Valuations
Highlights Portfolio Strategy The financials sector's fortunes are linked to the path of 10-year Treasury yields. BCA's view of a selloff in the bond market bodes well for this interest rate-sensitive sector. The S&P banks index is on the cusp of flexing its earnings power muscle. Higher profits will serve as a catalyst for a valuation rerating in this key financials sub-sector. The still unloved S&P asset management & custody banks index has significant catch-up potential. We reiterate our high-conviction overweight status. Recent Changes There are no changes to our portfolio this week. Table 1 Feature The S&P 500 ended last week on a high note, cheering significant progress on the tax bill front and digesting early earnings beats. Given the equity market's lofty valuation starting point, substantial positive profit surprises are now necessary to move the needle in stocks. Encouragingly, IBM's mention of the fall in the U.S. dollar boosting EPS1 may morph into a broad-based theme this earnings season given the currency's mysterious absence we have been flagging in Q2. Beneath the surface, easy fiscal policy prospects coupled with synchronized global growth will likely continue to underpin equities. Importantly, later stages of the business cycle are synonymous with impressive gains in the S&P 500. The unemployment gap, defined as the unemployment rate minus the non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment (NAIRU), is an excellent leading indicator of the yield curve. Granted, NAIRU is an estimate and we are using the CBO's long-term NAIRU quarterly forecast as an input to the unemployment gap indicator. When the unemployment gap disappears, inflation should start rearing its ugly head, eventually leading the Fed to tighten monetary policy to the point where the yield curve inverts and predicts the end of the business cycle. Empirical evidence suggests that first the unemployment gap closes then the yield curve inverts and the business cycle subsequently ends (Chart 1). However, this indicator has had one miss since the early-1970s, during the second leg of the early-1980s double dip recession. Chart 1Eliminated Unemployment Gap Is Bullish For Equities Table 2 shows the S&P 500 performance from when the unemployment gap clearly closes until the business cycle ends. In all five iterations that lasted, on average, 28 months, the broad market has risen, on average, by 29%. The unemployment gap has been eliminated since February 2017 and if history at least rhymes the next U.S. recession will arrive some time in 2019 as the SPX hits our peak cycle 3,000 target.2 Another later cycle phenomenon is the disappearance of volatility and the plunge in stock correlations as the Fed tightens monetary policy. While large institutional investors aggressively selling volatility this cycle is dampening vol across asset classes, there is another explanation of the non-existence of vol: synchronized global growth. Chart 2 shows that leading up to the prior three recessions, volatility was drifting lower and remained low, and the common denominator was simultaneous global growth in the late-1980s, late-1990s and mid-2000s. BCA's global (40 country) industrial production composite was expanding during the later stages of the business cycle. Similarly, our global (44 country) global EPS diffusion index and the global synchronicity indicator also depict concurrent global growth. Table 2S&P 500 Returns When##br## The Unemployment Gap Closes Chart 2Linking Low Vol To ##br##Synchronized Global Growth During the later stages of the cycle, equity sector correlations also collapse as earnings fundamentals are key performance drivers and sector differentiation generates alpha, as the broad market enters the last stage of the bull market. As we mentioned in our "SPX 3,000?" Weekly Report on July 10th, this does not mean the S&P 500's path is a linear straight line up until the next recession hits. There are high odds of a 5-10% garden variety pullback materializing which we deem a healthy development and our strategy would be to buy the dip, ceteris paribus. This week we update an early cyclical sector and two key sub-components. Financials: In The Shadows Of The Bond Market While financials stocks have cheered the prospects of a tax bill passage sometime in early 2018 (Chart 3), sell-side analysts have been brutally downgrading financials sector EPS estimates, dealing a blow to most sub-indexes net earnings revisions (Chart 4). True, hurricane-related losses may be the culprit, but such indiscriminate downgrades are unwarranted, and we would lean against such pessimism. Recent profit results corroborate our positive sector bias, but we are still early in the earnings season. Chart 3Dissecting Financials Performance Chart 4Extreme EPS Pessimism This early cyclical sector is a core overweight portfolio holding and there are high odds of significant relative gains in the coming quarters. Historically, financials stocks had been almost 100% positively correlated with the yield curve slope (Chart 5): a steepening yield curve gooses financials profits, while a flattening one eats into earnings via narrowing net interest margins. This rang true up until the Great Recession. Since then, unconventional monetary policies likely rendered this multi-decade correlation ineffective. In particular, the fed funds rate's zero lower bound caused a shift in the correlation from the yield curve to the 10-year Treasury yield (Chart 6). In fact, changes in the 10-year Treasury yield are now a carbon copy of relative share price momentum (Chart 6). Chart 5Shifting Correlations Chart 6Financials And UST Yield Are Joined At The Hip Thus, accurately forecasting long term interest rates should also dictate the direction of relative share prices, especially given the still historically low fed funds rate. On that front, the Treasury market is priced for the 10-year yield to hit 2.57% in October 2018 from roughly 2.38% currently. We expect the 10-year yield will rise more quickly than is discounted in the forward curve. Our U.S. bond strategists think core inflation will soon resume its modest cyclical uptrend. A parallel recovery in the cost of inflation protection will impart 50-60 basis points of upside to the 10-year Treasury yield by the time core inflation reaches the Fed's 2% target.3 Chart 7 plots the path of the 10-year Treasury yield discounted in the forward curve alongside a path consistent with BCA's view that inflation is poised to head higher. It also shows what this would mean for the 10-year breakeven inflation rate. If core inflation resumes its uptrend, as BCA expects, then financials will have a stellar return year in 2018, all else equal. Chart 7Lots Of Upside Meanwhile, market participants typically value financials on a price-to-book basis during calamitous times and are very slow in changing metrics once the tremors are behind the sector. We are likely on the cusp of a switch away from P/B and toward forward P/E as a key valuation metric for financials. The current 20% forward P/E discount to the broad market is highly punitive (bottom panel, Chart 5). If the key S&P banks sub-index successfully flexes its earnings power muscle, as we expect, then a valuation rerating phase looms for both banks and financials equities. Banks Hold The Key We remain constructive on the S&P banks index as all three key drivers of bank profits, namely loan growth, price of credit and credit quality, are simultaneously moving in the right direction. Tack on the increasing likelihood of a tax bill becoming law in early 2018, the continued push of the Trump administration to relax bank regulations and pent up demand for shareholder friendly activities including net share retirement and higher dividend payments/payouts, and bank stocks are well positioned to generate impressive returns in the coming quarters. Lower corporate tax rates will boost bank profits directly and indirectly. Fiscal stimulus typically translates into an economic fillip. If small and medium businesses (SME) benefit the most from lower taxes then higher SME profits will lead to a more expansionary mindset and small business owners will likely