Valuations
Highlights Duration: Rising political tensions in the U.S. will not offset the cyclical upward momentum in global growth, which is supported by accelerating corporate profits. Bond yields are unlikely to fall much in the near term, despite significant bearish investor duration positioning. Shift back to a below-benchmark overall portfolio duration stance and position for bear-steepening of yield curves. Country Allocation: Downgrade U.S. Treasuries to underweight (2 of 5) in global hedged bond portfolios. Corporates: A better global growth outlook should continue to support U.S. corporate debt markets, despite tight valuations and a strong U.S. dollar. Upgrade allocations to U.S. Investment Grade to above-benchmark (4 of 5) and U.S. High-Yield to neutral (3 of 5), at the expense of U.S. Treasuries. Favor the higher quality tiers (i.e. above Caa) in U.S. junk. Feature Optimism reigns supreme in the markets at the moment, particularly in the U.S. where bullish investors traded in their "Make America Great Again" hats for "Dow 20,000" ballcaps last week. The string of better-than-expected economic data across the world is continuing - a fact confirmed by the latest corporate profit releases showing that an earnings recovery was already underway before Donald Trump's election victory. We have been looking for a meaningful pullback in government bond yields, and a widening of credit spreads, before returning to a below-benchmark portfolio duration stance and raising corporate allocations. That opportunity may not come to pass as economic data remains solid and leading indicators are accelerating. With no major inflation hiccups likely in the near-term to force the major central banks to rapidly shift to a more hawkish stance, and with equity markets remaining supported by accelerating earnings growth, the current "sweet spot" for risk can continue. Return expectations must be tempered, though, as much of the recent growth improvements is already reflected in bond and equity valuations. Any sign that the optimism shown in confidence surveys is not translating into improving hard economic data could trigger an equity market correction and a risk-off move to lower government bond yields and wider credit spreads. Given our view that global growth will be faster than consensus expectations in 2017, however, we think that a pro-risk overshoot phase is more likely than a risk-off correction in the near term. Any upset in equity markets would represent a medium-term opportunity to increase credit risk and reduce duration. This week, we are adapting a more pro-growth, pro-risk stance in our recommended portfolio allocations this week, making the following changes: Reduce overall portfolio duration to below-benchmark Reduce U.S. Treasury exposure to below-benchmark (2 of 5) Upgrade U.S. Investment Grade corporate exposure to above-benchmark (4 of 5) Upgrade U.S. High-Yield corporate exposure to neutral (3 of 5), favoring B- & Ba-rated names Importantly, we are maintaining our current allocations to Euro Area corporates (above-benchmark) and Emerging Market sovereign and corporate debt (neutral for both), given that we see more potential for upside surprises in the U.S. economy relative to the rest of the world. Duration: Re-Establish A Cyclical Below-Benchmark Stance We moved to a neutral stance on our overall duration recommendation back on December 6th, which we viewed as a tactical profit-taking exercise on our previous successful bearish bond call dating back to last July.1 Our view at the time was that global bonds were still in a cyclical bear phase, led by rising inflation expectations and better economic growth prospects in the developed world (especially in the U.S.). Given the extreme bearish positioning in government bond markets, at a time of oversold momentum, our stated plan of attack was to look to move back to a below-benchmark stance after a meaningful pullback in yields. The likely trigger for that move was expected to be some disappointment on actual economic data, especially given the heightened growth expectations in the U.S. after Trump's electoral victory. Global economic data continues to trend in a positive direction, however, which is preventing any pullback in bond yields despite a deeply oversold market (Chart of the Week). The Citigroup Data Surprise index for the major developed economies is at the highest levels since early 2014. The Global ZEW indicator, one of our favorites, is at the highest level since mid-2015. The global leading economic indicator from the OECD is back to levels last seen in 2013, suggesting that the positive growth momentum can continue to put upward pressure on real bond yields. There are few signs of disappointment at the country level, with the Purchasing Managers Indices for all major developed markets, as well as for China, all pointing to expanding global activity (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekYields Supported By Faster Growth
Yields Supported By Faster Growth
Yields Supported By Faster Growth
Chart 2A Broad Based Upturn
A Broad Based Upturn
A Broad Based Upturn
It will be interesting to see if this uptrend can withstand the "bull in the China shop" approach of the new Trump administration with regards to U.S. trade policy. Already, in just the first week of his presidency, Trump has aggressively pushed to implement much of his protectionist campaign promises, like pulling out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, pushing to renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement and threatening the imposition of tariffs or border taxes in an effort to reduce the U.S. trade deficit. Global confidence surveys will be critical to monitor in the next month or two for any sign that Trump uncertainty is having a detrimental effect on business optimism outside the U.S. Importantly, the starting point is strong, with both consumer and business confidence measures in Europe and China rising steadily, as are net earnings revisions for global equities (Chart 3). A combination of improving economic sentiment, confirmed by stronger corporate profits, may be enough for the global economy to withstand the shifting plate tectonics of U.S. economic policy. In the U.S. itself, the GDP report released last week showed that 2016 ended on a soft note, with annualized growth of only 1.9% in the 4th quarter. However, a sector-by-sector forecast for U.S. GDP presented last month by our colleagues at BCA U.S. Bond Strategy shows that there is upside risk for most major elements of the U.S. economy (Chart 4).2 Rising consumer confidence amid a tight labor market should help boost consumption, while the large drag from inventory destocking seen last year will not be repeated in 2017. Chart 3An Improving Corporate Profit Backdrop
An Improving Corporate Profit Backdrop
An Improving Corporate Profit Backdrop
Chart 4Upside Risks For U.S. Growth
Upside Risks For U.S. Growth
Upside Risks For U.S. Growth
The wild cards for U.S. growth will come from all the sectors most impacted by potential policies from the Trump administration: business investment, government spending and net exports. Trump has been going full steam ahead with his protectionist leanings in his initial days in office, but how much he can quickly implement remains to be seen. For now, the U.S. dollar is not rising rapidly enough to generate much of a drag on U.S. GDP growth, unlike the 2014/15 surge in the greenback (see the bottom panel of Chart 4). More importantly, the improving trend in U.S. corporate profit growth and post-election surge in business confidence should support faster growth in U.S. capital spending, which is already showing signs of perking up a bit (Chart 5). As we discussed in a Weekly Report earlier this month, the bigger upside surprise for the U.S. economy this year will come from capital spending, not government spending, as Trump will have a much easier time passing pro-growth corporate tax cuts than getting his infrastructure spending program green-lighted quickly through the U.S. Congress.3 U.S. growth will be much faster than the Fed's current forecast of 2.1%, which will embolden the Fed to deliver on additional rate hikes later this year. The Fed will likely want to see some sign of clarity on the fiscal policy outlook before contemplating the next rate hike, and we are not expecting a rapid acceleration of U.S. inflation in the next few months that would force to Fed to act more quickly. The next rate hike will come at the June FOMC meeting, with the Fed delivering at least the 50bps of rate hikes by year-end currently discounted in the market, and possibly the full 75bps of hikes shown in the latest FOMC projections if the economy delivers faster growth in 2017, as we expect. When looking at the other major bond yields in the "Big-4" developed markets, all elements of valuation have repriced higher (Chart 6): Chart 5U.S. Corporate Profits & Confidence Are Stronger, Capex Is Next
U.S. Corporate Profits & Confidence Are Stronger, Capex Is Next
U.S. Corporate Profits & Confidence Are Stronger, Capex Is Next
Chart 6All Yield Components Are Rising
All Yield Components Are Rising
All Yield Components Are Rising
Central bank policy rate expectations have shifted away from cuts in the Euro Area, Japan and the U.K., with a small hike from the Bank of England now discounted in the U.K. Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve; Term premiums have risen from the mid-2016 lows, but remain negative in the countries where central banks are still actively engaging in asset purchase programs; Inflation expectations are well off the 2016 lows in all markets, but with higher levels in the U.K. and U.S. We see much higher upside risks for growth and inflation, and tighter monetary policy, in the U.S. and U.K. than the Euro Area or Japan. To reflect this in our model portfolio, we are downgrading our U.S. country allocation to below-benchmark (2 of 5) this week, while maintaining our underweight in the U.K. (also 2 of 5). We are keeping the Euro Area at above-benchmark (4 of 5) and Japan at benchmark (3 of 5). Government bond yield curves should see mild steepening pressure from rising inflation expectations before central banks are forced to turn more hawkish. We are focusing our decision to reduce overall portfolio duration more at the longer end of yield curves, especially in the U.S. and U.K. (Chart 7). A large headwind to any significant move higher in bond yields remains investor positioning, with only the "active client" portion of the JP Morgan duration survey showing a flip back to a net long duration stance in recent weeks (Chart 8). A full unwind of the large short positions in government bond markets is unlikely in the absence of much weaker economic data or a big correction in equity markets. The latter is impossible to time, but nothing that we are seeing in the forward-looking data is pointing to an imminent slowing of economic growth. Thus, we are choosing to shift back to our desired strategic below-benchmark duration stance this week. Chart 7Rising Inflation = Steeper Yield Curves
Rising Inflation = Steeper Yield Curves
Rising Inflation = Steeper Yield Curves
Chart 8Large Short Positions Still An Issue
Large Short Positions Still An Issue
Large Short Positions Still An Issue
Bottom Line: Rising political tensions in the U.S. will not offset the cyclical upward momentum in global growth and inflation. Bond yields are unlikely to fall much in the near term, despite significant bearish investor duration positioning. Shift back to a below-benchmark overall portfolio duration stance and position for bear-steepening of yield curves. Downgrade U.S. Treasuries to underweight (2 of 5) in global hedged bond portfolios. Corporate Bonds: A Cyclical Upgrade In The U.S., Despite Tight Valuations Global corporate debt has enjoyed solid relative performance versus government bonds over the past several months, driven by the improvements in economic growth and earnings. Credit spreads have narrowed in response, for both Investment Grade and High-Yield. In the Euro Area, the U.K. and Japan, central bank asset purchases of corporate bonds have also helped to keep spreads tight and help support the overall positive backdrop for credit markets. High levels of corporate leverage remain an issue, especially in the U.S., but an improving profit backdrop and faster nominal GDP growth will help paper over problems associated with high company debt. In the U.S., the items in our "Corporate Checklist" are providing a generally positive signal (Chart 9): Our Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) is starting to signal a slight improvement in corporate credit metrics after several years of deterioration; Bank lending standards are no longer tightening, according to the Fed's Senior Loan Officer Survey, after a brief period of more stringent standards in 2015 & 2016; Bank equities are outperforming the overall market, which in the past has been a positive signal for credit availability and corporate debt performance; Monetary conditions are still only just neutral, even with the U.S. dollar at very expensive levels. The monetary backdrop could become a concern later on in the year if Fed rate hikes lead to another period of rapid U.S. dollar appreciation. Until then, the more positive backdrop for profits will continue to boost balance sheet health, resulting in reduced equilibrium risk premiums (i.e. spreads) on corporate bonds. Already, U.S. corporate debt has priced in the better news (Chart 10). In High-Yield, the massive rally in energy-related names after the recovery in oil prices last year (top panel) has driven the spread on the Energy sub-component of the Barclays Bloomberg benchmark index back to levels last seen when oil was at $100/bbl ... even though the price of oil is still in the low $50s! Meanwhile, junk spreads ex-energy now reflect the benign macro volatility environment, as proxied by the VIX index (middle panel). Chart 9A Better Fundamental Backdrop
A Better Fundamental Backdrop
A Better Fundamental Backdrop
Chart 10Corporate Valuations Are Not Cheap...
Corporate Valuations Are Not Cheap...
Corporate Valuations Are Not Cheap...
In Investment Grade, spreads have also tightened alongside falling volatility, although spreads are still somewhat higher than during the previous period when the VIX was this low back in 2014 (bottom panel), suggesting that spreads could compress even further if the macro backdrop stays benign. We have maintained a generally cautious stance on U.S. corporate credit for much of the past year, given the combination of poor corporate health, contracting profits and slowly tightening monetary conditions. Now that the backdrop has changed, the case for upgrading U.S. corporates versus U.S. Treasuries is more compelling. This is especially so given the improvement in global economic growth momentum, which usually correlates with periods of positive excess returns for both Investment Grade and High-Yield versus Treasuries (Chart 11). Given our more optimistic tone on global economic growth, led by the potential for upside surprises in the U.S., this week we are upgrading our recommended stance on U.S. Investment Grade corporates to above-benchmark (4 of 5) and U.S. High-Yield to at-benchmark (3 of 5). Within High-Yield, we are focusing our exposure on the high-to-middle quality tiers, as both B-rated and Ba-rated spreads look far more attractive than Caa-rated debt. That can be seen in Chart 12, which shows the option-adjusted spread (OAS) for the overall U.S. High-Yield index and the three main credit tier buckets, divided by the 12-month trailing volatility of excess returns for each grouping. These "vol-adjusted" spreads are at the long-run median level for B-rated and Ba-rated debt, while Caa-rated bonds (which are dominated by the now-expensive debt of energy-related companies) offers poor value relative to their volatility. Chart 11...But The Growth Outlook Remains Supportive
...But The Growth Outlook Remains Supportive
...But The Growth Outlook Remains Supportive
Chart 12Avoid The Lower Credit Tiers In U.S. Junk
Avoid The Lower Credit Tiers In U.S. Junk
Avoid The Lower Credit Tiers In U.S. Junk
Differentiating within the credit tiers is important, as the overall U.S. High-Yield spread is not particularly cheap once expected default losses are taken into account (Chart 13). If U.S. economic growth surprises to the upside, as we expect, then the default outlook will look better and High-Yield spreads will look more attractive. For this reason, we would look to shift to an above-benchmark stance on any risk-off correction in global equities or corporates. With the business cycle improving, buying any dips in U.S. corporate credit markets should pay off in 2017. One final point: we have had a long-standing recommendation to overweight Euro Area Investment Grade corporate debt versus U.S. equivalents. That view was based on the underlying support for Euro Area corporates from ECB purchases, coming at a time when Euro Area balance sheets were improving in absolute terms, and relative to the U.S., as shown by our Euro Area Corporate Health Monitor (Chart 14). However, with our U.S. CHM now showing some modest improvement, and with U.S. likely to show more upside growth surprises in 2017, we are not upgrading Euro Area debt from the current above-benchmark (4 of 5) ranking, even as we boost our U.S. corporate allocation. Chart 13Expect Carry-Like Returns, Given Tight Spreads
Expect Carry-Like Returns, Given Tight Spreads
Expect Carry-Like Returns, Given Tight Spreads
Chart 14A Bullish Case For Both U.S. and Euro Area IG
A Bullish Case For Both U.S. and Euro Area IG
A Bullish Case For Both U.S. and Euro Area IG
Bottom Line: A better global growth outlook should continue to support U.S. corporate debt markets, despite tight valuations and a strong U.S. dollar. Upgrade allocations to U.S. Investment Grade to above-benchmark (4 of 5) and U.S. High-Yield to neutral (3 of 5), at the expense of U.S. Treasuries. Favor the higher quality tiers (i.e. above Caa) in U.S. junk. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "The Bond Vigilantes Take A Break For The Holidays", dated December 6, 2016, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see BCA U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "A "Post-Truth" Economic Upturn?", dated January 17, 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
The Global Growth Upturn Has Legs: Reduce Duration, Upgrade Credit Exposure
The Global Growth Upturn Has Legs: Reduce Duration, Upgrade Credit Exposure
Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Duration: Treasuries are now slightly expensive relative to global growth indicators, and the global economic recovery appears sustainable. Despite lingering concerns about policy uncertainty and bearish bond positioning, we recommend shifting back to a below-benchmark duration stance. Spread Product: The combination of an improving global growth back-drop and still-accommodative Fed policy will be positive for spread product. As such, we increase our allocation to investment grade corporate bonds - and spread product more generally - from neutral (3 out of 5) to overweight (4 out of 5). We also upgrade high-yield bonds from underweight (2 out of 5) to neutral (3 out of 5). Economy: U.S. GDP growth will be solidly above trend in 2017, driven in large part by accelerating consumer spending. Feature The divergence in economic growth between the U.S. and the rest of the world has been one of our key investment themes for much of the past two years. All else equal, the greater the divergence in growth between the U.S. and the rest of the world, the more the U.S. dollar comes under upward pressure. A strengthening dollar limits how far the Fed can lift rates and caps the upside in long-dated yields. In fact, in a report published last October titled "Dollar Watching: An Update"1 we wrote: Our continued expectation that the Fed will lift rates in December leads us to maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration and a neutral allocation to spread product until a December rate hike has been fully discounted by the market. Beyond December, our investment strategy will depend largely on how the dollar responds to an upward re-rating of rate expectations. Strong dollar appreciation would likely cause us to reverse our below-benchmark duration stance and become even more cautious on spread product. Conversely, a tame dollar could mean that the sell-off in bonds and rally in spreads have further to run. With the December rate hike now in the rearview mirror, global growth divergences do not appear to be a strong headwind for bond yields. In fact, the trade-weighted dollar has flattened off since the Fed lifted rates and bullish sentiment toward the dollar has plunged even though rate hike expectations remain elevated (Chart 1). This suggests that the dollar is so far not having much of an impact on the U.S. growth outlook or the expected path of monetary policy. Digging a little deeper, it appears we are witnessing a synchronized upturn in global growth led by the manufacturing sector (Chart 2). The Global Manufacturing PMI is in a clear uptrend, while the diffusion index suggests the improvement is broad based. Similarly, our Global Leading Economic Indicator is once again expanding, while its diffusion index is holding steady above the 50% line. Chart 1Dollar Sentiment: A Key Indicator
Dollar Sentiment: A Key Indicator
Dollar Sentiment: A Key Indicator
Chart 2Synchronized Global Recovery
Synchronized Global Recovery
Synchronized Global Recovery
Although the extremely high level of economic policy uncertainty increases the odds of a near-term selloff in risk assets and related flight-to-quality into Treasury securities, the strength of the global growth impulse and sustainability of the U.S. economic recovery (see section titled "U.S. Economy: A Healthy Consumer Leads The Way" below) means we would view any risk-off episode as an opportunity to reduce portfolio duration and increase exposure to spread product. As such, given our 6-12 month investment horizon and the inherent difficulty in forecasting near-term market riot points, this week we begin the process of shifting our portfolio in this direction. Specifically, we move from an "At Benchmark" back to a "Below Benchmark" duration stance and we also upgrade spread product from neutral (3 out of 5) to overweight (4 out of 5), while downgrading Treasuries from neutral (3 out of 5) to underweight (2 out of 5). Within spread product we upgrade investment grade corporates from neutral (3 out of 5) to overweight (4 out of 5) and upgrade high-yield from underweight (2 out of 5) to neutral (3 out of 5). We expand on the rationale for each move below. Portfolio Duration Chart 3Treasuries Now Expensive
Treasuries Now Expensive
Treasuries Now Expensive
Two weeks ago,2 we detailed our bearish 6-12 month outlook for U.S. bonds, while also pointing to three factors that had so far prevented us from adopting a below-benchmark duration stance. The three factors were: (i) valuation, (ii) economic policy uncertainty and (iii) sentiment & positioning. Factor 1: Valuation Two weeks ago the 10-year Treasury yield was trading 9 basis points cheap on our 2-factor model based on Global PMI and bullish dollar sentiment. Since then, bullish sentiment has declined and Flash3 PMI readings from the U.S., Eurozone and Japan were all strong. If we assume that final PMIs from these regions are in line with the Flash numbers and that the PMIs from all other countries remain flat, then we calculate that the 10-year Treasury yield is actually 4 basis points expensive relative to fair value (Chart 3). In short, valuation argues even more in favor of reducing portfolio duration than it did two weeks ago. Factor 2: Uncertainty Economic policy uncertainty remains elevated and, unusually, has de-coupled from surveys of consumer and business confidence (Chart 4). Certainly, there is a risk that confidence measures relapse in the near-term if it appears as though some of the new President's promises related to tax cuts and deregulation will not be delivered. However, this risk needs to be weighed against the bond-bearish combination of protectionism and fiscal stimulus favored by the new administration, especially at a time when the economy is close to full employment. Factor 3: Sentiment & Positioning Bond sentiment and positioning remain decidedly bearish according to our Bond Sentiment Indicator and net speculative positioning in Treasury futures, although the J.P. Morgan client survey shows that clients' duration positioning is close to neutral (Chart 5). It is likely that some further capitulation of short positions is necessary before Treasury yields can move decisively higher. However, these shifts in positioning can occur very quickly and given the reading from our valuation model we feel that now is the appropriate time to reduce duration exposure. Chart 4Elevated Uncertainty Remains A Near-Term Risk...
Elevated Uncertainty Remains A Near-Term Risk...
Elevated Uncertainty Remains A Near-Term Risk...
Chart 5...As Does Bearish Positioning
...As Does Bearish Positioning
...As Does Bearish Positioning
Bottom Line: Treasuries are now slightly expensive relative to global growth indicators, and the global economic recovery appears sustainable. Despite lingering concerns about policy uncertainty and bearish bond positioning, we recommend shifting back to a below-benchmark duration stance. Spread Product In last week's report,4 we explored the performance of spread product throughout the four phases of the Fed cycle (Chart 6), which are defined as follows: Chart 6Stylized Fed Cycle
Dollar Watching: Another Update
Dollar Watching: Another Update
Phase I represents the early stage of the withdrawal of monetary stimulus. This phase begins with the first hike of a new tightening cycle and ends when the fed funds rate crosses above its equilibrium level. Phase II represents the late stage of the tightening cycle, when the Fed hikes its target rate above equilibrium in an effort to slow the economy. Phase III represents the early stage of the easing cycle. It begins with the first rate cut from the peak and lasts until the Fed cuts its target rate below equilibrium. Phase IV represents the late stage of the easing cycle. It encompasses both the period when the fed funds rate descends to its cycle trough and the subsequent adjustment period when the Fed remains on hold in an effort to kick start an economic recovery. Based on the fact that core PCE inflation remains below the Fed's target and the view that its uptrend will proceed only gradually, we concluded that we are presently in Phase I of the Fed cycle and would probably remain there for the balance of the year. Historically, spread product has performed well in Phase I of the Fed cycle, with only Phase IV producing higher average monthly excess returns. However, the Fed cycle is only part of the story. Our Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) - a composite measure of balance sheet health for the nonfinancial corporate sector - has been in "deteriorating health" territory since late 2013. Historically, this measure has an excellent track record of flagging periods of spread widening (Chart 7). Chart 7The Corporate Health Monitor And Credit Spreads
The Corporate Health Monitor And Credit Spreads
The Corporate Health Monitor And Credit Spreads
To augment our analysis, this week we re-examine average monthly excess returns for investment grade corporate bonds in the four phases of the Fed cycle but this time we also split each phase into periods of improving and deteriorating corporate health (Table 1). Table 1Investment Grade Corporate Bond Excess Returns* Given Reading From ##br##BCA Corporate Health Monitor And The Phase Of The Fed Cycle (July 1989 To Present)
Dollar Watching: Another Update
Dollar Watching: Another Update
Table 1 shows there have been 14 months since 1989 when Phase I of the Fed cycle coincided with deteriorating corporate health, according to the CHM. Conversely, Phase I of the Fed cycle coincided with improving corporate health in 25 months. However, 13 of the 14 months when Phase I of the Fed cycle coincided with deteriorating corporate health are the most recent 13 months. In other words, the current combination of tightening (but still-supportive) monetary policy and weak corporate balance sheets is unprecedented. The other factor we have not yet considered is valuation, as measured by the starting level of corporate spreads. In Table 2 we present average monthly excess returns for investment grade corporate bonds split by both the phase of the Fed cycle and the investment grade corporate option-adjusted spread. At present, the average option-adjusted spread for the Bloomberg Barclays investment grade corporate index is 120 bps. Table 2Investment Grade Corporate Bond Excess Returns* Given Previous Month Option-Adjusted Spread** ##br##And The Phase Of The Fed Cycle (July 1989 To Present)
Dollar Watching: Another Update
Dollar Watching: Another Update
In Table 2 we observe that usually spreads are much lower in Phase I of the Fed cycle, typically between 50 bps and 100 bps, and that periods when spreads are above 100 bps generally coincide with higher excess returns. However, we must also recall that corporate health is typically still improving in Phase I of the Fed cycle, so today's higher spread levels might be justified by worse credit quality. Chart 8Value Is Stretched In Junk
Value Is Stretched In Junk
Value Is Stretched In Junk
It goes without saying that the unusual combination of deteriorating corporate health and still-supportive Fed policy is a complicated environment for credit investors to navigate. Our view is that accommodative Fed policy will prevent material spread widening, at least until inflation breaks above the Fed's target and we shift into Phase II of the Fed cycle, but it is also probably not reasonable to expect spreads to tighten much further from current levels. We are looking for low, but positive, excess returns from spread product, consistent with the available carry. Bottom Line: The combination of an improving global growth back-drop and still-accommodative Fed policy will be positive for spread product. As such, we increase our allocation to investment grade corporate bonds - and spread product more generally - from neutral (3 out of 5) to overweight (4 out of 5). We also upgrade our allocation to high-yield bonds from underweight (2 out of 5) to neutral (3 out of 5). We retain only a neutral allocation to high-yield due to the longer-run risks posed by poor corporate health, and tight valuations for high-yield bonds (Chart 8). U.S. Economy: A Healthy Consumer Leads The Way U.S. GDP growth decelerated to 1.9% in Q4 from 3.5% in Q3. Growth in consumer spending slowed to 2.5% from 3.0%, while fixed investment spending picked up to 4.2% from 0.1%. The headline 1.9% GDP print also includes a -1.7% contribution from net exports and +1.0% contribution from inventories. Taking a step back from the quarterly data, we see that the growth in real final sales to domestic purchasers - a measure of growth that strips out the volatile trade and inventory components - has clearly shifted into a higher range during the past couple of years (Chart 9). Further, leading indicators for each individual component of growth all suggest that further acceleration is in store (Chart 10). Chart 9Growth Finds A Higher Gear
Growth Finds A Higher Gear
Growth Finds A Higher Gear
Chart 10Contributions To GDP Growth
Contributions To GDP Growth
Contributions To GDP Growth
But crucially, it is the fundamental drivers underpinning the outlook for consumer spending that lead us to believe that U.S. economic growth will maintain an above-trend pace throughout 2017. As was observed by our U.S. Investment Strategy service in a recent report,5 income growth - the main driver of consumption trends - appears poised to accelerate, driven by accelerating wage growth that is starting to kick in now that the economy has finally reached full employment (Chart 11). The boost in consumer confidence could also lead to a lower savings rate, further increasing the impact on spending (Chart 11, bottom panel). Chart 11Consumer Spending = Income + Confidence
Consumer Spending = Income + Confidence
Consumer Spending = Income + Confidence
Bottom Line: A healthy consumer is the back bone of the U.S. economy, and elevated consumer demand will also lend support to corporate fixed investment and the housing market. We expect that U.S. growth will be solidly above trend in 2017. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Dollar Watching: An Update", dated October 25, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Is It Time To Cut Duration?", dated January 17, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 The flash estimate is typically based on approximately 85%-90% of total PMI survey responses each month and is designed to provide an accurate advance indication of the final PMI data. 4 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 5 Please see U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "U.S. Consumer: The Comeback Kid", dated January 16, 2017, available at usis.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Pricing power has improved across a number of industries, with the exception of technology, a necessary development to sustain an overall profit recovery. The S&P railroads index has surged to the point where it will take massive upside earnings surprises to drive additional gains. Profit-taking is appropriate. Telecom services profit drivers have deteriorated significantly of late, and a full shift to underweight is recommended. Recent Changes S&P Railroads Index - Take profits of 22% and downgrade to neutral. S&P Telecom Services Index - Take profits of 6% and downgrade to underweight from overweight. Table 1
Pricing Power Improvement
Pricing Power Improvement
Feature Chart 1Pricing Power Is Profit Positive...
Pricing Power Is Profit Positive...
Pricing Power Is Profit Positive...
Momentum remains the dominant market force. Fear of missing out is pulling sidelined cash into the market, supported by a decent earnings season to date and rising economic confidence. While consumer inflation expectations remain very low, market-derived inflation expectations have moved up markedly since the U.S. election (Chart 1), a surprising development given the surge in the U.S. dollar. Inflation expectations are back to levels that existed prior to the 2014 kickoff to the U.S. dollar rally. A shift away from deflation worries is supporting a re-pricing of stocks vs. bonds. That trend could continue until the U.S. economy begins to disappoint, potentially causing inflation expectations to retreat. Our pricing power update shows that while deflation remains prevalent, its intensity is fading. We have updated our industry group pricing power (Table 2), which compiles the relevant CPI, PPI, PCE or commodity-data for 60 S&P 500 industry groups. The table also compares those pricing power trends with overall inflation rates to help determine which areas are at a profit advantage or disadvantage. Based on our analysis, the number of groups suffering deflation in selling prices has shrunk to 19 from 23 in our update last September, and 32 last March. In all, 34 out of 60 groups are still unable to raise prices by more than 1%, but that is also an improvement from the 40 out of 60 industries that couldn't keep a 1% price hike pace last September. The bad news is that less than 1/3 have a rising selling price trend, even if the absolute level is negative, down from 50%, and another third has a flat trend. The implication is that upward momentum in pricing power may already be fading. Where is the pricing power improvement? Deep cyclical sectors such as energy and materials account for the lion's share, reflecting higher commodity prices. However, as discussed previously, 6-month growth rates have rolled over (Chart 2), signaling that the unwinding of the negative rate of change shock has run its course. The technology sector is also notable, as several groups are cutting selling prices at a faster clip. Table 2Industry Group Pricing Power
Pricing Power Improvement
Pricing Power Improvement
Defensive sectors such as consumer staples, health care and utilities remain well represented in the positive category, while a reacceleration in consumer discretionary and financials sector selling price increases has boosted interest rate-sensitive sector pricing power (Chart 2). This would suggest that profit advantages continue to reside in these areas, rather than in cyclical sectors. That is confirmed by the uptrend in developed vs. developing market PMIs. This manufacturing gap would presumably widen further if the U.S. ever imposes import taxes. The latter would weaken developing country exports, thereby forcing currency devaluation and hurting capital inflows. Regardless, the PMI divergence reinforces that, in aggregate, cyclical sectors are not as fundamentally well supported as other sectors, and that a highly targeted and selective approach is still the right strategy (the PMI ratio is shown advanced, Chart 3). Even external factors warn against chasing lingering cyclical sector strength. Using the options market, the SKEW index provides a good read on perceived tail risk for the S&P 500. A rise toward 150 indicates significant worries about potential outlier returns. The SKEW has soared in recent weeks, which is often a harbinger of increased equity volatility and defensive vs. cyclical sector strength (Chart 4). Chart 2... But Is Not Broad-Based
... But Is Not Broad-Based
... But Is Not Broad-Based
Chart 3Global PMIs Are Signaling Defense First...
Global PMIs Are Signaling Defense First...
Global PMIs Are Signaling Defense First...
Chart 4... As Are Market-Based Indicators
... As Are Market-Based Indicators
... As Are Market-Based Indicators
In sum, the broad market has a powerful head of steam and it could be dangerous to stand in its way, but the rally continues to exhibit signs of a late stage blow-off, vulnerable to sudden and sharp corrections. Maintain a healthy dose of non-cyclical exposure to protect against building and potentially sudden downside overall market risks, while being careful in terms of cyclical industry coverage. This week, we are taking advantage of exuberance in the rail space, and reversing our call on the telecom services sector in response to broad-based erosion in profit indicators. Rails Are Now Priced For Perfection For such a mundane and staid industry, railroad stocks have garnered considerable attention of late. Most recently, rumors that railroad maven Hunter Harrison will be installed at CSX to engineer yet another corporate turnaround have spurred a massive buying frenzy. We upgraded the S&P railroads index to overweight on August 1, 2016. Our analysis suggested that analysts and investors had made a full bearish capitulation, slashing long-term growth estimates to deeply negative territory and pushing valuations decisively into the undervalued zone. That pessimism overlooked efforts to cut costs and stabilize profit margins in the face of waning freight growth, setting the stage for a re-rating. While that thesis has worked out, we are concerned that the needle has now swung too far in the other direction, much like what occurred in the air freight industry. The latter had a steep run up only to disappoint newly buoyant expectations. We took air freight profits in late-November, as the soaring U.S. dollar was an anti-reflationary threat to the anticipated recovery in global trade that both investors and the industry had positioned for. Indeed, industry hiring has expanded rapidly (Chart 5). However, hours worked are contracting (Chart 5). Ergo, the hoped for increase global revenue ton miles has not materialized to the extent that was expected (Chart 5). Over-employment is a productivity and profit margin drag, and we were fortunate to take profits before the payback period. We can envision a similar scenario for railroads. There has no doubt been an improvement in freight activity, and there is more in the pipeline. The question is one of degree. Total rail shipment growth has climbed back into positive territory, and our rail shipment diffusion index, which measures the number of freight categories experiencing rising vs. falling growth, is near the 80% level (Chart 6). The key consumer-driven intermodal segment, which accounts for over half of total freight volumes, has finally begun to recover. Rising personal incomes should underpin credit availability and demand, and therefore, spending. The increase in business sales-to-inventories and growth in Los Angeles port traffic also augur well for intermodal shipments (Chart 6). One caveat is that autos represent a large portion of this segment, and pent-up demand has been fully realized at the same time that auto credit quality is beginning to crack. That could keep a lid on the magnitude of the intermodal shipment recovery. Coal volumes have also shown signs of life after a brutal contraction. Coal is a high margin product and another large freight category, and any sustained recovery would provide a meaningful profit boost. Rising natural gas prices typically bode well for coal volumes (Chart 7), via increasing the cost of competing fuels to burn for power generation. However, it is premature to celebrate, because the abnormally warm North American winter may mean that the rebound in electricity production is passed its peak. That would slow the burn rate and keep coal (and natural gas) supplies higher than otherwise would be the case. Chart 5Stay Grounded
Stay Grounded
Stay Grounded
Chart 6Broad-Based Freight Recovery
Broad-Based Freight Recovery
Broad-Based Freight Recovery
Chart 7Coal Is Critical
Coal Is Critical
Coal Is Critical
History shows that pricing power and coal shipment growth are tightly linked. Selling prices have firmed in recent months, but are not at a level that heralds meaningful improvement in return on equity (Chart 8, third panel). True, rising oil prices typically lead to rail companies reinstituting fuel surcharges. But that is profit margin protective, not expansionary, as true pricing power gains come on the back of increased demand and the creation of bottlenecks. It is not clear that such a point has been reached. The Cass Freight Expenditures Index has been flat for several months, signaling that companies do not intend to raise transportation outlays. This series correlates positively with relative forward earnings estimates (Chart 8). That will make it difficult for rail freight to grow faster than GDP (Chart 9), a necessary development to drive earnings outperformance. Meanwhile, productivity gains may be slow to accrue if freight only grows modestly. Weekly train speeds have been stuck in neutral (Chart 8), and the industry may be in the early stages of a capital spending reacceleration. Rail employment growth has jumped in recent months, which is often a leading indicator of investment (Chart 9). If capital spending begins to take a larger share of sales in the coming quarters, then recent investor excitement may ease, leading to a prolonged consolidation phase. After all, valuations are stretched. Over the past two decades, whenever the relative forward P/E has crossed above a 10% premium, relative forward 12-month returns have averaged -4%, and been negative in 4 out of 5 cases. Overheated technical momentum also warns against extrapolating the latest price gains (Chart 10). Chart 8Earnings Will Only Improve Slowly...
Earnings Will Only Improve Slowly...
Earnings Will Only Improve Slowly...
Chart 9... If Capital Spending Re-Accelerated
... If Capital Spending Re-Accelerated
... If Capital Spending Re-Accelerated
Chart 10A Profit Recovery Is Discounted
A Profit Recovery Is Discounted
A Profit Recovery Is Discounted
Bottom Line: Take profits of 22% and downgrade the S&P rails index (BLBG: S5RAIL - UNP, CSX, NSCX, KSU) to neutral, as the index appears to be setting up for a 'buy the rumor, sell the news' scenario. Stay neutral on the S&P air freight index (BLBG: S5AIRF - UPS, FDX, CHRW, EXPD). Telecom Services: Can You Hear Me Now? The niche S&P telecom services sector (comprising 3% of the S&P 500) has served our portfolio well, up 6% since inception. However, operating conditions have downshifted and we recommend lightening up a notch and reducing weightings to underweight. There are five factors driving this downgrade: the relative spending profile, sales outlook, margins pressure, interest rates and capital spending trends. First, telecom services personal consumption expenditures (PCE) have sunk anew after a brief attempt to stabilize last year. While consumer spending on telecom services has increasingly become a discretionary item, the improvement in consumer finances and vibrant labor market appear to be generating even more outlays on non-telecom goods and services (top panel, Chart 11). Second, this spending backdrop has undermined the sector sales outlook. Top line growth has retreated to nil, and BCA's telecom services sales-per-share model is signaling that a contraction phase looms (middle panel, Chart 11). Worrisomely, the latest producer price index release revealed that industry pricing power has taken a turn for the worse, which will sustain downward pressure on revenue growth. Third, profit margins are under stress. Selling prices are deflating at a time when the wage bill is still expanding at a mid-single digit rate. The implication is that margins, and thus earnings, are unlikely to improve much in the coming quarters (Chart 12). Chart 11Sales Prospects Have Dimmed
Sales Prospects Have Dimmed
Sales Prospects Have Dimmed
Chart 12Ditto For Profit
Ditto For Profit
Ditto For Profit
Fourth, telecom services is a high yielding sector and the recent sell-off in 10-year Treasurys (UST) is an unwelcome development. When competing investments rise in yield, the allure of telecom carriers diminishes, and vice versa. Chart 13 shows that relative performance momentum and the change in UST yields are inversely correlated, underscoring that as long as the bond market selloff persists relative share price pressures will remain intact. Finally, industry capital expenditures are reaccelerating, which is a short-term negative for profitability. This message is corroborated by the government's construction spending release, which shows a pickup in telecom facilities construction (bottom panel, Chart 13). Taken together with the deteriorating sales backdrop, higher capital spending would be negative for profit margins. While we would normally be reluctant to move an attractively valued sector all the way to underweight (Chart 14), the marked deterioration in these five drivers of relative profitability warrants such an extreme move, regardless of our reticence about the sustainability of the broad market's recent gains. Chart 13Higher Bond Yields Aren't Helping
Higher Bond Yields Aren't Helping
Higher Bond Yields Aren't Helping
Chart 14Technical Breakdown
Technical Breakdown
Technical Breakdown
Our Technical Indicator has crossed decisively into the sell zone, and the share price ratio has failed to break back above its 40-week moving average, providing technical confirmation of a breakdown (Chart 14). Bottom Line: Lock in profits of 6% in the S&P telecom services sector since the Nov 9th, 2015 inception and downgrade exposure all the way to underweight. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps. Favor growth over value (downgrade alert).
Highlights The DXY correction has a bit more to run as G10 economic surprises are likely to roll over. EM-related plays like commodity currencies can rally for a few more months, but the outlook for 2017 is troublesome. China is at risk of a deceleration. Global liquidity is tightening. Protectionism is rising. Feature Dollar Correction: It Ain't Over 'til It's Over Can the dollar correction advance further, or is the dollar bull market about to resume? We prefer to position ourselves for additional dollar weakness in the coming months. Despite persistently high bond yields, the DXY is still softening. It is being dragged down by a euro supported by strong economic news such as this week's Belgian business confidence, our favorite bellwether for the euro area. The pound too continues to show some vigor, which is also a byproduct of economic data pointing toward better growth (Chart I-1). We expect the support for the greenback from higher Treasury yields to be temporary. Momentum in U.S. 10-year government bond yields is driven by G10 economic surprises (Chart I-2). Currently, economic surprises are flirting with the upper end of their distribution of the past 12 years. Chart I-1The British Economy Is Picking Up
The British Economy Is Picking Up
The British Economy Is Picking Up
Chart I-2G10 Economic Surprises Drive Treasury Yields
G10 Economic Surprises Drive Treasury Yields
G10 Economic Surprises Drive Treasury Yields
Accentuating the odds of a rollover in surprises are two factors: First, as bond yields and risk-asset prices attest, investors are revising their growth expectations upward, lifting the hurdle for data to surprise to the upside. Second, having expanded for 10 months, the global credit impulse has experienced its longest upswing in a decade. Yet, the increase in global borrowing costs, along with the widening in cross-currency basis swap spreads, points to tightening global liquidity conditions, a poison for the credit cycle (Chart I-3). As credit slows, the economy will deteriorate. Chart I-3The Credit Cycle Is Stretched
The Credit Cycle Is Stretched
The Credit Cycle Is Stretched
This means that the key factor that has supported the stronger dollar in recent months - higher U.S. yields - will begin to dissipate, putting downward pressure on the USD. Finally, our dollar capitulation index, after hitting overbought conditions, is now falling. Moreover, it currently stands below its 13-week moving average, conditions under which the greenback has recorded an average 8.1% annualized weekly loss since 1994, and an average 5.3% annualized weekly loss since 2011 (Chart I-4). Chart I-4Negative Momentum For The Dollar
Negative Momentum For The Dollar
Negative Momentum For The Dollar
We continue to play this correction by shorting USD/JPY. As we have pointed out before, USD/JPY remains a function of the level of global bond yields (Chart I-5). Additionally, a negative surprise in global growth is likely to hurt risk assets. To conclude with the favorable backdrop for the yen, the high degree of uncertainty created by the seemingly erratic policy changes of the new Trump administration suggests that equity implied volatility remains too low. After all, we do not know what changes will hit global tax regimes, what the Fed policy will look like, nor how protectionist Trump will really be. Imbedding a premium for these risks will require higher equity implied vols. A higher VIX tends to support the yen against the USD (Chart I-6). Chart I-5USD/JPY And G10 Bond Yields
USD/JPY And G10 Bond Yields
USD/JPY And G10 Bond Yields
Chart I-6The Yen Likes Uncertainty
The Yen Likes Uncertainty
The Yen Likes Uncertainty
Bottom Line: The correction in the dollar should continue, as bond yields still have downside on a one- to three-month basis. The yen remains the best-placed currency to take advantage of these dynamics, especially if risk assets experience a correction. Focus - Emerging Markets and Liquidity: A March To The Scaffold This week, we re-examine our bearish view on emerging markets, a key theme underpinning our bearish stance on commodity currencies. EM assets, and therefore commodity currencies, have outperformed our expectations, reflecting the percolation of previous positive economic surprises in EM relative to the U.S. (Chart I-7). EM and commodity currencies are priced for perfection, with the risk-reversals on EM currencies displaying elevated levels of optimism (Chart I-8). For EM and commodity currencies to rally further, EM economies need to continue to outperform durably. This requires the Chinese economy and the global liquidity backdrop to only improve further. Can this happen? Chart I-7Surprise Beat In EM Versus The U.S. Has ##br##Helped EM And Commodity Currencies
Surprise Beat In EM Versus The U.S. Has Helped EM And Commodity Currencies
Surprise Beat In EM Versus The U.S. Has Helped EM And Commodity Currencies
Chart I-8EM And Commodity Currencies ##br##Priced For Perfection
EM And Commodity Currencies Priced For Perfection
EM And Commodity Currencies Priced For Perfection
While the next month or two may continue to generate generous returns for EM-related plays, the rest of 2017 may not prove as kind. The China Syndrome Let's begin with China. The recent upsurge in metal prices has reflected an improvement in Chinese economic activity (Chart I-9). As we have pinpointed before, the Keqiang index is near cycle highs, and, Chinese railway freight volumes have been growing at their fastest pace since 2010. This situation is unlikely to continue much longer. The upsurge in Chinese commodity intake - metals in particular - has been fueled by a vigorous rebound in Chinese real estate construction. However, Chinese real estate price appreciation has hit dangerous levels, and the authorities are already leaning against it, with the PBoC increasing rates by 10 basis points this week. The roll-over in Chinese real estate activity should deepen Chart I-10), hurting commodity prices - particularly iron ore, steel and copper - and commodity currencies along the way. Chart I-9China's Rebound Explains ##br##The Metals Rally
China's Rebound Explains The Metals Rally
China's Rebound Explains The Metals Rally
Chart I-10The Risk Of A China Real Estate ##br##Slowdown Is Growing
The Risk Of A China Real Estate Slowdown Is Growing
The Risk Of A China Real Estate Slowdown Is Growing
Moreover, some of the upswing in Chinese economic activity was also related to large amounts of fiscal stimulus in that nation. In mid-2015, the Middle Kingdom was inching ever closer to a hard landing, prompting a panicked Beijing to boost fiscal support and to speed up the roll-out of US$1.2 trillion of infrastructure public-private partnerships. Today, this fiscal hand-out is fading (Chart I-11). This could once again cause industrial activity and investments to weaken as Chinese capacity utilization remains near recession troughs. The recent disappointing investment growth reading in the latest Chinese GDP release could be a harbinger of this reality. Finally, as we have highlighted last week, Chinese monetary conditions have massively improved as Chinese producer-price inflation rebounded, pushing down Chinese real rates in the process. However, with commodity price inflation set to slow - courtesy of a dissipating base effect and of last year's dollar rally - Chinese PPI should roll over, pulling up real rates and tightening monetary conditions (Chart I-12). A tightening in Chinese monetary conditions represents a big problem for EM as it portends a slowdown in economic activity (Chart I-13). This will ultimately lead to a big drag on DM commodity producers, as EM commodity intake decreases, pushing down the likes of the AUD, CAD, and NZD as their terms of trade suffer. Chart I-11Fading Chinese##br## Fiscal Stimulus
Fading Chinese Fiscal Stimulus
Fading Chinese Fiscal Stimulus
Chart I-12Commodity Inflation Will Peak, ##br##So Will Chinese Inflation
Commodity Inflation Will Peak, So Will Chinese Inflation
Commodity Inflation Will Peak, So Will Chinese Inflation
Chart I-13Tightening China Monetary Conditions##br## Will Hurt EM Economic Activity
Tightening China Monetary Conditions Will Hurt EM Economic Activity
Tightening China Monetary Conditions Will Hurt EM Economic Activity
Bottom Line: In early 2016, global markets were not positioned for a rebound in Chinese economic activity. Yet, Chinese industrial activity improved, resulting in a rebound in EM assets, commodity prices, and commodity currencies. The crackdown on real estate activity, the removal of Chinese fiscal stimulus, and the expected tightening in Chinese monetary conditions should result in a reversal of these trends, hurting commodity producers and their currencies in the process. Global Liquidity In Retreat While China represents a problem for EM plays and commodity currencies, deteriorating global liquidity could prove an even stronger hurdle. Our tactical expectation of a lower dollar and lower rates may support EM plays temporarily, but the cyclical outlook remains grim. To begin with, EM economies are dependent on global liquidity as they run a current account deficit expected to hit US$140 billion in 2017, or US$400 billion if China is excluded. Moreover, they sport large external debts of US$4.8 trillion, excluding Taiwan and China. Especially worrisome are the large funding requirements of many EM countries, especially for Turkey, Malaysia, and Colombia. (Chart I-14). Chart I-14EM Debt Vulnerability Ranking
Dollar Corrections, EM Outlook, Global Liquidity, And Protectionism
Dollar Corrections, EM Outlook, Global Liquidity, And Protectionism
Why is this a problem? Two reasons: Global Interest rates and the dollar. Global Interest rates, driven by higher Treasury yields, are rising as the U.S.'s economic slack vanishes, suggesting that the current tightening campaign by the Fed will be durable (Chart I-15). Higher U.S. rates lift the U.S. dollar against EM currencies, tightening EM liquidity conditions. But an unrelated shock is also putting exogenous upward pressure on the dollar. This force is the widening in LIBOR spreads (Chart I-16). This is the result of the regulation-related 90% melt down in the asset under management of U.S. prime money-market funds, an important source of global dollar liquidity. Moreover, U.S. banks, with their balance sheets under pressure by the binding constraints of Basel III, have not been able to fill the gap. Chart I-15The Fed has A Green Light To Hike
The Fed has A Green Light To Hike
The Fed has A Green Light To Hike
Chart I-16Stresses In The Libor Market Remain
Stresses In The Libor Market Remain
Stresses In The Libor Market Remain
The end result has been a widening of cross-currency basis swap spreads, which usually tends to boost the dollar (Chart I-17). This phenomenon increases the hedging costs to foreign investors of holding U.S. dollar assets. These investors become increasingly tolerant of purchasing U.S. assets unhedged, pushing up the value of the dollar in the process. This is best illustrated by the fact that net portfolio investments in the U.S. moved from a deficit of US$300 billion in Q1 2015 to a surplus of more than US$550 billion. Yet, hedges put in place, as approximated by the BIS's volume of OTC FX derivatives, have flat-lined since 2013 (Chart I-18). Chart I-17Widening Cross-Currency Basis Swap Spreads Equals A Higher Dollar
Widening Cross-Currency Basis Swap Spreads Equals A Higher Dollar
Widening Cross-Currency Basis Swap Spreads Equals A Higher Dollar
Chart I-18Hedging Activity is Receding
Dollar Corrections, EM Outlook, Global Liquidity, And Protectionism
Dollar Corrections, EM Outlook, Global Liquidity, And Protectionism
A rising dollar and LIBOR stresses are tightening global dollar liquidity, creating a big problem for EM. Wider-than-normal cross-currency basis swap spreads have been associated with declining global trade (Chart I-19). The stronger dollar plays a role, as it hurts the price of globally-traded good prices. Also, higher borrowing costs result in a mild disintermediation of global trade flows. As physical exports are 26% of EM GDP versus 13% for the U.S., this represents a huge drag on EM currencies, especially versus the USD. As a corollary, it is also a problem for the small open commodity producing DM economies like Australia, Canada, or New Zealand. Furthermore, the strength in the dollar associated with LIBOR shocks further hurts EM domestic economies by impeding EM credit growth (Chart I-20). The combined assault of a stronger dollar and higher rates increases the cost of EM foreign debt. Also, according to the BIS, between 2002 and 2014, 55% of EM commodity producers' debt issuance has been in USD.1 When the dollar rises, they see both their borrowing costs rise and the prices of the products they sell fall. Altogether, these forces preempt capex and credit accumulation in EM nations. Chart I-19Tightening Global Liquidity##br##Is Bad For Trade
Tightening Global Liquidity Is Bad For Trade
Tightening Global Liquidity Is Bad For Trade
Chart I-20A Stronger Dollar Will Hamper##br## EM Credit Growth
A Stronger Dollar Will Hamper EM Credit Growth
A Stronger Dollar Will Hamper EM Credit Growth
Bottom Line: The global liquidity backdrop is deteriorating. DM rates are rising cyclically, which is lifting the dollar. Moreover, a global dollar shortage is also supporting the greenback, further hurting EM liquidity conditions. Thus, we expect EM growth to deteriorate, hurting EM assets and commodity currencies. Protectionism The final issue affecting EM economies is the rise of protectionism, especially in the United States. EM - Asia and China in particular - have been the main beneficiaries of globalization (Chart I-21). Currently, they are in the line of sight of President Trump. Thus, we expect that any potential trade war between the U.S. and the rest of the world will focus on EM economies and China. Chart I-21EM And Asia Are In Trump's Line Of Sight
Dollar Corrections, EM Outlook, Global Liquidity, And Protectionism
Dollar Corrections, EM Outlook, Global Liquidity, And Protectionism
EM are much more dependent on the U.S. than the other way around. As an example, China's exports to the U.S account for 3.5% of Chinese GDP, while U.S. exports to China account for less than 1% of U.S. GDP. EM economies have a lot more to lose from a trade war than the U.S. Because of this imbalance in relative trade-exposures, EM economies are at risk from the border-adjustment tax being discussed in the U.S. These taxes would be very deflationary for EM economies as they could force a downward adjustment in EM labor costs and further depress capex in these nations. To ease these adjustments, falling EM exchange rates would be required. Once again, commodity currencies would suffer from these developments. First, lower capex in EM hurts Australian, New Zealand, or Canadian terms of trade. Second, lower EM exchange rates means that that exports from the dollar bloc to EM would suffer. Finally, and most perversely, lower EM exchange rates will give EM commodity producers an advantage versus DM producers, in that a stronger U.S. dollar means their local-currency costs are falling. EM commodity producers would keep producing more than warranted, putting additional downward pressure on commodity prices and stealing market shares from the dollar bloc producers. This is not a pretty picture. Bottom Line: EM should bear the brunt of the pain of any rise in U.S. protectionism. The tight link between EM economies and DM commodity producers suggests that this pain should adversely affect the AUD, the CAD, and the NZD. Risks To Our View Chart I-22Chinese Tariffs Are Falling
Chinese Tariffs Are Falling
Chinese Tariffs Are Falling
The biggest risk to our view is a redoubling of Chinese fiscal stimulus. The threat of U.S. tariffs and trade sanctions is obviously deflationary and negative for the Chinese economy. We know this, as do the relevant powers in Beijing. A tool to mitigate any of these negative repercussions on the Chinese economy might be for Beijing to press on the gas pedal once more. Additionally, as our colleague Yan Wang wrote in this week's China Investment Strategy, key members of the new U.S. administration have been on record saying that the threat of tariffs is not an end game, but rather a negotiating tool to extract concessions from U.S. trade partners, implying a potentially more pragmatic stance from the U.S. than current rhetoric suggests.2 Moreover, the Chinese side of the negotiation table is also more open minded than most observers fear. China has been cutting its own tariffs and could continue to do so (Chart I-22). Moreover, Premier Li Keqiang has made a new pledge to move faster toward opening and liberalizing Chinese markets for access by foreign companies. A deal may be less elusive than feared. Finally, regarding the global liquidity deterioration, the recent rebound in gold and silver prices may be a harbinger of improving liquidity conditions globally. We doubt that the economic situation will let this rally be durable, but it remains something to monitor. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Bruno Valentina, and Hyun Song Shin, "Global Dollar Credit And Carry Trades: A Firm-level Analysis", BIS, Working Papers, August 205. 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "Dealing With The Trump Wildcard", dated January 6, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
Chart II-2USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
U.S. data was mixed this week. The labor market saw both continuing and initial jobless claims rise above expectations. However, the economy is still near full employment and the Fed will not respond to this news. Furthermore, the Beige Book, released last week, also highlights that the U.S. economy remains resilient with employment and pricing activity particularly strong. This week the DXY broke through the key 100 level, as the market continues to reprice capricious assumptions of Trump's policies. Nevertheless, it has rebounded since then. The dollar is unlikely to see any real movement until the administration releases concrete information about its policies. For the time being, the Fed also seems to be on the sidelines in anticipation of more information. Report Links: U.S. Border Adjustment Tax: A Potential Monster Issue For 2017 - January 20, 2017 Update On A Tumultuous Year - January 6, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
Although the euro area has seen a brighter economic environment as of late, this week's data has been mixed: German and overall euro area services and composite PMI underperformed, while manufacturing PMI outperformed consensus. The IFO Business Climate and Expectations both underperformed consensus, while the Current Assessment remained in line with consensus. All measures still remain over 100. Finally, Belgian Business Confidence accelerated sharply. The ECB is unlikely to change its dovish stance. The euro will therefore see little upside. The recent uptrend in EUR/USD is due to dollar weakness, but the recent downtrend in EUR/GBP and EUR/SEK indicate that the market is not necessarily hopeful that the ECB will reach its inflation target anytime soon. Report Links: GBP: Dismal Expectations - January 13, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 When You Come To A Fork In The Road, Take It - November 4, 2016 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
Recent data indicates that last year's sharp depreciation of the yen is helping the Japanese economy: Exports increased by 5.4% YoY, crushing expectations of 1.2% growth. Nikkei Manufacturing PMI reached 52.8, also beating expectations. In November machinery orders grew by more than 10% YoY. The BoJ will be more resolute on its radical monetary measures, as recent data shows that their approach is working. This will prove very bearish for the yen on a cyclical basis, given that the cap in Japanese rates will cause the rate differential between the U.S. and Japan to widen. In the short term, USD/JPY will resume its correction. We estimate that USD/JPY will cease to be attractive as a short opportunity at around 110. Report Links: Update On A Tumultuous Year - January 6, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 Party Likes It's 1999 - November 25, 2016 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
On Tuesday, the Supreme Court upheld the decision of the High Court, requiring a parliamentary vote to authorize the exit of the U.K. from the European Union. This news is an added boon for cable, which has surged by almost 5% after bottoming at 1.20 about 10 days ago. As political risks start to dissipate, and the currency trades more on economic fundamentals, the pound should become a more attractive buy, particularly against the euro, given that the U.K. economy should outperform the market's dismal expectations. Recent data supports this view: Average earning growth outperformed expectations in November. GDP growth was 2.2% YoY in Q4, also outperforming expectations. Furthermore, short-term technicals point to a stronger pound. EUR/GBP has broken through its 100-day moving average, which indicates that momentum should continue to drive this cross downwards for the time being. Report Links: Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 The Pound Falls To The Conquering Dollar - October 14, 2016 The Dollar: The Great Redistributor - October 7, 2016 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
Two weeks ago, we argued that the rally in AUD lacks fundamental domestic causes. This week, the momentum of the recent AUD rally, caused by rising iron ore and copper prices, has seemingly paused. Exacerbating this change of pace is recent data which indicates a weak economic backdrop: the RBA trimmed mean CPI, and the more common CPI measure, underperformed consensus at both a quarterly and yearly pace. This could be due to depressed consumer sentiment, as the labor market remains mired in a slump, with the unemployment rate increasing to 5.8%, and total hours worked falling. Given recent data, it is likely that markets reprice growth prospects in Australia. U.S. trade policies could also potentially curtail global trade, painting a bearish picture for AUD. Report Links: Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 One Trade To Rule Them All - November 18, 2016 When You Come To A Fork In The Road, Take It - November 4, 2016 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
The Kiwi has appreciated 4.4% since the start of 2017. Although this rally might eventually be limited against the U.S. dollar, the NZD will likely have more upside against its crosses, particularly the AUD. Indeed it seems that low inflation, one of the only sore spots for the RBNZ in an otherwise stellar kiwi economy, has turned the corner, surging to 1.3% on the latest reading Wednesday. More importantly, not only did inflation beat expectations but it also surpassed 1% for the first time since 2014. This is a significant development, given that persistently low inflation in New Zealand was keeping the dovish bias of the RBNZ. With this hurdle gone, and an economy that continues to be the best performing in the G10, this dovish bias should disappear, which will ultimately lift the NZD against its crosses. Report Links: Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 Long-Term FX Valuation Models: Updates And New Coverages - September 30, 2016 Global Perspective On Currencies: A PCA Approach For The FX Market - September 16, 2016 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
Despite the dissipating oil slump, potential risks may weigh on Canada's future. These risks are likely to emanate from an international sphere. Key concerns revolve around U.S. policies: recent statements have increased yields and tightened financial conditions, but global trade worries are not fully priced in. Recent news indicates that Trump has no ill-intentions aimed at Canada, however, protectionist policies could hurt global trade, indirectly curtailing Canadian exports. A U.S. corporate tax cut can also deviate investment from Canada to the U.S. The recent appreciation in the CAD against major currencies can also hurt Canadian competitiveness going forward. As oil is likely to remain relatively stable in the near future, we may again see a disassociation of CAD with oil, and a continued tight relationship with interest rate spreads. Report Links: Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 When You Come To A Fork In The Road, Take It - November 4, 2016 Relative Pressures And Monetary Divergences - October 21, 2016 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
Yesterday, EUR/CHF fell below the crucial 1.07 level. As we have recommended many times, any time that this cross falls below this threshold, it becomes an excellent buying opportunity. The SNB has not been shy to intervene in the currency markets, and they have been very clear that they will not tolerate any currency strength past a certain threshold as it could add additional deflationary pressures to an economy that has not had a positive inflation rate since 2014. We have identified a level of 1.07 for EUR/CHF as this threshold. Moreover given that the euro is the currency of reference for interventions, the behavior of USD/CHF should roughly mirror the behavior of the dollar against the Euro. Report Links: Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 Long-Term FX Valuation Models: Updates And New Coverages - September 30, 2016 Global Perspective On Currencies: A PCA Approach For The FX Market - September 16, 2016 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
The Norwegian Krone has rallied along other commodity currencies so far this year, in spite of the meek performance of oil over this timeframe. This surge might prove unsustainable in the short term, as USD/NOK is very close to oversold territory. In the long term, the outlook for the NOK is more positive, particularly against other commodity currencies. Rising oil prices resulting from the OPEC cuts should supercharge the already high inflationary pressures in the Norwegian economy. This factor will eventually push the Norges Bank off its dovish bias, and the NOK higher in the process. Report Links: Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 The Pound Falls To The Conquering Dollar - October 14, 2016 The Dollar: The Great Redistributor - October 7, 2016 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
The Swedish economy seems to be finally benefitting from last year's weaker krona; PPI numbers came in at 2.1% MoM, and 6.5% YoY, higher than previous numbers. This will feed into CPI in the near future. Additionally, 1-year, 2-year, as well as the important 5-year Prospera Inflation Expectations have all picked up, with the 5-year at 2%, in line with the Riksbank's target. The bank is aware of the krona's recent strength against major currencies, and realizes that it is important that the appreciation slows. In the short term, the SEK could continue to rally on the back of the dollar's correction and the Swedish economic outperformance vis-Ã -vis the euro area. Report Links: Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 One Trade To Rule Them All - November 18, 2016 The Pound Falls To The Conquering Dollar - October 14, 2016 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
The Tactical Asset Allocation model can provide investment recommendations which diverge from those outlined in our regular weekly publications. The model has a much shorter investment horizon - namely, one month - and thus attempts to capture very tactical opportunities. Meanwhile, our regular recommendations have a longer expected life, anywhere from 3-months to a year (or longer). This difference explains why the recommendations between the two publications can deviate from each other from time to time. Highlights In January, the model outperformed global equities and the S&P 500 in USD terms, but underperformed in local-currency terms. For February, the model cut its weighting in stocks and increased its allocation to bonds (Chart 1). Within the equity portfolio, the weightings to both the U.S. and emerging markets were decreased. The model boosted its allocation to French bonds at the expense of Swedish and Canadian paper. The risk index for stocks, as well as the one for bonds, deteriorated in January. Feature Performance In January, the recommended balanced portfolio gained 1.4% in local-currency terms, and 3.6% in U.S. dollar terms (Chart 2). This compares with a gain of 3.2% for the global equity benchmark and a 2% gain for the S&P 500 index. Given that the underlying model is structured in local-currency terms, we generally recommend that investors hedge their positions, though we provide other suggestions on currency risk exposure from time to time. The performance of bonds was a detractor from the model's performance in local currency terms in January. Chart 1Model Weights
Model Weights
Model Weights
Chart 2Portfolio Total Returns
Portfolio Total Returns
Portfolio Total Returns
Weights The model decreased its allocation to stocks from 57% to 53%, and upgraded its bond weighting from 43% to 47% (Table 1). Table 1Model Weights (As Of January 26, 2017)
Tactical Asset Allocation And Market Indicators
Tactical Asset Allocation And Market Indicators
The model increased its equity allocation to France, Italy, and Sweden by one point each. Meanwhile, weightings were cut by 2 points in the U.S., and by 1 point in Germany, Spain, Switzerland, Emerging Asia, and Latin America. In the fixed-income space, the allocation to French paper was increased by 6 points and the U.K. by 1 point. The model cut its exposure to Swedish bonds by 2 points and Canadian bonds by 1 point. Currency Allocation Local currency-based indicators drive the construction of our model. As such, the performance of the model's portfolio should be compared with the local-currency global equity benchmark. The decision to hedge currency exposure should be made at the client's discretion, though from time to time we do provide our recommendations. The dollar weakened in January and our Dollar Capitulation Index fell close to neutral levels. Uncertainty over the size of the fiscal push by the U.S. administration could prolong the dollar's consolidation phase, especially if coupled with any negative economic surprises. However, this would only be a pause since continued monetary policy divergence should translate into another leg up in the dollar bull market (Chart 3). Chart 3U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar* And Capitulation
U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar* And Capitulation
U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar* And Capitulation
Capital Market Indicators The deterioration of the value and cyclical components led to a higher risk index for commodities. The model continues to shun this asset class (Chart 4). The risk index for global equities increased to a 3-year high in January due to the deterioration in the value indicator. While the global risk index for global bonds also deteriorated, it remains firmly in the low-risk zone. The model slightly decreased its allocation in equities to the benefit of bonds (Chart 5). Chart 4Commodity Index And Risk
Commodity Index And Risk
Commodity Index And Risk
Chart 5Global Stock Market And Risk
Global Stock Market And Risk
Global Stock Market And Risk
Following the latest uptick in the risk index for U.S. equities, the allocation to this asset class was trimmed. U.S. stocks have been propped up by the growth-positive aspects of the new U.S. administration's policies and are at risk should this optimism deflate (Chart 6). The risk index for Canadian equities improved slightly in January as the better readings in the liquidity and momentum indicators offset continued worsening in value. That said, the overall risk index remains at the highest level in this business cycle. This asset remains excluded from the portfolio (Chart 7). Chart 6U.S. Stock Market And Risk
U.S. Stock Market And Risk
U.S. Stock Market And Risk
Chart 7Canadian Stock Market And Risk
Canadian Stock Market And Risk
Canadian Stock Market And Risk
The risk index for U.K. equities deteriorated, reaching a post-Brexit high. For the first time in over two years, the value component crossed into expensive territory (Chart 8) The model trimmed its allocation to Emerging Asian stocks following the slight uptick in the risk index. While the global reflationary pulse should bode well for this asset class, rumblings about protectionism threaten to de-rate growth expectations (Chart 9). Chart 8U.K. Stock Market And Risk
U.K. Stock Market And Risk
U.K. Stock Market And Risk
Chart 9Emerging Asian Stock Market And Risk
Emerging Asian Stock Market And Risk
Emerging Asian Stock Market And Risk
The unwinding of oversold conditions was the main reason behind the deterioration in the risk index for bonds in January. However, the latter is still in the low-risk zone as the bond-negative reading from the cyclical indicator remains overshadowed by the ongoing oversold conditions in the momentum indicator (Chart 10). The risk index for U.S. Treasurys deteriorated in January on the back of a less-stretched momentum indicator. While the cyclical backdrop is bond-bearish, there is arguably more room for scaling down optimism over the economy than there is to having an even more upbeat outlook. As a result, any resumption of the rise in Treasury yields could end up being very gradual (Chart 11). Chart 10Global Bond Yields And Risk
Global Bond Yields And Risk
Global Bond Yields And Risk
Chart 11U.S. Bond Yields And Risk
U.S. Bond Yields And Risk
U.S. Bond Yields And Risk
The risk index for euro area government bonds also deteriorated in January, but unlike the U.S., it is in the high-risk zone. There are notable differences in the risk readings within euro area markets (Chart 12). Given the upcoming presidential elections, France is next in line in terms of investors' focus on political risks. French bonds are heavily oversold based on the momentum indicator, pushing the overall risk index lower. An unwinding of the risk premium would bode well for French bonds, which the model upgraded in January (Chart 13). Chart 12Euro Area Bond Yields And Risk
Euro Area Bond Yields And Risk
Euro Area Bond Yields And Risk
Chart 13French Bond Yields And Risk
French Bond Yields And Risk
French Bond Yields And Risk
The risk index for Spanish government bonds ticked down slightly reflecting minor improvements in all three of its components. However, it remains much higher than the risk index for the French paper, which is preferred by the model (Chart 14). With the risk index little changed in January, Swiss government bonds remain in the high-risk zone. The model continues avoiding this asset which possesses negative yields (Chart 15). Chart 14Spanish Bond Yields And Risk
Spanish Bond Yields And Risk
Spanish Bond Yields And Risk
Chart 15Swiss Bond Yields And Risk
Swiss Bond Yields And Risk
Swiss Bond Yields And Risk
Currency Technicals The dollar depreciated after the 13-week momentum measure indicated last month that the greenback could face near-term resistance. Further consolidation cannot be ruled out, but the 40-week rate of change measure is not signaling an end to the dollar bull market. The monetary policy divergence between the Fed and its peers provides underlying support for the dollar, while heightened uncertainty on the fiscal front implies more volatility going forward (Chart 16). EUR/USD was not able to stay below 1.05. The short-term rate-of-change measure is approaching neutral levels, which could test the EUR/USD bounce. A risk-off episode or continued solid economic data are two factors that could provide some support for the euro in the near term (Chart 17). The 40-week rate of change measure for GBP/USD continues to hover near the most oversold level since 2000 (excluding the great recession). Meanwhile, the 13-week momentum measure crossed into positive territory, but is not extended. The pound will remain event-driven and possibly range-bound in the near term as the mood bounces within the hard Brexit / soft Brexit spectrum (Chart 18). Chart 16U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar*
U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar*
U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar*
Chart 17Euro
Euro
Euro
Chart 18Sterling
Sterling
Sterling
Miroslav Aradski, Senior Analyst miroslava@bcaresearch.com
Highlights U.S. policy uncertainty has increased again early in the New Year. President Trump's inaugural speech highlighted that he has not tempered his "America First" policy prescription. The Trump/GOP agenda is still a moving target, but three key risks have emerged for financial markets. A border tax could see a 10% rise in the U.S. dollar. It would also be bearish for global bonds and EM stocks. Position accordingly. Second, President Trump has his sights on China. U.S. presidents face few constraints on the trade and foreign policy side. Investors seem to be under-appreciating the risk of a trade war. Third, the plan to slash Federal government spending could completely offset the fiscal stimulus stemming from the proposed tax cuts and infrastructure spending. The good news is that the major countries, including China, appear to have entered a synchronized growth acceleration. There is more to the equity market rally than a "sugar high". The global profit recession is over and the rebound has been even more impressive than we predicted. As long as any U.S. protectionist policies do not derail the growth acceleration, corporate EPS in the major countries should rival (traditionally overly-optimistic) bottom-up expectations in 2017. The Fed will hike three times this year, one more than is discounted. The Bank of Japan will continue to target a 10-year JGB yield of 0%, but the ECB will begin hinting at another taper in the fall. Our bond team tactically took profits on a short-duration position, but expect to move back to below-benchmark duration before long. The U.S. policy backdrop is very fluid but, for now, the new Administration has boosted confidence and thereby reinforced a global cyclical upswing. As long as protectionist policies implemented this year do not unduly undermine U.S. growth (our base case), then stocks will beat bonds by a wide margin. Investors should consider long VIX positions, but add to equity exposure on dips. Feature It has become a cliché to describe the economic and financial market outlook as "unusually uncertain". Since 2007, investors have had to deal with rolling financial crises, deleveraging, recession, deflation pressures, quantitative easing, negative interest rates, re-regulation, a collapse in oil prices and Brexit. Chart I-1Stocks Decouple From Policy Uncertainty
Stocks Decouple From Policy Uncertainty
Stocks Decouple From Policy Uncertainty
Now, there is Donald Trump. The new President's inaugural speech highlighted that he has not tempered his "America First" policy prescription. Protectionism, de-regulation and tax reform are high on the agenda but details are scant, leaving investors with very little visibility. There are many policy proposals floating around that have conflicting potential effects on financial markets. Which ones will actually be pursued and how will they be prioritized? Is the U.S. prepared to fight a trade war? Is a border tax likely? Will President Trump push for a "Plaza Accord" deal with China? Even the prospect for fiscal stimulus is a moving target because the Trump Administration is reportedly considering a plan to slash Federal spending by $10 trillion over the next decade! Some have described the global equity rally as just a "sugar high" that will soon fade. No doubt, some of the potentially growth-enhancing parts of the Trump agenda have been discounted in risk assets. Given the highly uncertain policy backdrop, it would be easy to recommend that investors err on the side of caution if the U.S. and global economies were still stuck in the mud. The level of the S&P 500 appears elevated based on its relationship with the policy uncertainty index (shown inverted in Chart I-1). Nonetheless, what complicates matters is that there is more to the equity rally than simply hope. Both growth and profits are surprising to the upside in what appears to be a synchronized global upturn. If one could take U.S. policy uncertainty out of the equation, risk assets are in an economic sweet spot where the deflation threat is waning, but inflation is not enough of a threat to warrant removing the monetary punchbowl. Indeed, the Fed will proceed cautiously and official bond purchases will continue through the year in Japan and the Eurozone. We begin this month's Overview with two key protectionist policies being considered that could have important market implications. We then turn to the good news on the economic and earnings front. The conclusion is that we remain positive on risk assets and bearish bonds on a 6-12 month investment horizon. It will likely be a rough ride, but investors should use equity pullbacks to add exposure. Protectionism Risk #1 A U.S. border tax has suddenly emerged on the U.S. policy program. More formally, it is called a destination-based cash flow tax. Under current U.S. law, corporate income taxes are assessed on worldwide profits, which are the difference the between worldwide revenues and worldwide costs. The introduction of a border tax adjustment would change the tax system to one where taxes are assessed only on the difference between domestic revenues and domestic costs (i.e., revenues derived in the U.S. minus costs incurred the U.S.). The mechanics are fairly complicated and we encourage interested clients to read a Special Report on the topic from BCA's Global Investment Strategy service.1 The result would be a significant increase in taxes on imported goods and a reduction in taxes paid by exporters. One benefit is that the border tax would generate a large amount of revenue for the Treasury, which could be used to offset the cost of corporate tax cuts. Another benefit is that the tax change would eliminate the use of international "transfer pricing" strategies that allow American companies to avoid paying tax. In theory, the dollar would appreciate by enough to offset the tax paid by importers and the tax advantage gained by exporters, leaving the trade balance and the distribution of after-tax corporate profits in the economy largely unchanged. A 20% border tax, for example, would require an immediate 25% jump in the dollar to level the playing field! In reality, there are reasons to believe that the dollar's adjustment would not be fully offsetting. First, much depends on how the Fed responds. Second, some central banks would take steps to limit the dollar's ascent. To the extent that the dollar did not rise by the full amount (25% in our example), then the border tax would boost exports and curtail imports. The resulting tailwind for U.S. growth would eventually be reflected in higher inflation to the extent that the economy is already near full employment. The result is that a border tax would be bullish the dollar and bearish for bonds. Our base case is that a 20% border tax would lift the dollar by about 10% over a 12-month period, above and beyond our current forecast of a 5% gain. The 10-year Treasury yield could reach 3% in this scenario. Subjectively, we assign a 50% probability to a border tax being introduced in some form or another, although our sense is that it will be somewhat watered down so as not to generate major dislocations for the economy. It appears that investors are underestimating the likelihood that the U.S. proceeds with this new tax, suggesting that the risks to the dollar and bond yields are to the upside. This is another reason to underweight U.S. bonds relative to Bunds on a currency-hedged basis. For stocks, any growth boost from the border tax would benefit corporate profits, at least until the Fed responded with a faster pace of rate hikes. It is another story for EM equities as a shrinking U.S. trade deficit implies less demand for EM products and shrinking international dollar liquidity. A border tax could be seen as the first volley in a global trade war, souring investor sentiment towards EM stocks. Another major upleg in the U.S. dollar could also spark a financial crisis in some EM countries with current account deficits and substantial dollar-denominated debt. Protectionism Risk #2 Chart I-2Trade War Risk Is Elevated
Trade War Risk Is Elevated
Trade War Risk Is Elevated
While President Trump wants a smaller trade deficit generally, he has his sights on China because of the elevated U.S. bilateral trade deficit (Chart I-2). His choices for Commerce Secretary, National Trade Council and U.S. Trade Representative are all China critics. U.S. presidents face few constraints on the trade and foreign policy side. He can order tariffs on specific goods, or even impose a surcharge on all dutiable goods, as Nixon did in 1971. Congress is unlikely to be a stumbling block. Trump's election was a signal that the U.S. populace wants protectionist policies. His electoral strategy succeeded in great part because of voter demand for protectionism in key Midwestern states. We expect the Trump Administration to give a largely symbolic "shot across China's bow" in the first 100 days, setting the stage for formal trade negotiations in the subsequent months. The initial shot will likely rattle markets. A calming period will follow, but this will only give a false sense of security. The U.S. is in a relatively good negotiating position because China's exports to the U.S. are much larger than U.S. exports to China. However, tensions over the "One China" policy and international access to the South China Sea will greatly complicate the trade negotiations. The bottom line is that there is little hope that U.S./China relations will proceed smoothly.2 A long position in the VIX is prudent given that the market does not appear to be adequately discounting the possibility of a trade war. Synchronized Global Growth Upturn While the U.S. policy backdrop has become more problematic for investors, the global economic and profit picture has brightened considerably. We were predicting a pickup in global growth before last November's election based on our leading indicators and the ebbing of some headwinds that had weighed on economic activity early in 2016. As expected, the manufacturing sector is bouncing back after a protracted inventory destocking phase. The stabilization in commodity prices has given some relief to emerging market manufacturers. The drag on global growth from capex cuts in the energy patch is moderating even though the level of capital spending will contract again in 2017. Moreover, the aggregate fiscal thrust for the advanced economies turned positive in 2016 for the first time in six years. The major countries, including China, appear to have entered a synchronized growth acceleration. The pick-up is confirmed by recent data on industrial production, purchasing managers' surveys and the ZEW survey (Chart I-3). The global ZEW composite has been a good indicator for world earnings revisions and the global stock-to-bond return ratio. The synchronized uptick in global coincident and leading economic data, including business and consumer confidence, suggests that there is more going on than a simple post-election euphoria. Euro Area sentiment measures hooked up at the end of 2016 and the acceleration in growth appears to be broadly based (Chart I-4). A simple model based on the PMI suggests that Eurozone growth could be as much as 2% this year, which is well above trend. Chart I-3Positive Global Indicators
bca.bca_mp_2017_02_01_s1_c3
bca.bca_mp_2017_02_01_s1_c3
Chart I-4Euro Area To Beat Growth Estimates
Euro Area To Beat Growth Estimates
Euro Area To Beat Growth Estimates
While Japan will not be a major contributor to overall global growth given its well-known structural economic impediments, the most recent data reveal a slight uptick in consumer confidence, business confidence and the leading economic indicator (Chart I-5). We have noted the impressive rebound in China's leading and coincident growth indicators for some time. Some indicators are consistent with real GDP growth well in excess of the 6.7% official growth figure for 2016 Q4. Both the OECD leading indicator and our proprietary GDP growth model are calling for faster growth in 2017 (Chart I-6). A potential increase in trade or even military tensions between China and the U.S. is a potential risk to this sunny picture. Nonetheless, given what we know about the underlying economy at the moment, China looks poised to deliver another year of solid growth. Chart I-5Even Japanese Sentiment Is Turning Up
Even Japanese Sentiment Is Turning Up
Even Japanese Sentiment Is Turning Up
Chart I-6Upside Risk To China's Growth
Upside Risk To China's Growth
Upside Risk To China's Growth
In the U.S., President Trump appears to be stirring long-dormant animal spirits. CEOs are much more upbeat and several regional Fed surveys indicate a surge in investment intentions (Chart I-7). Spending on capital goods has the potential to soar given the historical relationship with the survey data shown in Chart I-8 (the caveat being that Congress will need to deliver). Even the long depressed small business sector is suddenly more optimistic. The December reading of the NFIB survey showed a spike in confidence, with capital expenditures, hiring plans and overall optimism returning to levels not seen in this expansion. Chart I-7Animal Spirits Reviving In The U.S....
Animal Spirits Reviving In The U.S....
Animal Spirits Reviving In The U.S....
Chart I-8...Which Will Spark Capital Spending
...Which Will Spark Capital Spending
...Which Will Spark Capital Spending
There is a good chance that a deal between the White House and Congress on tax reform will occur in the first half of 2017, including a major tax windfall for the business sector that would boost the after-tax rate of return on equity. Nonetheless, past research shows that sustainable capital spending cycles only get underway once businesses see clear evidence that consumer demand is on the upswing. In other words, consumers need to move first. On that score, a number of cyclical tailwinds have aligned for household spending. Credit scores have largely been repaired since the recession and income growth is on track to accelerate (Chart I-9). Despite a moderation in monthly payrolls, overall income growth is likely to stay perky, now that wage gains are on an upward path. And, importantly, various surveys highlight an improvement over the past year in consumer confidence about long-term job prospects. The propensity to spend rather than save is higher when households feel secure in their jobs. Chart I-10 highlights that the saving rate tends to decline when confidence is elevated. The wealth effect from previous equity and housing price gains has been a tailwind for some time but, until now, consumers have held back because it seemed to many that the recession had never ended. Chart I-9Share Of Home Mortgage Borrowers ##br##Who Recovered Pre-Delinquency Credit Score After Foreclosure
February 2017
February 2017
Chart I-10Room For U.S. Consumer To Spend
Room For U.S. Consumer To Spend
Room For U.S. Consumer To Spend
In other words, there are increasing signs that the scar tissue from the Great Recession is finally fading, at a time when tax cuts are on the way. We expect that U.S. real GDP growth will be in the 2½-3% range this year with risks to the upside, as long as the Trump Administration does not start a trade war that undermines confidence. Corporate Earnings Liftoff Chart I-11Profits Are Bouncing Back
Profits Are Bouncing Back
Profits Are Bouncing Back
The good news on the economy carries over to corporate earnings. The profit recession is over and the rebound has been even more impressive than we predicted (Chart I-11). Eurozone EPS "went vertical" near the end of 2016. Blended S&P 500 Q4 bottom-up estimates reveal a huge increase in EPS last year to $109 (4-quarter trailing), providing an 8.5% growth rate for 2016 as a whole. The 4-quarter trailing growth figure will likely surge again to 16% in 2017 Q1, even if the sequential EPS figure is flat. Some of the growth acceleration is technical, reflecting a particularly sharp drop in profits at the end of 2015 (which will eventually fall out of the annual growth calculation). Of course, a spike in energy earnings on the back of higher oil prices made a major contribution to the overall growth rate, but there is more to it than that. Consumer Discretionary, Financials and Health Care all posted solid earnings figures last year. Earnings momentum has also picked up in Materials, Real Estate and Utilities, although profit growth in these sectors is benefiting from favorable comparisons. Dollar strength has pushed the U.S. earnings revisions ratio slightly into negative territory, while revisions have surged into positive terrain in the other major markets (Chart I-12). The sharp upturn in our short-term EPS indicators corroborates the more upbeat earnings outlook for at least the next few months (Chart I-13). Chart I-12Earnings Revisions
Earnings Revisions
Earnings Revisions
Chart I-13Short-Term EPS Indicators Are Bullish
Short-Term EPS Indicators Are Bullish
Short-Term EPS Indicators Are Bullish
Our medium-term profit models also paint a constructive picture for equities. These are top-down macro models that include oil prices, exchange rates, industrial production (to capture top-line dynamics), and the difference between nominal GDP and labor compensation (to capture margin effects). Given our more optimistic economic view, the model forecasts for 2017 EPS growth have been revised higher for the global aggregate and each of the major developed markets (Chart I-14). The U.S. is tricky because of the impact of comparison effects that will add volatility to the quarterly growth profile as we move through the year. We are now calling for a 10% gain for 2017 as a whole, which is just shy of the roughly 12% increase expected by bottom-up analysts. This is impressive because actual market expectations are typically well below the perennially-optimistic bottom-up estimates. A 10% EPS growth figure might seem overly optimistic in light of the dollar appreciation that has occurred since last November. Some CEOs will no doubt guide down 2017 estimates during the current earning season. However, in terms of EPS growth, the annual change in the dollar matters more than its level. Chart I-15 shows that the year-over-year rate of change in the dollar is moderating despite the recent rise in the level. This is reflected in a diminishing dollar drag on EPS growth as estimated by our model (bottom panel in Chart I-15). We highlighted in the December 2016 monthly report that it does not require a major growth acceleration to overwhelm the negative impact of a rising dollar on earnings. Chart I-14Medium-Term Profit Models Are Also Bullish
Medium-Term Profit Models Are Also Bullish
Medium-Term Profit Models Are Also Bullish
Chart I-15Dollar Effect On U.S. EPS
Dollar Effect On U.S. EPS
Dollar Effect On U.S. EPS
The models for Japan and the Eurozone point to 2017 EPS growth in the mid-teens. Both are roughly in line with bottom-up estimates which, if confirmed this year, would be quite bullish for stock indexes. Keep in mind that these projections do not include our base case forecast that the U.S. dollar will appreciate by another 5% this year (more if a border tax is enacted). Incorporating a 5% dollar appreciation would trim U.S. EPS growth by 1 percentage point and add the same amount to profit growth in Japan and the Eurozone. The bottom line is that we expect corporate profits to be constructive for global bourses this year. Within an overweight allocation to equities in the advanced economies, we continue to favor the European and Japanese markets versus the U.S. As we discussed in the 2017 Outlook, political risks in the Eurozone are overblown. Currency movements and relative monetary policies will work against U.S. stocks on a relative (currency hedged) basis. FOMC: Hawks Gradually Winning The Debate Fed officials are in a state of quandary over how the policies of the incoming Administration will affect the growth and inflation outlook. Nevertheless, the last FOMC Minutes confirmed that the consensus on the Committee is still shifting in a less dovish/more hawkish direction. The tone of the discussion was decidedly upbeat, especially on the manufacturing and capital spending outlook. "Most" of the meeting participants felt that the U.S. economy has reached full employment, although there is still an ongoing debate on the benefits and costs of allowing the unemployment rate to temporarily move below estimates of full employment. Running the economy "hot" for a while might draw more discouraged workers back into the workforce and thereby expand the supply side of the economy. Other members, however, highlight that past attempts by the Fed to fine tune the economy in this way have always ended in recession. Our view is that the FOMC will not follow the Bank of Japan's example and explicitly target a temporary inflation overshoot. Conversely, the Fed will not attempt to pre-emptively offset any forthcoming fiscal stimulus either (if indeed there is any net fiscal stimulus). Policymakers will watch the labor market and, especially, wage and price inflation to guide them on the appropriate pace of rate hikes. Core PCE inflation is roughly 30 basis points below target and has only edged erratically higher over the past year. The pickup in shelter inflation has been largely offset by falling core goods prices, reflecting previous dollar strength. We expect shelter inflation to soon flatten off, but goods prices will continue to contract if the dollar rises by another 5% this year. Year-ago comparison effects will also depress the annual rate of change over the next couple of months. However, the key to the underlying inflation trend will be wage pressures, which are most highly correlated with the non-shelter part of the service component. Up until recently, the structural and cyclical forces acting on wage gains were pulling in the same downward direction. Structural factors include automation and population aging; as high-paid older workers leave the workforce, the vast majority of new entrants to full-time employment do so at below-median wages, putting downward pressure on median earnings growth.3 These structural factors will not disappear anytime soon, but the cyclical forces have clearly shifted. The main measures of U.S. wage growth are all trending higher. Excess labor market slack appears to have been largely absorbed. Only the number of people working part time for economic reasons suggests that there is some residual slack remaining. To what extent will cyclical wage pressures exert upward pressure on inflation? That will depend on the ability of companies to raise prices in order to protect profit margins. Wage inflation trends do not lead, and sometimes diverge from, inflation in goods and services. Theory suggests that there is a two-way relationship between wages and prices. Sometimes inflation starts in the labor market and spills over into consumer prices (cost-push inflation), and sometimes it is the other way around (demand-pull inflation). At the moment, the corporate sector appears to have limited ability to pass on rising wage costs. Balancing off the opposing factors, we believe that core PCE inflation will grind higher and should be near the 2% target by year end. This would end the Fed's debate over whether to run the economy hot, helping to keep upward pressure on Treasury yields. Bond Bear To Return Chart I-16Watch Bond Technicals To Short Again
Watch Bond Technicals To Short Again
Watch Bond Technicals To Short Again
Global yields troughed a full four months before the U.S. election. As discussed above, the U.S. and global economies were showing signs of increased vigor even before Trump won the Presidency. The new President's policies reinforce the bond-bearish backdrop, especially protectionism and fiscal stimulus, at a time when the economy is already near full employment. Long-term inflation expectations imbedded in bond yields have shifted up in recent months across the major markets. Real yields have been volatile, but generally have not changed much from late last year. We remain modest bond bears over a 6-12 month horizon. Inflation and inflation expectations will continue to grind higher in the major markets and we expect the FOMC to deliver three rate hikes in 2017, one more than is discounted in the Treasury market. A rise in 10-year TIPS breakevens into a range that is consistent with the Fed's 2% inflation target (2.4%-2.5% based on history) would be a strong signal that the Fed will soon lift the 'dot plot.' ECB bond purchases will limit the increases in the real component of core European yields, but any additional weakness in the euro would result in a rise in European inflation. The ECB was able to announce a tapering of monthly purchases last year while avoiding a bond rout by extending the QE program to the end of 2017, but this will be more difficult to pull off again if inflation is on the rise and growth remains above-trend this year. We expect the ECB to provide hints in September that it will further taper its QE program early in 2018. Thus, the Eurozone bond market could take over from U.S. Treasurys as the main driver of the global bond bear market late in 2017. The Japanese economy is also performing impressively well, reducing the probability of a "helicopter drop" policy. The dollar's surge has depressed the yen and lifted inflation expectations, relieving some pressure on PM Abe to ramp up fiscal spending beyond what is already included in the supplementary budgets. In any event, the BoJ will keep the 10-year yield pinned near to zero, limiting the upside for bond yields to some extent in the other major bond markets. That said, we are neutral on JGBs, not overweight, because most of the yield curve is in negative territory. We remain overweight Bunds versus both Treasurys and JGBs on a currency-hedged basis. In terms of the duration call, our bond strategists felt in early December that the global bond selloff had progressed too far, too fast (Chart I-16). They recommended temporarily taking profits on short-duration positons and shifting to benchmark, which turned out to be excellent timing. Yields have drifted lower since then and the technicals have improved enough to warrant shifting back to below-benchmark duration. Investment Conclusions Chart I-17A Better Growth ##br##Backdrop For USD Strength
A Better Growth Backdrop For USD Strength
A Better Growth Backdrop For USD Strength
Equity markets have gone into a holding pattern as investors weigh heightened U.S. policy risk against the improving profit and global macro backdrop. The latter appears to have broken the Fed policy loop that had been in place for some time. Expectations for a less dovish Fed helped to drive the dollar and Treasury yields higher late in 2016. But, rather than sparking a correction in risk assets as has been the case in recent years, stock indexes surged to new highs (Chart I-17). The difference this time is that there has been a meaningful improvement in the growth and profit outlook that has overwhelmed the negative impact of a stronger dollar and higher borrowing rates. The protectionist policies currently being considered are clearly dollar bullish, and bearish for global bonds and EM stocks. Investors should be positioned accordingly. It is more complicated for stocks. The passing of a major tax reform package would no doubt buttress the budding revival in private sector animal spirits, but a nasty trade war has the potential to do the opposite. The multitude of policy proposals floating around greatly complicate asset allocation. It is a very fluid situation but, for now, the new Administration has boosted confidence and thereby reinforced a global cyclical upswing. As long as protectionist policies implemented this year do not unduly undermine global growth (our base case), then corporate earnings growth will be solid in 2017 and stocks will beat bonds by a wide margin. We wish to be clear, though, that equities are on the expensive side in most of the main markets. This means that overweighting equities and underweighting cash and bonds in a balanced global portfolio is essentially playing an equity overshoot. It may end badly, but the overshoot is likely to persist for as long as the economic and profit upswing persists. Investors should consider long VIX positions, but add to equity exposure on dips. Our view on corporate bonds is unchanged this month. Poor value and deteriorating corporate balance sheet health make it difficult to recommend anything more than a benchmark position in the U.S. relative to Treasurys. However, investors can pick up a little spread in the Eurozone corporate bond market, where balance sheet health is better and the ECB is soaking up supply. Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst January 26, 2017 Next Report: February 23, 2017 1 U.S. Border Adjustment Tax: A Potential Monster Issue for 2017. BCA Global Investment Strategy service, January 20, 2017. 2 For more information, please see: Trump, Day one: Let the Trade War Begin. BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, January 18, 2017. 3 For more information in the structural and cyclical wage pressures, please see: U.S. Wage Growth: Paid in Full? U.S. Investment Strategy Service, November 28, 2016. II. Global Debt Titanic Collides With Fed Iceberg? The spike in bond yields since the U.S. election has focussed investor attention on the economic implications of higher borrowing costs. In this world of nose-bleed debt levels, it seems self-evident that certain parts of the global economy will be ultra-sensitive to rising rates. The "cash flow" effect on debt service is a headwind for growth as rising interest payments trim the cash available to spend on goods and services. Some market commentators believe that the Fed will not be able to raise interest rates much because the cash-flow effect will be so severe this time that it will quickly derail the economic expansion. However, a number of factors make projecting interest payments complicated, such that back-of-the-envelope estimates are quite misleading. In order to provide a sense of the size of the cash-flow effect, in this Special Report we estimate the sensitivity of interest payments to changes in borrowing rates in the corporate, household and government sectors for four of the major economies. The key finding is that interest burdens will rise only modestly, and from a low level, over the next couple of years even if borrowing rates increase immediately by 100 basis points from today's levels. It would require a 300 basis point jump to really "move the dial". Interest rate shocks are more dramatic for the Japanese government interest burden due to the size of the JGB debt mountain, but much of the interest payments would simply make the round trip to the Bank of Japan and back again. We are not downplaying the risks posed by the rapid accumulation of debt since the Great Recession. Rather, our aim is to provide investors with a sense of the debt-service implications of a further rise in borrowing rates. Our main point is that the cash-flow effect of higher interest rates should not be included in the list of reasons for believing that Fed officials will be quickly thwarted if they proceed with their rate hike plan over the next couple of years. Investors are justifiably worried that the bond selloff will get ahead of itself, spark an economic setback and a corresponding flight out of risk assets. After all, there have been several head fakes during this recovery during which rising bond yields on the back of improving data and optimism were followed by an economic soft patch and a risk-off phase in financial markets. In this world of nose-bleed debt levels, it seems self-evident that certain parts of the global economy will be ultra-sensitive to rising rates. Indeed, global debt has swollen by 41½ percentage points of GDP since 2007 (Chart II-1). Households, corporations and governments tried to deleverage simultaneously to varying degrees in the major countries since the Great Recession and Financial Crisis, but few have been successful. Households in the U.S., U.K., Spain and Ireland have managed to reduce the level of debt relative to income. U.K. and Japanese corporations are also less geared today relative to 2007. Outside of these areas, leverage has generally increased in the private and public sectors (see Chart II-2 and the Appendix Charts beginning on page 37). The astonishing pile-up of debt in China has been particularly alarming for the investment community (Chart II-3). Chart II-1Leverage Has Increased Since 2007
Leverage Has Increased Since 2007
Leverage Has Increased Since 2007
Chart II-2Leverage In Advanced Economies
Leverage In Advanced Economies
Leverage In Advanced Economies
Chart II-3China's Alarming Debt Pile-Up
China's Alarming Debt Pile-Up
China's Alarming Debt Pile-Up
Governments can be excused to some extent for continuing to run fiscal deficits because automatic stabilizers require extra spending on social programs when unemployment is high. Fiscal policy was forced to at least partially offset the drain on aggregate demand from private sector deleveraging, or risk a replay of the Great Depression. More generally, history shows that it is extremely difficult for any one sector or country to deleverage when other sectors and countries are doing the same. The slow rate of nominal income growth makes the job that much harder. Borrowing Rates And The Economy There are several ways in which higher borrowing rates can affect the economy. Households will be incentivized to save rather than spend at the margin. Borrowing costs surpass hurdle rates for new investment projects, causing the business sector to trim capital spending. Uncertainty associated with rising rates might also undermine confidence for both households and firms, reinforcing the negative impact on demand. Banks, fearing a growth slowdown ahead and rising delinquencies, may tighten lending standards and thereby limit credit availability. These negative forces are normally a headwind for growth, but not something that outweighs the positive Keynesian dynamics of rising wages, profits and employment until real borrowing rates reach high levels. However, if the neutral or "equilibrium" level of interest rate is still extremely low today, then it may not require much of a rise in market rates to tip the economy over. A lot depends on confidence, which has been quite fragile in the post-Lehman world. The "cash flow" effect on debt service is another headwind for growth as rising interest payments trim the cash available to spend on goods and services. For the government sector, a swelling interest burden will add to the budget deficit and may place pressure on the fiscal authorities to cut back on spending in other areas. Some market commentators believe that the Fed will not be able to raise interest rates much because the cash-flow effect will quickly derail the expansion in the U.S. and potentially in other countries as the Treasury market selloff drags up yields across the global bond market. This is an argument that has circulated at the beginning of every Fed tightening cycle as far back as we can remember. Some even predict that central banks will be forced to use financial repression for an extended period to prevent the interest burden from skyrocketing and thereby short-circuiting the economic expansion. Back-of-the-envelope estimates that simply apply a 100 or 200 basis point increase in borrowing rates to the level of outstanding debt, for example, imply a shocking rise in the debt service burdens. Fed rate hikes could be analogous to the iceberg that took down the Titanic in 1912. Key Drivers Of Interest Sensitivity However, back-of-the-envelope calculations like the one described above paint an overly pessimistic picture for three reasons. First, the starting point for debt service burdens in the corporate, household and government sectors is low (Chart II-4). These burdens have generally trended down since 2007 because falling interest rates have more than offset debt accumulation, with the major exception of China.1 Second, the maturity distribution of debt means that it takes time for interest rate shifts to filter into debt servicing costs. For example, the average maturity of corporate investment-grade bond indexes in the major economies is between 3 and 12 years (Chart II-5). The average maturity of government indexes range from 7½ to 16 years. Moreover, the majority of household debt is related to fixed-rate mortgages. Even a significant portion of consumer debt is fixed for 5-years and more in some countries. Households have been extending the maturity structure of their debt in recent decades (Chart II-5, bottom panel). Chart II-4Debt Service Has Generally Declined
Debt Service Has Generally Declined
Debt Service Has Generally Declined
Chart II-5Average Maturity Of Debt Is Long
Average Maturity Of Debt Is Long
Average Maturity Of Debt Is Long
Third, even following the backup in yield curves since the U.S. election, current interest rates on new loans are still significantly below average rates on outstanding household loans, corporate debt and government debt. The implication is that most older loans and bonds coming due over the next few years will be rolled over at a lower rate compared to the loans and bonds being replaced. This will even be true if current yield curves shift up by 100 basis points in many cases (except for the U.S. where current yields are closer to average coupon and loan rates). In this Special Report, we estimate the sensitivity of interest payments to changes in borrowing rates in the corporate, household and government sectors for four of the major economies. We could not include China in this month's analysis because data limitations precluded any degree of accuracy, but the sheer size of China's debt mountain justifies continued research in this area. The key finding is that interest burdens will rise only modestly, and from a low level, over the next couple of years even if borrowing rates rise immediately by 100 basis points from today's levels. It would require a 300 basis point rise in yield curves to really "move the dial" in terms of the cash-flow impact on spending. An interest rate shock of that size would be particularly dramatic for the Japanese government interest burden given the size of its debt mountain, but much of the interest payments would simply make the round trip to the Bank of Japan and back again. Consumer Sector U.S. households have worked hard at deleveraging since their net worth was devastated by the housing bust. Still, the overall debt-to-income level is elevated by historical standards. U.S. household leverage has generally trended higher since the Second World War and has been a source of angst for investors as far back as the late 1950s. Yet, we find no evidence that U.S. consumers have become more sensitive to changes in borrowing rates over the decades.2 This counter-intuitive result partially reflects the fact that consumers have partially insulated themselves from rising interest rates by adopting a greater proportion of fixed-rate debt. The bottom panel of Chart II-6 presents the two-year change in debt service payments expressed as a percent of income (i.e. the swing or the "cash flow" effect). The fact that these swings have not grown over time suggest that the cash-flow effect of changes in interest rates on debt service has not increased.3 Chart II-6U.S. Consumers Have Not Become More Sensitive To Interest Rates
U.S. Consumers Have Not Become More Sensitive To Interest Rates
U.S. Consumers Have Not Become More Sensitive To Interest Rates
Another way to demonstrate this point is to compare disposable income growth with a measure of "discretionary" disposable income that subtracts debt service payments (Chart II-6, top panel). This is the amount of money left over after debt servicing to purchase goods and services. The annual rate of growth in disposable income and discretionary income are nearly identical. In other words, growth in spending power is determined almost exclusively by changes in the components of income (wages, hours and employment). Moreover, the fact that some households are net receivers of interest income provides some offset to rising interest payments for other households when rates go up. This conclusion applies to households in the other major countries as well. Charts II-7 to II-10 present projections for household interest payments as a percent of GDP under three scenarios: no change in yield curves, an immediate 100 basis point parallel shift up in the yield curve and a 300 basis point shift. Assuming an immediate increase in yields across the curve is overly blunt, but the scenarios are only meant to provide a sense of how much interest payments could rise on a medium-term horizon (say, one to five years). The exact timing is less important. Chart II-7U.S. Household Sector Interest Payment Projection
U.S. Household Sector Interest Payment Projection
U.S. Household Sector Interest Payment Projection
Chart II-8U.K. Household Sector Interest Payment Projection
U.K. Household Sector Interest Payment Projection
U.K. Household Sector Interest Payment Projection
Chart II-9Japan Household Sector Interest Payment Projection
Japan Household Sector Interest Payment Projection
Japan Household Sector Interest Payment Projection
Chart II-10Eurozone Household Sector Interest Payment Projection
Eurozone Household Sector Interest Payment Projection
Eurozone Household Sector Interest Payment Projection
Unsurprisingly, household interest payments as a fraction of GDP are flat-to-slightly lower in "no change" interest rate scenario for the major countries. The interest burden increases by roughly 1 percentage point in the 100 basis point shock, although the level remains well below the pre-Lehman peak in the U.S., U.K. and Eurozone. In Japan, the interest payments ratio returns to levels last seen in the late 1990s, although this is not particularly onerous. A 300 basis point shock would see interest burdens ramp up to near, or above, the pre-Lehman peak in all economies except in the U.K. For the latter, borrowing rates would still be below the 2007 peak even if they rise by 300 basis points from current levels. This scenario would see the household interest burden surge well above 3% of GDP in Japan, a level that exceeds the entire history of the Japanese series back to the early 1990s. Also shown in the bottom panel of Chart II-7, Chart II-8, Chart II-9, Chart II-10 is the associated 2-year swing in interest expense as a percent of GDP under the three scenarios. The 2-year swing moves into positive (i.e. restrictive) territory for all economies under the 100 basis point shock, although they remain in line with previous monetary tightening cycles. It is only for the 300 basis point scenario that the cash-flow effect appears threatening in terms of consumer spending power over the next two years. Corporate Sector The starting point for interest payments and overall debt-service in the corporate sector is also quite low by historical standards, although less so in the U.S. Falling interest rates have been partially offset by the rapid accumulation of American company debt in recent years. We modeled national accounts data for non-financial corporate interest paid using the stock of corporate bonds, loans and (where relevant) commercial paper, together with the associated interest or coupon rates. The model simply sums interest payments across these types of debt to generate a grand total, after accounting for the maturity structure of the loans and debt. Chart II-11, Chart II-12, Chart II-13 and Chart II-14 present the three yield curve scenarios for corporate interest payments. The interest burden is flat-to-somewhat lower if yield curves are unchanged, as old loans and bonds continue to roll over at today's depressed levels. Even if market yields jump by 100 basis points tomorrow, the resulting interest burdens would rise roughly back to 2012-2014 levels in the U.S., Eurozone and the U.K., which would still be quite low by historical standards. The resulting two-year cash-flow effect is modest overall. The rate increase feeds into corporate interest payments somewhat more quickly in the Eurozone and Japan because of the relatively shorter average maturity of the corporate debt market, but a shock of this size does not appear threatening to either economy. Chart II-11U.S. Corporate Sector Interest Payment Projection
U.S. Corporate Sector Interest Payment Projection
U.S. Corporate Sector Interest Payment Projection
Chart II-12U.K. Corporate Sector Interest Payment Projection
U.K. Corporate Sector Interest Payment Projection
U.K. Corporate Sector Interest Payment Projection
Chart II-13Eurozone Corporate Sector Interest Payment Projection
Eurozone Corporate Sector Interest Payment Projection
Eurozone Corporate Sector Interest Payment Projection
Chart II-14Japan Corporate Sector Interest Payment Projection
Japan Corporate Sector Interest Payment Projection
Japan Corporate Sector Interest Payment Projection
It is a different story if yields rise by 300 basis points. The interest ratio approaches previous peaks set in the 2000s in the U.S. and Eurozone. The interest ratio rises sharply for the U.K. corporate sector as well, although it stays below the 2000 peak because interest rates were even higher 17 years ago. Japanese companies would also feel significant pain as the interest ratio rises back to where it was in the late 1990s. Government Sector Government finances are not at much risk from a modest increase in bond yields either (Chart II-15). We focus on the level of the interest burden rather than the cash-flow effect for the government sector since changes in interest payments probably have less impact on governments' near-term spending plans than is the case for the private sector. Chart II-15Government Sector Interest Payment Projection
Government Sector Interest Payment Projection
Government Sector Interest Payment Projection
As discussed above, Treasury departments in the U.K., Eurozone and Japan have taken advantage of ultra-low borrowing rates by extending the average maturity of public debt. The average maturity of the Barclays U.K. government bond index has extended to 16 years, while it is close to 10 years in Japan and the Eurozone (Chart II-5). The U.S. Treasury has not followed suit; the Barclays U.S. index is about 7½ years in maturity. The lengthy average maturity means that index coupon rates will continue to fall for years to come if rates are unchanged in the U.K., Japan and the Eurozone, resulting in a declining interest burden. Even if rates rise by another 100 basis points, the interest burden is roughly flat as a percent of GDP for the U.K. and Eurozone, and rises only modestly in Japan. The limited impact reflects the fact that the starting point for current yields is well below the average coupon on the stock of government debt. In contrast, the U.S. interest burden is roughly flat in the "no change" scenario, and rises by a half percentage point by 2025 in the 100 basis point shock scenario. Keep in mind that we took the neutral assumption that the stock of government debt grows at the same pace as nominal GDP growth. This assumes that governments deal effectively with the impact of aging populations on entitlement programs in the coming years. As many studies have shown, debt levels will balloon if entitlements are not adjusted and/or taxes are not raised to cover rising health care and pension costs. We do not wish to downplay this long-term risk, but we are focused on the impact of higher interest rates on interest expense over the next five years for the purposes of this Special Report. As with the household and corporate sectors, the pain becomes much more serious in the event of a 300 basis point rise in interest rates. Interest payments rise by about 1 percentage point of GDP in the U.S. and U.K. to high levels by historically standards. It takes a decade for the full effect to unfold, although the ratios rise quickly in the early years as the short-term debt adjusts rapidly to the higher rate environment. For the Eurozone, the roughly 100 basis points rise takes the level of the interest burden back to about 2003 levels (i.e. it does not exceed the previous peak). Given Japan's extremely high government debt-to-GDP ratio, it is not surprising that a 300 basis point rise in interest rates would generate a whopping surge in the interest burden from near zero to almost 5% of GDP by the middle of the next decade. Nonetheless, this paints an overly pessimistic picture for two reasons. First, the Bank of Japan is likely to hold short-term rates close to zero for years as the authorities struggle to reach the 2% inflation target. This means that only long-term JGB yields have room to move higher in the event of a continued global bond selloff. Second, 40% of the JGB market is held by the central bank and this proportion will continue to rise until the Bank of Japan's QE program ends. Interest paid to the BoJ simply flows back to the Ministry of Finance. The net interest payments data used in our analysis are provided by the OECD. These data net out interest payments made between all arms of the government except for the central bank. The implication is that rising global bond yields in the coming years will not place the Japanese government under any fiscal strain. The same is true in the U.S., U.K. and Eurozone, where the respective central banks also hold a large portion of the stock of government debt (although this conclusion does not necessarily apply to the peripheral European governments). Conclusion The spike in bond yields since the U.S. election has focussed investor attention on the economic implications of higher borrowing costs given the sea of debt that has accumulated. As discussed in our 2017 BCA Outlook, we believe that the secular bond bull market is over but foresee only a gradual uptrend in yields in the coming years. Inflation is likely to remain subdued in the major countries and bond supply will continue to be absorbed by the ECB and Bank of Japan. The stock of government bonds available to the private sector will drop by $750 billion in 2017 for the U.S., Eurozone, Japan and the U.K. as a group. This follows a contraction of $546 billion in 2016. Forward guidance from the BoJ and ECB will also help to cap the upside for global bond yields. Still, we believe that the combination of gradually rising U.S. inflation, Fed rate hikes and the Trump fiscal stimulus plan will push Treasury yields above current forward rates in 2017. Other bond markets will outperform in local currency terms, but will suffer losses via contagion from the U.S. Despite the dizzying amount of debt accumulated since the Great Recession, it does not appear that debt service will sink the economies of the advanced economies as the Fed continues to normalize U.S. monetary policy. Debt service will rise from a low starting point and the swing in interest payments as a percent of GDP is unlikely to exceed previous cycles on a 2-year horizon for a 100 basis point rise in yields. The level of the interest payments/GDP ratio should not exceed previous peaks in most cases. The picture is much more threatening if yields were to surge by 300 basis points over the next couple of years, although this scenario would require an unexpected acceleration of inflation in the U.S. and/or the other advanced economies. We are not making the case that the buildup of debt is benign. Academic research has linked excessive leverage with slower trend economic growth and a higher risk of financial crisis. For governments, elevated debt can result in a rising risk premium that will crowd out spending in important areas, such as health and pensions, in the long run. For consumers and the corporate sector, excessive leverage could result in financial distress and a spike in defaults in the next downturn, reinforcing the contraction in output. The Bank for International Settlements agrees: "Increased household indebtedness, in and of itself, is not likely to be the source of a negative shock to the economy. Rather the primary macroeconomic implication of higher debt levels will be to amplify shocks to the economy coming from other sources, particularly those that affect household incomes, most notably rises in unemployment." 4 Debt lies at the heart of BCA's longstanding Debt Supercycle thesis. For several decades, the willingness of both lenders and borrowers to embrace credit was a lubricant for economic growth and rising asset prices and, importantly, underpinned the effectiveness for monetary policy. During times of economic and/or financial stress, it was relatively easy for the Fed and other central banks to improve the situation by engineering a new credit upcycle. That all ended with the 2007-09 meltdown. Since then, even zero policy rates have been unable to trigger a strong revival in private credit growth in the major developed countries because the starting point for leverage is already elevated. Growth headwinds finally appear to be ebbing, at least in the U.S., prompting the FOMC to begin the process of "normalizing" short-term interest rates. The U.S. economy could suffer another setback in 2017 for a number of reasons. Nonetheless, the key point of this report is that the cash-flow effect of rising interest rates should not be included in the list of reasons for believing that Fed officials will be quickly thwarted if they proceed with their rate hike plan over the next couple of years. Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst 1 For China, the BIS only provides an estimate of the debt service ratio for the household and non-financial corporate sectors combined. 2 See: U.S. Consumer Titanic Meets the Fed Iceberg? The BCA U.S. Fixed Income Analyst, July 2004. 3 The absence of a rise in volatility of the cash flow effect is partly due to the decline in, and the volatility of, interest rates after the 1980s. 4 Guy Debelle, "Household Debt and the Macroeconomy," BIS Quarterly Review, March 2004. Appendix Charts Chart II-16, Chart II-17, Chart II-18, Chart II-19 Chart II-16U.S. Debt By Sector
U.S. Debt By Sector
U.S. Debt By Sector
Chart II-17U.K. Debt By Sector
U.K. Debt By Sector
U.K. Debt By Sector
Chart II-18Japan Debt By Sector
Japan Debt By Sector
Japan Debt By Sector
Chart II-19Euro Area Debt By Sector
Euro Area Debt By Sector
Euro Area Debt By Sector
III. Indicators And Reference Charts Global equities have been in a holding pattern so far in 2017, consolidating the gains made at the end of last year. Our key equity indicators are mixed at the moment. The Valuation indicator continues to hover at about a half standard deviation on the expensive side. The effect of the rise in global equity indexes late last year on valuation was offset by a surge in profits. Stocks are not cheap but, at this level, valuation not a roadblock to further price gains. Our Monetary indicator deteriorated further over the past couple of months, driven by a stronger dollar and higher bond yields. A shift in this indicator below the zero line would be negative for stock markets. Sentiment is also frothy, which is bearish from a contrary perspective, although our Technical indicator is positive. Our Willingness-to-Pay (WTP) indicators continue to send a positive message for stock markets. These indicators track flows, and thus provide information on what investors are actually doing, as opposed to sentiment indexes that track how investors are feeling. Investors often say they are bullish but remain conservative in their asset allocation. The WTP indicators have all turned higher from a low level for the Japanese, the European and the U.S. markets. This suggests that investors, after loading up on bonds last year, have "dry powder" available to buy stocks as risk tolerance improves. The U.S. WTP has risen the fastest and is closing in on the 0.95 level. Our tests show that, historically, investors would have reaped impressive gains if they had over-weighted stocks versus bonds when the WTP was rising and reached 0.95. The WTPs suggest that the U.S. market should outperform the Eurozone and Japanese markets in the near term, although for macro reasons we still believe the U.S. will lag the other two. We expect the global stock-to-bond total return ratio to rise through this year. The latest selloff has pushed U.S. Treasurys slightly into "inexpensive" territory based on our Valuation model. Bonds are still technically oversold and sentiment remains bullish, suggesting that the consolidation phase may last a little longer. Nonetheless, we expect to recommend short-duration positions again once the overbought conditions unwind. The U.S. dollar is near previous secular peaks according to our valuation measure. Nonetheless, policy divergences are likely to drive the U.S. dollar to new valuation highs before the bull market is over. Technically overbought conditions have almost unwound, clearing the way for the next leg of the dollar bull run. Commodities have been on a tear on the back of improving and synchronized growth across the major countries (and some dollar weakness very recently). The commodity price outlook is clouded by the prospect of a border tax, which could send the U.S. dollar soaring. The broad commodity market is also approaching overbought levels. The cyclical growth outlook is positive for commodity demand, although supply factors favor oil to base metals. EQUITIES: Chart III-1U.S. Equity Indicators
U.S. Equity Indicators
U.S. Equity Indicators
Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk
Willingness To Pay For Risk
Willingness To Pay For Risk
Chart III-3U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators
U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators
U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators
Chart III-4U.S. Stock Market Valuation
U.S. Stock Market Valuation
U.S. Stock Market Valuation
Chart III-5U.S. Earnings
U.S. Earnings
U.S. Earnings
Chart III-6Global Stock Market And Earnings: ##br##Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Chart III-7Global Stock Market And Earnings: ##br##Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
FIXED INCOME Chart III-8U.S. Treasurys And Valuations
U.S. Treasurys and Valuations
U.S. Treasurys and Valuations
Chart III-9U.S. Treasury Indicators
U.S. Treasury Indicators
U.S. Treasury Indicators
Chart III-10Selected U.S. Bond Yields
Selected U.S. Bond Yields
Selected U.S. Bond Yields
Chart III-1110-Year Treasury Yield Components
10-Year Treasury Yield Components
10-Year Treasury Yield Components
Chart III-12U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
Chart III-13Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Chart III-14Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
CURRENCIES: Chart III-15U.S. Dollar And PPP
U.S. Dollar And PPP
U.S. Dollar And PPP
Chart III-16U.S. Dollar And Indicator
U.S. Dollar And Indicator
U.S. Dollar And Indicator
Chart III-17U.S. Dollar Fundamentals
U.S. Dollar Fundamentals
U.S. Dollar Fundamentals
Chart III-18Japanese Yen Technicals
Japanese Yen Technicals
Japanese Yen Technicals
Chart III-20Euro/Yen Technicals
Euro/Yen Technicals
Euro/Yen Technicals
Chart III-19Euro Technicals
Euro Technicals
Euro Technicals
Chart III-21Euro/Pound Technicals
Euro/Pound Technicals
Euro/Pound Technicals
COMMODITIES: Chart III-22Broad Commodity Indicators
Broad Commodity Indicators
Broad Commodity Indicators
Chart III-23Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Chart III-24Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Chart III-25Commodity Sentiment
Commodity Sentiment
Commodity Sentiment
Chart III-26Speculative Positioning
Speculative Positioning
Speculative Positioning
ECONOMY: Chart III-27U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop
U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop
U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop
Chart III-28U.S. Macro Snapshot
U.S. Macro Snapshot
U.S. Macro Snapshot
Chart III-29U.S. Growth Outlook
U.S. Growth Outlook
U.S. Growth Outlook
Chart III-30U.S. Cyclical Spending
U.S. Cyclical Spending
U.S. Cyclical Spending
Chart III-31U.S. Labor Market
U.S. Labor Market
U.S. Labor Market
Chart III-32U.S. Consumption
U.S. Consumption
U.S. Consumption
Chart III-33U.S. Housing
U.S. Housing
U.S. Housing
Chart III-34U.S. Debt And Deleveraging
U.S. Debt And Deleveraging
U.S. Debt And Deleveraging
Chart III-35U.S. Financial Conditions
U.S. Financial Conditions
U.S. Financial Conditions
Chart III-36Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Chart III-37Global Economic Snapshot: China
Global Economic Snapshot: China
Global Economic Snapshot: China
Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst
Highlights U.S. Investment Grade (IG): We recommend overweights in Energy, Financials, Airlines, Building Materials within an overall neutral allocation to U.S. Investment Grade. Euro Area IG: Maintain overweights in Euro Area IG vs U.S. equivalents, favoring Energy, Financials and Wireless sectors. U.K. IG: Maintain an above-benchmark stance on U.K. IG, favoring Banks, Technology and Telecommunications sectors. Feature Last September, we introduced a new element to the BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy investment framework - translating our views on individual bond markets into a model portfolio. This was intended to be a tool providing something closer to a "real world" percentage allocation among the various countries and sectors that we cover, more in line with the day-to-day decisions faced by a typical bond manager. We came up with a custom benchmark for that portfolio, combining government debt, corporate bonds and other spread products from the major developed economies. We used the market capitalization weightings of the Bloomberg Barclays bond indices to determine the relative size of each sector. Our chosen benchmark index goes into considerable detail for our government bond allocations, with several maturity buckets, to allow for more precision in our overall country and duration calls. As the next step in the evolution of our model portfolio framework, we are adding a detailed sectoral breakdown of the Investment Grade (IG) corporate bond universes for the U.S., Euro Area and U.K. This will provide more granularity in our IG recommendations, and give our clients additional investment ideas beyond our major portfolio allocation calls. Going forward, we will provide a regular update of our sector allocations in our first Weekly Report published each month. For this week, we are recommending sectors that have cheaper valuations but with riskiness close to the overall IG indices where spreads remain tight. For example, in the U.S., overweight Energy within an overall neutral IG allocation; in the Euro Area, overweight Wireless within an overall above-benchmark IG allocation; and in the U.K., overweight Basic Industries within an overall above-benchmark IG allocation (Chart of the Week). Chart of the WeekSome Of Our Preferred IG Sectors
Some Of Our Preferred IG Sectors
Some Of Our Preferred IG Sectors
A Brief Description Of Our Sectoral Relative Value Framework Our existing sector relative value methodology assesses the attractiveness of each IG sector within a cross-sectional analysis. The option-adjusted spread (OAS) for each sector is regressed against common risk factors (interest rate duration and credit quality) with the residual spread determining the valuation of each sector. As an additional measure of the overall riskiness of each sector, we use the concept of "duration times spread" (DTS). We have shown in previous research that allocating to sectors in an IG corporate bond portfolio using a DTS weighting scheme produces better risk-adjusted returns with lower drawdown risk.1 It is our plan to eventually incorporate DTS-weightings into our asset allocation framework more directly, as we build out our model portfolio infrastructure to include quantitative risk management metrics. For now, we will look at the relationship between the OAS residuals from our sector relative value models to the DTS of each sector to give a reading on the risk/reward tradeoff for each sector. In some cases, we may not wish to overweight sectors with cheap spreads (positive residuals in our model) that have an above-average DTS, if we are relatively more cautious on taking overall spread risk. The opposite could also occur, where we could overweight sectors that do not have positive spread residuals but have a DTS close to our desired level of credit risk. At the moment, we see overall IG spreads as fully valued in the U.S., Europe and the U.K., so we are aiming for sectors with credit risk closer to the levels of the benchmark indices. Therefore, in the absence of any strong sector-specific views, we are looking for sectors with positive residuals from our relative value model, but with a DTS close to the level of the overall IG index for each region. U.S. Investment Grade - Stay Cautious In Sector Allocations, Except For Energy In Table 1, we present the output of our U.S. IG sector valuation model. The index OAS, model residual ("risk-adjusted valuation"), and DTS is provided for each sector. In addition, a four-letter abbreviation is shown which is used in Chart 2, a scatter diagram showing the residuals versus the DTS for all the sectors. TABLE 1U.S. Investment Grade Corporate Sector Valuation*
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
Within the U.S. IG universe, our valuation model shows spreads are attractive in sectors within Basic Industry (most notably, Metals & Mining and Paper), Building Materials, Energy (most notably, Independent, Refining and Midstream), Communications (most notably, Cable & Satellite and Wireless), Airlines and Financials (most notably, Brokerages/Asset Mangers/Exchanges, Finance Companies, Life Insurers and Property/Casualty Insurers). Among those sectors, the names that have a DTS relatively close to, or lower than, the overall U.S. IG index DTS are: Finance Companies, Building Materials, Airlines, and Brokerages/Asset Managers/Exchanges. These are also sectors with an absolute (non-risk-adjusted) OAS above that of the overall U.S. IG index, adding to their attractiveness. Despite our overall cautiousness on spread risk, the Energy-related sectors represent a special case where we would consider overweighting these higher DTS names. As global oil markets have rebalanced in the latter half of 2016, the subsequent rise in oil prices helped reduce the large risk premiums that had built up in Energy corporate debt (both IG and high-yield). BCA's Commodity strategists see oil prices holding up well over the next year, trading in a range between $50/bbl and $65/bbl for the Brent benchmark. In that scenario, we see a full convergence of the spread between Energy related names and the U.S. IG index, which makes the case for overweighting the cheaper Energy sub-sectors a compelling one, even with the higher risk as measured by DTS. This is particularly true given the large weighting of those names in the overall IG benchmark (just over 6%). Therefore, in our recommended U.S. IG sector allocation, we are adding overweights in Independent Energy, Refining and Midstream to the other names mentioned above. The actual percentage sector allocations for our model portfolio are shown in Table 2. The table is presented in a similar format to the model portfolio tables that we present in the back of our Weekly Reports. The weightings reflect all the investment goals outlined above, including the preferred overweights, while delivering a portfolio DTS that is equal to the overall IG index DTS of 9. Bottom Line: We recommend overweights in Energy, Financials, Airlines, Building Materials within an overall neutral allocation to U.S. Investment Grade. Chart 2U.S. Investment Grade Corporate Sector Risk Vs Reward*
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
TABLE 2Our Recommended U.S. IG Corporate Sector Portfolio Allocation
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
Euro Area Investment Grade - Overweight Vs U.S., Favoring Wireless, Energy & Financials In Table 3, we show the output for our Euro Area IG sector model and, in an identical fashion to the U.S. IG analysis above, we show a scatter diagram showing the model residuals versus the sector DTS scores in Chart 3. TABLE 3Euro Area Investment Grade Corporate Sector Valuation*
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
Chart 3Euro Area Investment Grade Corporate Sector Risk Vs Reward*
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
In this case, we are sticking with our current model portfolio recommendation to overweight Euro Area IG, but while maintaining the same relatively cautious stance towards the DTS exposure given tight overall spread levels. Our call to overweight European IG is a relative one versus U.S. IG, given the stronger signals given by our relative Corporate Health Monitors and the ongoing presence of European Central Bank corporate bond asset purchases (Chart 4). Within Euro Area IG, the cheapest valuations within our model framework are among the Financials - specifically, within the Insurance sectors. The Insurers, however, have very high DTS scores relative to the overall index, and thus we are choosing not to overweight the names despite the wider risk-adjusted spreads on offer. From a fundamental perspective, higher Euro Area interest rates will be required to make us turn more bullish on the Insurers, which is an outcome that we do not anticipate until at least the latter half of 2017. We are recommending overweights in sectors with non-zero model residuals that have relatively neutral DTS scores: Wireless, Packaging, Integrated Energy, Banks, Brokerages/Asset Managers/Exchanges, and Other Finance. Our recommended Euro Area IG sector allocations are presented in Table 4, with the weighted DTS of our portfolio in line with the index DTS of 6. Bottom Line: Maintain overweights in Euro Area IG vs U.S. equivalents, favoring Energy, Packaging, Financials and Wireless sectors. Chart 4Continue To Favor Europe IG Over U.S. IG
Continue To Favor Europe IG Over U.S. IG
Continue To Favor Europe IG Over U.S. IG
TABLE 4Our Recommended Euro Area IG Corporate Sector Portfolio Allocation
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
U.K. Investment Grade - Stay Overweight, Focusing on Financials, Technology & Telecommunications Table 5 contains the output from our U.K. IG sector model, while the scatter diagram of model residuals versus DTS scores is in Chart 5. Again, the Insurers look attractive in the U.K. as in the Euro Area, but the high DTS score deters us from overweightings these names. Banks and Other Financials look attractive, with lower DTS scores, as does the debt of Metals & Mining, Cable & Satellite, Wireless, & Technology. TABLE 5U.K. Investment Grade Corporate Sector Valuation*
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
Chart 5U.K. Investment Grade Corporate Sector Risk Vs Reward*
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
We continue to recommend an above-benchmark allocation to U.K. IG within out model portfolio, given the highly stimulative monetary settings in the U.K. (low interest rates, a deeply undervalued currency), as well as the continued presence of Bank of England corporate bond asset purchases. Our recommended allocation within the above-benchmark allocation to U.K. IG can be found in Table 6. Again, we sought an overall DTS score in line with the U.K. IG DTS of 12. Bottom Line: Maintain an above-benchmark stance on U.K. IG, favoring Banks, Technology and Telecommunications sectors. TABLE 6Our Recommended U.K. IG Corporate Sector Portfolio Allocation
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Bond Strategy/Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "Managing Bond Portfolios In A Rising Spread Environment, Part 1: Choosing The Right Benchmark", dated September 1, 2015, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com and gfis.bcaresearch.com. The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
Adding Investment Grade Corporate Bond Sectors To Our Model Portfolio Framework
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Media stocks are poised to challenge previous relative performance highs as sales growth reaccelerates. Stay overweight. The materials sector has lagged behind the commodity price rally, a sign of underlying weakness rather than latent strength. Chemicals overcapacity will remain a headwind until U.S. competitiveness improves. Stay clear. Recent Changes There are no changes to our portfolio this week. Table 1Sector Performance Returns (%)
The "IF" Rally
The "IF" Rally
Feature The broad market has been very strong since the November election. While advance/decline lines have firmed, participation in the rally has been uneven and may be fraying around the edges. For example, the number of groups trading above their 40-week moving average has been diverging negatively from the broad market in the last few months, suggesting diminishing breadth (Chart 1). In fact, the industrials (I) and financials (F) sectors have carried the market since November. Other deep cyclical sectors, such as energy, materials and tech, have mostly matched market performance. The 'IF' rally is based on an expected upgrade to the economic growth plane that matches the surge in various sentiment gauges. If validation does not occur, then the IF rally will become iffy indeed, unless sector breadth improves. Last week we showed that market cap-to-GDP was so far above its long-term average that even if nominal growth boomed at 8% per annum for the next five years this valuation ratio would still not have normalized. That valuation backdrop may not upend additional short-term market momentum, but it is a true measure of just how bullish sentiment has become and should be a critical input to the portfolio construction process, because of its warning about divergences from fundamental supports. Another unconventional sentiment gauge is observed from sub-surface market patterns. Chart 1 shows that the number of defensive groups with a positive 52-week rate of change, in relative terms, is in freefall, plunged to virtually nil. In the last two decades, investors eschewing capital preservation and non-cyclical sectors so aggressively has typically preceded major market peaks (Chart 1). The steep drop in the put/call ratio confirms that euphoria and greed are trumping mistrust and fear. The put/call ratio has recently bounced, but is well below levels that signal investors are accumulating significant portfolio protection. The Fed's tightening bias, contracting U.S. dollar-based financial liquidity amid the strong U.S. dollar all threaten to keep a lid on corporate sector sales prospects. As such, we remain biased toward non-cyclical and consumer sectors, even excluding fiscal policy uncertainty. Chart 2 shows that these areas are in a base-building phase, in relative terms, following their post-election drubbing. We expect momentum to steadily build toward sustained outperformance by midyear. Conversely, a reversal in the 'IF' sectors already appears to be developing, while other capital spending-dependent sectors are unable to gain momentum (Chart 3). This week we highlight both a winning group and an area we expect to disappoint. Chart 1The Rally Is Fraying Around The Edges
The Rally Is Fraying Around The Edges
The Rally Is Fraying Around The Edges
Chart 2Defensive Base-Building?
Defensive Base-Building?
Defensive Base-Building?
Chart 3Cyclical Sector Distribution
Cyclical Sector Distribution
Cyclical Sector Distribution
New Highs Ahead For Media While the consumer discretionary sector has a poor track record during Fed tightening cycles, the S&P media sub-component can buck this trend. Media stocks outperformed in the second half of the 1990s and also trended higher in the 1980s while the Fed was tightening. The key was the U.S. dollar (Chart 4). As long as the dollar was strong, media companies sustained a profit advantage over the rest of the corporate sector owing to limited external exposure. A replay is currently playing out, and has the potential to persist for at least the next few quarters based on upbeat cyclical indicators. Media sales growth is in recovery mode. Consumers have significantly boosted spending on media services, as measured by personal consumption expenditures data (Chart 5). Pricing power has surged in response to demand strength (Chart 5, bottom panel). In turn, strong demand is boosting measures of productivity: our proxy for sales/employment is accelerating toward the double-digit growth zone (Chart 5). Productivity is diverging positively from relative forward earnings expectations, implying there is room for a re-rating. As long as the U.S. economy is growing, media companies should be able to garner an increasing share of consumer wallets. Chart 6 shows that real spending on media services has been in a steady uptrend for well over a decade, reflecting its ability to continually innovate, only pausing during recessions when consumers are forced to retrench. Typically, a rise in spending pulls up pricing power (Chart 6). Chart 4Media Stocks Like Dollar Strength
Media Stocks Like Dollar Strength
Media Stocks Like Dollar Strength
Chart 5Sales Are Set To Accelerate
Sales Are Set To Accelerate
Sales Are Set To Accelerate
Chart 6Secular Strength
Secular Strength
Secular Strength
All of this has spurred a recovery in media cash flow growth (Chart 7, top panel). Relative performance and cash flow move hand-in-hand. Rising cash flows also imply that the media sector can further reduce shares outstanding through buybacks and/or M&A activity (Chart 7), bolstering ROE. The S&P movies & entertainment index has been one of the driving forces behind the broader media index recovery. We upgraded the former to overweight after the vicious selloff related to Disney's ESPN woes and the takeover saga at Viacom had pushed the index to an undervalued extreme. While slightly early, this upgrade is now paying off (Chart 8). The expectations hurdle remains surmountable. Both forward earnings and sales growth estimates are deeply negative (Chart 8), reflecting the well-known cooling in cable subscriber growth. But even here, there is room for potential upside surprises. Consumer spending on recreation has been growing at a low single-digit clip, but the surge in consumer confidence, courtesy of rising wage growth and a positive wealth effect from rising real estate and financial asset prices, should support increased discretionary consumer spending. The message from the jump in the ISM services index is bullish for recreation spending (Chart 9, second panel). Chart 7Shareholder-Friendly
Shareholder-Friendly
Shareholder-Friendly
Chart 8Cheap With Low Expectations
Cheap With Low Expectations
Cheap With Low Expectations
Chart 9Still Early In The Recovery
Still Early In The Recovery
Still Early In The Recovery
In turn, faster spending would support ongoing pricing power gains (Chart 9). The industry is already sporting one of the most robust selling price increases of all that we track, as advertising rate inflation is growing anew. Importantly, real outlays on cable services have recovered after a steep decline (Chart 9), suggesting that the drag from disappointing cable subscriber growth and cord cutting may be easing. Less churn implies more pricing power. Content cost inflation also remains under wraps. The implication is that the fundamental forces to propel a retest of previous relative performance highs are in place. Technical conditions are also sending a bullish signal. Cyclical momentum, as measured by the 52-week rate of change, is on the cusp of breaking into positive territory (Chart 9), while the share price ratio has already crossed decisively above key resistance at its 40-week moving average. A dual breakout would confirm a new bull trend. Bottom Line: Media stocks have good odds of retesting previous relative performance highs as discretionary consumer spending perks up. Stay overweight the overall media group, and the S&P movies and entertainment index in particular. Chemical Stocks: A Toxic Portfolio Blend The commodity price recovery has not carried over into the S&P materials sector, as relative performance has been moving laterally for much of the last twelve months. Rather than view this as an opportunity to play catch up, the more likely outcome is that the sector has missed its chance to outperform. In fact, downside risks have intensified. The strong U.S. dollar will exact a toll on U.S. exporters, particularly if emerging markets and China do not experience accelerating final demand. While there has been a massive amount of stimulus in China over the past 18 months, the thrust of that impulse is fading. Fiscal spending growth has dropped sharply and the authorities trying to cool rampant real estate speculation. The yield curve remains flat (Chart 10), as local funding costs rise on the back of the authorities attempt to mitigate capital outflows, and loan demand remains weak. Persistent weakness in the Chinese currency may reflect a lack of confidence in local returns, i.e. sub-par growth. All of that argues against expecting a major impetus to raw materials demand, at a time when the materials sector total wage bill is inflating more aggressively. Our Cyclical Macro Indicator for the materials sector is hitting new lows (Chart 10), heralding earnings underperformance, underscoring that below-benchmark allocations remain appropriate. The S&P chemicals group represents for than 70% of the overall materials market cap. It has underperformed since its peak and our underweight call in 2014, pulled lower by the soaring U.S. dollar and sagging industry productivity (Chart 11). Net earnings revisions have been consistently revised lower over the past few years, and are unlikely to recover without a reflationary push (global real yields are shown inverted, second panel, Chart 11) that revives chemical final demand. Analysts have latched on to the firming in global purchasing manager survey sentiment, aggressively pushing up sales growth expectations in recent months (Chart 12). Clearly, manufacturing sector expansion is expected to reverse the contraction in chemical output growth (Chart 12). Chart 10Higher PMIs Are Not Enough
Higher PMIs Are Not Enough
Higher PMIs Are Not Enough
Chart 11Higher Yields Are A Bad Omen
Higher Yields Are A Bad Omen
Higher Yields Are A Bad Omen
Chart 12Expectations Are Inflated
Expectations Are Inflated
Expectations Are Inflated
However, this may be yet another case of analysts chronically overestimating the industry's earnings power. Global manufacturing improvement seems likely to accrue mostly to firms outside the U.S. Chart 13 shows that chemicals relative performance is heavily influenced by the U.S. dollar. Valuations and sentiment are tightly linked with chemical export growth (Chart 13), as the latter represent 14% of total U.S. exports. The U.S. dollar surge is diverting orders away from U.S. manufacturers: German chemical new orders have surged, and the IFO survey of chemical industry executives signals optimism about the future (Chart 14). Chart 13The Dollar Is Hurting The U.S. ...
The Dollar Is Hurting The U.S. ...
The Dollar Is Hurting The U.S. ...
Chart 14... But Helping Foreign Competitors
... But Helping Foreign Competitors
... But Helping Foreign Competitors
U.S. executives appear to be equally confident, but that optimism is misplaced. The American Chemical Council expects U.S. chemical exports to increase 7% a year through 2021. Over $170B is expected to be invested in U.S. chemical manufacturing capacity, representing nearly 25% of the total industry size, which is anticipated to boost the chemical trade surplus to new records. So far, roughly $76B of projects has either been completed or is under construction. If these planned projects all come to fruition, our concern is that new capacity will be idle rather than productive. The industry is in the crosshairs of anti-globalization and protectionism, and a strong U.S. dollar and rising domestic cost structures threaten to reduce competitiveness. Chemical imports are a fairly large portion of sales, rendering profitability vulnerable should an import-tax ever be introduced. From a cyclical standpoint, deflationary pressures are already very acute. Chemical capacity is growing much faster than production, warning that pricing power will be under significant pressure (Chart 15). Many chemical products are destined for interest rate-sensitive end markets such as autos, underscoring that a Fed tightening cycle is a headwind. While capacity expansion was planned when interest rates and feedstock costs were expected to remain at rock bottom levels for the foreseeable future, this is no longer the case. Chemical companies can either use natural gas (ethane) or oil (naphtha) as a primary feedstock. U.S. production is largely ethane-based, while global capacity is geared to naphtha. Rising U.S. natural gas prices are undermining the U.S. input cost advantage (Chart 16). Chart 15Persistent Deflation Pressures
Persistent Deflation Pressures
Persistent Deflation Pressures
Chart 16U.S. Cost Structures Are Unattractive
U.S. Cost Structures Are Unattractive
U.S. Cost Structures Are Unattractive
Increased capacity has also put significant upward pressure on wage costs, as our proxy for the total wage bill is rising at a high single-digit rate (Chart 16). With capital spending slated to stay robust in the coming years, it will likely continue to take a larger share of sales, impairing profit margins. While the planned merger between heavyweights Dow Chemical and Dupont may eventually help to rationalize costs, this is a necessary but not sufficient step in the face of a loss of global market share. Without accelerating sales, U.S. chemical makers will be hard pressed to improve productivity sufficiently to reverse the slide in relative forward earnings estimates. Bottom Line: The S&P materials sector hasn't been able to outperform during a period of improving global manufacturing activity, raising doubts about its performance potential when global output growth inevitably slows. Part of this reflects the challenging outlook for the sector heavyweight chemicals index, and we recommend staying underweight both. The symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5CHEM - APD, ARG, CF, DOW, EMN, ECL, DD, FMC, IFF, LYB, MON, MOS, PPG, PX, SHW. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps. Favor growth over value (downgrade alert).
Highlights Duration: In the absence of a major economic shock we will reinitiate a below-benchmark duration recommendation once the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty Index displays some mean reversion and positioning indicators are at less bearish extremes. Fed Balance Sheet: The Fed could start to reduce the size of its balance sheet as early as the end of this year, but more likely in 2018. In any case, allowing securities to run off its portfolio will not have much of an impact on long-dated Treasury yields. MBS: Remain underweight MBS. Spreads are already low and have near-term upside based on the slope of the yield curve and the uptrend in interest rate volatility. Feature As we pointed out in our December 6 report, the bond selloff had proceeded too far, too fast, and was due for a pause. The 10-year Treasury yield then peaked at 2.6% on December 16 and has now fallen back to 2.4% as we go to press. It is of note that all of the reversal has come from the real component of yields while the compensation for expected inflation has remained firm (Chart 1). Chart 1Bear Market On Pause
Bear Market On Pause
Bear Market On Pause
In our end-of-year "Themes For 2017" Special Report 1 we explained why we believe Treasury yields will level-off in the near term before heading higher throughout most of 2017. Now that we have entered this first "consolidation phase" it is time to consider what factors would cause us to reinstate a below-benchmark duration stance. But first, let us quickly recap our bearish 6-12 month outlook for Treasuries. The Cyclical Outlook For Treasury Yields Many of the headwinds that held back economic growth last year - including fiscal policy, inventory drawdowns and the impact of a distressed energy sector on capital spending - are poised to abate in 2017. With stronger growth and an already tight labor market, core inflation will continue to gradually rise toward the Fed's target. We expect trailing 12-month core PCE inflation will reach the Fed's 2% target near the end of 2017. Consequently, the cost of inflation protection embedded in bond yields will also converge with levels that are consistent with the Fed's target (Chart 2). We judge this level to be in the range of 2.4% to 2.5% for long-dated TIPS breakevens. With the 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven rate at 2.13% and the 10-year TIPS breakeven rate at 2%, long-dated Treasury yields have approximately 30-50 bps of upside from the inflation component alone. Chart 2Breakevens Still Too Low
Breakevens Still Too Low
Breakevens Still Too Low
Chart 3Real Yields Also Biased Higher
Real Yields Also Biased Higher
Real Yields Also Biased Higher
We are less certain about how much higher real yields might move during the next 12 months. However, the downside in real yields is surely limited. Chart 3 shows that changes in the 10-year real yield and changes in our 12-month Fed Funds Discounter2 are almost always positively correlated. At present, the reading from our discounter is 46 bps, meaning the market is priced for about 2 more rate hikes during the next 12 months. Given our positive economic outlook, 2 or 3 rate hikes in 2017 sounds reasonable. Is Now The Time To Trim Duration? Barring any major economic setbacks we will consider three factors when making this decision: (i) valuation, (ii) economic policy uncertainty and (iii) sentiment & positioning. Factor 1: Valuation When we last shifted from a below-benchmark to a benchmark duration stance on December 6 the 10-year Treasury yield traded 14 bps above the fair value reading from our 2-factor Global PMI Model. At present, the 10-year yield is only 9 bps cheap on this model (Chart 4). In other words, valuation is essentially neutral. But since global PMI is likely to trend higher over the course of the year, we would be comfortable cutting duration at current valuation levels should the other two factors on our checklist fall into place. Factor 2: Uncertainty We've been talking a lot about uncertainty recently, mostly in reference to the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty Index created by Baker, Bloom and Davis.3 This index exhibits a strong inverse correlation with Treasury yields over time and has shot higher during the past couple of months without a corresponding decrease in yields. When we consider the uncertainty index alongside Global PMI and bullish sentiment toward the U.S. dollar in our 3-factor model of Treasury yields, we find that the 10-year Treasury yield now appears 38 bps cheap (Chart 5). Chart 4Close To Fair Value...
Close To Fair Value ...
Close To Fair Value ...
Chart 5...But Uncertainty Remains Elevated
... But Uncertainty Remains Elevated
... But Uncertainty Remains Elevated
What is particularly odd is that the uncertainty index has diverged so sharply from measures of both consumer and small business confidence (Chart 6). This epic split can mean only one of two things: Chart 6Excessive Optimism Or A False Reading From The Uncertainty Index?
Excessive Optimism Or A False Reading From The Uncertainty Index?
Excessive Optimism Or A False Reading From The Uncertainty Index?
Businesses and consumers are excessively optimistic in the face of an increasingly uncertain back-drop, or The uncertainty index is unable to distinguish between policy shocks with positive and negative economic implications We turn to history in an attempt to determine whether the warning from the uncertainty index should be heeded. Specifically, we searched for other one-month periods when there was a one standard deviation increase in the uncertainty index alongside increases in both consumer and small business confidence. Since 1991, ten months meet these criteria (Table 1). Table 1Periods Displaying One Standard Deviation Increase In Global Economic Policy##br## Uncertainty Index* And Increase In Both Consumer Sentiment Index** ##br##And Small Business Confidence Index*** (1991 To Present)
Is It Time To Cut Duration?
Is It Time To Cut Duration?
First we note that Treasury yields declined in 7 out of the 10 flagged periods, but in many of those episodes the scale of the positive confidence shocks was not very large. The two months that appear most similar to the present situation are September 2008 and December 2013. Chart 7Investors Still Bearish
Investors Still Bearish
Investors Still Bearish
The Fed announced the tapering of its asset purchases in December 2013 amidst signs of an improving economy. The hawkish Fed announcement and improving economic outlook sent yields higher on the month, while the uncertainty index spiked as a large number of Fed-related news stories hit the papers.4 One thing that makes December 2013 an imperfect comparable to the present day is that the uncertainty shock was relatively small compared to the confidence shocks. In September 2008 the confidence shocks were not as large as the uncertainty shock, much like today, and the 10-year Treasury yield managed a 2 bps increase. However, it is definitely unfair to draw a conclusion based on the extremely volatile price movements that were witnessed at the height of the financial crisis in September 2008. Based on the example of December 2013, we cannot decisively rule out the possibility that the uncertainty index is simply giving a false signal. However, if that is the case we would expect the uncertainty index to mean revert in relatively short order. Given the strong historical relationship between the uncertainty index and Treasury yields, we will wait for some mean reversion in the uncertainty index before shifting back to a below-benchmark duration stance. Factor 3: Sentiment & Positioning When we shifted from a below-benchmark to a benchmark duration stance measures of investor sentiment and positioning were at bearish extremes, sending a decisive signal that the bond market was oversold. As of today, some of these indicators have started to reverse course while others have not (Chart 7). Our BCA Bond Sentiment Indicator, a composite of a survey of bullish sentiment toward bonds and the 13-week rate of change in bond yields is no longer at an oversold extreme. However, net speculative positions in the 10-year Treasury futures contract have moved even further into "net short" territory. The J.P. Morgan client survey shows that investors remain below benchmark duration in aggregate, although active traders are no longer net short. Although some capitulation of shorts has already taken place, we will await some further normalization of positioning - particularly in net speculative futures - before reinitiating a below-benchmark duration stance. Bottom Line: In the absence of a major economic shock we will reinitiate a below-benchmark duration recommendation once the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty Index displays some mean reversion and positioning indicators are at less bearish extremes. The Fed's Balance Sheet & The Shortage Of Bills The minutes from December's FOMC meeting revealed that: Several participants noted circumstances that might warrant changes to the path for the federal funds rate could also have implications for the reinvestment of proceeds from maturing Treasury securities and principal payments from agency debt and mortgage-backed securities Since then, three different FOMC members have also spoken about the size of the Fed's balance sheet. Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker said that the Fed should consider shrinking its balance sheet once the fed funds rate reaches 1%.5 Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren made the case for more immediate action6 and St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said the Fed should consider shrinking its balance sheet in 2017.7 Clearly, talk of unwinding the Fed's balance sheet is heating up. The Fed's only official stated position on this topic is that it will keep its balance sheet level until normalization of the fed funds rate is "well under way", a statement we have long interpreted to mean "until the fed funds rate is 1%, or perhaps even higher". As such, we would not expect any action on winding down the Fed's balance sheet until late this year at the earliest, and more likely in 2018. The Impact On Treasury Yields In any case, as we detailed in a report published in August 2015,8 we do not think that the Fed allowing its balance sheet to shrink will itself have much of an impact on Treasury yields. The reason relates to the way in which maturing Treasury securities are currently rolled over at auction and the persistent shortage of T-bills in the market. Chart 8Fed Runoff Will Increase##br## Issuance To Public ...
Fed Runoff Will Increase Issuance To Public ...
Fed Runoff Will Increase Issuance To Public ...
At the moment, balances of matured Treasury securities are added to upcoming note/bond auctions as non-competitive bids. In other words, as Treasury securities mature the Fed buys an equal amount at upcoming Treasury auctions. If the Fed were to cease this reinvestment, that amount would need to be added to the competitive portion of the auctions and would greatly increase the gross issuance of Treasury debt to the public. For a sense of scale, we calculate that Treasury issuance to the public would need to increase by $426 bn in 2018 and $378 bn in 2019 if the Fed were to cease the reinvestment of its portfolio at the end of this year (Chart 8). We contend, however, that a significant portion of this extra financing requirement will be met through increased T-bill issuance and will therefore not impact long-dated Treasury yields. The Treasury department has had a stated goal of increasing T-bill issuance since May 2015 and bill supply as a percentage of total Treasury debt remains near a multi-decade low (Chart 9). Further, T-bills are still in high demand as evidenced by the fact that they are trading at a substantial premium to other money market instruments (Chart 10). This premium exists despite the fact that the Fed has been soaking up a lot of T-bill demand through its Overnight Reverse Repo facility (Chart 10, bottom panel). If the Fed were to phase this program out alongside a reduction in the size of its balance sheet - which is its current stated exit strategy - the shortage of T-bills would be exacerbated. Chart 9... But Mostly Through T-Bills
... But Mostly Through T-Bills
... But Mostly Through T-Bills
Chart 10T-Bills In High Demand
T-Bills In High Demand
T-Bills In High Demand
Of course there is a new regime about to enter the White House and the Treasury department, and also a lot of uncertainty about how large the deficit will be going forward. If the deficit is increased substantially then it would likely be necessary for the Treasury department to increase the size of both bill and coupon issuance in the years ahead. Bottom Line: It is necessary to consider both fiscal policy and the Fed's balance sheet together when forecasting Treasury issuance. Further, whatever the government's financing requirement, a considerable portion of it will be addressed through increased T-bill issuance in the years ahead. This will limit the impact on long-dated Treasury yields. A Quick Note On MBS Chart 11MBS Spreads Are Too Low
MBS Spreads Are Too Low
MBS Spreads Are Too Low
Any unwind of the Fed's balance sheet will have a much greater impact on MBS spreads than on Treasury yields since it will add directly to the supply of MBS available to the public, which tends to correlate with MBS option-adjusted spreads (Chart 11). Of course, other factors such as the rate of prepayments will determine how quickly the Fed's MBS holdings run off and the state of the housing market will determine how much new mortgage origination takes place. We hope to explore these issues in more depth in the coming weeks. Of more immediate concern for MBS spreads though is the recent divergence between nominal spreads, rate volatility and the slope of the yield curve (Chart 11, bottom two panels). MBS spreads have not widened in recent weeks despite curve steepening and rising rate vol. MBS spreads are already low compared to investment alternatives and have upside in the near term, especially if the yield curve continues to steepen, as we expect it will. Looking further out, the eventual wind down of the Fed's balance sheet is another risk the MBS market will have to face. Bottom Line: Remain underweight MBS. Spreads are already low and have near-term upside based on the slope of the yield curve and the uptrend in interest rate volatility. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 207", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Our 12-month discounter measures the expected change in the fed funds rate during the next 12 months as discounted in the overnight index swap curve. 3 www.policyuncertainty.com 4 The uncertainty index is in part based on an algorithm that scans newspapers for coverage of policy-related economic uncertainty. 5 http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-fed-harker-idUSKBN14W1W4 6 http://www.cnbc.com/2017/01/09/reuters-america-interview-rosengren-urges-more-rate-hikes-slimmer-balance-sheet.html 7 http://www.businessinsider.com/lets-shrink-the-balance-sheet-bullard-says-2016-12 8 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Currencies: The Tail Wagging The Dog", dated August 18, 2015, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification