "shunto" negotiations between businesses and unions, both the Abe administration and Keidanren, the top business group, are asking for 3% wage increases. The biggest union, Rengo, is only asking for one percentage point more. Abe has dedicated the current Diet session, beginning January 22, to "work-style reforms" that should be, on net, positive for wage growth. He wants to remove disparities between regular and irregular workers, particularly regarding wages, training opportunities, and welfare benefits. He also wants to impose limits on the workweek - putting a cap on the average 80-hour workweek of Japan's full-time workers so as to force companies to hire more irregular workers on a full-time basis (and to encourage employed people to have children). Companies that raise wages by 3% or more will see a cut in the corporate tax rate from around 30% to 25%.1 If Abe is successful in convincing Japanese companies to boost wages, this can help broaden the current cyclical economic upturn in Japan through faster consumer spending. Consumption has lagged other more robust parts of the economy during the current cycle (Chart 8, top panel), even though consumer confidence has surged in response to the healthy labor market (middle panel). Real disposable income growth has been unable to exceed 1% since 2010, a problem for consumer spending that has been exacerbated by the five percentage point rise in the household saving rate since 2013 (bottom panel). Chart 6Domestic Inflation,##BR##Like Services, Is Anemic
Domestic Inflation, Like Services, Is Anemic
Domestic Inflation, Like Services, Is Anemic
Chart 7Japanese Companies##BR##Are Not Sharing The Wealth
Japanese Companies Are Not Sharing The Wealth
Japanese Companies Are Not Sharing The Wealth
Chart 8Poor Fundamentals For##BR##The Japanese Consumer
Poor Fundamentals For The Japanese Consumer
Poor Fundamentals For The Japanese Consumer
Putting it all together, the Japanese economy is in good shape, but inflation continues to undershoot the BoJ's goals. Bottom Line: Japan is in the midst of a solid cyclical upturn, driven by strong exports and rising investment spending. Yet despite signs that the economy is running at an above-potential pace with no spare capacity in labor or product markets, inflation remains tame. This puts no immediate pressure on the BoJ to move away from its easy policy stance. Plausible Next Steps For The BoJ The BoJ is in a difficult spot at the moment. The underwhelming pace of inflation is forcing the central bank to continue committing to its aggressive monetary easing programs, which include large-scale purchases of Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs) and Japanese equities via ETFs. Yet the BoJ already shifted from a quantity target for its JGB purchases to a price target back in September 2016 when it introduced the "Yield Curve Control" (YCC) element to its overall Quantitative & Qualitative Easing (QQE) program. By switching to a price level on the 10-year, the BoJ was aiming to reduce the amount of JGBs it was buying from 80 trillion yen per year to whatever level was required to keep the 10-year yield at 0%. After switching to the YCC framework, the growth in the BoJ's JGB holdings slowed sharply to a pace that is now below the pace of new JGB issuance for the first time since the QQE program started in 2013 (Chart 9). It is no coincidence that the peak in the pace of BoJ buying coincided with the cyclical trough in our own BoJ Central Bank Monitor, which suggests that tighter monetary policy is now required in Japan (top panel). The BoJ has been successful in keeping the 10-year JGB yield near its 0% target, but that outcome will be operationally harder to achieve in the future. The BoJ currently holds about 70% of all 10-year JGBs outstanding, and the increase in ownership has risen by 5-7% in each quarter (Chart 10). In other words, if this pattern lasts, without a major increase in issuance at that maturity, the BoJ will effectively own all the 10-year JGBs outstanding by the middle of 2019. Already, the BoJ owns around 43% of the entire stock of JGBs, draining liquidity away from the market for the risk-free asset (government bonds) that is needed by Japanese banks and major investors like pension funds and insurance companies (Chart 11). Chart 9BoJ Has Already 'Tapered'##BR##Its Bond Purchases
BoJ Has Already 'Tapered' Its Bond Purchases
BoJ Has Already 'Tapered' Its Bond Purchases
Chart 10The BoJ Is Cornering##BR##The JGB Market
BoJ Has Already 'Tapered' Its Bond Purchases
BoJ Has Already 'Tapered' Its Bond Purchases
With the BoJ unwilling to continue impairing the liquidity in the JGB market, it will be forced to consider alternatives to its current YCC program settings. Last week, the Japanese government nominated BoJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda for another five-year term as the head of the central bank. Kuroda has received the full trust from PM Abe in his handling of monetary policy. However, maintaining the current monetary policy has some limitations. What can the BoJ realistically do? Until realized inflation reaches the BoJ target, there can be no shift to a less accommodative monetary policy involving a full tapering of asset purchases or interest rate increases. Yet the BoJ cannot continue to buy bonds at the current pace without essentially "cornering the market" for 10-year JGBs. The solution that would be the least disruptive, in our view, would be increasing the YCC yield target from the current 0%. It has been rumored over the past year that the BoJ would consider raising that yield curve target, although that idea has been repeatedly shot down by Governor Kuroda - no surprise, given how far inflation is from the BoJ target. The BoJ has been already been effectively "tapering" by buying fewer bonds under YCC than QQE. An explicit announcement to reduce the pace of bond buying, however, would be taken as a hawkish sign by the markets. Just ask the ECB, who is dealing with its own communication problems with the markets as it tries to prepare for the inevitable exit from its bond buying program. Explicitly raising the yield curve target would only be an option for the BoJ if it felt that a) the domestic economy could tolerate some increase in longer-term bond yields; b) Japanese inflation was likely to reach (or even surpass) the BoJ's 2% target; and c) the global economy was strong enough to push global bond yields to a sustained higher trajectory. We see the following as being a necessary "checklist" of events that must occur before the BoJ would even contemplate a more to a higher target on the 10-year JGB yield (Chart 12): Chart 11JGB Ownership Shares##BR##By Investor Category
JGB Ownership Shares By Investor Category
JGB Ownership Shares By Investor Category
Chart 12These Must ALL Happen Before##BR##The BoJ Lifts Its JGB Yield Target
These Must ALL Happen Before The BoJ Lifts Its JGB Yield Target
These Must ALL Happen Before The BoJ Lifts Its JGB Yield Target
1) The USD/JPY exchange rate must increase back to at least the 115-120 range The recent rise in the yen versus the U.S. dollar has flied in the face of interest rate differentials that should be highly supportive of the U.S. dollar (top panel). This is not the only currency pair where this has happened, of course, but it matters far more for Japan given the low readings on headline inflation. A strengthening yen makes a difficult job - boosting Japanese inflation sustainably to 2% - almost impossible. 2) Japanese core CPI inflation and nominal wage inflation must both rise sustainably above 1.5% This is fairly obvious, but the BoJ cannot be confident that its 2% inflation target can be reached if core inflation continues to muddle along at levels well below that target. If wage growth were to also rise at the same time and pace as core inflation, both within hailing distance of 2%, then the BoJ would be even more convinced that some modest change to its yield target was required. 3) The 10-year JGB yield must reach an overvalued extreme versus U.S. Treasuries Table 1JGB Yield Model
What Would It Take For The Bank Of Japan To Raise Its Yield Target?
What Would It Take For The Bank Of Japan To Raise Its Yield Target?
Or put more simply, global bond yields must rise by enough for the BoJ to say that there has been a shift in the global growth/inflation backdrop, justifying a structurally higher level of bond yields. The BoJ could then point to non-Japanese factors as the reason to bump up the target for 10-year JGB yields. We can evaluate this using the BoJ's own model for the 10-year JGB yield that was introduced back in 2016 (Table 1). This model includes Japanese potential GDP growth, the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield and the share of JGBs owned by the BoJ (along with "dummy variables" to identify the dates of the BoJ's QQE and negative interest rate policy). In the bottom two panels of Chart 12, we show a scenario that would lower the residual of the model (i.e. how far JGB yields are below fair value) to the same extremes seen during the QQE era since 2013. That would require a move in the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield to 3.5% AND an increase in the BoJ ownership share of the entire stock of JGBs to 50%. That would increase the fair value of the 10-year JGB yield to 0.18%, leaving the current yield around 10bps too expensive. Importantly, all three items in our checklist would have to happen at the same time for the BoJ to contemplate any shift in its yield curve target. That is especially true for USD/JPY. Japan would face considerable international pressure if the yen was held at undervalued levels by an overly accommodative BoJ policy that was no longer needed with Japanese inflation approaching the 2% target. What are the odds of all three of these items in our checklist being reached in 2018? Quite low, perhaps no more than 20%. For that reason, we do not see the BoJ being a new reason for frazzled global investors to worry about another spike in volatility. Bottom Line: When the BoJ does finally consider a shift in its monetary policy stance, the first thing it will do is raise its yield target on the 10-year JGB. Before doing that, three things must happen - yen weakness, higher core Japanese inflation and much higher non-Japanese global bond yields. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst Ray@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Kuroda Or No Kuroda, Reflation Ahead", dated February 7th 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights The spike in volatility last week led to a sharp correction in equities. However, the bull market in equities is not over yet. The Fed's response to the selloff will be critical. Policymakers will closely monitor financial conditions. The most overvalued assets are at greatest risk during a selloff. Feature Financial markets did not give new Fed Chair Jay Powell a warm welcome last week. Volatility spiked, and risk assets fell sharply. Nonetheless, BCA's view is that strong economic growth and stout earnings growth will keep the bull market intact. The selloff is reminiscent of the 7% drop in the S&P 500 in May of 2006.1 Back in the spring of 2006, then Chairman Ben Bernanke had just taken the helm at the Federal Reserve. Global growth was strong, the U.S. dollar was selling off and global share prices were surging and overbought. From May through June 2006, markets sold off because of the then-prevailing narrative that Chairman Bernanke would be too dovish, allowing U.S. inflation to get out of hand. U.S. bond yields spiked, inflicting particular damage on EM assets. The February 2018 may not play out exactly like May 2006. That said, there are enough similarities to draw parallels. Global growth is robust and inflationary pressures are accumulating. Bond yields are rising, and the greenback is selling off. A new Fed Chairman just took over the reins, and there are growing odds that U.S. inflation will soon begin to rise, justifying more Fed rate hikes. The Fed's response to the tighter financial conditions will be crucial. The May 2006 selloff turned out to be just a correction in a bull market that lasted another 18 months. Still, investors today are also concerned about what to sell first as the end of the expansion draws closer. A Shake Up BCA strategists believe that the market turmoil since last week reflects a technical correction from overbought and over complacent levels, but the cyclical bull run is not yet over.2 Nonetheless, investors should note that the bull market is entering its late stages. The low inflation and low volatility era is ending as the U.S. economy begins to face late-cycle, supply-side constraints, especially in the labor market. Therefore, the equity advance will be associated with higher volatility than in the past few years. Chart 1 shows that the VIX soared by roughly four times more on February 5 than expected, based on the decline in equity prices. This suggests that the spike in volatility caused the stock market plunge, rather than the other way around. The relatively muted reaction in the past few days of other risk gauges, such as junk bonds, EM stocks, and gold prices, is consistent with this thesis. Chart 1Last Monday's VIX Spike Was Abnormally Large
Powell's First Week
Powell's First Week
Importantly, the implosion of volatility funds is unlikely to reverberate across the global financial system in the same way as it did during the 2007-2009 financial crisis. The mortgage crisis a decade ago was so toxic that the losses were concentrated in the books of highly leveraged financial institutions. However, that does not appear to be the current case with volatility funds. The cyclical underpinnings for the bull market in equities is intact. The odds of a recession remain low (Chart 2). Corporate earnings continue to come in above expectations, aided by a wave of share buybacks linked to the U.S. Tax Cut and Jobs Act (Chart 3). Global economic growth remains upbeat as well. Chart 2Odds Of A Recession##BR##Remain Low
Odds Of A Recession Remain Low
Odds Of A Recession Remain Low
Chart 3Buybacks, Surging Capex##BR##Raising The Bar For 2018 EPS Growth
Buybacks, Surging Capex Raising The Bar For 2018 EPS Growth
Buybacks, Surging Capex Raising The Bar For 2018 EPS Growth
Chart 4U.S. Equities And Vol##BR##Climbed Through The 1990s
U.S. Equities And Vol Climbed Through The 1990s
U.S. Equities And Vol Climbed Through The 1990s
This does not mean that everything will be smooth sailing. Last week's selloff marked an inflection point in the low-volatility world that has prevailed in the past few years. The VIX Humpty-Dumpty has been irrevocably broken. Volatility will stay elevated relative to what investors have come to anticipate. As the experience of the 1990s shows, stocks can still climb when volatility trends higher (Chart 4), but this is going to make for a more challenging investment environment. Bottom Line: Rising volatility does not mean the end of the bull market or the economic expansion. Bear markets outside of recessions are rare, and our view remains that the odds of a recession this year or next remain low. Moreover, the additional dose of fiscal stimulus passed by Congress late last week may extend the expansion into 2020. Stay overweight stocks versus bonds.3 The Policy Response The Fed's reaction to this new regime will be critical. The 7.2% drop in equities last week occurred on Jay Powell's first as Chairman of the Fed. Chart 5 shows that it is not unusual for the equity markets to be in turmoil in the early months of a new Fed Chair's tenure. BCA expects that Powell and his FOMC colleagues will adopt Janet Yellen's gradual approach to raising rates this year. Nonetheless, the January readings on average hourly earnings suggest that supply-side constraints are beginning to bite. The runway for low inflation and easy monetary policy may not be as long as some had hoped. Just like Yellen, Jay Powell will seek a consensus among his colleagues. The composition of the FOMC will probably shift in a more hawkish direction, but the evolution will be slow. In the meantime, the recommendations of career Fed staff will represent an important and often underappreciated source of continuity. Last week, several Fed speakers reinforced that the central bank will continue to monitor incoming economic and financial data, and react accordingly. The stock market rout has led to some tightening in financial conditions, but FCIs in the U.S. remain more expansionary than they were six months ago (Chart 6). As a result, U.S. economic growth is poised to accelerate even more in the first half of the year (Chart 7). This will push the unemployment rate further below NAIRU and ultimately force up wage and price inflation. Chart 5New Fed Chairs##BR##And The Equity Market
New Fed Chairs And The Equity Market
New Fed Chairs And The Equity Market
Chart 6Decline In Equity Market##BR##Tightened Financial Conditions
Decline In Equity Market Tightened Financial Conditions
Decline In Equity Market Tightened Financial Conditions
However, at 2.1% on February 8, the 10-year TIPS breakeven yield was still below the 2.4 to 2.5% range where markets need to worry about the Fed falling behind the curve (Chart 8). A shift above 2.4% would be consistent with the Fed's 2% target for the PCE measure of inflation. This would signal that the FOMC will have to boost the pace of rate hikes and aggressively slow economic growth. We expect the Fed to tighten four times in 2018. We will likely take some money off the table if core inflation rises, even if it is still below 2%, when the TIPS breakeven reaches 2.4%. Chart 7Lagged Effect Of Easier##BR##Monetary Conditions Will Boost Growth
Lagged Effect Of Easier Monetary Conditions Will Boost Growth
Lagged Effect Of Easier Monetary Conditions Will Boost Growth
Chart 8Breaking Down##BR##The Rise In Yields
Breaking Down The Rise In Yields
Breaking Down The Rise In Yields
A sustained move above 3% on the nominal 10-year Treasury yield will require a more durable increase in inflation. Ultimately, we think core inflation will move4 above 2%, forcing the Fed to lift interest rates into restrictive territory. However, this probably will be a story for 2019 rather than 2018. Stocks tend to peak about six months before the start of a recession (Table 1). If the next recession occurs in late 2019, as we forecast, the equity bull market could last a while longer. The additional fiscal impulse from the spending bill passed by Congress last week may extend the expansion into early 2020. A modest overweight on global risk assets is warranted for now, but investors should consider reducing their risk exposure later this year. Table 1Too Soon To Get Out
Powell's First Week
Powell's First Week
Bottom Line: The Fed and the market are now in agreement on rate hikes in 2018. BCA's U.S. Bond Strategists' stance is that the 2/10 curve will flatten from here, as the upside in long maturity yields will be limited once the TIPS breakeven inflation rates reach our target fair value range of 2.4-2.5%. Nonetheless, at that point, the nominal 10-year yield5 is likely to be between 3.0 and 3.25%. Stay underweight duration for now. Where Do We Go From Here? Clients have asked our view on the appropriate order in which to reduce risk assets. One way to approach the question is to compare valuation across asset classes. Presumably, the most over-valued ones are at greatest risk, and thus profits should be taken here first. It is difficult to compare valuation across asset classes. Should one use fitted values from models or simple deviations from moving averages? Over what time span? We include multiple measures because there is no widely accepted approach. More than one time period was used in some cases to capture regime changes. Table 2 provides our best approximation for nine asset classes. The approaches range from sophisticated methods6 developed over many years (i.e. our equity valuation indicators), to regression analysis on the fundamentals (i.e. oil), to simple deviations from a time trend (i.e. real raw industrial commodity prices and gold). Table 2Valuation Levels For Major Asset Classes
Powell's First Week
Powell's First Week
We averaged the valuation readings where there were multiple estimates for a single asset class. The results are shown in Chart 9. Chart 9Valuation Levels For Major Asset Classes
Powell's First Week
Powell's First Week
By far, U.S. equities stand out as the most expensive at 1.8 standard deviations above fair value. Gold, raw industrials and EM equities are next at one standard deviation overvalued. EM sovereign bond spreads follow at 0.7, tracked closely by U.S. Treasuries (real yield levels) and investment-grade corporate (IG) bonds (expressed as a spread). High-yield (HY) is only about 0.3 sigma expensive, based on default-adjusted spreads over the Treasury curve. That said, both IG and HY are very expensive in absolute terms based on the fact that government bonds are pricey. Oil is sitting very close to fair value, despite the rapid price run up in the past couple of months. This makes oil exposure doubly attractive because the fundamentals point to higher prices when the underlying asset is not expensive. Historical analysis around equity market zeniths provides an alternative approach to the sequencing question. Table 3 presents the number of days that various asset classes peaked before or after the past major five tops in the S&P 500. A negative number indicates that the asset class peaked before U.S. equities, and a positive number means that it peaked after. Table 3Asset Class Leads & Lags Vs. Peak In S&P 500
Powell's First Week
Powell's First Week
Unfortunately, there is no consistent pattern observed for EM equities, raw industrials, U.S. cyclical stocks, tech stocks or small-cap versus large-cap relative returns. Sometimes they reached their zenith before the S&P 500, and sometimes after. The EM sovereign bond excess return index peaked about 130 days in advance of the 1998 and 2007 U.S. equity market tops, although we only have three episodes to analyze due to data limitations. Oil is a mixed bag. A peak in the price of gold led the equity market in four out of five episodes, but the lead time was long and variable. The U.S. corporate bond market offers the most consistent lead/lag relationship. Both investment- and speculative-grade excess returns relative to government bonds peaked in advance of U.S. stocks in four of the five episodes. High-yield excess returns provided the most lead time, peaking on average 154 days in advance. Excess returns to high-yield were a better signal than total returns. This leading relationship is one reason why we plan to trim exposure to corporate bonds within our bond portfolio before we scale back on equities. Base metal prices will be hit particularly hard if the 2019 U.S. recession spills over as expected to the EM economies. We may downgrade base metals from neutral to underweight around the time that we downgrade equities, but much depends on the evolution of China's economy in the coming months. Oil is a different story. OPEC 2.0 will likely cut back on supply in the face of an economic downturn, which will help keep prices elevated.7 Therefore, we may not trim energy exposure this year. In terms of equities, our recommended portfolio is still overweight cyclicals for now. Our themes of a synchronized global capex boom, rising bond yield, and firm oil price means we will stay overweight in the industrials, energy and financial sectors. Utilities and homebuilders are underweight. Tech is part of the cyclical sector, but poor valuation keeps us underweight. Our U.S. Equity Strategists have already started a gradual shift away from cyclicals toward defensives. This transition will continue in the coming months as we reduce risk. We will also shift small caps to neutral on earnings disappointments and elevated debt levels.8 Bottom Line: The economic expansion is not over, but investors are already wondering what to sell first as the next peak in equities nears. Market participants should look to trim credit exposure before scaling back on equities, and BCAs' U.S. Equity Strategy service is already scaling back on cyclicals and reduced small caps to neutral from overweight last month. At under $60/ barrel WTI, oil is 5% below our Commodity & Energy Strategy's target of $63/bbl. Moreover, global inventories will continue to draw on the back of OPEC supply restraint as shale production growth alone will not satisfy stronger global demand driven by stronger global economic growth. If prices hit the low $70 range, supply restraint and demand growth will ebb, capping incremental upside. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com Mark McClellan, Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst markm@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Equity Strategy Insight "Buy The Dip," published February 8, 2018. Available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research's Global Investment Strategy Special Report "The Return Of Vol," published February 6, 2018. Available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report "Watching Five Risks," published January 24, 2018. Available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Bond Strategy PAS "Warning Signals," published February 6, 2018. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Bond Strategy PAS "Warning Signals," published February 6, 2018. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Research's The Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report, published January 25, 2018. Available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report "OPEC 2.0 Vs. The Fed," published February 8, 2018. Available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report "Too Good To Be True?," published January 22, 2018. Available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
Dear Client, Wednesday, we sent you a Special Report by our Global Investment Strategist, Peter Berezin titled: The Return of Vol, which fleshed out BCA's view on the recent volatility spike and the associated market selloff. BCA believes that markets are realizing that U.S. inflation is not forever dead. As such, market volatility is set to rise, even if global equities can make new highs. From an FX perspective, a rise in U.S. inflation, especially when accompanied by the kind of spending programs announced this week in Washington DC, could result in a period of strength for the U.S. dollar. Additionally, since financial markets tend to experience clusters of volatility, the recent bout of volatility can stay in place for a while. High volatility tends to be negative for carry trades, hence EM currencies could suffer this quarter. The Australian dollar and the euro could also decline under this scenario. However, the yen and CHF may experience upside, but mostly against other currencies than the greenback. In this present report, we are updating our views on the G10 central banks. Best regards, Mathieu Savary Feature In our Special Report published last summer titled "Who Hikes Next?" we examined which of the G10 central banks would be next to join the Federal Reserve on its tightening path.1 Seven months later, we now know that the Bank of Canada and, to a lesser extent, the Bank of England, were respective second and third to begin raising their own policy rates. It is now time to revisit the topic and see which central banks are most likely to adjust their policy further. As Chart 1 shows, global goods prices have picked up steam, which has been translated in an ebbing of global deflationary forces. A few factors lie behind this improvement. First, China is not exporting deflation around the world anymore because the trade-weighted yuan has been stable and producer price inflation, which currently stands at 5%, has been in positive territory for 15 straight months. Second, thanks to ebullient global growth, global capacity utilization has grown significantly. Third, oil prices have climbed further. This development has been particularly meaningful as it has contributed to a significant pick-up in market-based inflation expectations. But as in every economic cycle, some risks are worth monitoring. As we have highlighted before, global money growth has slowed, Chinese monetary conditions have tightened meaningfully and Asian manufacturing activity has decelerated in a wide swath of countries. Even BCA's Global Capex Indicator (Chart 1, bottom panel), which flashed an unabashed green light last June, has begun to roll over. The recent market shakeup has also reminded investors that higher bond yields do have an impact on asset prices and economic growth. Despite these worries, we expect more central banks to join the fray this year and begin removing accommodation one way or another. Others will shy away, but they will guide markets toward expecting less monetary accommodation next year. Finally, some central banks will likely stand pat, and will leave their policy settings unchanged. Chart 2 illustrates where we think G10 central banks stand in their respective hiking cycles. Chart 1The Reasons Why Central Banks Are Tightening
The Reasons Why Central Banks Are Tightening
The Reasons Why Central Banks Are Tightening
Chart 2G10 Central Banks Map
Who Hikes Again?
Who Hikes Again?
The Hikers 1) The U.S. Chart 3U.S.
U.S.
U.S.
The Federal Reserve will continue to tighten policy this year. To begin with, its communications on the topic have been extremely clear: the Federal Open Market Committee wants to increase interest rates three times in 2018. The Fed has good reasons for this hawkish stance. The gap between the real policy rate and the recent average of real GDP growth remains in stimulative territory (Chart 3). Meanwhile, U.S. financial conditions have rarely been easier, yet the economy is receiving a boost thanks to tax cuts and spending increases. There is, therefore, little mystery as to why survey data point to healthy GDP growth for the first half of 2018. In fact, the Atlanta Fed GDPnow model currently forecasts a growth rate of 4.0% for the first quarter of this year. This is an inflationary combination. It is not just growth conditions that are creating tailwinds for the Fed. Resource utilization is also elevated. According to the CBO, the U.S. output gap closed last year, and the unemployment rate not only stands at its lowest level in 17 years, but it is also well below equilibrium. We are already seeing the symptoms of this state of affairs: the employment cost index is growing at 2.6%/annum, its highest rate in three years; the growth of average hourly earnings just hit 2.9%/annum, and even core inflation is bottoming. These developments will give comfort to the Fed that hiking rates three times this year is the right strategy. The Hikers 2) Canada Chart 4Canada
Canada
Canada
The Bank of Canada has already increased rates three times since we first explored this topic last summer. Like the Fed, the BoC has strong justification behind its hawkish stance. While the policy rate is not as stimulative as it was last year, capacity utilization has become much tighter (Chart 4). The unemployment rate is now back in line with its underlying equilibrium, and the BoC's Business Outlook Survey shows that the quantity and intensity of labor shortages have become elevated, which has historically led to higher wages. Additionally, the OECD's approximation of the output gap has closed, something also acknowledged by the BoC's models. Core inflation has begun to respond, rising to 1.5% in December. The current backdrop suggests this trend has further to go. Moreover, as exports to the U.S. represent 20% of Canada's GDP, the economic vigor south of the border will only translate into further inflationary pressures up north. Based on these factors, we expect the BoC to increase rates as much as the Fed in 2018. This view is not without risks. NAFTA negotiations remain rocky, and the uncertainty emanating from trade policy could hurt Canadian capex. Additionally, Canadian house prices remain 31% above fair value, Canadians sport a debt load of 170% of disposable income, and a growing array of macro-prudential measures are being implemented to slow the housing market. If this combination bites deeply - which remains to be seen - the BoC may be forced to, at least, pause its tightening policy faster than anticipated. Still Hiking? 3) The U.K. Chart 5U.K.
U.K.
U.K.
On many metrics, the Bank of England looks set to hike again in 2018. There is no denying that British monetary policy remains extremely easy, as the gap between the real policy rate and real GDP growth is still in massively stimulative territory (Chart 5). Moreover, according to the OECD, the output gap stands at 0.4% of potential GDP. This observation seems to be corroborated by the fact that the unemployment rate remains nearly 1% below its equilibrium value. Adding credence to these assertions, U.K. core inflation spiked as high as 2.9% one month ago. However, make no mistake: the spike in inflation, while facilitated by tight supply conditions, is still mostly a consequence of the pass-through created by the pound's collapse in 2016. Because the rate of change of the pound has stabilized, the U.K.'s inflation rate will fall back to earth. Moreover, the outlook for British consumption is murky as the household savings rate has plunged to a mere 5.2% of disposable income, and debt growth is peaking. Corporations too have curtailed their borrowings, pointing to a weak capex outlook. While the MPC would like to hike once or twice this year, since a policy tightening is contingent on elevated inflation, the central bank may once again disappoint. For now, rate hikes look likely, but this may change if inflation decelerates sharply. In The Starting Blocs For 2018 4) Sweden Chart 6Sweden
Sweden
Sweden
The December policy statement by the Riksbank highlighted that while the world's oldest central bank will reinvest the proceeds from redemptions and coupon payments from its large bond portfolio, it still expects to begin lifting its benchmark rate in the middle of 2018. This is not a minute too soon. Swedish monetary conditions are incredibly easy: Real interest rates are 6% below the average real GDP growth of the past three years (Chart 6). Moreover, Sweden is facing growing capacity constraints. The unemployment rate is nearly 1% below equilibrium, and according to the OECD, the output gap stands at 1.5% of GDP, the most positive number among the G10. The Riksbank's own capacity utilization measure - an excellent leading indicator of inflation - is at a 10-year high, pointing to further acceleration in a core inflation that is already very close to 2%. Additionally, Sweden is in the thralls of a massive real estate bubble, a byproduct of extremely loose monetary policy. The external environment will remain the main source of risk to this hawkish outlook. On the plus side, the European Central Bank has begun tapering its QE program and should end new purchases in September 2018. This limits how high the SEK can spike against the euro - the currency of Sweden's main trading partner - if the Riksbank tightens policy. However, Asian industrial production has slowed sharply, and Swedish PMIs are already buckling. Any deepening of the recent selloff in risk assets, especially if it spreads further into commodities, could cause Riksbank Governor Stefan Ingves to retreat to his dovish safe place. In The Starting Blocs For 2019... Or 2018 5) New Zealand Chart 7New Zealand
New Zealand
New Zealand
The Reserve Banks of New Zealand is slated to hike rates by mid-2019. However, risks are growing that the RBNZ could be forced into an earlier first hike. Policy is currently massively accommodating as the real official cash rate stands nearly 4% below the average real GDP growth of the past three years (Chart 7). At 1.4%, core inflation remains below the RBNZ's target, but it is on a rising trend, especially as the Kiwi economy is beyond full employment and the OECD's measure for New Zealand's output gap is at 0.8% of potential GDP. Moreover, GDP growth remains robust, and terms of trade have been improving as dairy prices are still firm, thus a further overheating in this economy is likely. The political front could also give impetus for the RBNZ to hike earlier than it recently suggested. The Ardern government has proposed increasing the minimum wage to NZ$20/hour by 2021, starting in April 2018. This could fuel already improving wages, and thus fan inflation. This government also plans to increase fiscal spending, which tends to exacerbate inflationary pressures when an economy is at full capacity. Thus, inflationary risks in New Zealand are skewed to the upside. In The Starting Blocs For 2019... Or 2018 6) Norway Chart 8Norway
Norway
Norway
The Norges Bank anticipates it will begin to increase rates toward the middle of 2018. The Norwegian central bank is facing an interesting cross current. On the one hand, when compared with other nations on the list, the Norwegian economy seems less ripe to withstand higher rates. To begin with, because Norwegian core inflation has fallen precipitously in recent years, the gap between real interest rates and the average real GDP growth of the past three years has narrowed considerably (Chart 8). Moreover, the unemployment rate remains 0.9% above equilibrium, while a more broad-based measure of slack, the output gap, stands at -1.6% of potential GDP, at least according to the OECD. Moreover, core inflation only hovers near a 1.2% annual pace and is expected to stay below 2.5% in the coming years. Despite these negatives for Norway, some important positives also exist, which explains the Norges Bank's optimism. The Norwegian economy did not go through much of a financial crisis this cycle; as a result, Norwegian banks are healthy, and the Norwegian money multiplier never imploded as it did in other G10 countries. Also, the Norwegian krone is very cheap, adding a further reflationary impulse beyond low rates. Moreover, Norwegian GDP growth has experienced a rebound on the back of rallying oil prices. However, oil prices are nearing the top end of our energy strategists' forecasts, suggesting this tailwind is receding. Altogether, this confluence of factors suggests that similar to the RBNZ, the Norges Bank is likely to hike rates in early 2019 or late 2018. 2019 Take Off 7) Australia Chart 9Australia
Australia
Australia
The Reserve Bank of Australia may well begin increasing interest rates in early 2019. Many factors would argue that the RBA could in fact increase interest rates earlier. Even though it is less accommodative than Sweden's or New Zealand's, Australian monetary policy is quite easy as the gap between the real policy rate and the average real GDP growth rate of the past three years is well into negative territory (Chart 9). Additionally, core inflation has rebounded hitting 1.9% recently, while trimmed-mean CPI stands at 1.8%. Among additional positives, Australia's national income is growing at a robust 4.3% annual pace and job creation is brisk, with payrolls expanding at an impressive 3.6% rate on a yearly basis. These positives mask some stiff headwinds. Rapid national income growth will likely peter out. It was the result of the very large rebound in the RBA's commodity price index, however, this benchmark, which was growing at a 53% annual rate in February 2017, is now contracting at a 1% annual rate. Additionally, the OECD's measure for the Australian output gap stands at -1.5%. While it is true that the unemployment rate is below its equilibrium rate, the RBA's labor underutilization measure remains near 25-year highs. This explains why robust job creation is not being translated into wage gains, and suggests that the RBA is right to expect trimmed-mean inflation to durably be at 2-2.25% only by the end of 2019. Moreover, the recent strength in the AUD will also weigh on inflation going forward. Netting out pros and cons suggests that the most likely first hike by the RBA will be in early 2019. 2019 Take Off 8) Euro Area Chart 10Euro Area
Euro Area
Euro Area
The European Central Bank has begun tapering its QE program, and if the global economy does not experience any meaningful relapse, the ECB will end new purchases this September. However, a rate hike is not in the offing this year. To begin with, the ECB's communications on the topic have been rather clear: At its latest press conference, President Mario Draghi once again rejected any possibility of a move this year, and even Jens Weidmann, the Bundesbank's head, acknowledged that the current market pricing - a hike in the summer of 2019 - is about right. While it is true that the ECB's monetary policy setting is still very accommodative, the unemployment rate remains 0.8% above equilibrium, and outside of Germany, labor underutilization is still high. Moreover, the OECD's estimate of the euro area's output gap still stands at -0.5% of potential GDP (Chart 10). Another hurdle is core CPI which remains well below the ECB's objective; in fact, after hitting 1.2% in May, inflation excluding food and energy has now relapsed to 0.9%. Peripheral nations are experiencing even weaker inflation readings. With the ECB's inflation forecast still well below target until 2020, a rate hike will have to wait until next year. The Laggards 9) Switzerland Chart 11Switzerland
Switzerland
Switzerland
The Swiss National Bank remains firmly among the lagging central banks within the G10. Because inflation is still at only 0.7%, the gap between real interest rates and average real GDP growth of the past three years is among the least stimulative in the G10 (Chart 11). Corroborating this observation, loan growth has averaged a paltry 4% over the course of the past three years. Moreover, the Swiss economy is still replete with excess capacity. The unemployment rate may be a low 3%, but it still stands 1.3% above equilibrium, and Swiss wage growth remains very depressed. Moreover, the OECD pegs the Swiss output gap at -1.2% of potential GDP. On a PPP basis, the Swiss franc remains 5% overvalued against the euro, Swiss core inflation was only 0.7% in December, but better than the -1% posted in early 2016. The SNB is likely to officially abandon its foreign asset purchases this year. The Swiss economy has recovered from its doldrums of the past several years, and most importantly, the euro crisis is now fully in the rearview mirror. This means that safe-haven flows out of the euro area, which were pushing the CHF to nosebleed valuation levels, have dried up. In fact, this year's weakness in the franc versus the euro was not accompanied by much increases in SNB sight deposits, suggesting this depreciation has been organic and not manufactured in Bern and Zurich. However, until core CPI moves closer to 2% and Swiss wages pick up, the SNB will likely lag the ECB when it comes to actual interest rate increases amid fears that the Swiss franc will rebound and tighten policy again. A late 2019 or early 2020 hike remains the most likely scenario. The Laggards 10) Japan Chart 12Japan
Japan
Japan
The Bank of Japan is also faraway from increasing policy rates. This is not because the Japanese economy is replete with excess slack. It is not. The active job openings-to-applicants ratio stands at a whopping 44-year high, the unemployment rate is 0.8% below equilibrium and the OECD's estimate of the output gap is in positive territory (Chart 12). However, despite this very inflationary backdrop, inflation excluding food and energy remains a paltry 0.3%/annum. The BoJ has rightfully identified moribund inflation expectations as the key to unlocking this mystery. Decades of deflation have created a deflationary mindset among Japanese economic agents. As a result, wages and inflation itself are not experiencing much of a lift. The BoJ is tackling this issue head on, and has made it clear that it will not abandon its yield curve control strategy until inflation is well above its 2% target. In the BoJ's view, an inflationary overshoot is now necessary to shock deflationary mentalities, which will be the keystone to let inflation take off in durable fashion. For now, the tight negative relationship between Japanese financial conditions and inflation suggests the BoJ will do its utmost to contain the yen, which would undermine the progress made in recent quarters. As such, we do not foresee any rate hikes until well into 2019. QQE is likely to be abandoned first, as in practice the BoJ has not hit its JGB purchases target since the first half of 2016. Investment Implications The dollar could experience a further lift in the first half of 2018. Investors plunked the greenback last year and in the opening weeks of 2018 because they had been focusing on the far future - a future in which the ECB hikes rates faster than the Fed. But the reality remains that this year and next, the Fed will lift interest rates much more than the ECB. This means the euro is vulnerable to a pullback as it is very expensive relative to differentials at the front end of the curve. The outlook for EUR/USD will improve again once we get closer to 2019. The CAD has niether much upside nor downside. Interest rate markets are pricing in as many interest rate increases as we are. The key for the CAD will once again be oil prices, but keep in mind that Brent prices are not far off from our energy strategists' target of US$67/bbl. The SEK and the NOK will likely experience upside versus the euro. Their central banks are also set to pull the trigger before the ECB. Moreover, these two currencies are very cheap. However, the ride is unlikely to be a smooth one. The budding slowdown in Asian manufacturing could generate temporary hiccups before yearend that will cause these extremely pro-cyclical currencies to swoon. The picture for the pound remains as murky as ever. On one hand, the BoE has begun to increase rates. However, this progress could run astray very easily if, as we expect, British inflation weakens anew. Moreover, Brexit negotiations with the rest of the EU are far from fully settled. Further, the trade-weighted pound is moving toward the top end of its post-Brexit range, making it highly vulnerable to even a modest disappointment. The Australian dollar is likely to experience a poor 2018, as the RBA is a long way from increasing interest rates, and on all the long-term metrics we track, the AUD is one of the most expensive currencies. A continuation of the recent spat of asset market volatility could prove to be unkind to the Aussie. The kiwi will likely outperform its antipodean brethren as we see upside risk for interest rates in New Zealand. Finally, Swiss and Japanese interest rates will remain near current levels for a few more years. This suggests that the Swiss franc and the yen have little durable upside this year. The same holds true for the first half of 2019. However, since Switzerland and Japan still sport hefty current account surpluses and supersized positive net international investment positions, the CHF and JPY will continue to behave as safe-haven currencies, rallying when global asset prices weaken. This means that since markets tend to experience volatility clusters, the recent bout of market volatility could continue, which will help both the Swiss franc and the yen over the coming weeks. This will be especially true if the CHF and JPY are bought against the EUR, AUD, CAD, and NZD. But beware: the yen is especially cheap, so any signs that inflation expectations of Japanese agents pick up could be associated with a sharp rally in the yen, as it will spell imminent doom for the BoJ's YCC strategy. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, titled "Who Hikes Next?", dated June 30, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades
Highlights This week's global equities sell-off spilled into oil markets, taking Brent and WTI down 2.7% and 3.7% as of Tuesday's close, in line with the S&P 500 decline, which began Friday. In line with our House view, we do not believe this will, in and of itself, deter the Fed from raising overnight rates four times this year. Nor do we believe oil-price weakness earlier this week reflects a breakdown in fundamentals. Any demand-dampening effects coming from a stronger USD in the wake of Fed rate hikes will have a muted effect on oil prices, provided OPEC 2.0 can maintain production discipline, and, critically, keep the Brent and WTI forward curves backwardated.1 Likewise, any demand stimulation coming from a weaker USD in the wake of a more measured Fed policy - e.g., two or three hikes - also will be muted by backwardation. Energy: Overweight. Fundamentally, we cannot see anything that warrants a change in our average-price forecast of $67 and $63/bbl for Brent and WTI this year. Our long Jul/18 WTI vs. short Dec/18 WTI calendar spread, put on in expectation of continued backwardation in oil forward curves, is up 81.5% since Nov 2/17, when we recommended it. Base Metals: Neutral. Base metals also were caught up in the equities sell-off, with spot copper trading ~ $3.15 - $3.20/lb on the COMEX. As with oil, we do not see the equities sell-off as a harbinger of a bearish shift in base metals fundamentals. Precious Metals: Neutral. Gold returns were relatively flat amid the equities sell-off with only a 0.6% loss. Our long gold portfolio hedge is up 7.9% since it was recommended on May 4/17. Ags/Softs: Underweight. China opened an anti-dumping and anti-subsidy investigation into U.S. sorghum imports, which the country's foreign ministry insisted was not related to recent U.S. tariffs on solar panels and washing machines. China accounts for ~ 80% of U.S. sorghum exports. Feature The global equity sell-off spilled into oil markets, with Brent and WTI prompt futures down 2.7% and 3.7% over the past week when the equity slide began (Chart of The Week). The proximate cause of the equities down leg appears to be the stronger-than-expected U.S. wage growth reported last week, suggesting inflationary pressures continue to build in the U.S. This prompted speculation the Fed would be inclined to increase the number of rate hikes it executes this year - going from a consensus view of three hikes to four - and that financial conditions would tighten. The equities sell-off this prompted then led to speculation the Fed would dial back the number of rate hikes it executes this year. We believe the Fed will look through the recent equity-market volatility, and will lift rates four times this year, in line with BCA's once-out-of-consensus House view. Chart of the WeekOil Prices Caught Up In Equities Sell-Off
Oil Prices Caught Up In Equities Sell-Off
Oil Prices Caught Up In Equities Sell-Off
Chart 2Fundamentals Support Backwardation
Fundamentals Support Backwardation
Fundamentals Support Backwardation
As far as oil markets are concerned, as long as the Brent and WTI forward curves remain backwardated (Chart 2), any impact from U.S. monetary policy on oil prices - chiefly through currency effects - will be muted. Demand-dampening effects coming from a stronger USD in the wake of Fed rate hikes will be dissipated in backwardated markets. Likewise, any demand stimulation coming from a weaker USD in the wake of fewer rate hikes policy at the Fed - e.g., two or three hikes - will be muted by backwardation. Fundamentals Dominate Oil-Price Evolution Chart 3Strong Fundamentals##BR##Force Inventories Lower
Strong Fundamentals Force Inventories Lower
Strong Fundamentals Force Inventories Lower
Fundamentals point to continued tightening of crude oil markets in 1H18, the period we have the greatest visibility on: OPEC 2.0's production cuts are pretty much locked in to end-June, when the producer coalition again will meet to assess market conditions, and global demand growth will remain robust. Even with U.S. shale-oil output increasing, OECD inventories will continue to draw during this period (Chart 3). OPEC 2.0's goal of reducing OECD inventories to five-year average levels likely will be met late in 1H18 or early in 2H18, based on our global balances model. While it is possible OPEC 2.0 will extend its production cuts to year-end 2018, we don't believe it is likely. Voluntary production cuts by Russia and Gulf OPEC nations, combined with decline-curve losses in non-Gulf OPEC producers have removed ~ 1.4mm b/d from the market since January 2017. The bulk of these cuts have been made by KSA and Russia, which account for close to 1.0mm b/d of OPEC 2.0 production cuts. Based on our fundamentally driven econometric model, extending OPEC 2.0's cuts to year-end would lift average prices in 2018 from our current expectation of $67/bbl for Brent and $63/bbl for WTI to $71 and $67/bbl, respectively. Counterintuitively, we believe maintaining prices at this level for the entire year is not the desired outcome of OPEC 2.0's production-cutting strategy. Higher price levels will incentivize larger-than-expected shale-oil production gains than we currently are forecasting - ~ 1.0mm b/d in 2018 and 1.2mm b/d in 2019. In addition, they would breathe life into marginal production around the world, particularly in provinces where break-evens and services costs have fallen - e.g., the North Sea, Barents Sea and offshore Brazil. OPEC 2.0's Long Game KSA's and Russia's oil ministers, the leaders of OPEC 2.0, have stated they would prefer to see their coalition endure beyond end-2018, when their production-cutting deal expires. Be that as it may, they have yet to publicly articulate an agreed strategy for OPEC 2.0, either in terms of a preferred price level or price band, or a strategy that builds on the gains they've made in backwardating oil forward curves. Chart 4Stakes Are High For OPEC 2.0##BR##If No Post-2018 Strategy Emerges
Stakes Are High For OPEC 2.0 If No Post-2018 Strategy Emerges
Stakes Are High For OPEC 2.0 If No Post-2018 Strategy Emerges
Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak recently suggested a preferred range for prices of $50 to $60/bbl for Brent, the international crude-oil benchmark. In the short term, KSA likely prefers a higher price - between $60 and $70/bbl for Brent - to support the IPO of Saudi Aramco, which probably will occur later this year. As we near the end of 1H18, OPEC 2.0's leaders will have to provide some indication they are converging on a common production-management strategy. They will, we believe, have to begin behaving more like a central bank - i.e., providing the market forward guidance - and less like a loose alliance of like-minded producers lurching between stop-gap measures to support prices. Importantly, when they do provide such guidance, they will have to follow through on publicly stated goals, or risk losing credibility with markets. The stakes are fairly high. If, as we've modeled in our unconstrained case, OPEC 2.0 returns ~ 1.1 - 1.2 mm b/d of actual production cuts (ex-decline-curve losses) to the market beginning in 2H18, and U.S. shale and other producers respond to 2018's higher prices with aggressive production growth that carries through 2019, Brent and WTI prices could be pushing toward $40/bbl by the end of 2019 (Chart 4). Also note that if prices start to moderate in H2 2018, 2019 shale production growth may ultimately be less than the 1.2 MMb/d we have forecast, softening the decline in prices during 2019. Longer term, we believe KSA and Russia are aligned with Russia's preference, if for no reason other than to keep U.S. shale-oil production from realizing the run-away growth sustained higher prices almost surely would provoke. Such growth would accelerate the development of U.S. crude oil export capacity - already hovering around ~ 2mm b/d - and the competition for market share in markets OPEC 2.0 members are keen to defend. Higher prices also would improve the competitive position of non-hydrocarbon-based transportation - e.g., electric vehicles and hybrids - which works against OPEC 2.0's long-term goals. Backwardation Matters For OPEC 2.0 Price levels always will be an important policy variable for OPEC 2.0. Equally important, we believe, will be having a strategy that maintains a backwardated forward curve in the Brent and WTI markets. This is because OPEC 2.0 member states sell oil at spot-price levels - the highest point of a backwardated forward curve - while shale-oil producers hedge their revenues over a 1- to 2-year interval. Other than allowing prices to collapse once again, this is the most viable way of constraining U.S. shale production growth longer term. The steeper the backwardation in the WTI forward curve, in particular, the lower the average price level of the hedges producers are able to lock in when they hedge forward revenues. This translates directly into lower output, since producers cannot afford to field as many rigs at lower prices over the life of the hedge as they would be able to field at higher prices. The extent to which OPEC 2.0 can keep forward curves backwardated will determine the extent to which the USD influences oil prices, as well. Our recently concluded research reveals backwardation can mitigate FX effects on oil prices induced by U.S. monetary policy. There is a long-term equilibrium between the level of the USD's broad trade-weighted index (TWIB) and crude oil prices (Chart 5). Indeed, the USD TWIB is one of the key variables we use in our demand, supply and price models. A weak dollar spurs consumption - USD/bbl prices ex-U.S. are cheaper in local-currency terms, especially for fast-growing emerging markets - while production costs ex-U.S. are higher, which limits output growth at the margin. A stronger dollar restrains consumption and encourages production ex-U.S., at the margin. However, this long-term equilibrium is asymmetric. The strength of the correlation between the level of the USD and crude oil prices is such that as oil inventories fall - and backwardation becomes more pronounced - the USD becomes less important to the evolution of oil prices.2 This can be seen in the month-on-month (m-o-m) rolling correlation between prompt WTI futures and the USD TWIB plotted against the spread between 1st nearby WTI futures and 12th nearby WTI futures (Chart 6). Chart 5Long-Term Inverse Correlation##BR##Between USD TWIB And Crude Prices
Long-Term Inverse Correlation Between USD TWIB And Crude Prices
Long-Term Inverse Correlation Between USD TWIB And Crude Prices
Chart 6Backwardated Forward Curves##BR##Limit USD's Effect On Oil Prices
Backwardated Forward Curves Limit USD's Effect On Oil Prices
Backwardated Forward Curves Limit USD's Effect On Oil Prices
With the exception of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC), the higher the backwardation in crude oil forward curves, the smaller the USD-WTI correlation becomes.3 This suggests that, if OPEC 2.0 can maintain the backwardation in WTI and Brent in 2018, the correlation between crude oil prices and the USD TWIB likely will not go back to the large negative correlation typical of previous cycles. In other words, sustained backwardation will weaken the inverse relationship between WTI prices and the USD TWIB vs. the long-term average in place since 2000, which is roughly when oil prices became random-walking variables. We also looked at year-on-year change in U.S. commercial inventories vs. the USD-WTI prices correlation (Chart 7). Our analysis indicates that when inventories are building, the correlation between USD and WTI prices becomes negative, and when they are falling the correlation goes to zero or positive. This supports our earlier observation that when crude inventories fall, the USD becomes less important to the evolution of WTI prices, particularly spot prices. One more point that we should note: the inverse relationship between the USD and oil prices is a two-way street. In addition to a weaker USD helping to support higher oil prices, higher oil prices have also tended to weaken the USD by inflating the U.S. trade deficit through more expensive petroleum imports. However, over the past decade, the U.S. has reduced its volumes of petroleum imports by roughly 75%, from 12-13 MMB/d in 2007 to only 3-4 MM b/d today (Chart 8). Therefore, this feedback loop of higher oil prices weakening the USD, and lower oil prices strengthening the USD, is greatly reduced. Chart 7Tighter Inventories Limit##BR##USD's Effect On Oil Prices
Tighter Inventories Limit USD's Effect On Oil Prices
Tighter Inventories Limit USD's Effect On Oil Prices
Chart 8Lower Imports Of Petroleum Help##BR##Insulate USD From Oil Price Moves
Lower Imports Of Petroleum Help Insulate USD From Oil Price Moves
Lower Imports Of Petroleum Help Insulate USD From Oil Price Moves
The USD's influence on the evolution of oil prices essentially is an exogenous variable out of OPEC 2.0's control. To the extent it can minimize these effects by backwardating oil forward curves, the coalition reduces the impact of an essentially exogenous USD risk from its production-management strategy. Bottom Line: The Fed likely will view the equity sell-off as a transitory event, and proceed with four overnight-rate hikes this year, in line with our House view. Any read-through from Fed policy decisions to the USD TWIB will be muted by continued backwardation in crude oil forward curves. To the extent OPEC 2.0 can maintain backwardated forward oil curves, it reduces the impact of an essentially exogenous USD risk from its production-management strategy. Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger, Research Analyst HugoB@bcaresearch.com 1 Jargon recap: OPEC 2.0 is the moniker we coined for the producer coalition led by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and Russia. Its historic production-cutting Agreement to remove 1.8mm b/d of production from the market - via a combination of outright cuts and decline-curve run-off - has largely held, despite wide-spread skepticism. "Backwardation" is a term of art in commodities describing a forward curve in which prompt-delivered crude oil trades at a higher price than crude delivered in the future - e.g., a year hence. This is a reflection of a tight market - i.e., refiners are willing to pay more for oil delivered tomorrow or next month than they are willing to pay for oil delivered next year. The opposite of a backwardated market is a "contango" market, another term of art. 2 Generally, falling commodity inventories put a premium on prompt-delivered supply. As inventories fall, there is less readily available supply in place to meet unexpected supply outages. Under such conditions, refiners will attempt to conserve inventory and bid for flowing supply more aggressively, either to replace consumption out of inventory or to keep inventories at safe levels so as to minimize stockout risks. Either way, prompt-delivered supply becomes more valuable than deferred supply. Backwardation reflects this dynamic by keeping prompt-delivered prices above prices for deferred delivery. Backwardation is the market's way of incentivizing storage holders to release inventory to the market. It also is the source of returns for long-only commodity index products. 3 The GFC of 2008 - 09 was a global liquidity event, in which correlations between most tradeable assets went to 1.0 as prices collapsed. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table
OPEC 2.0 Vs. The Fed
OPEC 2.0 Vs. The Fed
Trades Closed in 2018 Summary of Trades Closed in 2017
OPEC 2.0 Vs. The Fed
OPEC 2.0 Vs. The Fed
Highlights Japan's reflationary economic policies will be reinforced ahead of the constitutional referendum; The Bank of Japan is a long way from a 2% inflation overshoot; Fiscal thrust will continue to surprise to the upside; Wage law revisions are significant and, on net, inflationary; Go long JPY/EUR as a tactical play on the countertrend yen rally. Feature Despite a 8.5% selloff in Japanese equities over the past week amid the global equity pullback, Japan's underlying economic growth is strong. The unemployment rate has collapsed to 2.8%, the economy is humming along at an impressive 2.1% clip, and inflationary pressures are building at last. A variety of indicators - from sentiment surveys to household incomes to manufacturing output - attest to the fact that "Abenomics" is keeping the fire well lit (Chart 1). Before the pullback began, investors were wondering whether the BoJ's reduction of long-term government bond purchases signaled that a less dovish turn in monetary policy was underway (Chart 2). BoJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda tried to quiet these rumors by reiterating the need to keep current, easy monetary policy in place. The latest financial shakeup reinforces this message. Chart 1Japan's Macro Fundamentals Are Strong
Japan's Macro Fundamentals Are Strong
Japan's Macro Fundamentals Are Strong
Chart 2The BoJ Has Cut Back Asset Purchases
The BoJ Has Cut Back Asset Purchases
The BoJ Has Cut Back Asset Purchases
Over the long run, the BoJ's moves, and "Abenomics" in general, should be assessed from the perspective of Japan's broader geopolitical revival.1 Prime Minister Shinzo Abe needs reflation to continue for a range of reasons. Policymakers are not constrained by inflation; rather, inflation is constrained by the yen, global growth, and the increasing danger of a Chinese policy mistake. The BoJ Will Not Betray Abenomics Japan's strong consumer and business confidence, white-hot economic growth, and multi-year equity rally have stemmed from three factors: positive fiscal thrust, an EM rebound, and a weak yen.2 As a result, real interest rates have fallen (Chart 3), prompting the BoJ to downgrade its quantitative and qualitative easing policy (QQE). But cutting back bond-buying does not mean that the BoJ is removing accommodative policy. The central bank stopped targeting the quantity of asset purchases when it introduced its "yield curve control" policy in September 2016. Yield curve control ensures that long-term JGB yields stay around 0%, with a de facto cap of 10 basis points that can be adjusted as needed. Therefore the gross amount of asset purchases is arbitrary; it only needs to be sufficient to achieve the yield target. In fact, the BoJ's official annual target of asset purchases, 80 trillion yen, was until recently well above the annual net issuance of JGBs at 35 trillion yen (Chart 4). Fiscal policy, while surprising upward as expected, has not produced the volumes of new bond issuance that would be necessary to justify such a lofty target. Hence the BoJ can reduce bond-buying without turning more hawkish. As for inflation, the core price level has only barely begun to perk up (Chart 5) - and that has occurred after five years of reflationary efforts, which, in turn, followed a sea change in Japanese politics. Prime Minister Abe came to power by declaring war on deflation, putting Governor Kuroda in charge of the BoJ, and seeking a broad-based revival of Japan from the "lost decades" of the 1990s and 2000s. Neither Abe nor Kuroda can afford to remove accommodation too soon and snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. Chart 3Real Interest##br## Rates Have Fallen
Real Interest Rates Have Fallen
Real Interest Rates Have Fallen
Chart 4Bond Purchases Had ##br##Exceeded New Issuances
Bond Purchases Had Exceeded New Issuances
Bond Purchases Had Exceeded New Issuances
Chart 5Weak Yen, Easier Financial ##br##Conditions Pushed Up Inflation
Weak Yen, Easier Financial Conditions Pushed Up Inflation
Weak Yen, Easier Financial Conditions Pushed Up Inflation
Kuroda has repeatedly stressed that he will allow inflation to "overshoot" the 2% target before normalizing policy.3 While it is possible that he will step down when his first term ends on April 8, it is neither required nor probable. We highly doubt that he will. Further, the likeliest candidates to replace him are those that would maintain policy continuity.4 Hence the wind-down of QQE does not portend any additional moves away from easy policy. Any such moves would drive the yen upward, and neither Kuroda nor his acolytes at the BoJ can allow yen strength to undermine their quest to whip deflation. Bottom Line: The BoJ's yield curve control framework will remain intact even if the quantity of asset purchases remains much smaller. No leadership change at the BoJ will alter this new monetary policy framework. With the Fed and other central banks in the midst of rate-hike cycles, and the ECB winding down its QE, the persistent dovishness of the BoJ will act as a depressant on the yen as it experiences upward pressure from abroad. Policy Is Inflationary... Significant inflationary pressures are building in Japan, and reflationary policy will be resolute in the face of any headwinds. First, Abe's political career depends on maintaining the economic revival. His most treasured policy objective - reforming the Japanese constitution to revise the pacifist Article Nine and clear the legal path for the normalization of the country's military - ultimately requires a majority vote in a popular referendum.5 This is no easy task. Abe will almost certainly win the leadership poll within the Liberal Democratic Party in September this year, but he may not wait till then to try to push a constitutional amendment through the Diet. The tentative plan is to present a bill in March and proceed to the national referendum in late 2018. Certainly it is imperative for him to secure two-thirds majority votes in each chamber before the House of Councillors elections in July 2019, since that event puts his near-supermajority in the upper house at risk (Chart 6). The constitutional referendum could coincide with that vote or precede it, but Abe wants the process finished before the 2020 Tokyo summer Olympics. It will be a stretch but it is feasible. Chart 6Abe Has A Virtual Supermajority In Both Houses, Necessary For Constitutional Change
Japan: Kuroda Or No Kuroda, Reflation Ahead
Japan: Kuroda Or No Kuroda, Reflation Ahead
Chart 7A Popular Referendum Will Be Very Close
Japan: Kuroda Or No Kuroda, Reflation Ahead
Japan: Kuroda Or No Kuroda, Reflation Ahead
Opinion polls have consistently showed the public almost evenly split on the topic of revising Article Nine, with the hawkish advocates of revision usually trailing dovish opponents (Chart 7). While Abe's approval rating ranges in the high forties, his constitutional tinkering has similar, sub-50% levels of support. Pacifism runs deep in Japan. The LDP and New Komeito ruling coalition has not won more than 47% of the popular vote in the 2012, 2014, and 2017 general elections (Chart 8). And it has never scored above 50% in popular opinion polls over the course of Abe's term (Chart 9). Chart 8Abe's Coalition Has Not Won 50% Of The Vote...
Japan: Kuroda Or No Kuroda, Reflation Ahead
Japan: Kuroda Or No Kuroda, Reflation Ahead
Chart 9...Nor Polled Above 50% In Popular Opinion
...Nor Polled Above 50% In Popular Opinion
...Nor Polled Above 50% In Popular Opinion
Abe will not have forgotten Italy's former Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, who gambled his political career on controversial constitutional reforms in 2016 only to fall from power when he lost the popular referendum. More to the point, Abe knows that large-scale protests - bigger than those he faced in 2015 - could attend his final push to secure the constitutional revision. After all, Abe's grandfather, Nobusuke Kishi, faced mass protests in 1960 and was forced to resign upon concluding a new Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security with the United States. This was a consequential update to the "U.S.-Japan Security Treaty" that enabled Japan to build up de facto military forces despite its pacifist constitution. Kishi fell from power even though he had presided over a rapid expansion of real GDP and real wages and a steep drop in unemployment (Chart 10). True, Japan was a very different place in 1960. At that time, the Cold War was raging, and a large and restless youth population energized the protests. Today's youth are complacent and outnumbered by comparison. Nevertheless, Kishi did not need to put his treaty to a popular vote, unlike Abe's constitutional revisions. His grandson has a higher threshold to overcome. It follows that Japan will maintain dovish monetary policy and will continue to outperform conventional estimates of fiscal thrust (Chart 11).6 Abe's decision to abandon the goal of achieving a primary balance budget surplus by 2020 is a clear indication of this policy direction.7 Chart 10Treaty Protests In 1960 Despite Strong Economy
Treaty Protests In 1960 Despite Strong Economy
Treaty Protests In 1960 Despite Strong Economy
Chart 11Fiscal Thrust Surprises To Upside
Japan: Kuroda Or No Kuroda, Reflation Ahead
Japan: Kuroda Or No Kuroda, Reflation Ahead
Wages will be a decisive factor in Abe's economic success.8 Wage growth has remained in the black for most of his term, marking a contrast with the past twenty years of at best sporadic and short-lived wage rises (Chart 12). This is likely to continue. In this spring's "shunto" negotiations between businesses and unions, both the Abe administration and Keidanren, the top business group, are asking for 3% wage increases. The biggest union, Rengo, is only asking for one percentage point more.9 Abe has dedicated the current Diet session, beginning January 22, to "work-style reforms" that should be, on net, positive for wage growth.10 He wants to remove disparities between regular and irregular workers, particularly regarding wages, training opportunities, and welfare benefits. He also wants to impose limits on the workweek - putting a cap on the average 80-hour workweek of Japan's full-time workers so as to force companies to hire more irregular workers on a full-time basis (and to encourage employed people to have children). Companies that raise wages by 3% or more will see a cut in the corporate tax rate from around 30% to 25%. Economic conditions should push wages up regardless of central government policies. The jobs-to-applicants ratio is at the highest level since 1990. The labor participation rate is 60.8%, with female participation at 51.3%, up from 47.8% when Abe took power in 2012. Neither does the adoption of robotics, for which Japan is famous, counteract the tight labor market and inflationary consequences over time.11 In short, wages and core inflation should rise as long as the economic expansion is not derailed. As our colleague Peter Berezin of BCA's Global Investment Strategy has shown, the Phillips Curve will eventually kick in - and it even looks like Japan (Chart 13)!12 Chart 12Wage Growth Is The Key To Abe's Success
Wage Growth Is The Key To Abe's Success
Wage Growth Is The Key To Abe's Success
Chart 13The Phillips Curve In Japan Looks Like Japan
Japan: Kuroda Or No Kuroda, Reflation Ahead
Japan: Kuroda Or No Kuroda, Reflation Ahead
Bottom Line: A growing economy with real wage growth is Abe's only hope not only of beating deflation but also of getting his planned constitutional amendments over the line. Reflationary policy is essential to his legacy and vision of reviving Japan. ... But Not Too Inflationary Still, fiscal thrust is hardly going to explode unless an economic slowdown calls for it. Despite Abe's adoption of a twenty first-century "Takahashi Plan," i.e. simultaneous monetary and fiscal expansion, his administration's fiscal spending has remained relatively restrained. Strong revenue growth has actually improved the primary balance (Chart 14). Until very recently, Abe's "fiscal arrow" has disappointed his cheerleaders - he even raised the consumption tax from 5% to 8% in 2014, undermining his pro-growth fiscal packages. By law Abe is required to raise the consumption tax again, from 8% to 10%, in October 2019. In the latest election he campaigned on using the proceeds of this tax increase to expand social spending.13 Of course, he reserves the option of postponing this decision if he should deem a tax hike detrimental to the economic recovery (or to his odds of revising the constitution). But this flexibility means that any and all inflationary pressures in 2018-19 will increase under the shadow of a statutorily scheduled slug to consumer spending. There are also some constraints on wage growth. First, the reforms are intended to liberalize the labor market, which means their effects are not likely to be exclusively inflationary. "Performance" metrics that put less emphasis on seniority and working overtime, insofar as they are successful, could weigh on wage growth, at least initially. Second, Japan is starting to allow immigration - the number of foreign workers hit a record of 1.28 million total in October 2017 (Chart 15).14 This trend runs contrary to Japan's long status as the least hospitable destination for migrants in the developed world. The influx is apparently not limited to construction workers for the 2020 Olympics, as manufacturing is still the sector with the largest number of foreign workers. The Abe administration is committed to breaking the mold in the name of pro-growth structural reform and immigration is a meaningful change, albeit still in its early stages. Given existing labor market tightness and rising labor costs for companies, we expect this trend to outrun expectations, nudging up labor force growth and at least mildly counteracting wage rises, especially in low-skill sectors.15 Chart 14Primary Balance Improves On Growth
Japan: Kuroda Or No Kuroda, Reflation Ahead
Japan: Kuroda Or No Kuroda, Reflation Ahead
Chart 15Japan Finally Allowing Immigration
Japan: Kuroda Or No Kuroda, Reflation Ahead
Japan: Kuroda Or No Kuroda, Reflation Ahead
Bottom Line: Inflation will continue building if the global economy continues expanding and additional fiscal thrust and wage hikes are added to Japan's negative output gap, tight labor market, and rock-bottom unemployment rate. Nevertheless Japan is far from runaway inflation, and fiscal and labor market policies are nuanced. The BoJ's desired inflation overshoot is still a long way off. China And EM Pose Deflationary Risks Meanwhile deflationary forces lurk in China and emerging markets, which have been key factors in Japan's recent economic outperformance. Japan's trade exposure to China is substantial: The latter accounts for 18% of Japan's total exports, 2.7% of Japan's GDP (Chart 16). At the moment, Japanese manufacturing appears resilient in the face of China's slowdown, especially relative to the "newly industrialized" Asian neighbors. But Chinese Premier Li Keqiang's famous proxy for economic activity is closely correlated with Japanese export growth, and it is slowing. China's monetary conditions and credit and fiscal spending impulse - key leading indicators - also bode ill for Japanese exports (Chart 17). Chart 16Japan Exposed To Chinese Economy
Japan Exposed To Chinese Economy
Japan Exposed To Chinese Economy
Chart 17China Policy Will Hit Japan Directly
China Policy Will Hit Japan Directly
China Policy Will Hit Japan Directly
Beijing has so far tightened policy into the slowdown. It is adding new financial, environmental, and property sector regulations while expanding its anti-corruption campaign into finance, industry, and local government.16 Central government regulatory discipline - and reforms meant to reduce capital and energy intensity - will weigh on China's monetary and credit growth, capex, capital and commodity imports, and hence EM as a whole (Chart 18). And EM ex-China accounts for a further 25% of Japanese exports. In other words, Chinese reforms will bite in 2018-19 and thus encourage Japan to maintain loose fiscal and monetary policy. Recent market turbulence may add to this predicament as it is not easy for China to abandon its newly launched economic reforms - meaning China may ease policy too late if conditions worsen. We put the risk of a policy induced mistake in China at 30%. There are also significant geopolitical risks in East Asia that could cause headwinds to Japan's economy. China's strategic challenge is the key driver of Japan's attempts to revive its economy (including through higher military spending) and normalize its military operations (Chart 19). With Japan re-arming, China and Japan could easily suffer a breakdown in diplomatic relations - and China has already shown the willingness to use sanctions to punish Japan when strategic spats occur.17 Frictions over the Koreas or Taiwan could also encourage safe-haven flows into the yen. In short, Abe and Kuroda must be prepared for any eventuality, which is another reason to expect policy to stay looser for longer. Chart 18China Policy Will Hit Japan Via EM
China Policy Will Hit Japan Via EM
China Policy Will Hit Japan Via EM
Chart 19Strategic Tensions Still A Serious Risk
Strategic Tensions Still A Serious Risk
Strategic Tensions Still A Serious Risk
Bottom Line: Japan's exposure to both China and EM ex-China makes it vulnerable to growth wobbles as China intensifies reforms. Meanwhile Japan's constitutional revisions and remilitarization could spark a spat with China. These are compelling reasons for policymakers to stay the course with loose monetary and fiscal policies. Investment Recommendations In the short run, we would suggest clients go long JPY/EUR. The euro is expensive relative to fair value and purchasing-power-parity models (Chart 20). And investor positioning is skewed heavily in favor of the euro versus the yen (Chart 21).18 Chart 20EUR/JPY Is Expensive
EUR/JPY Is Expensive
EUR/JPY Is Expensive
Chart 21Skewed Positioning In EUR/JPY
Skewed Positioning In EUR/JPY
Skewed Positioning In EUR/JPY
We are closing our long USD/JPY for a loss of 3.23%. In the long run, as long as global growth holds up, any yen rally is likely to be a countertrend one, as a stronger yen will exert deflationary pressures and reinforce persistent, easy policy. Japanese policymakers have little need to fear inflation; they will focus on nurturing the country's economic and strategic rebound. Therefore, investors need not worry about the BoJ pulling the rug out from under the equity and bond markets. While BCA's House View favors Japanese equities over the U.S., BCA Geopolitical Strategy's China view prevents us from sharing this conviction in 2018. We would favor U.S. equities, which are low-beta and poised for continued strong earnings growth due to tax cuts and growth. The big risk for Japanese equities comes if China's central government makes a policy mistake and "overcorrects," triggering a precipitous drop in Chinese imports. We put a 30% subjective probability to such a scenario given the difficulty of reforming the financial sector in a highly leveraged economy. The yen would rally on safe-haven flows and Japanese markets would sell off. Matt Gertken, Associate Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Japan's Political Paradigm Shift: Investment Implications," dated December 21, 2012, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC!" dated January 12, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 3 See for example Haruhiko Kuroda, "Quantitative and Qualitative Monetary Easing and Economic Theory," speech at the University of Zurich, Bank of Japan, November 13, 2017, available at www.boj.or.jp. 4 Technically, Kuroda's term ends on April 8, 2018 but he can be reappointed by the prime minister for another five-year term. Please see "Experts say Haruhiko Kuroda likely to remain at BOJ helm despite failures," Japan Times, October 7, 2017, available at www.japantimes.co.jp. Both of Kuroda's deputies, Hiroshi Nakaso and Kikuo Iwata, as well as other possible successors (Masayoshi Amamiya, Etsuro Honda, and Takatoshi Ito) are dovish candidates likely to maintain continuity with his policies if at the BoJ helm. Nobuchika Mori is the only potential exception but it is still not clear that he would deviate from Abe's and Kuroda's framework if given the top job. 5 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Strategic Outlook 2017: We Are All Geopolitical Strategists Now," dated December 14, 2016; and Special Report, "Japan: The Emperor's Act Of Grace," dated June 8, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Northeast Asia: Moonshine, Militarism, And Markets," dated May 24, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 7 Abe abandoned the 2020 budget target while campaigning in the general election of October 2017 and has stuck with his higher spending proposals. 8 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, "King Dollar: The Agent Of Righteous Retribution," dated October 12, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see "Japan business lobby seconds call for 3% pay hikes," Nikkei Asian Review, January 17, 2018, available at asia.nikkei.com. 10 Abe is attempting to amend the Labor Standards Law. Please see Heizo Takenaka, "A prologue to work-style reforms," Japan Times, January 30, 2018, available at www.japantimes.co.jp. 11 Despite labor shortages, Japanese firms are using robots less often. Also, companies with high technology and robot usage are actually companies that tend to pay higher wages, contrary to popular belief. Please see BCA's The Bank Credit Analyst Special Report, "The Impact Of Robots On Inflation," dated January 25, 2018, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 12 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy, "Three Tantalizing Trades - Four Months On," dated January 19, 2018, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 13 Abe reiterated his plans for more social spending, for instance on expanded child care support and free preschool education, in his policy speech ahead of the opening Diet session this year. Please see "Abe delivers policy speech," NHK, January 22, 2018, available at www3.nhk.or.jp. 14 Please see "Number of Foreign Workers in Japan at Record High," NHK, January 26, 2018, available at www3.nhk.or.jp. 15 Please see "Japan quietly accepting foreign workers -- just don't call it immigration," Japan Times, November 3, 2016, available at www.japantimes.co.jp 16 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Upside Risks In U.S., Downside Risks In China," dated January 17, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 17 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Does It Pay To Pivot To China?" dated July 5, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 18 For full discussion, see footnote 2 above. Geopolitical Calendar
Dear Client, In light of recent market turbulence, we are publishing our weekly report earlier than usual. Caroline Miller, Garry Evans, and I will also be hosting a webcast Wednesday morning at 10am EST to discuss the investment outlook. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights Monday's stock market rout was largely driven by technical factors. Strong economic growth and positive earnings surprises should keep the equity bull market intact. Nevertheless, investors need to adjust to the fact that volatility is likely to pick up, just as it did in the last few years of the 1990s bull market. The market's expectations of where the funds rate will be over the next two years have almost converged with the Fed dots. In the near term, this will limit the ability of the 10-year Treasury yield to rise much above 3%. Looking further out, inflation is likely to move above the Fed's target early next year, setting the stage for a recession starting in late 2019. A modest overweight on global risk assets is warranted for now, but investors should consider reducing risk exposure later this year. Feature VIX Kicks Last week's Global Investment Strategy report, entitled "Take Out Some Insurance," argued that equities had become dangerously overbought and were highly vulnerable to a correction.1 We noted that the VIX had likely bottomed for the cycle and that going long volatility had now become an attractive hedge against stock market declines. As many of my colleagues have noted, betting on continued low volatility had become an increasingly crowded trade in recent years. Back in January, we observed that net short volatility positions had reached record-high levels (Chart 1). We warned that "traders have been able to reap huge gains over the past few years by betting volatility will decline. The problem is that if volatility starts to rise, those same traders could start to unload their positions, leading to even higher volatility."2 Precisely such a vicious cycle erupted on Monday, causing the S&P 500 to suffer its worst daily percentage loss since August 18, 2011. The question is where do we go from here? So far, the sell-off in stocks looks largely technical in nature. Chart 2 shows that the VIX soared by roughly four times more on Monday than one would have expected based solely on the decline in equity prices. This suggests that the spike in volatility caused the stock market plunge, rather than the other way around. The relatively muted reaction of other "risk gauges" such as junk bonds, EM stocks, and gold prices over the past few days is consistent with this thesis. Chart 1Volatility Is Back
Volatility Is Back
Volatility Is Back
Chart 2Monday's VIX Spike Was Abnormally Large
The Return Of Vol
The Return Of Vol
Cyclical Outlook Still Solid It is impossible to know if today's rebound will persist or if the correction still has further to run. What we do know is that the cyclical underpinnings for the bull market remain intact. Leading economic data remain buoyant (Chart 3). Corporate earnings continue to come in above expectations (Chart 4). Chart 3Global Economic Backdrop Remains Buoyant
Global Economic Backdrop Remains Buoyant
Global Economic Backdrop Remains Buoyant
Chart 4Optimism Over 2018 Earnings Growth
Optimism Over 2018 Earnings Growth
Optimism Over 2018 Earnings Growth
None of our recession-timing indicators are flashing red (Chart 5). The Conference Board's LEI is rising at a healthy 5.5% y/y pace. Historically, a decisive break below zero in the year-over-year change in the LEI has been a reliable recession indicator. Likewise, while the U.S. 2/10-year Treasury curve has flattened, it has not inverted yet. Moreover, even once the yield curve inverts, the lags can be quite long before the recession begins. For example, in the last cycle, the yield curve inverted in early 2006, but the recession did not begin until December 2007. This does not mean that everything will be smooth sailing from here. Monday's sell-off marked an inflection point in the low-volatility world that has prevailed over the past few years. The VIX Humpty-Dumpty has been irrevocably broken. Going forward, volatility will remain elevated relative to what investors have come to expect. As the experience of the 1990s shows, stocks can still go up when volatility is trending higher (Chart 6), but this is going to make for a much more challenging investment environment. Chart 5No Signs Of An Imminent End To This Business Cycle
No Signs Of An Imminent End To This Business Cycle
No Signs Of An Imminent End To This Business Cycle
Chart 6Volatility Can Increase As Stock Prices Rise
Volatility Can Increase As Stock Prices Rise
Volatility Can Increase As Stock Prices Rise
The Powell Put? How the Fed and other central banks react to this new world will be critical. It is perhaps not a complete coincidence that Monday's crash occurred on the first day that Jay Powell took over the helm of the Fed. Investors are increasingly worried that the Fed will turn from friend to foe. The faster-than-expected increase in average hourly earnings in January put those fears in stark relief. Accelerating wage growth suggests supply-side constraints are beginning to bite. This, in turn, means that the runway for low inflation and easy monetary policy may not be as long as some had hoped. As BCA editors discussed in our 2018 Outlook, "Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," central banks are in the process of winding down the extraordinary stimulus that investors have gotten used to.3 Whether this undermines the case for holding stocks and other risk assets depends on how quickly the adjustment occurs. On the plus side, we continue to think the adjustment will be fairly gradual, at least for the time being. Core CPI inflation outside of shelter is still running at 0.7% (Chart 7). This gives the Fed plenty of wiggle room. Just like Janet Yellen, Jay Powell will seek to build a consensus among his colleagues. Granted, the composition of the FOMC is likely to shift in a somewhat more hawkish direction. However, the evolution will be slow. In the meantime, the recommendations of career Fed staff will represent an important, and often underappreciated, source of continuity. As in the past, the Fed will continue to monitor incoming economic and financial data and react accordingly. The stock market rout has led to some tightening in financial conditions, but FCIs in the U.S. and most other countries remain more expansionary than they were six months ago (Chart 8). Chart 7Core Inflation Outside Housing Is Still Low
Core Inflation Outside Housing Is Still Low
Core Inflation Outside Housing Is Still Low
Chart 8Financial Conditions Have Tightened Recently, But Are Still Easier Than They Were Last Year
Financial Conditions Have Tightened Recently, But Are Still Easier Than They Were Last Year
Financial Conditions Have Tightened Recently, But Are Still Easier Than They Were Last Year
Just as importantly, the implosion of volatility funds is unlikely to reverberate across the financial system in the same way as it did during the financial crisis. What made the mortgage crisis so toxic was that the losses were concentrated in the books of highly leveraged financial institutions. In the case of volatility funds, that does not appear to be the case. Investment Implications Global bond yields remain quite low by historic standards and this should continue to support stocks. Indeed, even after the recent bond sell-off, average global bond yields are still close to half of what they were in 2011 - a time when global excess capacity was much greater than it is today (Chart 9). In keeping with our structurally bearish view on bonds, which we first articulated on July 5, 2016 in a note entitled "The End of 35-Year Bond Bull Market," we expect global bond yields to grind higher.4 However, in rate-of-change terms, the swift repricing of yields over the past few months has likely run its course. Chart 10 shows that market expectations of where the funds rate will be at the end of 2018 and 2019 have almost converged with the Fed dots. This convergence helped our short December-2018 fed funds futures trade, which we closed at our stop for a gain of 70 bps last Friday. A sustained move above 3% on the 10-year Treasury yield will require a more durable increase in inflation. Ultimately, we do expect core inflation to move above 2%, forcing the Fed to lift interest rates into restrictive territory. However, this is likely to be a story for 2019 rather than 2018. Stocks tend to peak about six months before the start of recessions (Table 1). If the next recession occurs in late 2019, as we expect, the equity bull market could last a while longer. A modest overweight on global risk assets is warranted for now, but investors should consider reducing risk exposure later this year. Chart 9Yields Are Still Low By Historic Standards
Yields Are Still Low By Historic Standards
Yields Are Still Low By Historic Standards
Chart 10Market Pricing Has Almost Caught Up To The Fed's Dots
Market Pricing Has Almost Caught Up To The Fed's Dots
Market Pricing Has Almost Caught Up To The Fed's Dots
Table 1Too Soon To Get Out
The Return Of Vol
The Return Of Vol
Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Take Out Some Insurance," dated February 2, 2018. 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Will Bitcoin Be DeFANGed?" dated January 12, 2018. 3 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst, "2018 Outlook - Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," dated November 20, 2017. 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "End Of The 35-Year Bond Bull Market," dated July 5, 2016. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights Global Bond Rout: Overheated financial markets are going through a much needed correction with higher bond yields being the immediate trigger. The cyclical rise in global bond yields is not yet complete, however. Monetary policy settings remain accommodative in almost all major economies, while global growth momentum is showing no signs of slowing. The current turbulence is an early indication of how the investment backdrop will become much more challenging later in 2018 as global inflation continues to rise. Fixed Income Strategy: Returns on global spread product are still expected to beat those on sovereign debt in the coming months, particularly after the latest market correction restored some value through spread widening. There is no sign yet that the sell-off is damaging future global growth expectations that can stall the move to less accommodative monetary policy. Maintain an overall below-benchmark duration stance, favoring corporate credit over sovereign debt - especially in the U.S. - for now. Feature Risk assets worldwide are finally correcting after the relentless run-up seen in January, with the trigger being the steady rise in global bond yields seen since the beginning of the year. The big decline in U.S. equity markets, particularly after the release of last Friday's U.S. employment data which featured the highest year-over-year growth rate in wages seen in almost a decade, suggests that investors are growing increasingly worried about accelerating inflation and a more aggressive tightening response from central banks (NOTE: markets were undergoing another bout of selling yesterday as this publication went to press, but the conclusions reached in this report are unchanged). Chart of the WeekThe Cyclical Rise In Yields##BR##Has Room To Run
The Cyclical Rise In Yields Has Room To Run
The Cyclical Rise In Yields Has Room To Run
However, taking a step back to look at the big picture, nothing has really changed in the past few days. Global growth remains strong, which has already steadily increased pressure on policymakers to raise interest rates according to our own BCA Central Bank Monitors (Chart of the Week). In the U.S. - the epicenter of the latest bout of market angst - financial conditions remain highly accommodative and supportive for future growth, while bond volatility remains low by historical standards even after the most recent upward blip. Credit spreads and equity valuations in non-U.S. markets, from Europe to the emerging world, are also no impediment to future growth in those regions. We have been expecting global bond yields to rise in 2018 as markets adjust to both a normalization of global inflation expectations and a shift to a less aggressive pace of bond buying by the Fed, European Central Bank (ECB) and Bank of Japan (BoJ). As we described in our 2018 Outlook report published last December:1 The current low volatility regime will end when higher inflation and less accommodative central banks raise interest rate volatility and, eventually, future growth uncertainty. We see that inflection point occurring sometime next year, leading to a more challenging environment for global fixed income "carry trades" that are also focused on global growth, like developed market corporate bonds and emerging market debt. The current market sell-off is likely too soon to be the ultimate realization of that forecast. Monetary policy settings remain accommodative and inflation is still below central bank targets in almost all major economies, while global growth momentum is showing no signs of slowing. This is an early indication, however, of how the investment backdrop will become much more challenging later in 2018 as global inflation continues to rise. We continue to recommend a pro-growth fixed income investment strategy, staying below-benchmark overall duration, focusing on lower-beta government bond markets, overweighting corporate debt over sovereign debt, and prioritizing inflation protection in bond portfolios. In the coming weeks, however, we will begin to discuss strategies to play for the shift to a more hostile investment backdrop that we expect later in 2018. The U.S. Bond Vigilantes Are Back In Charge Global monetary policies that remain "too" accommodative given robust growth and some pickup in realized inflation have prompted bond markets to reprice, through both higher inflation expectations and real yields. Rising yields have triggered a spike in market volatility measures like the U.S. VIX index, although there were also several bouts of higher volatility in 2017 (Chart 2). Growth-sensitive financial assets shrugged off those higher volatility episodes, mainly because growth expectations were not impacted. We see no reason why this current bout of market turbulence should differ from last year's volatility spikes, and have any meaningful impact on forecasts for future economic growth (and, by extension, corporate profits). At least, not without a more meaningful tightening of global monetary policy, particularly in the U.S. where inflation pressures are gaining steam. The December Payrolls report released last week may finally contain that missing piece of the inflation puzzle - faster wage growth. Headline Average Hourly Earnings expanded 2.9% on a year-over-year basis, with the 3-month annualized growth rate surging to pre-crisis levels above 4% (Chart 3). Coming at a time when the U.S. labor market remains tight by any measure (top panel), a pickup in wage growth supports the other evidence indicating that U.S. inflation is on the upswing, like the modest acceleration in core PCE inflation (3rd panel) and steady climb in TIPS breakevens (bottom panel).2 Chart 2This Is A Correction,##BR##Not A Reversal, In Risk Assets
This Is A Correction, Not A Reversal, In Risk Assets
This Is A Correction, Not A Reversal, In Risk Assets
Chart 3U.S. Wage Inflation##BR##Finally Appears
U.S. Wage Inflation Finally Appears
U.S. Wage Inflation Finally Appears
A faster inflation backdrop is making the Fed's current monetary policy plans more credible for investors. The U.S. Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve is now fully pricing in the Fed's three planned interest rate hikes for 2018, and has almost priced in the additional 50bps of hikes the Fed is projecting for 2019 (Chart 4). Rate expectations even further out the curve have been climbing, as well. Our measure of the market's expectation for the so-called "terminal rate" - the 5-year U.S. OIS rate, 5-years forward - is now up to 2.66%, only 9bps below the current median projection ("dot") for the terminal rate. Markets have been highly skeptical that the Fed would ever be able to raise rates as high as its projections in recent years - justifiably so, given that U.S. realized inflation has been persistently falling short of the Fed's 2% inflation target. Now, with core inflation having clearly bottomed out and shorter annualized rates of change closing in on 2%, markets are coming around to the idea that the Fed inflation forecasts will be realized. If that happens, then the Fed should be expected to follow through on its published projections, not only for 2018 but for the remainder of the current tightening cycle. On that basis, there is not a lot more room for the market's pricing of the expected path of U.S. interest rates to converge to the Fed's projections. That suggests that the shorter-end of the U.S. Treasury curve may be approaching a cyclical peak - unless the Fed were to begin revising up its "dots" in response to a faster pace of U.S. economic growth and inflation. That would require the Fed to start believing that a faster pace of rate hikes, or a higher equilibrium real interest rate, was required in the U.S. The current real interest rate remains around 0% (subtracting core PCE inflation from the fed funds rate), as the Fed's rate hikes since beginning the tightening cycle in December 2015 have matched the increase in realized inflation. Measures of the so-called "r-star" equilibrium rate, like the Williams-Laubach measure, are also indicating that the real fed funds rate should be around 0% (Chart 5). The real fed funds rate has historically been highly correlated to the employment/population ratio in the U.S., and the current level of that ratio (60%) suggests that the Fed does not have to target a real funds rate above 0%. The conclusion is that it would take a sign of even greater U.S. labor market utilization - i.e. a rising employment/population ratio - for the Fed to conclude that it must raise its interest rate projections. Chart 4Market Pricing Has Caught Up##BR##To The Fed's Forecasts
Market Pricing Has Caught Up To The Fed's Forecasts
Market Pricing Has Caught Up To The Fed's Forecasts
Chart 5A 0% Real Fed Funds Rate##BR##Is Still Appropriate
A 0% Real Fed Funds Rate Is Still Appropriate
A 0% Real Fed Funds Rate Is Still Appropriate
Without such a boost to the Fed's expected path of interest rates, any remaining increases in U.S. Treasury yields will have to come from higher inflation expectations. On that front, the current level of the 10-year TIPS breakeven at 2.14% remains 30-40bps below the 2.4-2.5% range that is consistent with the Fed's 2% inflation target (adjusting for the typical gap between CPI and PCE inflation and allowing for a small inflation risk premium). That suggests that the 10-year nominal Treasury yield can rise to the 3.10-3.25% range to fully discount a sustainable return of inflation to the Fed's target, with the Fed delivering on its interest rate projections in response. That target range is also not far from the current fair value from our 2-factor 10-year U.S. Treasury yield model, which has risen to 3.01% (Chart 6).3 It will be critical to watch the future behavior of the parts of the U.S. economy that are most sensitive to interest rates, like consumer durables and housing, for signs that the latest rise in U.S. bond yields is having any negative effect on U.S. growth. A slowing trajectory for U.S. growth in response to higher interest rates would certainly give the Fed some second thoughts on moving ahead with its rate hike plans. On that note, the year-over-year change in the 10-year Treasury yield is now in positive territory, which has typically led to a slower contribution to U.S. real GDP growth from consumer durables (Chart 7, top panel). The rise in U.S. mortgage rates should also lead to slower growth in residential investment, although housing has already been providing very little marginal contribution to U.S. growth over the past two years (2nd panel). Chart 6Fair Value On The 10-Year##BR##UST Yield Is 3%...And Rising
Fair Value On The 10-Year UST Yield Is 3%...And Rising
Fair Value On The 10-Year UST Yield Is 3%...And Rising
Chart 7Rising U.S. Capex Should Offset##BR##Slowing Interest-Sensitive Spending
Rising U.S. Capex Should Offset Slowing Interest-Sensitive Spending
Rising U.S. Capex Should Offset Slowing Interest-Sensitive Spending
The potential offset to any slowdown in interest-sensitive spending, however, is capital spending by businesses, which is being boosted by easy financial conditions (bottom panel), loosening bank lending standards and a rise on the expected after-tax return on investment following the Trump corporate tax cuts. It will likely take higher interest rates, and much tighter financial conditions, before the capex cycle peaks out. Bottom Line: Overheated financial markets are going through a much needed correction, with higher bond yields, most notably in the U.S., being the immediate trigger. The cyclical rise in global bond yields is not yet complete, however, and monetary policies will need to tighten further in response to strong growth and rising inflation pressures. The cyclical interest rate tipping point for risk assets has not yet been reached, even in the U.S., but is getting incrementally closer. Don't Forget The Other Factor Driving Global Bond Yields - Reduced Central Bank Buying Amidst all the worries about higher inflation and the related impact on global bond yields, it should not be forgotten that the major developed market central banks have been cutting back on their bond purchases. Global bond yields have been correlated to the growth rate of the combined balance sheet of the "G-4" central banks (Fed, ECB, BoJ and Bank of England) since the ECB started its bond buying program in 2015 (Chart 8). The current rise in global yields has been in line with the projected slower pace of aggregate bond buying by those central banks. Based on our projection for the year-over-year growth rate of the G-4 central bank balance sheets - which incorporate the Fed letting maturing bonds run off its balance sheet and cutbacks in the pace of buying of new bonds by the ECB and BoJ - there is still more room for bond yields to rise over the course of 2018. A slower pace of central bank "liquidity" creation is something that we anticipated to weigh on risk asset returns in 2018. By driving down the yields on safe assets like government debt to highly unattractive levels, central banks induced huge inflows into global equity and credit markets, both in the developed and emerging worlds. As central banks are now buying fewer bonds, however, there is not only reduced downward pressure on government bond yields but also diminished scope for additional inflows into riskier assets. Looking at the growth rate of the G-4 central bank balance sheet versus the rolling 12-month returns on global equities and credit, the current pullback in overheated risk assets is merely bringing returns back down to levels consistent with central banks taking their foot off the monetary accelerator (Chart 9). Chart 8The Central Bank Impact On##BR##Bond Yields Is Slowly Unwinding...
The Central Bank Impact On Bond Yields Is Slowly Unwinding...
The Central Bank Impact On Bond Yields Is Slowly Unwinding...
Chart 9...Which Impacts Risk Asset##BR##Returns, As Well
...Which Impacts Risk Asset Returns, As Well
...Which Impacts Risk Asset Returns, As Well
For global fixed income markets, we had anticipated that 2018 would be a year of much lower expected returns on spread product like global corporate debt, although those would still beat the returns likely from government debt - at least until government bond yields reached our cyclical targets. Our view has not changed, even in light of the current pullback in risk assets and yesterday's decline in government bond yields. For now, we continue to recommend an overweight stance on global corporate debt, but favoring U.S. Investment Grade and High-Yield debt over European equivalents (and over Emerging Market hard currency debt). We will discuss our eventual recommended exit strategy in upcoming reports, but for now, our advice is to sit tight and ride out this current bout of market turbulence. Bottom Line: Returns on global spread product are still expected to beat those on sovereign debt in the coming months, particularly after the latest market correction restored some value through spread widening. There is no sign yet that the sell-off is damaging future global growth expectations that can stall the move to less accommodative monetary policy. Maintain an overall below-benchmark duration stance, favoring corporate credit over sovereign debt - especially in the U.S. - for now. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "2018 Key Views: BCA's Outlook & What It Means For Global Fixed Income Markets", dated December 5th, 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 2 It is interesting to note that it took a sharp pickup in the Average Hourly Earnings measure to get the market's attention about wage inflation. Many Fed officials and market commentators (including here at BCA!) have consistently pointed out the inherent flaws in looking at Average Hourly Earnings as an accurate measure of wage pressures in the U.S. Yet the big market response to the latest surge in Average Hourly Earnings is a sign that investors still look at that indicator as the "true" measure of wage inflation. 3 The standard deviation of the fair value estimate from that model is 17bps, which means that yields could rise as high as 3.18% before reaching an "undervalued" level for U.S. Treasuries - assuming no further increases in fair value, of course. Recommendations
Forewarned Is Forearmed
Forewarned Is Forearmed
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Dear Client, In light of recent market turbulence, we are publishing our weekly report earlier than usual. Caroline Miller, Garry Evans, and I will also be hosting a webcast Wednesday morning at 10am EST to discuss the investment outlook. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights Monday's stock market rout was largely driven by technical factors. Strong economic growth and positive earnings surprises should keep the equity bull market intact. Nevertheless, investors need to adjust to the fact that volatility is likely to pick up, just as it did in the last few years of the 1990s bull market. The market's expectations of where the funds rate will be over the next two years have almost converged with the Fed dots. In the near term, this will limit the ability of the 10-year Treasury yield to rise much above 3%. Looking further out, inflation is likely to move above the Fed's target early next year, setting the stage for a recession starting in late 2019. A modest overweight on global risk assets is warranted for now, but investors should consider reducing risk exposure later this year. Feature VIX Kicks Last week's Global Investment Strategy report, entitled "Take Out Some Insurance," argued that equities had become dangerously overbought and were highly vulnerable to a correction.1 We noted that the VIX had likely bottomed for the cycle and that going long volatility had now become an attractive hedge against stock market declines. As many of my colleagues have noted, betting on continued low volatility had become an increasingly crowded trade in recent years. Back in January, we observed that net short volatility positions had reached record-high levels (Chart 1). We warned that "traders have been able to reap huge gains over the past few years by betting volatility will decline. The problem is that if volatility starts to rise, those same traders could start to unload their positions, leading to even higher volatility."2 Precisely such a vicious cycle erupted on Monday, causing the S&P 500 to suffer its worst daily percentage loss since August 18, 2011. The question is where do we go from here? So far, the sell-off in stocks looks largely technical in nature. Chart 2 shows that the VIX soared by roughly four times more on Monday than one would have expected based solely on the decline in equity prices. This suggests that the spike in volatility caused the stock market plunge, rather than the other way around. The relatively muted reaction of other "risk gauges" such as junk bonds, EM stocks, and gold prices over the past few days is consistent with this thesis. Chart 1Volatility Is Back
Volatility Is Back
Volatility Is Back
Chart 2Monday's VIX Spike Was Abnormally Large
The Return Of Vol
The Return Of Vol
Cyclical Outlook Still Solid It is impossible to know if today's rebound will persist or if the correction still has further to run. What we do know is that the cyclical underpinnings for the bull market remain intact. Leading economic data remain buoyant (Chart 3). Corporate earnings continue to come in above expectations (Chart 4). Chart 3Global Economic Backdrop Remains Buoyant
Global Economic Backdrop Remains Buoyant
Global Economic Backdrop Remains Buoyant
Chart 4Optimism Over 2018 Earnings Growth
Optimism Over 2018 Earnings Growth
Optimism Over 2018 Earnings Growth
None of our recession-timing indicators are flashing red (Chart 5). The Conference Board's LEI is rising at a healthy 5.5% y/y pace. Historically, a decisive break below zero in the year-over-year change in the LEI has been a reliable recession indicator. Likewise, while the U.S. 2/10-year Treasury curve has flattened, it has not inverted yet. Moreover, even once the yield curve inverts, the lags can be quite long before the recession begins. For example, in the last cycle, the yield curve inverted in early 2006, but the recession did not begin until December 2007. This does not mean that everything will be smooth sailing from here. Monday's sell-off marked an inflection point in the low-volatility world that has prevailed over the past few years. The VIX Humpty-Dumpty has been irrevocably broken. Going forward, volatility will remain elevated relative to what investors have come to expect. As the experience of the 1990s shows, stocks can still go up when volatility is trending higher (Chart 6), but this is going to make for a much more challenging investment environment. Chart 5No Signs Of An Imminent End To This Business Cycle
No Signs Of An Imminent End To This Business Cycle
No Signs Of An Imminent End To This Business Cycle
Chart 6Volatility Can Increase As Stock Prices Rise
Volatility Can Increase As Stock Prices Rise
Volatility Can Increase As Stock Prices Rise
The Powell Put? How the Fed and other central banks react to this new world will be critical. It is perhaps not a complete coincidence that Monday's crash occurred on the first day that Jay Powell took over the helm of the Fed. Investors are increasingly worried that the Fed will turn from friend to foe. The faster-than-expected increase in average hourly earnings in January put those fears in stark relief. Accelerating wage growth suggests supply-side constraints are beginning to bite. This, in turn, means that the runway for low inflation and easy monetary policy may not be as long as some had hoped. As BCA editors discussed in our 2018 Outlook, "Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," central banks are in the process of winding down the extraordinary stimulus that investors have gotten used to.3 Whether this undermines the case for holding stocks and other risk assets depends on how quickly the adjustment occurs. On the plus side, we continue to think the adjustment will be fairly gradual, at least for the time being. Core CPI inflation outside of shelter is still running at 0.7% (Chart 7). This gives the Fed plenty of wiggle room. Just like Janet Yellen, Jay Powell will seek to build a consensus among his colleagues. Granted, the composition of the FOMC is likely to shift in a somewhat more hawkish direction. However, the evolution will be slow. In the meantime, the recommendations of career Fed staff will represent an important, and often underappreciated, source of continuity. As in the past, the Fed will continue to monitor incoming economic and financial data and react accordingly. The stock market rout has led to some tightening in financial conditions, but FCIs in the U.S. and most other countries remain more expansionary than they were six months ago (Chart 8). Chart 7Core Inflation Outside Housing Is Still Low
Core Inflation Outside Housing Is Still Low
Core Inflation Outside Housing Is Still Low
Chart 8Financial Conditions Have Tightened Recently, But Are Still Easier Than They Were Last Year
Financial Conditions Have Tightened Recently, But Are Still Easier Than They Were Last Year
Financial Conditions Have Tightened Recently, But Are Still Easier Than They Were Last Year
Just as importantly, the implosion of volatility funds is unlikely to reverberate across the financial system in the same way as it did during the financial crisis. What made the mortgage crisis so toxic was that the losses were concentrated in the books of highly leveraged financial institutions. In the case of volatility funds, that does not appear to be the case. Investment Implications Global bond yields remain quite low by historic standards and this should continue to support stocks. Indeed, even after the recent bond sell-off, average global bond yields are still close to half of what they were in 2011 - a time when global excess capacity was much greater than it is today (Chart 9). In keeping with our structurally bearish view on bonds, which we first articulated on July 5, 2016 in a note entitled "The End of 35-Year Bond Bull Market," we expect global bond yields to grind higher.4 However, in rate-of-change terms, the swift repricing of yields over the past few months has likely run its course. Chart 10 shows that market expectations of where the funds rate will be at the end of 2018 and 2019 have almost converged with the Fed dots. This convergence helped our short December-2018 fed funds futures trade, which we closed at our stop for a gain of 70 bps last Friday. A sustained move above 3% on the 10-year Treasury yield will require a more durable increase in inflation. Ultimately, we do expect core inflation to move above 2%, forcing the Fed to lift interest rates into restrictive territory. However, this is likely to be a story for 2019 rather than 2018. Stocks tend to peak about six months before the start of recessions (Table 1). If the next recession occurs in late 2019, as we expect, the equity bull market could last a while longer. A modest overweight on global risk assets is warranted for now, but investors should consider reducing risk exposure later this year. Chart 9Yields Are Still Low By Historic Standards
Yields Are Still Low By Historic Standards
Yields Are Still Low By Historic Standards
Chart 10Market Pricing Has Almost Caught Up To The Fed's Dots
Market Pricing Has Almost Caught Up To The Fed's Dots
Market Pricing Has Almost Caught Up To The Fed's Dots
Table 1Too Soon To Get Out
The Return Of Vol
The Return Of Vol
Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Take Out Some Insurance," dated February 2, 2018. 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Will Bitcoin Be DeFANGed?" dated January 12, 2018. 3 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst, "2018 Outlook - Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," dated November 20, 2017. 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "End Of The 35-Year Bond Bull Market," dated July 5, 2016. Strategy & Market Trends*
The Return Of Vol
The Return Of Vol
Tactical Trades
The Return Of Vol
The Return Of Vol
Strategic Recommendations
The Return Of Vol
The Return Of Vol
Trades Closed In 2015-2018
The Return Of Vol
The Return Of Vol
Highlights Market participants should be asking why yields are higher, and not worry about how much they have climbed. While the bond market has begun to price in higher inflation (via the move in the TIPS breakeven rate), wage and price inflation remains muted for now. Sentiment has deteriorated more than valuations or technicals as the S&P 500 climbed to fresh all-time highs in December and January. Our U.S. Equity Strategy service downgraded small caps to neutral from overweight. Feature Chart 1The January Jobs Report Keeps The Fed##BR##On Track For Gradual Hikes This Year
The January Jobs Report Keeps The Fed On Track For Gradual Hikes This Year
The January Jobs Report Keeps The Fed On Track For Gradual Hikes This Year
Last week marked Janet Yellen's final FOMC meeting and the first week in many years that the U.S. Treasury and equity markets worried about inflation. The strongest year-over-year reading in average hourly earnings in 9 years (+2.9% in January) added to the market's inflation concerns (Chart 1). The 10-year Treasury yield climbed 15 bps to 2.84%, while the S&P 500 moved lower by 2.5% as of midday on Friday, February 2. It was the worst week for the stock market since September 2016. Individual investor sentiment on the equity market has surged recently, and valuations are at extremes. However, BCA's technical indicator for U.S. stocks is not at an extreme. BCA's stance is that while the risk/reward for stocks over bonds has narrowed, it is too soon to call an end to the bull market. However, we are monitoring real yields closely. At 2.13% on Friday morning, February 2, the 10-year TIPS breakeven yield was still below the 2.4 to 2.5% range where markets should begin to worry about the Fed falling behind the curve. While the acceleration in average hourly earnings in January cements the case for continued gradual Fed rate hikes this year, inflation is not about to spiral higher. Wage inflation remains muted, and patience is still required as market participants await signs of a pickup in broader measures of consumer price inflation. The market is now fully priced for three rate hikes this year. Also, longer-term rate expectations have moved close to the Fed's estimate of the terminal rate. It would be reasonable to expect some short-term pause to recent near-relentless uptrend in rate expectations. For the market to price tightening beyond the Fed's dots, the economy and inflation would need to outperform the Fed's forecasts (which are 2.5% GDP growth, 1.9% core inflation and 3.9% unemployment for 2018). For now at least, it's not clear that is the case. Why Rates Are Rising Matters The relentless increase in 10-year Treasury yields spooked investors early last week, but it is too soon for equity investors to worry about an overly aggressive Fed. At 2.84%, the 10-year Treasury yield is above the FOMC's view of the neutral Fed funds rate, and has moved nearly 80 bps higher since early September. Market participants should be asking why yields are higher, and not worry about how much they have climbed. Chart 2Breaking Down The Rise In Yields
Breaking Down The Rise In Yields
Breaking Down The Rise In Yields
BCA's U.S. Bond Strategy service noted in mid-January1 that in the current environment, it is useful to split the nominal 10-year yield into its two main components - the compensation for inflation protection and the real yield (Chart 2). The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate has moved from 1.66% last June to 2.13% late last week, but is still too low. Historically, the 10-year TIPS breakeven rate has traded in a range between 2.4 and 2.5% when inflation is well-anchored near the Fed's 2% target. BCA's stance is that inflation will move back to the Fed's target soon. The implication is that there is still another 25 to 35 bps of upside in the 10-year breakeven rate. The reason why this threshold is important is because a rise in inflation expectations to that level would be a signal that the FOMC will need to become more aggressive in slowing economic growth. This could occur even if actual inflation is below the 2% target, as long as it is rising toward the target. This will be especially true if the unemployment rate is heading to 3.5%, as we suspect. BCA's U.S. Bond strategists' model of real yields2 projects that real yields will rise 4 bps by the end of the year to 0.61%, but it could be more depending on how quickly the Fed wants to slow growth. Bottom Line: BCA expects that the nominal Treasury yield should move into a range between 3.0 and 3.25% by the time inflation reaches the Fed's target. BCA's stance is that risk assets will get into trouble once inflation expectations rise above 2.4%. Bond yields will presumably be moving higher along with inflation expectations. However, investors should not ignore higher Treasury yields rates. That said, equity investors do not need to be too concerned until inflation expectations hit that 2.4% threshold. Inflation itself may not be at 2% as this occurs, but if inflation is climbing and the unemployment rate is still falling, then the market will believe that the Fed is behind the curve. That is a bearish environment for equities. Inflation: Still A Waiting Game While the bond market has begun to price in higher inflation (via the move in the TIPS breakeven rate), wage and price inflation remains muted for now. Chart 3 illustrates various measures of wage inflation. Panel 1 shows that the Employment Cost Index (ECI) is in a clear uptrend. The acceleration in the wages and salaries component of ECI is broad-based across geography and industry (Chart 4, panel 1). Moreover, at 86%, the percentage of states reporting unemployment rates below NAIRU suggests that wage gains are imminent (Chart 4, panels 2 and 3). Chart 3Most Wage Metrics Are Rolling Over
Most Wage Metrics Are Rolling Over
Most Wage Metrics Are Rolling Over
Chart 4The Employment Cost Index Is In A Definitive Uptrend...
The Employment Cost Index Is In A Definitive Uptrend...
The Employment Cost Index Is In A Definitive Uptrend...
Although the year-over-year increase in average hourly earnings accelerated to 2.9% in January, many other wage indicators have stalled out recently (Chart 3, panel 4). The Atlanta Fed Wage Tracker rolled over recently along with weekly usual earnings (Chart 3, panels 2 and 3). In short, despite a robust global economy, a U.S. economy running above its long term potential and the unemployment rate (4.1% in January) below NAIRU (4.6%), labor shortages are not yet strong enough to push up wage inflation. Chart 5Shift Towards Service Economy Led##BR##To Shift Away From Capacity Utilization
Shift Towards Service Economy Led To Shift Away From Capacity Utilization
Shift Towards Service Economy Led To Shift Away From Capacity Utilization
That said, the historical evidence suggests that once the labor market tightens, inflation eventually does accelerate. However, wages do not always lead inflation at bottoms and may be a lagging indicator in this cycle.3 In long economic cycles (1980s and 1990s), wage inflation was a lagging indicator. BCA recommends that investors should monitor a broad range of inflation indicators. Most of these indicators show that inflation pressures are building, but only gradually. The low readings on manufacturing capacity utilization suggest low odds of a rapid acceleration in inflation. Furthermore, the shift in composition of the U.S. economy in the past three decades suggests that the metric is no longer an accurate measure of wage or price bottlenecks in the economy (Chart 5, panels 1 and 2). Manufacturing capacity utilization hit a post WWII low in mid-2009 at 63.5%, before recovering to a well below average 75%-76% range for the past half-decade. In December 2017, utilization hit a 9-year high at 77%. Chart 5, (panels 3 and 4) shows that prior to 1980, inflation accelerated and the output gap closed as utilization breached 80%. Since early 1990s, the relationship is not as clear. Is 5% The Magic Number On Rates? History suggests that rising rates are not an impediment to higher stock prices, as long as rates remain below 5%. Chart 6 is a reminder that the 10-year yield and stock prices climbed together in the 1950s. The rise in yields in the 50s primarily reflected better economic growth rather than fears of inflation. Nonetheless, investors are concerned that a rise in yields will flip the positive correlation between bond yields and stock prices. Table 1 shows that since 1980, long treasury yields and stock prices move in the same direction until the 10-year moves above 5%. Chart 7 shows the relationship between the level of nominal bond yields and stock to bond yield correlations back to 1874. Moreover, since 1980, a move from 2 to 3% on the 10-year is accompanied by an average gain for the S&P 500 of 1.2%, with a median move of 1.8%. On average, the S&P 500 posts a modest decline (24 bps) as the 10-year Treasury elevates from 3 to 4%, but the median return (98 bps) is still positive. Our July 2016 Special Report provides an in-depth discussion of the impact of rates and inflation on equity prices. Historically, even the move from 4 to 5% on the 10-year is not an impediment to higher stock prices.4 Moreover, in a 2016 report our Global ETF Strategy service provides a detailed overview of equity returns in various phases of the Fed cycle.5 Chart 6Stock Can Rise##BR##With Bond Yields
Stock Can Rise With Bond Yields
Stock Can Rise With Bond Yields
Table 13-Year Correlation* Between Stock Prices##BR##And Bond Yield Level (1980-2018)
Yellen's Last Week
Yellen's Last Week
BCA's stance is that the stock-to-bond ratio will climb this year. However, the risk/reward embedded in that stance has shifted given the move in both bond yields and stock prices in the past few months. Our U.S. bond strategists peg fair value for the 10-year Treasury yield at 3.0%, just 18 bps above the yield last Friday morning. Chart 8 illustrates this point across three time horizons given our view of fair value on the 10-year Treasury yield (3.0%). Our analysis assumes a 1.75% annualized dividend yield on the S&P 500. Panel 1 illustrates that the ratio between now and mid-year will remain positive if stocks are flat. The same holds true though September 2018 and year end. Just a 5% drop in the S&P 500 by year-end 2018 signals a localized peak in the stock-to-bond ratio. Declines of 10 or 20% indicate a reversal of the uptrend in stocks versus bonds that has been in place since early 2016. Chart 7Stock To Bond Correlations Remain Positive With Nominal Yields Below 4.25%
Yellen's Last Week
Yellen's Last Week
Chart 8Scenarios For Stock-To-Bond Ratio
Scenarios For Stock-To-Bond Ratio
Scenarios For Stock-To-Bond Ratio
Bottom Line: BCA's view is that Treasury yields will top out at around 3 to 3.25% in this cycle, as inflation returns to the Fed's 2% target. Our base case is that stocks will do well in 2018, and will not be subject to concerns over an aggressive Fed until 2019. However, investors should closely monitor the 10-year TIPs spread, as noted above. We do not expect to breech 2.4% this year, but the timing is unclear. Moreover, we may take profits on our overweight stance well before the market senses the Fed is behind the curve, earlier than that, especially given stretched valuation and stretched market sentiment. Seismic Sentiment Shift Rising rates are not the only concern for U.S. equities. In late November, we noted6 that our technical and sentiment indicators are not flashing red as in previous bear markets, but neither are they giving an all-clear for U.S. equity investors. Sentiment levels are a bigger concern than technical indicators, and investors should monitor both for signs of an equity sell-off. These indicators have become even more stretched since we highlighted them in November and more clearly since the most recent equity market lull in late August 2017. BCA's technical indicator deteriorated since our late November report, but remains below levels that, in the past, have preceded bear markets (Chart 9, panel 1). The S&P 500 is testing the top end of the recovery trend channel in place since 2009 (Panel 2). A break above that level suggests more upside to stocks. However, a definitive failure to breakout may signal a period of consolidation for equities. BCA's equity valuation metric pushed further into extreme overvalued territory. Stretched valuations say more about medium- and long-term returns than near-term performance.7 However, the shift in the equity sentiment indicators we track is notable. BCA's investor sentiment composite index is at an all-time high (Chart 10, panel 1). Moreover, the surge in sentiment is led by individual investors and advisors who serve them (panels 2 and 4). Traders are a bit more complacent. Furthermore, individuals' optimism toward stocks is at an all-time high in surveys conducted by the Conference Board and the University of Michigan (Chart 11, panels 1 and 2). Chart 9Technical Picture For##BR##Equities Still Looks OK
Technical Picture For Equities Still Looks OK
Technical Picture For Equities Still Looks OK
Chart 10Investor Sentiment##BR##Is Flashing Red
Investor Sentiment Is Flashing Red
Investor Sentiment Is Flashing Red
Chart 11Surge In Consumer Optimism##BR##Toward Year Ahead Returns For Equities
Surge In Consumer Optimism Toward Year Ahead Returns For Equities
Surge In Consumer Optimism Toward Year Ahead Returns For Equities
A similar survey from Yale University suggests that consumers' expectations about future equity market returns remains subdued. However, this may be due to the fact that the Yale survey is only available to December, and thus misses the equity 'melt up' in January that followed the news of the U.S. tax cuts. The other surveys mentioned are up to January. Notably, the Yale panel includes wealthy individual investors and a sample of institutions. The respondents in the Michigan and Conference Board surveys are more representative of the average U.S. household. Despite elevated attitudes toward equities, readings from the Fed's Flow of Funds on household ownership of stocks suggest that individuals may still have room in their portfolios for equities. Chart 12 shows that as of Q3 2017, equity holdings as a share of total household financial assets remains below prior peaks. As the U.S. stock market soared in the late 1990s, equities accounted for 31% of assets at the peak. Just before the global financial crisis, the figure was 23%. Today, equities account for just 25% of households' financial portfolios. The bottom panel of Chart 12 illustrates that individuals have allocated away from debt securities in the past half-decade. Chart 12Household Holdings Of Equities Still Below Prior Peaks
Household Holdings Of Equities Still Below Prior Peaks
Household Holdings Of Equities Still Below Prior Peaks
Bottom Line: Sentiment has deteriorated more than valuations or technicals as the S&P 500 climbed to fresh all-time highs in December and January. While we are sticking with our stance that stocks will beat bonds in 2018, we are concerned about small caps. BCA's U.S. Equity Strategy service notes8 that rising interest rates and a flattening yield curve, coupled with increasing relative indebtedness and lack of relative profit growth, signal that the time is right to shift from overweight to neutral on U.S. small caps. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report "The Long And Short Of It", published January 23, 2018. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report "Ill Placed Trust?", published December 19, 2017. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Research's The Bank Credit Analyst "Monthly Report", published September 2017. Available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Investment Strategy Special Report "Stock-To-Bond Correlation: When Will Good News Be Bad News?", published July 6, 2015. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Research's Global ETF Strategy Special Report "Equity Factors And The Fed Funds Rate Cycle", published December 21, 2016. Available at getf.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Technically Speaking", published November 27, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see BCA Research's Global Asset Allocation Special Report "What Returns Can You Expect?", published November 15, 2017. Available at gaa.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report "Too Good To Be True?", published January 22 , 2018. Available at uses.bcaresearch.com.