tap their bankers to finance capital spending plans. As tax certainty increases, so will animal spirits, aiding in kick-starting a virtuous economic cycle. Thus, loan growth is on an upward trajectory. Leading indicators of loan demand are also painting a bright picture for bank profits. C&I and consumer loans, two large credit categories, are both forecast to reaccelerate in the coming months. The ISM manufacturing survey has been on fire lately and consumer confidence has been following closely behind (third & fourth panels, Chart 8). Our credit growth model captures these positive forces and is sending an unambiguously positive message for loan reacceleration in the coming months (Chart 8). Moreover, residential real estate loan origination (the second largest credit category in U.S. dollar terms) should gain steam, underpinned by solid housing market's foundations: house prices are still expanding at a healthy clip (top panel, Chart 9), household formation is running higher than housing starts and mortgage rates are not prohibitive. Chart 8Bright Business And Consumer Credit Outlooks Chart 9Ongoing Valuation Rerating The V-shaped recovery in our U.S. credit impulse corroborates this fertile loan backdrop and is heralding an earnings outperformance phase (Chart 10). On the price of credit front, if BCA's bond view pans out in the next year and the 10-year Treasury yield veers closer to 2.8-3% range with rising inflation expectations in the driver's seat (Chart 11), then bank profits should continue to accelerate. Granted, the Fed will also raise rates next year and, at the margin, push up funding costs for the banking sector. However, our working assumption is that banks will remain linked to the 10-year UST yield's fortunes next year. At some point later in the Fed tightening cycle, the yield curve and bank correlation will likely get re-established. But, a flattening yield curve denting NIMs is a 2019 narrative. Finally, credit quality remains pristine despite some pockets of weakness in, subprime especially, auto loans. At this stage of the cycle, near or at full employment, NPLs will remain muted. Importantly, loan loss reserves have recently crossed above non-current loans in Q2 according to the FDIC, for the first time since 2007. Historically, a rising reserve coverage ratio has been synonymous with increasing valuations and the current message is that the banks rerating phase is in the early innings (Chart 12). Chart 10Heed The Positive Credit Impulse Signal Chart 11Price Of Credit Should Recover Chart 12Pristine Credit Quality Bottom Line: We reiterate our early-May overweight stance in the S&P financials sector and continue to overweight the heavyweight S&P banks sub-index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5BANKX - WFC, JPM, BAC, C, USB, PNC, BBT, STI, MTB, FITB, CFG, RF, KEY, HBAN, CMA, ZION, PBCT. A Few Words On Asset Management & Custody Banks The S&P asset management & custody banks (AMCB) index sits atop of our high-conviction return table (see page 15), outperforming the broad market by 7.2% since inception. While it is tempting to monetize some of these profits, we choose to remain patient. Likely more gains are in store in the coming months as this financials sub sector maintains its leadership position. If BCA's bond view of a selloff in the 10-year Treasury market transpires in 2018, then the budding rotation out of bond and into equity products will further accelerate. The stock-to-bond ratio captures this shift and it is currently flashing green (Chart 13). Overall assets under management are also rising and are a boon for the AMCB group's profit prospects, on the back of higher equity prices and also higher flows into stocks in general (bottom panel, Chart 13). Vibrant global economic sentiment, as measured by the IFO's World Economic Survey (top panel, Chart 14), and domestic (and global) manufacturing resurgence should continue to underpin M&A activity and sustain the high levels of margin debt. Both of these factors suggest that AMCB profit drivers are accelerating and will likely serve as a catalyst to unlock excellent value in this still unloved financials sub-group (middle panel, Chart 14). Chart 13Increasing AUMs... Chart 14...And Rising Animal Spirits Are Bullish For AMCB Adding it up, the still undervalued AMCB index has sizable catch-up potential, especially if the equity risk premium (ERP) continues to narrow in the coming quarters, as we expect (ERP shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 14). Bottom Line: The S&P AMCB index remains a high-conviction overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5AMGT-BK, BLK, STT, AMP, NTRS, TROW, BEN, IVZ, AMG. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy & Global Alpha Sector Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report,"Dollar The Great Reflator" dated September 18, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report,"SPX 3,000?" dated July 10, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report,"Living With The Carry Trade" dated October 17, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps and stay neutral growth over value.
Highlights High-Yield: High-Yield spreads are 149 bps away from being more expensive than they have ever been. But in the absence of inflation it is difficult to pinpoint a catalyst for sharp spread widening. We expect excess high-yield returns between 2% and 5% (annualized) during the next 6-12 months. EM Sovereigns: There is no compelling valuation argument in favor of hard currency EM Sovereign debt versus U.S. corporate bonds. We will look to shift into EM once the pace of Fed rate hikes starts to slow later in the cycle. Economy & Inflation: Core inflation disappointed expectations in September, but the details of the report showed some silver linings. Inflation looks to be past the worst of its downtrend and should be strong enough during the next two months for the Fed to lift rates in December. Feature Chart 110-Year Treasury Yield Breakdown Just past the three quarter mark of 2017 and stubbornly low inflation remains the story of the year in U.S. bond markets. Quite simply, if inflation rebounds during the next two-and-a-half months, as the Federal Reserve expects, then Treasury yields will move sharply higher and Treasury total returns for 2017 will be close to zero. Otherwise, yields are likely to remain near current levels and 2017 Treasury total returns will approximate carry, in the range of 2.5%. Our valuation framework for the 10-year Treasury yield underscores the importance of inflation for the duration call. The real 10-year Treasury yield (currently 0.43%) is consistent with market expectations for just under two Fed rate hikes during the next 12 months (Chart 1). With the median Fed member calling for 3-4 hikes during that period, the potential remains for somewhat higher real yields in the near-term. But with all but one Fed member forecasting a terminal fed funds rate of 3% or below (1% or below in real terms), the long-run upside in real yields appears limited. On the other hand, the compensation for inflation embedded in 10-year bond yields is still far too low. At 1.85%, the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate is well below the 2.4% to 2.5% range consistent with the Fed hitting its inflation target. This continues to be the case even as our Pipeline Inflation Indicator has accelerated in recent weeks (Chart 1, bottom panel). Bond investors are waiting for inflation to show up in the core CPI and PCE data before liquidating their positions. We retain our below-benchmark duration bias on a 6-12 month horizon on the view that inflation will soon resume its cyclical uptrend. 