Financial Markets
Highlights Duration: The bond market’s bearish trend remains intact, but suffered a hiccup last week as some economic data disappointed. Our sense is that the worst of the global growth slowdown is over, but a rebound in our preferred global growth indicators – Global Manufacturing PMI, US ISM Manufacturing PMI and CRB Raw Industrials index – is necessary to push bond yields higher. We expect that such a rebound will transpire in the coming months. The Credit Cycle & Inflation: Low inflation expectations will keep monetary policy accommodative for the next 6-12 months. This justifies a positive outlook for spread product excess returns. Eventually, inflation will return and force the Fed to adopt a more restrictive stance. This will lead to the end of the credit cycle. We will get more defensive on spread product when long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates move above 2.3%. Municipal Bonds: The main issues facing municipal bonds are long-run in nature, mostly related to underfunded state & local government pensions. These concerns are propping up yield ratios at the long-end of the muni curve, but aren’t likely to cause a wave of ratings downgrades until revenue growth slows during the next downturn. For the time being, investors can grab an attractive after-tax yield premium in long-maturity munis. Hiccups Judging by the bond market, recession fears appear to have peaked in late August. Since then, the Treasury index has lost 2.1% versus a position in cash and the 2/10 yield curve is 23 bps steeper (Chart 1). Curve steepening has also occurred via the real yield curve, while the breakeven inflation curve is moderately flatter, consistent with our expectations.1 However, this bearish bond market trend suffered a set-back last week. The 10-year yield fell 10 bps, back down to 1.84%, and the 2-year yield fell 7 bps to 1.61%. The move was driven by an increase in skepticism about the US and China’s “phase 1” trade deal and some mixed economic data. Both industrial production growth and capacity utilization remain well above their 2016 lows, consistent with stronger PMIs. October’s Industrial Production report was the worst of last week’s data releases. Production declined 0.8% on the month and capacity utilization fell from 77.5% to 76.7% (Chart 2). The data were significantly influenced by the General Motors strike, but the index still fell 0.5% with motor vehicles and parts stripped out. In our prior discussions of the divergence between “hard” and “soft” economic data, we pointed to relatively strong industrial production as a reason to expect a snapback in depressed manufacturing PMIs.2 This month’s weak print challenges that view, though both industrial production growth and capacity utilization remain well above their 2016 lows, consistent with stronger PMIs. The New York Fed’s Manufacturing PMI also came in roughly flat last week, and continues to point to a rebound in the national index (Chart 2, bottom panel). Chart 1Bumps On The Road ##br##To Higher Yields Chart 2Disappointing Data, But Well ##br##Above 2016 Lows October’s retail sales were also released last week, and we continue to observe a wide divergence between strong consumer spending growth and falling consumer confidence (Chart 3). As with the divergence between industrial production and the manufacturing PMI, we suspect that negative sentiment about the US/China trade war has unduly depressed consumer and business sentiment. Sentiment should rebound if trade tensions ease in the coming months, as we expect. Finally, we note that the CRB Raw Industrials index remains downbeat (Chart 4). We should continue to view the recent increase in bond yields as tenuous until it is confirmed by a rebound in this global growth bellwether. Chart 3Retail Sales Still Strong Chart 4Waiting On The CRB Index To Rebound Bottom Line: The bond market’s bearish trend remains intact, but suffered a hiccup last week as some economic data disappointed. Our sense is that the worst of the global growth slowdown is over, but a rebound in our preferred global growth indicators – Global Manufacturing PMI, US ISM Manufacturing PMI and CRB Raw Industrials index – is necessary to push bond yields higher. We expect that such a rebound will transpire in the coming months. Inflation Will End The Cycle … But Not Anytime Soon As global growth improves during the next few months and recession fears fade into the background, discussion will once again turn toward questions about how much longer the credit cycle can run, and what will ultimately bring it to an end. On the first question, we find the slope of the yield curve to be an excellent indicator of the age of the cycle. Specifically, we like to split each cycle into three phases based on the slope of the 3-year/10-year yield curve: 3 Phase 1 starts at the end of the last recession and ends when the 3/10 slope flattens to below 50 bps. Phase 2 encompasses the period when the slope is between 0 bps and 50 bps. Phase 3 begins when the 3/10 slope inverts and ends at the start of the next recession. We expect Phase 2 to persist for some time given that inflation expectations remain downbeat. Table 1 shows that corporate bond excess returns are highest in Phase 1, when the yield curve is steep and spreads are tightening quickly. Excess returns tend to remain positive in Phase 2, but are much lower. Excess returns don’t usually turn negative until after the yield curve inverts and we enter Phase 3. Table 1Corporate Bond Performance During The Three Phases Of The Yield Curve Cycle Though some segments of the yield curve inverted in August, we do not think that the cycle has transitioned into Phase 3. The inversion was quite brief, and the measure we employ in our analysis – the monthly average of daily closing values of the 3-year/10-year slope – never broke below zero. The 3-year/10-year slope is currently +23 bps. We expect the current Phase 2 environment to persist for some time, and consequently, corporate bonds will deliver small positive excess returns relative to Treasuries. The reason why we expect Phase 2 to persist for some time is that inflation expectations remain downbeat (Chart 5). Both the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates are well below the 2.3%-2.5% range that is consistent with the Fed’s target. This means that the Fed has every incentive to maintain an accommodative monetary policy until inflation expectations are re-anchored. An accommodative policy stance will prevent the yield curve from inverting for any sustained period of time. Chart 5The Re-Anchoring Process Will Take Time The upshot is that a re-anchoring of TIPS breakeven inflation rates will be an important signal for us to get more defensive on corporate credit. When the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates move above 2.3%, the Fed will have less incentive to maintain an accommodative stance. The pace of tightening will likely quicken, leading to a sustained curve inversion and a transition into Phase 3 of the cycle. How Long Until Inflation Expectations Are Re-Anchored? Given our framework for thinking about the age of the cycle, the big question for our corporate credit call is: How long until inflation expectations are re-anchored? We have previously demonstrated that inflation expectations adapt to changes in the actual inflation data, and that this adaptive process occurs very slowly.4 Note that our Adaptive Expectations Model puts fair value for the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate at 1.9%. This is above the current rate of 1.63%, but still well below our 2.3%-2.5% target range (Chart 5, bottom panel). The gradual nature of the adaptive process means that actual core inflation will probably have to overshoot the Fed’s 2% target for a period of time before long-dated expectations are firmly re-anchored. With that in mind, we are still a long way away from inflation posing a problem for the credit cycle. Core CPI and core PCE inflation are running at year-over-year rates of 2.3% and 1.7%, respectively, both slightly below levels consistent with the Fed’s target (Chart 6).5 Trimmed mean measures are slightly higher and less volatile. They currently suggest that core inflation will remain in a slow and steady uptrend going forward. Any durable increase in core inflation will likely occur via the Core Services (ex. shelter and medical care) component. Looking at the main components of core inflation, we see some reason to expect consumer price acceleration to cool in the coming months. Recent inflation gains have come mostly via the Core Goods component (Chart 7). This component tracks non-oil import prices with a long lag, and import prices have already rolled over. Meanwhile, shelter is the largest component of core inflation and we expect it will remain well supported in the coming months. The National Multifamily Housing Council’s Apartment Market Tightness Index has been in “net tightening” territory for two consecutive quarters (Chart 7, bottom panel). An above-50% reading from this index tends to coincide with rising shelter inflation. Chart 6Expect Core Inflation To Rise Slowly Chart 7A Closer Look At The Core CPI Components Ultimately, any durable increase in core inflation will likely occur via the Core Services (ex. shelter and medical care) component. This component has been relatively stable during the past few months (Chart 7, panel 3). Another interesting dynamic to monitor when assessing how long it will take for inflation to return is the labor share of national income. Chart 8 shows that the wage acceleration seen during the past few years has come mostly at the expense of corporate profit margins, and has not yet been significantly passed through to higher consumer prices. This is typical late-cycle behavior, and at some point firms will need to start raising prices in order to protect margins. Chart 8Where Will The Labor Share Peak? If we use the past few cycles as a guide, we see that the labor share of income peaked at above 70%. If this is an accurate road-map for the current cycle, then it means that firms can stomach quite a bit more margin compression, and it could be a long time before inflation pressures emerge. However, some recent research suggests that the labor share of income might peak at a lower level this cycle than in the past.6 This research documents that many industries are increasingly dominated by a small number of “superstar firms”. These firms have greater pricing power and might be able to sustain higher profit margins indefinitely. This would mean that inflationary pressures could re-emerge at a lower labor share of national income than in previous cycles. Bottom Line: Low inflation expectations will keep monetary policy accommodative for the next 6-12 months. This justifies a positive outlook for spread product excess returns. Eventually, inflation will return and force the Fed to adopt a more restrictive stance. This will lead to the end of the credit cycle. We will get more defensive on spread product when long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates move above 2.3%. Strong Revenue Growth Supports Munis We continue to recommend an overweight allocation to municipal bonds due to attractive yield ratios, particularly for long maturities, and steady state & local government revenue growth. Chart 9 shows that Aaa Municipal / Treasury yield ratios were quite low earlier this year, but have increased significantly during the past few months. Yield ratios are above average pre-crisis levels for maturities of 10-years and greater. Against that back-drop of attractive valuations, credit quality trends are also supportive. Municipal bond ratings upgrades are outpacing downgrades (Chart 10), and history suggests that will continue until state & local government revenue growth slows. On that front, the three main sources of state & local government revenue are all growing at strong rates, a trend that should continue as long as the economic recovery is maintained. Municipal bond ratings upgrades are outpacing downgrades, and history suggests that will continue until state & local government revenue growth slows. Of course, many state & local governments face long-run credit constraints, mostly related to underfunded pension obligations. This is almost certainly the reason why yield ratios for long-maturity bonds are so attractive. Crucially, these long-run issues will not be exposed until revenue growth slows during the next economic downturn, and investors have an opportunity to capture the attractive yield premium in the meantime. Chart 9Great Value At The Long End Chart 10Revenue Growth Will Remain Strong State governments have also made progress shoring up their balance sheets during the past few years. The National Association of State Budget Officers calculates that the overall state & local government total balance has returned back to 2006 levels, while rainy day funds have been built up considerably (Chart 11). Chart 11States Are Growing Rainy Day Funds Bottom Line: The main issues facing municipal bonds are long-run in nature, mostly related to underfunded state & local government pensions. These concerns are propping up yield ratios at the long-end of the muni curve, but aren’t likely to cause a wave of ratings downgrades until revenue growth slows during the next downturn. For the time being, investors can grab an attractive after-tax yield premium in long-maturity munis. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Position For Modest Curve Steepening”, dated October 29, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Crisis Of Confidence”, dated October 22, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 For more details on our analysis of the phases of the cycle based on the slope of the yield curve please see US Bond Strategy Special Report, “2019 Key Views: Implications For US Fixed Income”, dated December 11, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Adaptive Expectations In The TIPS Market”, dated November 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 The Fed targets 2% PCE inflation, which is historically consistent with CPI inflation between 2.4% and 2.5%. 6 https://economics.mit.edu/files/12979 Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Dear Client, Instead of our regular weekly report next Monday, this Friday November 22, you will receive our flagship publication “The Bank Credit Analyst” with our annual investment outlook. Our regular publication service will resume on December 2 with our high-conviction calls for 2020. Kind regards, Anastasios Avgeriou Highlights Portfolio Strategy Weakening supply/demand dynamics, pricing pressures, macro headwinds and pricey valuations are all warning that REITs are headed south. Global capex blues and the ongoing manufacturing recession, the resilient US dollar and weak operating metrics all confirm that an underweight stance is still warranted in the S&P communications equipment index. Recent Changes There are no changes to our portfolio this week. Table 1 Feature The S&P 500 made fresh all-time highs again last week, as investors focused on hopes of a US/China trade deal and continued to ignore negative data/news at their own peril. Domestically, unemployment insurance claims jumped to the highest level since June, and none of the major market and industry groups showed a gain in output on a month-over-month basis in October according to the latest Fed industrial production release. Internationally, Korean exports remain in the doldrums, Chinese data releases were weak across the board, and the mighty US dollar is making multi-decade highs versus a slew of EM currencies. Chart 1Disquieting Gap All of this begs the question is global growth going to recover and aid the equity market grow into its lofty valuation? Our indicators suggest that a definitive earnings trough is now pushed out to Q2/2020. Thus, equity market caution is still warranted. Given all the recent equity market euphoria, we feel more and more like “the lone calf standing on the desolate, dangerous, wolf-patrolled prairie of contrary opinion” as – arguably the greatest trader of all time – Jesse Livermore mused roughly a century ago. Share buybacks have been a key pillar underpinning stocks since the GFC averaging roughly $500bn/annum since 2010. But, last year equity retirement jumped to nearly $1tn/annum. That is clearly unsustainable, warning that there is a disconnect between the S&P 500 and already steeply decelerating share buybacks. Our equity retirement estimate for next year is a return to the 10-year average, signaling that the market may hit a significant air pocket (top panel, Chart 1). Another perplexing recent phenomenon has been the lack of buying on margin that typically confirms SPX breakouts. While this episode may be similar to the 2015/16 episode, if margin debt does not recover soon it will exert downward pull on the broad market (bottom panel, Chart 1). Turning over to earnings, revenues, margins and the forward multiple is instructive. Turning over to earnings, revenues, margins and the forward multiple is instructive. Chart 2 highlights the S&P 500 earnings growth surprise factor. In more detail, this IBES/Refinitiv data show how accurate the sell side analysts’ 12-month forward EPS forecasts have been over time: a reading above zero implies the analyst community was too timid, while a fall below zero signals analysts were too optimistic. Chart 2Unhinged From The EPS Accuracy Signal Equity market momentum moves with the ebb and flow of this factor and given the still downbeat message both from our SPX profit model (please refer to our recent webcast slides) and our simple liquidity indicator (please see Chart 4 from last week’s publication), we doubt 10% profit growth is even plausible for 2020. On the margin front, all four key profit margin drivers are on the brink of turning from tailwinds to headwinds as we recently highlighted in our “Peak Margins?” Special Report. Revenue growth is also at risk of a standstill. Domestic producer prices are deflating, and the ISM prices paid index has been clobbered. German, Japanese, Korean and Chinese wholesale prices are contracting and the OECD’s composite PPI measure is also sinking, suggesting that final demand is anemic at best. Under such a dire global pricing backdrop, it will be challenging for SPX sales to sustain their positive momentum, especially if the greenback remains well bid (Chart 3). Chart 3Top Line Growth Troubles Forward multiples have slingshot higher despite a near 40bps increase in the 10-year yield since Labor Day. When the discount rate rises the multiple should come in and vice versa. Thus, we would lean against the recent spike in the S&P 500 forward P/E (10-year yield shown inverted, Chart 4). This week we are updating our negative views on a niche high-yielding sector and a tech subgroup. Finally, while sifting through market internals, we recently stumbled upon the GICS2 S&P consumer services index. Digging deeper into services was revealing. This relative share price ratio has gapped down of late. One of the reasons is that the services component of the personal consumption expenditure (PCE) data is decelerating (PCE services shown advanced, middle panel, Chart 5). The ISM non-manufacturing survey is also an excellent leading indicator of the S&P consumer services index, and warns that things will likely get worse before they get better (bottom panel, Chart 5). Chart 4Lofty Valuations Chart 5Market Internals Signal: Sit This One Out This week we are updating our negative views on a niche high-yielding sector and a tech subgroup. Getting Real With Real Estate We would refrain from chasing high yielding real estate stocks higher, and would rather avoid them altogether at the current juncture. Similar to utilities, REITs have come to the forefront lately as they have populated the top return sector ranks. However, real estate stocks, which have split out of the financials sector, are a niche GICS1 sector with a mere 3% market capitalization weight in the SPX, and have not driven the S&P 500 to all-time highs. Instead, tech stocks have, owing to their 23% market capitalization weight, as we have shown in recent research.1 Importantly, several key factors continue to signal that investors should shed public market real estate exposure. Namely, weakening supply/demand dynamics, pricing pressures, macro headwinds and still pricey valuations (primarily rock bottom cap rates) are all firing warning shots. The commercial real estate (CRE) sector is a bubble candidate that exemplifies this cycle’s excesses. As we have highlighted in the past, CRE prices sit at roughly two standard deviations above both the historical time trend and the previous cycle’s peak (not shown).2 Worryingly, CRE demand is waning. Not only our proprietary real estate demand indicator has sunk recently, but also the latest Fed Senior Loan Officer survey revealed that demand for CRE loans remains feeble (third & bottom panels, Chart 6). Simultaneously, fewer bankers are willing to extend CRE credit according to the same quarterly Fed survey (Chart 7). This tightening backdrop is weighing on CRE credit growth and CRE prices (second panel, Chart 6). In fact, absent credit growth providing the necessary fuel to sustain the CRE price inflation frenzy, there are rising odds that investors pull the plug on REITs (top panel, Chart 7). Chart 6Demand Ails Chart 7Time To... Already, occupancy rates have crested and there are increasing anecdotes of credit quality deterioration. As a result, CRE rents are also failing to keep up with inflation which eats into relative cash flow growth prospects (Chart 8). The supply side build up tilts this delicate balance further into deficit. Non-residential construction shows no signs of abating, with multi-family housing starts still running at an historically high rate of roughly 400K/annum (Chart 9). Such relentless overbuilding sows the seeds of the eventual felling in CRE prices and rents, which should also dent the S&P real estate sector. Chart 8...Lighten Up On Real Estate Chart 9Supply Build Up Is Deflationary Meanwhile, interest rate related headwinds will also weigh on this high-yielding sector in coming quarters, especially if the selloff in the bond market gains steam as BCA’s fixed income strategists continue to expect. While in the 2000s REITs were positively correlated with the 10-year Treasury yield, since 2010 this relationship has flipped and is now a tight inverse correlation (Chart 10). Chart 10Rising Yields = Sell REITs Finally, our proprietary Valuation Indicator (VI) has enjoyed an impressive run since the 2017 trough and despite the recent relative selloff remains in overvalued territory. Our Technical Indicator (TI) hit a wall of late near one standard deviation above the historical mean and has only partially unwound the overbought reading since the early 2018 bottom. If our thesis pans out, we expect heightened selling pressure to weigh further on our VI and TI (Chart 11). Chart 11Still Too Pricey Bottom Line: We reiterate our underweight rating in the S&P real estate sector. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG – S5RLST – AMT, PLD, CCI, SPG, EQIX, WELL, PSA, EQR, AVB, SBAC, O, DLR, WY, VTR, ESS, BXP, CBRE, ARE, PEAK, MAA, UDR, EXR, DRE, HST, REG, VNO, IRM, FRT, KIM, AIV, SLG, MAC . Lost Signal The communications equipment rally stalled early in the summer and has since morphed into a bear market. We are sticking with our underweight recommendation, especially given a darkening profit outlook for this niche tech sub-group. Bellwether CSCO’s latest guidance was weak and confirmed that this capex-laden tech sub-index is in for a rough ride. Worryingly, CSCO’s key enterprise segment has no pulse. Historically, this data series has been positively correlated with telecom carrier capital outlays and the current message is grim (second panel, Chart 12). Tack on the ongoing manufacturing recession with CEOs canceling/postponing capital spending plans and the outlook dims further for the revenue prospects of communications equipment vendors (third & bottom panels, Chart 12). Chart 12Heed The CSCO Warning Adding insult to injury, the US/China trade war is further complicating the picture. The ongoing tariffs have exacerbated the global growth slowdown and global capex plans have come under intense scrutiny. The IFO’s World Economic Outlook capex intentions survey has plunged, warning that global exports of telecom gear have ample downside (Chart 13). Chart 13Global Capex Blues Chart 14US Dollar The Deflator The greenback’s resilience is also sapping business purchasing power, especially in the emerging markets, denting final-demand. Therefore, the US dollar’s appreciation robs communications equipment manufacturers’ pricing power, makes their goods more expensive in the global market place, and as a consequence forces market share losses on them (Chart 14). The greenback’s resilience is also sapping business purchasing power, especially in the emerging markets, denting final-demand. The implication of weakening pricing power is that profits will likely underwhelm. Currently, the sell-side is penciling in roughly 10% EPS growth for the S&P communications equipment index over and above the SPX in the next twelve months. This is a tall order and we would lean against such extreme analyst optimism (bottom panel, Chart 15). Operating metrics are quickly losing steam, another harbinger of profit ails for this tech sub-group. In more detail, our productivity proxy has taken a steep turn for the worse and industry executives have also put investment projects on hold (middle panel, Chart 15). Moreover, the communication equipment new orders-to-inventories ratio is contracting and industry resource utilization is probing multi-year lows, according to the Fed’s latest industrial production release. Under such a backdrop, relative top line growth is on track to level off and likely flirt with the contraction zone (Chart 16). Chart 15Operating Metric... Chart 16...Dysphoria Netting it all out, global capex blues, the resilient US dollar and weak operating metrics all confirm that an underweight stance is still warranted in the S&P communications equipment index. Bottom Line: Continue to avoid the S&P communications equipment index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG – S5COMM – CSCO, JNPR, MSI, ANET, FFIV. Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Insight Report, “Deciphering Sector Returns” dated August 30, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Special Report, “10 Most FAQs From The Road” dated April 8, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Stay neutral cyclicals over defensives (downgrade alert) Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps (Stop 10%)
Highlights A few indicators suggest that global growth will soon bottom. The bottoming process could prove volatile, but the duration of the slowdown suggests a V-shaped rather than U-shaped recovery. The dollar should weaken as higher-beta cyclical currencies rebound from deeply oversold levels. Sell the DXY index at 100. Aggressive short USD bets can be played via the NOK and SEK. The euro is also a natural beneficiary. Our favorite dollar-neutral bets include long AUD/CAD, SEK/NZD, GBP/JPY and short CAD/NOK. Feature The biggest question facing global investors is whether growth will pick up next year, and if so, what the durability of such a rebound will be. Any additional growth hiccups will cause the dollar to soar, and this week’s disappointing credit and industrial production numbers from China are a sober reminder that we are not out of the woods yet. Nevertheless, we believe a pickup in demand, especially emanating from outside the US, is forthcoming. This will favor more pro-cyclical currencies. Cyclical sectors of the equity market are already sniffing a growth rebound, and the dollar is off its peak for the year (Chart I-1). Historically, these have been good reflation indicators, especially when they are sending the same message. This is also a reminder to focus on where economic data will be six to 12 months from now rather than trade on yesterday’s news. Chart I-1The Dollar Tends To Weaken When Cyclicals Are Outperforming Policy shifts affect the economy with a lag, with a bottoming process that can be volatile and/or protracted. However, the duration of the current slowdown suggests we might be entering a V-shaped rather than U- or W-shaped recovery. Investors can track a few indicators to help calibrate the probability of the different scenarios playing out. The Message From Economic Variables There are a swath of economic variables one can follow to track the health of an economy, but we tend to focus on purchasing managers’ indices. This is because they are timely and have a good track record of confirming cyclical shifts in the economy. The problem is that for the most part, they tend to be coincident rather than leading indicators. Gauging the magnitude and duration of the cycle is also important to avoid false starts. The message is that the European manufacturing recession will be over by the first quarter of 2020. In the US, financial conditions lead the ISM manufacturing index with a tight correlation (Chart I-2). Over the past 18 months, US bond yields have fallen. The historical precedent is that manufacturing activity should be reviving about now. The current reading is consistent with a rather explosive rise in the ISM manufacturing index, towards 60. Chart I-2The Drop In Bond Yields Is Consistent With An ISM Near 60 In Europe, the Sentix sentiment index, which surveys the balance of investors’ emotions between greed and fear, tends to be coincident. However, the ratio of the expectations component to the current situation, a second derivative measure of exuberance or capitulation, tends to lead changes in the PMI indices by six months (Chart I-3, top panel). Again, the message is that the European manufacturing recession will be over by the first quarter of 2020. Applying the same formula to the ZEW survey gives a similar message for Germany (Chart I-3, bottom panel). Even within the Japanese economy, which was heavily hit by the October consumption tax hike, some green shoots can still be uncovered. The expectations component of the Economy Watchers Survey, a comprehensive read across much of the smaller entrepreneurs that drive the local economy, is improving. This has nudged the difference between the expectations component and the current situation to the highest in 5 years. The message is corroborated by the economic surprise index (Chart I-4). Chart I-3A V-Shaped Recovery In European Manufacturing? Chart I-4Japan Green ##br##Shoots Chinese credit growth was uninspiring in October, but the Caixin manufacturing PMI is now firmly above the 50 boom/bust level. More and more financial intermediation is being done through the bond market, and the drop in Chinese bond yields has eased financial conditions tremendously. This should encourage lending, which should lead to stronger economic activity, boosting demand for imports (Chart I-5). Rising Chinese imports will boost global growth. Chart I-5Chinese Imports Could Soon Rebound Bottom Line: For the most part, PMIs across many countries remain weak, but a few indicators are starting to point to an improvement next year. Given PMIs tend to be coincident, the most potent gains will be made by being early in the cycle. What Are Financial Markets Telling Us? The nascent upturn in our growth indicators is also coinciding with a positive signal from financial variables. Usually, when financial and economic data are in sync, the move in markets tends to be durable and powerful. Below are a few examples. Usually, when financial and economic data are in sync, the move in markets tends to be durable and powerful. Global cyclical stocks have started to outperform defensives, and the traditional negative correlation with the dollar appears to be holding (previously referenced Chart I-1). Correspondingly, flows into more cyclical ETF markets are accelerating. These are a small portion of overall FX flows, but the information coefficient is directionally quite good. The message is that in six months, EUR/USD will hit 1.16, GBP/USD will be at 1.4, AUD/USD at 0.75 and the USD/SEK at 8.5. Paradoxically, these are also closer to our own internal targets (Chart I-6). Chart I-6Inflows Into Cyclical ETFs The copper-to-gold, oil-to-gold, and CRB Raw Industrials-to-gold1 ratios often capture the transmission mechanism between easing liquidity conditions and higher growth. It is encouraging that these also tend to move in lockstep with US bond yields, another global growth barometer. The power of the signal is established when all three indicators peak or bottom at the same time, as is the case now (Chart I-7). The next confirmation will come with a clear breakout in these ratios. Chart I-7Global Growth Barometers Flashing Amber Correspondingly, in China, scrap steel prices have begun to rise faster than imported iron ore prices, suggesting an improving margin for steel producers. This is probably an indication that steel destocking has reached a nadir (Chart I-8). A renewed restocking cycle should benefit iron ore and other commodity imports and prices. In sympathy, the LMEX index appears to be making a tentative trough. AUD/JPY breached the important technical level of 72 cents this year but has since recovered. The cross has failed to sustainably break below this level both during the euro area debt crisis in 2011-2012 and the China slowdown in 2015-2016. Again, it appears reflation is winning the tug-of-war. Given speculators are neutral the cross, it suggests that any move either way will be powerful and significant (Chart I-9). Chart I-8Bullish Bottom-Up Signals From Metals Chart I-9Breakdown Avoided For Now An improving liquidity environment will be especially favorable for carry trades. High-beta currencies such as the RUB/USD, ZAR/USD and BRL/USD have not yet broken down. These currencies are usually good at sniffing out a change in the investment landscape. The message so far is that the drop in US bond yields may have been sufficient to backstop any cascading selloff (Chart I-10). Chart I-10Carry Trades May Be Back In Style Soon Finally, bond yields across major markets are off their lows. Our strategy is to be selective as US dollar tailwinds shift to headwinds, by initially expressing tactical USD shorts via the more potent Norwegian krone and Swedish krona. We have discussed at length our rationale for picking these currency pairs,2 but the bottom line is that they are deeply oversold and have probably been the primary vehicles used to express US dollar long positions. Bottom Line: It is too early to tell if the dollar will retest its highs before ultimately cresting, because part of the move has been driven by risk aversion/political uncertainty. Our bias is that some sort of trade détente is sufficient to rejuvenate economic activity given part of the slowdown, especially vis-à-vis capex, has been driven by uncertainty. Meanwhile, lots of monetary ammunition has already been fired over the past year. Notes On Australia And New Zealand This week, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand surprised markets by keeping rates on hold, a volte-face to its dovish surprise this summer. In retrospect, this makes sense. First, the RBNZ may be watching the same indicators as us, and as such is seeing an imminent turnaround in the global economy. Keeping some ammunition will allow for more room to ease down the road. Second, the weakness in the currency has probably done the heavy lifting in boosting exports and supporting domestic income. Finally, Australia and China are New Zealand’s biggest trading partners, and the trade war along with rising pork prices have allowed for a terms-of-trade boost for New Zealand’s agricultural exports (Chart I-11). Slowing migration will go a long way in eroding a meaningful supply of employment and domestic demand in New Zealand. We are positive on the kiwi but believe it will underperform its antipodean neighbor. First, the AUD/NZD is cheap on a real effective exchange rate basis (Chart I-12). Meanwhile, a more pronounced downturn in Aussie house prices has allowed some cleansing of sorts, bringing them further along the adjustment path relative to New Zealand. We are willing to overlook this week’s disappointment in Australia’s job numbers, given the unfortunate wildfires that are destroying businesses and homes. Fiscal stimulus will be forthcoming, and reconstruction efforts will go a long way to boosting domestic demand Chart I-11A Terms Of Trade Boost Chart I-12AUD/NZD Is Cheap Meanwhile, the RBNZ began a new mandate on April 1st that now includes full employment in addition to inflation targeting. But given the RBNZ has been unable to fulfill its price stability mandate over the past several years, it is hard to argue it will find a dual mandate any easier. Slowing migration will erode a meaningful supply of employment and domestic demand in New Zealand (Chart I-13). The final catalyst for the AUD/NZD cross will be a terms-of-trade shock (Chart I-14). Iron ore prices may face further downside, given supply from Brazil is back online, but China’s clear environmental push has lifted the share of liquefied natural gas in Australia’s export mix. Given eliminating pollution is a strategic goal in China, this will be a multi-year tailwind Chart I-13Loss Of A Meaningful Tailwind For Employment Chart I-14Terms Of Trade Favors ##br##Aussie Bottom Line: Remain long AUD/NZD as a strategic position and SEK/NZD as a tactical position. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The CRB Raw Industrials-to-gold ratio is not shown here because of the steep correction in iron ore prices, after a resolution to a supply disruption. That said, iron ore prices are up 28% this year, versus 14% for gold. 2 Please see page 24 for a summary of our recent reports. Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the US have been positive: The Michigan consumer sentiment index edged up to 95.7 from 95.5 in November. The NFIB business optimism index slightly increased to 102.4 from 101.8 in October. Headline inflation recorded modest growth to 1.8% year-on-year in October while core inflation fell to 2.3%. Headline and core producer prices both slowed to 1.1% and 1.6% year-on-year respectively in October. The housing market remains healthy, with mortgage applications up 9.6% for the week. The DXY index appreciated by 0.2% this week. During his testimony this week, Fed Chair Powell suggested the growth outlook for the US remained favorable, based on labor market trends. That said, Europe and EM probably have more scope to outperform amid a global growth recovery, which will be a headwind for the US dollar. Report Links: Signposts For A Reversal In The Dollar Bull Market - November 1, 2019 On Money Velocity, EUR/USD And Silver - October 11, 2019 Preserving Capital During Riot Points - September 6, 2019 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Recent data in the euro area have been improving: The ZEW economic sentiment index rebounded to -1 from -23.5 in November. Industrial production contracted by 1.7% year-on-year in September, however it is better than the contraction of 2.8% in the previous month and the expectations of a 2.3% drop. The preliminary GDP report showed that growth increased to 1.2% year-on-year in Q3, up from 1.1% in the previous quarter. Impressively, Germany steered clear of a recession. The euro fell by 0.2% against the US dollar this week. We expect the euro to recover along with the gradual improvement in the data. Moreover, the increased issuance of euro-denominated debt suggests some inflows into European corporate bond markets. This will benefit the euro. Report Links: On Money Velocity, EUR/USD And Silver - October 11, 2019 A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 2019 Battle Of The Central Banks - June 21, 2019 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan have been mixed: The trade surplus plunged to JPY 1 billion in September. The current account surplus narrowed to JPY 1.6 trillion from JPY 2.2 trillion. Machinery orders contracted by 2.9% month-on-month in September. On a yearly basis however, they grew by 5.1% year-on-year. Preliminary machine tool orders kept falling by 37.4% year-on-year in October. Preliminary annualized GDP growth slowed to 0.9% quarter-on-quarter in Q3. USD/JPY fell by 0.6% this week. Forward-looking data are showing more optimism on the domestic economy. This might prove that the damage from the tax hike is only a one-off effect. Continue to hold the yen, as both portfolio insurance, and a bet against more aggressive monetary stimulus from the BoJ. Report Links: Signposts For A Reversal In The Dollar Bull Market - November 1, 2019 A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 2019 Has The Currency Landscape Shifted? - August 16, 2019 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the UK have been mostly negative: The total trade deficit (including EU) widened to £3.4 billion in September. Preliminary GDP growth slowed to 1% year-on-year in Q3, from 1.3% in the previous quarter. Industrial production contracted by 1.4% year-on-year in September. Average earnings kept growing by 3.6% year-on-year in September. Moreover, the ILO unemployment rate fell further to 3.8%. Headline inflation fell to 1.5% year-on-year in October, while core inflation remained at 1.7%. GBP/USD increased by 0.4% this week. Despite the recent small rally, the pound is still undervalued on a PPP basis. With a lower probability of a hard-Brexit, our bias remains that the pound has more upside and will converge towards its long-term fair value. Report Links: A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 2019 United Kingdon: Cyclical Slowdown Or Structural Malaise? - Sept. 20, 2019 Battle Of The Central Banks - June 21, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Recent data in Australia have been mixed: NAB business conditions and confidence both increased to 3 and 2 in October. Moreover, Westpac consumer confidence increased by 4.5% in November. The wage price index grew by 2.2% year-on-year in Q3. The labor market data was however disappointing, the unemployment rate slightly increased to 5.3% in October. There was a loss of 19K jobs in October, with 10K full-time and 9K part-time. AUD/USD fell by 1.3% this week, weighed down by the recent slide in iron ore prices and employment data. Given speculators are already very short the cross, this could be capitulation. We discuss Australia in this week’s front section. Report Links: A Contrarian View On The Australian Dollar - May 24, 2019 Beware Of Diminishing Marginal Returns - April 19, 2019 Not Out Of The Woods Yet - April 5, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Recent data in New Zealand have been mostly negative: Inflation expectations fell slightly to 1.8% in Q4. The REINZ house price index grew by 1.1% month-on-month in October, down from 1.4% in the previous month. Migration into New Zealand continues to slow, with only 3440 newcomers in September. The New Zealand dollar rose by 0.6% against the US dollar this week. The main driver is that the RBNZ unexpectedly kept its interest rate unchanged at 1% this Wednesday. We are positive on the kiwi, but remain underweight against both the Australian dollar and the Swedish krona on valuation grounds. Report Links: USD/CNY And Market Turbulence - August 9, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Not Out Of The Woods Yet - April 5, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Recent data in Canada have been mostly negative: Housing starts fell by 20K to 202K in October. Building permits fell by 6.5% month-on-month in September. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5.5% in October. There was a loss of 1.8K jobs in October. However, average hourly wages yearly growth accelerated to 4.4%. New house prices contracted by 0.1% year-on-year in September. The Canadian dollar fell by 0.4% against the US dollar this week, given broad US dollar strength. CAD has handsomely outperformed its G10 commodity counterparts and some measure of rotation is due. We are short CAD/NOK and long AUD/CAD. Report Links: Making Money With Petrocurrencies - November 8, 2019 Signposts For A Reversal In The Dollar Bull Market - November 1, 2019 Preserving Capital During Riot Points - September 6, 2019 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland have been negative: Producer and import prices contracted by 2.4% year-on-year in October. The Swiss franc has appreciated by 0.6%, and the latest PPI numbers suggest deflation is becoming more and more rampant. Our bias remains that the SNB is likely to soon weaponize its currency like other central banks. We have a limit buy on EUR/CHF at 1.06. Stay tuned. Report Links: Notes On The SNB - October 4, 2019 What To Do About The Swiss Franc? - May 17, 2019 Beware Of Diminishing Marginal Returns - April 19, 2019 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Recent data in Norway have been negative: Producer prices fell by 13.8% year-on-year in October. This can largely be explained by the petroleum sector. Headline inflation increased to 1.8% year-on-year from 1.5% in October. Core inflation was unchanged at 2.2% year-on-year. The mainland GDP growth was unchanged at 0.7% in Q3. The Norwegian krone fell by 0.8% this week. The weakness in the krone remains much more than is warranted by underlying economic conditions. Should the DXY hit 100, we will be aggressive buyers of the krone. Report Links: Making Money With Petrocurrencies - November 8, 2019 A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 2019 Portfolio Tweaks Into Thin Summer Trading - July 5, 2019 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Recent data in Sweden have been positive: Headline inflation increased to 1.6% year-on-year from 1.5% in October. The unemployment rate fell to 6% from a downward-revised 6.6% in October. The Swedish krona depreciated by 0.3% against the US dollar this week. Statistics Sweden has revised down the unemployment rate for the period from July 2018 to September 2019, due to a flaw in data quality. This has dampened the credibility of the employment data in Sweden and its effect on the exchange rate. That said, we maintain a pro-cyclical stance and remain bullish on the Swedish krona. Report Links: Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Dear Client, I will be visiting clients in Paris, Amsterdam, and London next week. In lieu of our regular report, we will be sending you a Special Report from Matt Gertken, BCA’s Chief Geopolitical Strategist. Matt argues that US politics and the 2020 election represent the greatest source of geopolitical risk over the coming year, and possibly beyond. Best regards, Peter Berezin Highlights Having underperformed for more than ten years, non-US stocks are set to gain the upper hand over their US peers. A reacceleration in global growth, a weaker US dollar, and favorable valuations should all support non-US stocks next year. Meanwhile, one of the greater drivers of US equity outperformance – the stellar returns of tech stocks – is likely to dissipate. Investors should remain overweight global equities relative to bonds, but start increasing allocations to non-US stocks at the expense of US stocks. US Stocks: From Leaders To Laggards? US equities have handily outperformed their global peers since 2008. About half of that outperformance was due to faster sales-per-share growth in the US, a third was due to faster growth in US margins, and the rest was due to relative P/E expansion in favor of the US (Chart 1). Looking ahead, non-US stocks are set to gain the upper hand over their US peers thanks to an improving global growth backdrop, a weaker US dollar, and an increasingly irresistible valuation tailwind. Chart 1Faster Sales Growth, Rising Margins, And Relative PE Expansion Helped Drive US Outperformance Over The Past Decade Improving Global Growth Outlook Global growth should benefit next year from the dovish pivot by most central banks. The share of central banks cutting/raising rates leads global growth by about 6-to-9 months (Chart 2). Chart 2Lower Rates Should Help Spur Growth Chart 3The Effects Of Easing Monetary Policy Should Soon Trickle Down To The Economy The global manufacturing downturn is also coming to end as inventories continue to be run down. The auto sector, which has been at the forefront of the manufacturing slowdown, is finally showing signs of life. US banks stopped tightening lending standards for auto loans in the third quarter. They are also reporting stronger demand for vehicle financing (Chart 3). In Europe, the new orders-to-inventory ratio of the Markit Europe Automobile PMI has moved back to parity for the first time since the autumn of 2018. In China, vehicle production and sales are rebounding on a rate-of-change basis (Chart 4). Both automobile ownership and vehicle sales in China are still a fraction of what they are in most other economies (Chart 5). Chart 4Chinese Auto Sector Is Bottoming Out Chart 5China: Structural Outlook For Autos Is Bright The trade war is a clear and present danger to our bullish outlook on global growth. The good news is that President Trump has a strong incentive to make a deal. A resurgence in the trade war would hurt the economy, which is Trump’s best selling point (Chart 6). As a self-described master negotiator, Trump has to produce a “tremendous” deal for the American people. Had he negotiated an agreement a year or two ago, he would currently be on the hook for showing that it resulted in a smaller trade deficit with China. But with the presidential election only a year away, he can semi-credibly claim that the trade balance will improve only after he is re-elected. Assuming a “Phase 1” agreement is concluded, global business sentiment should improve. Chart 6Trump Gets Reasonably High Marks On His Handling Of The Economy, But Not Much Else A détente in the trade war is unlikely to cause China to restart its deleveraging campaign. Credit growth is currently only a few points above trend nominal GDP growth, implying that the ratio of credit-to-GDP is barely increasing (Chart 7). The combined Chinese credit and fiscal impulse is still rising; it reliably leads global growth by about nine months (Chart 8). Chart 7China: The Deleveraging Campaign Has Been Put On The Backburner Chart 8Chinese Stimulus Should Boost Global Growth Faster Global Growth Should Disproportionately Benefit Non-US stocks The sector composition of international stocks is more skewed towards cyclicals than defensives compared to US stocks (Table 1). As a result, non-US stocks generally outperform their US peers when global growth accelerates (Chart 9). Table 1Cyclicals Are More Heavily Weighted Outside The US Stock Market We would include financials in our definition of cyclical sectors. As global growth improves, long-term bond yields will increase at the margin (Chart 10). Since central banks are in no hurry to raise rates, yield curves will steepen. This will boost bank net interest margins, flattering profits and share prices (Chart 11). Chart 9Non-US Equities Usually Outperform When Global Growth Improves Chart 10Stronger Economic Growth Will Put Upward Pressure On Government Bond Yields The US Dollar Should Weaken Compared to most other economies, the United States has a large service sector and a small manufacturing base. This makes the US a “low beta” play on global growth. As a result, capital tends to flow from the US to the rest of the world when global growth picks up, putting downward pressure on the US dollar in the process (Chart 12). Chart 11Steeper Yield Curves Will Benefit Financials Chart 12The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency Interest-rate differentials have been moving against the dollar for most of this year (Chart 13). This makes the greenback more vulnerable to a correction. Chart 13The Dollar Has Been Diverging From Rate Differentials This Year Chart 14Long Dollar Is A Crowded Trade Bullish sentiment towards the dollar also remains somewhat stretched. Net long speculative positions are near the top of their historic range (Chart 14). Our tactical MacroQuant model, which has an excellent track record of predicting short-to-medium term moves in the dollar, has dropped its bullish bias towards the currency (Chart 15). Chart 15MacroQuant Has Soured On The US Dollar A weaker dollar will help boost commodity prices, which is usually good news for cyclical stocks (Chart 16). A softer dollar will also raise the USD value of overseas shares, thus making international stocks more attractive in common-currency terms. Valuations Favor Non-US Stocks There is an old investment adage which says that valuations are useless as a short-term timing tool. That is only partially true. While valuations by themselves offer little guidance as to where the stock market is going in the short run, combined with a catalyst, valuations can make a big difference. When stocks are cheap, a bullish catalyst can cause prices to surge; whereas when stocks are expensive, a bearish catalyst can cause them to plunge. Looking ahead, non-US stocks are set to gain the upper hand over their US peers thanks to an improving global growth backdrop, a weaker US dollar, and an increasingly irresistible valuation tailwind. Non-US stocks are currently trading at 13.8-times forward earnings. This represents a significant discount to US stocks, which trade at a forward PE ratio of 17.7. The valuation discount is even greater if one looks at other measures such as the cyclically-adjusted PE, price-to-book, price-to-sales, and the dividend yield (Chart 17). Chart 16A Weaker Dollar Tends To Support Commodity Prices Chart 17US Stocks Are More Expensive... Differences in sector weights account for about a quarter of the valuation gap between the US and the rest of the world (Chart 18). The rest of the gap is due to cheaper valuations within sectors. Financials, utilities, and consumer discretionary stocks, in particular, are quite a bit more expensive in the US than elsewhere (Chart 19). Chart 18…Even When Adjusting For Sector Weights Chart 19AEquity Sector Valuations: US Versus The Rest Of The World (I) Chart 19BEquity Sector Valuations: US Versus The Rest Of The World (II) The valuation gap between the US and the rest of the world is even starker if we compare earnings yields with bond yields. Since bond yields are lower outside the US, the implied equity risk premium is markedly higher for non-US stocks (Chart 20). An examination of the relative performance of US vs non-US companies over the past 50 years reveals two major tops, and one potential top. Some commentators have argued that the loftier valuations enjoyed by US stocks are warranted due to their superior growth prospects. While there may be some truth to that, it is worth noting that the IMF projects GDP growth (based on MSCI country weights) will be faster outside the US over the next five years (Chart 21). Chart 20Equity Risk Premia Remain Quite High Chart 21Growth Prospects Brighter Outside The US One should also keep in mind that relatively fast US earnings growth is a fairly recent phenomenon. Between 1970 and 2008, European EPS actually grew slightly faster than US EPS (Chart 22). Earnings in emerging markets also increased more rapidly than in the US during the two decades leading up to the Global Financial Crisis. Chart 22US Earnings Have Not Always Outperformed The Role Of US Tech The large weight of the tech sector in the US stock market explains much of the superior performance of US stocks over the past decade. As Chart 23 illustrates, EPS in the I.T. sector has grown a lot more quickly than in other sectors. Chart 23US Earnings: Who Has Been Doing The Heaving Lifting? Chart 24S&P 500: Much Of The Increase In Margins Has Occurred In The I.T. Sector Looking out, there are four reasons why US tech stocks may be due for a breather. First, tech valuations have gotten stretched relative to the broader market. Second, tech margins have risen to unprecedented high levels. We estimate that about half of the increase in S&P 500 profit margins since 2007 has been due to I.T. (Chart 24). Even that understates the role of tech in the expansion of profit margins because Standard & Poor’s no longer classifies some large-cap behemoths such as Google and Facebook as I.T. companies. Third, tech companies may face increased regulatory scrutiny in the years ahead stemming from alleged privacy violations, perceived monopolistic behavior, and worries about the censorship of online speech. This could weigh on sales and earnings growth. Fourth, the growth in private equity funds is likely to limit the number of tech companies that go public at a very early stage. Stock market investors were very lucky that companies such as Microsoft, Cisco, Nvidia, Qualcomm, Oracle, Amazon, and Netflix issued shares to the public at a young stage in their development (Table 2). All seven had market caps below $1 billion when they went public. Such hidden gems are becoming less common: The number of publicly listed companies in the US has fallen by more than half over the past two decades (Chart 25). The median age of tech companies at the time of IPO has risen from around 7 in the 1990s to 12 years today (Chart 26). Table 2Big Gains From Once Small Companies Chart 25The Number Of Publicly Listed Companies Fell Chart 26Tech Companies Entering The Public Arena Are Now More Mature Had Uber gone public as a small, upstart company not long after it was founded in 2009, it probably would have also made public shareholders a lot of money. Instead, it ended up going public this year with a market cap of $75 billion, only to see it shrink to as low as $40 billion in the ensuing six months. We won’t even mention what would have happened if WeWork had gone public. Investment Conclusions An examination of the relative performance of US vs non-US companies over the past 50 years reveals two major tops, and one potential top: The first during the “Nifty 50” era of the late 1960s, the second during the 1990s dotcom boom, and the third during the recent FAANG craze (Chart 27). It is too early to say whether FAANG stocks have peaked, but it is worth noting that the group has underperformed the S&P 500 since May (Chart 28). Chart 27Putting The Recent FAANG Craze Into Context Chart 28FAANG Stocks And The Market Chart 29Has The Underperformance Of Value Run Its Course? Regardless of whether the secular outperformance of US equities is ending, the cyclical backdrop that we foresee over the next 12-to-18 months – characterized by faster global growth, a weakening dollar, and higher commodity prices – is likely to favor non-US stocks. As such, investors should remain overweight global equities relative to bonds, but start increasing allocations to non-US stocks at the expense of US stocks. Consistent with this, we are initiating a new recommendation to go long the MSCI ACWI ex USA index versus the MSCI USA index in dollar terms. Looking across the various stock markets outside the US, we are particularly fond of Europe. Net profit margins among companies in the STOXX Europe 600 index are about three percentage points below the S&P 500. This gives European companies greater scope to boost earnings. European banks are especially attractive, sporting a forward PE of 8.3, a price-to-book ratio of 0.6, and a dividend yield of 6.1%. Lastly, on the question of style investing, we would note that the relative performance of the MSCI value and growth indices closely tracks the performance of global financials versus I.T. (Chart 29). Given our preference for the former over the latter, we suspect that value will outperform growth next year. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes Strategy & Market Trends MacroQuant Model And Current Subjective Scores Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights The attractiveness of European stocks is relative to European bonds rather than relative to non-European stocks. Despite vastly different stock market valuations in Germany, Japan, and the US, the implied prospective 10-year annualised returns are almost identical – at around 5 percent per annum. Overweight the DAX versus German long-dated bunds. Equities would lose their attractiveness if the global 10-year bond yield were to rise through 2.5 percent, because the required excess return from equities would viciously normalise. Tactically overweight EM versus DM. Fractal trade: short GBP/NOK, as the recent rally in the pound appears technically extended. Feature Chart of the WeekOverweight Europe Vs. World = Overweight Consumer Staples Vs. Technology Stock markets recently broke to new highs, begging the perennial question: how attractive are equities at current valuations? To answer, we need to assess the prospective return that is now ‘baked in the equity valuation cake’. But which valuation metric gives the most credible assessment of prospective returns? Equity valuations based on assets are problematic – because nowadays, assets comprise intellectual capital or intangibles or ‘virtual’ assets, which are extremely difficult to value. Equity valuations based on earnings are problematic. Equity valuations based on earnings (profits) are also problematic – because they take no account of structurally high profit margins (Chart I-2). The problem is that earnings will face a headwind when profit margins normalise, depressing prospective returns. Some people suggest adjusting the earnings to derive a cyclically adjusted price to earnings multiple (CAPE), but by definition this does not correct for the structural rise in profit margins. Chart I-2Structurally High Profit Margins Flatter Earnings Hence, the most credible assessment comes from price to sales – because sales are quantifiable, unambiguous, and undistorted by profit margins. Significantly, while price to earnings missed the high valuation of world equities in 1990 (Japanese bubble) and 2007 (credit bubble), price to sales did not (Chart I-3 and Chart I-4). Chart I-3Price To Earnings Missed The Japanese Bubble And The Credit Bubble... Chart I-4...But Price To Sales ##br##Didn't Are Stocks Attractive? Based on the credible assessment from price to sales, today’s prospective 10-year annualised return from world equities is around 5 percent (Chart I-5). This is not that different to the 4 percent prospective return at the peak of the credit bubble in 2007.1 Which raises an obvious question. Back in 2007, a secular growth boom provided the excuse for the rich absolute valuation, but today, if anything, investors fear a ‘secular stagnation’. What can excuse today’s rich absolute valuation? Chart I-5The Prospective Return From World Equities Is 5 Percent The answer is ultra-low bond yields. In 2007, the global 10-year bond yield stood at 5 percent; today, it stands well below 2 percent (Chart I-6). A lower prospective return on bonds means a lower prospective return on competing long-duration assets, like equities. Chart I-6The Global 10-Year Bond Yield Has Plunged To Below 2 Percent Moreover, as bond yields approach their lower bound, the riskiness of bonds rises because they take on an unattractive ‘lose-lose’ characteristic. As holders of Swiss government bonds discovered this year, prices do not rise much in a rally, but they do plunge in a sell-off. This higher riskiness of bonds justifies an abnormally low (or zero) ‘risk premium’ on competing long-duration assets, like equities. The 5 percent prospective return makes equities look attractive relative to bonds. The upshot is that the 5 percent prospective return from equities is low in absolute terms. But in a world of ultra-low numbers – for both bond yields and equity risk premiums – the 5 percent prospective return makes equities look attractive relative to bonds. At the peak of the credit bubble in 2007, equities were offering a lower prospective return than the 5 percent available from bonds. But today’s equity risk premium over bonds is generous. The caveat is that this would change if the global 10-year bond yield were to rise through 2.5 percent because the required risk premium on equities would viciously normalise. Are European Stocks Attractive? Turning to the relative attractiveness of major stock markets, it is tempting to think that the markets trading on the best head-to-head valuation comparisons are the most attractive. For example, Germany and Japan, both trading on a price to sales multiple of 0.9, appear compelling buys compared to the US, trading on a multiple of 2.1 (Chart I-7). But such a knee-jerk conclusion is wrong, for two reasons. Chart I-7Germany And Japan Trade On Much Lower Multiples Than The US First, stock markets have very different sector compositions. Two sectors with vastly different structural growth prospects – say, technology and banks – must necessarily trade on vastly different valuations. So the sector with the lower valuation is not necessarily the better-valued sector. By extension, the stock market with the lower valuation because of its ‘sector fingerprint’ is not necessarily the better-valued stock market. Second, major stock markets are dominated by multinational companies with mixed currency sales and profits, while the stock price is quoted in the domestic currency. Hence, if the market expects the mixed currency profits to depreciate in domestic currency terms, the stock will trade at a discount. Put another way, if the domestic currency is cheap the stock market will appear cheap. The best way to see this is to look at the two valuations of dual-listed multinationals like the UK/US cruise operator Carnival. In London, the stock trades on a price to forward earnings at 9.7; in New York it trades at 10.3. But it would be absurd to suggest that Carnival is cheaper in London than in New York! The discrepancy is simply because the market expects the pound to appreciate versus the dollar. A head-to-head comparison of stock market valuations is misleading. Allowing for the distortions from sector skews and currency adjustments, the best way to assess an equity region’s attractiveness is to quantify the prospective return implied by its valuation versus its own history. The method is to regress historic starting price to sales with the (historic) prospective 10-year returns that followed. Then apply this relationship to the current price to sales to predict the (current) prospective 10-year return. The results are amazing. Despite the vastly different price to sales multiple of 0.9 in Germany and Japan, and 2.1 in the US, the implied prospective 10-year annualised returns are almost identical – at around 5 percent from each of the three stock markets (Chart I-8-Chart I-10). Chart I-8Expect Near-Identical Returns From The US... Chart I-9…Germany… Chart I-10...And Japan Still, there is one significant difference: the 10-year bond yield is much lower in Germany and Japan than in the US, equating to a much more attractive equity risk premium of over 5 percent in Germany and Japan. So to answer this week’s title, yes, European stocks are attractive. But the attractiveness is not relative to non-European stocks, the attractiveness of European stocks is relative to European bonds. Bottom Line: maintain a structural overweight to the DAX versus German long-dated bunds. Europe’s ‘Sector Fingerprint’ Is No Longer Pro-Cyclical Over the short term, stock market relative performance is just the result of global sector relative performance combined with the unique sector fingerprint of each stock market. It follows that regional and country equity allocation must always start with a sector view combined with an awareness of the sector fingerprint of the major bourses (Table 1-1). Table I-1EM, DM, And Europe Have Unique ‘Sector Fingerprints’ In this regard, there is an important change. Market action plus index composition changes are making the European index less cyclical. Specifically, the European index is no longer over-weighted to Financials relative to the world index. Instead, the European sector fingerprint is now: ‘Overweight Consumer Staples, Underweight Technology’ (Chart of the Week). With the overweight skew being to defensive staples and the underweight skew to partly-cyclical tech, the cyclicality of the European index has become ambiguous. By contrast, emerging market (EM) equities remain ultra-cyclical with a sector fingerprint that is: ‘Overweight Banks, Underweight Healthcare’ (Chart I-11). Suffice to say, this is ultra-cyclical because the 10 percent overweight is to an unambiguously cyclical sector, while the symmetrical 10 percent underweight is to an unambiguously defensive sector. Chart I-11Overweight EM Vs. DM = Overweight Banks Vs. Healthcare The upshot is that a pro-cyclical sector tilt no longer implies an overweight to European equities versus other regions, but it does strongly imply an overweight to EM equities. This is our recommended stance, albeit only on a tactical horizon until our leading indicators show that the current growth rebound can be sustained well into 2020. Stay tuned. Fractal Trading System* The broken 65-day fractal structure of GBP/NOK suggests that its recent rally is susceptible to a countertrend sell-off, albeit UK election campaign developments are likely to be the near-term sentiment drivers. Go short GBP/NOK, setting a profit target at 2.5 percent with a symmetrical stop-loss. In other trades, short Italian 10-year BTP achieved its 3 percent profit target and is now closed, while long gold / short nickel is very close to its 11 percent profit target. 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. 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. * 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. Dhaval Joshi Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Total (capital plus income) nominal annualised returns Fractal Trading System Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Duration: A survey of the five factors that determine the path for Treasury yields suggests that further upside is likely. We see a clear path to 2.5% for long-maturity Treasury yields as recessionary risk moves to the back burner in the coming months. Credit Cycle: C&I lending standards tightened on net in the third quarter of 2019. But other indicators of monetary conditions point to continued accommodation. We expect lending standards will soon move back into “net easing” territory. Remain overweight Spread Product versus Treasuries. IG Valuation: Investment grade corporate bond spreads for all credit tiers are now below our fair value targets. We recommend only a neutral allocation to the sector. Investors should prefer high-yield bonds, where spreads are more attractive, and Agency MBS, which offer competitive expected returns and much less risk. Feature Chart 1Recession Risk Getting Priced Out The bond sell-off continued last week, driven by positive developments in US/China trade negotiations and tentative signs of stabilization in some global growth indicators. The renewed sense of economic optimism has reduced the recessionary risk priced into bond markets. The 2/10 Treasury slope has steepened 30 bps since it briefly inverted in late August. During that same period, the 2-year Treasury yield is up 15 bps, the 10-year yield is up 45 bps and the Bloomberg Barclays Treasury index has underperformed a position in cash by 2.7% (Chart 1). These recent developments raise two important questions. First, should investors chase or fade the back-up in Treasury yields? And second, if the sell-off does continue, how high can yields go? To answer these questions we turn to the five macro factors that drive trends in US bond yields. These factors were outlined in our “Bond Kitchen” report from last April, and are listed right here:1 Global growth Policy uncertainty The US dollar The output gap Sentiment Back In The Kitchen Global Growth Chart 2CRB Index Needs To Rebound Three global growth indicators are particularly relevant for US Treasury yields. They are the Global Manufacturing PMI, the US ISM Manufacturing PMI and the CRB Raw Industrials index. The latter is especially useful because it updates on a daily basis. Considering the CRB index, we notice that, while it is no longer in a steep downtrend, it has also not rebounded alongside the jump in bond yields (Chart 2). This should give us pause. Continued low readings from the CRB index make it more likely that bond yields will fall back in the coming weeks. We should also note that the ratio between the CRB index and Gold is more highly correlated with the 10-year Treasury yield than the CRB index itself.2 This ratio has bounced off its lows (Chart 2, top panel), but only because Gold has come under downward pressure. With the Fed committed to maintaining an accommodative policy stance until inflation expectations are re-anchored, we expect the Gold price to remain well bid. This means that raw industrials prices must rebound to keep the ratio trending higher. The CRB/Gold ratio has bounced off its lows, but only because Gold has come under downward pressure. More encouraging than the CRB index is the Global Manufacturing PMI, which has moved off its lows during the past three months (Chart 3). The increase has been partially driven by stronger US readings (Chart 3, panel 2), but principally by a significant jump in China’s PMI (Chart 3, bottom panel). Chart 3China Pulling The Global Manufacturing PMI Higher Somewhat stronger China PMI readings should be expected, given the rebound in our China Investment Strategy’s Li Keqiang Leading Indicator – a composite measure of monetary conditions, money and credit growth (Chart 4).3 We should also expect further modest policy stimulus from China, as long as the labor market remains under pressure (Chart 4, bottom panel). Turning to the US, we have seen three very positive developments in the economic data during the past month. First, the ISM Services PMI jumped from 52.6 to 54.7 in October (Chart 5). A drop in this index to 50 or below would be consistent with a US recession, while the combination of a strong service sector and a depressed manufacturing sector is consistent with our baseline 2015/16 roadmap. This roadmap leads to an eventual rebound in the manufacturing index. Second, the ISM Manufacturing PMI rose a tad in October, but the New Export Orders component jumped significantly from 41 to 50.4 (Chart 5, panel 2). Since the global slowdown began as a non-US phenomenon, a rebound in this export component sends a strong signal that we are at an inflection point. Finally, consumer confidence rose in October following a sharp decline in September. A year-over-year decline in the consumer confidence index is a reasonably strong recession signal, but recent data suggest that this signal is fading (Chart 5, bottom panel). Chart 4Modest Stimulus In China Chart 5Three Positive Developments All in all, the global growth data have turned more positive during the past month. US indicators, in particular, are no longer sending strong recessionary signals. A rebound in the CRB Raw Industrials index would give us more confidence in the durability of the recent rise in Treasury yields. Policy Uncertainty Uncertainty about the US/China trade conflict has eased considerably during the past few weeks, as the two sides appear to be working toward a “phase 1” deal that would prevent the imposition of new tariffs and roll back some that are already in place. Heightened uncertainty about the trade war played a large role in dragging bond yields lower in 2019. This becomes apparent when you notice that survey and sentiment (aka “soft”) data about the economic outlook have been significantly worse than the actual “hard” data on US economic activity.4 It is clear that negative sentiment about the trade war has held survey data and bond yields down, even as underlying US economic activity has been solid. Less bullish dollar sentiment supports a continued uptrend in Treasury yields. We see a continued easing of trade tensions as we head into the first half of next year. President Trump has an incentive to support the economy in an election year, given the historical record of incumbent presidents being re-elected when the economy is strong. However, if this strategy doesn’t work and Trump finds himself behind in the polls by the end of next summer, then he could decide that ramping up the trade war again is the best course of action. In other words, another spike in policy uncertainty in the second half of 2020 is possible if President Trump is trailing in the polls. The US Dollar Chart 6Dollar Sentiment Points To Higher Yields The US dollar is important for the path of US Treasury yields because it signals whether US yields are decoupling from yields in the rest of the world. In other words, if the dollar appreciates significantly alongside rising Treasury yields, then we should view those yields as increasingly out of step with the rest of the world, and thus more likely to fall back down. So far, the dollar has been relatively flat as yields have risen and bullish sentiment toward the US dollar has declined significantly (Chart 6). Less bullish dollar sentiment supports a continued uptrend in Treasury yields. But if yields do in fact continue to rise, it will be important to watch the dollar’s reaction. The Output Gap Chart 7Wage Gains Hurting Margins, Not Raising Prices Some sense of the output gap is important for forecasting bond yields. This is because the same amount of global growth will lead to more inflationary pressure and higher bond yields when the output gap is small than when it is large. The fact that the output gap is smaller now than it was in 2016 is probably the reason why the 10-year Treasury yield bottomed 10 bps above its 2016 trough this year, and why the average Treasury index yield bottomed 47 bps above its 2016 trough. We have found wage growth to be an excellent indicator of the output gap, and noted in a recent report that wage growth should continue to accelerate.5 In this vein, another crucial variable to monitor is labor compensation as a percent of national income (Chart 7). The rise in this series indicates that wage gains during the past few years have come at the expense of corporate profit margins, and have not been passed through to higher consumer prices. If this series proves to have a lot more cyclical upside, then it could be some time before wage acceleration translates to higher inflation. Sentiment Chart 8Surprise Index Says Sentiment Is Neutral The final factor we consider when forecasting US Treasury yields is sentiment. We have found that the Economic Surprise Index is the single best measure of aggregate market sentiment. That is, when the Surprise index reaches a positive or negative extreme, it usually means that sentiment is too positive or too negative, and will mean-revert in the months ahead. Also, we have observed a strong correlation between the Surprise index and changes in Treasury yields (Chart 8). At present, the Surprise index is roughly neutral, and therefore does not send a strong signal about where sentiment might push bond yields during the next few months. Investment Conclusions To summarize, the outlook from our five macro factors suggests that Treasury yields will rise further in the coming months. Global growth indicators are showing tentative signs of bottoming, and should rise to levels more consistent with the “hard” economic data as policy uncertainty continues to wane. The fact that the US economic data look less recessionary than they did one month ago makes us more confident that our global indicators will rebound. Chart 9A Clear Path To 2.5% We would become concerned about a renewed downtick in yields if the CRB Raw Industrials index fails to rebound, or if the dollar strengthens significantly in the coming weeks. At the beginning of this report, we asked how high Treasury yields can go if the global growth rebound proves durable. To answer that question we refer to current estimates of the long-run neutral fed funds rate. The FOMC’s median estimate of the long-run neutral fed funds rate is 2.5% and the median estimate from the New York Fed’s Survey of Market Participants is 2.48%, with an interquartile range of 2.25% - 2.5%. If recessionary fears move to the back burner, it would be logical for long-dated yields to converge toward those levels. That is in fact what happened in recent years, with the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield peaking several times at levels close to the Fed’s median neutral rate estimate (Chart 9). With this in mind, we see a clear path to 2.5% on the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield, with the 10-year yield reaching similar levels since the 5/10 Treasury slope is likely to remain flat (Chart 9, bottom panel). For yields to eventually move above 2.5%, the market would have to re-consider its outlook for the long-run neutral fed funds rate. We discussed what factors to monitor in this regard in a recent report.6 Bottom Line: Treasury yields have moved significantly higher in recent weeks, but a survey of the five factors that determine the path for Treasury yields suggests that further upside is likely. We see a clear path to 2.5% for long-maturity Treasury yields as recessionary risk moves to the back burner in the coming months. Checking In On The Credit Cycle In previous reports, we mentioned that three factors drive our view of corporate bond spreads and the credit cycle: Balance sheet health Monetary conditions Valuation We last presented a detailed examination of these factors in a report from mid-September, concluding that accommodative monetary conditions will support corporate bond excess returns, despite deteriorating balance sheet health.7 Three factors drive our view of corporate bond spreads and the credit cycle: Balance sheet health, monetary conditions,and valuation. But since then, C&I lending standards – an important indicator of monetary conditions – moved into “net tightening” territory for the third quarter of 2019 (Chart 10). Tightening C&I lending standards, if they persist, would put significant upward pressure on corporate defaults and credit spreads. Chart 10Credit Cycle Checklist: Monetary Conditions While the recent move in lending standards is concerning, we expect it to reverse in the near future. The yield curve, another indicator of monetary conditions, has steepened in recent months, suggesting that conditions are becoming more accommodative. Also, loan officers reported that the terms on C&I loans continued to ease in Q3, even as overall standards tightened (Chart 10, panel 3). Most importantly, inflation expectations remain extremely low (Chart 10, bottom panel). This gives the Fed every incentive to maintain accommodative monetary conditions. This should give lenders the confidence to ease lending standards, leading to tight credit spreads and a low corporate default rate. Bottom Line: C&I lending standards tightened on net in the third quarter of 2019. But other indicators of monetary conditions point to continued accommodation. We expect lending standards will soon move back into “net easing” territory. Remain overweight Spread Product versus Treasuries. Downgrade Investment Grade Corporates To Neutral Last week, we downgraded our recommended allocation to investment grade corporate bonds from overweight to neutral.8 We maintain a positive view of the credit cycle, and expect that corporate bonds will continue to outperform Treasuries. However, investment grade corporate spreads no longer provide adequate compensation for their level of risk. We maintain an overweight allocation to high-yield corporates, where spreads remain attractive. Chart 11 shows that investment grade corporate spreads have tightened somewhat in recent months, but that they remain well above the tights seen in early 2018. However, the chart also shows that average index duration has increased considerably this year. All else equal, higher index duration justifies a wider spread. In contrast, notice that high-yield index duration fell this year (Chart 11, bottom panel). This is because high-yield bonds usually carry embedded call options, making them negatively convex. All else equal, lower index duration makes the spread offered by the high-yield index more attractive. Because changes in spread and duration are both important, we prefer to use the 12-month breakeven spread as our main valuation tool. This measure is the spread widening required on a 12-month investment horizon to underperform a duration-matched position in Treasuries. It can be approximated by dividing the option-adjusted spread by duration. Chart 12 shows investment grade 12-month breakeven spreads as a percentile rank since 1995. The overall message is that spreads have rarely been lower. Chart 11Higher Durations Makes IG Spreads Look Too Tight Chart 12Investment Grade Corporate Spreads Have Rarely Been Lower Finally, we can also recognize that spreads tend to be tight in the middle and late stages of the credit cycle. In the current environment, that means we should expect spreads to be near the bottom of their historical ranges. To control for this fact, we re-calculate our breakeven spread percentile ranks using only mid-cycle periods when the slope of the yield curve is between 0 bps and 50 bps. We can then back-out spread targets for each credit tier based on the median 12-month breakeven spreads seen in similar macro environments. Chart 13 shows that spreads for all investment grade credit tiers have moved below our targets. High-yield spreads are not shown, but they remain well above target levels.9 Chart 13Spreads For All IG Credit Tiers Are Below Target In place of investment grade corporates, which have become expensive, we recommend upgrading Agency MBS. MBS now offer expected returns that are comparable with corporate bonds rated A or higher, with considerably less risk.10 Bottom Line: Investment grade corporate bond spreads for all credit tiers are now below our fair value targets. We recommend only a neutral allocation to the sector. Investors should prefer high-yield bonds, where spreads are more attractive, and Agency MBS, which offer competitive expected returns and much less risk. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Bond Kitchen”, dated April 9, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 For details on why the ratio between the CRB Raw Industrials index and Gold tracks the 10-year Treasury yield please see US Bond Strategy Portfolio Allocation Summary, “The Sequence Of Reflation”, dated March 5, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, “The Data Lab: Testing The Predictability Of China’s Business Cycle”, dated November 30, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 4 For more details on the divergence between “soft” and “hard” data please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Crisis Of Confidence”, dated October 22, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Position For Modest Curve Steepening”, dated October 29, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Position For Modest Curve Steepening”, dated October 29, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Corporate Bond Investors Should Not Fight The Fed”, dated September 17, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 8 Please see US Bond Strategy Portfolio Allocation Summary, “The Fed Will Stay Supportive”, dated November 5, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 9 For details on how we calculate our spread targets please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Value In Corporate Bonds”, dated February 19, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 10 For more details on the positive outlook for MBS please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Two Themes And Two Trades”, dated October 1, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights The mood among investors is shifting from the recessionary gloom of this past summer. Equities worldwide are rallying, buoyed by a combination of dovish monetary policies, tentative signs of bottoming global growth and expectations of some sort of trade détente between the US and China. The latter is fueling more bullish sentiment towards equities in regions most exposed to global trade and manufacturing like Emerging Markets (EM) and Europe. Feature Chart 1Global Corporates: 2016 Revisited? Credit investors, in an unusual twist, have been far more optimistic than their equity brethren. Corporate bonds have delivered solid performance in 2019, with the Bloomberg Barclays Global Corporates total return index up +9.5% year-to-date. This is a surprising development, as global growth concerns triggered a major decline in developed market government bond yields but no widening of credit risk premia (Chart 1). With that in mind, this week we are presenting the latest update of our Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) Chartbook. The CHMs are composite indicators of balance sheet and income statement ratios (using both top-down and bottom-up data) designed to assess the financial well-being of the overall non-financial corporate sectors in the major developed economies. A brief overview of the methodology is presented in Appendix 1 on page 15. The overriding message from the latest read of our CHMs is that the manufacturing-led slowing of global growth this year has not resulted in much deterioration in overall corporate creditworthiness. There are fascinating cross-currents within the data, however. On a regional basis, the CHMs in the euro area, the UK and Canada are in better shape than in the US and Japan. The most interesting differences are across credit quality, with our “bottom-up” high-yield (HY) CHMs looking better than the investment grade (IG) equivalents in both the US and euro area, mostly due to greater relative increases in IG leverage. Our current global corporate bond investment recommendations broadly follow the trends signaled by our CHMs: an aggregate overweight stance versus global government debt, but with a “reverse quality bias” favoring HY over IG in the US and Europe. With government bond yields now on the rise across the developed markets – and with credit spreads fairly tight across the majority of countries - the period of hyper-charged absolute corporate bond returns is over. Expect more carry-like excess returns over sovereigns during the next 6-12 months. US Corporate Health Monitors: Steady Deterioration, Mostly Within Investment Grade Our top-down US CHM is sending a negative message on credit quality, staying in the “deteriorating health” zone since 2015 (Chart 2). The structural declines in the profitability ratios (return on capital and operating margin), debt coverage and, more recently, short-term liquidity are the main causes of that deterioration in US corporate health. Not all the news is negative, however. While operating margins have clearly peaked, they remain at a very high level. The top-down interest coverage ratio is also improving, thanks to low corporate borrowing rates. That is a welcome development that will help extend the US credit cycle by keeping downgrade/default risk, and the credit spreads required to compensate for it, subdued. When looking at our bottom-up US CHMs, the story becomes more nuanced. The bottom-up US high-yield CHM is signaling a surprisingly positive story, spending the past two years in “improving health” territory. The bottom-up US IG CHM remains above the zero line, as has been the case since 2012 (Chart 3). The multi-year increase in the debt-to-equity ratio, and declines in return on capital and interest coverage over the same period, are the main reasons why US IG corporate health has worsened, even as profit margins have stayed high. Chart 2Top-Down US CHM: Steadily Worsening Chart 3Bottom-Up US IG CHM: Some Areas Of Concern The bottom-up US HY CHM is signaling a more positive story, spending the past two years in “improving health” territory (Chart 4), led by stable balance sheet leverage and improvements in operating margins and return on capital. The absolute levels of interest and debt coverage ratios for US HY remain low – a potential future risk for US HY when the US economy goes into its next prolonged downturn. One common signal from all our US CHMs, both top-down and bottom-up, is that short-term liquidity ratios have declined. Those moves are driven by increases in the denominator of the ratios (the market value of assets for the top-down CHM, and the value of current liabilities in the bottom-up CHMs), rather than declines in working capital or cash on corporate balance sheets – trends that would typically precede periods of corporate distress. Just last week, we downgraded US IG to neutral, while maintaining an overweight tilt on US HY.1 The rationale for the move was based on value, as spreads for all US IG credit tiers had tightened to our spread targets, which is not yet the case for HY. The message from our bottom-up US CHMs supports that recommendation. The combination of improving global growth and a Fed that will stay dovish until US inflation has sustainably moved higher paints a favorable backdrop for the relative performance of all US corporate debt versus Treasuries. However, given our expectation that US bond yields will continue to move higher over the next 6-12 months, the lower interest rate duration of US HY relative to IG also supports favoring the former over the latter (Chart 5). Chart 4Bottom-Up US HY CHM: Looking Better Than IG (!) Chart 5US Corporates: Stay Overweight HY & Neutral IG Euro Corporate Health Monitors: Some Cyclical Weakness Our bottom-up euro area CHMs are sending different messages for lower-rated and higher-quality issuers, similar to the divergence in our bottom-up US CHMs. For euro area IG, the gap between domestic and foreign issuers has been widening, with the former now in “deteriorating health” territory (Chart 6). Leverage has gone up for all issuers, with debt/equity ratios now above 100%, but the pace of increase has been faster for domestic issuers. Return on capital and profit margins for domestic issuers have declined since the start of 2018 alongside the prolonged slowing of euro area economic growth. For domestic euro area IG issuers, interest coverage has been steadily climbing since 2015 when the ECB went to negative rates and, more importantly, started its Asset Purchase Program that included corporate debt. Our bottom-up euro area CHMs are sending different messages for lower-rated and higher-quality issuers, similar to the divergence in our bottom-up US CHMs. For euro area HY, the signal from the bottom-up CHM is more positive for both domestic and foreign issuers (Chart 7), with both CHMs sitting just in the “improving health” zone. Leverage has declined, but profit-based metrics have worsened for both sets of issuers. Interest/debt coverage and liquidity, however, are far worse for domestic issuers than foreign issuers. Chart 6Bottom-Up Euro Area IG CHMs: Weak Growth Hitting Domestic Issuers Chart 7Bottom-Up Euro Area HY CHMs: Healthy, But Leverage Now Rising Within the euro area, our bottom-up IG CHMs for Core and Periphery countries have worsened over the past year, from healthy levels, with both above the zero line (Chart 8). Interest coverage is considerably stronger for Core issuers, although profitability metrics are remarkably similar. Short-term liquidity ratios have also fallen for both regional groups over the past year. We have maintained a moderate overweight stance on euro area corporates, both for IG and HY, since the summer of this year (Chart 9). This view was based on expectations that the European Central Bank (ECB) would ease monetary policy, not on a forecast that euro area growth would revive organically. That outcome came to fruition when the ECB cut rates in September and restarted asset purchases earlier this month. The ECB’s moves create a more supportive monetary backdrop (along with an undervalued euro) that will help keep euro area credit spreads tight – a trend that is reinforced by decent corporate health. Chart 8Bottom-Up Euro Area Regional IG CHMs: Heading In The Wrong Direction Chart 9Euro Area Corporates: Stay Overweight IG & HY Chart 10Relative Bottom-Up CHMs: Turning In Favor Of The US? We see no reason to alter our recommendations on euro area credit, based on our forecast of better global growth, with no change to the ECB’s ultra-accommodative monetary stance, in 2020. However, a stronger growth backdrop could benefit euro area HY performance more than IG, based on the comparatively healthier signal from the bottom-up euro area HY CHM. The gap between the combined IG/HY bottom-up CHMs for the US and euro area aligns with credit spread differentials between euro area and US issuers (Chart 10).2 latest trends show a narrowing of the gap between the US and euro area CHMs, suggesting relative corporate health favors US names (middle panel). At the same time, the stronger performance of the US economy, which is much less levered to global trade and manufacturing compared to Europe, continues to support US corporate performance versus euro area equivalents (bottom panel). UK Corporate Health Monitor: Some Improvement, Even With Brexit Uncertainty Despite the persistent uncertainty over the UK-EU Brexit negotiations that has weighed on UK economic confidence, our top-down UK CHM remains in the "improving health" zone (Chart 11). All of the individual components are contributing to the strength of the CHM, which even improved from those healthy levels in Q2/2019 (the most recent data available). A sustained easing of UK financial conditions – easy monetary policy alongside a deeply undervalued currency – have helped boost interest/debt coverage ratios by keeping UK corporate borrowing costs low. Top-down operating margins for UK non-financial firms have surprisingly increased and now sit just under 25%. Short-term liquidity remains solid with leverage holding at non-problematic levels. As we discussed in a recent Special Report, the UK economy has been holding up fairly well despite the political uncertainty that has driven a prolonged slowdown in productivity growth through weak business investment.3 The UK consumer has continued to spend, however, seemingly desensitized to the political drama, and the labor market has remained tight enough to support a decent pace of household income growth. Despite the persistent uncertainty over the UK-EU Brexit negotiations, our top-down UK CHM remains in the "improving health" zone. The near term performance of the UK's economy is highly dependent on the final result of Brexit negotiations. If a negotiated Brexit occurs, UK corporates can start to ramp up the capital spending that has been delayed due to the political uncertainty, which will eventually lead to an improvement in UK productivity growth and overall corporate performance. A strengthening pound and rising government bond yields, driven by markets unwinding Brexit risk premia, will mitigate some of that growth thrust, but the net effect will still boost the relative performance of UK corporate debt versus Gilts. There are still near-term political risks stemming from the UK parliamentary election next month, with the deadline for a UK-EU Brexit deal delayed until after the election. Thus, we continue to maintain only a neutral stance on UK IG corporates in our model bond portfolio, despite our overall bias to be overweight global corporate debt versus government bonds. We will reconsider that stance after we have more clarity on the final resolution of the Brexit uncertainty. At a minimum, however, we expect UK corporates to continue to deliver solid excess returns versus UK Gilts (Chart 12). Chart 11UK Top-Down CHM: Solid Improvement, Despite Brexit Chart 12UK Corporates: Stay Neutral Japan Corporate Health Monitor: A Further Cyclical Deterioration Our bottom-up Japan CHM remains in the "deteriorating health" zone, as has been the case since the start of 2018 (Chart 13).4 The message from the individual CHM components, however, is that this is a cyclical, not structural, deterioration in Japanese corporate credit quality, and from a very healthy starting point. Leverage, defined here as the ratio of total debt to the book value of equity, is slightly above 100%, well below the 100-140% range seen between 2006 and 2015. A similar trend exists for return on capital, which has dipped below 5% but remains high relative to its history (although very low by global standards). Operating margins, debt coverage and short-term liquidity are down from recent peaks but all remain well above the lows of the decade since the 2008 financial crisis. Interest coverage has suffered a more meaningful deterioration relative to its history. However, this is more a cyclical issue related to falling profits (the numerator of the ratio) rather than rising interest costs (the denominator), with the latter remaining subdued thanks to the Bank of Japan’s hyper-easy monetary policy. For the former, the cyclical momentum in Japan’s economy is not improving, despite some recent evidence that global growth may be stabilizing. According to the latest Tankan survey, Japanese manufacturers – who saw profits fall -31% on a year-over-year basis in Q2/2019 - reported a worse business outlook than previously expected, both for large and small firms. This is not surprising, as Japan’s economy remains highly levered to global growth and export demand, in general, and China, in particular. Yet the less trade-sensitive services sector has also weakened – forecasts of the Tankan non-manufacturing index have already rolled over and the services PMI dropped to 49.7 in October. Japan’s corporate spread has widened slightly (+10bps) since the beginning of this year (Chart 14), in contrast to the spread tightening seen in other major developed economy corporate bond markets. This is sign that the markets have responded to the slowing growth momentum in Japan with a bit of a wider risk premium. Yet despite that widening, Japanese corporates with small positive yields continue to generate positive excess returns (on a duration-matched basis) versus Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs); yields on the latter will remain anchored near zero by the Bank of Japan’s Yield Curve Control policy. Thus, we continue to recommend an overweight stance on Japanese corporates vs JGBs as a buy-and-hold carry trade, even with the softening in our Japan CHM. Chart 13Japan Bottom-Up CHM: Cyclical Deterioration Chart 14Japan Corporates: Stay Overweight Vs JGBs For Carry Canada Corporate Health Monitors: Continuous Improvement Our top-down and bottom-up Canadian CHMs indicate an improving trend in Canadian corporate health, with both remaining in the “improving” zone as of the latest data available from Q2/2019 (Chart 15). The cyclical components (return on capital and operating margins) have gradually improved over the past three years, but remain relatively weak compared to history. Leverage is rising (now above 120% in our bottom-up CHM), but interest/debt coverage ratios remain steady and, in the case of the bottom-up CHM, have outright improved over the past year. We reviewed the Canadian economy last week5 and concluded that a Bank of Canada interest rate cut was unlikely because of signs of improving domestic growth momentum at a time when core inflation was at the midpoint of the BoC’s 1-3% target range. Overall, Canadian growth has been resilient in the face of the 2019 global manufacturing downturn, and should re-accelerate in the next year led by a firm consumer with rebounding housing and business investment. This should help boost the cyclical components of our Canada CHMs, especially if some improvement in global growth helps lift demand for Canadian commodity exports. We also introduced a framework to analyze Canadian corporate bonds in a Special Report published in late August.6 We concluded that Canadian companies’ financial health remains a positive for corporate bond returns on a cyclical basis, but high leverage and mediocre profitability were longer-term concerns. We also noted that the higher credit quality of Canadian corporates, where only 40% of the investment grade index is rated BBB, made them more potentially appealing on a creditworthiness basis relative to the lower quality markets in the US (50% BBB share) and euro area (52%). We continue to recommend an overweight position in Canadian corporate debt relative to Canadian government bonds as a carry trade. We continue to recommend an overweight position in Canadian corporate debt relative to Canadian government bonds as a carry trade. Spreads have held in a well-established range of 100-200bps since the 2009 recession (Chart 16), even during periods when our CHMs were indicating worsening corporate health. Accommodative monetary conditions and relatively low Canadian interest rates will continue to make Canadian corporates relatively attractive, in an environment of decent growth and firm corporate health. Chart 15Canada CHMs: Still Healthy, Despite Slower Growth Chart 16Canadian Corporates: Stay Overweight Vs Canadian Govt. Debt Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, CFA Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com Appendix 1: An Overview Of The BCA Corporate Health Monitors The BCA Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) is a composite indicator designed to assess the underlying financial strength of the corporate sector for a country. The Monitor is an average of six financial ratios inspired by those used by credit rating agencies to evaluate individual companies. However, we calculate our ratios using top-down (national accounts) data for profits, interest expense, debt levels, etc. The idea is to treat the entire corporate sector as if it were one big company, and then look at the credit metrics that would be used to assign a credit rating to it. Importantly, only data for the non-financial corporate sector is used in the CHM, as the measures that would be used to measure the underlying health of banks and other financial firms are different than those for the typical company. The six ratios used in the CHM are shown in Table 1 below. To construct the CHM, the individual ratios are standardized, added together, and then shown as a deviation from the medium-term trend. That last part is important, as it introduces more cyclicality into the CHM and allows it to better capture major turning points in corporate well-being. Largely because of this construction, the CHM has a very good track record at heralding trend changes in corporate credit spreads (both for Investment Grade and High-Yield) over many cycles. Table 1Definitions Of Ratios That Go Into The CHMs Top-down CHMs are now available for the US, euro area, the UK and Canada. The CHM methodology was extended in 2016 to look at corporate health by industry and by credit quality.7 The financial data of a broad set of individual US and euro area companies was used to construct individual “bottom-up” CHMs using the same procedure as the more familiar top-down CHM. Some of the ratios differ from those used in the top-down CHM (see Table 1), largely due to definitional differences in data presented in national income accounts versus those from actual individual company financial statements. The bottom-up CHMs analyze the health of individual sectors, and can be aggregated up into broad CHMs for Investment Grade and High-Yield groupings to compare with credit spreads. In 2018, we introduced bottom-up CHMs for Japan and Canada. With the country expansion of our CHM universe, we now have coverage for 92% of the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Corporate Bond Index (Appendix Chart 1). Appendix Chart 1We Now Have CHM Coverage For 92% Of The Developed Market Corporate Bond Universe Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, “How Sweet It Is”, dated November 6, 2019, available at gfis.bcareseach.com. 2 We only use the CHMs for euro area domestic issuers in this aggregate bottom-up CHM, as this is most reflective of uniquely European corporate credits. This also eliminates double-counting from US companies that issue in the euro area market that are part of our US CHMs. 3 Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, “United Kingdom: Cyclical Slowdown Or Structural Malaise?”, dated September 20, 2019, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 4 We do not currently have a top-down CHM for Japan given the lack of consistent government data sources for all the necessary components. 5 Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, “How Sweet It Is”, dated November 6, 2019, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, “The Great White North: A Framework For Analyzing Canadian Corporate Bonds”, dated August 28, 2019, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see Section II of The Bank Credit Analyst, “U.S. Corporate Health Gets A Failing Grade”, dated February 2016, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. Appendix 2: US Bottom-Up CHMs For Selected Sectors The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Depressed technicals, compelling valuations, macro tailwinds, improving operating fundamentals and the messages from our relative profit growth models and relative Cyclical Macro Indicators all signal that the time is ripe to initiate a long energy/short utilities pair trade. Pricey valuations, overbought technicals, the sell-off in the bond market and weak profit fundamentals, all warrant an underweight stance in the S&P utilities sector. Recent Changes Initiate a long S&P Energy/short S&P Utilities pair trade today. Table 1 Feature Equities propelled to uncharted territory, celebrating an easy Fed and the US/China détente with a hint of a tariff rollback, overcoming the seasonally difficult months of September and October. Historically, investors chase performance during the end of the year and seasonality will likely favor further flows into equities in the last two months of the year. On the economic front, while manufacturing remains in recession, a resilient labor market is providing a significant offset allaying fears of recession gripping the broad economy. Drilling deeper on the labor front is revealing. The unemployment rate ticked higher to 3.6% last month based on the household survey as the participation rate increased. However, according to the Sahm Rule Recession Indicator (SRRI), courtesy of Fed economist Claudia R. Sahm,1 were the unemployment rate to average 4% for three consecutive months by September 2020, the US economy will enter recession. In other words, based on empirical evidence the SRRI shows that when the three-month average unemployment rate has jumped by 50bps compared with previous twelve month low, the US has entered recession 100% of the time since the end of WWII (Chart 1). Chart 1Watch The Sahm Rule Recession Indicator Meanwhile, the parallels drawn with the mid-to-late 1990s and the current market backdrop have mushroomed, but our view is that the differences could not be wider. Since the history of our reconstructed SPX data going back to the late-1920s, there has never been a five-year period when the S&P 500 rose by at least 20% every year except for the 1995-1999 era. In that five-year period the SPX soared more than threefold, increasing annually by 34%, 20%, 31%, 27% and 20%, respectively. Investors forget that those were manic markets and despite a high and rising fed funds rate that peaked at 6.5% in early 2000 (real rates were over 4%), the forward P/E multiple went to the stratosphere ignoring theory and defying logic (Chart 2). Putting the late-1990s exuberance into perspective is instructive: if 1995 is similar to 2016 (and 1998 is similar to 2019) then the SPX should spike to over 6000 by the end of next year! Moving over to economic green shoots, we turn our attention to the signal the emerging markets are emitting. While both the EM and the Chinese manufacturing PMIs are expanding smartly, leading indicators suggest that the recovery may be running on empty. Chart 2One Of A Kind Chart 3Mixed Signals Chart 3 shows that the Chinese credit impulse is contracting, weighing on EM FX momentum and also signaling that the CAIXIN China manufacturing PMI, that has opened the widest gap with the official China NBS manufacturing PMI since the history of the data, will likely suffer a setback in the coming quarters. In the transportation sector, the Baltic Dry Index is down 33% since the early-September peak and is also losing steam on year-over-year basis, warning that a global trade recovery is skating on thin ice. Moreover, EM sentiment is downbeat. Investor flows into EM equities, according to the most liquid iShares MSCI EM ETF, have been drifting lower since the 2018 peak and have more recently gapped down (bottom panel, Chart 3). Thus, the recent green shoots may prove fleeting. This week we are initiating a new market-neutral pair trade and reiterate our negative view on a niche defensive sector. With regard to US liquidity, that we have been inundated with client requests recently, we highlight our simple liquidity indicator: industrial production (IP) growth versus M2 money supply growth. In other words, we gauge how fast a unit of currency is translated into IP. Chart 4 highlights that IP/M2 is contracting at an accelerating pace, heralding further earnings growth pain for the S&P 500. US dollar based liquidity is also contracting as we showed in last week’s US Equity Strategy Webcast slides. Chart 4Clogged Pipelines Weighing On Profit Growth Other SPX profit indicators we track continue to suggest that the earnings soft patch is not out of the woods yet (we use forward EBITDA estimates to gauge trend growth, which excludes the one time fiscal easing boost to net EPS). Net forward EBITDA revisions are below zero, the ISM manufacturing new orders-to-inventories ratio has fallen 40% from the 2018 peak and is hovering near parity, momentum in the key ISM manufacturing new orders subcomponent is contracting and BCA’s boom/bust indicator continues to deflate. All of this, suggests that a turnaround in profits remains elusive and is a first half of 2020 outcome, at the earliest (Chart 5). Already, Q4/2019 profit growth estimates have now sunk into negative territory according to the latest FactSet data.2 Finally, the Fed released the last Senior Loan Officer Survey of the year in the past week and demand for C&I loans collapsed. This data series has broken below the 2016 trough and warns that C&I credit origination will continue to contract. Chart 5No Pulse Chart 6Capex Contraction Dampens Need For Credit Such a souring backdrop makes intuitive sense as animal spirits have died down courtesy of the Sino-American trade war. CEO’s are still voting with their feet and are canceling/postponing capital outlays. Absent capex, C&I credit demand runs aground (Chart 6). It remains unclear if a US/China “phase one” trade deal including tariff rollbacks can reverse the ongoing global trade contraction, signaling that caution is still warranted on the prospects of the broad equity market for the next 9-12 months. This week we are initiating a new market-neutral pair trade and reiterate our negative view on a niche defensive sector. Long/Short Idea: Buy Energy/Sell Utilities There is an exploitable opportunity in going long the S&P energy sector/short the S&P utilities sector and we recommend initiating this market-neutral trade today. The top panel of Chart 7 shows that energy stocks have come full circle and are trading at levels last seen two decades ago when WTI oil was fetching less than half of today’s $55/bbl price. Encouragingly, there seems to be long-term support for relative share prices at the current overly depressed level. While utilities have been making headlines all year long given their outperformance, when put in proper perspective this niche defensive sector with a mere 3% weight in the SPX looks like a shipwreck (bottom panel, Chart 7). Taken together, this battle between two diminishing sectors presents a tradable opportunity by favoring energy stocks at the expense of utilities. In fact, this ratio trades at more than two standard deviations below the historical uptrend, and thus offers a lucrative risk/reward profile (Chart 8). Chart 7Buy Energy… Chart 8…At The Expense Of Utilities Beyond depressed technicals and compelling overall valuations with an alluring relative dividend yield (investors are paid an unprecedented 100bps in dividend yield carry to put on this trade, Chart 9), macro tailwinds, improving operating fundamentals, and the messages from our relative profit growth models and relative Cyclical Macro Indicators (CMI), all signal that the time is ripe to initiate a long energy/short utilities pair trade. On the macro front, inflation expectations have tentatively troughed and if oil rebounds further, as our Commodity & Energy Strategy service expects, then given their tight positive correlation with oil prices, rising inflation expectations should put a definitive floor under the relative share price ratio (Chart 10). Chart 9Unloved And Oversold Chart 10Return Of Inflation… However, the real interest rate component (i.e. growth) also explains roughly half of the selloff in the 10-year Treasury yield since early September, which also moves in lockstep with relative share price momentum (bottom panel, Chart 10). Were this budding global growth recovery to gain steam into the first half of 2020, then energy profits would outshine utility sector profits. As a reminder, oil is a global growth barometer and rises with increasing global growth while defensive utilities flourish when growth sputters (Chart 11). The US dollar’s recent appreciation has also dealt a blow to this trade and a grinding lower currency which is synonymous with a modest global growth recovery would also reverse this pair trade’s fortunes (top two panels, Chart 12). Chart 11…And Green Shoots Beneficiary Chart 12Operating Metrics Also… Zooming into the relative operating outlook, the bottom panel of Chart 12 shows that oil price inflation is outpacing natural gas selling prices. This relative underlying commodity backdrop is important as energy stocks move with the ebbs and flows of the oil market, whereas the marginal price setter for utility services is natural gas prices. The upshot is that heading into 2020, bombed out relative share prices should play catch up to the firming relative commodity backdrop. Capital spending outlays also favor energy shares over utilities stocks (top two panels, Chart 13). Surprisingly, the utilities sector net debt-to-EBITDA ratio is above 5x, waving a red flag, but energy indebtedness is coming down fast in the aftermath of the early 2016 oil price collapse and the energy sector’s net debt-to-EBITDA ratio is close to 2x (bottom panel, Chart 13). Our relative CMIs and relative profit growth models do an excellent job capturing all these moving parts and are unanimously sending a bullish message that an earnings-led recovery is in store for the relative share price ratio (Chart 14). Chart 13…Favor Energy Over Utilities Chart 14Green Light From US Equity Strategy Models Bottom Line: Initiate a long S&P energy/short S&P utilities pair trade today. Out Of Power Warning Utilities stocks have been all the rave this year, but given their small weighting in the SPX they only explain a very small part of the broad market’s run (in contrast, the heavyweight tech sector explains most of the S&P 500’s rise as we highlighted in recent research).3 We reiterate our underweight stance in this small defensive sector that has run way ahead of soft profit fundamentals. Worrisomely, utilities trade with a 20 forward P/E handle and command a 20% premium to the broad market, but their forecast EPS growth rate at 5% trails the SPX by 350bps (not shown). Chart 15 shows that our composite relative Valuation Indicator has surged to one standard deviation above the historical mean, a level typically associated with recession. Technicals are also extended (bottom panel, Chart 15), warning that this crowded trade is at risk of deflating, especially if the breakout in bond yields gains steam. Chart 15Overbought And Overvalued In sum, pricey valuations, overbought technicals, the selloff in the bond market and weak profit fundamentals, all warrant an underweight stance in the S&P utilities sector. The top panel of Chart 16 shows that relative share prices and the 10-year Treasury yield are closely inversely correlated. Now that the risk free asset is having a more competitive yield, investors will likely start to abandon this niche defensive sector. Similarly, the recent selloff in the total return bond-to-stock ratio also warns that buying up expensive utilities at the current juncture is fraught with danger (second panel, Chart 16). The jury is still out on the final outcome of the Sino-American trade war. However, there has been a decisive change of heart in US exporters and the ISM manufacturing survey’s new export orders subcomponent reflects an, at the margin, improvement in the US/China trade relationship. This bodes ill for safe haven utilities stocks (new export orders shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 16). Chart 16Budding Recovery Weighing On Utilities Chart 17Sell The Strength Turning over to the sector’s operating metrics reveals that investors piling into utilities is unwarranted. Natural gas prices are contracting at the steepest pace of the past four years (middle panel, Chart 17) and signal that the path of least resistance is lower for relative share price momentum. Meanwhile, electricity capacity utilization is in a multi decade downtrend, warning that the relative profitability will remain under pressure in the coming quarters (bottom panel, Chart 17). In sum, pricey valuations, overbought technicals, the sell-off in the bond market and weak profit fundamentals, all warrant an underweight stance in the S&P utilities sector. Bottom Line: Shy away from the expensive S&P utilities sector. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG – S5UTIL– PPL, PNW, ATO, PEG, FE, EIX, AEE, SO, SRE, AEP, XEL, DTE, EVRG, WEC, AES, CMS, LNT, ED, NRG, D, AWK, DUK, ETR, EXC, NEE, CNP, NI, ES. Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 https://www.federalreserve.gov/econres/claudia-r-sahm.htm 2 https://insight.factset.com/sp-500-now-projected-to-report-a-year-over-year-decline-in-earnings-in-q4-2019 3 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Insight Report, “Deciphering Sector Returns” dated August 30, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Stay neutral cyclicals over defensives (downgrade alert) Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps (Stop 10%)