Technical
U.S. dollar softness has failed to lift equities of late, a tentative warning that correlations are changing as the U.S. economy cools.
The trading action of gold is currently sending a bearish message on the dollar as the price of the precious metal has broken above critical resistance. Though the causation between the dollar and gold usually runs from the former to the latter, gold also has a tendency to sniff out broad-based moves in the greenback. We remain broadly short USD in our portfolio.
Reflation continues to dictate short-term market moves. Behind this sugar-high, the global economic backdrop remains poor. Commodity currencies can rally for a few more weeks, but once markets refocus on Chinese and EM core weaknesses, commodity currencies will make new lows. Within the complex, favor the NOK and the CAD over the AUD and the NZD. Our portfolio remains positioned for additional yen strength.
For the month of April, the model's performance was in line with the S&P 500, but lagged global equities. For May, the model is aggressively paring back its equity risk exposure. Both Europe and Emerging Markets were downgraded, but still possess the lion's share of the equity allocation, while defensive markets such as the U.S. and Switzerland received a boost. In the fixed-income space, U.S., Italian and Spanish paper were the model's favorites.
The Fed's statement underscored its 'go slow' approach, with a June hike increasingly unlikely, but September and December still in play. The BoJ stood pat, reluctant to admit that NIRP was a flop soon after it was launched. Nevertheless, we expect fresh easing this summer. Chinese stimulus should last a few more months, but commodities will resume their structural downtrend thereafter. Remain tactically bullish risk assets; be prepared to turn more cautious in Q2.
Sell the bounce in banks, which face a triple whammy of earnings threats. This will reduce our financials sector allocation to underweight, making room for last week's energy upgrade.
The dollar countertrend move has more downside, but beyond the next few months, the dollar remains in a cyclical bull market. Improvements in global growth, even if temporary, are likely to lift non-U.S. rates more than U.S. ones. The euro will benefit from that move as investors still have deep negative feelings toward EUR/USD, exactly as economic momentum has moved in favor of Europe. The SEK should outperform.
Bearish sentiment is a red herring, as most other measures of investor positioning point to a strong undercurrent of bullishness. That is contrarily worrying.
Japan is in a liquidity trap: bad economic news is good for the yen while good economic news is bad for the yen. Chinese reflation could help risk assets in the months ahead, but poor EM fundamentals will reassert themselves later this year. The yen bull market is not over yet. The BoC was more positive on growth than anticipated. The BoE's Super Thursday was a non-event.
We do not expect Russia and OPEC members to reach a production-limiting agreement at the April 17 meeting in Doha, but that does not diminish our bullish expectations for a rebalancing of oil markets in H2 2016.