10-year inflation compensation has 55-65 bps of upside in this scenario, while 10-year real yields will probably stay close to current levels. The outlook for core inflation is discussed in more detail in the Economy & Inflation section below. High-Yield: Just A Carry Trade At this late stage of the credit cycle, low inflation is also the key support for excess returns in both investment grade and high-yield corporate bonds. We see limited scope for further spread tightening but think it's likely that the carry trade will continue until inflation turns the corner and long-maturity TIPS breakevens settle into the 2.4% to 2.5% range consistent with the Fed's target.1 In this week's report we explore what this carry trade means for excess high-yield returns, and put those returns into context with what the asset class has typically delivered for bond investors. Table 1 shows historical annual excess returns for the Bloomberg Barclays High-Yield index since 1995.2 On average High-Yield has returned 3.42% over Treasuries each year, but with significant variation. Most of that variation results from years when the default rate is either rising quickly during a recession or falling fast in the early stages of economic recovery. Since neither of those scenarios is likely during the next 6-12 months we filter out those periods by looking at years when the average index option-adjusted spread (OAS): Widened by more than 100 bps Tightened by more than 100 bps Was range bound between -100 bps and +100 bps The average excess return is 4.9% in years when the spread is confined to a -100 bps to +100 bps range. High-Yield has returned 5.46% in excess of Treasuries so far this year, and the OAS has tightened 61 bps. It is unlikely that junk spreads will tighten by 100 bps or more during the next 12 months. The average index OAS is currently 348 bps, only 115 bps above its all-time low (Chart 2). However, to properly assess current spread levels we also need to consider that the average index duration has declined during the past fifteen years. All else equal, the same spread level is more attractive today because index duration is lower. Table 1Historical Annual High-Yield##br## Excess Returns* (%) Chart 2Junk Spreads Not Far ##br##From All-Time Tights We adjust for index duration by looking at the 12-month breakeven spread.3 At 93 bps, the breakeven spread is currently 40 bps above its all-time low (Chart 2, bottom panel). In other words, at current duration levels, the junk OAS can tighten another 149 bps before the sector is more expensive than it has ever been. Either way, what's clear from Chart 2 is that we should probably not expect much more than 100 bps of further tightening this cycle. Or, put differently, it would definitely make sense to reduce high-yield exposure as we approach all-time expensive valuations. But we can get even more specific about our expectations for high-yield excess returns. Excess junk returns can be approximated using the following formula: Excess return = Starting OAS - Default Losses - Duration*(Change in OAS) The expected return from carry during the next 12 months can be thought of as today's index spread less our expectation for default losses. Capital gains and losses can be approximated using today's index duration and the expected change in spreads. For simplicity we ignore convexity effects. This excess return approximation is shown in the second panel of Chart 3, where the dashed line assumes a base case scenario where default losses fall in line with our expectation and the OAS remains flat. Table 2 shows what 12-month excess returns would be in this base case scenario, as well as in several other scenarios. Chart 3High-Yield ##br##Expected Returns Table 2High-Yield 12-Month Excess ##br##Return* Projections In a base case scenario, where default losses are 1.09% and the OAS is flat, we would expect excess junk returns of 2.39% during the next 12 months. In a more bullish scenario where the OAS tightens by another 100 bps - bringing it to within striking distance of all-time tights - we would expect excess returns of 6.15%. We also consider scenarios where default losses differ from our forecast of 1.09%. For context, that 1.09% forecast is derived from Moody's baseline default rate forecast of 2.26% and our own model-based recovery rate forecast of 51%. For example, in a scenario where default losses are somewhat higher than expected (2%) but where the OAS stays flat, we would expect excess returns of only 1.48%. We should note that 12-month high-yield default losses have never been lower than 0.5%. So we present that optimistic scenario as an upper-bound on potential excess returns to junk. Notice that even in the most optimistic scenario we can envision, default losses reaching all-time lows and spreads contracting to within a hair of all-time tights, expected excess high-yield returns still only reach 6.74%. We would view that as the absolute best case scenario for high-yield. Realistically, default losses will probably fall into a range between 1% and 2% during the next 12 months. Assuming also that spreads come under neither strong upward nor downward pressure, we would expect excess high-yield returns between 2% and 5% (annualized) during the next 6-12 months. Bottom Line: High-Yield spreads are 149 bps away from being more expensive than they have ever been. But in the absence of inflation it is difficult to pinpoint a catalyst for sharp spread widening. We expect excess high-yield returns between 2% and 5% (annualized) during the next 6-12 months. Is Hard Currency EM Debt A Substitute For Junk? Chart 4Favor U.S. Corporates Over EM Sovereigns With relatively feeble expected returns from U.S. high-yield bonds, it's logical to explore whether there are any more attractively valued alternatives in the U.S. bond universe. One potential candidate is the U.S. dollar denominated debt of Emerging Market governments. Unfortunately, valuation in that space does not look much better than in U.S. corporates. In an effort to control for differences in both credit rating and index duration, we compare 12-month breakeven spreads between the Bloomberg Barclays EM USD Sovereign Index and a credit rating matched benchmark consisting of a combination of U.S. investment grade and high-yield corporate bond indexes. We notice that hard currency EM Sovereigns and similarly rated U.S. corporate bonds offer almost exactly the same breakeven spread, and also that EM Sovereigns have been getting comparatively cheaper since early last year (Chart 4). At the moment there is no compelling argument to favor one sector over the other on pure valuation grounds. We therefore also consider the main macro drivers of relative excess returns between EM Sovereigns and U.S. corporates (Chart 4, bottom 2 panels). The last two significant periods of EM outperformance coincided with falling U.S. rate hike expectations - as evidenced by our declining fed funds discounter - and a weaker U.S. dollar. With our 24-month fed funds discounter at only 62 bps - meaning the market expects less than three rate hikes during the next 24 months - we think it is likely to move higher from here. This should lead to one more bout of EM cheapening relative to U.S. corporates. At that point, once we are past peak rate hike expectations for the cycle, we will likely get a more attractive entry point to move into EM. Interestingly, an examination of country level spreads also does not identify any clear pockets of cheapness in EM (Chart 5). Mexico and Turkey both offer similar breakeven spreads to equivalently rated U.S. corporates, but our Emerging Markets Strategy service has a dim view of both the Turkish Lira and Mexican peso versus the U.S. dollar.4 The higher-rated EM countries: Saudi Arabia, UAE and Qatar offer the most attractive relative spreads. But, at least for Qatar, that elevated spread is most likely compensation for a highly volatile currency (Chart 6).5 Chart 5Breakeven Spreads: USD EM Sovereign Vs. U.S. Corporates Chart 6USD EM Sovereign Breakeven Spread Differentials Vs. Exchange Rate Volatility Bottom Line: There is no compelling valuation argument in favor of hard currency EM Sovereign debt versus U.S. corporate bonds. We will look to shift into EM once the pace of Fed rate hikes starts to slow later in the cycle. Economy & Inflation Some Silver Linings In September's CPI The September CPI report was released last week and it disappointed expectations with core CPI rising only 0.13% month-over-month. For context, an environment where inflation is well anchored around the Fed's target would be consistent with core CPI prints of 0.2% every month, roughly 2.4% annualized. However, despite the disappointing month-over-month figure, we continue to see evidence that inflation is past the worst of its recent downtrend. First, while year-over-year core CPI was roughly flat in September, the 3-month rate of change increased for the fourth consecutive month. The year-over-year rate of change tends to converge toward the 3-month rate of change (Chart 7). Second, a look at the underlying components of core CPI shows the following (Chart 8): Chart 7CPI Inflation Chart 8Core CPI Components Shelter inflation fell from 3.30% to 3.24% year-over-year in September. This mild deceleration is consistent with the reading from our model, and will persist going forward (Chart 8, panel 1). Chart 9Wireless No Longer A Drag Core goods inflation also fell in September, but should soon start to rise as the weaker dollar and rising import prices pass through to overall core goods prices (Chart 8, panel 2). Core services inflation, excluding shelter and medical care, increased for the third consecutive month (Chart 8, panel 3). This component of inflation is most sensitive to wage growth, and it is where we would expect most of the inflation to come from going forward. Medical care inflation continues to decelerate sharply (Chart 8, bottom panel), but as we have discussed previously, this mostly reflects a convergence between CPI and PCE inflation.6 The Fed's 2% target refers to PCE inflation. The acceleration in core services inflation (excluding shelter and medical care) is particularly important as it is yet another signal that tight labor markets are starting to pressure wages higher. This is the dynamic that must continue to play out if inflation is to return to the Fed's target, and we would tend to view increases in inflation as more sustainable if they are driven by this component. Additionally, the critical core services inflation (excluding shelter and medical care) component has been depressed in recent months by an incredibly sharp decline in cellular service (aka wireless) inflation (Chart 9). The decline occurred when both Verizon and AT&T unveiled unlimited data plans in the same month, but that drop has since reversed. When we exclude wireless from core services inflation, in addition to shelter and medical care, we see that the resulting series tracks wage growth much more closely in recent months. This underscores our conviction that core services inflation will respond to tightening labor markets and mounting wage pressure going forward. Consumer Sentiment Is Sky High There was one other notable datapoint released last week, and that was the University of Michigan's Consumer Sentiment survey which surged to its highest level since 2004 (Chart 10)! This should lend support to consumer spending (and hence GDP growth) in Q3 and Q4 and is consistent with the message from the New York Fed's GDP tracking estimate which projects GDP growth to average 2.3% in the second half of 2017. This is well above the Fed's 1.8% estimate of trend. Chart 10Consumer Spending & Sentiment With growth coming in solidly above trend, it is unlikely that September's disappointing month-over-month CPI print will be enough to prevent the Fed from lifting rates in December. As long as inflation is flat or higher during the next two months, then another rate hike this year is probably in the cards. Bottom Line: Core inflation disappointed expectations in September, but the details of the report showed some silver linings. Inflation looks to be past the worst of its downtrend and should be strong enough during the next two months for the Fed to lift rates in December. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Risk Rally Extended", dated June 27, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Excess returns are calculated relative to a duration-matched position in Treasury securities. 3 The 12-month breakeven spread is the spread widening required on a 12-month investment horizon to deliver zero excess returns. For simplicity we ignore convexity effects and calculate the breakeven spread as OAS divided by duration. 4 For Turkey please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, "Is The Dollar Expensive, And Are EM Currencies Cheap?" dated October 11, 2017. For Mexico please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, "Questions From The Road", dated September 20, 2017. Both available at ems.bcaresearch.com 5 Both Saudi Arabia and UAE have pegged exchange rates and are not shown in Chart 6. 6 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Great Unwind", dated September 19, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights It is often argued that the U.S. dollar is expensive, but models do not offer a unanimous picture. The U.S. current account, exports share, and cyclical inflation do not point to an obvious dollar overvaluation either. Without a clear valuation signal, the dollar will continue to trade off rate differentials. An increasing body of evidence points toward a rebound in U.S. inflation. As such, U.S. rates are likely to move up relative to the rest of the world, lifting the USD over the next 12 months. Feature We are sending you a shorter regular bulletin this week as we are also publishing a follow up to our joint Special Report titled, "Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Equity Investors," released with the Global Asset Allocation team two weeks ago. In this follow-up, my colleague Xiaoli Tang expands on the same methodology, testing various FX-hedging strategies for international investors - but this time looking at portfolios based in the CHF, the SEK, and the NOK. In this week's regular bulletin, we take a closer look at the U.S. dollar's valuations. The consensus view is that the dollar is expensive. We explore how this claim stacks up against the facts. At this juncture, the U.S. economy is not exhibiting some of the key consequences typical of an economy burdened by an expensive currency. Valuation Models The main argument used by some investors to show that the U.S. dollar is expensive is the traditional purchasing power parity model. This indicator does indeed flag a large 17% overvaluation for the greenback (Chart I-1). However, this is only one metric based on producer price indices. We also like to look at measures that focus on the true determinant of competitiveness: the cost of labor. When we deflate the U.S. dollar's exchange rate using unit labor costs, the dollar is neither a screaming sell nor a screaming buy. It is in line with its long-term average (Chart I-2). The same IMF real effective exchange rate model based on unit labor costs also shows the euro as fairly valued. Thus, on this metric, valuations do not seem to provide a compelling argument to go long or short the dollar, which challenges the universally bearish take on the dollar's perceived overvaluation. Chart I-1An Argument For An###br## Expensive USD Chart I-2But Not All Valuation Approaches ##br##Are That Clearcut We can also double-check the result of this metric using our own long-term fair value model, which incorporates long-term relative productivity trends. This model tries to capture the so-called Balassa-Samuelson effect. This effect is an empirical observation that countries with superior long-term labor productivity trends tend to experience a secular upward bias on their real exchange rates. The perceived overvaluation of the U.S. dollar may in fact be an illusion, because when the Balassa-Samuelson effect is taken into account, the dollar currently trades in line with its fair value (Chart I-3). Chart I-3Another Global Approach With USD At Fair Value Bottom Line: Valuing currencies is always an exercise to be approached with plenty of circumspection. It is easy to look at simple PPP models and argue that the dollar looks very expensive. However, when one takes into account labor market costs and productivity trends, the dollar seems fairly valued. A Look At The Symptoms Chart I-4The U.S. Current Account##br## Shows Little Dollar Strain Models are only as good as their inputs. It is important to try to corroborate their insights with economic reality. An expensive currency should produce three major outcomes: the