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During the first day of the BCA Annual Investment Conference 2020, Dr. Larry Summers highlighted that in his opinion, ESG investing would remain a major market theme for the years ahead as we move toward a greener development framework and move away from the…
Correlations across asset classes move higher in times of crisis. 2020 proved no exception to this rule, which is problematic as it makes diversification more difficult to achieve exactly when investors need it most. The good news is that as economic…
Highlights US market risks stem from both the lack of fiscal stimulus before the new president assumes office in late January. Risk-off moves in US financial markets will weigh on EM. China’s stimulus has peaked and the country has begun a destocking phase in commodities inventories. These factors could add to investor worries reinforcing the pullback in commodities prices and EM currencies.  The key risks to our strategy are that financial markets might look through the lack of US fiscal stimulus in the next several months and ignore the commodity destocking cycle in China. This will be the case if investors instead focus on the US and China’s benign growth outlook over the next nine months. In that regard, we are positive too. Hence, the difficulty is to navigate markets in the near-term. If EM risk assets and currencies prove resilient in the short term, we will upgrade our stance sooner than later. Feature Global risk assets are vulnerable as US Republicans and Democrats have failed to agree on a new round of fiscal stimulus. The odds of enacting significant stimulus legislation – including income support for the unemployed – before the new president assumes office in late January are low. Global risk assets will suffer due to their dependence on continuous government stimulus. The rally since late March has created an air pocket, somewhat disconnecting risk asset prices from their fundamentals. In particular, the gaps between share prices and corporate earnings and between corporate spreads and projected corporate default rates have widened dramatically (Chart I-1). We do not mean that corporate earnings will not recover. Our point is that share prices have risen too far, too fast. Absent a large fiscal stimulus package in the US, risk asset prices will likely experience a meaningful setback. These gaps have been sustained by hopes of continuous fiscal and monetary stimulus. However, absent a large fiscal stimulus package in the US, risk asset prices will likely experience a meaningful setback. We continue recommending EM investors maintain a defensive positioning for now. Asset allocators should remain neutral on EM equities and credit within their respective global portfolios. In the near term, EM currencies will depreciate against the US dollar. We continue shorting a basket of EM currencies versus the euro, CHF and JPY. These DM currencies are likely to experience some, but not substantial, downside versus the greenback. Elevated Expectations Economic growth expectations are rather elevated and investor sentiment is complacent: The Global ZEW expectations index – based on a survey of analysts from banks, insurance companies and finance departments from the corporate sector – is close to an all-time high (Chart I-2). This implies that investors’ and analysts’ growth expectations are substantially inflated.   Chart I-1The Rally Has Been Too Fast, And Gone Too Far Chart I-2Investor Expectations Are Very Elevated   The very low level of the SKEW for US stocks signifies investor complacency (Chart I-3). A low SKEW reading means investors are not pricing in tail risks. Further, the rally since March lows has been reinforced by the substantial speculative trading activities of retail investors. Finally, investors’ net long positions in copper are at their previous cyclical highs (Chart I-4). Chart I-3Low SKEW Signifies That Investors Are Not Ready For Tail Risks Chart I-4Investors Are Very Long Copper   Peak Stimulus? China is approaching peak stimulus. Chart I-5 shows that the projected bond issuance by central and local governments will decline in the coming months. Besides, the loan approval index of the PBoC banking survey has rolled over decisively (Chart I-6). Chart I-5Peak Fiscal Stimulus In China? Chart I-6Peak Credit Growth In China?   A combination of less government bond issuance and less loan origination by banks implies that the credit impulse will roll over in the coming months. This does not mean that the mainland economy will weaken in the coming months. The credit and fiscal spending as well as broad money impulses lead the economy by about nine months (Chart I-7). Therefore, even if the credit and fiscal spending impulse rolls over later this year, the economy will continue improving at least until next spring. Therefore, from a cyclical perspective, we remain positive on China’s business cycle. China’s peak stimulus and destocking phase in commodities could add to investor worries. That said, China-related financial markets have already rallied quite a bit and are likely to experience a pullback as US equity and credit markets sell off. Additionally, after having stockpiled commodities since spring, China has probably entered a commodity destocking cycle. Even though final demand in China will be firming, resource prices will likely relapse in the near term due to diminished mainland imports.  In the US, the massive fiscal stimulus from the CARES Act has led to a surge in household income amidst the worst collapse in economic activity since the Great Depression and the massive layoffs that accompanied it. Government transfers during recessions are typically devised to moderate income decline but not lead to a boom in income as has occurred in the US this year (Chart I-8). Chart I-7China's Business Cycle Will Continue Improving Chart I-8US Household Income Surged Amid Economic Collapse Chart I-9Credit Standards At US Banks Are Tight Without renewed fiscal transfers to households, personal income will erode and consumer spending will weaken. Further, state and local governments are retrenching as their revenue streams have evaporated. Finally, bank lending standards have tightened dramatically (Chart I-9). Crucially, the majority of investors are long risk assets because of expectations of recurring fiscal stimulus and the Federal Reserve’s implicit put on stocks and corporate credit. If one of these two pillars – in this case fiscal stimulus – fades away, some investors might throw in the towel. In EM excluding China, Korea and Taiwan, economic activity is rebounding post lockdowns. However, these economies are also approaching peak stimulus at a time when the level of economic activity in many countries remains very low. In addition, hit by a wave of defaults, banks in these economies are not in a position to originate new loans. Thereby, the transmission mechanism of monetary policy is partially broken. Their central banks’ stimulus have not been fully transmitted to the real economies.  Bottom Line: Risks to the rally in US equities stem from both the lack of fiscal stimulus and political uncertainty following a possibly contested presidential election. Risk-off moves in US financial markets will weigh on EM. China’s peak stimulus and destocking phase in commodities could add to investor worries, reinforcing the pullback in commodities and EM risk assets.  Indicator Review A number of indicators point to downside in EM risk assets and currencies. The advance-decline line for EM equities is below zero stocks (Chart I-10). This points to poor equity breadth in the EM universe. Chart I-10Poor Breadth In EM Equities Chart I-11A Warning Signal For EM Stocks The cross rate of the Swedish koruna versus the Swiss franc (de-trended) has been a good coincident indicator for EM share prices and it points to a selloff (Chart I-11). The implied volatility index for EM currencies is rising (shown inverted in the chart), pointing to a relapse in EM exchange rates versus the US dollar (Chart I-12, top panel). Chart I-12Red Flags For EM Equities And Currencies Chart I-13Are Commodities In A Soft Spot? Platinum prices are gapping down. This rings alarm bells for EM currencies as the two are strongly correlated (Chart I-12, bottom panel).  Chinese steel rebar futures, global steel stocks and Glencore’s share price – a global bellwether for commodities – have all begun relapsing, even before Trump’s withdrawal from the fiscal stimulus talks (Chart I-13). Also, the latter has failed to break above its 200-day moving average. The same is true for oil prices. We read such a technical configuration as a telltale sign that these commodity plays have not entered a bull market and remain vulnerable. In emerging Asia, high-yield corporate credit’s relative performance versus investment-grade corporates has rolled over at its previous highs (Chart I-14). In the past several years, the failure to break above this technical resistance level was followed by a material selloff in EM credit and equity markets. Bottom Line: The majority of indicators for EM risk assets and currencies are presently flashing red. Investment Considerations The rally in share prices and drop in the US dollar yesterday following Trump’s cancellation of stimulus talks is puzzling. We expect the market to realize that the odds of considerable fiscal stimulus with meaningful income support for the unemployed is low until the new president assumes office in late January. We believe large and recurring US fiscal stimulus packages are very likely following the elections, favoring reflation and inflation strategies in the medium and long run, and weighing on the US dollar. That was the basis upon which we turned bearish on the US dollar on July 9 and upgraded EM stocks from underweight to neutral on July 30. However, in the near term, the lack of fiscal stimulus favors the deflation trade: a bet on lower growth and lower inflation. If EM risk assets and currencies prove resilient in the near term, we will upgrade our stance sooner than later. If the markets agree with our assessment that US growth will meaningfully disappoint without fiscal stimulus, not only will global share prices drop but also US inflation expectations will decline, US real rates will rise and the US dollar will rebound (Chart I-15). This would produce a bearish cocktail for EM currencies, credit markets and stocks in the near term. Chart I-14A Message From Emerging Asian Credit Markets Chart I-15A Reset In US Inflation Expectations, Real Rates And US Dollar Is Overdue   The key risks to our strategy are that financial markets might look through the lack of US fiscal stimulus in the next several months and ignore the commodity destocking cycle in China. It will be the case if investors focus on the US and China’s benign growth outlook over the next nine months. In that regard, we are positive too. Hence, the difficulty is to navigate markets in the near-term. If EM risk assets and currencies prove resilient in the near term, we will upgrade our stance sooner than later. Stay tuned. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Strategy For Philippine Markets xChart II-1Philippine Equities: Relative & Absolute Performance Our underweight stance on Philippine stocks has played out well as this bourse has massively underperformed the EM equity benchmark (Chart II-1, top panel). Notably, in absolute terms, Philippine share prices look disconcerting as they have stalled at their long-term moving average (Chart II-1, bottom panel). We continue to recommend an underweight position in this bourse for dedicated EM portfolios and a cautious stance for absolute-return investors. In terms of the currency market, our short position on the Philippine peso has not played out as the exchange rate has been very resilient. We are removing the PHP from our short EM currency basket by closing the short PHP/long the euro, CHF and JPY trade with a 1% loss. The key reason for the peso’s strength has been the rapidly improving current account balance (Chart II-2). The latter has moved into a surplus due to the collapse in domestic demand and imports as well as ballooning remittances. In brief, the balance of payment surplus has been so large that the currency appreciated against the US dollar even though the central bank accumulated large amounts of foreign exchange reserves.   Such strong remittance inflows are probably due to returning expatriate Filipino workers from Gulf countries, bringing their entire savings with them. If so, such remittance inflow will not reoccur. Nevertheless, the trade and current account deficits are unlikely to widen rapidly because imports will stay subdued - due to weak domestic demand - and exports will be supported by electronics exports (Chart II-3). The latter make up 57% of total goods exports. Chart II-2Current Account Balance Is In Surplus Chart II-3Philippine Exports Are Recovering Commercial banks in the Philippines have tightened their lending standards meaningfully. On domestic demand, the post lockdown recovery will be moderate and slow and corporate profits will disappoint: Chart II-4Decelerating Bank Loan Growth The country has not been handling the pandemic well. The health system is showing signs of stress and the authorities have been forced to continuously roll out new lockdowns and social distancing measures. This will prevent a strong revival in business activity in an economy where consumer spending represents 70% of GDP. The Philippine government has unleashed  fiscal stimulus packages of about 4% of GDP to counter the pandemic-induced recession. With the fiscal year nearing its end, the cyclical growth outlook will depend on next year’s budget. Next year’s government spending will likely be 5% higher than the original 2020 budget, i.e., excluding extraordinary stimulus measures from both 2020 and 2021 budgets. Therefore, the 2021 budget is unlikely to be enough to support growth materially. Besides, even though the government is trying to roll out more stimulus for next year, its concerns about the size of budget deficit and its financing will limit stimulus. Crucially, bank loan growth is decelerating sharply (Chart II-4). Commercial banks will be reluctant to originate much new credit in this weak growth environment. In brief, the negative credit impulse will offset the fiscal stimulus. The Philippine central bank has been very aggressive in its measures. It has unleashed an unprecedented QE program – buying government bonds en masse – and has also injected liquidity into the banking system and cut its policy rate by 175 basis points (Chart II-5). Yet, the monetary transmission mechanism has been broken in the Philippines and the monetary easing has not benefited the real economy. In particular, commercial banks in the Philippines have tightened their lending standards meaningfully. In turn, banks’ lending rates have not dropped.  As with many other EMs, this is occurring because Philippine banks want to protect or increase their net interest rate margins at a time when they are witnessing mounting non-performing loans, rising provisions, and tanking profits (Chart II-6). Chart II-5Philippine: Central Bank Is Doing QE Chart II-6Banks Are Facing Mounting NPLs   Bottom Line: Continue underweighting Philippine stocks in an EM equity portfolio. Within this bourse, we are taking profit on the short position in property stocks. This recommendation has generated a 10% gain since its initiation on November 1, 2018. As to fixed-income markets, consistent with our view change on the currency we are upgrading Philippine sovereign credit from underweight to overweight and domestic bonds from underweight to neutral. Ayman Kawtharani Editor/Strategist ayman@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
BCA Research's China Investment Strategy service remains overweight Chinese domestic and investable stocks in a global portfolio in the coming six to nine months. China offshore cyclical stock prices have been driven by hefty valuations since 2016, mostly…
When looking at multiples like the price-to-book or price-to-earnings ratios, it is easy to paint the S&P 500 as exceptionally expensive compared to other major equity markets. However, the picture becomes murkier if we take into account growth…
In the Tuesday morning session of our BCA Research Annual investment Conference, Professor Larry Summers mentioned that the disconnect between stock prices and economic activity was a consequence of Secular Stagnation. Secular Stagnation causes a rise in…
Dear Client, Next week I will present our outlook on China’s economic recovery, the direction of economic policy and financial markets for the rest of the year and beyond in two live webcasts. The webcasts will take place next Wednesday, October 14 at 10:00AM EDT (English) and Friday, October 16 at 9:00 AM Beijing/HK/Taipei time, 12:00 PM Australian Eastern time (Mandarin). Best regards, Jing Sima, China Strategist   Feature We have changed the format of our monthly China Macro And Market Review to deliver our messages more concisely and effectively. This week’s report consists of charts that are the most market relevant. Many charts are either self-explanatory or convey a message with brief comments. These charts present macro fundamentals as well as price signals and valuation profiles of China’s financial markets. Our key observations and investment conclusions are as follows: Recent economic data points to a broadening economic recovery in China. The demand side continues to accelerate, and its pace has outstripped production for three consecutive months. Both external and domestic demand measures jumped to above the 50 boom-bust threshold in September’s manufacturing PMI. Service PMI saw the largest monthly uptick since 2013. Credit expansion remained robust through August. Medium- and long-term bank loans to corporates have partially offset the dwindling short-term loans since May, suggesting that near-term liquidity constraints among corporates may be easing. Moreover, an improving bank loan structure will help to boost corporates’ Capex investments. As noted in last month’s China Macro and Market Review,1 the consistent outperformance in production recovery relative to demand in H1 this year has led to an inventory buildup. The ongoing inventory destocking has impeded China’s imports of major commodities and led to a weakening of commodity prices in the past two weeks. The continued destocking of commodities suggests that China’s demand for commodities will remain soft into Q4. Beyond Q4, however, the acceleration in both domestic and external demand should provide solid support to the ongoing economic recovery. Local governments still hold a substantial amount of unspent proceeds from special-purpose bonds issued earlier this year; the funds must be invested in infrastructure projects. We expect China’s imports of industrial raw materials to bounce back in Q1 2021 once the current inventory destocking runs its course. We remain overweight Chinese domestic and investable stocks in a global portfolio in the coming six to nine months. Even though Chinese share prices have run ahead of the country’s business cycle and have priced in an earnings recovery, they are still less overbought than their global peers. China’s economic recovery remains solid compared with other economies, thanks to its successful containment of the domestic COVID-19 outbreak. In absolute terms, we think Chinese stocks still have ample upside potential, as both monetary and fiscal stances remain historically accommodative and the economic recovery is accelerating. Recent setbacks in onshore and offshore stocks were due to the ripple effects from global equity selloffs. Escalating Sino-US frictions have had a very limited effect on China’s overall market because US sanctions are mostly targeted at individual technology companies. There is an elevated risk of a near-term correction in global equity prices, particularly in the next four weeks leading up to November’s US presidential election. In our view, these corrections will provide good buying opportunities. Both Chinese government bonds and onshore corporate bonds remain attractive in a global fixed-income portfolio, based on their higher yields and better risk-reward profile relative to their global peers. Within China’s onshore bond portfolio, returns on corporate bonds have consistently outperformed their duration-matched government bonds. We continue to recommend onshore corporate bond positions in the next 6-12 months.   Qingyun Xu, CFA Senior Analyst qingyunx@bcaresearch.com Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com   Chart 1A Widening Economic Recovery Chart 2Credit Expansion Will Likely Peak In October, But Its Impetus For The Economic Recovery Will Continue Through 1H2021   Chart 3ALocal Governments Still Have Plenty Of Unspent Fiscal Firepower The divergence between total social financing and M2 growth during the past two months was mainly due to the lack of synchronization between government bond issuances and fiscal spending. Bond issuances are included in social financing and have pushed up fiscal deposits. Fiscal deposits do not derive M2 until they are eventually transferred into fiscal spending. Therefore, we expect that M2 growth will catch up in a few months. Most of the proceeds from government bond issuance have not been dispensed. Local governments have more than enough firepower to continue to support infrastructure spending in the next two quarters. Chart 3BChina's Bank Loan Structure Is Improving Chart 3CLoan Demand And Loan Approvals Have Revitalized Chart 4AChina's Resilient And Competitive Export Sector Has Performed Well During The Pandemic-Induced Global Recession... Chart 4B...And Will Benefit From A World-wide Economic Recovery Chart 5Ongoing Inventory Destocking Will Likely Continue To Impede China's Imports Of Commodities Into Q4 Chart 6A Faster Recovery In Demand In Downstream Industries Should Help To Revive The Manufacturing Sector   Chart 7AMounting Post-Pandemic Demand In The Property Market Has Invited Tighter Scrutiny From Chinese Authorities... Chart 7B...But Near-Term Real Estate Construction Should Still Hold Up As noted in last month’s China Macro And Market Review,2 recently tightened financing regulations on real estate development3 are not game changers. Historically, the government’s financial rules and land sales have not had a strong positive correlation with real estate investment growth. So far, Chinese authorities have kept property policies flexible, allowing most local governments to have their own housing policies. We expect property restrictions will tighten on tier-one and tier-two cities that are facing upward pressure on housing prices. Housing demand in smaller cities, however, remains soft and may see increased policy support next year.  Chinese policymakers will continue to keep an eye on real estate speculation. In the near term, however, real estate developers need to complete their existing projects, which will support construction activities into H1 next year.   Chart 8AHousehold Consumption Continues To Recover Chart 8BRising Employment Should Further Lift Consumption   Chart 9AChina's Offshore And Onshore Forward Earnings Have Ticked Up Chart 9BValuations In A Shares Are Not Too Extreme   Chart 9CChinese Stocks Are Not Expensive Compared With Global Benchmarks Chart 10AChina's Cyclical Stocks Are Advancing Against The Backdrop Of Improving Economic Fundamentals China offshore cyclical stock prices have been driven by hefty valuations since 2016, mostly because investable cyclicals are heavily weighted in high-flying tech stocks. Chinese tech stock prices will likely be extremely volatile in the next one to three months. We expect a tougher stance on China from the US in the next four weeks leading up to the presidential election. Furthermore, even if Trump does not get reelected, the “lame duck” President may still impose sanctions on China before he leaves the White House in January 2021. We are staying the course with our constructive cyclical view on Chinese stocks, even though the market will be more volatile during the next few months. Chinese tech company stocks have been shaken by negative surprises relating to frictions with the US.  However, investors also cheer on even the slightest easing of tensions between the two countries.4 We expect this risk-on and -off sentiment to intensify through Q4. Onshore cyclical stocks have consistently underperformed defensives, driven by a downtrend in relative earnings per share. However, improvements in economic fundamentals of late suggest that the uptick in domestic cyclicals may be strengthening. We remain long on onshore and offshore consumer discretionary and materials relative to their respective broad market indexes. The investment calls are in place until policy dividends on those sectors subside, which we expect in mid-2021. Chart 10BChina's Equity Sectors In Perspective Chart 10CChina's Equity Sectors In Perspective Chart 11AA Solid Economic Recovery, A Relatively Stable Currency Exchange Rate And Higher Yields, All Have Made China's Stocks and Bonds Attractive To Foreign Investors Chart 11BChinese Bonds Offer A Better Risk-Reward Profile In An Ultra-Low Yield Global Environment Table 1China Macro Data Summary Table 2China Financial Market Performance Summary   Footnotes 1Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "China Macro And Market Review," dated September 9, 2020, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 2Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "China Macro And Market Review," dated September 9, 2020, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 3China's widely circulated but unofficial "three red lines" policy sets limits on bank borrowings: a 70% ceiling on a developer’s debt-to-asset ratio after excluding advance receipts; a 100% cap on the net debt-to-equity ratio; and a requirement that short-term borrowing does not exceed cash reserves, according to S&P Global Ratings. 4Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Sticking With Chinese “Old Economy” Stocks In A Widening Tech War," dated August 12, 2020, available at cis.bcaresearch.com Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
BCA Research holds a favorable cyclical view on foreign stocks relative to US equities. A common question from our clients is: where do EM equities stand within that ranking? Valuations are one angle we can use to approach this question. While EM stocks…
We have shown in recent research that the fourth year of presidential cycles finds the SPX ending the year on average in the green with a calendar return in the high single digits. Peering back in 2016 is instructive as that presidential election cycle year was in some ways similar to the current one. The economy, in particular, was fighting off a manufacturing recession that spread and infected the services sectors as the vast majority of S&P GICS1 sectors contracted profits and more importantly revenues. The chart shows a number of asset classes and compares 2016 with 2020. The 10-year US Treasury yield appears poised to rebound significantly, especially if Congress passes a fresh fiscal package that aides the parts of the economy that need the stimulus checks most. Fiscal easing uncertainty remains a thorny issue across different markets and if history is an accurate guide, the SPX could glide lower into the November election before rallying into year-end. Bottom Line: We are in the tail end of the equity market correction and as election and fiscal policy uncertainties recede they will pave the way for a robust SPX rally. ​​​​​​​
Not so fast, according to BCA Research's US Equity Strategy service, buybacks are down but not out. While financials have been weighing heavily on the S&P buybacks index, we would not write off the positive impact of equity retirement, especially in a…