Currencies
Highlights The Chinese government plans a smaller policy push in this year's budget, but is not aiming at a lower growth rate. Maintaining stability remains the priority over promoting growth and progress. Chinese growth has continued to accelerate. Odds of a relapse are low in the next one to two quarters. The sharp recovery in producer prices will likely support private sector investment. The regained strength in construction equipment sales of late could be a harbinger of increasing housing starts. The PBoC has both the willingness and resources to intervene and maintain control over the RMB exchange rate. The CNY/USD cross rate will remain largely determined by the broad trend of the dollar. Feature Chinese lawmakers and senior government officials are convening in Beijing this week for the annual plenary session of the People's Congress, China's parliament. The 3000-member Congress is expected to ratify Premier Li Keqiang's work report, approve his budget and endorse some key initiatives that the central government plans to unveil for the year. Overall, maintaining stability, both socially and economically, remains the focal point of Premier Li's work plan, but the government is planning a smaller policy push on growth in its budget compared with last year. Meanwhile, the latest growth figures out of China confirm that the economy has continued to build momentum. Odds of a near term relapse are low. Reading Policy Tea Leaves Premier Li's blueprint for 2017 offers little surprises, and we doubt that the government is aiming at a lower growth rate for the year. The minimum GDP growth target for 2017 was set at 6.5%, not much different from last year's target as well as realized GDP performance for the whole year (Table 1). Meanwhile, other key macro variables have also been adjusted slightly lower from last year's targets, but are slightly higher than last year's growth rates. For example, government agencies expect investment spending and broad money supply to grow by 9% and 12%, respectively, in 2017, a tick lower than last year's targets, but higher than a growth rate of 7.9% and 11.3%, respectively, in 2016. Furthermore, the government's growth priority is also reflected in a higher target for creating jobs. Table 1Table: The Growth Target China's growth recovery since mid-last year has given the government some comfort in staying the course on policy rather than engaging in fresh stimulus. On the fiscal front, there are some initiatives to reduce the corporate tax burden and administrative fees, but the overall budget deficit target will be maintained at 3%, unchanged from last year, which implies no fresh fiscal thrust to support the economy. Meanwhile, infrastructure spending on railways, waterways and highway construction is only expected to be marginally higher than last year's levels. On the monetary front, the Premier has pledged a prudent and neutral policy stance. Headline CPI is expected to increase by 3% in 2017, compared with 2.5% in December 2016. This reflects the government's eased concerns over deflation rather than an anticipation of inflation risk. Building on last year's efforts, the government continues to plan to remove excess capacity in certain industries. The focus remains on steelmakers and coalmines, but some other sectors are also being singled out such as construction materials, ship-building and coal-fire thermal industries. Last year's "de-capacity" campaign has led to a dramatic turnaround in business conditions in steelmakers and coalmines, which suggests the slack in the economy may not be as big as commonly perceived.1 These efforts deserve close attention in terms of their impact on other industries as well as on the overall economy. Finally, Premier Li has also pledged to further advance market-oriented reforms. The government plans to improve governance, reduce administrative red tape, simplify the tax code and increase private sector access to key industries. Meanwhile, the government intends to continue to push "mixed ownership" reforms, or partial privatization, among the country's state-owned enterprises (SOEs), including electricity, petroleum, natural gas, railways, civil aviation, telecom and military equipment. Financial sector reforms are being directed towards boosting the efficiency of financial resources, improving corporate sector access to financing, enhancing supervision over financial institutions and preempting financial risks. These reform initiatives are largely incremental, which probably underscores the authorities' preference for stability ahead of the Party Congress later this year. All in all, the central government plans a smaller policy push in this year's budget, and intends to let the economy run on its own momentum. Aggressive policy reflation is not in the cards unless a relapse in the economy threatens job creation. The government has reiterated its pledge for further reforms, but has so far offered few hopeful signs of bold steps. Overall, maintaining stability remains the priority over promoting growth and progress. China Growth Watch Key macro indicators to be released in the next several days will offer a reality check on how the Chinese economy has fared since the beginning of the year as the holiday seasonal factor wears off. Early indicators confirm that the economy has continued to accelerate. Real time activity trackers for the industrial sector, such as the daily coal intake at thermal power plants and average daily output at major steelmakers, have continued to accelerate (Chart 1). The sharp increase in imports compared with a year ago also confirmed strengthening domestic demand. The recovery in Chinese domestic activity is also reflected in neighboring countries. Sales to China from Korean and Taiwanese exporters have increased sharply from a year ago (Chart 2). As the biggest trading partner of these countries, China has played a pivotal role in the cyclical recovery of their respective economies. Chart 1Real Time Activity Monitor##br## Has Continued To Strengthen Chart 2A Sharp Turnaround##br## In Chinese Demand In short, the Chinese economy has demonstrated some remarkable strength of late. Last year's low base may have exaggerated the year-over-year comparison in some macro figures, but there is little doubt the economy's strong recovery has continued into the New Year. Looking forward, the risk is still tilted to the upside, at least over the next three to six months. First, purchasing manager indexes (PMIs) for both the manufacturing and service sectors have been above the 50 threshold, with broad-based improvement in all major components. BCA's China Leading Economic Indicator remains in a clear uptrend, heralding further improvement in macro numbers (Chart 3). Second, the sharp recovery in producer prices will likely support capital expenditure, especially among private enterprises. Some commentators have attributed China's rising PPI to the increase in global commodities prices rather than being a reflection of the Chinese business cycle. We disagree. While it is certainly true that the mining sector and materials producers have enjoyed the biggest boost in their pricing power since last year due to rising commodities prices, the improvement in Chinese PPI is rather broad-based. Our diffusion index for producer prices, which measures the percentage of sectors witnessing higher PPI, has also recovered strongly (Chart 4). In fact, the current reading suggests almost all sectors are experiencing rising output prices rather than only the resource sector. At a minimum, this should put a floor under capital expenditure in the manufacturing sector. Chart 3Strengthening LEI Points ##br##To Further Growth Acceleration Chart 4Broad-Based Improvement##br## In PPI Moreover, there has been a dramatic increase in the sales of construction equipment such as heavy trucks and excavators, with growth rates matching levels during the boom years prior to the global financial crisis. Historically, construction machines sales have been tightly correlated with real estate development (Chart 5). If history is any guide, the regained strength in construction equipment sales of late could be a harbinger of an impending boom in new housing starts. This means efforts to rein in housing activity since last October have done little to dampen developers' confidence.2 Meanwhile, we have highlighted the risk of slowing infrastructure construction by the state sector, which could weigh on overall capital spending3 - any improvement in real estate investment would offer an important offset. Ongoing housing sector development deserves close attention in the coming months. Finally, the growth outlook in other major developed economies has also improved, which should benefit Chinese exporters. A recent Special Report published by our sister publication, The Bank Credit Analyst, found broad-based evidence of improving activity across countries and industrial sectors.4 Retail sales, industrial production and capital spending are all showing more dynamism in the advanced economies, and orders and production are gaining strength for goods related to both business and household final demand. As far as China is concerned, a mini-cycle global upturn bodes well for exports. We were surprised by February's weak Chinese export numbers and for now, we suspect it reflects noise rather a trend. Unless protectionism backlash out of the U.S. derails normal trade links, we expect Chinese exports should continue to strengthen,5 which should allow the Chinese economy to gain additional momentum (Chart 6). Chart 5An Impending Boom In Housing Construction? Chart 6Chinese Exports: Better Days Ahead? Bottom Line: Chinese growth has continued to accelerate. Odds of a relapse are low in the one to two quarters. The RMB: Back In The Spotlight The Federal Reserve is well expected to raise its benchmark policy rate again next week, which has prompted a bidding up of the U.S. dollar against other majors as well as the RMB. In Premier Li Keqiang's work report presented to the People's Congress this week, the Chinese government appears to have omitted the usual commitment to maintain "exchange rate stability," which is being interpreted by some as a sign the government may allow for much greater fluctuations of the RMB against the dollar. To be sure, achieving a free-floating exchange rate has been China's long-stated reform target, and it is impossible to predict the exact next step of the People's Bank of China. However, a few broad judgements should still hold. First, we doubt the PBoC will tolerate unorderly fluctuations in the exchange rate in the near term. A weaker currency can be viewed as a reflection of domestic weakness. Moreover, sharper RMB depreciation begets greater capital outflows, which could quickly degenerate into a vicious circle - all of which is against the government's intentions of maintaining stability, especially ahead of the Party Congress late this year. Chart 7A Weak RMB, Or A Strong Dollar? Second, it is unlikely the PBoC will sacrifice domestic monetary policy independence in order to defend the exchange rate. The PBoC's recent policy tightening is as much a response to the stronger domestic economy as it is a forced response to higher U.S. interest rates. Tighter capital account controls will remain the dominant policy tool to deter domestic capital outflows and support the RMB if needed. Finally, fundamental factors do not support significant RMB depreciation against the dollar, given Chinese exporters' competitiveness and the country's large external surpluses. China's recent growth improvement should further weaken the case for a much cheaper RMB. In short, the PBoC has both the willingness and resources to intervene and maintain control over the exchange rate. The CNY/USD cross rate will remain largely determined by the broad trend of the dollar, and the RMB is unlikely to depreciate against the dollar more than other major currencies, if the dollar uptrend resumes (Chart 7). We will follow up on these issues in next week's report. Yan Wang, Senior Vice President China Investment Strategy yanw@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "The Myth Of Chinese Overcapacity," dated October 6, 2016, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Housing Tightening: Now And 2010," dated October 13, 2016, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Be Aware Of China's Fiscal Tightening," dated February 16, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Special Report, "Global Growth Pickup: Fact Or Fiction?" dated February 23, 2017, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "Dealing With The Trump Wildcard," dated January 26, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights Eurostoxx50 versus S&P500 boils down to a simple choice: Banco Santander, BNP Paribas and ING; or Apple, Microsoft and Google? Right now, we would rather own the three tech stocks than the three banks - which necessarily means underweighting the Eurostoxx50 versus the S&P500. Eurostoxx50 performance relative to the FTSE100 boils down to the inverse direction of euro/pound. Right now, we expect euro/pound to strengthen - which necessarily means underweighting the Eurostoxx50 versus the FTSE100. Stay overweight Spanish Bonos versus French OATs as a structural position. Feature Which would you rather own: Banco Santander, BNP Paribas and ING; or Apple, Microsoft and Google?1 Surprising as it may seem, the all-important allocation decision between the Eurostoxx50 and the S&P500 boils down to this simple choice. The Chart of the Week should leave no doubt that everything else is largely irrelevant. Chart of the WeekEurostoxx50 Vs. S&P500 = Santander, BNP & ING Vs. Apple, Microsoft & Google Right now, we would rather own the top three U.S. tech stocks rather than the top three euro area banks - which necessarily means underweighting the Eurostoxx50 versus the S&P500. The Fallacy Of Division For Equities The fallacy of division is a logical fallacy. It occurs when somebody falsely infers that what is true for the whole is also true for the parts that make up the whole. As a simple example, somebody might infer that because their computer screen appears purple, the pixels that make up the screen are also purple. In fact, the pixels are not purple. They are either red or blue. The fallacy of division is that the property of the whole - purpleness - does not translate to the property of the constituent parts - redness or blueness. As investment strategists, we hear a common fallacy of division. Since global equities are a play on the global economy, it might seem that national equity markets - like Ireland's ISEQ or Denmark's OMX - are plays on their national economies. In fact, nothing could be further from the truth. The property of the equity market as a global aggregate does not translate to the property of equity markets as national parts. The equity markets in Ireland and Denmark are each dominated by one stock which accounts for almost a quarter of national market capitalization - in Ireland, Ryanair, the pan-European budget airline, and in Denmark, Novo Nordisk, the global pharmaceutical company. Therefore, the relative performance of Ireland's ISEQ has almost no connection with Ireland's economy; rather, it is a just a play on airlines. And given budget airlines' sensitivity to fuel costs, Ireland's ISEQ is counterintuitively an inverse play on the oil price (Chart I-2). Likewise, the relative performance of Denmark's OMX has no connection with Denmark's economy; it is just a strong play on global pharma (Chart I-3). Chart I-2Ireland = Short Oil Chart I-3Denmark = Long Pharma In a similar vein, the relative performance of Switzerland's SME is also a play on global pharma - via Novartis and Roche (Chart I-4); Norway's OBX is a play on global energy - via Statoil (Chart I-5); and Italy's MIB and Spain's IBEX are plays on banks (Chart I-6 and Chart I-7). We could continue, but you get our drift... Chart I-4Switzerland = Long Pharma / Short Oil Chart I-5Norway = Long Oil Chart I-6Italy = Long Banks Chart I-7Spain = Long Banks But what about a regional index like the Eurostoxx50 or Eurostoxx600: surely, with the broader exposure, there must be a strong connection with the euro area economy? Unfortunately not - at least, not when it comes to relative performance. Consider that for the past few years, the euro area economy has actually outperformed the U.S. economy2 (Chart I-8). Yet the Eurostoxx50 has substantially underperformed the S&P500 (Chart I-9). What's going on? The answer is that the Eurostoxx50 has a major 15% weighting to banks and a minor 7% weighting to tech. The S&P500 is the mirror image; a minor 7% weighting to banks and a major 22% weighting to tech. Chart I-8The Euro Area Economy ##br##Has Outperformed... Chart I-9...But The Eurostoxx50##br## Has Underperformed For the Eurostoxx50 the distinguishing property is 'bank'; for the S&P500 it is 'tech'. And as we saw earlier, these distinguishing properties are captured by just three large euro area banks and three large U.S tech stocks. So index relative performance simply boils down to whether the three euro area banks outperform the three U.S. tech stocks, or vice-versa. Everything else is largely irrelevant. Equities' Connection With Economies Is Often Counterintuitive When it comes to the FTSE100, it turns out that it is not more bank or tech than the Eurostoxx50. Major sector weightings across the two indexes are broadly similar. Hence, relative performance is more connected to relative economic performance. But there is a catch - the connection is not as intuitive as you might first think. You see, both major indexes are made up of dollar-earning multinational companies. Yet the index value and earnings are quoted in pounds and euros respectively. If the home currency appreciates, index earnings - translated from dollars into home currency - go down, depressing index relative performance with it. And the opposite happens if the home currency depreciates. So the counterintuitive thing is that a relatively strengthening home economy does not result in index outperformance. Quite the opposite, it normally means a relatively more hawkish central bank, and an appreciating currency (Chart I-10). Thereby it causes index underperformance. Hence, Eurostoxx50 performance relative to the FTSE100 boils down to the inverse direction of euro/pound. Once again, Chart I-11 should leave readers in no doubt. Chart I-10A Relatively More Hawkish Central Bank =##br## A Stronger Currency Chart I-11A Stronger Currency = ##br##Equity Index Underperformance Which neatly brings us to today's ECB meeting. The ECB is a tunnel-vision 2% inflation-targeting central bank. Any upgrade to its inflation forecast, as seems likely, would imply less need for its extreme and experimental monetary easing. Once digested by the market, this would support the euro. Meanwhile, on the other side of the Channel, the U.K. Government is preparing to trigger Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty and start its formal divorce from the EU within a couple of weeks. Expect the EU's immediate response to cast long shadows across Theresa May's vision of a future in sunlit uplands. Once digested by the market, this would further weigh down the pound. A stronger euro/pound necessarily means underweighting the Eurostoxx50 versus the FTSE100. The Fallacy Of Division For Bonds The fallacy of division also applies to euro area sovereign bonds. The aggregate euro area sovereign yield just equals the average ECB policy rate anticipated over the lifetime of the bond (Chart I-12). This is directly analogous to the relationship between the U.K. gilt yield and the anticipated path of the BoE base rate, and the relationship between the U.S. T-bond yield and the anticipated path of the Fed funds rate (Chart I-13). Chart I-12The Aggregate Euro Area Bond Yield = ##br##The Average ECB Policy Rate Expected Chart I-13The U.S. T-Bond Yield = ##br##The Average Fed Funds Rate Expected But what is true for the whole is not necessarily true for the parts that make up the whole. Individual euro area sovereign bond yields carry a second component which can override everything else. This second component is a redenomination premium as compensation for the expected loss if the bond redenominates out of euros. For example, the redenomination premium on a Spanish Bono versus a French OAT equals: The annual probability of euro breakup Multiplied by The expected undervaluation of a new peseta versus a new franc. However, the ECB's own analysis shows that Spain is now as competitive as France (Chart I-14), meaning that a new peseta ultimately should not lose value versus a new franc. So irrespective of the probability of euro breakup, the second item of the multiplication should be zero. Meaning that the redenomination premium should also be zero, rather than today's 75 bps (on 10-year Bonos over OATs). Bear in mind that Spain's housing bust and subsequent recapitalisation of its banks has followed Ireland's template - just with a two year lag. And observe that the redenomination premium on Irish 10-year bonds over OATs, which once stood at a remarkable 1100 bps, has now completely vanished. We expect Spain to continue following in the footsteps of Ireland (Chart I-15). As a structural position, stay long Spanish Bonos versus French OATs. Chart I-14Spain Has Dramatically Improved##br## Its Competitiveness Chart I-15Spain Is Following In The##br## Footsteps Of Ireland Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President European Investment Strategy dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 Listed as Alphabet. 2 On a per capita basis. Fractal Trading Model* Long tin / short copper hit its 5% profit target, while short MSCI AC World hit its 2.5% stop-loss. This week's recommendation is to short ruble / dollar. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-16 * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch ##br##- Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Risk assets have rallied smartly, yet key indicators like the relative performance of Swedish stocks or the price of kiwi equities are not corroborating these moves. With the Fed now very likely to increase rates in March, the broad-trade-weighted dollar could be about to resume its rally. This would prompt a correction in metals, and EM as well as commodity currencies. We think the tactical correction in the broad-trade-weighted dollar is over, and the cyclical dollar rally can resume. EUR and JPY will not suffer as much as the commodity currencies, go long EUR/AUD, short NZD/JPY. Feature In the Roman calendar, the Ides of March corresponds to the 15th of that month. Consigning that date to posterity in the year 44 BCE, Julius Caesar was assassinated on the floor of the senate in Rome, with his adoptive son Brutus, being among the conspirators. This event prompted yet another round of civil war in the republic, and ultimately a regime shift: the end of the Roman Republic and the Beginning of Imperial Rome under Augustus in 27 BCE. Fast forward 2061 years to the present. March 15th will be the day when the FOMC meeting ends. Will the period around the Ides of March represent a regime shift once again - albeit on a much different scale - where risk assets finally correct? Can the dollar resume its ascent? We believe the answer to both questions is yes. Unusual Market Moves Strange market dynamics have piqued our interest. In recent weeks, DM stock prices, and bond yields have been moving up (Chart I-1). This is consistent with investors pricing in an improving growth outlook and a Fed moving toward a tighter policy. On the other hand, EM stocks, metals, and gold in particular have also been moving up (Chart I-2). This move is more disturbing as it tends to imply an easing in monetary conditions, especially the strength in gold, even if it may have ended yesterday. This strange performance could be explained if the dollar was weakening or inflation expectations were moving up. However, the dollar has been strengthening in recent days and inflation expectations have been flat. Additionally, the U.S. yield curve has flattened, suggesting that the adjustment in the Fed's expected rate path is beginning to have marginally negative implications for future growth (Chart I-3). Chart I-1More Growth, More Hikes Chart I-2More Reflation As Well Chart I-3No Sign Of A Fed Behind The Curve So based on current information, how are these market moves likely to resolve themselves? Let's look at indicators. In the past, we have followed the common-currency performance of Swedish relative to U.S. equities as a gauge for the global growth outlook, and particularly non-U.S. growth relative to U.S. growth. This reflects the fact that U.S. stocks tend to be defensive, while Swedish stocks are very pro-cyclical. This dynamic is accentuated by the nature of the Swedish economy. Sweden is a small open nation that trades heavily with EM. While its biggest trading partner is the euro area, where it tends to export many intermediate goods and machinery, which are then re-exported as finished products to the EM space. Currently, Swedish equities continue to underperform U.S. ones. What is most striking is that this underperformance has happened despite a strong performance in EM stocks and metals, a very rare divergence (Chart I-4). Another worrying signal comes from New Zealand stocks in USD terms. New Zealand is another small open economy with deep trade links to the EM space. It is therefore very sensitive to global growth dynamics. While Kiwi equities did flag the rebound in EM growth and global manufacturing activity that happened in 2016, since late January, they have stopped participating in the rally in global risk assets despite a booming New Zealand economy. They have even begun swooning in recent weeks (Chart I-5). Chart I-4A Strange Divergence Chart I-5Are Kiwi Stocks Telling Us Something? Finally, two other reliable indicators of global growth are also not corroborating any further improvement in global growth from here: Small caps are underperforming large caps and oil is underperforming gold (Chart I-6). Obviously the next question becomes: are all these indicators likely to converge back toward EM equities, the AUD and the BRLs of the world or are the risk assets mentioned above likely to be the ones experiencing a downward adjustment? Here economics should give us a clue. For one, the 2016 rally in EM and risk assets can be explained by the large improvement in economic conditions. G10 and EM surprise indexes have moved up vertically in recent months (Chart I-7). However, this move might reflect the past not the future. Chart I-6Some Growth Indicators Are##br## Not Doing Well Anymore Chart I-7Too Much Of##br## A Good Thing? China has been a key reason explaining why EM assets and economic activity have been so positive. However, the large dose of fiscal stimulus that has supported that economy has dissipated (Chart I-8). Based on the IMF's October Fiscal Monitor, the fiscal thrust in China was 1.7% of potential GDP in 2015 (heavily loaded to the second half of that year), and 0.3% in 2016. It is moving to 0% in 2017. This means that as the lagged effects of the late 2015 fiscal surge dissipate, a key reflationary wind behind the global economy will disappear. The Keqiang index is mirroring these dynamics. After flirting with cyclical highs, and therefore highlighting a sharp improvement in the Chinese industrial sector, it has begun to roll over (Chart I-9). More weakness is likely in the cards. Fiscal dynamics have followed a similar pattern on a global level. The overall EM fiscal thrust was at its strongest in 2015, at 0.6% of EM potential GDP, fell to 0.1% in 2016, and is expected to hit -0.2% in 2017. In the DM, the pattern is slightly different. The high point of fiscal stimulus was 2016, when the fiscal impulse hit 0.4% of potential GDP. However, this measure is moving back to -0.1% in 2017. Chart I-8Losing A Source ##br##Of Reflation Chart I-9Chinese Industrial Activity ##br##May Be Rolling Over Additionally, the monetary environment is not as stimulative as it once was. Bond yields have risen in the whole DM space, with Treasury yields now more than 110bps higher than in July, Bund yields having moved from -0.18% to 0.31%, and JGB yields having adjusted 37bp higher to 0.07%. High-frequency loan data out of the U.S. already shows some strains caused by this rise in borrowing costs (Chart I-10). This combination points toward a deceleration in the growth impulse, especially in the goods sector. As such, we do expect the EM and G10 surprise indexes to roll over in coming weeks. Even if this phenomenon may prove temporary, the market is not priced for this event. Highlighting this vulnerability is the high level of complacency we have already flagged last week, which suggests that global investors are positioned for a continuation of the improvement in the growth outlook (Chart I-11). So high seems the conviction that growth will continue to accelerate that it is outweighing the move toward a tighter Fed going forward. Finally, the implied correlation in the S&P 500 has fallen to post 2010-lows. This could incentivize investors to take on more leveraged bets on portfolios of stocks. A low correlation results into higher diversification benefits and therefore, a lower portfolio volatility (Chart I-12). A rise in correlation would cause volatility to rise and thus a mini-deleveraging and de-risking cycle to take hold amongst investors. Chart I-10Response To Higher Yields Chart I-11Lots Of Complacency Globally Chart I-12Correlation-Induced Derisking On Its Way? Bottom Line: DM stocks are up, yields are up, the dollar is firming, yet EM equities, metals and gold especially have risen as well, and the U.S. yield curve is flattening while inflation expectations have recently been stable. We expect risk assets to end up buckling. Some reliable indicators of the trend in risk assets are pointing south, global investors are expecting further growth improvement in the coming months while global growth may in fact temporarily decelerate, and finally, if the low level of implied correlation in stocks normalizes, a correction may be catalyzed. What About The Fed Because Lael Brainard has been such a reliable dove on the FOMC, when she says that a hike is coming soon, we must listen. The fact that the market has come to price in an 83% probability of a Fed hike in March will only give the FOMC more comfort in increasing interest rate when it meets in two weeks (Chart I-13). While we have been expecting the Fed to move in line with its Summary of Economic Projection's interest rate forecast, and thus increase three times this year, we are surprised by the fast change of tune in recent days. Nonetheless, we are acknowledging this reality. Is this publication moving toward expecting four rate hikes in 2017? Not yet. We want to see how the market handles the coming hike going forward. A correction in risk assets, commodities, and EM is likely to force the Fed to pause again before resuming its hiking path. We are clearly expecting such a development. The broad dollar is likely to be caught in a bullish cross current. However, differentiation between the minors vis-à-vis the EUR and JPY might be essential for investors. Chart I-14 shows that recently, the broad-trade-weighted dollar has not kept pace with the increase in interest rate expectations for the U.S. With our capitulation index for this measure of the dollar moving closer to "oversold" territory, the weeks leading up to the Fed meeting could witness a stronger broad trade-weighted dollar. We are therefore removing our tactical short bias and moving in line with our cyclical bullish dollar stance. Chart I-13The Fed Tends To Telegraph ##br##Its Intention To Hike Chart I-14The Dollar Should ##br##Catch Up We believe that in this process, the dollar will be strongest against EM and commodity currencies. To begin with, the USD is trading near 19, 18, and 17 months lows against the BRL, ZAR, and RUB respectively. As recently as Wednesday, the AUD was also trading near the top of its distribution of the past two years (Chart I-15). Moreover, EM and commodity currencies are heavily geared to global growth. As such, the combination of a tightening Fed, rising bond yields, and a potential roll-over in global economic surprises may weigh especially heavily on them. On the other hand, in 2015 and 2016, the dollar has tended to be softer against the EUR and the JPY in periods of market turbulence. Thus, the call on EM and commodity currencies seems much cleaner than on these two currencies. In this regard, two crosses have caught our eye. One is EUR/AUD. Not only is it at the bottom end of a trading range established since June 2013, it has only traded lower at the apex of the euro area crisis between 2011 and the first half of 2013 (Chart I-16). The recent rollover in French / German bund spreads is potentially a good signal to buy this cross. The picture for JPY is now muddied. While higher interest rates should hurt the JPY, a period of risk-asset selloff should support the JPY. To play the cross-current described above, we are opening a short NZD/JPY position, a cross historically levered to rising volatility (Chart I-17). Chart I-15AUD Is Elevated Chart I-16To Fall From Here, EUR/AUD Needs A Euro Crisis Chart I-17Short NZD/JPY: A Risk-Off Play Bottom Line: The Fed moving forward its planned rate hike to March could be the ultimate catalyst to prompt a correction in risk assets, especially the segment of the market most levered to EM and growth conditions: EM and commodity currencies. We are removing our tactical USD stance and we are moving in line with our bullish cyclical stance. We are also buying EUR/AUD and shorting NZD/JPY. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 2 Recent data paints a healthy picture for the U.S. economy: Fourth quarter annualized GDP came in unchanged from the previous quarter at 1.9%; PCE Price Index increased at a 1.9% annual pace, near the Fed's target; Core PCE remained steady at 1.7% annually and increased to 0.3% monthly, indicative of a robust economy; ISM Manufacturing PMI went up to 57.7. The market is now pricing in an 83% probability of a rate hike. Further enhancing growth prospects were Trump's remarks at his Joint Address to Congress, where he stated that there will be a "big, big cut" in corporate tax, and that he will seek to gain approval for a $1 trillion infrastructure plan. Hawkish comments from the previous FOMC meeting strengthened the dollar in February; Trump's comments may be an additional tailwind to the dollar's upside this month. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Risks To The Cyclical Dollar View - February 3, 2017 Dollar Corrections, EM Outlook, Global Liquidity, And Protectionism - January 27, 2017 The Euro EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 2 Fundamentally, the euro area economy remains resilient: Services sentiment, business climate, and industrial confidence all picked up in February, outperforming expectations; Germany recorded a decrease in unemployed persons of 14,000; German CPI picked up to a 2.2% annual pace, also beating expectations Nevertheless, EUR/USD is unlikely to see any substantive upside in the coming months. With the Dutch elections in around 2 weeks, considerable volatility could rise up, something which has not been priced in. The Euro Stoxx 50 Volatility Index is showing a low reading of 16.55, just above the all-time low of 12. The ECB will meet next week and is likely to display a dovish bias due to potential political turmoil. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 The French Revolution - February 3, 2017 GBP: Dismal Expectations - January 13, 2017 The Yen JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 2 On a cyclical basis we are still bearish on the yen, as the BoJ will continue to pursue radical measures to pull Japan out of its liquidity trap. Recent data seems to indicate that these measures have been somewhat successful: Retail trade YoY growth outperformed expectations coming in at 1%. Housing starts YoY growth also outperformed, coming in at 12.8%. On a tactical basis the picture is more nuanced. While it is very possible that the coming rate hike could lift rate expectations in the U.S., lifting USD/JPY, there is a risks that the hike might trigger a sell-off in risks assets, which could be very positive for the yen. For this reason we are shorting NZD/JPY, as this cross is very vulnerable to an increase in volatility. Report Links: JPY: Climbing To The Springboard Before The Dive - February 24, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Dollar Corrections, EM Outlook, Global Liquidity, And Protectionism - January 27, 2017 British Pound GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 2 The past week has not been kind to the pound, with GBP depreciating by about 2% against both the Euro and the U.S. Dollar. This was in part due to the prospect of a Scottish Independence referendum. On the economic side, data for the U.K. continue to be mixed: House prices annual growth outperformed expectations coming in at 4.5% M4 broad money annual growth continues to climb higher and it is now at 7%. On the other hand manufacturing PMI, although still high, underperformed expectations, coming in at 54.6. Although the cyclical dollar bull market should continue to weigh on cable, we are more bullish on the pound, particularly against the euro, as expectations for the U.K. economy continue to be too pessimistic, while the dark cloud of this year's election cycle looms on the euro. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 The Pound Falls To The Conquering Dollar - October 14, 2016 Australian Dollar AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 2 AUD lost 1.3% of its value Thursday morning amid disappointing trade data. It seems that the market largely ignored stronger data this week: GDP grew at a 2.4% annual rate Q42016 and both NBS and Ciaxin Chinese Manufacturing PMI beat expectations. Exports, however, contracted at a 3% pace and the surplus missed expectations by 66%, most likely due to the AUD's strength this year, even alongside higher commodity prices. This is also particularly worrying seeing that exports failed to pick up despite a previously strong Chinese PMI reading. Now, alongside a Keqiang Index that is topping out, the future for Australian exports could be limited. Additionally, this outlook is further supported by investment diverting to the non-resource sector. It is difficult to see whether the RBA will respond to this export slump, as the contractionary Q32016 GDP data was largely overlooked and dismissed. Nevertheless, we stand by our bearish outlook on AUD. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Risks To The Cyclical Dollar View - February 3, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 New Zealand Dollar NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 2 The RBNZ continues to assert its neutral bias. On Wednesday, RBNZ Governor Graeme Wheeler stated that "there is an equal probability that the next OCR adjustment could be up or down". This caused the kiwi to come close to reaching 0.71, its lowest point since mid-January. We continue to believe that the RBNZ stance is not hawkish enough, as powerful inflationary forces continue to brew in New Zealand. That being said, it is very likely that the RBNZ will continue with its neutral tone up until the middle of the year, when we start to have a clearer picture about the outcome in European elections. Therefore, given that the Fed is likely to hike in March, diverging monetary policies should continue to weigh on NZD/USD until then. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Risks To The Cyclical Dollar View - February 3, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 Canadian Dollar CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 2 The BoC left their overnight rate target unchanged at 0.5% despite a high CPI reading of 2.1% in January. A further surprise was a particularly dovish tone, highlighting that higher energy prices will have a temporary effect on inflation, and indicating "material excess capacity in the economy". Additional weaknesses were highlighted with regards to competitiveness challenges for the export sector and subdued wage growth accompanied by contracting hours worked. Trade developments are an additional headwind for the Canadian economy that the bank is monitoring and will continue to do so until the outlook clarifies. CAD has lost more than 2% of its value against the USD in 3 days due also to a stronger dollar based on Fed rate hike expectations and Trump's potential infrastructure spending and tax cuts. It is unlikely that CAD will see any strength in the near future as the Bank has set forth a rather cautious tone. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 When You Come To A Fork In The Road, Take It - November 4, 2016 Swiss Franc CHF Technicals 1 CHF Technicals 2 Recent data has been mixed, which indicates that although economic activity in Switzerland is improving, it still is very tepid: The KOF leading indicator outperform expectations coming in at 107.2 Retail sales outperformed expectations. However they are still contracting by 1.4% GDP annual growth was 0.6%, falling significantly from last quarter reading of 1.4% The SNB is currently in a tight spot, as improvements are very marginal and it is evident that the economy is still plagued by strong deflationary forces. Meanwhile EUR/CHF is under 1.065 and has been unable to climb above this level this month, as the SNB continues to fight risk off flows coming into the franc due to the risks of the European election cycle. As these risks increase, the floor in this cross will continue to get tested. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 Long-Term FX Valuation Models: Updates And New Coverages - September 30, 2016 Norwegian Krone NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 2 Risks continue to point for further upside in USD/NOK. Oil is unlikely to rally much further from current levels, even if the OPEC agreement continues. Thus the movements in USD/NOK should be dominated by monetary divergences between the United States and Norway. These are likely to continue to favor the dollar, as the Fed should continue its hawkish tone. Meanwhile the Norges Bank is likely to stay dovish, as their economy has been to be very weak. GDP growth is negative, the output gap is over -2% of GDP and employment and real wages continue to contract. Meanwhile, the high inflation that Norway experiences last year is likely to continue its slowdown, as the effects of the currency depreciation should start to dissipate. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 The Pound Falls To The Conquering Dollar - October 14, 2016 Swedish Krona SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 2 In past reports, we have argued that the Swedish economy is robust and inflation is picking up. This has been corroborated by strong consumer and business confidence, and high resource utilization and inflation expectations. Recent data has supported this view: Retail sales picked up 2.2% annually; Producer price index was up 8.2% from last year in January; Annual GDP growth came in at 2.3% at the end of last year. Growth and inflation have been supported by expansionary monetary policy. With the Riksbank stating that "there is still a greater possibility that the rate will be cut than... raised in the near future", these conditions are unlikely to falter. Nevertheless, it is important to note that it is this cautionary stance by the Bank that is the reason for the SEK's recent weakness, not fundamentals. It is now the probable case that any upside in the SEK will be noted and limited by the Riksbank, capping the upside on the krona. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 One Trade To Rule Them All - November 18, 2016 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights In this week's report, we update the "Three Controversial Calls"1 we made at BCA's New York Investment Conference held on September 26-27th, 2016. Call #1: "Trump Wins, And The Dollar Rallies." We still see 5% more upside for the greenback. Call #2: "Japan Overcomes Deflation." Inflation expectations have moved higher over the past five months, while the yen has weakened. This trend will persist. Call #3: "Global Banks Finally Outperform." Bank shares have beaten their global benchmark by 14% since we made this prediction. European financials have finally turned the corner. Feature Call #1: "Trump Wins, And The Dollar Rallies" Chart 1From Unrealistic To Even More Unrealistic We never bought into the notion that a Trump victory would cause investors to flee the dollar. On the contrary, we argued that most of Trump's policies were bond bearish/dollar bullish. In particular, we reasoned that Trump's attempts to browbeat companies into moving production back home would help reduce the U.S. trade deficit, boosting aggregate demand in the process. Efforts to curb illegal immigration would also push up the wages of low-skilled workers. Meanwhile, fiscal stimulus would fire up the labor market at a time when it was already approaching full employment. Fiscal Deficit On Upward Path With nearly four months having passed since the election, what have we learned? First, and foremost, a big increase in the budget deficit still looks likely. As Trump's address to the joint session of Congress on Tuesday night underscored, the president has plenty of specific areas in mind where he would like to increase spending (more money for defense, infrastructure, etc.) and a long list of taxes he would like to cut (corporate and personal income taxes, estate taxes, a new childcare tax credit,2 etc.). We do not take seriously Trump's pledge to pay for increased military spending by cutting annual nondefense discretionary spending by $54 billion relative to the existing CBO baseline. Chart 1 shows that under current budgetary rules, nondefense discretionary spending is set to decline from 3.3% of GDP in 2016 - already close to a historic low - to only 2.7% of GDP in 2026. Cutting that portion of the budget above and beyond what has already been legislated is unrealistic. There simply aren't enough programs like the National Endowment for the Arts that Republicans can take to the woodshed without facing a severe political backlash (Chart 2). As long as big ticket entitlement programs such as Social Security and Medicare remain unscathed - which Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin confirmed would be the case earlier this week - overall government spending will rise, not fall. Chart 2Nondefense Discretionary Spending: Where The Money Goes Trump And Trade The one category where Trump would be more than happy to see taxes go up is on imports. The constraint here is political. A unilateral move to legislate large-scale import duties would be in gross violation of WTO rules and could spark a global trade war. Many of Trump's Republican colleagues, as well as a fair number of Democrats, also favor free trade and would resist such an effort. One solution that Trump vaguely alluded to in his speech is to raise duties on imports within the context of a broader tax reform bill. A border adjustment tax, for example, would bring in $1.2 trillion in revenues over ten years.3 As we argued in a Special Report earlier this year, the introduction of a BAT would be highly dollar bullish.4 Pulling Back The Welcome Mat? On immigration, Trump has sent mixed messages. On the one hand, he continues to insist that he will build "the wall" and has maintained his hardline stance on refugee policy. On the other hand, he has backed off his campaign promise to reverse Obama's executive order protecting the so-called "dreamers." This order allows immigrants who came to the U.S. illegally as children to remain in the country indefinitely, provided they do not commit a serious criminal offence. During his speech, Trump signaled a willingness to shift the U.S. immigration system towards one based on merit, similar to what countries such as Canada and Australia already have. This is an excellent idea, but it raises the question of what will happen to the 11 million illegal aliens currently residing in the country, the vast majority of whom are poorly educated. It is important to remember that U.S. immigration laws are already very strict. Trump has given the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE) greater leeway in enforcing these laws, while also pledging to hire 5,000 more border agents and 10,000 additional ICE officers. As such, a "status quo immigration policy" under Trump could prove to be much more restrictive than the one under Obama even if no new legislation is passed. A key implication is that labor shortages in areas such as construction and hospitality services may intensify. Solid U.S. Growth Outlook Favors A Stronger Dollar Meanwhile, the U.S. growth picture remains reasonably bright (Chart 3). This may not be obvious from current Q1 tracking estimates, which are pointing to real GDP growth of below 2%. However, the weak Q1 numbers are mainly due to an unexpectedly large jump in imports and a sharp decline in inventory accumulation. According to the Atlanta Fed's model, taken together these two factors have shaved a full percentage point off growth. Real private final demand is still rising at nearly 3% (Chart 4). If U.S. growth stays solid as we expect, the Fed will raise rates three or four times this year, starting in March. This is slightly more than the market is currently pricing in, which should be enough to ensure that the trade-weighted dollar strengthens by another 5% or so over the remainder of the year (Chart 5). We see the greatest upside for the dollar versus EM currencies, and as we discuss next, against the yen. Chart 3U.S. Economic Data Are Upbeat Chart 4Trade And Inventories Detract From ##br##A Bright Q1 Growth Picture Chart 5Real Rate Differentials Are ##br##Driving UpThe Dollar Call #2: "Japan Overcomes Deflation" Many of the forces that have exacerbated deflation in Japan, such as corporate deleveraging and falling property prices, have run their course (Chart 6). The population continues to age, but the impact that this is having on inflation may have reached an inflection point. For most of the past 25 years, slow population growth depressed aggregate demand by reducing the incentive for companies to build out new capacity. This generated a surfeit of savings relative to investment, helping to fuel deflation. Now, however, as an ever-rising share of the population enters retirement, the overabundance of savings is disappearing. The household saving rate currently stands at 2.8% - down from 14% in the early 1990s - while the ratio of job openings-to-applicants has soared to a 25-year high (Chart 7). Chart 6Japan: Easing Deflationary Forces Chart 7Japan: Low Household Saving Rate ##br##And A Tightening Labor Market Chart 8Investors Still Not Entirely ##br##Convinced Japan Is Eradicating Deflation Government policy is finally doing its part to slay the deflationary dragon. The Abe government shot itself in the foot by tightening fiscal policy by 3% of GDP between 2013 and 2015. It won't make the same mistake again. The Bank of Japan's efforts to pin the 10-year yield to zero also seem to be bearing fruit. As bond yields in other economies have trended higher, this has made Japanese bonds less attractive. That, in turn, has pushed down the yen, ushering in a virtuous circle where a falling yen props up economic activity, leading to higher inflation expectations, lower real yields, and an even weaker yen. Stay Short The Yen Consistent with this narrative, market-based inflation expectations have risen over the past five months. But with inflation swaps still pricing in inflation of only 0.6% over the next 20 years, there is plenty of scope for real rates to fall further (Chart 8). This implies that investors should maintain a structurally short position in the yen. A weaker yen will help boost Japanese stocks, at least in local-currency terms. As a relative play, investors should consider overweighting Japanese exporters versus domestically-exposed sectors. Multinational manufacturers stand to gain the most, as they will benefit from increased overseas sales, while the highly automated, capital-intensive nature of their operations will limit the burden of rising real wages. Call #3: "Global Banks Finally Outperform" Global bank shares have risen by 25% since we made this call, outperforming the MSCI All Country World Index by 14% (Chart 9). The thesis that we outlined five months ago still remains intact (Charts 10 and 11): Chart 9Global Bank Shares Have Bounced Chart 10Factors Supporting Bank Stocks Chart 11Global Banks Are Still Fairly Cheap Improving business and consumer confidence should continue to support credit demand. Stronger economic growth will reduce nonperforming loans. Capital ratios have improved significantly, reducing the risk of further equity dilution. Yield curves have steepened since last summer, which should flatter net interest margins. Despite the run-up in share prices over the past five months, valuations remain attractive. Looking across regions, European banks stand out as being particularly attractive over a cyclical horizon of about 12 months. BCA's European Corporate Health Monitor continues to improve, foreshadowing further progress in mending loan books (Chart 12). The ECB's lending survey indicates that a majority of banks are seeing stronger loan demand (Chart 13). This suggests that credit growth is not about to stall anytime soon. Meanwhile, euro area banks are trading at a miserly 0.8-times book value, which gives valuations plenty of upside. Chart 12Euro Area: Improving Corporate Health Chart 13Euro Area: Banks See Rising Loan Demand Political Risks Chart 14This Will Not Get Le Pen Into The Elysee Palace The risk is that European political developments sabotage this thesis. Our view here is "near-term sanguine, long-term cautious." We continue to think that populism is in a long-term secular bull market. However, unlike in the case of Brexit or Trump, populist leaders in continental Europe will have to wait until the next economic downturn (probably in two or three years) before they seize power. To that extent, the prevailing - though admittedly rather myopic - consensus view is correct: Marine Le Pen will not become president this year. Keep in mind that the National Front underperformed during regional elections in December 2015, just weeks after the terrorist attacks in Paris. Despite a recent uptick in the polls, support for Le Pen is actually lower now than it was back then (Chart 14). As long as the French economy continues to show signs of tentative improvement, the establishment parties will succeed in keeping Le Pen out of power. Peter Berezin, Senior Vice President Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "Three (New) Controversial Calls," dated September 30, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Despite the populist sounding nature of this proposal, the Tax Policy Center estimates that 70% of the childcare credits will go to households earning $100,000 and up. See Lily L. Batchelder, Elaine Maag, Chye-Ching Huang, and Emily Horton, "Who Benefits from President Trump's Child Care Proposals?" Tax Policy Center (February 27, 2017) for details. 3 James R. Nunns, Leonard E. Burman, Jeffrey Rohaly, Joseph Rosenberg, and Benjamin R. Page, "An Analysis of the House GOP Tax Plan," Tax Policy Center (September 16, 2016). 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "U.S. Border Adjustment Tax: A Potential Monster Issue For 2017," dated January 20, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights The supply of U.S. dollar outside America has been curtailed, yet there is large pent-up demand for dollars. This warrants another upleg in the greenback. The Trump administration's desire to shrink America's current account deficit will be very deflationary for the rest of the world, and mildly inflationary for the U.S. Such policies, if adopted, will exaggerate the paucity of U.S. dollars beyond America's borders and lead to notable dollar appreciation. The RMB is at risk because Chinese banks have created too many yuan, and deposit rates in real terms have turned negative as inflation has risen. Our negative view on EM has been and continues to be driven by our outlook on EM/China domestic demand, commodities prices and the U.S. dollar - not growth in advanced economies. Feature In recent weeks we met with clients in Asia and Australia. This week's report addresses some of the more common questions that we were asked to address. Question: You have written about "global U.S. dollar liquidity shortages." Why have these "global dollar shortages" occurred given the Fed expanded its balance sheet enormously from 2008 until 2014? How does one measure "global dollar shortages," and what does it mean for financial markets? By "global U.S. dollar shortages," we refer to deficiency in U.S. dollars outside the U.S., where U.S. dollar supply growth has fallen short of growth in demand for the greenback. We have the following pertinent observations on this issue: U.S. dollar shortages in the global banking system (eurodollar market) can be represented by U.S. banks' and other financial firms' claims on foreigners. This measure has been shrinking since early 2015 (Chart I-1). This corroborates the fact that U.S. banks, prime money market funds and other financial institutions have been unable/unwilling to supply dollars to the eurodollar market. This is consistent with rising LIBOR rates, which still continue to climb. U.S. non-financial entities' foreign assets have also fallen in the past year and a half but they are much smaller than banks and other financial institutions claims. As to U.S. banks' and other financial firms' claims on EM, they have also been shrinking since early 2015 (Chart I-2). Chart I-1Weak Supply Of U.S. Dollars To Rest ##br##Of World By U.S. Financial Institutions Chart I-2Shrinking Supply Of U.S. Dollars ##br##To EM By U.S. Financial Institutions Another way that the U.S. emits dollars to the rest of the world is by running a current account deficit. The U.S. current account deficit as a share of global GDP is now much smaller now than it was before the Great Recession (Chart I-3). This also means a smaller U.S. dollar supply relative to the size of the world economy. On the demand side, the widening in cross currency basis swaps indicates structural demand for U.S. dollar funding among euro area and Japanese investors (Chart I-4). Chart I-3The U.S. Emits Less ##br##Dollars To World Via Trade Chart I-4Pent-Up Demand For Dollars From Japanese ##br##And European Fixed-Income Investors These investors have been opting for exposure to dollar assets due to the higher yield on U.S. dollar fixed-income instruments - but they have been reluctant to take on exchange rate risk. In brief, they have avoided getting long exposure to the U.S. dollar. The reluctance to accept the exchange rate risk by European and Japanese investors means they are not bullish on the dollar. This goes against the widespread opinion among investors that the overwhelming majority of global investors are bullish on the U.S. currency. By hedging the exchange rate risk - in this case the risk of potential greenback depreciation - these investors are giving up a considerable portion of higher yield that they obtain in U.S. fixed-income market. In fact, if these basis swaps continue to widen or remain wide it might make sense for European and Japanese fixed-income investors to buy U.S. fixed-income securities and not hedge the currency risk. If and when these investors stop hedging their exchange rate risk, the U.S. dollar will appreciate versus the euro and the yen. Provided European and Japanese fixed-income investors are sizable players in global fixed income and hence currency markets, they have the potential to make a difference in exchange rate markets. In short, there is potential pent-up demand for U.S. dollars from these European and Japanese institutions. Such a widening in basis swaps is also consistent with the above observations that U.S. banks have been reluctant to take the other side of this trade - i.e., offer U.S. dollars to European and Japanese investors - even though it is a very profitable opportunity. Finally, the drop in EM central banks' foreign exchange reserves reflects demand for U.S. dollars in their economies, primarily in China (Chart I-5). The Chinese central bank has sold U.S. securities to meet mushrooming demand for U.S. dollars from Chinese households and companies. This entails there has been and remains considerable pent-up demand for dollars by mainland companies and households. With respect to the supply of currency, it is important to note that it is up to commercial banks - not the central bank - to create money. Central banks provide liquidity for commercial banks, but it is the latter that creates money.1 In a nutshell, by undertaking QE, the Fed provided reserves for U.S. commercial banks (Chart I-6), yet the latter have been reluctant to create too much money. Banks create money by originating loans and other types of claims. Chart I-5China: Selling U.S. Securities To ##br##Meet Domestic Demand For Dollars Chart I-6The Fed's Balance ##br##Sheet In Perspective U.S. banks have been very conservative in money creation especially outside America. In the U.S., banks shrunk their balance sheets and loans in the 2009-2011 period. That is why the Fed's QE programs have not led to inflation. Notably, U.S. banks' total assets - including bank loans - and broad money (M2) growth have lately rolled over (Chart I-7). This worsens the lingering dollar scarcity outside the U.S., which should in turn prop up the value of the dollar. The reasons why U.S. banks and financial institutions have been conservative is due to their own deleveraging objectives and because of regulatory changes in the financial industry. In regard to interest rates, U.S. nominal and real (inflation-adjusted) interest rates are very low yet they are high relative to European and Japanese real rates (Chart I-8). Given a relatively tight labor market, odds are that U.S. interest rate expectations will rise further in both absolute and relative terms. This will cause the dollar to appreciate. Chart I-7U.S. Banks Control ##br##The Supply Of U.S. Dollars Chart I-8U.S. And German ##br##Inflation-Adjusted Interest Rates Bottom Line: The pace of supply of dollars beyond the U.S. is falling short of growth in demand for this currency. Typically, this warrants greenback appreciation. Question: What about the U.S. administration's preference for a weaker dollar to improve America's trade position? Won't the greenback depreciate as the Trump administration expresses its desire for a weaker currency? Certainly U.S. officials can verbally influence the exchange rate and drive markets for a (short) period of time. Yet fundamentals and flows will re-assert themselves and the greenback will ultimately appreciate even if its rally is delayed by policymakers. The new U.S. administration intends to run mercantilist policies to create jobs in America and doing so will shrink the current account deficit. Nevertheless, a narrowing U.S. current account deficit ultimately entails diminishing flows of U.S. dollars to the rest of the world, which is bullish for the greenback. In brief, the U.S. administration can delay the dollar rally, but it will not be able to prevent it if and when it shrinks the U.S. current account deficit. This will be enormously deflationary for the rest of the world and ultimately for the global economy. The supply of dollars outside U.S. borders will become even more dearth. As their exports tumble, manufacturing-heavy Asian and European economies will have to run even more stimulative policies - reduce their real interest rates further - to offset such a deflationary shock to their economies. In the case where the Trump administration successfully manages to weaken the U.S. dollar, the ensuing boost to U.S. manufacturing and employment will be mildly inflationary given the already relatively tight labor market. Thereby, trade protectionism or policy-driven currency depreciation, if these occur, will lift U.S. inflation and U.S. interest rates will go up. Rising U.S. interest rates and lower interest rates throughout the rest of the world will propel the dollar's value higher. On the whole, in the case of U.S. trade restrictions, the exchange rates have to adjust to mitigate deflation in the rest of world and cap inflation in America. This ultimately entails a stronger U.S. dollar and weaker currencies abroad. A final note on exchange rates valuation. Based on unit labor costs, the U.S. dollar is not yet expensive (Chart I-9A). The same measure for other currencies is also shown in Chart I-9A and Chart I-9B. Chart I-9AReal Effective Exchange ##br##Rates Based On Unit Labor Costs Chart I-9BReal Effective Exchange ##br##Rates Based On Unit Labor Costs Financial markets tend to overshoot and undershoot before a major trend reversal. We believe the U.S. dollar is in a genuine bull market and will likely become more expensive before topping out. Bottom Line: The U.S.'s desire to shrink its current account deficit is very deflationary for the rest of the world. Such policies, if adopted in the U.S., will exaggerate the scarcity of U.S. dollars beyond America's borders and lead to notable dollar appreciation. Question: The RMB/USD exchange rate has been stable lately. Does this mean the authorities have reasserted their control over the exchange rate and will not allow it to depreciate? The authorities in China have partial and temporary control over the exchange rate. Ultimately, it will be Chinese households and companies that drive the exchange rate, barring full-out government controls over all export/import transactions, money transfers as well as financial and capital account flows. If mainland households and companies opt to convert a small portion of their liquid savings (deposits at banks) into foreign currency, there is little the authorities can do to defend the RMB, barring a complete closing of balance-of-payments transactions to companies and households. The primary risk to the yuan exchange rate is not currency valuation but an overflow of yuan in the system - i.e., excess supply of RMBs is the main factor that will cause currency depreciation. Unlike U.S. banks, Chinese banks have created too many yuan. Broad money (M2) in China has risen from RMB 48 trillion as of December 2008 to RMB 158 trillion currently - i.e., it has surged by 3-fold. M2 has risen from 150% to 210% of GDP in the past eight years (Chart I-10). In the meantime, the ratio of foreign exchange reserves to M2 has dropped to 14% (Chart I-11). Chart I-10Chinese Banks Have ##br##Created Too Many Yuan Chart I-11China: Foreign Reserves Are ##br##Small Relative To Money Supply The latter ratio implies that if Chinese companies and households decide to convert 14% of their deposits at banks into foreign currencies and the People's Bank of China (PBoC) sells its international reserves to offset it, the latter will simply evaporate. We are not suggesting this will actually happen. The point to emphasize is that mainland banks have created so much money that even the country's US$ 3 trillion foreign exchange reserves are not sufficient to back those deposits up. Chinese households and companies may already be sensing there is too much in the way of RMBs floating around, and intuitively may not trust the currency. They have paid astronomical multiples for real assets like property in China, and have recently been willing to shift assets into foreign currencies/assets. Importantly, the one-year deposit rate at banks is 1.5% in nominal terms but in real terms it has now become negative as inflation has picked up. Chart I-12 (top panel) demonstrates that the deposit rate deflated by core inflation is negative for the first time in the past 10 years. The bottom panel of Chart I-12 shows that the deposit rate deflated by headline CPI inflation is also negative. Interestingly, any time the real deposit rate turned negative in the past, the central bank hiked interest rates. It is impossible to know whether the latest pick up in China's inflation represents a temporary spike or is the beginning of a major and lasting uptrend (Chart I-13). We are surprised by how fast and sharply inflation has risen lately, given the growth improvement has so far been modest. Chart I-12China: Real Deposit ##br##Rates Have Turned Negative Chart I-13China: Inflation ##br##Is Rising, For Now The trillion- dollar question is what is the true output gap in China and, correspondingly, whether the latest rise in inflation is genuine and lasting or simply a statistical aberration. No one including Chinese policymakers knows the answers to these very essential questions. What type of adjustment China embarks on depends on monetary policy and banks in China. As and if Chinese banks slow down money creation, economic growth will tumble and deflationary tendencies will resurface. This scenario is good for creditors - households and companies with large amounts of deposits - because deposit rates in real terms will rise again. Yet this is a bad outcome for indebted companies, capital spending and employment. If mainland banks continue to create money at a double-digit pace as they have been doing, inflation will likely become persistent and durable. These dynamics are positive for debtors as real borrowing costs will drop further/stay negative, and growth will hold up. However, in such a case, negative real rates will buttress capital outflows and pressure the value of the RMB. By and large, the Chinese authorities are facing a profound choice: Policymakers can choose to help debtors (indebted companies) by accommodating continuous money supply expansion by banks, i.e., opt for negative real interest rates. The outcome will be much stronger downward pressure on the RMB. The latter will depreciate at a double-digit pace annually in the next several years. They can opt to force the banking system to slow down the pace of money/credit creation. This will lead to some sort of debt deflation. Money growth and inflation will drop and the currency will not be at a risk of major depreciation. Yet, economic growth/profits/employment will tumble. A third choice for the authorities is to resort to full-out government controls over all trade, transfers as well as financial and capital account transactions - i.e., take the country back to socialism. Only in such a case can the authorities control the exchange rate and interest rates simultaneously - i.e., they can inflate the credit bubble away while preventing households from converting their liquid savings into foreign currency. In brief, this entails financial repression, and it will erode the real value of Chinese deposits. It is not clear to us whether this is a politically more viable option than allowing some bankruptcies/layoffs and debt deflation. Besides, this will devastate China's vibrant private sector as businessmen and high-income employees become reluctant to invest and expand as they observe the real value of their savings/wealth decline. Chart I-14U.S. Dollar And Commodities ##br##Prices Unusual Decoupling As if there were not enough domestic challenges, Chinese policymakers are also facing a hawkish Trump administration on the issue of trade and the exchange rate. Putting it all together, we conclude it will be extremely difficult for the Chinese authorities to navigate through these challenges. One area where we disagree with many investors is that the Chinese authorities have a viable plan and strategy. Given the above constraints, there are no easy choices and it is hard to know which route the Chinese government will take. The latest bout of stability in the RMB has been due to a notable shutdown in outflows. Yet this is a temporary solution. The inability to convert liquid savings into foreign currency will only make households and companies more set on converting their yuan. Odds are that capital outflows will skyrocket on any relaxation of recent harsh restrictions. Bottom Line: In any country, the monetary authorities cannot simultaneously control the price of money (interest rates), the quantity of money, and thereby the exchange rate. This will prove to be true in China too. We continue betting on further RMB depreciation. Question: Why do you not think this commodities rally has further to go, given supply has been curtailed and demand is picking up as global growth improves? The strength in commodities prices in recent months when the U.S. dollar has been firm is a major departure from historical correlations (Chart I-14). Remarkably, oil forward prices have recently dropped and global energy share prices have relapsed in absolute terms, even though the spot price has held up (Chart I-15). This foretells that the marketplace does not believe in the sustainability of the current spot price level of crude. As to industrial metals, our hunch is that Chinese demand will weaken again as the nation's credit and fiscal impulse relapses (Chart I-16). Besides, the recent resilience in copper has been due to supply disruptions that may be temporary. Chart I-15Has Sell Off In Oil Market Begun? Chart I-16China's Growth To Peak Later This Year Notably, hopes that U.S. infrastructure spending - even if such spending turns out to be considerable - will boost demand for industrial metals are misplaced, because the U.S. is a small consumer of metals. China consumes six to seven times more copper, nickel, zinc, aluminum, tin and lead than the U.S. Hence, we view industrial metals as a pure play on China's capital spending. Bottom Line: We expect a combination of a stronger dollar, weaker Chinese growth and elevated oil inventories to produce a major reversal in industrial metals and oil prices. Chart I-17EM Stocks And U.S. ##br##TIPS Yields: Negative Correlation Question: Is your negative stance on EM contingent on weakness in DM growth? No, our negative stance on EM is not contingent on a relapse in DM growth. Some combination of the following key factors will trigger and drive weakness in EM risk assets: Higher U.S. real rates or a stronger U.S. dollar. Chart I-17 demonstrates the strong negative correlation between higher U.S. TIPS yields and EM share prices in the recent years. Lower commodities prices. Renewed weakness in China's economy. Our negative view on EM has and continues to be driven by our views on EM/China domestic demand/credit cycles, commodities and the U.S. dollar. Investment Conclusions Chart I-18EM/China Plays Are At Critical Juncture Exchange rates have been critical to financial market dynamics in recent years. This is unlikely to change. Odds favor another upleg in the U.S. dollar and a weaker RMB. As such, the outlook for EM risk assets is poor. EM currencies will be driven by a stronger dollar, a weaker RMB and lower commodities prices. EM share prices as well as global mining, and machinery stocks are at a critical juncture (Chart I-18). China-plays may soon start reacting to the PBoC's recent modest tightening as well as regulatory credit curtailment and begin to sell off in anticipation of weaker growth later this year. Global equity portfolios should continue underweighting EM stocks. Similarly, global credit (corporate bonds) portfolios should underweight EM sovereign and corporate credit. Finally, the outlook for weaker currencies does not bode well for EM local currency bonds. However, for fixed income investors we have several swap rate trades, relative value recommendations and yield curve positions that are published regularly in our Open Position Table on page 16. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please refer to Trilogy of Special Reports on money/loan creation, savings and investment, titled "Misconceptions About China's Credit Excesses," dated October 26, 2016, and "China's Money Creation Redux And The RMB," dated November 23, 2016, links available on page 17. Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
How Long Is The Sweet Spot? Table 1Recommended Allocation The sweet spot on a baseball bat, scientists find,1 is the small area about two inches (5 cm) long, some six inches from the tip. The sweet spot for global risk assets may not be much bigger. The 22% rise in global equities since February last year has been driven by a "goldilocks" combination of recovering economic activity, quiescent inflation, and still-accommodative monetary policy. But, after such a strong rally, markets must walk a fine line - no slowdown in growth and no surprising tightening of monetary conditions - for prices to rise further. Our analysis suggests that they can, but the risk of a correction is rising. A lot of the better news of the past year has already been priced in. The price-to-sales ratio for U.S. stocks is close to an all-time high, and even the plain-vanilla 12-month forward PE ratio has reached 17.5x, the highest since 2002 (Chart 1). Volatility has fallen to a low level, with the VIX not rising above 12 over the past month, and the S&P500 index going 98 days without a one-day decline of 1% or more, the longest such period since 1995 (Chart 2). To a degree, this is justified by the recent strong pick-up in global growth. Sentiment indicators have accelerated since the election of President Trump, and even hard data is now showing the first signs of recovery (Chart 3) with, for example, U.S. retail sales rising 5.6% year-on-year in January, and core durable goods orders starting to follow the rise in companies' capex intentions (Chart 4). Similar positive economic surprises are visible in Europe, Japan, China and elsewhere. The problem is that further upside surprises are likely to be limited. Regional Fed NowCast surveys for Q1 real GDP growth are already at 2.5-3.1%. Consensus forecasts for S&P500 earnings growth in 2017 look about right at 10.5% but, with a stronger dollar and rising wages, are unlikely to be beaten. Chart 1Historically High Valuations Chart 2Time For A Pull-Back? Chart 3Hard Data Starting To Recover Too Chart 4Orders To Follow Capex Intentions Headline inflation has picked up (to 2.5% in the U.S. and 1.9% in the Eurozone), mainly because of higher oil prices, but core inflation remains sufficiently under control that central banks don't need to slam on the brakes. The rise in unit labor costs in the U.S. suggests that core PCE inflation will gradually move up to 2% during the year (Chart 5). The latest FOMC minutes revealed that members want a further rate hike "fairly soon", and BCA expects the Fed to raise three times this year (to which the futures market ascribes only a 36% probability). But Fed policy remains very accommodative (Chart 6), the European Central Bank is unlikely to end its asset purchases soon on account of political and banking system concerns, and the Bank of Japan remains committed to its 0% yield target for 10-year government bonds until inflation is well above 2%. Absent a powerful fiscal stimulus in the U.S. or a move by the "hard money" advocates in the Trump administration to change the Fed's modus operandi, we think its unlikely that a tightening of monetary policy will drag down asset prices. Chart 5Labor Costs Putting Pressure On Prices Chart 6Fed Policy Still Accomodative Risks certainly abound. The Trump administration could start a trade war with China. Its proposals for corporate and personal tax cuts could disappoint both in terms of their details and the timing of Congress's passing them. European politics remain a concern, with the probability of Marine Le Pen becoming French President increasing recently (though it remains small). But risk markets tend to rise on a wall of worry. Investor sentiment is not particularly bullish at the moment, with the bull/bear ratio among individual investors barely above 1 (Chart 7) and flows into equity funds in recent months not reversing the outflows of last year (Chart 8). Chart 7Retail Investors Not So Bullish Chart 8Equity Flows Are Still Tepid After a year of a strong cyclical risk-on rally, progress from now on will get tougher. A short-term change of direction is quite possible (and has already happened in some assets, with the yen moving back to 112 and the 10-year Treasury yield to 2.3%). But we expect economic growth to remain robust this year - with U.S. real GDP growth likely to come in close to 3% on the back of surprises in capex - which will push the 10-year Treasury yield above 3% by year-end. In this environment, we continue to favor equities over bonds, and maintain our pro-risk tilt in equity sectors, credit and alternative assets. Equities: U.S. equities have outperformed Eurozone ones by 5% year-to-date, mainly because of worries about Europe's political risk and the fragility of its banking sector. Though we think the political risks are overstated (except perhaps in Italy), we continue to prefer the U.S. in common currency terms because of our expectations of further dollar appreciation and because the lower volatility of the U.S. helps reduce the beta of our recommended portfolio. Emerging markets have outperformed global equities by 3% YTD, mainly on the back of stronger commodities prices. But we remain underweight EM because of the risks from a stronger dollar and rising global rates, concerns about protectionism and debt refinancing, and because of the likelihood that China's rebound will run out of steam over the next 12 months (Chart 9). Fixed Income: Rates have pulled back recently: long-term institutional investors have begun to find attraction in the long end of the U.S. Treasury yield curve at 2-3%, though speculative investors remain short (Chart 10). With the Fed likely to raise rates three times this year, inflation expectations to pick up further, and nominal GDP growth in the U.S. to reach 4.5-5%, we expect the U.S. 10-year yield to rise above 3%. We therefore remain underweight duration and prefer inflation-linked over nominal bonds. In the improving economic environment, we continue to like credit, but find valuations more attractive for investment-grade bonds than for high-yield. Currencies: Dollar appreciation has been on hold since January but we think the long-term trend remains in place because of the probable direction of relative interest rates. Neither Japan nor the Eurozone is likely to move towards monetary tightening over the next 12 months. Even if the Trump administration were to want a weaker dollar, a few tweets would not be enough to offset monetary fundamentals. And, while it is true that sentiment towards the dollar is already bullish, this has historically not precluded further appreciation, for example in the late 1990s (Chart 11). Chart 9EM Equities Correlated With China PMIs Chart 10Divergent Views On U.S. Bonds Chart 11Optimism Need Not Stop USD's Rise Commodities: The oil price remains close to its equilibrium level at around $55 a barrel, with the OPEC agreement largely holding but being offset by a production increase from the U.S. shale drillers, whose rig count has doubled since last May. We are neutral on industrial commodities: Chinese demand resulting from last year's reflationary policy is likely to be offset by the stronger dollar. Gold remains a useful portfolio hedge in a world of elevated geopolitical worries and inflation tail-risk, but is also negatively correlated with the U.S. dollar. Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Global Asset Allocation garry@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see, for example, "The Sweetspot of a Hollow Baseball or Softball Bat", by Daniel A. Russell, Pennsylvania State University, available at www.acs.psu.edu/drussell/bats/sweetspot.html Recommended Asset Allocation Model Portfolio (USD Terms)
Highlights Since the 1950s, the trends in margins and earnings growth have been one and the same: as profit margins decline, so does earnings growth. The decline in profit margins that began in early 2015 has gone on hiatus for the past two quarters. But this rebound in margins is unlikely to be sustained. However, even if profit margins turn lower on a sustained basis, there is scope for equity returns to stay positive, based on historical precedent. Similar to a broad-based profit margin decline, further currency strength will be an earnings headwind, but not a show-stopper for profit growth. All in all, with forward multiples now at multi-decade highs, there is lots of room for earnings growth to disappoint, but the conditions for an equity bear market are not in place. Feature Equity prices continue to march higher and the S&P 500 made another all-time high last week. Q4 earnings reporting is now nearly complete, with about two-thirds of companies surprising to the upside. According to FactSet, the share of Q4 surprises is below the 5-year average, while the size of surprises (2.9% above the estimate) is also a smaller margin than the "average surprise" in the past five years (Chart 1). Nonetheless, that has not stopped analysts from getting even more bulled up about 2017 earnings. Analysts' consensus for S&P 500 operating earnings is 10.2% for the calendar year, and the forward multiple now stands at 17.5x, its highest level since 2004 (Chart 2). Chart 1Q4 Earnings Surprises: Better, ##br##But Not That Surprising Chart 2Forward P/E At ##br##Decade Highs A 10% rise in earnings within the year would not be an unprecedented move - there are numerous historical re-accelerations of operating earnings of that size. However, it would be unprecedented for earnings growth to move consistently higher over the next year without an upward trend in profit margins. As Charts 3A and 3B shows, the turning points in earnings growth always correspond with turning points in profit margins. True, there have been 13 minor episodes whereby profit margins have declined but earnings growth accelerated. But these periods were very short-lived, never lasting more than three months at a time. In the majority of these episodes, equity investors saw through the blip down in margins; equity prices continued to rally higher and returns for the year were larger than average. Chart 3AProfit Growth And Margins: An Iron Link Chart 3B There have been far more one-quarter episodes whereby earnings growth decelerates and profit margins continue to rise (39 times since 1951). In these cases, equities exhibit below average returns. Chart 4Slow Growth Will Stay A Profit Headwind The key takeaway is that when profit margins and earnings growth temporarily fail to pull in the same direction, investors have tended to focus on earnings growth. However, the caveat to the above analysis is that we rely on data going back to 1951. The current cycle is unique in that potential GDP growth has never been this low (Chart 4). In a low-growth environment, it is harder for volume expansion to compensate for any fall in margins. We believe that understanding the profit margin backdrop in this environment will remain particularly important. The Outlook For Profit Margins The trend in profit margins is determined largely by the relative growth rates of selling prices, compensation and productivity. Unit labor costs (ULC), which is compensation divided by productivity, account for about 60% of production expenses: the ratio of selling price to unit labor costs is a good proxy for profit margins (Chart 5). In terms of the denominator, unit labor costs have been choppy, but have nonetheless been on a rising trend since the beginning of the recovery. Since the early 1990s, unit labor costs tended to rise throughout the business expansion, and then fall sharply once businesses retrenched during recessions. If this cycle follows historical patterns, then unit labor costs could push higher toward 3%. In other words, labor expenses may not accelerate quickly, but it is highly unlikely that profits will benefit from a fall in ULC growth at this stage of the expansion. In a recent Special Report,1 we made the case that the economy is at full employment and there would be cyclical pressure for wages to rise, despite some structural headwinds. We do not anticipate a surge in labor costs, rather a slow creep higher. Chart 5Can Selling Prices ##br##Catch Up To Labor Cost? Chart 6Businesses Will Find It Hard ##br##To Pass On Price Increases Our major concern is whether or not selling prices (i.e. the numerator in our proxy) can keep up with even mild cost pressures. Traditionally, the conditions that allow companies to raise prices are also associated with rising costs of inputs and labor, and higher inflation prompts the Fed to impose monetary restraint. Thus, profit margins - and therefore equity prices - have generally done better when price inflation is low. However, the concern today is that inflation (corporate selling prices) is too low and that it is difficult for firms to pass on rising input costs, i.e. that a margin squeeze occurs because businesses cannot sufficiently pass on rising labor costs, as consumers have become conditioned to entrenched deflation, particularly at the retail level. We have written extensively in recent publications about inflation. Our bias is to expect broad-based inflation (PCE and CPI measures) as well as corporate selling price inflation (i.e. businesses pricing power) to rise slowly this cycle. The key points are as follows: Inflation expectations are extremely well anchored (Chart 6). True, there is a gap that has opened between survey and market-based inflation expectations. But as we explained in our January 9 Weekly Report, there are several reasons why market-based measures are likely overstating the rise in inflation expectations. Even so, these measures remain well below historic averages and continue to signal that even if the trend is up, the rate of inflation remains very benign. If survey-based inflation expectations are correct, then this business cycle could be a mirror opposite of the 1970s/80s. In that cycle, strong inflation expectations became self-fulfilling/self-reinforcing and lead to higher realized inflation. Today, after a long period of fearing deflation and experiencing massive price discounting at the retail level (Chart 6), consumers have become conditioned to expect prices will never go up. Even once the output gap is fully closed, it could take several years for inflation to gain traction. A strong dollar argues for constant drag on 30% of consumer price inflation (i.e. tradable goods and services). This will keep a lid on inflation for the foreseeable future. Overall, wage costs have outpaced pricing power since 2014, with the exception of the prior two quarters. We do not have a strong view on whether profit margins are finally in a sustained mean-reverting phase, but the above framework suggests that due to a very solid anchoring of inflation expectations, businesses could be faced with a tough pricing backdrop much later than is typical in the business cycle. Flat/falling margins are historically not enough to derail the bull market at this stage of the expansion. However, as we highlighted above, equities are now trading at sky-high forward valuations and have become extremely vulnerable to earnings disappointment. What About The Dollar? A frequent question from clients is about the role of the dollar in U.S. earnings and how enthusiastic can one be about earnings growth if the dollar is rising? As our U.S. Equity Strategy team has pointed out in the past, there are two distinct camps on the impact of U.S. dollar strength on equities.2 Bulls believe that dollar strength will depress commodity and import prices, tamping down inflation pressures and allowing the Fed to avoid monetary tightening. Therefore, the net monetary conditions impact will be positive for the U.S., which is a relatively closed economy. Under these conditions, capital would continue to flow into stocks. Bears see the currency as undermining profitability, given that foreign translation will take a hit along with income from foreign affiliates selling into weaker demand abroad (Chart 7). In other words, the rest of the world is exporting deflationary pressures to the U.S. via currency depreciation. This threatens the earnings outlook, particularly relative to still lofty growth expectations. Chart 7Dollar Headwind Our take is somewhere in between these two extremes. It is certainly true that a strong dollar helps contain inflation pressures, and allows for a prolonged business cycle. But as highlighted above, in an economy still struggling to grow much above 2%, inflation pressures are not an overly large concern to begin with. Meanwhile, hedging means that the currency translation effect on financial performance is not immediate. And the impact of any dollar strength surely depends on the conditions under which it is strengthening: dollar strength in a period of weak global growth will be more detrimental to returns than a dollar that is rising due to exceptionally strong domestic conditions. We are currently at neither one of these extremes (Chart 8). Chart 8U.S. And Global Economy: Not Hot, Not Cold Our Bank Credit Analyst service recently presented a matrix of different scenarios for the dollar and economic growth applied to a model for EPS growth. The key finding was that the effect of even small changes in growth assumptions dominate the effect of much larger moves in the dollar. A 10% dollar appreciation from current levels would shave about 2% from profits, assuming no change to the GDP growth outlook. The bottom line is that the recent improvement in margins has helped earnings recover from last year's profit recession. However, it is unlikely that margins have entered a lasting uptrend; firms lack pricing power and the labor market is now tight enough that unit labor costs will rise on a sustained basis. As profit margins trend lower in the coming years, this will present a headwind for profit growth. Similarly, our expectation that the currency will continue to appreciate over the next 12-18 months is a headwind to earnings growth. Current sky-high equity valuations leave little room for these risks. We expect that disappointments will eventually cause an equity price reset, but timing is uncertain. As we wrote last week, technical indicators do not currently suggest an important pullback is imminent. Looking further out, the overall backdrop of slowly building inflation, a go-slow Fed, and a mild pickup in nominal GDP growth, is a positive backdrop for long-term stocks. Lenka Martinek, Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy lenka@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Investment Strategy Special Report "U.S. Wage Growth: Paid In Full?", dated November 28, 2016, available at usis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see U.S. Equity Strategy Service Special Report, “Equity Sectors And The Soaring U.S. Dollar,” dated November 3, 2014, available at uses.bcaresearch.com
Highlights Despite our tactical bullish stance, the cyclical outlook remains firmly negative for the yen, with a 12-month target for USD/JPY above 120. The BoJ is currently committed to an inflation overshoot, with this solid commitment, a strong economy will be able to lift inflation expectations, depress real interest rates, and hurt the yen. The key improvements pointing to higher inflation expectations are: Already positive inflation expectation dynamics, the closing of the output gap, the removal of the fiscal drag, the tightness in the labor market, and the end of the private-sector deleveraging. The tactical environment suggests that nimble traders with short investment horizons should stay short USD/JPY for now. Longer-term investors may want to add to short bets on the yen on further weaknesses. Feature We have espoused a cyclically bearish stance on the yen since September when the BoJ began targeting the price of money instead of the quantity of money, aiming for stable JGB yields around 0%.1 More recently, we have been buyers of the yen on a tactical basis. Here, we are reviewing whether this tactical call should morph into a cyclical bullish stance on the yen or whether the primary trend for the yen still points lower. Ultimately, we expect USD/JPY to punch through 120 on a 12 month basis. The Liquidity Trap Our framework to analyze the yen rests on one key assumption: Japan remains mired in liquidity trap dynamics. As we have pointed out before, the key symptom of this disease is evident in the Land of the Rising Sun: Loan demand has become irresponsive to changes in private sector borrowing costs (Chart I-1). In this environment, we can experience strange dynamics. As we argued in details a few months ago, when both in a liquidity trap and at the lower bound of interest rates, the demand for money is infinite, and interest rates are independent of the level of output in the economy.2 In other words, a decrease in exports, government spending, or investment, hurts demand without affecting nominal interest rates (Chart I-2, middle panel). However, in the long run, decreases in aggregate demand exert downward pressure on prices, and thus, lower inflation expectations today (Chart I-2, bottom panel). The opposite is true for a positive demand shock. Chart I-1The Symptom Of Disease Chart I-2The Thing That Should Not Be In this topsy-turvy world, a negative shock to growth, by decreasing inflation expectations, pushes up real interest rates, and thus the exchange rate. Meanwhile, a positive shock increases inflation expectations, pulling down real rates and the exchange rate as well. This is fundamental as USD/JPY continues to trade closely in line with real rate differentials between the U.S. and Japan (Chart I-3). Chart I-3USD/JPY: No Money Illusion Here This is even truer now that the Bank of Japan is both trying to keep 10-year JGB yields near 0%, and has promised to keep a very accommodative monetary policy in place until inflation has overshoot the price stability target of an average inflation rate of 2% over the whole business cycle. In other words, the BoJ's inflation target is near symmetrical and monetary policy will only harden once previous inflation undershoots below 2% have been compensated by an extended period of inflation overshoot. Also, we expect the BoJ to stay committed to this policy. Not only does Abenomics remain popular in Japan, but we expect Kuroda to be re-appointed to lead the BoJ. Moreover, the last two members of the policy committee not appointed by Abe will see their terms end in 2017. After this year, the BoJ committee will fully represents Abe's wishes. Under this framework, the key to expect the yen to fall is therefore not valuation, nor the current account outlook - two factors pointing to a higher yen - but whether or not the economy and inflation expectations can improve durably on a cyclical basis. In the next section, we explore the key positive economic developments underpinning our negative JPY stance. Bottom Line: As the BoJ is strongly committed to maintaining an extremely dovish stance until inflation overshoots by a wide-enough margin to compensate for previous undershoots, key economic improvements in Japan should lead to higher inflation expectations, falling Japanese real interest rates, and a much weaker yen. The Five Samurais We see five reasons to remain bearish the JPY: Inflation expectation dynamics, the closing output gap, the disappearance of the fiscal drag, the labor market tightness, and the end of the Japanese private sector's deleveraging. Factor 1: Inflation Expectations Are Already Unhinged Even before the BoJ aggressively targeted 0% JGB yields, Japanese inflation expectations were on an improving path. During the 2012 summer, markets began correctly anticipating the December electoral victory of Shinzo Abe, apprehending that his BoJ was about to massively ramp up quantitative easing. Japanese 5-year/5-year forward CPI swaps soon decoupled from the rest of the world and the U.S. (Chart I-4). Chart I-4The BoJ Policy Has Already Borne Fruit Chart I-5The Mechanics Of Price-Level Targeting So strong has the perceived commitment of the BoJ to higher inflation been that Japanese inflation expectations never tanked the way U.S. ones did after 2014. These dynamics contributed to keep Japanese real rates depressed relative to U.S. ones. Moreover a virtuous circle was created where lower real rates supercharged the USD/JPY's rally, lifting it by more than 60% from 77 in September 2012 to 125 in June 2015, and this further supported Japanese inflation expectations. In the summer of 2015, as EM and commodity prices began imploding on the growing expectation of a Chinese economic hard landing, Japanese inflation expectations did relapse, strengthening the yen rally. But again, unlike in the U.S., Japanese CPI swaps never fell to new lows, pointing to some improving dynamics for the domestic component of Japanese inflation expectation formations. Going forward, we expect Japanese inflation expectations to move further up. The price level targeting mechanism put in place by the BoJ last fall reinforces inflationary dynamics (Chart I-5). Any anticipated tightening in monetary policy in response to economic improvements has been pushed further away in the future, in a world where inflation may be higher locally and globally. Additionally, if global and local inflation rises, because nominal interest rates are pegged at low levels, the increase in inflation expectations puts additional downward pressure on real rates, further stimulating the domestic economy, further weakening the yen, and further boosting inflation expectations. The circuits for positive feedback loops are being laid in place. Factor 2: The Output Gap Based on the OECD's estimates, the Japanese output gap has now moved into positive territory for the first time since 2007-2008, the last episode where Japan experienced anything close to inflation (Chart I-6). Prior to then, the last time the Japanese output gap was as positive as it will be in 2017 was in 1993, among the last years when Japanese core inflation was still above 1%. While this reflects the global phenomenon of low productivity growth, the low level of supply expansion in Japan has been augmented by the 2% decline in the labor force since 1998. This means that the capacity constraints in the Japanese economy are easy to reach even if average real GDP growth has only been 0.8% since 2010. The cyclical improvements in the business cycle only point toward an increasingly positive output gap and rising inflationary pressures. To begin with, business confidence and PMIs are all very robust (Chart I-7). Chart I-6No More Slack In Japan Chart I-7Japanese Businessmen Feel Good The strength of the U.S. ISM index suggests that Japanese exports have more upside (Chart I-8) as well. Not only does a stronger Japanese trade balance contributes to a larger positive output gap, but also, strong export growth has often been the key precursor to higher capex in Japan (Chart I-8, bottom panel). Finally, the credit dynamics remain supportive. Bank loan growth has not slowed much, despite the large tightening in Japanese monetary conditions in 2016. With conditions now easing in the country, we expect the credit impulse, which has bottomed around the zero line, to re-accelerate going forward, supporting excess demand above potential GDP growth (Chart I-9). Together, all these factors suggest that the improvement in the Japanese shipments-to-inventory ratio witnessed since March 2016 will continue to lift Japanese inflation expectations higher (Chart I-10). Chart I-8Strong Japanese Exports ##br##Will Filter To Capex Chart I-9The Japanese Credit ##br##Impulse Will Rebound Chart I-10Upward Momentum In ##br##Japanese Inflation Expectations Factor 3: Fiscal Policy Another key factor that has hampered the Japanese economy since 2013 has been the large fiscal belt-tightening experience by the country. In the wake of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake, the government primary deficit blew up to 7.7% of potential GDP in 2011. It will hit 3.5% for 2017, but the IMF does not forecast much more narrowing of the government budget gap (Chart I-11). This signifies that the great brake that slowed the Japanese economy and prevented a rise in inflation is being lifted. In fact, we expect the Japanese government deficit to increase again. First, Abe's upper house electoral victory last summer was built on a campaign of larger government spending. Second, with an approval rating of 56% four years into his premiership, Abe remains a highly popular prime minister for a country plagued by 15 changes of government since 1990. This is a vote of confidence by the Japanese public toward his "Abenomics" program. Finally, military spending is likely to increase. As recently as 2005, Japan's and China's defense budgets were the same; today, China outspends Japan by four times (Chart I-12). In an increasingly unstable Asia-Pacific region, where China, Russia, and North Korea are all conducting more independent foreign policy agendas, Japan will be forced to fend for itself with more military spending, underscoring the relatively hawkish agenda of the Abe administration on this front. This will require more spending by Tokyo in this arena. Chart I-11Vanishing Japanese##br## Fiscal Drag Chart I-12The Geopolitical Imperative To Increase ##br##Japanese Government Spending Factor 4: The tightening Labor Market The Japanese labor market has now become very tight and key supply-side adjustments are behind us. The job-openings-to-applicants ratio stands at July 1991 levels, the last time when Japan was able to generate any durable wage growth. Additionally, the level of participation of women in the labor force is very elevated. The employment-to-population ratio for prime-age females stands at 74%, well above the 71.4% level of the U.S. today, and just as high as the U.S. in 2000, when that ratio was at its highest (Chart I-13). Additionally, despite a shrinking labor force and population, the total number of employed individuals stands at 65 million, the highest level since 1999 (Chart I-14). Hiring growth is also experiencing its most vigorous upswing in 20 years. Unsurprisingly, nominal wages have been growing since 2013, the longest upswing since 2004 to 2006, and wages are now at their highest level since 2009 (Chart I-14, middle panel). Chart I-13The Japanese Labor Market Is Very Tight (I) Chart I-14The Japanese Labor Market Is Very Tight (II) With the economy remaining robust, the output gap being closed, and the fiscal drag disappearing, this tightening in the labor-market should lead to additional wage gains in Japan. As the labor market slack dissipates further, we expect Japanese employment growth to slow and wages to accelerate their upward path. It is true that the Japanese labor market duality still constitutes a structural damper on Japanese wages, but for now, the very important positive cyclical factors noted above should overpower this long-term negative. Only with additional reform of the labor market will this duality dissipate structurally. Factor 5: End Of The Private Sector Deleveraging The last factor that has turned the corner in Japan is the evolution of the private sector's deleveraging. Non-financial private debt fell from 220% of GDP in 1994 to 160% of GDP today, after having stabilized since 2009 (Chart I-15). At these levels, the Japanese non-financial private debt to GDP is in line with the worldwide average of 157%, much below China's 210%, as well as below the levels recorded in Canada, Australia, New Zealand or Sweden. This development is key for many reasons. First, since 2011, Japanese households have in fact re-levered, with their debt load rising by 6.5% since their trough. This means that Japanese households are generating demand in excess of their earnings, and are therefore a source of inflation in the country. Second, the end of deleveraging has coincided with an end to the decline in Japanese land prices that has put downward pressure on all prices since 1991 (Chart I-16). Finally, the rising debt load of the Japanese government is no longer just a compensating mechanism for the deficiency in demand created by the private sector's sector deleveraging. In fact, like for households, government dissaving is now purely adding to the aggregate demand of Japan, and at the margin, is inflationary. Unsurprisingly, since 2012, periods of accelerating growth in the Japanese broad money supply have now been associated with periods of weakness in the yen (Chart I-17). This highlights the fact that money creation is now generating some increase in inflation expectations as the private sector is not furiously building its savings anymore and as the Kuroda BoJ is not leaning against inflationary developments. Chart I-15Private Sector Deleveraging Is Over Chart I-16Land Prices Are Not A Source Of Deflation Anymore Chart I-17Money Matters Putting It All Together In our view, in an environment where Japan is beginning to generate domestic inflationary pressures of its own, where the output gap is now positive, where the government is not putting a brake on growth anymore, where the labor market is at its tightest in decades, and where private sector deleveraging is not an handicap anymore, any improvement in global growth is likely to result in further increases in Japanese inflation expectations. Our sister service, Global Investment Strategy is long Japanese CPI swaps, a trade we agree with. In the context of FX, with the BoJ firmly on an easing path, rising Japanese inflation expectations will only depress Japanese real rates, exactly as the Fed becomes more aggressive. As a result, on a 12-18 months basis, the downside for the yen is very large. What About Trump? Chart I-8Japan FDI Profile President Trump wants to see a lower dollar to achieve his goal of creating manufacturing jobs in the U.S. Much ink has been spilled on the potential emergence of a Plaza 2.0 accord. We disagree. The U.S. has very little leverage to boost the value of the yen. The Bank of Japan's policy is designed to generate domestic inflationary pressures, the yen is only a casualty of this policy. In fact, with inflation expectations having been so low for so long, no country in the world can better justify having a very loose monetary policy setting than Japan. Also, the 97% surge in the yen that followed the Plaza accord of 1985 caused Japanese interest rates to stay too low relative to the state of the economy. As a result, a massive debt bubble ensued that lifted the economy further, but then prompted the bust which Japan still pays for. Today, the Japanese are unlikely to want to repeat the same mistake. While we do think that deleveraging has ended in Japan, a country with a falling population is unlikely to begin a new private-sector debt supercycle either. Finally, China continues to be an economy that saves too much. This means that China can either allocate these savings domestically through the debt market or export them internationally through its current account surplus. We expect Chinese authorities, who are already very worried by the high debt load in China to choose the second option for the next two years. As a result, BCA foresees further declines in the RMB over the next 12 to 18 months. In this environment, the Japanese would find it very difficult to remain competitive in the Chinese market if their currency rises as the RMB weakens.3 That being said, Trump will want some concessions out of the Japanese. Already, the February 10 meeting between the U.S. president and PM Abe is giving us a glimpse of things to come. Japanese non-tariff barriers on U.S. products are likely to decrease, potentially in the agricultural and automotive field especially. Additionally, Japan still runs a large current account surplus and therefore, a large capital account deficit. We expect Japanese FDIs in the U.S. to only grow going forward. The main beneficiary is likely to be the automotive sector as it would be the key mechanism for Japanese firms to avoid paying large tariffs / punitive taxes and still access the vital U.S. market (Chart I-18). Moreover, this fits well within Trump's agenda as it creates manufacturing jobs in the U.S. Call it a win-win situation if you will. Not Time To Close Short USD/JPY Yet Despite this very negative cyclical view on the yen, we remain committed to our tactical short USD/JPY position: For one, positioning on the yen remains too extreme (Chart I-19). Second, as argued by our European Investment Strategy service, we may be on the cusp of a mini down cycle in the credit impulse, suggesting a temporary deceleration in the G10.4 The recent collapse in quarterly credit growth in the U.S. points exactly in this direction (Chart I-20). Because U.S. 10-year bond yields are so tightly linked to global economic surprises, negative surprises could put temporary downward pressure on Treasury yields (Chart I-21). A move lower in yields would be very supportive of the yen, even if only for a few months. Chart I-19Speculators Are Still Too ##br##Short JPY Tactically Chart I-20Falling Short-Term Credit##br## Impulse In The U.S. Chart I-21Falling Surprises Can##br## Temporarily Help Bond Prices Third, the dollar correction is not over. Sentiment and positioning on the dollar represent tactical hurdles that need to be overcome before the greenback can resume its ascent. Also French OAT / German bunds spreads are at distressed levels, having only been higher at the height of the euro crisis in 2012, and not far off the levels experienced during the ERM crisis of the early 1990s (Chart I-22). This suggests that the risk of a Le Pen presidency is now well known. We agree that the impact of such an event would be enormous, but the 34.5% odds currently assigned to it on Oddschecker are too great, especially now that Bayrou - a centrist politician - is not entering the race and putting his support behind Macron. Finally, the dollar has followed a textbook wave pattern since October. A continuation of this pattern suggests that the DXY has downside toward 97-98 (Chart I-23). Chart I-22OAT / Bund Spreads Price In A Lot Of Negatives Chart I-23A Textbook Wave Pattern In The Dollar The ultimate factor in favor of the continuation of the yen correction is the higher degree of complacency that has settled globally. Our Global Complacency indicator, based on the G10 stock-to-bond ratio, commodity prices, and the VIX is at an extremely elevated level warning of a potential risk-off event globally. Any rollover in this very mean-reverting indicator would prompt a further weakness in USD/JPY as well as AUD/JPY, especially if the BoJ doesn't increase stimulus in the meantime (Chart I-24). Chart I-24AUnless The BoJ Eases Further, Too Much ##br##Complacency Equals Tactically Long JPY Chart I-24BUnless The BoJ Eases Further, Too Much ##br##Complacency Equals Tactically Long JPY Bottom Line: Tactical investors should continue shorting USD/JPY for the moment. More cyclical players can begin deploying capital to short the yen as the cyclical outlook for this currency remains dire, but better opportunity to sell this currency are likely to emerge over the coming months. A dollar-cost averaging strategy seems wise at this point. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see the Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "How do You Say "Whatever It Takes" In Japanese?", dated September 23, 2016, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see the Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Down The Rabbit Hole", dated April 15, 2016, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 3 For a more detailed discussion on the RMB, please see the Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Does China Have A Debt Problem Or A Savings Problem?", dated February 24, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com 4 For a more detailed discussion of the mini-cycle, please see the European Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Slowdown: How And When?", dated February 2, 2017, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 The U.S. economy is giving a green light to the Fed to hike. Headline CPI is at 2.5% annually, and core CPI is at 2.3%; Retail sales beat expectations at 0.4% MoM; The core CPI measure is evidence that the U.S. economy is fundamentally strong and dynamic. Real GDP now stands 11% above its pre-recession peak, and it is approaching the Congressional Budget Office's estimate of potential output. The unemployment and output gap are also close to their long-term levels. With the economy closing in on its potential, it is only natural that FOMC participants "expressed the view that it might be appropriate to raise the federal funds rate again fairly soon" in the Minutes. Although a risk of disappointment from Trump's fiscal proposal is possible, the economy's momentum will continue. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Risks To The Cyclical Dollar View - February 3, 2017 Dollar Corrections, EM Outlook, Global Liquidity, And Protectionism - January 27, 2017 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 The euro area remains robust, with this week's data showing a strong outperformance: German, French and overall euro area PMI increased and beat expectations across all measures, with the exception of France which only outperformed on the Composite measure; Euro area producer prices strengthened to a 2.4% annual pace; After seeing some downside from worries about a Le Pen victory, markets have calmed François Bayrou, a centrist, announced an alliance with presidential candidate Emmanual Macron, adding a resistance to the euro's downside. Substantial volatility can still be expected, however, as a Le Pen victory is not completely out of the realm of possibility, which means that the euro can see some weakness in the near term. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 The French Revolution - February 3, 2017 GBP: Dismal Expectations - January 13, 2017 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Positive signs continue to emerge in Japanese data: Industrial production yearly growth came in at 3.2% Nikkei Manufacturing PMI came in at 53.5, outperforming expectations Japan's Leading Economic Index came at 104.8, the highest level since 2015 These economic developments are good news for the BoJ, as it shows them that their price level targeting and yield curve control measures seem to be working. However the objective of these measures is not to achieve these marginal improvements in the economy. The objective is to catapult Japan out of the liquidity trap it is in, which means that these measures will likely stay in place for a while. Therefore, on a cyclical basis we remain short the yen, as we expect USD/JPY to reach 120 on a 12 to 18 month horizon. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Dollar Corrections, EM Outlook, Global Liquidity, And Protectionism - January 27, 2017 Update On A Tumultuous Year - January 6, 2017 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data has painted a mixed picture for the U.K. Industrial and manufacturing production yearly growth came in at 4.3% and 4% respectively. Both measures blew past expectations. Also, in spite of the dramatic fall in the pound, Inflation seems to be relatively contained, as both core and headline numbers came in below expectation at 1.8% and 1.6% respectively. However not everything is good news. Yearly growth for retail sales and retail sales ex fuel underperformed expectations coming at 1.5% and 2.6%, respectively. Additionally, wage growth has been limited, as average weekly earnings yearly growth came below expectations at 2.6%. We continue to be bullish on the pound, particularly against the euro as any additional political risks caused by Brexit are now well known by participants, making the pound very cheap, especially if one takes into account real rate differentials. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 The Pound Falls To The Conquering Dollar - October 14, 2016 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 The AUD has been the top performing currency against the USD out of the G10, having appreciated 7.11% since the beginning of the year. This rally is increasingly tenuous. Full-time employment has struggled to pick up, while part-time employment increased by 4%. This will hamper wage growth and consumption going forward. This is important as consumption is already 58% of the economy. Meanwhile, net exports have made a negative contribution to GDP growth for almost two years. In fact, Australian exports to China subtracted 1% of GDP growth last year, due to a decline in commodity prices. Going forward, a limited upside in commodity prices and an end to the Chinese easing cycle can exacerbate this decline. On a technical basis, AUD/USD has sustained momentum since the beginning of the year, with the RSI displaying overbought levels since mid-January. The cross is also approaching a key resistance level, pointing to growing risks ahead. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Risks To The Cyclical Dollar View - February 3, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Recent data for New Zealand has not been particularly positive and have weighed on the kiwi: Retail sales underperformed, growing by 0.8% QoQ against expectations of 1.1%. Business NZ PMI fell to 51.6 from last month's 54.5. Nevertheless, a closer look at the data paints a much brighter picture: the decline in NZ PMI seems to have been primarily due to bad weather conditions, which means that the strong fundamentals of the kiwi economy should show up in the data once seasonal factors start to dissipate. Therefore, we are bullish on the NZD versus the AUD, as the structural backdrop for these countries could not be further apart, yet the market is now pricing less than a 10 basis points difference from here until the end of the year. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Risks To The Cyclical Dollar View - February 3, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits -December 16, 2016 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Canadian employment numbers came out seemingly strong, with a net change in employment of 48,300 and a decrease in the unemployment rate to 6.8%. However, these numbers mask numerous underlying inconsistencies. The decrease in unemployment was the result of a robust part-time employment growth of 5.6%, not the 0.3% growth in full-time employment. Wage growth remains subdued, with average hourly earnings of permanent workers currently increasing at a 1% annual pace, compared to 3.3% a year ago. Furthermore, hours worked have declined by 0.8%, exacerbating the weakness of full-time employment's contribution to activity. Retail sales underperformed expectations, contracting at a 0.5% monthly pace; the measure excluding Autos also contracted at a 0.3% pace. Increasing household debt and festering labor market complications are likely to weigh on consumer confidence. An uncertain outlook on trade developments is an additional handicap to future CAD strength. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 When You Come To A Fork In The Road, Take It - November 4, 2016 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 During the last couple of weeks, fear of a Eurosceptick government in Europe's second biggest economy, has lowered EUR/CHF below the implied floor that the SNB has had for the last couple of years. Indeed, last week, as La Pen surged on French presidential polls, this crossed reached 1.063, its lowest level since August 2015. This is bad news for Switzerland, as economic data continues to indicate that the country has not been able to shake off the shackles of deflation: Headline inflation outperformed expectations as it finally exited deflationary territory, coming in at 0%. Industrial production contracted by 3.3% on a year on year basis Given this deflationary backdrop, the SNB will continue to try to limit the downside for this cross. However, on the months leading to the French elections, the floor will continue to get tested. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 Long-Term FX Valuation Models: Updates And New Coverages - September 30, 2016 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Inflation seems to be abating in Norway as core and headline inflation numbers fell sharply from last month reading, coming in at 2.1% and 2.8% respectively. This is the result of various factors: First, the inflation caused by the collapse of the krone is starting to fade away. From 2014 to 2016, the krone collapsed along with oil prices. This selloff in the krone passed through inflation to the Norwegian economy via rising imported goods, with a lag. Today, roughly one year after the NOK bottomed, the effects of the currency on inflation is starting to dissipate. Furthermore, labor market dynamics in Norway are anything but inflationary as wage growth is contracting by 4% and although unemployment is low, the Norges Bank has pointed out that is in largely caused by a fall in the participation rate. Thus, given that high inflation is receding, the Norges Bank will keep its easing bias for the time being. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits -December 16, 2016 The Pound Falls To The Conquering Dollar - October 14, 2016 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 The February 2017 Monetary Policy Statement illustrated a clear dovish stance. Governors and economists at the Riksbank are paranoid about risks emanating from a strong currency and political developments. Tensions from a recently strong SEK have created worries about a potential slowdown in inflation. The Bank has therefore reiterated the possibility of an intervention if the Krona's appreciation is too rapid, making it a very real possibility. A questionable political outlook from the U.S. and the euro area has further hampered the Riksbank's optimism. The euro area is a particular risk since it represents a large source of Sweden's growth, and any damage to the monetary union will have a catastrophic effect on Sweden. Because of these reasons, the Riksbank explicitly stated that it is "still prepared to make monetary policy more expansionary if the upward trend in inflation were to be threatened and confidence in the inflation target weakened." Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 One Trade To Rule Them All - November 18, 2016 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
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 February, the model underperformed global equities and the S&P 500 in USD and local-currency terms. For March, the model slightly increased its allocation to stocks and cut its weighting in bonds (Chart 1). Within the equity portfolio, the allocation to Europe was increased. The model boosted its weightings to French and Australian bonds at the expense of Canadian and Swedish paper. The risk index for stocks, as well as the one for bonds, deteriorated in February. Feature Performance In February, the recommended balanced portfolio gained 2.1% in local-currency terms, and 0.2% in U.S. dollar terms (Chart 2). This compares with a gain of 3% for the global equity benchmark and a 3.3% gain for the S&P 500. Given that the underlying model is structured in local-currency terms, we generally recommend that investors hedge their positions, though we provide suggestions on currency risk exposure from time to time. The high allocation to bonds continued to hold back the model's performance. Chart 1Model Weights Chart 2Portfolio Total Returns Weights The model increased its allocation to stocks from 53% to 57%, and cut its bond weighting from 47% to 43% (Table 1). Table 1Model Weights (As Of February 23, 2017) The model increased its equity allocation to Dutch and Swedish equities by 4 points each, Germany and New Zealand by 2 points each, and France and Emerging Asia by 1 point each. Weightings were cut in Italy by 4 points, Latin America by 3 points, Spain by 2 points, and Switzerland by 1 point. In the fixed-income space, the allocation to Australia was boosted by 8 points, France by 6 points, and Germany by 4 points. The model cut its exposure to Swedish bonds by 9 points, Canadian bonds by 6 points, U.S. and U.K. bonds by 3 points each, and Kiwi 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 most recent bout of dollar depreciation was halted in February. Our Dollar Capitulation Index is below neutral levels. However, it is not extended, meaning that it does not preclude renewed dollar weakness in the near term. That said, assuming no major negative economic surprises, a relatively more hawkish Fed versus its peers should provide support for the dollar (Chart 3). Chart 3U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar* And Capitulation Capital Market Indicators The risk index for commodities was little changed in February. The model continues to avoid this asset class (Chart 4). The risk index for global equities rose to its highest level since early 2010, mostly on the back of deteriorating value. Despite this, the model slightly increased its allocation to equities (Chart 5). Chart 4Commodity Index And Risk Chart 5Global Stock Market And Risk The rally in U.S. stocks - driven by optimism about the economic outlook - pushed the value component of the risk index into expensive territory. The model kept a small allocation in U.S. equities. A change in the perception about the ability of the new U.S. administration to boost growth remains a risk for this market (Chart 6). The risk index for euro area equities continues to deteriorate. However, it remains lower than its U.S. counterpart. The continued flow of solid economic data and a weaker currency should bode well for euro area stocks, although political uncertainty is a potential headwind (Chart 7). Chart 6U.S. Stock Market And Risk Chart 7Euro Area Stock Market And Risk All three components of the risk index for Dutch equities are close to neutral levels. As a result, despite the recent deterioration in the overall risk index, it remains one of the lowest among the markets the model covers (Chart 8). The risk index for Swedish stocks worsened. However, the model increased its allocation to this bourse. Swedish equities would be a beneficiary of the continued risk-on environment (Chart 9). Chart 8Netherlands Stock Market And Risk Chart 9Swedish Stock Market And Risk The momentum indicator for global bonds is less stretched in February. Meanwhile, despite its latest decline, the cyclical indicator continues to signal that the positive global economic backdrop is firmly bond-bearish. Taken all together, the risk index for bonds deteriorated in February, although it still remains in the low-risk zone (Chart 10). U.S. Treasury yields moved sideways in February as investors await more guidance from the Fed on the timing of the next hike. A bond-negative cyclical indicator coupled with the unwinding of oversold conditions - as per the momentum measure - led to a deterioration in the risk index for U.S. Treasurys. The latter is almost back to neutral levels. The model trimmed the allocation to this asset class (Chart 11). Chart 10Global Bond Yields And Risk Chart 11U.S. Bond Yields And Risk The momentum indicator remains the main driver of the risk index for Canadian bonds. As a result, the less extreme momentum reading translated into an increase in the risk index for this asset class. (Chart 12). The risk index for Australian bonds moved lower in February, reflecting improvements in all three of its components. The model included the relatively high-yielding Aussie bonds in the portfolio. (Chart 13). Chart 12Canadian Bond Yields And Risk Chart 13Australian Bond Yields And Risk The cyclical indicator for euro area bonds is near expensive levels, and the momentum indicator shows heavily oversold conditions. These two measures are offsetting the cyclical one that is sending a bond-bearish message. While the overall risk index for euro area bonds is in the low-risk zone, the country allocation is concentrated in French paper (Chart 14). The risk level for French bonds is seen as low thanks to oversold momentum. French presidential elections are probably the most important political event in Europe this year. Whether the models' heavy allocation to this asset pans out hinges to a certain extent on the reduction of investor anxiety about this political risk (Chart 15). Chart 14Euro Area Bond Yields And Risk Chart 15French Bond Yields And Risk The 13-week momentum measure for the dollar broke below the zero line, and is currently sitting on its upward-sloping trendline, drawn from the 2010 lows, that has been broken only once before. Meanwhile, the 40-week rate of change measure is still suggesting that the dollar bull market has more legs on a cyclical horizon. Monetary divergences should lend support to the dollar over the cyclical horizon, although the new administration's attempts to talk down the dollar as well as heightened policy uncertainty could translate into more volatility (Chart 16). The weakening trend in the yen hit a snag two months ago, as the 13-week momentum measure reached the lows that previously foreshadowed a consolidation phase after sharp depreciations. This short-term rate-of-change measure has bounced smartly this year reaching a critical level. Meanwhile, the 40-week rate-of-change measure is not warning of a major change in the underlying trend which remains dictated by BoJ's dovish bias (Chart 17). EUR/USD has been gravitating towards 1.05 over the course of February. The short-term rate-of-change measure seems to be holding at the neutral level, while the 40-week rate-of-change measure is in negative territory, but hardly stretched. Political uncertainty has the potential to drive the euro in near term, but the longer-term outlook is mostly a function of the monetary policy divergence between the ECB and the Fed (Chart 18). Chart 16U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar* Chart 17Yen Chart 18Euro Miroslav Aradski, Senior Analyst miroslava@bcaresearch.com