country's current account position should be deteriorating, its market share of global exports should be falling, and it should be experiencing deep deflationary pressures relative to the rest of the world. Let's begin with the current account. Despite a 17% increase in the U.S. dollar since 2014, the U.S. current account has remained stable (Chart I-4). It is undeniable that this reflects an improvement in the energy trade balance of the U.S., itself a byproduct of the shale revolution. Nonetheless, it also highlights that there is little balance-of-payments strains in the U.S. In fact, the move away from energy imports in itself should point to a higher level of equilibrium for the dollar. The export share of the U.S. also does not point to too much stress created by the dollar bull market. As Chart I-5 illustrates, in contrast to the early 1980s or late 1990s-early 2000s, U.S. exports has been faring well when compared to the rest of the world. This exercise needs to be conducted by comparing U.S. exports to the rest of the world excluding China. China has been grabbing global market share from everyone for 30 years. As an aside, the continued rise of China, as well as its still-large current account surplus of more than US$155 billion, supports the idea that the RMB is indeed cheap and remains attractive on a long-term basis - a message also flagged by our long-term fair value model for the CNY (Chart I-6). Chart I-5Growing U.S. Market Share Chart I-6The Yuan Is Clearly Cheap Finally, there is little evidence that the U.S. dollar is depressing U.S. inflation on a cyclical basis. Changes in financial conditions can temporarily redistribute inflationary pressures between the U.S. and the rest of the world, but an expensive dollar should depress U.S. inflation for an extended period of time on a global relative basis. An expensive U.S. dollar makes the U.S. uncompetitive, and should force some degree of internal adjustment on the U.S. economy. So far, the two-year moving average of U.S. core inflation relative to the OECD does not show the same kind of swoon as in the 1980s or late 1990s. In fact, even after this year's inflation slowdown in the U.S., American inflation remains in an uptrend relative to the rest of the OECD (Chart I-7). One source of worry remains the U.S. net international investment position (NIIP). The U.S.'s NIIP currently stands at -41% of GDP, and despite stabilizing for the past two years, has been in a pronounced downtrend over the past 35 years. Historically, countries like Switzerland or Japan with strong NIIPs have tended to experience long-term upward pressure on their exchange rates, while those with poor NIIPs such as South Africa tend to experience negative secular trends, even in real terms. For the time being, what keeps the negative impact of the NIIP on the USD at bay is that the U.S. continues to earn a positive net income - despite negative net assets abroad (Chart I-8). This reflects the willingness of investors to hold the U.S. dollar for its reserve currency status. For the time being, with a lack of alternative to challenge the U.S. dollar's reserve status, the NIIP should not represent a key hurdle for a few more years. Chart I-7The U.S. is Not Experiencing##br## An Internal Devaluation Chart I-8The Exorbitant ##br##Privilege Bottom Line: The U.S. economy is currently exhibiting few of the signals that would be associated with an expensive dollar: the current account remains well behaved, the country is not losing export market shares to its main competitors, and U.S. inflation remains well behaved relative to the rest of the OECD on a cyclical basis. A key risk remains the U.S.'s net international investment position, but so long as the USD can maintain its unchallenged role as the key reserve in the global financial system, the U.S. is likely to continue to run an income surplus vis-à-vis the rest of the world. So What? When it comes to the FX space, long-term valuations only become binding constraints when they are in the extreme. Right now, there is enough conflicting evidence to suggest that if the dollar is indeed expensive, it is not expensive enough to flash a bright sell signal. In this case, the U.S. dollar's dynamics are likely to be dominated by interest rate differentials. Interest rate curves outside of the U.S. seem currently fairly priced, but this is not the case in the U.S. Thus, with only two full hikes priced in over the next 24 months, one needs to see upside for U.S. interest rates if one is to be bullish on the greenback. Despite last month's very poor employment numbers, a consequence of hurricanes Harvey and Irma, the labor market remains strong enough to justify the Federal Reserve's desire to hike rates. The ISM surveys also remains very strong, with the headline numbers and new order components pointing toward robust growth. The only factor that could impede the Fed is inflation. On this front, we remain optimistic that inflation will not deteriorate much further and that, in fact, it is likely to pick up over the next six months, giving the Fed a green light to increase rates in line with its own forecast: First, in the past, we have highlighted that velocity of money - based on the money of zero maturity and nominal GDP - has been a very reliable leading indicator of inflation over the past 20 years, and is pointing toward a rebound in core inflation measures toward year-end.1 Moreover, the easing in U.S. financial conditions over the past 18 months also points toward upside risks to both U.S. growth and inflation. Second, the strength in the Prices-Paid component of both ISM surveys further increases our optimism. Moreover, the recent vigor of the Supplier Delivery subcomponent - a measure of bottlenecks in the system - also points to pipeline inflationary pressures. It is true that some of the recent spike is most likely skewed by the devastating impact of the hurricanes, but this improving trend began much earlier this year. Historically, a combined improvement in both the Prices-Paid and the Supplier Delivery components of the ISM survey tends to provide long leads on core inflation (Chart I-9). Third, the New York Fed has recently started publishing an underlying inflation trend estimate. This measure has also been rebounding sharply, hitting its highest level in 10 years, also pointing toward higher core inflation (Chart I-10). Chart I-9Pipeline Inflationary Pressures##br## Are Growing In The U.S. Chart I-10Underlying Inflationary ##br##Pressures Are Growing Fourth, the behavior of inflation itself is somewhat encouraging. While the recent core PCE year-over-year numbers have been disheartening, the three-month annualized rate of change has picked up robustly. Historically, this has also led to turning points in the year-on-year number (Chart I-11). Finally, there are signs of underlying vigor in wages. Last week's U.S. average hourly earnings number clicked in at 2.9%.It was likely overinflated by the effect of the hurricanes, which have temporarily dropped workers in low-paid industries out of the sample used by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics to compute this data. However, the median average hourly earnings across the key sectors covered by the BLS has been in an uptrend since the beginning of the year (Chart I-12), pointing to some faint but real early signs of rising underlying wage growth. Moreover, while much ink has been spilled regarding whether or not the Philips curve is flat, there remain a well-defined tight relationship between the U.S. employment cost index (ECI) and the level of employment-to-population ratio in the U.S. (Chart I-13). Our view that employment growth will likely continue to tick in north of 120,000 jobs for the next 12 months, implies further improvement in the employment-to-population ratio, and thus a growing ECI. This will both support household income and consumption as well as our inflation view. Chart I-11Sequential Inflation Pointing ##br##To A Turning Point Chart I-12Cross-Sectional Median ##br##Of Wages Improving Chart I-13The Cross-Sectional Median##br## Of Wages Improving Bottom Line: With no clear message from long-term valuation, the key driver of the dollar is likely to remain interest rate differentials. At this point, U.S. interest rates need U.S. inflation to be able to rise by more than what is implied in the OIS curve and lift the dollar. Signs continue to accumulate that U.S. inflation is likely to turn the corner over the next six months, thanks to an easing in U.S. financial conditions and the pick-up in the velocity of money: the Prices-Paid and Supplier Deliveries components of the ISM have hooked up significantly, the NY Fed's underlying inflation measure is strong, the sequential growth rate in core inflation is improving, and there are growing signs that wage growth in the U.S. is picking up. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report titled "Fade North Korea, And Sell The Yen", dated August 11, 2017, or Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Conflicting Forces For The Dollar", dated September 8, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Closed Trades
Highlights EM currencies are fairly valued at the moment - they are neither cheap nor expensive. Unit labor cost-based REER is a superior currency valuation measure to those based on consumer and producer prices. Based on this measure, the U.S. dollar is not expensive - rather its valuation is neutral. When valuations are neutral, directional market indicators are more imperative than valuations. We expect directional indicators to favor the U.S. dollar and the euro versus EM currencies. In Turkey, inflation is breaking out - the currency, stocks and bonds will be under assault (page 9). The Philippines economy is overheating warranting policy tightening. Share prices are at risk (page 16). Feature EM currencies have recently begun to sell off. Does this represent a major reversal, or just a pause in a bull market? Our bias is that it is the former. In this week's report, we discuss the valuation aspect of foreign exchange markets. One of the oft-cited bullish arguments for EM currencies is that they are cheap. Similarly, the contention goes that the U.S. dollar is expensive. Our exchange rate valuation measures do not support these claims. According to our most favored currency valuation measure - the real effective exchange rate (REER) based on unit labor costs - the U.S. dollar is currently fairly valued (Chart I-1). More specifically, the greenback is not cheap, per se, but it is not expensive either. Meanwhile, the euro is at its fair value and the yen is undervalued (Chart I-2). The source of this data is the IMF. Below we elaborate in detail why we believe the unit labor cost-based REER valuation measure is superior to those based on consumer or producer prices. Chart I-1The U.S. Dollar Is Neither Cheap Nor Expensive Chart I-2The Euro Is Fairly Valued, The Yen Is Cheap As to EM currencies, there is no data on REER based on unit labor costs across all EM countries. The IMF and OECD have data for only a few developing countries, shown in Chart I-3A and Chart I-3B. With the exception of the Mexican peso and the Polish zloty, EM currencies shown in these charts are not cheap. Chart I-3AEM Currencies Are Not Universally Cheap Chart I-3BEM Currencies Are Not Universally Cheap In the absence of unit labor cost-based REER for EM, we deduce EM currency valuations in a number of ways: First, if the U.S. dollar, the euro and yen are not expensive, EM currencies by definition cannot be cheap. Second, provided exchange rates of commodities-producing advanced countries such as Australia, New Zealand, Canada and Norway are still expensive, according to unit labor cost-based REER (Chart I-4A and Chart I-4B), it is fair to argue that currencies of commodities-producing EM economies probably are not cheap as well given they move in tandem with their advanced countries peers. Chart I-4ACAD Is At Fair Value, NOK Is Slightly Expensive Chart I-4BAUD & NZD Are Expensive Third, Chart I-5 illustrates consumer and producer prices-based REER for EM. Excluding China, Korea and Taiwan, the equity market cap-weighted EM REER based on the average of consumer and producer prices is at its historical mean (Chart I-5). This denotes that EM currencies are by and large fairly valued. Notably, the BRL is slightly above its fair value, according to the REER based on average of consumer and producer prices (Chart I-6, top panel). Similarly, the same measure for the RUB and ZAR is no longer depressed after the appreciation witnessed in both currencies over the past 18 months (Chart I-6, middle and bottom panels). Chart I-5EM Ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: ##br##Exchange Rates Valuations Are Neutral Chart I-6EM High-Yielding ##br##Currencies Are Not Cheap All in all, we conclude that EM currencies are fairly valued at the moment - they are neither cheap nor expensive. This message is also corroborated by current account profiles across EM economies. In many developing countries, current account balances have improved, but are still in deficit. Consistently, the U.S. current account deficit excluding oil is at 1.75%, and with oil is at 2.4% of GDP - not wide at all. So, the current account does not presage that the greenback is expensive. Importantly, when valuations are neutral, they do not necessarily prevent the market from either rallying or selling off. Neutral valuations in any market have little impact on the market outlook. Thereby, we conclude that valuations are not an impediment for both EM currencies and the U.S. dollar to move in any given direction. When valuations are neutral, directional market indicators are more imperative than valuations. The best directional indicators for EM currencies have been commodities prices and the EM business cycle. Chart I-7 illustrates the EM aggregate currency index has historically correlated with commodities prices and EM industrial production. If commodities prices relapse and the EM business cycle slows down, as we expect, EM currencies will depreciate. As to U.S. bond yields and the greenback, we believe U.S. interest rate expectations will rise and the U.S. dollar will strengthen, at least, relative to EM currencies. That said, there has been no historical correlation between high-yielding exchange rates such as the BRL and ZAR and their interest rate differential over the U.S. (Chart I-8). Chart I-7These Factors Drive ##br##EM Exchange Rates Chart I-8Interest Rate Differential And ##br##Exchange Rates: No Correlation The euro and European currencies have the least downside versus the U.S. dollar. Hence, we expect EM currencies to weaken materially versus both the dollar and the euro (Chart I-9). Bottom Line: EM currencies are neither cheap nor expensive. We expect commodities prices to relapse and U.S. interest rate expectations to rise. This warrants a material down leg in EM currencies. We continue recommending a short position in a basket of the following currencies: ZAR, TRY, BRL, MYR and IDR versus the U.S. dollar. Investors, who are not comfortable being long the U.S. dollar, can short these same EM currencies versus the euro. Our overweights within the EM currency space are the TWD, THB, RMB, RUB, MXN, PLN and CZK. The Superior Currency Valuation Measure Unit labor cost-based REER is a superior currency valuation measure to those based on consumer and producer prices. The key idea behind currency valuation measures in general is to gauge competitiveness. Rising consumer and producer prices relative to trading partners signifies deteriorating competitiveness, and usually entails more expensive currency valuations. However, nowadays, labor costs in many economies, especially advanced ones, represent the largest cost component, even for manufacturing businesses. Therefore, it makes sense to compare wages across trading partners, not consumer and producer prices. However, rising wages in a country relative to its trading partners do not always signify worsening competitiveness. Wages might be rising, but productivity of employees may well be growing faster than wages. Therefore, true labor costs for businesses are not wages, but unit labor costs. Unit labor costs equal wages divided by productivity. They show the labor cost per unit of output. To estimate an economy's true competitiveness, one should compare its unit labor costs relative to its trading partners. REER based on unit labor cost does that. Hence, this measure captures two critical variables to competitiveness: wages and productivity. On the whole, unit labor costs measure competitiveness better than consumer and producer prices. Therefore, we argue that REER based on unit labor costs is superior to those based on consumer and producer prices. For comparison purposes, Chart I-10 illustrates the two REER measures for the U.S. dollar. Chart I-9EM Currencies Versus The USD And Euro Chart I-10U.S. Dollar: Two Valuation Measures Based on the above analysis, we conclude that the greenback and the euro are fairly valued, while the Japanese yen is cheap. In addition, EM currency valuations are neutral and currencies of commodities producing advanced countries are modestly expensive. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com Turkey: Ride The Sell-Off Turkish stocks were among the best performing equity markets worldwide in the January-August period of this year before relapsing by 16% in U.S. dollar terms since September 1st (Chart II-1). We remain bearish/underweight Turkish financial markets. A Genuine Inflation Breakout Despite the currency being stable since the beginning of the year, inflation has been rising. Core consumer price inflation has surpassed 10% for the first time in the past 14 years (Chart II-2). Chart II-1Turkish Stocks Have More Downside Chart II-2Turkey: Inflation Is Breaking Out The country's double-digit wage growth is not supported by productivity gains. The latter has been stagnant (Chart II-3, top panel). Consequently, unit labor costs have surged in both the manufacturing and services sectors (Chart II-3, bottom panel). This combination of strong wage growth paired with low productivity growth depresses companies' profit margins. This in turn will force businesses to raise prices. Provided stimulus-propelled domestic demand is robust, businesses will succeed in raising their prices leading to escalating inflation. Typically, when a country is witnessing heightening inflationary pressures, the natural policy response should be monetary and/or fiscal tightening. However, Turkish authorities have been doing the opposite - running loose monetary and fiscal policies: Government expenditure excluding interest payments have accelerated significantly (Chart II-4). The rise in government spending has been partially funded by commercial banks - the latter's holdings of government bonds have been growing, boosting money supply, as a result. Chart II-3Turkey: Surging Unit Labor Costs Chart II-4Turkey: Fiscal Expenditures Are Booming This year the Turkish authorities have been able to generate growth through the recapitalization of the Credit Guarantee Fund. The aim of this fund is to incentivize banks to lend by essentially assuming credit risk on loans extended to small and medium enterprises. Under this scheme, the government has effectively given a green light to flood the economy with credit, in turn, boosting economic growth. So far, the scheme has been responsible for the creation of TRY 200 billion, or 7% of GDP, worth of new credit out of the TRY 250 billion limit. This TRY 250 billion is considerable as it compares with a total of TRY 367 billion worth of loan origination by commercial banks last year. Turkey's banking system has been relying on enormous amounts of liquidity provisions by the central bank (Chart II-5, top panel) to sustain its ongoing credit boom and strong economic growth. On the whole, the central bank's net liquidity injections into the banking system continue to increase rapidly. Interestingly, the nature of the central bank's funding of commercial banks has increasingly shifted away from open market operations and more towards direct lending to banks (Chart II-5, bottom panel). Adding all the liquidity facilities - the intraday, overnight and late window facilities - the Central Bank Of Turkey's outstanding funding to banks is TRY 86 billion, or 3% of GDP, abnormally elevated relative to the data series' history. This entails that monetary policy is loose even though the price of liquidity provided by the central bank to banks has been rising. Consistently, local currency bank loan growth stands at 25% (Chart II-6, top panel). Chart II-5Central Bank Of Turkey's Liquidity Injections Chart II-6Turkey Is Experiencing A Credit Binge On the whole, commercial banks are requiring more and more liquidity, and the CBT is continuously supplying it. These injections maintain liquidity in the banking system to a sufficiently high level that allow money/credit creation by commercial banks to continue mushrooming (Chart II-6, bottom panel). Fiscal and monetary policies are overly simulative and the country's twin - fiscal and current account - deficit is widening (Chart II-7). The widening current account deficit - which is a form of hidden inflation - substantiates the case of an inflation outbreak in Turkey. Remarkably, despite extremely strong exports due to the robust growth in the Euro Area, Turkey's current account deficit has been unable to narrow at all. This confirms excessive growth in domestic demand. In regard to currency valuation, Chart II-8 demonstrates that the lira is not cheap, especially according to unit labor cost-based REER. It is therefore questionable how long Turkish exports can remain competitive if unit labor costs continue mushrooming at a rapid pace. Chart II-7Turkey: Widening Twin Deficit Chart II-8The Lira Is Not Cheap Bottom Line: Despite high inflation, the Turkish authorities have opted to stimulate the economy further, aiming to boost short-term growth at all costs. The outcome will be an inevitable inflation outbreak. The Monetary Regime And Exchange Rate Chart II-9Excessive Money Printing Is Bearish For Lira The monetary regime in Turkey will lead to a major lira depreciation: The money multiplier - calculated as broad local currency money divided by banks' excess reserves at the central bank - has been rising sharply since 2012 (Chart II-9, top panel). This measure illustrates the degree of leverage banks have assumed. Also, the money multiplier reveals how much broad money/purchasing power banks have created per unit of liquidity provided by the central bank. To put into perspective the vast amount of money that has been created, the bottom panel of Chart II-9 demonstrates that the current net level of foreign exchange reserves (currently US$ 32 billion) covers only 11% of broad local currency money M3. Not only is excessive money creation bearish for the currency but it is also highly inflationary. As inflation rises, residents' desire to convert their deposits from local to foreign currency will increase, further exerting downward pressure on the lira. In fact, this is already happening - households' foreign currency deposits - measured in U.S. dollars - are growing at rapid annual pace of 13%. Given this inflationary backdrop and the risk of further depreciation, interest rates will have to rise. This will inevitably trigger another NPL cycle. Banks are very under-provisioned for non-performing loans (NPL). NPLs have not risen, and NPL provisions are also very low (Chart II-10). Both are set to rise considerably, and banks' capital and ability to expand credit will be severely undermined. Lastly, higher interest rates will be negative for loan growth and bank's profitability. Bank stocks are starting to roll-over. Given the extent to which they have decoupled from interest rates, we believe there is much more downside (Chart II-11). Chart II-10Turkey: A New NPL Cycle Will Start Chart II-11Turkish Bank Stocks Have Considerable Downside The current monetary policy stance is unsustainable. Inflation is breaking out and this is bearish for Turkish financial markets. Box 1 on page 15 addresses the geopolitical dimension of Turkey's recent spat with the U.S. Investment Conclusions We expect policy makers to remain behind the curve amid rising inflation and this will weigh on the lira. As such, we suggest currency traders who are not shorting the lira to do so at this time. We remain short the lira versus the U.S. dollar but the lira will continue to plummet versus the euro too. A weaker lira will undermine U.S. dollar and euro returns on Turkish stocks and domestic bonds. Dedicated EM equity investors as well as those overseeing EM fixed income and credit portfolios should continue to underweight Turkish assets within their respective EM universes. Stephan Gabillard, Senior Analyst stephang@bcaresearch.com BOX 1 Turkey's Unstable Geopolitical Position On the political front, the recent spat with the U.S. over visas is just another sign of how far Turkey has descended into the geopolitical unknown. The U.S. has closed its visa offices as a response to the detention of a Turkish national working for the U.S. consulate in Istanbul by the local authorities. The arrest was made over alleged links to Fethullah Gulen, the cleric that Turkish authorities blame for the July 2016 botched coup. That Gulen remains the obsession of Turkish authorities is a clear sign that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan continues to feel threatened. Whether the Gulen threat is real or imagined is not for us to determine. But it is clear that Turkey remains a deeply divided country. The April 2017 constitutional referendum giving the president greater powers barely passed, despite numerous reports of irregularities. As BCA's Geopolitical Strategy posited following the vote, the referendum did nothing to reinforce Erdogan's power or reduce domestic tensions.1 It would only deepen his instinct to use "rally-around-the-flag" strategy by emphasizing external threats to quell domestic opposition. Now Turkey finds itself at the crossroad on three different fronts: Iraq: Neighboring Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) has just held an independence referendum, prompting Erdogan to threaten military action against the Iraqi Kurds. Although no regional or global power overtly supports KRG's moves towards independence, Turkey is under pressure to respond in order to snuff out any secessionist ambitions by the Kurds in Turkey and Syria. Syria: President Erdogan has also threatened invasion of the self-declared Kurdish canton of Afrin in northwestern Syria. The enclave is held by the U.S.-allied People's Protection Units (YPG), which fought against the Islamic State in Syria. According to various news reports, Turkish troops are amassing on the border with Syria for the intervention. This could put the Turkish military in direct contact with Russian troops, which have a presence in Afrin. The West: Relations with the West, with whom Turkey remains in a formal military alliance (NATO) remain in the doldrums. Aside from the visa spat with the U.S., Turkey's relations with Europe, and Germany in particular, are at their lowest point in years. Bottom Line: In a month's time, Turkey may have invaded both Syria and Iraq while simultaneously hitting a low point in its relationship with traditional Western allies. At the very least, this complicated geopolitical environment will make it difficult for Ankara to focus on the economy. At its greatest, it is a recipe for geopolitical overreach, military disaster, domestic crisis, or any combination of all three. Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "What About Emerging Markets?," dated May 3, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. The Philippines: An Overheating Economy Requires Policy Tightening Since early 2016, the Philippine stock market has been massively lagging the EM benchmark (Chart III-1, top panel). Similarly, the Philippine peso has been extremely weak, recording new lows versus the U.S. dollar, despite the broad-based EM currency rally (Chart III-1, bottom panel). In fact, the symptoms of this economy and its financial markets are consistent with an overheating economy that is expanding above potential, and where inflationary pressures are heightening. Going forward, inflation will keep rising and the central bank will have to tighten monetary policy meaningfully. These developments will weigh on Philippine growth and financial markets. Consumer price inflation, both headline and core, are rising briskly and currently stand at 3% - in the middle of the central bank's 2-4% target (Chart III-2). With the policy rate at 3%, this entails that real rates have dropped to zero. Chart III-1Philippine Stocks Relative ##br##To EM Have Underperformed Chart III-2Philippine Inflation ##br##Is Creeping Higher The Central Bank of the Philippines (BSP) has kept monetary policy too easy for too long. It injected liquidity into the banking system on various occasions in 2013-2014 and 2016-2017 via its banking liquidity management tool - the Special Deposit Account (Chart III-3, top panel). These liquidity injections incentivized commercial banks to create enormous amounts of credit in the economy (Chart III-3, middle and bottom panels). Booming credit growth in turn is creating excessive purchasing power in the economy, resulting in a current account deficit for the first time since 2000. In addition, the fiscal deficit is now widening (Chart III-4). Chart III-3Credit Growth Is Rampant Chart III-4Philippines Twin Deficit On the wage front, non-agriculture workers' salaries are accelerating, pushing unit labor costs higher (Chart III-5). Remarkably, despite real GDP growth of about 6.5% since 2014, consumer staples EPS growth is on the verge of contracting. It seems that costs (including wages) have been mushrooming while productivity gains have been lagging. This also corroborates the overheating thesis. With Philippines' inflationary dynamics intensifying, the BSP will have to tighten monetary policy. In fact, the top panel of Chart III-3 shows that the BSP has already begun its tightening cycle by withdrawing some banking liquidity via its Special Deposit Account. In addition, interest rate hikes by the central bank are also an option. Monetary tightening amid very strong loan growth will lead a meaningful slowdown in the economy. Loan growth deceleration will affect primarily capital spending and the property market. Both segments are cooling off (Chart III-6). Chart III-5Philippines: Wages Are Accelerating Chart III-6Cyclical Slowdown On The Horizon Importantly, banks' net interest margins have been falling - a trend that will likely continue due to potential liquidity tightening and higher policy rates (Chart III-7, top panel). This, along with slow loan growth and rising NPL provisions, will intensify banks' EPS contraction (Chart III-7, bottom panel). Chart III-8 illustrates that both NPL and NPL provisions as a percent of total loans are at their lowest level since 1997. Higher borrowing costs following a decade-long lending boom, necessitates higher NPL provisions. Chart III-7Banks' Interest Rate Margins And Profits Chart III-8Bank NPLs To Rise Along With Provisions NPLs are likely to emanate from the real estate and construction sectors. Loans to these two sectors account for 20% of total bank loans. Hence, higher interest rates are negative for banks and real estate stocks which, together, account for 40% of the Philippines MSCI index market cap. If the central bank decides not to tighten, however, the economy will continue to overheat and bond yields - as well as the currency - will sell-off. Such a scenario is equally bearish for the equity market. Philippines equity valuations are elevated and, hence, are not priced for any of these scenarios. For dedicated EM equity investors, we continue recommending a neutral allocation to this bourse. We are reluctant to underweight this stock market because the Philippines remains less leveraged to China and the commodities cycle vis-à-vis other emerging markets (EM). Besides, it has already considerably underperformed the EM equity benchmark. Therefore, it might not underperform substantially relative to other EM countries - if and when commodities start selling off as a result of a growth slowdown in China. Within ASEAN, we favor Thailand, underweight Malaysia and are neutral on the Philippines, Indonesia, and India relative to the EM equity benchmark. Ayman Kawtharani, Associate Editor ayman@bcaresearch.com Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations