Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.
Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Policy

Dear Client, In addition to this brief note concerning Wednesday's FOMC meeting, we will be sending you a Special Report written by my colleague Brian Piccioni, head of BCA's Technology Strategy service. Brian discusses the investment implications of what could be one of the most profound technological developments of the 21st century: CRISPR, a radical new technique for genetic engineering. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Senior Vice President Global Investment Strategy The dollar and U.S. Treasury yields fell sharply in the aftermath of Wednesday's FOMC meeting, while equities rallied. Indeed, so pronounced was the asset market reaction that financial conditions eased markedly for the day, making the Fed's actions an "unhike" of sorts. The FOMC meeting produced several dovish surprises. First, the number of participants who expected four rate hikes or more did not increase, as some observers had anticipated. Second, the estimate for the structural rate of unemployment was scaled down further by a tenth of a percentage point to 4.7%. Third, the FOMC statement said that the Fed was looking for a "sustained" return to 2% inflation, while also referring to its inflation target as a "symmetric" one. Fourth, Minneapolis Fed President Kashkari dissented in favor of keeping rates unchanged, which few people had expected. Having said all this, the market's reaction still seems rather excessive. The key message from the March meeting was that the Fed now sees inflation as having finally reached its 2% target. This was reflected in the decision to strip the reference to the "current shortfall of inflation" from the statement. Consistent with this, the FOMC raised its growth forecast for 2018 from 2.0% to 2.1%. In addition, it lifted its inflation forecast for this year from 1.8% to 1.9%. The median projection for the funds rate also edged up from 2.9% to 3% for 2019. The mean dot rose 9 bps in both 2018 and 2019, while the modal dot increased by 25 bps in both years. None of this is particularly dovish. As far as the reference to the Fed's "symmetric" target is concerned, this is something that Chair Yellen and other FOMC officials have stressed many times before. All it means is that the Fed will not react too aggressively if core inflation were to drift somewhat above 2%. It does not mean that the Fed will purposely try to engineer an inflation overshoot. If the Fed had wanted to do that, it would have lifted its 2019 inflation forecast. It didn't do that and the inflation forecast remains stuck at 2.0%. Why, then, did the FOMC bother massaging the language? The answer is that the Fed simply wanted to reassure the public and the investment community that it would maintain its "go slow" approach to raising rates. After all, investors were pricing in only a small probability of a March hike just a few weeks ago. A "hawkish hike" could have led to an excessive tightening in financial conditions, similar to what happened during the taper tantrum. However, given that financial conditions actually eased significantly in response to the FOMC's decision, it is likely that Fed speeches will lean in a less dovish direction over the coming weeks. The implication for investors is that the dollar is likely to rebound. Indeed, the longer-term risk to the dollar is not that the Fed turns out be too dovish, but that it turns out to be too hawkish - that it raises rates so much that the economy begins to roll over. However, with interest rates still low in absolute terms, this is more of a risk for late 2018 or 2019 than it is for the next 12 months. As such, investors should continue to cyclically overweight global equities, favouring stock markets such as those in Europe and Japan that have a "higher beta" to global growth than the U.S. A modest bearish tilt towards long-term government bonds is also warranted. Peter Berezin, Senior Vice President Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com
Highlights Geopolitics will not spoil the stock rally yet; European election risks remain overstated; In China, look beyond the National Party Congress; China's reforms could re-launch in 2018 ... ... But India's reforms are gaining momentum now. Feature The global economy continues to surprise to the upside, with the latest round of global purchasing managers' indices (PMIs) confirming that the business cycle continues to accelerate (Chart 1). In the context of firming global growth, the Fed's decision to hike rates may not produce as violent of a reaction from the dollar as last year, giving way to further upside in stocks. And while investors continue to fret about valuations, U.S. stocks are expensive only relative to history, not relative to competing assets, as our colleague Lenka Martinek of the U.S. Investment Strategy service points out (Chart 2).1 Chart 1Because I'm Happy Chart 2U.S. Stocks Pricey By History, Not Peers What geopolitical news could break up the party over the next six months? Europe: As we argued three weeks ago, the European electoral calendar is unusually busy (Table 1).2 However, we have also posited in our 2017 Strategic Outlook that Europe will be a red herring this year, allowing risk assets to "climb the wall of worry."3 The first test of this thesis comes today, with the Dutch general elections taking place. The polls suggest that the Dutch electorate is not following the populist trend of the Brexit referendum and U.S. election (Chart 3), but rather in the footsteps of the little noticed Austrian presidential election in December, which saw the populist presidential candidate defeated. Dutch Euroskeptics, who have led the polling throughout the last twelve months, are bleeding support as election day approaches. Meanwhile, in France, Marine Le Pen is struggling to keep momentum going with only a month and a half to the first round. Thus far, our thesis on Europe is holding. Table 1Busy Calendar For Europe This Year Chart 3Dutch Euroskeptics Are An Overstated Threat The U.S.: Investors will finally get to put numbers to President Trump's rhetoric when the White House announces its budget on March 16. As we argued last week, President Trump is who we thought he was: an economic populist looking to shake up America's status quo. That suggests he will err on the side of greater deficits and large middle-class tax cuts. We do not think Congress will bar his way, as it has rarely restrained a Republican president from profligacy (Chart 4). We could be wrong, but it is unclear if a more fiscally responsible budget would be negative for the markets. On one hand, it may disappoint optimistic growth projections, but on the other, it would mean that the Fed would have no reason to err on the side of more rate hikes in 2017. Meanwhile, while we continue to fear protectionism's impact on the market, it is unlikely that the Trump White House will focus on trade when so many domestic priorities are looming this summer. Russia: As we argued in a Special Report with the Emerging Markets Strategy group last week, Russia may be entering a low-beta paradigm - escaping from its close embrace with oil prices - due to the combination of orthodox monetary policy, modest structural reforms, and growing confidence in its geopolitical predicament.4 This is not the time for President Putin to rattle nerves in the West. He does not want to give Europe and the U.S. a reason to cooperate. We therefore expect Russia's geopolitical risk premium to continue to decline, a boon for European risk assets (Chart 5). Chart 4Budgets: Republican Presidents##br## Get What They Want Chart 5Russia's Calm##br## Is Europe's Profit From a tactical perspective, we believe that the confluence of geopolitical forces supports our continued overweight of developed-market equities versus those of emerging markets. Within developed markets, the BCA House View is to prefer euro-area equities due to overstated geopolitical risks and favorable valuations relative to the U.S. equity market. BCA's Global Investment Strategy has pointed out that euro-area equities are one standard deviation undervalued relative to the U.S., when one applies U.S. sector weights to them (Chart 6). In addition, BCA's U.S. Bond Strategy service believes that Treasury yields have more room to rise, with growth putting upward pressure on inflation and the Fed in a rate-hike cycle. This makes sense to us given that no major geopolitical risk is materializing and considerable upside risk exists in U.S. growth due to Trump's populist policies. Chart 6European Stocks Still A Buy Relative To U.S. In what follows, we take a break from poring over geopolitical risks in Europe and the U.S. and focus on emerging markets. Since January, very few investors have asked us about EM politics, save for the occasional question about Brazil. However, the two Asian giants - China and India - are both a source of risk: the first a downside, left-tail risk and the second an upside, right-tail risk. China: What Comes After The Party Congress This Fall? Since 2013, we have been outspoken in our low expectations for China's structural reforms.5 This view was confirmed with a series of stimulus efforts that displaced reforms, including the local government debt swap program in 2014 and extensive fiscal and monetary easing in 2015 and especially 2016.6 The upside of weak reforms was better-than-expected growth in the short run, as stimulus took effect. Indeed, China has pulled off a remarkable economic turnaround since early last year: infrastructure and housing investment have increased, the weaker yuan has boosted exports, and the global recovery in commodity prices has helped producer prices to recover, easing deflationary pressures (Chart 7). Chart 7Deflationary Pressures Easing Chart 8Stimulus Dropped Off Accordingly, Chinese policymakers, who are attempting to strike a balance between stimulus and restructuring, have begun leaning against the economy's gathering momentum. Government spending has collapsed now that a 6.5% GDP growth "floor" has been established (Chart 8). A new round of property market regulatory tightening began last fall, though it has had little impact so far. Also, the People's Bank of China has begun draining some liquidity (Chart 9). Signals coming out of the "Two Sessions" over the past two weeks, namely the National People's Congress, suggest that the Chinese leadership is content with the current state of affairs. Policymakers set their growth targets for 2017 a little lower than last year's targets and a little higher than last year's actual performance (Table 2).7 It is a line so thin that it is almost imperceptible. They do not want significant change. Chart 9PBoC Draining Liquidity Table 2China's Economic Targets For 2017 This stance fits with a deeper desire to keep the economy on an even keel during a pivotal year for Chinese politics. The legislative session took place under the shadow of the Communist Party's impending 19th National Party Congress - the "midterm" meeting of the party that happens every five years and features extensive promotions, rotations, and retirements for the party leadership. This year's congress promises to be especially influential because of Xi Jinping's ascendancy and the fact that around 70% of the upper tier of leaders will be replaced. Chart 10, which we have been showing clients over the past year to dampen expectations of stimulus, reveals that the party congress is not normally an excuse to throw open the floodgates of credit and government spending. Rather, it is a reason to avoid anything that might rock the boat, whether stimulus or reform. Chart 10Not Much Evidence Of Aggressive Stimulus Ahead Of Five-Year Party Congresses Thus while government spending has declined, it should be expected to rise again if growth slows down too much for too long. There may be a period of slowdown and market jitters before the leaders reach for the fiscal lever again, but the "Socialist Put" remains in place. Meanwhile, we are not surprised that structural reforms continue to suffer. It is not that China has eschewed all reforms but rather that its reforms have focused on centralizing power for the ruling party and alleviating some outstanding social grievances. These are positive in themselves but they do not address the key concerns of foreign investors relating to economic openness, financial stability, and the role of the state. The recent imposition of capital controls and a host of non-tariff barriers in the name of "state security" exemplify a negative trend. The delayed rollout of the property tax is also a sign of Beijing's proclivity to delay policies that may be financially risky.8 And Beijing has only tentatively attempted to cut back state-owned enterprises. Simply put, a push to overhaul any significant sector or sub-sector does not fit Beijing's priorities at the moment. However, if growth, debt, or asset prices should climb too rapidly, then we expect countermeasures to tamp them down. Even on the geopolitical front - where we have a high conviction view that tail risks to financial markets are higher than the market perceives them to be, both in China and the broader Asia Pacific - there have been some signs of the U.S. and China playing ball on a shared desire for "stability," at least for the moment.9 While we expect a negative geopolitical shock, the market will only believe it when it sees it. All of the above suggest that China will focus on "maintaining stability" this year even more than usual due to the party congress. This is clearly bullish, especially given improving U.S. and global growth. However, the mantra of "stability" and "party congress" should not prevent investors from looking beyond October or November of this year. Chart 11China Needs More##br## Credit For Same Growth Chart 12China Gets Old ##br##Before It Gets Rich Even assuming that China experiences no significant internal or external economic shocks from now until this fall, it is important to remember that China's growth potential is still slowing for structural reasons. Productivity is collapsing and credit dependency is rising (Chart 11). The slowdown stems from deep shifts such as the end of the debt supercycle in the U.S. (weak external demand), the tipping point in Chinese demographics (higher dependency ratio) (Chart 12), and the extremely rapid build-up in corporate debt (Chart 13). Chart 13Corporate Debt Skyrockets Chart 14As Good As It Gets This is what leads our colleague Mathieu Savary, of BCA's Foreign Exchange Strategy, to surmise that China is at the peak of its current economic mini-cycle. This is "as good as it gets," as he shows in Chart 14. Barring a situation in which Xi somehow fails to consolidate power at the party congress, the market impact will depend on which of two scenarios follows: First scenario: Xi achieves a dominant position in all party and state organs, yet 2018 sees a continuation of the current pattern of mini-cycles of stimulus, lackluster reform, and foreign policy aggressiveness. Xi implicitly deems the strategic cost of reform too great, as we argued he would do over the past four years, and dedicates his stint in office to the accumulation of power. Perhaps a successor will be able to use these powers to enact painful reforms in the mid-2020s; that is not Xi's immediate concern. This is short-term bullish for global and Chinese growth, long-term bearish for Chinese assets. Second scenario: Xi achieves a dominant position and uses his power to reinvigorate the country's stalled reforms. Hints of big measures emerge in the wake of the party congress in November or December, and January 2018 begins with a bang. This would necessarily mean that Xi accepts slower growth, or even that he imposes it through tighter fiscal policy, real credit control, SOE failures, and aggressive overcapacity cuts. However, Chinese productivity would begin to recover. This is short-term bearish for Chinese and global growth. However, it is the most bullish outcome for the long-term performance of Chinese assets. In China's current state - with capital controls newly reinstituted (Chart 15), Xi lauding the "central role" of SOEs in development, and Xi's administration still focused on purging the party and controlling the media - the second scenario admittedly seems far-fetched. Chart 15Are Capital Controls Working? Moreover, Xi seems averse to risky experiments at home that could weaken the country in the face of unprecedented strategic threats from the United States and Japan. Nevertheless, a 2018 reform push should not be dismissed out of hand. Why? Because an overbearing state, credit excesses, and weak productivity really do threaten the sustainability of the Chinese economy and hence the Communist Party's grip on power. Xi must keep them in check, as the current gestures toward tighter policy indicate. The government has overseen a massive monetary and credit expansion to protect the country from faltering external demand since 2008. As the current account surplus has declined, the country's massive savings have built up at home in the form of debt (Chart 16).10 Yet the investment avenues are restricted by the role of the state. As a result, the inefficient state-supported sector is getting propped up while the shadow financial sector grows wildly and creates murky systemic risks that are difficult to monitor and control. The PBoC has undertaken further extraordinary actions to keep financial conditions loose (Chart 17). Chart 16Savings Invested At Home Chart 17PBoC Lends A Helping Hand What signposts should investors watch for to see which path Xi will take after the party congress? Jockeying ahead of the party congress: The latest NPC session saw some political maneuvering. Several sixth generation leaders made appearances and spoke to media.11 Xi's supposed favorite, Chen Min'er, Party Secretary of Guizhou, distinguished himself by cutting reporters short at a press conference. Meanwhile former President Hu Jintao appeared publicly alongside his apprentice, Hu Chunhua, Party Secretary of Guangdong. Elite party gatherings in the summer, especially any retreat at Beidaihe, should be watched closely for any clues of who may be up and who down, and what general policy trajectory may be forthcoming. Xi's future: First, will Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang establish clear successors for their top two positions in 2022?12 A failure to do so will suggest that Xi intends to stay in power beyond his de facto term limit of 2022. This would mean that Xi will prioritize his own future over painful structural reforms. On the other hand, a clear commitment to a leadership transition in five years may re-focus the Xi-Li administration towards their initial commitment to economic restructuring. National Financial Work Conference: This conference is held every five years, usually connected with a major new financial reform or regulatory push, and due sometime in 2017. The government is looking into serious changes to financial regulation - including the creation of a super-ministry to house the various regulatory agencies. This, or the broader attempt to ensure adequate capitalization of banks, could be behind the delay. New central banker: Central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan, in office since 2002, may step down this fall. He could be replaced with another technocrat to little fanfare, but his exit introduces the opportunity for shaking up the PBoC regime as a whole. Other new officials: A slew of other appointments and reshuffles will take place this year as a generation of leaders born before the Revolution retires. A new director of the state economic planner, the National Development and Reform Commission, was just named, while late last year a new finance minister took his post. These officials have yet to make their mark. Their statements should be watched closely for any shifts in economic policy emphasis. Time frames for reforms: The market is still waiting for concrete proposals and time frames for major reform initiatives, particularly opening up to foreign competition and restructuring state-owned enterprises. Overcapacity cuts have also had mixed results. We do not expect major advances on big structural reforms this year due to the party congress, but details that can be gleaned about the process and timetables could be important. Bottom Line: Watch for signs of a renewed reform drive after the nineteenth National Party Congress. Xi is not going to reverse what he has done so far. And China is not going to become a market economy on the ideal western model. But a pivot point could be in the cards next year for China to pursue some pro-efficiency reforms that it has already set out for itself in a more resolute way. Xi's decision to stay in power beyond 2022 would be bearish for reforms as it would incentivize the current "Socialist Put" model of policymaking over a genuine paradigm shift. India: What Comes After Modi's Big Win? Prime Minister Narendra Modi has won a crushing victory in India's most populous state, Uttar Pradesh, positioning himself, his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), and National Democratic Alliance (NDA) coalition very well for the 2019 general elections. Policymaking is going to become easier for the ruling party - though there are still serious political and economic constraints. We have been long Indian equities relative to EM equities since the "Modi wave" began with Modi's victory in the Lok Sabha or lower house in 2014.13 The end of the commodity bull market signaled an opportunity for India, which imports about a third of its energy. The decline of global trade also heralded the outperformance of domestic demand-driven economies like India. Further, Modi's sweeping victory held out the promise for a reform agenda of tighter monetary and fiscal policy that would reduce inflation and make room for private investment to grow. This would make Indian risk assets attractive, especially relative to other EMs, which were at that time either lagging at reforms or failing to undertake them entirely. Since then we have seen Modi rack up a key legislative victory - the passage of the Goods and Services Tax, in the process of implementation - and engineer a surprise "demonetization" effort late last year to increase bank deposits, bring the country's gray markets into the open, and flush out crime and corruption.14 The ruling coalition's gains in Uttar Pradesh and a few other state elections this year are a striking vindication of popular support after this highly unconventional and controversial maneuver.15 Uttar Pradesh is the most important of these elections. It was slated to be a grand testing ground for Modi well before demonetization. It is the most populous Indian state, with about 200 million people, and the third largest state economy (producing about 10% of GDP). It is the second-poorest state, with a GDP per capita of about $730, it has the highest proportion of "scheduled castes" (untouchables), and ranks around the middle of states in terms of the Hindu share of population - all challenges for the landed, pro-business, Hindu nationalist BJP (Map 1). Politically, aside from its inherent heft in population and centrality, Uttar Pradesh sends the most representatives of any state to India's upper house (31 seats), the Rajya Sabha, where Modi lacks a majority. It is thus a key source of federal power and an important state ally. Map 1Modi's Saffron Wave Takes The Indian Core Given the above, it is hugely bullish that Modi's BJP romped to a historic victory in the state election, winning 312 out of 403 seats (about 39.7% of the vote), up from 47 seats previously. His coalition rose to 324 seats total (Chart 18). The BJP now has the largest majority of any party in the state since 1980. These results were not anticipated. A close election was predicted and opinion polls had BJP winning 157 seats, short of the 202 needed for a majority. This was only slightly ahead of its closest rival, an alliance made up of the local Samajwadi Party and its national partner, the left-leaning Indian National Congress (INC). Exit polls even suggested that the Samajwadi-INC coalition had edged ahead of the BJP. The immediate takeaway is that Modi will have better luck governing Uttar Pradesh itself now that the state government is on his side. Individual states hold the key to reform in India because of the country's size and socio-economic disparities. The state will now be expected to implement Modi's policies faithfully and push approved policies forward on its own. The second takeaway is that while Uttar Pradesh will not give Modi control of India's upper house of parliament, the Rajya Sabha, it will give him a better position there. The BJP has 56 seats in the upper house (fewer than the INC's 59), and the ruling coalition has 74, out of a total of 250. The coalition needs 52 seats for a simple majority. Uttar Pradesh will deliver 10 seats at most by the 2019 general election. Modi would have to win almost every seat of the 56 non-allied seats coming open between now and 2019 in order to win the upper house by that time (Chart 19). That is unlikely, but Modi is moving in the right direction and an upper-house majority cannot be ruled out in the long run. Chart 18Modi's Big Win In Uttar Pradesh Chart 19Modi's National Position Improves Of course, Modi has already shown with the Goods and Services Tax that he can pass very difficult legislation through the upper house without controlling a majority there. This achievement last year was perhaps an even greater surprise than the victory in Uttar Pradesh, which reinforces it. Modi also has a secret weapon: in case of a national emergency, however defined, he can call a joint session of parliament, where his coalition would carry the day. This is now more likely because it is the Indian president who is responsible for calling a joint session, and Modi is now more likely to get his candidate into that position due to the win in Uttar Pradesh. President Pranab Mukherjee, who is affiliated with the INC, will step down on July 25. Though Modi does not have all the votes in the electoral college to choose the president outright, smaller parties may fall in line now that the BJP has so much national momentum.16 Controlling the presidency will also give Modi greater influence over constitutional obstacles and gradually over the legal system. Separately, in August, Modi's alliance will be able to choose the vice president as well. More broadly, the Uttar Pradesh election marks a victory for Modi's style of appealing to voter demand for greater economic development as a general priority over longstanding religious and caste grievances that frequently determine electoral outcomes in state elections. This is a hugely significant indication for India's economic structural reform and nation building. Bottom Line: Modi's victory in Uttar Pradesh is proof that for all of India's sprawling inefficiencies, its political system is capable of responding to the large public demand for economic development. Do not underestimate reform momentum now. Modi's political capital remains high. Investment Conclusions The conventional wisdom has for decades been that China is better at reforming its economy because of its authoritarian regime, whereas India democratized too early and has thus lagged at reforms. We have never agreed with this simplistic view of economic reforms. Structural reforms are always and everywhere painful. As such, they require political capital. As our "J-Curve of Structural Reforms" posits, reforms deplete political capital as the pain spreads through the economy and opposition mounts among both the elite and the common man (Chart 20). Eventually, the government is faced with a "danger zone" in which the pain of reforms lingers, the benefits remain beyond the horizon, and all political capital is exhausted. Many leaders chose to water down the reforms, or back off from them altogether, at this point. Chart 20The J-Curve Of Structural Reform On the surface, authoritarian regimes have massive political capital with which to burst through the danger zone of reform. But this assumption is not entirely correct. In China's case, the political capital for reform came after disastrous performances by the "conservative" political forces. Reformers in China were buoyed by the failures of the "Cultural Revolution" (which ended in 1976) and the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests. Each political and social crisis gave the reformers an opening - following a consolidation period - to pursue controversial economic reforms at the expense of "conservative" forces. The fruit of these reform efforts has been the growth of China's middle class. And while this middle class expects reforms in the delivery and quality of public services, it is not interested in seeing a slowdown in economic growth, no matter how temporary or healthy it may be. As such, Chinese leaders are faced with a significant hurdle to their reform preference: how to convince the public that a slowdown is needed in order to restructure the economy. We are unsure whether the upcoming party congress will make a difference. However, we can see a scenario where President Xi decides to pursue market-friendly reforms because he sees an increase in his political capital. In particular, he may feel that he has cemented his personal dominance over his intra-party rivals and that the aggressive foreign and trade policy emanating from the Trump White House gives him a foil to blame for any downturn in growth. Reform would also be a return to Xi's original agenda, and would conform to the playbook of former president Jiang Zemin, whose precedents Xi has followed in some other areas. Given Xi's modus operandi, a post-consolidation reform drive would be executed relatively effectively and would therefore present short-term risks to Chinese and hence global growth, despite the long-term improvement. Markets are definitely not expecting such a policy pivot at the moment. China bulls are content with the current reforms, while China bears see no chance of the Xi administration changing tack. While we are just beginning to see the potential for a turn in Chinese policymaking towards reforms, India is a much clearer example of a reformist administration. Modi will feel empowered by the Uttar Pradesh election, a political recapitalization of sorts. Foreign investment will likely continue cheering Modi's ongoing revolution (Chart 21). The question now is whether Modi intends to use the infusion of political capital for genuine reforms. After all, the economy is not looking up (Chart 22). Chart 21Foreign Investors Cheer On Modi Chart 22Indian Economy Still Weak The evidence is mixed. First, Modi has not maintained strictness on fiscal spending and the budget deficit is creeping back to where it was when he took over the reins (Chart 23). Rising government spending along with higher commodity prices suggest that inflation will continue making a comeback (Chart 24). Poor food production is also driving up inflation. And higher spending and inflation pose a key threat to the sustainability of the reform agenda, since rising government bond yields will crowd out private investment. Chart 23Losing Budgetary Discipline? Chart 24Inflation Makes A Comeback Second, the RBI will be less likely to pursue a tighter monetary policy with both political influence and weak growth pressing on it. Moreover, Indian stocks are not all that cheap. In 2014, valuations were favorable and the backdrop included cheap commodities, fiscal prudence, and Modi's electoral success. Today, India is trading at its historical mean relative to EM (Chart 25), but using the equal sector weighted P/E ratio, by which India was very cheap back in 2014, India is at a 52% premium now (Chart 26). Chart 25Indian Stocks Trading##br## At Mean Against EM Chart 26Indian Stocks Pricey##br## Versus EM Sector-Weighted We are therefore taking this opportunity to close our long India / short EM trade for a 28% gain (since May 2014). We will reassess Modi's structural reform priorities in future research and gauge whether a new entry point is warranted. We remain optimistic on India in the long run as Modi certainly has the political capital for reforms. The question is whether he plans to use it. Meanwhile, we remain skeptical about China's long-term trajectory. To become fully optimistic about Chinese risk assets in absolute terms, we need to see the Xi administration chose short-term pain for long-term gain. For the time being, China continues to repress its structural problems rather than deal with them head on, relying on minimal openness, high and rising leverage, and state-owned banks and companies. India may be lagging in its reform effort, but it has at least established market reforms as a priority. And the Modi administration has built political capital through the slow and painful democratic process. Over the long term, India's approach is more sustainable. If President Xi wastes the opportunity afforded to him by the upcoming party congress, we suspect that China will face a much higher probability of left-tail economic risks than India over the long term. Matt Gertken, Associate Editor mattg@bcaresearch.com Marko Papic, Senior Vice President marko@bcaresearch.com Jesse Anak Kuri, Research Analyst jesse.kuri@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "How Expensive Are U.S. Stocks?," dated March 13, 2017, available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Climbing The Wall Of Worry In Europe," dated February 15, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Strategic Outlook, "Strategic Outlook 2017: We Are All Geopolitical Strategists Now," dated December 14, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Emerging Markets Strategy and Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Russia: Entering A Lower-Beta Paradigm," dated March 8, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Reflections On China's Reforms," dated December 11, 2013, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Taking Stock Of China's Reforms," dated May 13, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com, and "China: The Socialist Put And Rising Government Leverage" in Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, "Introducing: The Median Voter Theory," dated June 8, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see BCA China Investment Strategy, "Messages From The People's Congress," dated March 9, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see Chong Koh Ping, "No plans for NPC to discuss property tax," Straits Times, March 5, 2017, available at www.straitstimes.com. 9 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "How To Play The Proxy Battles In Asia," dated March 1, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 10 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Does China Have A Debt Problem Or A Savings Problem?" dated February 24, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 11 China's leadership is typically referred to in terms of "generations," with Mao Zedong and his peers the first generation, Deng Xiaoping and his cohort the second, Jiang Zemin the third, Hu Jintao the fourth, and Xi Jinping the fifth. The fifth generation was born in the early 1950s, the sixth generation was born in the early 1960s. 12 Xi may tweak retirement norms to let close allies, like Wang Qishan, the anti-graft attack dog, stay on the Politburo Standing Committee. This might also suggest that Xi himself intends to overstay his age limit in 2022. 13 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Long Modi, Short Jokowi," dated August 28, 2014, available at gps.bcaresearch.com, and Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report, "Long Indian / Short Indonesian Stocks," dated July 30, 2014, available at ems.bcaresearch.com. 14 Please see "India: Demonetization And Opportunities In Equities," in Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, "EM: Untenable Divergences," dated December 21, 2016, available at ems.bcaresearch.com. 15 Though the mixed results also indicate persistent regional differences. Modi's coalition won seats in Uttarakhand and Manipur but lost them in Goa and Punjab. Gujarat, Modi's home state, will hold elections later this year. Himachal Pradesh will also vote this year and will be a subsequent testing ground. 16 Please see Gaurav Vivek Bhatnagar, "BJP Sweep in UP Will Impact Decision on President, Rajya Sabha Numbers," The Wire, March 12, 2017, available at https://thewire.in/116044/bjp-sweep-will-impact-decision-president/
Highlights Fed: The Fed will deliver another rate hike tomorrow, but we do not expect a signal that a higher trajectory for the funds rate is necessary. The Fed wants to see higher inflation expectations and will remain as accommodative as possible until that happens. Maintain a below-benchmark allocation to U.S. Treasuries within global fixed income portfolios. ECB: The ECB opened the door slightly to a less-accommodative policy stance last week, although the talk of a rate hike is premature. A 2018 taper is the more probable scenario, likely to be introduced at the September 2017 policy meeting. This will raise longer-dated European bond yields and widen spreads for both Peripheral European government debt and Euro Area corporate bonds. Reduce Euro Area IG to below-benchmark. U.S. High-Yield: U.S. junk bond spreads have widened even though default rate indicators continue to show improvement. With valuations now looking more attractive, we upgrade U.S. High-Yield from neutral to overweight. Feature Chart of the WeekStill A Positive Backdrop ##br##For U.S. Corporates After a run of smooth sailing for the markets so far in 2017, investors will have a lot of event risk to chew over this week. A slew of central bank meetings - the Fed on Wednesday followed by the Bank of England, Bank of Japan and Swiss National Bank all on Thursday - provide opportunities for policymakers to respond to the rising trends in global growth and inflation. Only the Fed is expected to make a change, though, delivering a now fully priced rate hike. Throw in the Dutch elections on Wednesday and the G20 finance ministers meeting in Germany at the end of the week and there are plenty of potentially market-moving headlines that can hit the tape. While there has been selling pressure on all global bonds during the bear phase since last July, U.S. Treasuries still remain most exposed to additional losses in the near term given the combination of improving growth, booming asset markets, a whiff of Trumpian "animal spirits" and a Fed that still appears to be playing catch-up to the overall positive U.S. macro backdrop. A bigger potential move in yields could occur if and when the European Central Bank (ECB) shifts to a less accommodative monetary stance - a taper of asset purchases first, not a rate hike, in our view - although that will likely require more evidence that medium-term Euro Area inflation expectations are sustainably moving back to the ECB's 2% target (Chart of the Week). For now, we continue to see a more negative near-term environment for U.S. Treasuries over core European debt, and a more positive environment for U.S. corporate bonds than European equivalents. As we have discussed in recent Weekly Reports, the time is coming for a shift out of core European government debt into U.S. Treasuries, although we prefer to wait for that switch until after the French elections. After the recent back-up in U.S. High-Yield spreads that has restored some value to junk bonds, however, we are upgrading our allocation to U.S. High-Yield this week to above-benchmark, while downgrading Euro Area Investment Grade corporate bonds to neutral from above-benchmark. Simply put, we prefer to take our growth-sensitive spread risk in U.S. corporates over European equivalents. Fed Vs. ECB: Dawn Of Hawkish? Some investors and financial media pundits have been asking if the Fed has fallen "behind the curve" with regards to U.S. monetary policy, especially after another solid Payrolls report and with U.S. inflation expectations holding firm despite a pullback in oil prices. In our view, being a little bit behind the curve is exactly where the Fed wants to be, allowing the economic upturn to blossom and inflation expectations to continue drifting towards the Fed's 2% target. We do not anticipate that the Fed will shift to a more aggressively hawkish stance this week, with no signal that rates will rise in 2017 more than is currently projected (three times by year-end). However, we do expect some acknowledgement of the positive macro backdrop both in the U.S. and abroad, justifying the need to move sooner by hiking now. This is especially true with the U.S. dollar still well off the 2017 peak and not providing much of a tightening in monetary conditions that could postpone a Fed rate hike. Any surprise shift higher in the Fed's interest rate projections (the "dots") would not be taken well by the Treasury market, particularly after last week's European Central Bank (ECB) meeting where a message that was merely less dovish than expected sent European bond yields sharply higher. A more hawkish shift by either central bank would be premature right now, as bond markets are not yet signaling that significantly higher real interest rates are necessary. It is important to note that most of the rise in Treasury yields since last July, and virtually all of the rise in German Bund yields, has come from rising inflation expectations rather than higher real yields (Chart 2 & Chart 3). Also, the market expectation for the real terminal policy rate - where interest rates should end up at the end of the tightening cycle - remains around 0% in the U.S. and -1% in Europe, using our proxy measure of the 5-year Overnight Index Swap (OIS) rate, 5-years forward minus the equivalent forward inflation rate from the TIPS and CPI swap markets (bottom panel of both charts). In other words, markets are only expecting a cyclical rise in interest rates in response to faster inflation, not a structural rise in interest rates because of faster potential economic growth. Chart 2Rising Inflation Explains ##br##Most Of The Rise In U.S. Yields... Chart 3...And All Of The Rise##br## In European Yields On that front, the winds are shifting in a fashion that is more bearish for Treasuries, at least in the near term. In Chart 4, we show the relationship between inflation expectations and oil prices for the U.S. and Euro Area. As can be seen in the bottom panel, the correlation between oil and expectations remains high in the Euro Area, but has fallen to zero in the U.S., where inflation expectations are increasingly influenced by domestic price pressures (i.e. rising wage growth and faster core inflation). Chart 4U.S. Inflation Now Not Just About Oil, ##br##Unlike Europe This remains a key element underpinning of our current below-benchmark call on U.S. Treasuries, particularly versus core European bonds. U.S. yields are likely to have more upside from higher inflation expectations with the Fed likely to stay as accommodative as possible by hiking rates at a slower pace than inflation is rising. At some point, monetary policy will become restrictive, particularly if the U.S. dollar bull market resumes with gusto as the Fed is delivering additional rate hikes and expectations for U.S. growth and inflation moderate, capping the current cyclical rise in Treasury yields. We are still some time away from that point, however. Bottom Line: The Fed will deliver another rate hike tomorrow, but we do not expect a signal that a higher trajectory for the funds rate is necessary. The Fed wants to see higher inflation expectations, and will remain as accommodative as possible until that happens. Maintain a below-benchmark allocation to U.S. Treasuries within global fixed income portfolios. ECB Begins The Path To Tapering The ECB last week put a relatively positive spin on the Euro Area economy, while declaring that the worst of the deflationary pressures have passed. President Draghi sounded less downbeat on the Euro Area economy than he has for some time, citing the broadening Euro Area economic upturn that was pushing down unemployment and absorbing economic slack. The ECB only slightly raised its growth forecast for 2017 and 2018, though, raising both figures by 0.1 percentage points to 1.8% and 1.7%, respectively. This would still be sufficient to remove additional slack from the economy, with the ECB currently estimating trend growth of around 1% in the Euro Area. A look at the details of those projections showed that real consumer spending is only expected to grow by 1.4% this year and next, even as the Euro Area unemployment rate is projected to fall below 9% in 2018 on the back of steady job gains. Capital spending is also expected to pick up in the next couple of years, but the projections were downgraded slightly from previous forecasts. These numbers seem a bit too cautious compared to the recent improvements seen in consumer and business confidence in the Euro Area (Chart 5), and to the more positive tone on the economy expressed in the ECB policy statement and in Draghi's press conference following the meeting. Perhaps this is simply central bank prudence at work, particularly in an environment where there is still considerable uncertainty about politics within the Euro Area and global trade in the Trumpian era. Whatever the reason, it now seems likely that growth will at least match, if not exceed, the relatively low bar set by the ECB. This is important, as the central bank is already projecting that the Euro Area will reach full employment by 2019, when the unemployment rate is projected to fall to 8.4%. The ECB expects wage pressures to rise as a result, helping boost core inflation up to 1.8% within two years (Chart 6). This would be consistent with the rising path of interest rates currently discounted in the Euro Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve where rates are now expected to start going up in the middle of next year, with the negative rate era ending in 2019 (bottom panel). Chart 5ECB Too Pessimistic On ##br##Euro Area Growth? Chart 6ECB Will Not Hike Rates Before ##br##Full Employment Is Reached The ECB knows that interest rates will have to rise if its core inflation forecast pans out, as this would almost certainly mean that headline inflation and inflation expectations would be at the ECB target of "at or just below" 2%. Yet it is still too soon to discuss that scenario, with core inflation struggling to surpass 1% and the 5-year CPI swap rate, 5-years forward at similar levels. The ECB did slightly alter its forward guidance in its policy statement to suggest that it was now much less likely that additional monetary easing would be needed to boost growth, and that it would no longer be necessary to use "all instruments" to fight deflation in Europe. This was taken as a hawkish surprise by the markets, particularly after media reports indicated that some members of the ECB discussed raising interest rates before the tapering of the ECB's asset purchases. As we discussed in our previous Weekly Report, the current backdrop in Europe looks similar in many respects to the U.S. prior to the "Taper Tantrum" episode in 2013.1 We see the ECB following a similar path to what the Fed did during the Tantrum, by signaling a tapering of asset purchases several months in advance, then raising interest rates after the taper is complete. Many clients have asked us if it is possible for the ECB to raise short-term interest rates before starting a tapering of asset purchases. This question also came up at last week's ECB meeting, and President Draghi reiterated the view that rates would be expected to "remain at present or lower levels for an extended period of time, and well past the horizon of our net asset purchases." This fits with the ECB's unemployment and inflation scenarios, which do not project a return to full employment - which would justify a rate hike - until 2019. A rate hike too soon would result in an unwanted tightening in financial conditions in Europe that could threaten the current economic upturn. We do not believe that investors could neatly separate the impact of a rate hike from that of a taper. A tightening is a tightening, as can be seen in the strong correlation of our Euro Area months-to-hike measure and the term premium on 10yr German Bund yields in recent years (Chart 7).2 If the ECB were to deliver a rate hike, even a modest one of less than the typical 25bp increment, while maintaining the current pace of bond buying, it would send a contradictory message given the ECB's benign inflation outlook for the next couple of years. Clearly, the market is already a bit confused, as the months-to-hike has been rapidly declining, even as shorter-dated bond yields in core Europe stay low and the term premium on longer-dated government debt has stopped rising. We still see a taper next year as a more likely scenario, to be announced at the September 2017 ECB meeting, with a rate hike to occur within 6-12 months of the completion of the taper. This would allow the ECB to reduce the pace of monetary expansion in line with a less deflationary backdrop in Europe, while leaving the rate hike for a more traditional move when full employment is reached in 2019. In Chart 8, we present some potential tapering scenarios and what it would mean for the growth rate of the ECB's monetary base. We show the base case for this year of €60bn/month in asset purchases that ends in December (a "full-stop" with no tapering), along with alternative scenarios of a pace of tapering that reduces the bond buying to zero within six months (i.e. a €10bn/month reduction until June 2018) and with a full taper over 12 months (i.e. a €5bn/month reduction until December 2018). We also show an additional scenario where the ECB decides to extend the asset purchases into 2018 at the same current pace of €60bn/month. Chart 7A Rate Hike Before Tapering ##br##Is A Confusing Message Chart 8Taper Or Not, ECB Effect ##br##On Bund Yields Fading... The bottom panels of Chart 8 show the annual growth rate of the monetary base under the different scenarios, and how that maps into longer-term German bond yields through a widening term premium. Importantly, the growth rate of the ECB's monetary base would decelerate even if there was no taper next year, which would put upward pressure on European bond yields. Unless the ECB is willing to raise the pace of bond buying next year, which would only occur if there was an unexpected downturn in the Euro Area economy before full employment is reached, then the writing is on the wall for Euro Area government bond yields. They are moving higher. The same goes for Peripheral European debt and even Euro Area Investment Grade corporate debt, which the ECB has also been buying. A slowing pace of ECB buying will put upward pressure on both yields and spreads next year (Chart 9), although a better Euro Area economy that improves corporate profits and tax revenues will help mitigate the rise in yields. It is possible that the ECB could alter the composition of its purchases while tapering, choosing to continue to buy more shorter-dated bonds to limit the potential of an unwanted rise in the Euro. As can be seen in Chart 10, the typical indicators that correlate to the EUR/USD currency pair - the relative balance sheets of the Fed and ECB, and the 2-year interest rate differential between European and U.S. interest rates - are still pointing to an extended period of Euro weakness. It would take a combination of rate hikes in Europe and rate cuts in the U.S. to turn EUR/USD around on a sustainable basis. While the tapering announcement will likely push the Euro immediately higher, such a move will not last without a more fundamental change in relative interest rates. Chart 9...And For European ##br##Spread Product, Too Chart 10Tapering Will Not Sustainably ##br##Boost The Euro Bottom Line: The ECB opened to door slightly to a less-accommodative policy stance last week, although the talk of a rate hike is premature. A 2018 taper is the more probable scenario, likely to be introduced at the September 2017 policy meeting. This will raise longer-dated European bond yields and widen spreads for both Peripheral European government debt and Euro Area corporate bonds. Reduce Euro Area Investment Grade to below-benchmark. The Value Is Back In U.S. High-Yield One of our key themes for 2017 is that the uptrend in the U.S. High-Yield default rate is due for a pause.3 With the first quarter of the year nearly complete, all the indicators that make up our U.S. Default Rate Model are showing noticeable improvement (Chart 11). Interest coverage remains elevated A strong U.S. Manufacturing PMI points to a rebound in after-tax cash flow Lending standards have rolled over and are now just barely in "net tightening" territory An improving sales/inventory ratio portends a return to positive industrial production growth Job cut announcements have fallen back to 2011 levels on a trailing 12-month basis Chart 11Default Rate Indicators Are Showing Improvement Meantime, even though the default outlook continues to improve, junk spreads have actually widened during the past couple of weeks. The average option-adjusted spread on the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. High-Yield index has widened from a low of 344bps up to 378bps (Chart 12). Some of that spread increase is likely attributable to declining oil prices, as energy sector credits have indeed underperformed the overall index. However, the underperformance of the energy sector did start before the sharp drop in oil prices (Chart 12, bottom panel). In any event, our commodity strategists are not expecting the current decline in oil prices to persist and their estimates show that the oil market has recently shifted from an environment of excess supply to one of excess demand. U.S. crude oil inventories are poised to decline later this month and the OPEC / non-OPEC production deal negotiated by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Russia at the end of last year should be met with high compliance.4 If this view is correct, then the energy sector will not drag overall junk spreads wider in the months ahead. The combination of wider junk spreads and an improving default outlook has led to an increase in our preferred gauge of value for high-yield bonds - the default-adjusted spread (Chart 13). The default-adjusted spread is calculated by subtracting an ex-ante estimate of default losses from the average spread on the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. High-Yield index. Chart 12Energy Contributed To Junk Sell-Off Chart 13Some Value Returns To High-Yield To arrive at an estimate of default losses we use the Moody's baseline forecast for the default rate and our own forecast for the recovery rate based on the historical relationship between recoveries and defaults. With the release of February's default report, the Moody's baseline default rate forecast fell to 3.14% for the next 12 months. Based on this forecast, we estimate that the recovery rate will be 44%. Combining the default and recovery rate forecasts gives an estimate for default losses of 3.14% x (1- 0.44) = 176bps for the next 12 months. Since the average option-adjusted spread of the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. High-Yield index is currently 378bps, we calculate the default-adjusted spread to be: 378 bps - 176bps = 202bps. A default-adjusted spread of 202bps is 60bps higher than the reading of 142bps that prevailed just last week. This 60bps spread advantage makes a considerable difference in terms of projected excess returns. Chart 14 shows the relationship between 12-month excess returns and the starting default-adjusted spread. We observe a reasonably strong correlation and note that, using a linear regression, an extra 60bps of spread translates to an extra +251bps of excess return on average over a 12-month period. Chart 1412-Month Excess High-Yield Returns Vs. Ex-Ante Default-Adjusted Spread (2002 - Present) Table 1 provides more detail in terms of what excess returns have historically been associated with different levels of the default-adjusted spread. We see that when the default-adjusted is between 100 bps and 150bps, high-yield bonds earn positive excess returns 64% of the time over the following 12 months. When the default-adjusted spread is between 200bps and 250bps, high-yield earns a positive 12-month excess return 71% of the time. Table 112-Month High-Yield Excess Returns & Ex-Ante Default-Adjusted Spread Given our upbeat assessment of the trend in defaults and a wider junk spread than we have seen in a while, we think it is a good time to upgrade high-yield from neutral to overweight. The key near-term risk to this view is that the Fed will be more hawkish than we anticipate at this week's meeting. If the Fed's median forecast is revised up to four hikes in 2017, then it is possible that the recent bout of junk spread widening will have a bit further to run. However, given still-low inflation readings, the Fed would eventually be forced to back away from its hawkish rhetoric and support renewed spread tightening. In our view, the main risk to upgrading junk this week is that we are a bit too early. Bottom Line: U.S. junk bond spreads have widened even though default rate indicators continue to show improvement. With valuations now looking more attractive, we upgrade U.S. High-Yield from neutral to overweight. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Will The Hawks Walk The Talk?", dated March 7, 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com 2 Last week, we presented the Euro Area months-to-hike measure. We discovered that our measure was not calibrated for the current era of negative interest rates in Europe, and the months-to-hike indicated was actually signaling the "months until interest rates turned positive." We have since corrected our methodology to show the months until one full 25bp rate hike was priced in from the current negative levels, which is what is shown in Chart 7 of this report. This does not change the direction of the months-to-hike indicator, but it does bring forward to date of the first rate hike versus what was presented last week. 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Fed's Pre-Emptive Hike Will Hit Gold, Not Oil", dated March 9, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Monetary Policy: The Fed will lift rates this week, but will likely leave its median forecast for three hikes this year unchanged. With inflation still below target the Fed has an incentive to take it easy. Curve steepeners, TIPS breakeven wideners and overweight spread product positions will benefit. Duration: The growth outlook is improving and the 10-year Treasury yield could soon move higher, breaking out of its recent trading range. An already elevated economic surprise index should not be a deterrent. High-Yield: Junk spreads have widened even though default rate indicators continue to show improvement. With valuations now looking more attractive, we upgrade high-yield from neutral to overweight. Feature Chart 1How Much Hawkishness ##br##Can Markets Take? In early November, just prior to the U.S. election, money markets were still only discounting one rate hike before the end of 2017. The Fed has already raised rates once since then and the market is now almost priced for another three hikes before year-end (Chart 1). Encouragingly, financial markets digested the shift up to two 2017 rate hikes without much of a hiccup - the yield curve steepened, TIPS breakevens widened and junk spreads tightened - but the journey from two to three hikes has not gone down quite as easily (Chart 1, bottom panel). The yield curve has now started to flatten, breakevens have leveled off and junk spreads have edged wider. The worry is that a further shift in expectations - from three to four hikes in 2017 - might cause markets to choke. Fed Will Take It Slow Markets are already priced for a rate hike at this week's FOMC meeting along with no change to the Fed's median forecast for three hikes in 2017. As such, we would not expect much of a market reaction if that outcome is delivered. If the Fed were to increase its median forecast from three to four hikes in 2017, then we would anticipate at least some tightening of financial conditions. In other words, we would expect the yield curve to flatten, TIPS breakevens to narrow, the dollar to strengthen and credit spreads to widen. As we have written several times,1 with core inflation and TIPS breakevens still below target, the Fed must ensure that the economic recovery continues. It will therefore be quick to back away from any nascent hawkishness if financial conditions start to tighten. With markets already showing some signs of stress, we expect the Fed to err on the side of caution this week. This means the Fed will lift rates, but also leave the median forecast of three 2017 rate hikes unchanged. This notion that the Fed should be lifting rates, but only very slowly, is confirmed by our Fed Monitor (Chart 2). The Fed Monitor is a composite of 32 indicators that track the evolution of U.S. economic growth, inflation pressures and financial market conditions. Historically, a positive reading from the monitor has coincided with rate hikes, and vice versa. Chart 2BCA Fed Monitor Suggests A Slow Pace Of Rate Hikes The Fed Monitor just recently moved above zero, suggesting that only modestly tighter monetary policy is required. As an aside, we view the strongly positive readings from the Fed Monitor in 2011 and 2012 as anomalous and an artifact of the zero-lower-bound on interest rates. Since interest rates could not be lowered as much as would have been necessary (according to the Fed Monitor) in 2009, they also could not be raised as quickly as the monitor suggested in 2011. With the base effects from the financial crisis now out of the data, the Fed Monitor should go back to providing a useful signal about the future course of monetary policy. Chart 3BCA Fed Monitor Components We gain further insight from splitting the Fed Monitor into its three key components: growth, inflation and financial conditions (Chart 3). The growth component has accelerated strongly into positive territory but the inflation component still suggests that an easy policy stance is required. Financial conditions are also consistent with modest Fed tightening but have ticked down in recent weeks as the market has discounted a more rapid pace of hikes. Judging from the prior two cycles, an acceleration of the inflation component will be necessary for the Fed to deliver on its current expected path of rate hikes. While the Fed has sometimes started to lift rates with the inflation component below zero, that component has always surged into positive territory soon after hikes began (Chart 3, panel 2). While economic growth is accelerating, below-target inflation means that the Fed must continue to nurture the economic recovery. Investors should position for a steeper curve, wider TIPS breakevens and tighter credit spreads until inflationary pressures are more pronounced. This means at least until long-maturity TIPS breakevens reach the 2.4% to 2.5% range and core PCE inflation is firmly anchored around 2%. Bottom Line: The Fed will lift rates this week, but will likely leave its median forecast for three hikes this year unchanged. With inflation still below target the Fed has an incentive to take it easy. Curve steepeners, TIPS breakeven wideners and overweight spread product positions will benefit. Consolidation Complete? The 10-year Treasury yield has been stuck in a tight range below 2.6% since mid-December (Chart 4), but recent trends in the economic data suggest that it could be on the verge of breaking through this key resistance level. Economic surprises are positively correlated with changes in the 10-year Treasury yield and currently appear extended (Chart 4, bottom panel). While not a mean-reverting series by construction, economic surprises tend to follow a mean reverting pattern because investors revise their expectations higher as the economic data outperform. Eventually, expectations are bound to become excessive and the series will mean revert. However, we have found that economic surprises are usually first reflected in Treasury yields. In fact, changes in the 10-year Treasury yield tend to lead the economic surprise index by several weeks. This means that stagnant yields during the past few months have already foreshadowed a reversal in the surprise index. In other words, some mean reversion in economic surprises is already in the price and should not prevent yields from rising in the coming weeks. More important is that economic growth should be sustainably above trend on a 6-12 month horizon. This will continue to put upward pressure on inflation and ensure that the Fed remains in a rate hike cycle. Judging from recent data, not only is growth sustainably above trend, but it is probably even accelerating. Last week's February employment report showed that nonfarm payrolls rose by 235k, the second consecutive month of gains above 200k. The rate of change of employment growth is now threatening to reverse the downtrend that started in early 2015, and aggregate hours worked have accelerated suggesting that GDP growth will be strong in Q1 (Chart 5). Chart 410-Year Yield Facing Resistance Chart 5Labor Market Points To Stronger Growth... Financial conditions are also supportive of a further acceleration in growth. We found that the financial conditions component of our Fed Monitor provides a strong indication of near-term trends in GDP growth (Chart 6). This highlights that growth should be strong during the next few months but also that the Fed must respond to any tightening in financial conditions if it wants growth to remain robust. Chart 6...So Do Financial Conditions Bottom Line: The growth outlook is improving and the 10-year Treasury yield could soon move higher, breaking out of its recent trading range. An already elevated economic surprise index should not be a deterrent. The Value Is Back In High-Yield One of our key themes for 2017 is that the uptrend in the high-yield default rate is due for a pause.2 With the first quarter of the year nearly complete, all the indicators that make up our Default Rate Model are showing noticeable improvement (Chart 7). Chart 7Default Rate Indicators Are Showing Improvement Interest coverage remains elevated A strong Manufacturing PMI points to a rebound in after-tax cash flow Lending standards have rolled over and are now just barely in "net tightening" territory An improving sales/inventory ratio portends a return to positive industrial production growth Job cut announcements have fallen back to 2011 levels on a trailing 12-month basis Meantime, even though the default outlook continues to improve, junk spreads have actually widened during the past couple of weeks. The average option-adjusted spread on the Bloomberg Barclays High-Yield index has widened from a low of 344 basis points up to 378 bps (Chart 8). Some of that spread increase is likely attributable to declining oil prices, as energy sector credits have indeed underperformed the overall index. However, the underperformance of the energy sector also started before the sharp drop in oil prices (Chart 8, bottom panel). In any event, our commodity strategists are not expecting the current decline in oil prices to persist and their estimates show that the oil market has recently shifted from an environment of excess supply to one of excess demand. U.S. crude oil inventories are poised to decline later this month and the OPEC / non-OPEC production deal negotiated by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Russia at the end of last year should be met with high compliance.3 If this view is correct, then the energy sector will not drag overall junk spreads wider in the months ahead. The combination of wider junk spreads and an improving default outlook has led to an increase in our preferred gauge of value for high-yield bonds - the default-adjusted spread (Chart 9). The default-adjusted spread is calculated by subtracting an ex-ante estimate of default losses from the average spread on the Bloomberg Barclays High-Yield index. Chart 8Energy Contributed To Junk Sell-Off Chart 9Some Value Returns To High-Yield To arrive at an estimate of default losses we use the Moody's baseline forecast for the default rate and our own forecast for the recovery rate based on the historical relationship between recoveries and defaults. With the release of February's default report, the Moody's baseline default rate forecast fell to 3.14% for the next 12 months. Based on this forecast we estimate that the recovery rate will be 44%. Combining the default and recovery rate forecasts gives an estimate for default losses of 3.14% x (1- 0.44) = 176 bps for the next 12 months. Since the average option-adjusted spread of the Bloomberg Barclays High-Yield index is currently 378 bps, we calculate the default-adjusted spread to be: 378 bps - 176 bps = 202 bps. A default-adjusted spread of 202 bps is 60 bps higher than the reading of 142 bps that prevailed just last week. This 60 bps spread advantage makes a considerable difference in terms of projected excess returns. Chart 10 shows the relationship between 12-month excess returns and the starting default-adjusted spread. We observe a reasonably strong correlation and note that, using a linear regression, an extra 60 bps of spread translates to an extra +251 bps of excess return on average over a 12-month period. Chart 1012-Month Excess High-Yield Returns Vs. ##br##Ex-Ante Default-Adjusted Spread (2002 - Present) Table 1 provides more detail in terms of what excess returns have historically been associated with different levels of the default-adjusted spread. We see that when the default-adjusted is between 100 bps and 150 bps, high-yield bonds earn positive excess returns 64% of the time over the following 12 months. When the default-adjusted spread is between 200 bps and 250 bps, high-yield earns a positive 12-month excess return 71% of the time. Table 112-Month High-Yield Excess Returns & Ex-Ante Default-Adjusted Spread Given our upbeat assessment of the trend in defaults and a wider junk spread than we have seen in a while, we think it is a good time to upgrade high-yield from neutral to overweight. The key near-term risk to this view is that the Fed will be more hawkish than we anticipate at this week's meeting. If the Fed's median forecast is revised up to four hikes in 2017, then it is possible that the recent bout of junk spread widening will have a bit further to run. However, given still-low inflation readings, the Fed would eventually be forced to back away from its hawkish rhetoric and support renewed spread tightening. In our view, the main risk to upgrading junk this week is that we are a bit too early. Bottom Line: Junk spreads have widened even though default rate indicators continue to show improvement. With valuations now looking more attractive, we upgrade high-yield from neutral to overweight. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Inflation: More Fire Than Ice, But Don't Sound The Alarm", dated January 24, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Fed's Pre-Emptive Hike Will Hit Gold, Not Oil", dated March 9, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Feature Dear Client, Instead of our usual weekly report, we are sending you a report written by my colleague Matt Gertken, Associate Editor of BCA's Geopolitical Strategy service. In this piece, Matt argues that there is more than a 50% chance that the Border Adjustment Tax (BAT) will pass and Donald Trump's support will be the decisive factor. There are also high chances that trade retaliation would unfold likely detracting from the trade benefits of the proposed tax. In addition, given the likelihood of the BAT implementation, we are highlighting U.S. equity sector investment implications and ranking industries on three variables: taxes, margins and foreign sales exposure. We trust that you will find this Special Report useful and insightful. Best Regards, Anastasios Avgeriou There are good chances that the border adjustment tax (BAT) will pass as the House GOP has a governing trifecta. Trump has not yet endorsed the BAT, which will be critical, and carve-outs will likely be made to reduce the impact on low- and middle-income households. Still, we can draw some sectoral implications from the known GOP proposal. While a lot of ink has been spilled on potential direct winners and losers from the BAT and what is priced in by the markets, we focus our sector analysis on the sweet spot of tax rates, profit margins and international sales exposure. Chart 1 shows a Venn diagram of these three factors, with the overlap representing the optimally positioned sector. We deem that industries with a combination of high tax rates, high profit margins and low or no foreign sales exposure will be prime beneficiaries of the BAT. Chart 1Sweet Spot At first glance this backdrop may appear counterintuitive, especially the international revenue exposure angle, given the preferential treatment that exporters would receive with the BAT implementation. Almost immediately upon Trump's election and news of BAT the market bought companies/industries with negative net import share and discarded sectors with high net import content (Chart 2A & Chart 2B). Chart 2AInvestors Have Been... Chart 2B... Preferring Exporters To Importers Watch The U.S. Dollar And Emerging Markets Nevertheless, what is worrisome is the market's neglect of a U.S. dollar knee jerk appreciation as our sister Global Investment Strategy service outlined in the January 20th Special Report titled: "U.S. Border Adjustment Tax: A Potential Monster Issue For 2017." Chart 3U.S. Dollar And EM Risks It is difficult to fathom why a greenback surge will not be disruptive especially for the emerging markets (EM) and U.S. cyclical sector proxies trading in tandem with EM. According to the Bank for International Settlements, U.S. "Dollar credit to non-banks outside the United States reached $9.8 trillion at end-Q2 2015. Borrowers resident in EM accounted for $3.3 trillion of this amount, or over a third."1 The EM still have a large stock of U.S. dollar denominated debt to service, both interest payment and principal repayments/refinancing (Chart 3). While the FX straight jacket is not in place as in the 1990s, at least a mini EM crisis seems inevitable if the trade-weighted U.S. dollar moved up 10% from current levels as is likely owing to a BAT. Keep in mind that recent U.S. dollar moves of a similar magnitude (as in 2015), (Chart 3) have been rather unsettling, causing tremors in the EM that reverberated across the globe. Tack on uncertainty surrounding the Chinese renminbi that would only aggravate the U.S. dollar's rise and factors are falling into place for another troublesome EM episode. As a result, global final demand may come under pressure and U.S. exporters may initially suffer more than they benefit from the export subsidy they would enjoy. Another U.S. dollar induced global manufacturing recession would bode ill for U.S. cyclicals exposed to the EM. A Few Words On Manufacturing While the intent of bringing back manufacturing jobs to U.S. shores is appealing, practically it will prove very difficult. Developed economies are services oriented economies with manufacturing dwindling toward 10-15% of GDP (Chart 4). Moreover, the U.S. is a closed economy dominated by PCE comprising 70% of the overall economy. Thus, shifting the U.S. more toward a net export driven economy is also likely to prove challenging. Chart 4Tough To Shift The U.S. Economy's Profile Chart 5Will Capex Revive? Finally, manufacturing is tightly linked to capital expenditures and a recent post by the Atlanta Fed2 tried to shed some light as to why investment in the U.S. has lagged especially versus previous recoveries when the economy was near full employment (Chart 5 & Table 1). Interestingly, the biggest hindrance against boosting capex has been lack of skilled labor, and not the lack of financing or poor sales outlook or low return on investment for example. In fact the larger the firm (in terms of sales) the more pronounced the inaccessibility to qualified staff as a factor constraining investment. While tax reform aims to boost capex by accelerated depreciation schedule in the first year, it does not address the small business complaint of inability to find skilled labor. Table 1Impact Of "High Pressure" Labor Conditions On Capital Spending BAT Winners Therefore, we would want to bulletproof the portfolio by identifying industries that would do well owing to the BAT and resulting U.S. dollar appreciation. U.S. domestic services oriented firms fit the bill, and there is room for sizable outperformance if our thesis proves accurate. Chart 6 highlights 47 sub-industries from 9 GICS1 sectors (energy & materials are excluded) that we singled out that satisfy the domestic and services oriented prerequisite (See Appendix on page 8 for more details). U.S. manufacturers with little or no foreign sales exposure would also stand to get an earnings boost, especially relative to the broad market and to their internationally geared peers. Homebuilders, select construction materials and building products companies would be included in this category. Energy is a special case (please refer to Box 1 on page 6). Meanwhile, high profit margin businesses with sticky pricing power and high effective tax rates also come out on top of our analysis as these outfits would benefit more from overall tax reform. Table 2 shows the top 11 sectors in the S&P 500 on the three metrics. Chart 6Buy Domestic Services Table 2 Health care, utilities, and telecom services score well on all three counts. Real estate and financials also get high marks. In contrast, technology, materials, energy and industrials get poor grades on most of our metrics, with the balance of sectors falling somewhere in between. Box 1 Energy Is A Special Case Chart 7U.S. Remains A Net Importer Of Oil The energy sector is a special case. The U.S. still imports north of 7 MMb/d of oil and represents about 10% of the trade deficit (Chart 7). Were energy to be included in the BAT legislation, WTI crude oil prices would likely shoot higher by ~$10/b as U.S. oil consumers (refiners) would seek to avoid the $10+ BAT on imported light sweet crude by buying domestic oil, and U.S. oil producers would try to benefit from the export subsidy. U.S. exploration & production companies and energy servicers would be clear winners, while refiners would be losers. Nevertheless, the dollar jump would be an offsetting factor. Given the outsized impact on the consumer (gasoline price inflation sapping discretionary spending power) and the close political and energy-security relationship with Canada (60% of net U.S. petroleum imports), there is a high likelihood that energy would be exempt from the BAT. In fact, small and medium businesses (SME) would disproportionately benefit from lower corporate taxes especially compared with S&P 500 constituents that are privileged with a lower effective tax rate. Large capitalization multinationals with sizable foreign sourced sales/profits already use the "double Irish" or "Dutch sandwich" to bring down their tax bills. Keep in mind that SMEs also tend to have low or no foreign sales exposure insulating them from the looming U.S. dollar appreciation. Thus, small caps have a considerable advantage versus their large cap brethren upon implementation of the BAT and general tax reform, and we continue to recommend a small cap tilt in our size bias. For reference purposes Table 3 highlights small cap GICS1 sectors on an operating profit margin and effective tax rate basis. What follows in the appendix is a list of sub-industries per GICS1 sector we have identified that would likely stand to benefit from the BAT implementation assuming a U.S. dollar appreciation. Table 3 Bottom Line: We are comfortable maintaining a defensive versus cyclically exposed portfolio, that would shield us from the BAT implementation, especially if a greenback induced correction materialized in the coming months. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President Global Alpha Sector Strategy & U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 "Dollar credit to emerging market economies" by Robert Neil McCauley, Patrick McGuire and Vladyslav Sushko, 6 December 2015, Bank for International Settlements, Quarterly Review, December 2015, available at: http://www.bis.org/publ/qtrpdf/r_qt1512e.htm 2 http://macroblog.typepad.com/macroblog/2017/02/can-tight-labor-markets-inhibit-investment-growth.html Appendix Consumer Discretionary Advertising Broadcasting Cable & Satellite Casinos & Gaming Movies & Entertainment Publishing & Printing Restaurants Specialized Consumer Services Consumer Staples Food Distributors Financials Asset Management & Custody Banks Consumer Finance Diversified Banks Insurance Brokers Investment Banking & Brokerage Life & Health Insurance Multi-line Insurance Multi-Sector Holdings Property & Casualty Insurance Regional Banks Health Care Health Care Distributors & Services Health Care Facilities Life Sciences Tools & Services Managed Health Care Industrials Diversified Support Services Environmental & Facilities Services Human Resource & Employment Services Railroads Research & Consulting Services Trading Companies & Distributors Trucking Information Technology Data Processing & Outsourced Services Electronic Manufacturing Services Internet Software & Services IT Consulting & Other Services Real Estate Health Care REITs Hotel & Resort REITs Industrial REITs Office REITs Real Estate Services Residential REITs Retail REITs Specialized REITs Telecommunication Services Alternative Carriers Integrated Telecommunication Services Utilities Electric Utilities Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders Multi-Utilities Highlights The U.S. Border Adjustment Tax is likely to pass; Yet the political pieces are not in place; Trump himself will be the decisive factor; Trade retaliation would detract from trade benefits of the tax; Stay long volatility; small caps versus large caps; and long USD versus EM currencies. Remain short China-exposed S&P 500 stocks, and German exporters versus consumer services. Feature Donald Trump is a trend-setter. After winning the U.S. election on a protectionist platform that played well to voters in the Midwest, Trump has established an anti-globalization brand of politics. His success has revealed the preferences of the American "median voter."3 Other U.S. politicians are taking notice. The "Border Adjustment Tax" (BAT) is part of this new political trend, though it did not originate with Trump. The House GOP leadership has presented it as a response to economic dislocation in the American heartland, which propelled Trump to the White House. Is it protectionism? Yes, and in this analysis we explain why. The rest of the world is highly unlikely to treat the BAT as a standard Value Added Tax (VAT). It will therefore spark trade retaliation unless Congress addresses outstanding issues. So far President Trump is on the fence, and his support is necessary for passage. We think he will ultimately go with the proposal. The prospect of turning the tables on the U.S.'s trade partners, while spurring domestic investment and capital spending, speaks to his core promises to his voters. Trump's support for the plan should be read as a headwind for markets in the short term due to the uncertainties of implementation and trade disputes. If he should oppose the plan, it would be bullish for U.S. stocks in the short term, since it would mean cutting the corporate tax without radically altering the global status quo. It would signal that he is more interested in economic growth and corporate profits than changing the world or balancing the U.S. budget. Why Reform The Corporate Tax System? American policymakers have long struggled with the country's corporate income tax system. Leaving aside party politics, there are three main complaints:4 Corporate tax revenues are weak: Revenues have disappointed as companies have shifted profits to tax havens and used deductions and loopholes to avoid paying the 35% statutory rate. This erosion of the tax base has contributed to budget deficits as well as public dissatisfaction with governing institutions (Chart 1). U.S. companies have lost competitiveness: American businesses are overtaxed relative to their developed-market peers, taking a toll on competitiveness both at home and abroad (Chart 2). The middle class is losing out: U.S. workers are not as well compensated as their developed-market peers and have lost their share of American wealth in recent decades (Chart 3). The corporate tax contributes to this because companies foist the tax onto workers. The Republican Party examined fundamental tax reform in 2005 but could not make progress on it - instead it settled for the Bush tax cuts, which focused primarily on cutting household tax rates.5 Now that the Republicans have control of all three branches of government again, its leaders are attempting broad tax reform anew. The GOP is primarily concerned with corporate competitiveness, but they also need to appease the middle class - the source of the populist angst that supported both Obama and Trump (the former being the Republicans' arch-nemesis, the latter a strange bedfellow). The GOP also wants to raise some revenue to make their desired tax rate cuts "revenue neutral," i.e. somewhat fiscally defensible, at least enough to pass the bill. Enter Paul Ryan, Speaker of the House, and Kevin Brady, Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, and their "Better Way" tax plan, which proposes a sweeping overhaul of the U.S. tax system.6 The core idea is to pay for tax cuts by transforming the current corporate income tax system into a "destination-based cash-flow tax" (DBCFT) with border adjustability ("border adjustment tax" or BAT for short).7 We will get to the definition of that, but first, what is the ultimate point? The plan would purportedly drive corporate investment and economic growth by allowing companies to write off the expense of new investments immediately, the first year, rather than gradually through depreciation. (Depreciation schedules often mean that the tax write-off barely covers the cost of investment, thereby causing companies to err on the side of risk-aversion.) The plan would also remove the preferential treatment of corporate debt over equity, which is built into the current tax code through the deduction of interest - this change would discourage corporate indebtedness and encourage equity financing. Finally the plan would not allow U.S. companies to write off the expense of imported goods, as currently, and as such is essentially a tax on the U.S. trade deficit. Roughly, it could yield about $108 billion in revenue (assuming a 20% rate on the $538 billion deficit). The BAT is the chief tax uncertainty today for investors. That is because there are few constraints on the GOP passing some kind of corporate tax cut this year. Presidents Reagan, Clinton, and Bush all managed to pass major tax legislation in their first years, and Trump has stronger majorities than Bush did (Table 1). The GOP has been planning tax reform throughout the Obama administration, staffers and think tanks have "off the shelf" plans, and lawmakers know that time is short. There is every reason to think it will happen fast. In recent decades, the average length of time from the introduction of a major tax reform to the president's signature has been five months. Table 1Major Tax Legislation And The Congressional Balance Of Power In other words, Trump and his party would need to have a train wreck to fail to pass something this year. That is not beyond belief! But the overriding question is whether the tax reform will be focused on cutting rates, or transforming the system. Currently, the market seems to think the BAT will go through. A basket of stocks based on potential winners and losers suggests that investors believe it will pass (Chart 4). Meanwhile, however, the share prices of high-tax companies (who should benefit the most if taxes are cut) have fallen back from the pop after Trump's election. This could signal the opposite expectation, or that that investors recognize that many high-tax sectors stand to lose from a tax on imports (Chart 5). There is considerable uncertainty in this measure. We think the Trump administration will ultimately accept the House GOP's BAT proposal. But the road between here and there will be tortuous, as past attempts at tax reform show. We expect dollar volatility, which is relatively restrained at present, to rise as the BAT debate intensifies, given that the proposal is bullish for the greenback (Chart 6). Bottom Line: The Trump administration and GOP would have to be unusually incompetent to fail to achieve tax reform this year. The question is whether it will be mere rate cuts or a radical reform to the tax system as a whole. This is critical to the U.S. and global economy - especially given that the passage of a BAT will intensify trade disputes with the U.S. Why Is A Border Adjustment Tax "Protectionist"? Diagram 1 provides a simple illustration of how the current U.S. corporate tax works compared to the proposed BAT. The current system is a "worldwide" corporate income tax. The U.S. government taxes American companies based on their global profits (global revenues minus global costs). No matter where they incur costs, they can write them off, and no matter where they make profits, they must pay tax on them, at least in principle. Diagram 1Explaining The Border-Adjusted Destination-Based Cash-Flow Tax The new system, by contrast, would be a "destination-based" tax in which the government taxes companies only on domestic profits (domestic revenues minus domestic costs). This means that revenues earned abroad from exports or sales in foreign jurisdictions would be free from tax. However - and here is the tricky part - it also means that costs incurred abroad, imports or purchases in foreign jurisdictions, would be ignored by the tax authority, i.e. they could not be written off like domestic costs. As the "rebate" in the Diagram shows, the BAT is effectively a tax on imports and subsidy to exports. This is not as egregiously protectionist as it sounds at first, because it is very similar to a Value-Added Tax (VAT), which is the dominant tax system across the world. The U.S. is a massive outlier for not having a VAT. But notice that the amount of the rebate to the exporting company in the diagram is higher (at $40) than the amount of tax that would be due if it paid a tax on its foreign profits, since ($200 - $100) x 20% = $20. The WTO may rule against the law if it believes major U.S. exporters will pay net negative taxes as a result of the rebate. Moreover, the BAT has certain differences from a VAT that ensure that the world will see it as a protectionist affront. The BAT is a combination of a VAT, which is a tax on consumption, and an income tax, which is the current system. However, the BAT would allow companies to write off wages and salaries as costs, just like under the current system. Under VAT systems, this is not possible because wages are not consumption and therefore not deductible.8 If the GOP proposal becomes law without addressing this difference - that is, without denying corporates the wage deduction, or taxing them in some other way to compensate - it will likely prompt global trade retaliation. While the World Trade Organization may deem the BAT legal by interpreting it as a VAT, it will not do so if U.S. companies cannot show that they are not getting a leg up on their international rivals by retaining the wage deduction from the former corporate income tax code. Wages are obviously a very large part of a company's expenses. They make up about 68-72% of U.S. companies' costs (Chart 7), and have grown at about 2-4% each year for the export-oriented sector (Chart 8). If U.S. companies can write off the wage expense in their exported goods, then foreign countries will have to adjust, possibly by imposing duties to counteract the share of taxes avoided by that write-off. Bottom Line: The BAT is a hybrid of tax systems. It is likely that the WTO and U.S. trading partners will object to it as an import tax and export subsidy, particularly because of the wage deduction. The House GOP could adjust the proposal ahead of time or afterwards to avoid this conflict, but that has not happened yet. In addition, corporate lobbying against removing wage deductions would be severe. Will A BAT Get Passed Into Law? Currently, the House GOP leaders face a rising wave of criticism about the BAT proposal and have begun to signal greater flexibility in drafting the law so as to win over various stakeholders. A salient point to remember about U.S. tax legislation is that it is very rare in recent decades for a ruling party to bungle it. Only eight pieces of tax legislation have been vetoed by presidents since 1975, only two of which were serious bills, and in both cases the president vetoed the legislation pushed by an opposition-controlled Congress (Table 2). By the time a serious tax bill makes it to the president's desk, a veto is unlikely, especially if the president and Congress belong to the same party. Table 2Major Tax Legislation Is Set Up For Success Even more salient, only 23 pieces of tax legislation since 1975 have been struck down in either of the two houses. Of these, seven were attempts to amend the constitution (not likely to pass), nine were attempts to amend the internal revenue code for highly specific things (spirits, cigars, the holding of conventions on cruise ships). Only seven were major bills, and in only one of these cases did the Senate strike down the bill, which was a case of a Republican Senate defending a Republican president from an opposition Congress. In only one case did the ruling party in the House kill a serious tax bill proposed by one of its own members, but it is not comparable to the tax reform in question today.9 What this means is that the BAT is highly likely to be passed into law if the House remains loyal to its leader Paul Ryan, and to the Ways and Means Committee chair Kevin Brady, the two authors of the BAT proposal. However, Trump could derail Ryan's best laid plans. Trump seemed to throw a wrench in the gears when he cast doubt on border adjustment tax, saying that it was too complicated. However, the Trump administration has recently made comments favorable to the BAT. Peter Navarro, chief of the new National Trade Council, highlighted it as a way to bring manufacturing supply chains back into the U.S. (note the protectionist angle of the comment). Meanwhile Sean Spicer, Trump's spokesman, said it would be a good way to make Mexico pay for the infamous wall to be constructed on the border (again, note that the angle is protectionist and populist, not about balancing the budget).10 In each case, the Trump team has gone to pains to emphasize that the BAT is only one option among many. Yet the fact that they have repeatedly brought it up as a solution to their own populist promises is suggestive. We think Trump will ultimately hew to the Republican Party leadership on tax reform.11 Why? Time's a'wastin': Party control of all three branches is a fleeting boon and 2018 mid-term campaigning would make the BAT harder to pass because it could hike the prices of consumer goods. Republicans have a plan ready to go, the House ultimately controls the purse, and Trump wants to move fast on tax cuts and boosting the economy. Furthermore, Republicans remember how short-lived the Democrats' control of Congress was after 2008. Trump wants to be transformative, not merely transactional:12 Trump was elected in a populist revolution and has vowed to improve American manufacturing and trade. His protectionist and mercantilist vision is fundamentally aligned with the chief aims of the BAT: remove the "tax" on corporate investment to improve U.S. capital stock and productivity, and remove incentives to locate, operate, and stash profits offshore. There is at least some positive correlation between higher VAT rates and positive trade balances, and the law is simultaneously supposed to boost productivity (Charts 9 and 10). Trump needs domestic and international "legitimacy": His protectionist platform will stand on firmer ground if he adopts policy that is at least debatable at the WTO, as opposed to imposing tariffs willy-nilly through bare executive power, which is eventually vulnerable to congressional and judicial oversight. Domestic courts have already shown an inclination to halt Trump's controversial executive orders.13 By contrast, they would almost certainly defer to Congress even on the most radical tax reforms. Trump needs a tradeoff for infrastructure spending: Unpopular presidents cannot set the legislative agenda.14 But Trump may be able to trade GOP-style corporate tax reform - which offsets tax cuts with new revenue provisions, such as the BAT - in return for infrastructure spending, which the GOP is reluctant to embrace. Trump is willing to lead a crusade against the WTO: This may be a necessary prerequisite for the passage of this bill, and Trump is heaven-sent to play the role. He would be to the WTO what George W. Bush was to the United Nations. It would be disastrous for the U.S.-built international liberal order, but it would give Trump the ability to pursue protectionism while rallying the public around the flag against America's "globalist" enemies. (Sovereignty over taxation is a cause that is hard to beat in the U.S.)15 BAT allows Trump to save face on the "Wall" with Mexico: As the White House spokesman hinted, Trump may use creative accounting to satisfy his promise that Mexico would pay for the wall. Moreover, if Trump comes out in support of the BAT, it will likely get passed: Precedent: President John F. Kennedy's and Jimmy Carter's efforts at tax reform failed because Congress was not supportive, which is not a problem today; whereas Ronald Reagan's personal support for the 1986 tax reform - despite his reservations about the attempt to transform the system and broaden the base - proved critical in helping the bill move through Congress.16 Political science: The political context is a better determinant of presidential success than individual talents, and rising political polarization in the U.S. has created an environment in which "majority presidents," those whose party has a majority in Congress, are even more likely to be successful, while "minority presidents" are more likely to fail on key initiatives. The relevant factors of political context are the party's grip on Congress, the extent of polarization, and, somewhat less significantly, whether the president is in his "honeymoon period" and enjoys public support.17 Of these factors, Trump is only weak on public support, though not among conservatives (Chart 11), who could vote their representatives out of office if they defy Trump on tax reform. The Senate could still cause a serious hang-up. But if Trump and the House GOP stand behind the legislation then Senate Republicans would have to be suicidal to oppose it.18 What about the corporate lobbies that oppose the BAT? Certainly it is highly controversial at home. The tax could hurt import-heavy U.S. businesses and punish citizens with a high propensity to consume - i.e. the poor and elderly, both constituents that make up an important part of Trump's base. But that suggests that there will be carve-outs or phased implementation for key imports like food, fuel, and clothing. Such compromises will be messy, and will mitigate any dollar appreciation and reduce the tax revenues to be gained, but would probably enable the bill to get passed. The opposition of retailers like Wal-Mart and Target is overrated in terms of their power as a lobby. Importers form a slightly larger lobby than exporters, which makes sense given that the U.S. is a net importing economy, but neither of them comprises a large share of total lobbying (Chart 12). The sectors that suffer the most from the import tax also tend to pay higher effective tax rates and thus stand to benefit from the rate cuts (Chart 13). The opposition of the Koch brothers is also overrated, given their unhelpful attitude toward Trump's candidacy for president! Bottom Line: The BAT is a radical plan to spur corporate investment and production in the United States, and that goal matches Trump's vision. Trump will be hard pressed to find a more effective, structural way of achieving his goals. And the two-year window with assured GOP control of government will close faster than one might think. Risks To The View A major risk to the BAT is that Trump will fear the repercussions on his political base of higher consumer prices, as hinted above. Consumer pain is a necessary consequence of his mercantilist vision of rebalancing the U.S. from consumption to investment and bringing down the U.S. trade deficit, so Trump will have to decide whether he means what he says. Moreover, if the dollar rises sharply as a result of the BAT, as expected, it would cause pain for the economy and S&P 500 companies, which source 44% of earnings outside the U.S. According to BCA's Global Investment Strategy, the impact of a much stronger dollar on U.S. assets denominated in foreign currencies could amount to a loss worth of 13% of U.S. GDP! (Not to mention Trump's personal wealth from overseas.) Given the huge uncertainties of a totally new tax system, and potential disruption to the economy, it would be perfectly understandable if Trump refused to hitch his fate as president to this wonkish grand experiment. Further, it is not as if there is no alternative to the BAT. Since Republicans will be humiliated if they fail to deliver on tax cuts, Trump's opposition to the BAT would force the House GOP to go back to good ol' fashioned tax cuts without significant revenue raising measures, and specific add-ons to deal with concerns like corporate inversions. Trump would still likely get the repatriation of overseas earnings, a political win, and the economy would experience an increase in investment from tax rate cuts without the uncertain consequences of deeper change. Ronald Reagan's administration offers a precedent for this sequencing, since he began his term with simple tax cuts in 1981 and only later attempted the dramatic tax overhaul of 1986. There is also a risk that the business lobby against the BAT proves stronger than expected and gains traction in the media and popular opinion as a result of the feared consequences on consumer prices. Tax reform is never going to be easy and will always hang in a precarious balance. These are serious risks, but we think Trump and the GOP will move now rather than make any assumptions about their ability to win subsequent elections and enact massive tax reform. The fact that the GOP controls all three branches of government, the BAT plan is well in the making, and Trump is looking to reshape the American economy in ways that align with the BAT, make the odds of passage higher than 50%. Unfortunately, this also means the world should brace for a sharp spike in trade disputes. Bottom Line: There are plenty of reasons to think the BAT plan could collapse of its own weight. The path of least resistance is certainly not the BAT. But we think the preponderance of power in GOP hands in Washington favors radical change, even if it ends up being a policy mistake. Investment Implications: Trade War The WTO is supposed to presume innocence with a country's laws, and it might also approve the BAT on the basis that proponents argue: the U.S. imposing the BAT is not much different from a VAT country increasing its VAT rate while simultaneously slashing the payroll tax (as France has done under President Hollande's administration). This view is misguided. The WTO will rule on the statute and international trade treaties, not the special pleading of the advocates. It may or may not accept that the BAT is equivalent to a VAT; it may or may not object to the wage deduction as a holdover from the "direct" tax on income. The GOP has not yet introduced a draft law, but given the express intention - in the Ryan plan, not even to mention Trump - to put "America first" with a "pro-America approach for global competitiveness," it seems likely that a clash of interests is in the making. In other words, American proponents of the tax are not even hiding its overt protectionist intentions. The WTO will probably discover a subsidy for U.S. exporters and a violation of the principle of trade neutrality with respect to imports. WTO litigation will take years. When the European Union sued the U.S. over its use of Foreign Sales Corporations, a comparable dispute, the proceedings began in 1999 and the WTO ruled against the U.S. in 2002. Ultimately, the U.S. Congress amended the law to avoid retaliation in 2004.19 Trump and the GOP would be less likely to amend their pet project in the current environment, especially if the litigant is the EU at the WTO! Trump, as mentioned, would be inclined to take the fight to the WTO - he has even threatened to withdraw the United States from it. His support group feeds on conflict with supra-national bodies and he may see foreign retaliation as a convenient reason to impose tariffs of his own. The trade environment would deteriorate in the meantime. In 2002, it was assumed that the U.S. and EU could work out an agreement without punitive measures, but that assumption does not hold today. And it would not only be the EU leveling complaints. In short, the U.S. would face foreign retaliation, during the proceedings and likely as a consequence of the WTO ruling. The Trump administration would attempt to mitigate the blowback through a series of bilateral deals, and perhaps the U.S. law would ultimately be modified, but the entire saga would have a negative impact on global trade. Financial markets had many factors to contend with during this period (like the dot-com bubble), and they will similarly respond to large currents in the coming years aside from any BAT. Nevertheless, the tax would reinforce our themes of global multipolarity, mercantilism, and protectionism - and thus reinforce several of our existing trades: We continue to favor small caps over large caps. Small caps are insulated from global trade, will benefit most from the cut in tax rates, and will suffer least from any appreciation of the dollar. Long volatility - Long VIX 20-25 call spread for expiration in March; Long USD versus short EM currencies; Short China-exposed S&P stocks; Short German exporters versus long consumer services. If Trump comes out in opposition to the BAT, he would send a bullish signal for markets in the short term. It would mean, first, that the U.S. will have corporate tax cuts without the broader uncertainties of the BAT; and second, that Trump is actually a pragmatist who eschews radical change if he thinks it will cause too much trouble for U.S. consumers or economic growth. However, it would not necessarily mean that the U.S. would avoid a trade conflict, given Trump's executive powers.20 Of course, the BAT's failure - which is not our baseline - would also be worse for the deficit and debt, as the GOP tax cuts would have no offsetting revenue increases but would rely purely on creative accounting, "dynamic scoring," to appear fiscally acceptable. This legislation would also likely fail to simplify the tax code as much as the BAT would. Matt Gertken, Associate Editor mattg@bcaresearch.com 3 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Introducing: The Median Voter Theory," dated June 8, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see Alan J. Auerbach, "A Modern Corporate Tax," Center for American Progress, dated December 2010, available at www.americanprogress.org. 5 Please see President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform, "Final Report," dated November 1, 2005, available at govinfo.library.unt.edu. 6 Please see "A Better Way: Our Vision For A Confident America: Tax," dated June 24, 2016, available at abetterway.speaker.gov. 7 Our colleagues at BCA's Global Investment Strategy have recently provided a very helpful Q&A on the border adjustment tax (BAT), and we would refer readers to that report for a detailed discussion. Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "U.S. Border Adjustment Tax: A Potential Monster Issue For 2017," dated January 20, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see Reuven S. Avi-Yonah, "Back To 1913?: The Ryan Blueprint And Its Problems," Tax Notes 153: 11 (2016), 1367-47, reprinted by University of Michigan, available at www.repository.law.umich.edu. 9 Amo Houghton, a liberal-leaning Republican from New York, proposed the Taxpayer Protection and IRS Accountability Act of 2002, a bill to streamline IRS administration. It failed in the Republican Congress under President Bush. 10 Please see Shawn Donnan, "Trump's top trade adviser accuses Germany of currency exploitation," Financial Times, January 31, 2017, available at www.ft.com, and Bob Bryan, "Trump press secretary says the administration is considering a 20% border tax on Mexican imports to help pay for the wall," Business Insider, January 26, 2017, available at www.businessinsider.com. National Economic Council Director Gary Cohn has also indicated that the BAT is an option but not yet decided upon, see CNBC, "Squawk on the Street," February 3, 2017, available at www.cnbc.com. 11 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Constraints And Preferences Of The Trump Presidency," dated November 30, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 12 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, "Transformative Vs. Transactional Leadership," dated September 14, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 13 The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has already issued a temporary injunction against President Trump's executive orders on immigration. Please see "State of Washington & State of Minnesota v. Trump," available at www.ca9.uscourts.gov. 14 Please see John Lovett, Shaun Bevan, and Frank R. Baumgartner, "Popular Presidents Can Affect Congressional Attention, For A Little While," Policy Studies Journal 43: 1 (2015), 22-44, available at www.unc.edu. 15 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Reports, "The Trump Doctrine," dated February 1, 2017, and "The 'What Can You Do For Me' World?" dated January 25, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 16 Joseph A. Pechman, "Tax Reform: Theory and Practice," The Journal of Economic Perspectives 1:1 (1987), pp. 11-28 (15). 17 Jeffrey E. Cohen, Jon R. Bond, and Richard Fleisher, "Placing Presidential-Congressional Relations In Context: A Comparison Of Barack Obama And His Predecessors," Polity 45:1 (2013), 105-126. 18 The Senate Financial Services Committee's support will be critical. Chairman Orrin Hatch has criticized but not yet declared against the BAT. Even if he does, it would not necessarily kill the deal. One of his predecessors, Senator Bob Packwood, initially opposed the Tax Reform Act in 1986 but was ultimately persuaded to support it. If Hatch and the Finance Committee support the initiative, it will pass the Senate. First, the tax overhaul can be accomplished by "reconciliation," a congressional trick that will enable the GOP to avoid a Senate filibuster and pass the tax reform with a simple majority. Second, the Republicans today have almost exactly the proportion of seats in the Senate as the average in previous examples of successful tax reform (see Table 1). So there would have to be a higher share of Republican defectors than in the past to overturn the bill. This is possible but unlikely if Trump and the House GOP are behind the bill. 19 Please see Congressional Research Service, "A History of the Extraterritorial Income (ETI) and Foreign Sales Corporation (FSC) Export Tax-Benefit Controversy," dated September 22, 2006, available at digital.library.unt.edu. 20 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Trump, Day One: Let The Trade War Begin," dated January 18, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights U.S. equity valuations are historically high, based on a variety of metrics. However, relative to competing assets and global equity peers, U.S. stock valuations are not an extreme. For U.S.-based investors, our upbeat view on the U.S. dollar implies that efforts to diversify globally may come up short. The Fed will allow its Agency bond and MBS portfolios to run off starting in 2018, but it is much more uncertain whether it will ever cease the reinvestment of its Treasury holdings. Feature The S&P 500 remains near record highs, despite a modest setback last week. And the only period when stocks were more expensive was during the halcyon days of the dot-com bubble. Have stock prices outpaced fundamentals, and if so, how much of a risk does this present over the cyclical horizon? And should U.S. investors look further afield than domestic markets for a relative deal? On a historical basis, it is hard to argue that U.S. equities are anything other than expensive. A preferred valuation metric is the cyclically adjusted P/E ratio (CAPE), see Chart 1. Based on this metric, stocks are expensive, trading at their highest valuation outside of the dot-com bubble. However, valuing equities is a complicated issue, and the CAPE is not without its weaknesses. Examining a broad array of valuation indicators provides a slightly different message; U.S. stocks are expensive in absolute terms based on historic relationships, but are less stretched relative to both other asset classes and other equity indexes. Expensive, But... Our BCA valuation index captures the message from a broad range of metrics in one gauge (Chart 2). The valuation index was constructed using 11 different measures in an attempt to approach valuation from multiple angles. Decomposing the index into its three major components - earnings, balance sheet metrics and yield - show that stocks prices are well into expensive territory in absolute terms based on traditional fundamentals: Chart 1(Part I) U.S. Stocks Are Expensive ##br##Relative To History Chart 2(Part II) U.S. Stocks Are Expensive Relative ##br##To History Earnings Group: There are five inputs to the earnings component of our valuation indicator, including trailing price/earnings ratio, price/sales, market cap as a share of GDP. The second panel of Chart 2 shows that the aggregate of the Earnings Group indicators sits at historical highs, excluding the tech bubble. Balance Sheet Metrics: This component includes measure of the market value of equities relative to corporate net worth, both using market value (replacement cost) and historical cost. This measure of valuation has the same profile as the Earnings Group. Yield Group: The yield group compares the price of stocks to interest rates, nominal and real, government and corporate. Of the three groups, it is this Yield Group that gives a less expensive reading on equities (bottom panel of Chart 2). Overall, the Valuation Indicator is already well into "overvalued territory". There is only one episode since 1970 when the indicator has reached a significantly more extreme reading (the dot-com bubble). ...Not So On A Relative Basis Stocks are expensive on an absolute basis, but are far more appealing in relative terms. The current earnings yield on stocks is well above the real corporate bond yield and corporate bond spreads are historically very tight, despite the erosion in balance sheet health (our corporate health monitor has been deteriorating for several months). And compared to housing returns, stocks look downright cheap (Chart 3). Within the U.S., we expect stocks to be the biggest beneficiary of investment flows in the next year or two, in part because equity market value is the most appealing. Meanwhile, relative to global peers, U.S. equities valuations have been climbing since 2009 (Charts 4 and Chart 5). This eight-year rise in valuations now leaves U.S. P/Es at the higher end of the historical range relative to G10 ex-U.S. equities. U.S. stocks are especially expensive relative to Japanese equities. In any case, standard valuation measures have always been lower in Japan, with the exception of price-forward earnings. As our Bank Credit Analyst monthly publication points out, Japanese companies generally have a much higher interest coverage ratio compared to Corporate America. Nonetheless, they tend to come up short in terms of profitability. Operating margins in the U.S. have typically been double that of Japan. Japan's return-on-equity (RoE) has been dismal because of low levels of corporate leverage and loads of low-yielding cash sitting on balance sheets. Nonetheless, the valuation gap is at an extreme, with Japanese equities appearing to be a screaming value relative to U.S. stocks. Chart 3Stocks Look Less Expensive Relative To Competing Assets Chart 4(Part I) U.S. Outperformance Phase Can Continue Chart 5(Part II) U.S. Outperformance Phase Can Continue A similar, albeit less extreme, valuation case can be made for European stocks relative to the U.S. Eurozone stocks have also almost always traded at a discount to U.S. equities and this continues to be the case. Stocks have gotten even more expensive, more quickly, in the U.S. over the past year. But relative valuations are not near historic extremes. Tack on the fact that BCA's view is that the dollar will continue to appreciate over the next six-twelve months. For U.S.-based investors, the coming rise in the domestic currency implies that efforts to diversify globally may come up short, despite better value in major foreign markets. It is important to note that BCA does not view valuation measures as market timing tools. They are only useful at extremes. The bottom line is that U.S. equities are certainly far from cheap, but are not so expensive in relative terms to warrant an allocation change on this basis. We believe that equity returns should outperform Treasuries, cash and high-quality corporate bonds over the next 1-2 years as the bond bear market plays out. The Fed's Balance Sheet: What's Next? Recently we have received a number of client questions about the Fed's balance sheet and how it will evolve during the next few years. In response, we reprint below work from our U.S. Bond Strategy team, who recently addressed the topic in detail. The Fed's Stated Plan The most up-to-date guidance we have received about the Fed's balance sheet plans comes from Janet Yellen's recent Congressional testimony: "The FOMC has annunciated that its longer run goal is to shrink our balance sheet to levels consistent with the efficient and effective implementation of monetary policy. And while our system evolves and I can't put a number on that, I would anticipate a balance sheet that's substantially smaller than at the current time. In addition, we would like our balance sheet to again be primarily Treasury securities, whereas as you pointed out, we have substantial holdings of mortgage-backed securities." From this, and similar statements from other Fed officials, we conclude that the Fed will allow its balance sheet to shrink once the fed funds rate is somewhere in the range of 1% to 1.5%. Surveys also show that the median primary dealer expects the Fed will change its balance sheet policy when the target fed funds rate is 1.38%. As such, and under reasonable assumptions for the pace of rate hikes, we think it is very likely that the Fed will start to let its balance sheet shrink sometime in 2018. MBS First, Treasuries Maybe Later Yellen's statement to Congress also makes clear that the Fed would be more comfortable with a balance sheet that consists entirely of Treasury securities. For this reason, the central bank will start by simply ceasing the reinvestment of its Agency bond and MBS portfolios. At least initially, the Fed will continue to reinvest the proceeds from its maturing Treasury portfolio. Yellen also left open the possibility that reinvestment could be "tapered" rather than just halted altogether. While this is possible, and in fact 70% of primary dealers think that reinvestments will be phased out over time while only 14% think they will be ceased all at once, it seems to us like a needless complication. We expect that reinvestments of Agency bonds and MBS will end all at once sometime in 2018. As for the Fed's holdings of Treasury securities, it is much less clear whether the Fed will allow these balances to run down. In a Report in 2014,1 we describe in detail the differences between the Fed's pre-crisis mode of operation, when bank reserves were scarce, and the Fed's current mode of operation with large bank reserve balances. As of now, the Fed has stated that it intends to eventually drain bank reserves from the system and return to its pre-crisis mode of operation, but there are several possible advantages to running a system with an outsized Fed balance sheet and large bank reserve balances. None other than Ben Bernanke pointed out a few of those reasons in a blog post last fall.2 In our view, the most compelling is that regulatory changes have increased private sector demand for safe, short-maturity, liquid assets in recent years. If the Treasury department is unwilling to supply T-bills in sufficient numbers, then the Fed can supply safe, short-maturity, liquid assets to the market by purchasing long-maturity Treasury securities and replacing them with bank reserves. Chart 6Reserves Can Be Drained Fairly Quickly Of course, we take the Fed at its word when it says that it would like to eventually drain excess bank reserves from the system. But even in that case, the steady growth of currency in circulation means that bank reserves will decline over time even if the Fed keeps the asset side of its balance sheet flat. For example, Chart 6 shows what would happen to bank reserves if the amount of currency in circulation grows at a conservative 5% per year pace, and if the Fed decides to allow its Agency bond and MBS portfolios to run off at the beginning of next year while keeping its Treasury portfolio flat. We assume that MBS runs off the Fed's balance sheet at a pace of $15 billion per month, slightly below the recent pace of MBS reinvestment. During the past three years, the Fed has reinvested between $20bn and $40bn MBS each month with an average monthly reinvestment of $32bn. In this scenario, outstanding bank reserves would decline to zero by the end of 2025. At that point the Fed would have to start adding to its Treasury holdings just to keep pace with the amount of currency in circulation. Bottom Line: While it is very likely that the Fed will allow its Agency bond and MBS portfolios to run off starting in 2018, it is much more uncertain whether it will ever cease the reinvestment of its Treasury holdings. If the Fed does allow its Treasury holdings to run down as well, it will have to start buying Treasuries again before 2025. Lenka Martinek, Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy lenka@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report "Cleaning Up After The 100-Year Flood", dated June 10, 2014, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 2 https://www.brookings.edu/blog/ben-bernanke/2016/09/02/should-the-fed-keep-its-balance-sheet-large/
Highlights We discuss three "battles" that will shape the investment landscape in the euro area over the remainder of the decade. Battle #1: Reflation Versus Deleveraging - Reflation will triumph over the next 12 months. For the time being, this justifies an overweight position in euro area equities. Beyond then, the outlook is likely to darken. Battle #2: Hawks Versus Doves - The doves will win. Germany will reluctantly accept an overheated economy and higher inflation. Stay short the euro. Battle #3: Globalists Versus Populists - Marine Le Pen will lose this year's election, but Europe's populist parties will finally gain the upper hand by the end of the decade. Buy gold as a long-term hedge. Feature Market Update Global equities are technically overbought in the short term, but the longer-term cyclical (12-month) trend remains to the upside. Chart 1 illustrates the "reflation trade" in a nutshell. The Citigroup global economic and inflation surprise indices have surged and now stand at their highest combined level in the 14-year history of the series. While tracking estimates for Q1 U.S. GDP growth have fallen, this is mainly because of negative contributions from government spending, net exports, and inventories. Taken together, these three factors have shaved about 1.4 percentage points off of Q1 growth according to the Atlanta Fed's GDPNow model (Chart 2). Private final domestic demand is still growing at a reasonably robust 2.6% pace, and forward-looking indicators such as the ISM indices suggest that this number could rise over the next few quarters. Chart 1The Reflation Trade In One Chart Chart 2Underlying U.S. Growth Is Still Healthy As such, it is not too surprising that U.S. equities have had little trouble digesting the prospect of a March Fed rate hike. The market is still pricing in less than three rate increases this calendar year. Four hikes would not be out of the question. Investors should remain positioned for a stronger dollar and higher Treasury yields. We continue to favor higher beta developed markets such as the euro area and Japan over the U.S. on a currency-hedged basis. The Battle For Europe History is often shaped by great battles. Sometimes these are of the military variety. But often they transcend physical conflict, pitting competing ideas, interests, and trends against one another. In the remainder of this week's report, we discuss three economic and political battles that will determine Europe's fortunes over the next 12 months and beyond. Battle #1: Reflation Versus Deleveraging The euro area grew faster than the U.S. in 2016, the first time this has happened since 2008. While the U.S. is likely to resume pole position in 2017, we still expect the euro area economy to expand at an above-trend pace. That should be enough to keep unemployment on a downward trajectory. The euro area economic surprise index remains in positive territory. The composite PMI rose to 56 in February - the highest level since April 2011 - with the forward-looking "new orders" component hitting new cyclical highs. Capital goods orders continue to trend higher, which bodes well for investment spending over the coming months (Chart 3). In addition, private-sector credit growth has sped up to the fastest pace since the 2008-09 financial crisis (Chart 4). All this is good news for the region. Investors should overweight euro area equities on a currency-hedged basis over the next 12 months. Chart 3Euro Area Growth Holding Up Well Chart 4Euro Area: Accelerating Private-Sector ##br##Credit Growth Beyond then, things look murkier. The ECB's Bank Lending Standards survey showed a modest tightening in lending standards for business loans in Q4 of 2016 (Chart 5). Private-sector debt levels also remain elevated across the region, which is likely to dampen credit demand (Chart 6). Both of these factors suggest that loan growth could begin to moderate later this year. Chart 5Slight Tightening In Lending Standards ##br##For Business Loans And Mortgages In Q4 Of 2016 Chart 6Still A Lot Of Debt If the positive impulse from rising credit growth does begin to fade, GDP growth will fall off. Whether that proves to be just another run-of-the-mill "mid-cycle slowdown" or something more nefarious will depend on the policy response. On the fiscal side, the period of extended austerity has ended. The fiscal thrust in the euro area turned positive last year, the first time this has happened since 2010. The European Commission is advising member states to loosen fiscal policy further this year, but the governments themselves are targeting a modest tightening (Chart 7). With a slew of elections slated for this year, budget overruns will be hard to avoid. Nevertheless, barring a significant economic slowdown, no major European economy is likely to launch a large fiscal stimulus program anytime soon. Thus, while fiscal policy will not be a drag on growth, it will not provide much of a tailwind either. Chart 7European Commission Recommending Greater Fiscal Expansion This puts the ball back in the ECB's court. As we discuss next, monetary policy is likely to stay highly accommodative. That should help extend the cyclical recovery into 2018. Battle #2: Hawks Versus Doves Jean Claude Trichet's decision to raise rates in 2011 would have gone down as the most disastrous blunder the ECB ever made, were it not for his even more disastrous decision to raise rates in 2008. Mario Draghi has gone out of his way to avoid repeating the mistakes of his predecessor. Nevertheless, the risk is that the improving growth backdrop instills a false sense of complacency. There is no doubt that Draghi has become more confident about the economic outlook. The ECB revised up its growth and inflation projections for 2017-18 at this week's meeting and signaled that it was unlikely to extend its targeted longer-term refinancing operations, or TLTROs. The ECB is also likely to further reduce the value of its monthly asset purchases in 2018 with a view towards phasing them out completely by the end of that year. It is possible that these steps could trigger a "taper tantrum" in European government debt markets of the sort the U.S. experienced in 2013. If that were to happen, we would see it as a buying opportunity. As Draghi stressed during his press conference, wage growth is anemic. Without faster wage growth, inflationary pressures will remain muted. Granted, euro area headline inflation reached 2.0% in February. However, this was mainly the result of base effects stemming from higher food and energy prices. Our expectation is that headline inflation will fall back close to 1% by the end of the year. This is where core inflation currently stands. One should also keep in mind that the trade-weighted euro has depreciated by 8% since mid-2014 (Chart 8). To the extent that a weaker euro has put upward pressure on import prices, this has caused core inflation to be higher than it would otherwise have been. In contrast, the trade-weighted U.S. dollar has appreciated by 24% over this period. Yet, despite the diverging path between the two currencies, core inflation in the euro area remains noticeably lower than in the U.S. This is true even if one excludes housing costs from the U.S. CPI in order to make it more comparable to the European estimate of inflation. Excluding shelter, U.S. core inflation is currently 43 basis points higher than in the euro area (Chart 9). The point is that the Fed is much further along the path to monetary policy normalization than the ECB. Chart 8A Stronger Dollar Has Restrained U.S. Inflation... Chart 9...Yet Core Inflation In The U.S. ##br##Is Still Higher, Even Excluding Housing If that were all to the story, it would be enough to justify the ECB's wait-and-see approach. But there is so much more. Start with the fact that the euro area's poor demographics, high debt levels, and dysfunctional institutions all imply that the neutral rate - the interest rate consistent with full employment - is lower there than in the U.S. How does one ensure that real rates can fall to a low enough level in the event of an economic slowdown? One solution is to target a higher inflation rate. If inflation is running at 1% going into a recession, it might be impossible to bring real rates down much below -1%. But if inflation is running at 3%, real rates can fall to as low as -3%. This implies that the ECB should actually target a higher inflation rate than the Fed. Then there are the internal constraints imposed by the common currency. Countries with flexible exchange rates can adjust to adverse economic shocks by letting their currencies depreciate. That is not possible within the euro area. If one or a few countries in the region are suffering while others are not, the unlucky ones have to engineer an "internal devaluation." This requires that wages and prices in the ill-fated countries decline in relation to those in the better-performing ones. However, if inflation is already low in the latter, outright deflation may be necessary in the former, something that only a deep recession can achieve. The travails experienced by the peripheral countries over the past eight years brought home this lesson in stark and painful terms. Will Germany accept higher inflation? There is little in its recent history to suggest that it won't. Mario Draghi was not the odds-on favorite to become ECB president. That job was supposed to go to Axel Weber, the former president of the Bundesbank. Weber met with Angela Merkel on February 10, 2011. During this meeting with the chancellor, he made it clear that he did not support the ECB's emergency bond buying. Merkel balked and so the next day Weber tendered his resignation. Six months after that, ECB board member and uber-hawk Jürgen Stark quit, leaving the ECB more firmly in the control of the doves.1 Chart 10Germans Turning Radically Europhile Merkel's preference for a less hawkish ECB leadership wasn't solely based on altruistic feelings towards her European compatriots. Politically, Merkel knew full well that Germany would be blamed for the breakup of the euro area. Economically, German taxpayers also stood to lose a lot from a breakup. It is easy to forget now, but Germany spent 8% of GDP during the global financial crisis on bailing out its own banks. All that effort would have been for naught if German banks had been forced to write off billions of euros in loans that they had extended to peripheral Europe. Critically, the demise of the euro would have also saddled German exporters with a much more expensive Deutsche Mark, thus blowing a hole through the country's gargantuan current account surplus. The calculus has not changed much over the last six years. Germany may not welcome higher inflation, but the alternative is much worse. If anything, the polls suggest that German voters have become even more Europhile since the euro crisis ended (Chart 10). This gives Draghi even more free rein. For investors, this implies that the ECB is unlikely to raise rates for the next two years, and perhaps not until the end of the decade. As inflation expectations across the euro area drift higher, real rates will fall. This will push down the value of the euro. We expect EUR/USD to approach parity over the course of this year. Battle #3: Globalists Versus Populists First Brexit, then Trump, and now Le Pen? The spread between French and German 10-year government bond yields briefly touched 68 basis points in February, the highest level since the euro crisis (Chart 11). While the spread has edged down since then, investors remain on edge. Betting markets are currently assigning a one-in-three chance that Le Pen will become president, close to the odds that they were giving Donald Trump before his surprise victory (Chart 12). Chart 11Investors Worried About The Coming ##br##French Election Chart 12Will Le Pen Rule? Wanna Bet? There is little doubt that populism is in a secular "bull market." However, that doesn't mean that every populist politician is going to win every single election. For all their faults, U.S. nationwide presidential election polls were not that far off the mark. The RealClearPolitics average had Clinton up by 3.2% going into the election. She won by 2.1 points. Where the polls fell flat was at the state level. They completely underestimated Trump support in the Rust Belt states of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, and Wisconsin. That's not an issue in France, where the presidential vote is tallied at the national level. Le Pen currently trails Macron by 26 percentage points in a head-to-head contest (Chart 13). It is highly unlikely that she will be able to close this gap between now and May 7th, the date of the second round of the Presidential contest. The only way that Le Pen could win is if one of the two leftist candidates drops out.2 However, given the animosity between Benoit Hamon and Jean-Luc Mélenchon, that is almost inconceivable. And even if that did occur, the odds would still favor Macron slipping into the final round. As such, investors should downplay risks of a populist uprising this year. Beyond then, things are likely to get messier. At some point, Europe will face another downturn, either of its own doing or the result of an external shock. Many voters have been reluctant to vote for populist leaders out of fear that the ensuing economic turmoil could leave them out of a job. But if they have already lost their jobs, that reason goes away. Chart 14 shows the strong correlation between unemployment in various French départements, and support for Marine Le Pen's National Front. If French unemployment rises, her support is likely to increase as well. The same goes for other European countries. Chart 13Macron Leads Le Pen By A Mile Chart 14Higher Unemployment Would Benefit Le Pen In addition, worries about large-scale immigration from outside Europe will continue to work to the advantage of populist leaders. Recent immigrants and their children have sometimes struggled to integrate into European society. This has manifested itself in the form of low labor participation rates, poor educational achievement, elevated involvement in criminal activity, and high welfare usage. The problem has been especially acute in European countries with very generous welfare states (Chart 15). Chart 15Many Immigrants To Europe Are Lagging Behind The reaction of establishment parties to mounting concerns about immigration has been completely counterproductive. Rather than acknowledging the problems, they have sought to censor uncomfortable "hatefacts" and stage show trials of populist leaders - such as the one Marine Le Pen will likely be subjected to for her alleged crime of tweeting graphic photos of terrorist atrocities. This strategy will backfire and the result will be a wave of populist victories towards the end of the decade. With that in mind, investors should consider buying some gold as a long-term hedge. Peter Berezin, Senior Vice President Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, “Europe: Game Was Changed A Long Time Ago,” in a Monthly Report, “Fortuna And Policymakers,” dated October 2012, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, “Europe – Election Update, France,” in a Weekly Report, “Donald Trump Is Who We Thought He Was,” dated March 8, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights The global economy has turned the cap and is on a sustainable uptrend. Yet, the AUD and CAD have over-discounted the improvements and are at risk of suffering a disappointment if global manufacturing activity remains firm but does not accelerate much. Moreover, the Australian and Canadian domestic economies remain too weak to justify rates moving in line with the Fed. Rate differentials will continue to weigh on both currencies. While the CAD is cheaper than the AUD and warrants an overweight position versus the Aussie, we are adding it to our short commodity currency basket trade. The ECB will not ease further, but it will not tighten this year either. Feature Since their February highs, the Australian and Canadian dollars have declined by 2.7% and 3.6% respectively. In May 2016, we wrote that commodity currencies could continue to perform well, but that ultimately, this strong performance would only prove transitory and that the AUD and the CAD would once again resume their downtrends.1 Is this recent weakness the beginning of a more pronounced selloff? We believe the answer is yes. How Great Is The Global Backdrop? Much ink has been spilled regarding the improvement in the global industrial sector. Global PMIs have perked up the world over, semi-conductor prices have been booming, metal prices have been on a tear, and Chinese excavator sales have been growing at a 150% annual rate (Chart I-1). It would seem that the world economy is out of the woods. This is true, but asset markets are not backward looking, they are forward looking. The improvement in global economic conditions that we have witnessed has driven the impressive rally in stocks, EM assets, commodity, and commodity currencies in 2016. But what matters for future asset markets' performance, and especially growth sensitive currencies like the AUD and the CAD, is future global growth. Where do we stand on that front? We do not expect an economic relapse like in 2015 and early 2016. Some key elements have changed in the global economy, suggesting it is not as hampered by deflationary forces as it once was: DM industrial capacity utilization has improved (Chart I-2). Also our U.S. composite capacity utilization indicator that incorporates both the manufacturing and service sectors has now moved into "no slack" territory. This suggests that deflationary forces that have so negatively affected the DM economy in 2015 and 2016 are becoming tamer. Chart I-1Signs Of An Economic Rebound Chart I-2Improving Global Capacity Utilization Commodity markets are much more balanced than in 2015-2016. Not only has excess capacity in the Chinese steel and coal sector been drained, but the oil market has moved from being defined by excess supply to a surplus of demand (Chart I-3). This suggests that commodities are unlikely to be the same deflationary anchors they were in the past two years. The global contraction in profits is over. Profits are a nominal concept, and in 2015 and 2016, U.S. nominal growth hovered around 2.5%, in line with the levels registered in the 1980, 1990, and 2001 recessions (Chart I-4). As a residual claim on corporate revenues, profits display elevated operating leverage. Thus, nominal GDP growth moving from 2.5% to 4% on the back of lessened deflationary forces will continue to support profits. Chart I-3Oil: From Excess Supply To Excess Demand Chart I-4Last Year Was A Nominal Recession This also means that the rise in capex intentions that began to materialize last summer is likely to genuinely support capex growth and the overall business cycle in the coming quarters, especially in the U.S. (Chart I-5). Additionally, the inventory cycle that has weighed on EM and DM economies is now over (Chart I-6). While growth is likely to be fine based on these factors, for the AUD and CAD to move higher, growth needs to accelerate further. The problem is that based on our Nowcast for global manufacturing activity, things are as good as they get now (Chart I-7). Chart I-5Improving DM ##br##Capex Outlook Chart I-6Inventories: From ##br##Drag To Boost Chart I-7If Global Industrial Activity Doesn't ##br##Improve, CAD and AUD Are Toast In China, which stands at the crux of the global manufacturing cycle, we see the following factors hampering further improvements: The Chinese fiscal impulse has rolled over. Fiscal stimulus does impact the economy with some lags. The peak in the Chinese boost was reached in November 2015, with government expenditures growing at a 24% annual rate, but today, they are growing at a 4% rate. The deleterious effect on growth of this tightening may soon be felt. Chinese liquidity conditions have deteriorated. Interbank borrowing rates are already rising (Chart I-8), and the PBoC has drained an additional RMB 90 billion out of the banking system this week alone. These dynamics could be aimed at cooling down the real estate bubble in the country. Falling activity in that sector would represent a significant drag on the industrial and commodity sectors globally. Chart I-8Tightening Chinese Liquidity Conditions Chart I-9The NZD Weakness Should Be A Bad Omen The fall in Chinese real rates may have reached its paroxysm in February. Commodity price inflation may have hit its peak last month, suggesting the same for Chinese producer prices. A slowing PPI inflation will raise real borrowing costs in that economy and further tighten monetary conditions. Corroborating these risks, Kiwi equities, a traditional bellwether of global growth continue to buckle down. In fact, the New Zealand dollar is offering the same insight. Being the G10 currency most sensitive to the combined effect of wider EM borrowing spreads and commodity prices, its recent fall may presage some problems in these spaces (Chart I-9). To be clear, we are not expecting a wholesale collapse in growth. Far from it, but an absence of acceleration or a mild deceleration, could have troubling effects on commodities. The case of oil this week is very telling. Inventories have been going up, but the frailty of the oil market was mostly a reflection of the extraordinary bullish positioning of investors (Chart I-10, left panel). The same is true for copper, investors are very long and thus, vulnerable to mild growth disappointments (Chart I-10, right panel). Chart I-10AInvestors Are Bullish Industrial Commodities Chart I-10BInvestors Are Bullish Industrial Commodities Oil is not the only commodity experiencing a large accumulation in inventories. China, the key consumer of metals, is now overloaded with large inventories of both iron ore and copper (Chart I-11). This combination of high bullishness and rising inventories represents a risk for metals, especially if the positive growth impulse in China slows somewhat from here. Chart I-11China Has ##br##Hoarded Metals Chart I-12Can Growth And Reflation Surprises Increase##br## As Policy Becomes Less Easy? Adding to these risks is the Fed. The Fed is on the path to increase rates a bit more aggressively than was recently anticipated by markets. U.S. real rates are responding in kind, and key gauges like junk bonds, gold, or silver are also highlighting that global liquidity conditions may begin to deteriorate at the margin. While this tightening is not a catastrophe, it is still happening in an environment of elevated global leverage and potentially decelerating growth. This is not the death knell for risk assets, but it does represent a risk for the asset classes that are not pricing in any potential rollover in the elevated level of global surprises and reflation (Chart I-12). Commodity currencies are not ready for this reality. To begin with, positioning on the key commodity currencies has rebounded substantially, and risk reversals on these currencies as well as EM currencies are at levels indicative of maximum bullishness amongst investors. Also, the Australian dollar is expensive relative to its fundamentals, including the terms of trade. This makes the Aussie very vulnerable to small shocks to metal or coal prices (Chart 13, left panel). The CAD is not as pricey as the AUD, but nonetheless, it has lost its previous valuation cushion (Chart I-13, right panel). It also faces its own set of risks. Chart I-13ANo Valuation Cushion In CAD And AUD Chart I-13BNo Valuation Cushion In CAD And AUD This set of circumstance highlights that the room for disappointment in these currencies is now large. Bottom Line: While 2016 was a dream come true for investors in commodity currencies, 2017 may prove to be a tougher environment. Global growth is not about to plunge, but for commodity currencies to rally more, global manufacturing activity needs to accelerate further. Here the hurdle is harder to beat. Not only is the Chinese reflationary impulse slowing exactly as the global manufacturing sector hits exceptional levels of strength, but the Fed is also marginally tightening its stance. This means that expensive currencies like the BRL and AUD, as well as the cheaper but still vulnerable CAD could suffer some downside if industrial growth temporarily flattens, an event we judge more likely than not. Domestic Considerations Chart I-14We Build Houses In Canada When it comes to the AUD and the CAD, global risk is skewed to the downside, but what about domestic considerations? Here again, signs are not as great as one might hope. When it comes to Canada, the capacity to withstand higher rates is limited. The elephant in the room is the risk posed by the U.S. border adjustment tax. BCA thinks that this tax could be implemented in a diluted form, one were apparels, food, energy, etc. are exempt from the deal. However, the industries representing the American "rust-belt" are likely to be fully covered. This means that machinery and cars in particular could be the key targets of the BAT. This is a huge problem for Canada. Take the car industry as an example. Canada exports C$80 billion in vehicles and parts to the U.S., or 15% of its merchandise exports, nearly 4% of GDP. The potential hit from this tax on the country could be large. Also, the Canadian economy is even more levered to house prices that the Australian one. As Chart I-14 illustrates, the share of residential investment in Canada is much higher than in Australia, despite the slower growth of the population in Canada than in the Australia. Additionally, Canadian consumption is much more geared to housing than in Australia. Canadian households are experiencing slower nominal and real wage gains than their Australian counterparts. Yet their consumption per head growth is similar to that of Australia, and their confidence is substantially higher, reflecting a stronger wealth effect in Canada than in Australia (Chart I-15). Furthermore, despite the rebound in commodity prices and profits in 2016, Canadian and Australian credit growth have been slowing sharply (Chart 16, top two panels); however, Canada suffers from a higher level of debt service payment than Australia, despite the fact that the Canadian household debt to disposable income is 170% versus 185% in Australia (Chart I-16, bottom panel). These factors amplify the negative potential of higher interest rates in Canada relative to Australia. But Australia also suffers from its own ills. Total hours worked continue to deteriorate in that country and job growth is even more heavily geared to the part-time sector than in Canada. Additionally, while Canada will benefit from a small amount of fiscal expansion in the coming years, Australia is tabled to experience a large degree of fiscal austerity (Chart I-17). In this context, it will be difficult for the Australian labor market to outperform that of Canada. Chart I-15Canadian Households Are ##br##More Levered To Housing Chart I-16Slowing Credit Growth In ##br##Canada And Australia Finally, while the Canadian core CPI is elevated at 2.1%, this largely reflects pass-through from the previous collapse in the CAD, and this is expected to dissipate as wage growth remains tepid at 1.2%. But the Australian situation is even more troubling. Australia has been incapable of generating much inflation, and the fall in hours worked suggests that the labor market may be easing, not tightening. With the 10% increase in the AUD from its trough in 2016, inflation is unlikely to rise enough to prompt the RBA to become much more hawkish in the coming months. Thus, we think that both Canadian and Australian rates will continue to lag U.S. ones, putting more downward pressures on the CAD and the AUD versus the USD, despite the recent improvement in trade balances in both nations. (Chart I-18). Moreover, even if the decline in Australian interest rate differentials relative to the U.S. were to be less pronounced than in Canada, the AUD is much more misaligned with differentials than the CAD, adding to the Aussie's vulnerability. Chart I-17Fiscal Policy: Canada Eases, ##br##Australia Tightens Chart I-18Rate Differentials Will Continue##br## To Help The USD Bottom Line: Domestic conditions remains challenging for Australia and Canada. In both nations, debt service payments are already elevated, suggesting it will be hard for the central bank to increase rates without prompting accidents. While Australia seems less geared to the housing sector than Canada, its labor market dynamics are poorer, it faces a more austere fiscal policy, and it has trouble generating any inflation. We expect rate differentials to continue to move against both the CAD and the AUD versus the USD. Investment Conclusions At this point, the CAD and AUD are essentially entering an ugly contest. For both of these currencies, the global backdrop could prove to be more difficult in 2017 than in 2016. Moreover, both these currencies are handicapped by fundamental domestic issues that will further prevent rates to rise vis-à-vis the U.S. As such, we are now adding the CAD to our short commodity currency basket trade against the USD. AUD/USD may move toward 0.65-0.60 and USD/CAD may rally toward 1.40-1.45. Comparatively, both the AUD and CAD suffer from different but equally important handicaps. The only thing that would put the CAD at the nicer end of the ugly contest are its valuations. Our PPP model augmented for productivity differentials continues to show that the CAD is cheap against the AUD, corroborating the message of our long-term fair value models (Chart I-19). Also, as we highlighted above, CAD is more in line with its IRP-implied fair value than the AUD. We therefore recommend investors overweight the CAD vis-à-vis the AUD. A Few Words On The ECB Yesterday, Draghi struck a cautious tone in Frankfurt. While he acknowledged that deflationary risks in the euro area have decreased relative to where they stood last year, the governing council still thinks downside risks, even if of a foreign origin, slightly overshadow upside risks to its forecast. While the ECB feels that there is less of a need to implement additional support to the economy in the future, it judges the current accommodative setting to still be warranted. We agree. It is true that headline inflation in Europe has moved to 2%, but core inflation, which strips the very important base effect in energy prices that has lifted HICP, remains flat at low levels. Moreover, wage growth in the euro area remains tepid, confirming the lack of persistent domestic inflationary pressures in Europe (Chart I-20). Thus, the ECB elected to maintain asset purchases to the end of December at EUR60 billion per months. Rates are also unlikely to rise until after the end of the purchase program. In this environment, while the trade-weighted euro may move higher, the cyclical outlook continue to be negative for EUR/USD as monetary policy divergences between the U.S. and Europe will grow as time passes. On a 3-month basis, if we are correct that global growth may not accelerate further, the potential for a correction in EM and commodity plays could provide a temporary fillip to the euro. As markets currently priced in less rate hikes from the ECB than the Fed, the scope for pricing out the anticipated rate hikes is lower in Europe than in the U.S. if risk assets experience a correction within a bull market. This means that DXY may weaken or stay flat even if the trade-weighted dollar rises during that time frame. Chart I-19AUD / CAD Is Expensive Chart I-20The ECB's Dilemma Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Pyrrhic Victories" dated April 29, 2016 available at fes.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 The U.S. economy continues to show resilience with the ADP employment change crushing expectations by 108,000. Although the USD did not react proportionately to this specific news, this is only a firmer signal of the confirmation for a rate hike next week. With the market pricing in almost a 100% probability of a hike, the Fed is unlikely to disappoint. What matters now is the messaging around the hike. In this regard, Trump's aggressive fiscal stance and the economy's consistent resilience is making a good case for the Fed to remain supportive of its forecasts. On a technical basis, the MACD line for the DXY is above the signal line, while also being in positive territory. Momentum is therefore pointing to a strong upward trend for the dollar in the short term. Report Links: Et Tu, Janet? - March 3, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Risks To The Cyclical Dollar View - February 3, 2017 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 The ECB left its policy rates and asset purchase program unchanged. Although President Draghi acknowledged the euro area's resilience as risks have become "less pronounced", he also noted that risks still "remain tilted to the downside". In the press release, the Governing Council continued to highlight that they continue to expect "the key ECB interest rates to remain at present or lower levels for an extended period of time, and well past the horizon of the net asset purchases". The message is therefore mixed. Growth is expected to remain resilient in the euro area, but significant domestic slack and global factors have forced the ECB to remain cautious. Cyclical risks to the euro are more to the downside than to the upside in the current environment. Report Links: Et Tu, Janet? - March 3, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 The French Revolution - February 3, 2017 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent Japanese data has been mixed: Machine tool orders yearly growth came in at 9.1%, the highest level since the third quarter of 2015. Labor cash earnings yearly growth came above expectations at 0.5%. However GDP growth was disappointing, coming in at 1.2% against expectations of 1.6%. We continue to be bearish on the yen on a cyclical basis. Although there has been some improvement, economic data has still been too tepid for the Bank of Japan to even consider rolling back some of its most radical policies. After all, the BoJ has established that they now have a price level target instead of an inflation target, which means that inflation would have to overshoot 2% for a significant period of time in order to switch from their easing bias. Report Links: Et Tu, Janet? - March 3, 2017 JPY: Climbing To The Springboard Before The Dive - February 24, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 After the vote in the House of Lords, Theresa May has been dealt yet another blow to her Brexit hopes as the upper house of the U.K. voted for giving parliament veto power over the final exit deal of Britain from the European Union. This news have been positive for the pound at the margin, as the perception of softer Brexit increases. The prime minister will now appeal this decision to the House of Commons. If she is defeated here, the pound could rally significantly. On the economic side, recent data has been disappointing: Market Services PMI not only went down from the previous month but also underperformed expectations, coming in at 53.3. Halifax house prices yearly growth came in at 5.1%, underperforming expectations. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 The Pound Falls To The Conquering Dollar - October 14, 2016 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 As expected, the RBA left its cash rate unchanged at 1.5%. The currency was little changed from this announcement. However, following last week's depreciation, the AUD followed through with further depreciation on Wednesday due to a strengthening greenback. This affected the AUD twofold: the appreciating dollar added pressure on the AUD, and on commodity prices which further exacerbated the AUD's decline - copper prices are down more than 4% and iron ore futures are down almost 3%. Risks are to the downside for the AUD: declining copper and iron ore prices foretell that the AUD's decline may continue; China's regulation on coal imports and energy production will further damage Australia's export market. On a shorter-term basis, the MACD line is below the signal line and indicates negative momentum. Additionally, the MACD line has breached negative territory, adding further downward momentum. Report Links: Et Tu, Janet? - March 3, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Risks To The Cyclical Dollar View - February 3, 2017 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 The kiwi continues to fall, and has now lost all of the gains from earlier this year. The outlook for the NZD against other commodity currencies is puzzling: on the one hand the NZD is very sensitive to emerging market spreads, which means that it would be the primary victim of the dollar bull market, as a rising dollar drains liquidity from EM and hurts fixed income instruments in these countries. On the other hand, domestic factors provide a tailwind for the NZD as strong inflationary pressures are emerging in the kiwi economy and New Zealand continues to be the star performer amongst its commodity peers. Overall, we are inclined to be tactically more bullish on the NZD against the AUD, as the NZD/USD has reached oversold levels, while AUD/USD has been firmer amidst the rally in the U.S. dollar. Report Links: Et Tu, Janet? - March 3, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Risks To The Cyclical Dollar View - February 3, 2017 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Following up from last week's depreciation is an even weaker CAD this week. USD/CAD appreciated greatly amidst a large decline in oil prices after crude oil stocks increased by around 7 mn bbl more than the previous change and the consensus amount. This trend is likely to continue as rig counts continue to increase. A rising USD is likely to exacerbate the decline in the CAD as it will continue to weigh on oil prices. We have previously noted that the CAD will stay very affected by U.S. trade relations and rate differentials. This trend is likely to continue. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 When You Come To A Fork In The Road, Take It - November 4, 2016 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland has been encouraging: Unemployment continues to be very low at 3.3%. Headline inflation came in at 0.5%. At this level inflation now stands at its highest since 2011. Although these developments are positive, the SNB will continue to aggressively intervene in the currency and prevent further appreciation. The SNB has been keen on keeping their unofficial floor of 1.065 in EUR/CHF, even on the face of risk-off flows coming into Switzerland due to the European election cycle. In fact, the SNB reserves surged at the highest pace since December 2014, which indicates that the central bank has been having its hands full. For now the SNB will continue with this policy, however, we will continue to monitor Swiss data to assess whether a change in policy by the SNB is possible. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 Long-Term FX Valuation Models: Updates And New Coverages - September 30, 2016 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 USD/NOK rallied sharply following the 5% plunge in oil prices, as the rise in inventories came at almost 7 million barrels above expectations. The risk profile for the NOK is the opposite of the NZD. External factors should help the Norwegian economy vis-à-vis other commodity currencies, as oil should outperform industrial metals given that it has a lower beta to China and Emerging markets. On the other hand, the domestic situation has deteriorated. Nominal GDP is contracting, the output gap stands around -2% of potential GDP, and the credit impulse continues to be negative. Meanwhile, inflation is starting to recede, as the effect of the depreciation of the NOK on 2015 is dissipating. All of these factors should support a dovish bias from the Norges Bank, hurting the NOK going forward. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 The Pound Falls To The Conquering Dollar - October 14, 2016 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 The krona will resume its cyclical downward trend as the USD continues to climb, being one of the currencies with the highest betas to the dollar. Our bullish case for the krona is weakened by the Riksbank's extremely cautious tone which, so to speak, stopped the krona in its tracks. EUR/SEK stopped its depreciation abruptly in the beginning of February and has since appreciated. Momentum, however, does seem to be slowing down for this cross as the Swedish economy remains inherently resilient. As a large proportion of Sweden's exports to the euro area are re-exported to EM, additional risks may emanate from China as any potential slowdown in the world's second largest economy could provide a risk to Sweden's industrial sector. This could add deflationary pressures to the economy, which can solidify the Riksbank's dovish stance even further. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 One Trade To Rule Them All - November 18, 2016 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights The Fed's evident desire to lift its policy rate next week - presumably to get out ahead of inflation that has yet to show up in its preferred gauge - will weigh on gold. Oil ... not so much. This is because fundamentals once again are asserting themselves in the evolution of oil prices, something that has been evident even before markets balanced last year. Gold, meanwhile, remains exquisitely sensitive to Fed policy expectations and their effects on the USD and real rates, as with other currencies. Energy: Overweight. We are looking to re-establish our long WTI Dec/17 vs. short Dec/18 spread if it trades in contango again, i.e., if Dec/17 is less than Dec/18. We believe the combination of OPEC and non-OPEC adherence to their production Agreement will remain high, and demand likely will remain stout. Base Metals: Neutral. Spot copper is down ~ $0.10/lb on COMEX over the past week. We expect transitory supply issues in Chile and Indonesia to be resolved, and reflationary stimulus in China to wane going into the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party in the autumn, and, with it, copper demand. We remain neutral. Precious Metals: Neutral. Gold is weakening as the Fed's March meeting approaches next week, given the overwhelming expectation for a 25bp rate hike. We remain long volatility, expecting fiscal-policy uncertainty in the U.S. to be resolved over the next few months, and Fed policy drivers to become more focused. Ags/Softs: Underweight. We are not expecting significant changes in the USDA's estimates of stocks globally, and therefore remain underweight. Feature The choreographed messaging of voting and non-voting FOMC members asserting the need for a policy-rate hike over the past two weeks succeeded in pushing markets' expectations for such action to 88.6% as of Tuesday's close, up from 44.6% at the end of February. This despite the fact that the Fed's preferred inflation gauge - core PCE - has yet to show any sign of pushing up and thru the Fed's target of 2% growth yoy (Chart of the Week). Nor, for that matter, has core PCE shown any tendency to remain above 2% yoy growth over the past two decades (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekThe Fed's Preferred Inflation ##br##Gauge Still Quiescent Chart 2Core PCE Has Been ##br##Quiescent For Decades Between mid-December 2016 and the end of last month, gold prices rallied ~11.3% largely on the expectation the Fed would not raise rates until at least June, and, even then, would be constrained by uncertainty over what Congress and the Trump Administration would offer up in terms of fiscal policy later this year. Now, with the Fed succeeding in raising the market's expectation of a March rate hike, gold markets are left to re-calibrate the number of hikes to expect this year, and the likely implications for the USD and real rates. We believe the Fed will execute three rate hikes this year, but this will be highly dependent on how markets react to the now fully priced-in hike markets expect next week. Synchronized Growth, Inflation And Feedback Loops It is likely the Fed feels confident accelerating its rates normalization because, for the first time since the Global Financial crisis, we are getting a globally synchronized recovery in GDP. All else equal, this will give the U.S. central bank a bit of headroom to experiment with an earlier-than-expected rate hike. This synchronized growth also will provide a positive backdrop for commodity demand this year and next (Chart 3). The possibility of highly stimulative - or even just moderately stimulative - fiscal policy in the U.S. at a time when the economy is apparently at or close to full employment, will be positive for aggregate demand, and could be inflationary if its principal result is to lift real wages in the U.S. In addition to synchronized growth, we also are seeing evidence of synchronized inflation in the largest economies in the world (Chart 4). Chart 3Synchronized Global Growth ##br##Could Embolden The Fed Chart 4Synchronized Inflation Globally ##br##Likely Caught The Fed's Attention This synchronized growth and inflation is, we believe, important to the Fed, in that its effects constitute something of a global feedback loop. As we have noted in earlier research, the Fed is much more sensitive to how its policy actions affect other economies, given the deepening of global supply chains over the past two decades or so. Equally, policymakers are well aware the evolution of monetary policy and economic growth in other economies affects the U.S. growth and policy variables important to the Fed.1 Absent a policy shock in the U.S., Europe or China, the backdrop for EM growth should remain positive for at least 2017, even with reflationary stimulus waning in China, a left-tail risk to commodity prices that we identified in last week's publication.2 We expect the Fed's policy normalization to be tempered by continued monetary accommodation globally, which will be supportive of growth at the margin. This will keep global oil demand growth on track to average 1.50 - 1.60mm b/d this year and next, and, importantly for inflation and inflation expectations, keep EM oil demand growing. The income elasticity of per-capita oil consumption in EM economies typically is ~ 1.0, meaning a 1% increase in EM incomes is associated with a 1% increase in EM oil demand.3 EM growth accounts for close to 85% of the growth we expect in global oil demand this year. This is important, given EM oil demand, which we proxy with the U.S. EIA's non-OECD oil consumption time series, to be a common factor that explains the evolution of the CPI series shown above (Chart 5). EM oil demand is able to explain the synchronization of inflation in the three largest economies in the world is because incremental growth is occurring in the EM economies, and this is driving global growth. We continue to expect high compliance in the OPEC - non-OPEC production deal negotiated by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and Russia at the end of last year, which will, against the backdrop of continued global growth, cause inventories to fall and for markets to backwardate. We believe last week's increase in U.S. crude oil inventories to be the last big build, and expect the decline to begin later this month. On average vessels leaving the Persian Gulf destined for the U.S. have a 45- to 50-day sailing period depending on multiple factors such route, weather and sea conditions. Therefore, the recent increase in U.S. crude oil inventories can be linked to the arrival of the final fleet of vessels in concert with the pre-OPEC agreement production surge undertaken by the GCC. Evidence of this phenomenon is apparent in the ~500k b/d increase in U.S. crude oil imports (374k b/d coming from Iraq) over the prior week. We expect OECD oil stocks to start declining this month and fall some 300mm bbl before the end of 2017. This supply-demand dynamic will continue to dominate financial-market influences on oil prices, as we argued in last week's publication (Chart 6).4 Gold, on the other hand, will continue to take its cue from Fed policy and policy expectations, particularly as regards expectations for the USD, which should strengthen at the margin, given the Fed's new-found hawkishness, and real rates, which also should strengthen (Chart 7). Chart 5EM Oil Demand Continues##br## To Drive Inflation Chart 6IF KSA And Russia Can ##br##Coordinate Production... Chart 7Gold Will Continue To Take##br## Its Cue From Fed Policy Bottom Line: Oil prices will continue to be dominated by supply-demand-inventory fundamentals, with monetary policy effects on the evolution of prices taking a secondary role. Gold prices will continue to take their cue from Fed policy and policy expectations. We look to re-establish our long Dec/17 WTI vs. short Dec/18 WTI spread if it trades thru flat (i.e., $0.00/bbl). Given our gold view, we remain long volatility via the put spreads and call spreads we recommended February 23 - i.e., long Jun/17 $1,200/oz puts vs. short $1,150/oz puts, and long $1,275/oz calls vs. short $1,325/oz calls. The position was up 15% as of Tuesday's close. Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Reports "Global Inflation and Commodity Markets," dated August 11, 2016, and "Memo To The Fed: EM Oil, Metals Demand Key To U.S. Inflation," dated August 4, 2016, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report "Gold's Known Unknowns, And Fat Tails," dated February 23, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 3 Oil consumption frequently is employed to approximate EM income growth, given the income elasticity of demand for oil is ~ 1.0, meaning a 1% increase in income (GDP) produces an increase in demand for oil of approximately 1.0%. The OECD notes, "Non-OECD countries are found to have a higher income elasticity of oil demand than OECD countries. On average across countries, a one per cent rise in real GDP pushes up oil demand by half a per cent in OECD countries over the medium to long run, whereas the figure is closer to unity for most non-OECD countries." Please see "The Price of Oil - Will It Start Rising Again?" OECD Economics Department Working Paper No. 1031, p. 6 (2013). 4 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report "Days Of Oil Future's Past: Mean Reversion," dated March 2, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed In 2017 Summary of Trades Closed in
Highlights The Chinese government plans a smaller policy push in this year's budget, but is not aiming at a lower growth rate. Maintaining stability remains the priority over promoting growth and progress. Chinese growth has continued to accelerate. Odds of a relapse are low in the next one to two quarters. The sharp recovery in producer prices will likely support private sector investment. The regained strength in construction equipment sales of late could be a harbinger of increasing housing starts. The PBoC has both the willingness and resources to intervene and maintain control over the RMB exchange rate. The CNY/USD cross rate will remain largely determined by the broad trend of the dollar. Feature Chinese lawmakers and senior government officials are convening in Beijing this week for the annual plenary session of the People's Congress, China's parliament. The 3000-member Congress is expected to ratify Premier Li Keqiang's work report, approve his budget and endorse some key initiatives that the central government plans to unveil for the year. Overall, maintaining stability, both socially and economically, remains the focal point of Premier Li's work plan, but the government is planning a smaller policy push on growth in its budget compared with last year. Meanwhile, the latest growth figures out of China confirm that the economy has continued to build momentum. Odds of a near term relapse are low. Reading Policy Tea Leaves Premier Li's blueprint for 2017 offers little surprises, and we doubt that the government is aiming at a lower growth rate for the year. The minimum GDP growth target for 2017 was set at 6.5%, not much different from last year's target as well as realized GDP performance for the whole year (Table 1). Meanwhile, other key macro variables have also been adjusted slightly lower from last year's targets, but are slightly higher than last year's growth rates. For example, government agencies expect investment spending and broad money supply to grow by 9% and 12%, respectively, in 2017, a tick lower than last year's targets, but higher than a growth rate of 7.9% and 11.3%, respectively, in 2016. Furthermore, the government's growth priority is also reflected in a higher target for creating jobs. Table 1Table: The Growth Target China's growth recovery since mid-last year has given the government some comfort in staying the course on policy rather than engaging in fresh stimulus. On the fiscal front, there are some initiatives to reduce the corporate tax burden and administrative fees, but the overall budget deficit target will be maintained at 3%, unchanged from last year, which implies no fresh fiscal thrust to support the economy. Meanwhile, infrastructure spending on railways, waterways and highway construction is only expected to be marginally higher than last year's levels. On the monetary front, the Premier has pledged a prudent and neutral policy stance. Headline CPI is expected to increase by 3% in 2017, compared with 2.5% in December 2016. This reflects the government's eased concerns over deflation rather than an anticipation of inflation risk. Building on last year's efforts, the government continues to plan to remove excess capacity in certain industries. The focus remains on steelmakers and coalmines, but some other sectors are also being singled out such as construction materials, ship-building and coal-fire thermal industries. Last year's "de-capacity" campaign has led to a dramatic turnaround in business conditions in steelmakers and coalmines, which suggests the slack in the economy may not be as big as commonly perceived.1 These efforts deserve close attention in terms of their impact on other industries as well as on the overall economy. Finally, Premier Li has also pledged to further advance market-oriented reforms. The government plans to improve governance, reduce administrative red tape, simplify the tax code and increase private sector access to key industries. Meanwhile, the government intends to continue to push "mixed ownership" reforms, or partial privatization, among the country's state-owned enterprises (SOEs), including electricity, petroleum, natural gas, railways, civil aviation, telecom and military equipment. Financial sector reforms are being directed towards boosting the efficiency of financial resources, improving corporate sector access to financing, enhancing supervision over financial institutions and preempting financial risks. These reform initiatives are largely incremental, which probably underscores the authorities' preference for stability ahead of the Party Congress later this year. All in all, the central government plans a smaller policy push in this year's budget, and intends to let the economy run on its own momentum. Aggressive policy reflation is not in the cards unless a relapse in the economy threatens job creation. The government has reiterated its pledge for further reforms, but has so far offered few hopeful signs of bold steps. Overall, maintaining stability remains the priority over promoting growth and progress. China Growth Watch Key macro indicators to be released in the next several days will offer a reality check on how the Chinese economy has fared since the beginning of the year as the holiday seasonal factor wears off. Early indicators confirm that the economy has continued to accelerate. Real time activity trackers for the industrial sector, such as the daily coal intake at thermal power plants and average daily output at major steelmakers, have continued to accelerate (Chart 1). The sharp increase in imports compared with a year ago also confirmed strengthening domestic demand. The recovery in Chinese domestic activity is also reflected in neighboring countries. Sales to China from Korean and Taiwanese exporters have increased sharply from a year ago (Chart 2). As the biggest trading partner of these countries, China has played a pivotal role in the cyclical recovery of their respective economies. Chart 1Real Time Activity Monitor##br## Has Continued To Strengthen Chart 2A Sharp Turnaround##br## In Chinese Demand In short, the Chinese economy has demonstrated some remarkable strength of late. Last year's low base may have exaggerated the year-over-year comparison in some macro figures, but there is little doubt the economy's strong recovery has continued into the New Year. Looking forward, the risk is still tilted to the upside, at least over the next three to six months. First, purchasing manager indexes (PMIs) for both the manufacturing and service sectors have been above the 50 threshold, with broad-based improvement in all major components. BCA's China Leading Economic Indicator remains in a clear uptrend, heralding further improvement in macro numbers (Chart 3). Second, the sharp recovery in producer prices will likely support capital expenditure, especially among private enterprises. Some commentators have attributed China's rising PPI to the increase in global commodities prices rather than being a reflection of the Chinese business cycle. We disagree. While it is certainly true that the mining sector and materials producers have enjoyed the biggest boost in their pricing power since last year due to rising commodities prices, the improvement in Chinese PPI is rather broad-based. Our diffusion index for producer prices, which measures the percentage of sectors witnessing higher PPI, has also recovered strongly (Chart 4). In fact, the current reading suggests almost all sectors are experiencing rising output prices rather than only the resource sector. At a minimum, this should put a floor under capital expenditure in the manufacturing sector. Chart 3Strengthening LEI Points ##br##To Further Growth Acceleration Chart 4Broad-Based Improvement##br## In PPI Moreover, there has been a dramatic increase in the sales of construction equipment such as heavy trucks and excavators, with growth rates matching levels during the boom years prior to the global financial crisis. Historically, construction machines sales have been tightly correlated with real estate development (Chart 5). If history is any guide, the regained strength in construction equipment sales of late could be a harbinger of an impending boom in new housing starts. This means efforts to rein in housing activity since last October have done little to dampen developers' confidence.2 Meanwhile, we have highlighted the risk of slowing infrastructure construction by the state sector, which could weigh on overall capital spending3 - any improvement in real estate investment would offer an important offset. Ongoing housing sector development deserves close attention in the coming months. Finally, the growth outlook in other major developed economies has also improved, which should benefit Chinese exporters. A recent Special Report published by our sister publication, The Bank Credit Analyst, found broad-based evidence of improving activity across countries and industrial sectors.4 Retail sales, industrial production and capital spending are all showing more dynamism in the advanced economies, and orders and production are gaining strength for goods related to both business and household final demand. As far as China is concerned, a mini-cycle global upturn bodes well for exports. We were surprised by February's weak Chinese export numbers and for now, we suspect it reflects noise rather a trend. Unless protectionism backlash out of the U.S. derails normal trade links, we expect Chinese exports should continue to strengthen,5 which should allow the Chinese economy to gain additional momentum (Chart 6). Chart 5An Impending Boom In Housing Construction? Chart 6Chinese Exports: Better Days Ahead? Bottom Line: Chinese growth has continued to accelerate. Odds of a relapse are low in the one to two quarters. The RMB: Back In The Spotlight The Federal Reserve is well expected to raise its benchmark policy rate again next week, which has prompted a bidding up of the U.S. dollar against other majors as well as the RMB. In Premier Li Keqiang's work report presented to the People's Congress this week, the Chinese government appears to have omitted the usual commitment to maintain "exchange rate stability," which is being interpreted by some as a sign the government may allow for much greater fluctuations of the RMB against the dollar. To be sure, achieving a free-floating exchange rate has been China's long-stated reform target, and it is impossible to predict the exact next step of the People's Bank of China. However, a few broad judgements should still hold. First, we doubt the PBoC will tolerate unorderly fluctuations in the exchange rate in the near term. A weaker currency can be viewed as a reflection of domestic weakness. Moreover, sharper RMB depreciation begets greater capital outflows, which could quickly degenerate into a vicious circle - all of which is against the government's intentions of maintaining stability, especially ahead of the Party Congress late this year. Chart 7A Weak RMB, Or A Strong Dollar? Second, it is unlikely the PBoC will sacrifice domestic monetary policy independence in order to defend the exchange rate. The PBoC's recent policy tightening is as much a response to the stronger domestic economy as it is a forced response to higher U.S. interest rates. Tighter capital account controls will remain the dominant policy tool to deter domestic capital outflows and support the RMB if needed. Finally, fundamental factors do not support significant RMB depreciation against the dollar, given Chinese exporters' competitiveness and the country's large external surpluses. China's recent growth improvement should further weaken the case for a much cheaper RMB. In short, the PBoC has both the willingness and resources to intervene and maintain control over the exchange rate. The CNY/USD cross rate will remain largely determined by the broad trend of the dollar, and the RMB is unlikely to depreciate against the dollar more than other major currencies, if the dollar uptrend resumes (Chart 7). We will follow up on these issues in next week's report. Yan Wang, Senior Vice President China Investment Strategy yanw@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "The Myth Of Chinese Overcapacity," dated October 6, 2016, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Housing Tightening: Now And 2010," dated October 13, 2016, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Be Aware Of China's Fiscal Tightening," dated February 16, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Special Report, "Global Growth Pickup: Fact Or Fiction?" dated February 23, 2017, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "Dealing With The Trump Wildcard," dated January 26, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations