Developed Countries
According to BCA Research’s European Investment Strategy service, global activity will not find a durable bottom until inflation peaks, which implies that the market must see a stabilization in energy prices first. Thus, Q2 or early Q3 is likely to represent…
Executive Summary Lower Rates Are A Tailwind For Growth Stocks We remain in the bearish camp. While the market bottom is getting closer, there are still hurdles to overcome such as elevated economic and earnings growth expectations, which need to come down to prevent new disappointments. Notably, the market focus has shifted away from inflation and has turned towards worries about growth as is evident in the falling 10-year Treasury yield. The environment of slowing growth and falling rates is a tailwind for growth stocks, warranting an upgrade of Growth to at least a benchmark weight. Technicals also signal that Growth is oversold relative to Value. The valuation differential has also moderated. However, we are wary of upgrading Growth to an outright overweight and downgrading Value to underweight as there is still plenty of economic uncertainty. We also posit that in the next several months the markets will be “fat and flat”, i.e., a bear market punctuated by rallies and pullbacks. In this environment, a balanced allocation between Growth and Value will reduce portfolio volatility and result in higher compound returns. Bottom Line: In a commentary to our chart pack report, we upgrade the Growth/Value style preference to benchmark allocation. Feature This week we provide you with a style chart pack. In this accompanying note, we will make a case for upgrading Growth and downgrading Value, bringing these style allocations to equal weight. We are booking a profit of 13% since we established the position in January 2022. We are getting closer to upgrading Growth to overweight. Performance May started as another tough month for equities, but, as they say, all’s well that ends well. After pulling back 10% since the beginning of May, and briefly touching bear market territory of -20%, the S&P 500 rebounded in the last 10 days of the month bringing the index to where it ended April. As a result, the S&P 500 was flat, and the NASDAQ was down 2.4% in May. As expected, the rally brought about a change in leadership (Chart I-1), with Consumer Discretionary and Technology leading the pack. Energy and Utilities are the only sectors that avoided rotation. Since May 20, Growth has outperformed Value by 3%. Chart I-1Recent Performance Bear Market Rally Or The Real Thing? Since the start of the May rally, investors have been debating whether it has legs. Bulls argue that we are in the early innings of a sustainable rebound in equities – after all, much of the bad news is already priced in, 45% of NYSE and 70% of NASDAQ have recently hit new 12-month lows, screaming oversold conditions, and making bottom fishing tempting (Chart I-2). Bears consider this surge in performance a garden-variety bear market rally: Growth is slowing and none of the problems that have been haunting the markets over the past five months, such as inflation, war, China, and a hawkish Fed, have yet been resolved. Our views are closer to the bearish camp: We believe that, even if the market bottom is getting closer, there are still hurdles to overcome, such as elevated economic and earnings growth expectations, which need to come down to prevent new disappointments. As we discussed in the recent “What Is Next For Equities: They Will Be Fat And Flat” report, we believe that equities are likely to be range-bound over the next several months: A turn in inflation and a downshift in growth may ignite rallies on hopes of a gentler, data-driven Fed, and a shallower trajectory for the rate-hiking cycle (Chart I-3). However, we argue that the Fed “put” is no longer in play and the Fed will stay focused on inflation, inadvertently puncturing any budding rallies. In addition to a hawkish Fed, investors will have to process what may become a sharp economic growth slowdown and an earnings recession in the US on the back of rising costs, a stronger dollar, and slowing global demand for US goods. Chart I-2Is Much Of The Bad News Already Priced In? Chart I-3Many Hope For A Shallower Hiking Cycle Growth Vs. Value: Shifting Positioning To Equal Weight When Growth Is Harder To Find, Growth Stocks Shine As we argued in the “Fat and Flat” report, there are multiple signs that economic growth is slowing, and that earnings growth will disappoint. Our Business Cycle Indicator, which is a compilation of soft and hard data across production, consumer, and credit dimensions, is also signaling a slowdown (Chart I-4). Here we would like to emphasize our view: As of now, US economic growth is strong, and it is only its second derivative, i.e. a deceleration of growth, that is the root of our concerns. In a world where growth is becoming scarcer, companies that can deliver growth will shine. These are “growth” companies, i.e. large, stable companies with strong balance sheets that are able to generate positive cash flow and churn out strong earnings even under economic duress (Chart I-5). Quality growth outperforms during slowdowns (Chart I-6). This reasoning does not apply to speculative, barely profitable, growth companies which will fight for survival in a slow-growth world. Chart I-4We Are In A Slowdown Stage Of The Business Cycle Chart I-5Large Cap Growth Is Synonymous With Quality Chart I-6Growth Outperforms During Economic Slowdowns Of course, one might argue that economic growth has been slowing for about a year, initially by returning towards the pre-pandemic trend and, lately, as a result of monetary tightening. Yet, over the past six months, Growth has underperformed Value by nearly 11%. What is different now? First, inflation, and the monetary tightening that inevitably follows it, are the mortal enemies of growth stocks: Higher discount rates deflate the present value of future cash flows. Rising inflation and sharply rising Treasury yields are behind the recent sell-off in Growth stocks. However, recently, the market focus has shifted away from inflation, and seems to finally be turning towards worries about growth. As a result, the 10-year Treasury yield decreased from 3.12% to 2.75%, and its relentless climb may now be behind us (Chart I-7). Lower rates are a tailwind for Growth stocks which rebounded at the first whiff of rate stabilization (Chart I-8). Chart I-7Investors Concerns Have Shifted From Inflation To Growth Further, our research on macroeconomic regimes suggests that a turn in inflation heralds a change in market leadership from Value to Quality and Growth (Chart I-9). Chart I-8Lower Rates Are A Tailwind For Growth Stocks Chart I-9Growth And Quality Will Lead Markets When Inflation Abates Growth Not Yet Cheap But Oversold This year’s sell-off is characterized by a multiple contraction. Growth is a poster child of this trend: Its forward multiple has decreased by 8 points, with the style currently trading at just under 20x forward earnings, which is the 61st percentile relative to its 10-year history (compare that to 28x and the 94th percentile back in January). As for Value, it also became cheaper, contracting from 16.8x in January to 14.9x (Table I-1). Table I-1Valuations And EPS Growth Expectations According to the BCA Valuations Indicator (Chart I-10), the Growth/Value valuations spread has moderated but by itself, is not an impetus for a switch. However, looking at technicals, Growth is extremely oversold relative to Value and is at levels last seen in 2006. Why Neutral, Not Overweight? We hope we made a compelling case for shifting allocation from Value to Growth. Then why not go overweight, but just neutral? Mostly because many of the macroeconomic developments we have described are tentative and are just conjecture at this point – there is still plenty of uncertainty about inflation, rates, and the Fed monetary response. Second, while Growth stocks are supposed to grow faster than Value stocks, at the moment analysts expect them to grow at 8% and 11% respectively. We expect earnings growth expectations for Value stocks to be downgraded since they are dominated by cyclicals. However, until the new numbers are in for both styles, we need to be careful. Chart I-10Growth Is Getting Cheaper Relative To Value... It Also Appears Oversold Last, if we are right, and US equities are to test their bottom this summer in a “fat and flat” manner, there will be a frequent change in leadership, with Growth and Small outperforming during the rallies, and Value outperforming during pullbacks. Portfolios need exposure to both styles to achieve the highest compound returns as diversification reduces portfolio volatility. Once macroeconomic uncertainty dissipates, we will be able to pounce and shift Growth to overweight, and Value to underweight. For now, we are going to stay neutral out of an abundance of caution. Bottom Line Macroeconomic conditions are becoming more favorable for Growth as Treasury yields stabilize and economic growth slows, making the strong fundamentals and stable earnings of large-cap growth stocks more valuable. Growth is oversold relative to Value, and the relative performance differential of Growth vs. Value over the past six months has been staggering – it is time to book profits and prepare for the next chapter. Irene Tunkel Chief Strategist, US Equity Strategy irene.tunkel@bcaresearch.com S&P 500 Chart II-1Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart II-2Profitability Chart II-3Valuations And Technicals Chart II-4Uses Of Cash Cyclicals Vs Defensives Chart II-5Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart II-6Profitability Chart II-7Valuation And Technicals Chart II-8Uses Of Cash Growth Vs Value Chart II-9Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart II-10Profitability Chart II-11Valuations And Technicals Chart II-12Uses Of Cash Small Vs Large Chart II-13Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart II-14Profitability Chart II-15Valuations and Technicals Chart II-16Uses Of Cash Table A1Performance Table A2Valuations And Forward Earnings Growth Footnotes Recommended Allocation Recommended Allocation: Addendum
Executive Summary The default take on the economy and financial markets has been tilting increasingly bearish although the ongoing data flow has yet to pick a side. The data in the stories from the front page of The New York Times' Saturday Business section over the Memorial Day weekend nod in the direction of a Goldilocks outcome: households have been so well fortified by their pandemic savings that their spending is holding up despite stiff price increases but innovation and automation are allowing companies to protect their profits even in a tight labor market. We remain of the view that a wage-price spiral is unlikely and therefore see a plausible path for S&P 500 margins to hold up better than expected over the rest of the year. We are looking for an opportunity to add equity exposure to our ETF portfolio to restore its overweight allocation but we won't rush to do it while the S&P 500 is within 100 points of near-term technical resistance. Putting Excess Savings To Good Use Bottom Line: We remain constructive on financial markets and the US economy over the next twelve months but are content to wait for a better tactical entry point to increase our ETF portfolio's equity exposure. Feature The Internet has drastically curtailed newspapers’ influence, but Page 1 is still not the place to go for alpha-generating investment ideas. Nearly all the juice has been squeezed from an investment idea by the time it makes it to the front page; if there’s any alpha to be found in the paper, it will be on the vitamin pages – B7, B12, D3. As Don Coxe, a favorite mentor, put it throughout his five-decade career as an investment strategist, “We don’t invest on the basis of Page 1 stories. We invest on the basis of stories on Page D7 that are going to Page 1.” Lately, the stories getting the most media airtime have accentuated the negative. Inflation is making 40-year highs; consumers are in a grim mood, at least according to the University of Michigan’s sentiment survey; the Fed was napping and may not be able to catch up; corporate profits will be the next domino to fall. Against that backdrop, we thought the front-page New York Times Saturday Business section stories reporting on coincident indicators over the Memorial Day weekend provided an interesting corrective. The data are moving fast and their positive cast may be fleeting, but the latest batch makes the case that it’s too soon to abandon our constructive market and economic view. Declining Profit Margins Might Still Beat Expectations The entire space above the fold was filled by a photograph of workers harvesting radishes. There was a large machine with moving conveyor belts behind them and as the workers bound the radishes into clumps, they tossed them onto the belt without turning their heads. Under the headline, “Farming Transformation In the Fields of California,” the article began, “It looks like a century-old picture of farming in California: a few dozen Mexican men … plucking radishes from the ground [.] But the[se] crews … represent the cutting edge of how America pulls food from the land.” “For starters, the young men … are working alongside technology unseen even 10 years ago. … [W]hat looks like a tractor retrofitted with a packing plant … carries [the radishes] through a cold wash and delivers them to be packed into crates and delivered for distribution in a refrigerated truck.” “The other change is more subtle, but no less revolutionary. None of the workers are in the United States illegally.” “Both of these transformations are driven by the same dynamic: the decline in the supply of young illegal immigrants from Mexico, the backbone of the work force picking California’s crops since the 1960s.” “The new demographic reality has sent farmers scrambling to bring in more highly paid foreign workers on temporary guest-worker visas, experiment with automation wherever they can and even replace crops with less labor-intensive alternatives.” The drying up of its inexpensive labor supply would seem to pose a mortal threat to farming profit margins. Temporary workers covered by the H-2A visa program earn two-and-a-half dollars an hour more than the $15 minimum wage applicable to local workers and must be provided with room, board and transportation to and from the fields. The industry has adapted, however, finding ways to mechanize the harvesting of crops that don’t need to meet aesthetic standards while tinkering with planting and growing techniques and genetic modifications to reduce labor intensity. Crops that resist mechanization hacks are leaving the United States for lower-cost climes as evidenced by a doubling of fruit and vegetable imports over the last five years. California acreage given over to asparagus, an especially labor-intensive crop, has fallen to 4,000 acres in 2020 from 37,000 two decades ago, while the nearby Mexican state of Sinaloa picked up the slack by increasing its harvest by around 30,000 acres. The adaptations seem to be working well for all but the formerly essential undocumented agricultural work force. As a vineyard worker who illegally crossed the border nearly 20 years ago said, “It scares me that they are coming with H-2As and … robots. That’s going to take us down.” What does this specific story have to do with corporate profit margins, a general subject of vital importance to all investors? It illustrates the difficulty employees confront in capturing and maintaining leverage when employers can radically alter the dynamic with investment. The sub-headline sums up labor’s plight well: “Growers are turning more and more to workers on seasonal visas, and mechanizing where they can. Meanwhile, labor-intensive crops are shifting south of the border.” Chart 1Input Costs Are Surging, ... We reiterate that a wage-price spiral is not a foregone conclusion. Neither is an onshoring bonanza. Although the aggregate first-quarter S&P 500 profit margin narrowed versus the year-ago quarter (revenue-per-share growth (13.9%) outpaced earnings-per-share growth (11.2%) by nearly three percentage points), it managed to surprise to the upside (earnings’ 7% beat was over four percentage points wider than revenues’ 2.6%), and innovation and investment may allow it to do so going forward, despite soaring materials costs (Chart 1) and upward wage pressures. After an initial pandemic surge, however, wages have failed to keep pace with inflation for the last year (Chart 2) and growth in average hourly earnings, the most timely compensation series, may have peaked (Chart 3). Chart 2... But Wages Aren't Keeping Pace With Inflation ... Chart 3... And They May Have Already Peaked Households Are Not At Risk Of Drowning In Debt … The other two front-page stories challenge the narrative that high inflation will choke off consumption. “U.S. Spending Is Up Even With Buying Power Low” discussed the previous day’s release of the April Personal Income and Outlays report. The article expressed surprise that consumption rose 0.9% month-over-month when disposable income rose just 0.3% and was flat in real terms. Households squared the circle by saving less of their income, with the savings rate shrinking to 4.4%, the lowest level since the subprime boom, when it put in its all-time bottom (Chart 4). Chart 4Putting Their Cushion To Good Use Leading up to the financial crisis, households took on increasing quantities of debt to maintain their spending and the article noted that revolving loan balances (primarily credit cards) grew at their fastest rate in 24 years in March. That narrow statement is true, strictly speaking, but an investor should place it in a fuller context. Outstanding credit card and other revolving debt held by banks remains shy of its post-crisis growth trend though it did just top its previous high set in early 2020 (Chart 5). Though the article quoted an economist tut-tutting that credit card-funded spending is unsustainable, household debt service payments as a share of disposable income remain below their pre-pandemic lows and miles from their subprime-era level (Chart 6). These are fraught times, but any comparison linking US households’ financial positions with 2007 is specious. Chart 5Outstanding Card Balances Are Still Below Trend ... Chart 6... And Households Have Plenty Of Capacity To Take On More … Because They Were Pre-emptively Insulated From Elevated Inflation We have been tracking households’ excess pandemic savings balance since CARES Act transfer payments began to flow into individual checking and savings accounts. We estimate that households ended April with between $2.1 and 2.2 trillion more in savings than they would have had if the pandemic had not occurred. They began dipping into their stash in last year’s fourth quarter, when the savings rate first edged below its 8.3% pre-pandemic level, and have done so with increasing zest this year, trimming almost $200 billion from the excess savings peak (Table 1). They drew down almost $60 billion in April alone, indicating that half of the excess savings (our working estimate of how much will be spent) would last for eighteen months if households saved at half their pre-pandemic rate, or another nine if they didn’t save anything at all. Table 1The Excess Savings Cushion Remains Quite Large That’s a handy reference point to keep in mind when assessing the third front-page story, headlined, “Gas Prices Keep Surging, But Demand Isn’t Falling.” The same headline could be repurposed to top an article reporting on American Airlines’ upwardly revised second-quarter revenue outlook. American said in a filing before Friday’s open that it now expects 2Q22 revenue to exceed 2Q19 revenue (the airlines’ last pre-pandemic comparison) by 11-13%, up from its previous 6-8% guidance. A real-time Bloomberg headline accompanying the story credited the increase to “continued strength in demand and pricing.” The bottom line is that households have the means to satiate pent-up pandemic demand despite significantly higher prices. Spirited internal debates have revolved around households’ willingness to use those means. Without a similar fiscal transfer precedent, neither side can argue its case with high conviction, but the accelerating dissaving of the last six months and mounting evidence of consumers’ low sensitivity to higher airfares and gasoline prices suggest that the spending camp has the upper hand for now. Under an Occam’s razor standard, we don’t think the analysis requires anything as fancy as mental accounting gymnastics or Friedman’s permanent income hypothesis when there’s an age-old phrase that should especially resonate with the YOLO set: Easy come, easy go. ETF Portfolio Update Our cyclical ETF portfolio outperformed its benchmark by 43 basis points (bps) in May, bringing its outperformance since its January 31st launch to 87 bps. Our equity holdings accounted for the lion’s share of the value-add. Energy (XLE), our sole sector overweight, outperformed the S&P 500 by nearly 16 percentage points, while our Staples (XLP, 4-ppt underperformance) and Utilities (XLU, 4-ppt outperformance) underweights offset each other. Allocating some Discretionary exposure to outperforming homebuilders (ITB) was successful but was offset by concentrating all of our Materials exposure in metals and miners (XME). The Pure Value Index (RPV) and SmallCap 600 (IJR) overweights made undiluted positive contributions. Our high yield (JNK) overweight helped our fixed income performance, though it was held back by the allocation to variable-rate preferreds (VRP). VRP has struggled, but we still see going to the back of the creditor priority line at overcapitalized large banks as a source of alpha, and we maintain our modest allocation. We continue to seek an opportune time to remove some of the tactical restraints we imposed on the portfolio in early March. We are eager to bring the portfolio in line with BCA’s recent tactical equity upgrade to overweight but are reluctant to increase our equity exposure so close to the 4,200 resistance level that we expect will repel S&P 500 rallies in the immediate term. Friday’s selloff gave a buyer an additional 1% of headroom from the level we passed up on May 27th, but we intend to hold out for something in the neighborhood of 4,000. Investment Implications Viewed through a contrarian’s magazine-cover-indicator lens, the risk/reward profile of our constructive view has improved as the headlines’ bearish bias has become more pronounced. The zeal with which those in the bearish economic camp seized upon Walmart’s and Target’s first-quarter disappointments was revealing. Both companies’ earnings stunk – Walmart missed expectations by 12% and Target by 29% – but both companies beat revenues, by around 2%, just like their dollar-store and price-club peers who met or beat earnings expectations. Though it gave the commentariat something to do for a few days, the debate over the existence of a retail inventory glut isn’t supported by the aggregate data (Chart 7). Chart 7Retail Inventory Glut? Seriously? No one knows what’s coming next against the unprecedented macro backdrop and everyone involved in forecasting and investing should approach their work with humility right now. For an investor, that means staying within sight of the shore in terms of deviations from benchmark indexes and managing portfolios more tactically by reducing holding periods and setting, and abiding by, tight stops on opportunistic plays. A preponderance of data has yet to cast doubt on our constructive take on the economy and markets (nor has it conclusively validated it, alas). The sense that we increasingly find ourselves in the minority makes us feel better about the potential returns to our view, however, and we are sticking with it. We continue to recommend overweighting equities in a balanced portfolio, and high yield within fixed income portfolios (NB: our US Bond Strategy team recommends an equal-weight allocation to high yield) over a twelve-month time frame and are looking for a better entry point to increase our equity exposures within our ETF portfolio. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Cyclical ETF Portfolio
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Listen to a short summary of this report. Executive Summary Sentiment On Sterling Is Depressed The pound will suffer in the short term, setting the stage for a coiled-spring rebound. Cable is extremely cheap by most measures (Feature chart). The BoE could engineer a soft landing in the UK economy. If successful, it will annihilate sterling vigilantes, in a volte-face of the ERM crisis. We are cognizant of near-term risks. As such, we are long EUR/GBP with a target of 0.90, but will be buyers of cable at 1.20. Ultimately, the pound is undervalued on a longer-term basis. GBP/USD should touch 1.36 over the next 12-18 months. RECOMMENDATIONS INCEPTION LEVEL inception date RETURN long eur/gbp 0.846 2021-10-15 0.27 Bottom Line: The pound will likely face pressure in the near term, but will fare well over a cyclical horizon. Our 12-month target is 1.36. This target is based on a modest reversion towards PPP fair value, and some erosion in the “crisis” discount. Admittedly, sentiment on the pound is very depressed, and we could be wrong in our near-term assessment and cable has indeed bottomed. Feature Chart 1A Play On Cable Downside There has been much discussion around the premise that the pound could enter a capitulation phase, akin to an emerging market-style currency crisis. With inflation sitting at 9%, well above the Bank of England’s 2% target, the narrative is that interest rates need to rise substantially but will, at the same time, kill any recovery. The result will be a sharp fall in the pound. We began to highlight the near-term risks to cable in October of last year, going long EUR/GBP in the process, as a way to play sterling downside (Chart 1). That said, our longer-term view on the pound remained positive. In this report, we review what has changed since, and if a negative longer-term view is now warranted. UK Balance Of Payments Almost all currency crises are rooted in a deterioration of the external balance, and this is certainly true for the UK. The trade deficit sits at 7.9% of GDP, the worst among G10 countries (Chart 2). As a result, the current account is also in deficit. That said, there are reasons for optimism. Related Report Foreign Exchange StrategyAn Update On Sterling The Office for National Statistics (ONS) suggests that a change in methodology in January 2022 could be exarcebating the deterioration in the latest release of the trade balance. In our view, there are two key reasons why the UK’s balance of trade is worsening. The first is the oil shock – fuels constitute 11% of UK imports. Second, unprecedented fiscal stimulus led to an overshoot in goods imports. These negative forces are likely cyclical in nature, rather than structural. It is also noteworthy that most of the goods imported into the UK are machinery and transport equipment, which could go a long way in improving its productive capacity (Chart 3). Chart 2The UK Trade Balance Has Deteriorated Chart 3Goods Imports Have Been A Hit To The UK Trade Balance In parallel, there has been a structural improvement in the UK’s current account balance. This has mostly been driven by a rising primary income balance. In short, investments abroad are earning more, relative to domestic liabilities (Chart 4). The UK runs a large negative international investment position. Despite this, it has maintained the ability to issue debt bought by foreigners, while investing in high-return assets abroad. Secondary income has admittedly been in a structural deficit, but a falloff in transfer payments under the Brexit agreement will significantly improve this balance (Chart 5). Chart 4The UK Current Account Is Improving Chart 5A Fall In Brexit Payments Will Mend Secondary Income Finally, the pound’s share of global foreign exchange turnover is 12.8%, just behind the dollar, euro, and yen. That said, London dwarfs New York, Hong Kong, and Tokyo as a hub for foreign exchange trading (Chart 6). The pound also very much remains among the most desirable global currencies. Global allocation of FX reserves in sterling have been rising over the last decade (Chart 7). It currently stand at 4.8%, higher than the RMB at 2.8%, and all other emerging market currencies combined. Chart 6London Remains An Important Financial Center Chart 7The Pound Is Still A Reserve Currency It is noteworthy to revisit the period the pound experienced an EM-style crisis – under the European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM), when cable was effectively pegged to the German mark at an expensive level. At the time, UK inflation was running hot, while German inflation was more subdued. By importing monetary policy from the Bundesbank, the BoE was able to tame inflation, but at a high cost to growth. In Germany, the reunification boom warranted much higher interest rates, which was not appropriate for the UK . Cable eventually collapsed by 32.9% peak-to-trough, as the UK ran out of foreign currency reserves. Chart 8Cable Is Very Cheap There are three key differences between that episode and today: The pound is freely floating. Foreign exchange markets are extremely fluid and adjust to expectations quite quickly. A collapse in the pound seems unlikely, unless the UK faces a new large exogenous shock. Inflation is running hot in many countries, not just the UK. The pound is extremely cheap, and stimulative for the economy. On a real effective exchange rate basis, the pound is at record lows (Chart 8). Will The BoE Make A Policy Mistake? Sterling is pricing in a policy mistake by the BoE. First, inflation is well above its 2% target. Second, the labor market has tightened significantly. The unemployment rate hit a 47-year low of 3.7%, and job vacancies are low, pushing wages higher. As such, either the BoE allows inflation expectations to become unmoored, destroying the purchasing power of the pound, or kills the recovery to maintain credibility (Chart 9). Chart 9The UK Labor Market Is Tight While difficult, there are reasons to believe the BoE can achieve a soft landing. According to an in-house study, only one-third of the rise in UK inflation has been driven by demand-side pull, with the balance related to supply factors.1 The latter have been the usual suspects – rising energy costs, supply shortages, and even legacies of the Brexit shock (Chart 10). UK electricity prices have cratered since the opening of the 1,400MW undersea cable with Norway (Chart 11). Chart 10Most Of The Increase To UK Prices Is Supply-Driven Chart 11A Sharp Drop In Electricity Prices Second, it is likely that the neutral rate of interest in the UK is lower in a post-Brexit, post-COVID-19 world. This is visible in trend productivity growth, but even the size of the labor force has shrunk significantly. The UK workforce is down by 560,000 people since the start of the pandemic. This has been partly due to less immigration and more retirees, but the vast majority has been due to health side-effects from the pandemic, and delays in getting adequate medical care. As a result, there has barely been a recovery in the UK participation rate (Chart 12). Chart 12AThe Participation Rate In The UK Is Below Trend Chart 12BA Low Participation Rate Across Many Regions In hindsight, a least-regrets strategy to policy tightening – lift rates faster now, and then back off if financial conditions tighten sufficiently – seems appropriate. Frontloading the pace of tightening will flatten the UK gilts curve further. With most borrowing costs in the UK tied to the longer end of the curve, refinancing costs might not edge up that much, while inflation expectations will be well contained. The real canaries in the coal mine from this strategy are the economies of Australia, New Zealand, and Canada, where household debt is much more elevated (Chart 13), and the percentage of variable rate mortgages are higher. Chart 13Household Debt Is Not Alarming In The UK Larger fiscal stimulus will partially offset the near-term hit from tighter monetary policy. The additional £15 billion cost-of-living package announced last month is quite substantial at 0.7% of GDP. This gives the BoE breathing room to tighten policy in the near term. The redistributionist nature of the plan – taxing windfall profits from large energy companies, and using that to subsidize consumers most in need – could be what is required to achieve a soft landing, if the energy shock is temporary. Our Global Fixed Income colleagues upgraded UK gilts to overweight last month, on the basis that market pricing further out the SONIA curve was too aggressive. In our prior report on sterling, we also suggested that market expectations for interest rate increases may have overshot. Money markets are discounting a peak in the bank rate at 2.8%. The BoE’s new Market Participants survey suggests it will peak at 1.75%. While the BoE will deliver sufficient monetary tightening to lean against near-term inflationary pressures, it will be very wary to overdo it. This is especially true if the neutral rate in the economy is much lower. What Next For The Pound? Our view is that the pound faces near-term risks but is a buy longer term. There is an old adage that credibility is hard to earn, but easy to lose. For the UK in particular, this hits the mark. The Bank of England is the oldest central bank in the world, after the Riksbank. Yes, the BoE can make a policy mistake (as it has in the past), but treating the pound as an emerging market asset is a stretch (Chart 14). That said, our Chief European Strategist, Mathieu Savary, believes stagflation is not fully priced into UK assets. In the near term, he might be right. The UK’s large trade deficit puts the onus on foreigners to dictate movements in the pound. The pound does well when animal spirits are fervent. So far, markets have bid up a substantial safe-haven premium into the dollar (Chart 15). As a proxy, the pound has been sold. Northern Ireland could also return as a thorn in the side of sterling. Chart 14The Pound Is A Risk-On Currency Cable And EM Stocks Chart 15The Dollar Has A Hefty Safe-Haven Premium From a bird’s eye view, three factors tend to drive currencies – the macroeconomic environment, valuation, and sentiment. For now, markets have latched on to the GBP’s vulnerability to an EM-style crisis. That said, cable is very cheap, even accounting for elevated UK inflation. Our in-house PPP model suggests the pound could appreciate by 4% per year, over the next 10 years, just to revert to fair value (Chart 16). Chart 16Cable Is Cheap Admittedly, the UK desperately needs an improvement in productivity growth for further currency gains. To encourage capital inflows that the pound depends on, the UK needs to be at the forefront of disruptive technologies such as electric cars, digital currencies, 3D printing, and even innovations in gene therapy. High finance and fashion will remain relevant for London, but the need for innovation is high. Investment Conclusions Chart 17Sentiment On Sterling Is Depressed The pound will likely face pressure in the near term, but will fare well over a cyclical horizon. Our 12-month target is 1.36. This target is based on a modest reversion towards PPP fair value, and some erosion in the “crisis” discount. Admittedly, sentiment on the pound is very depressed, and we could be wrong in our near-term assessment if cable has indeed bottomed. Our intermediate-term timing model suggests that GBP is undervalued and has bottomed. Technical indicators also warn that cable is ripe for a fervent rebound (Chart 17). Particularly, our intermediate-term technical indicator is rebounding from oversold levels. The Aussie would outperform the pound in the long term, but AUD/GBP is vulnerable to a commodity relapse in the shorter term. Housekeeping We were stopped out of our short EUR/JPY trade for a loss of -2.78%, as oil prices and bond yields rebounded. This trade is a hedge to our pro-cyclical portfolio, so we will look to reenter it at more attractive levels. We are also lowering the stop-loss on our short RUB trade. This is a speculative bet many clients will not be able to play, but we expect it to payoff over the longer term. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Michael Saunders, "The route back to 2% inflation," (Speech given at the Resolution Foundation), May 9, 2022. Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Cyclical Holdings (6-18 months) Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
Executive Summary Crude Oil Prices Will Remain High The EU embargo on Russian seaborne oil imports will tighten global crude oil and refined-product markets further. Pipeline imports are due to phase out by year-end. This will translate to a 90% decrease in Russian crude and product exports to the EU, representing ~ 3mm b/d of lost sales. Russian crude oil production will fall to 7-8mm b/d by year-end 2023, unless the state pre-emptively cuts output before that. This would push crude oil above $140/bbl. We expect Russia to reduce natural gas exports to the EU in the wake of the oil embargo. Refined-product markets will remain tight, given refining capacity losses, tight crude oil markets and still-strong gasoline and diesel demand. OPEC 2.0 is expected to maintain its policy to nominally increase oil supply by 432k b/d at its meeting this week. Actual oil output returned to the market by the coalition is ~ 1.5mm – 1.7mm b/d below nominal levels. Bottom Line: Oil markets will continue to tighten in the wake of the EU’s embargo on Russian imports this week. Refined-product markets will remain well bid, with prices of gasoline, jet and diesel fuel close to or above record levels. We remain long oil producers and refiners via the XOP and CRAK ETFs, along with the S&P GSCI and COMT ETF, to retain exposure to higher commodity prices and backwardation. Feature Global refined-product markets are tight and getting tighter. Related Report Commodity & Energy StrategyOil, Natgas Prices Set To Surge As the Northern Hemisphere driving season gets underway, gasoline and diesel prices in the US are at record levels – up 56.55% and 70.17% respectively yoy. So are jet-fuel prices, which are up 107.97% yoy in the US. Prices are similarly robust ex-US and trading at or close to record levels. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the US permanently lost ~ 5% of total refining capacity. Currently, three of the largest refineries in the US are working on replenishing less than half of that loss by end-2023, which will take total US refining capacity to under 18.5mm b/d. US gasoline stocks are low for this time of the year. Markets expect higher demand this driving season, which unofficially ends in early September with the Labor Day weekend in the US. The US went into the Memorial Day Weekend – the start of the summer driving season – with record high motor gas prices (Chart 1). Gasoline stocks normally build in the off-season winter months. However, this year inventories are depleted (Chart 2) because of relatively high distillate “crack spreads” – gross refining margins – which incentivized refiners to produce more diesel, jet and marine fuels.1 This meant gasoline output was sacrificed in the process, which left markets tight going into the summer driving season.2 Chart 1High Gas Prices Bring In US Driving Season US distillate crack spreads are at record highs, after stocks hit a 14-year low last month (Chart 3). Reduced oil refinery capacity will constrict future supply, keeping prices elevated, which will feed into inflation. Demand destruction will be required to balance markets and bring prices lower. Chart 2Depleted Stocks Due To Low Gasoline Margins Chart 3Low Distillate Stocks Produce Record Cracks Tight Supply-Demand Fundamentals, High Prices US refined-product prices have been strengthening since 2021 due to high crude oil prices, rising demand and lower refinery capacity and utilization rates. This keeps the level of demand for refined products consistently above the level of supply, which forces refiners to pull down inventories or increase imports to cover the supply-demand gaps. Higher refined-product prices ensue as inventories fell. As a result, crack spreads were pushed higher to encourage higher output, which remains problematic because of supply-side pressure in global crude-oil markets (Chart 4). Crude oil prices account for 60% of gasoline and 49% of diesel costs, respectively.3 Last year OPEC 2.0’s production-management strategy kept the level of crude oil supply below demand, but this year additional forces are constraining output. Supply disruptions following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, lower OPEC 2.0 production, and non-OPEC capital discipline, particularly from US shale-oil producers, have combined to constrain crude-oil production. We expect continued production restraint by core OPEC 2.0 (Saudi Arabia and the UAE); lower output from the rest of the coalition; falling Russian supply due to sanctions and an EU embargo on Russian oil imports; and continued capital discipline by shale producers. These factors will offset weaker global oil demand resulting from slower GDP growth in the EU and China. Chart 4Supply Will Barely Rise Despite High Margins Volatile supply-demand dynamics will keep crude oil prices elevated this year and next (Chart 5).4 The EU’s embargo on Russian oil, in particular, will raise oil-price volatility, and leave prices upwardly biased. Lastly, we do not expect the US and Iran to renew the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), which would allow ~ 1mm b/d of Iranian exports to return to the market. Chart 5Crude Oil Prices Will Remain High Tighter Product Markets Will Persist Refined-product stocks in the US and the rest of the world were low prior to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, owing to strong demand growth and weak crude-oil supply growth last year, along with lower global refining capacity. US refinery utilization rates last year and earlier this year fell as refiners undertook heavier-than-usual maintenance, which was deferred during the pandemic (Chart 6). Refiners also closed ~ 1mm b/d in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, which resulted in ~ 5% of US refining capacity being shut-in at the start of 2021.5 Global refining capacity has fallen by more than 2mm b/d since the COVID-19 pandemic.6 As midterm elections approach, the Biden administration has been urging refiners to restart idle capacity to little or no avail, and has threatened to re-introduce export restrictions on crude oil in an attempt to hold down gasoline and diesel prices. Chart 6US Refiners Were Shut-In For Maintenance Gasoline markets are going into their first summer without COVID-19 restrictions since 2020. While US data for the first 3 months of 2022 suggest Americans’ gasoline consumption was more price-inelastic than in the past (Chart 7), a series of record-breaking gasoline prices recently may have been enough to start curbing US gasoline demand (Chart 8). All the same, US consumers appear to be willing to pay up for holiday breaks and get-aways, which will keep pressure on inventories during the summer driving season. Chart 7US Gasoline Demand Price Inelastic In Q1… Chart 8…But Record Breaking Prices May Change That Jet, Diesel Remain Tight, Especially In Europe The approval of an embargo on Russian oil imports into the EU earlier this week means member states on the continent that rely heavily on Russian distillate exports will remain exposed to higher refined-product prices (Chart 9).7 This will keep European diesel prices and crack spreads elevated this year and next (Chart 10). Chart 9EU Dependent On Russia For Diesel Chart 10Europe Refining Margins Will Remain Elevated Shipping markets also will continue to feel the pressure of higher prices, particularly for marine diesel fuel. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine forced insurance rates higher, which propelled shipping-rates higher in Europe and Russia (Chart 11). The EU is now slapping sanctions on insurers. In addition, the Ukraine war forced a re-routing of ships and port congestion, which led to massive supply-chain disruptions due to closures and blockades.8 High refined-product prices partly is the result of European refineries either permanently shutting in production or switching to renewable energy production when faced with low Covid-19-induced demand in 2020. In the first half of 2021, as product demand started to rise, the parabolic increase in prices of natgas – used as a fuel by refiners – was an additional headwind to refining margins. Chart 11Cost Of Shipping Crude, Products Surges As of last December, more than 800 kb/d – or 5% of the continent’s refining capacity – was permanently taken offline during the pandemic.9 As a result, OECD Europe’s refining capacity for 2022 will be 11.4 mmb/d, ~ 0.8 mmb/d below pre-pandemic levels.10 Europe will need to look elsewhere for distillates. Attempting to substitute refined products in such tight energy markets will not be cheap. Sourcing imports from other states will tighten exporters’ domestic refined product markets and dislocate distillate supply to their traditional importers, which will tighten those states’ domestic markets as well. This could lead to something similar to what we are currently witnessing in LNG markets between Europe and Asia. The US, despite having its own tight refined products market, likely will step up as an alternate supplier to fill the Russian distillate supply void for states reliant on Russian diesel, jet and marine fuels. This can be seen in the 32-month high in Gulf Coast diesel exports from the US, which are the result of stronger imports by Europe and LatAm.11 Investment Implications The EU embargo on Russian oil imports will tighten global refined-product markets. If Russia retaliates by pre-emptively cutting crude oil production by 20-30%, prices would significantly exceed our forecast of $113/bbl this year and $122/bbl next year – reaching or surpassing $140/bbl. Refined-product markets will remain well bid, with prices of gasoline, jet and diesel fuel close to or above record levels. We remain long oil producers and refiners via the XOP and CRAK ETFs, along with the S&P GSCI and COMT ETF, to retain exposure to higher commodity prices and backwardation. Ashwin Shyam Research Analyst Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Paula Struk Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy paula.struk@bcaresearch.com Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish We continue to expect Russia to cut off natural gas exports to the EU in retaliation for the embargo on EU oil imports from Russia agreed this week. The timing of this cut-off is uncertain, however. As our colleague Matt Gertken notes in this week’s Geopolitical Strategy, Russia and the EU both would benefit if exports were maintained as long as possible and phased down slowly. This would provide Russia with revenues to wage war in Ukraine, while allowing Europe to avoid recession as it phases out Russian gas. This is not an equilibrium, however, as it leaves both sides exposed to a sudden reversal of the tacit understanding. In equilibrium – i.e., the strategies that guarantee the EU and Russia lose the least – both states reduce their energy trade immediately. Russia needs to show strength in the face of the EU’s embargo, and Europe needs to cut the revenues fueling Russia’s war in Ukraine, which also will deter similar aggression against member states in the future. As soon as the EU weans itself off Russian natgas, Russia’s leverage disappears. If Europe does not diversify immediately, Russia can punish it severely by cutting off energy before it is prepared. (Chart 12). In the meantime, the EU is moving heaven and earth to fill its natgas storage as quickly as possible (Chart 13). According to the GIE AGSI, the percent-full level was 46.68% as of May 30, 2022. Precious Metals: Bullish Gold prices pared losses last Wednesday after the Federal Open Market Committee’s (FOMC) minutes of the May meeting indicated the Fed will not raise rates by more than the half percentage points markets had priced in for June and July. Recent weakness in gold prices despite heightened geopolitical uncertainty can be attributed to the Fed’s tightening cycle. Rate hikes will increase real interest rates, the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding bullion and strengthen the USD, which competes directly with gold for safe-haven demand, and will also raise the price of gold in local currencies. Base Metals: Bullish Chile’s National Institute of Statistics reported the country’s Mining Production Index fell 10.6% year-over-year (y-o-y) in April, dragging the country’s overall Industrial Production Index lower by 3.6% y-o-y. The drop in mining was due to a 9.8% fall in copper production y-o-y. The contraction in mined copper output this month follows y-o-y contractions of 15%, 7% and 7.2% in January, February and March respectively this year. Chart 12 Chart 13 Footnotes 1 The “crack spread” (or “cracks”) is an industry term for gross margins. It derives its name from the literal cracking of the bonds holding the hydrocarbon molecules of crude oil together under intense heat and pressure, and reforming them into refined products like gasoline and diesel fuel and other liquids and gases. The crack spread is the difference between the price of a refined product and crude oil in USD/bbl. 2 In this report, we focus on diesel fuel and gasoline. Low stocks, high prices and high crack spreads are a feature of jet-fuel markets as well. 3 Please see the US EIA’s May 2022 Gasoline and Fuel Update. 4 Please see Oil, Natgas Prices Set To Surge published on May 19, 2022 for our latest balances and price forecasts. 5 Please see the U.S. EIA’s 30 June, 2021 edition of This Week In Petroleum. 6 Please see White House Eyes Restarting Idle Refineries, published by ttnews.com on May 26, 2022. 7 Please see Breakingviews: Oil embargo will hurt Putin more than EU, published by reuters.com on May 31, 2022. 8 For more on this, please refer to High Food Prices Drive EM Inflation, which we published on May 12, 2022. 9 Please see Viewpoint: European refiners cautious on cusp of 2022, published by Argus Media on December 30, 2021. 10 Please see the IEA’s January 2022 Oil Market Report. 11 Please see to PADD 3 diesel exports reach 32 month high as the competition for the non-Russian molecule begins, published by Vortexa on May 4, 2022. Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Trades Closed in 2022
US housing, one of the most interest-rate sensitive sectors of the economy, has cooled in line with the two-percentage point rise in mortgage rates. Housing market dynamics affect aggregate growth via the wealth effect it exerts on consumption as well as…