Financial Markets
Highlights Q1 Performance Breakdown: The GFIS recommended model bond portfolio returned -0.55% (hedged into U.S. dollars) in the first quarter of 2018, underperforming the custom benchmark index by -11bps. The overweight to U.S. corporate bonds was the main drag on performance. Stress Test & Scenario Analysis: We introduce a simple framework to conduct scenario analysis and stress testing of the model bond portfolio. Our conclusion is that some shifting in our corporate bond allocations - reducing exposure to U.S. investment grade, increasing exposure to euro area and emerging market corporates - can actually help eliminate expected losses in scenarios that run counter to our base case. Feature This week, we present our regular quarterly report on the performance of the BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy (GFIS) model bond portfolio. As a reminder to existing readers (and for new clients), the portfolio is a part of our service that is a departure from the usual BCA macro analysis of global fixed income markets. The model portfolio is how we communicate our opinion on the relative attractiveness between government bond and spread product sectors, by applying actual percentage weightings to each of our recommendations within a fully invested hypothetical bond portfolio. This framework also gives us a vehicle to discuss many of the typical bond portfolio management issues that our clients face on a daily basis. In that vein, we are introducing a new element to our framework in this report - estimating future portfolio performance using scenario analysis, and conducting stress testing of outcomes that are contrary to our base case expectations for global bond markets. Q1/2018 Model Portfolio Performance Breakdown: An Unexpected Hit From U.S. Corporates Chart of the WeekShifting Correlations Hurt##BR##The Model Portfolio In Q1 The surge in global market volatility in the first quarter of the year weighed on the returns for the GFIS model bond portfolio. The portfolio had a total return of -0.55% (hedged into U.S. dollars), which lagged that of our custom benchmark index by -11bps.1 The quarter started out on a good note, with the portfolio outperforming by +12bps in January, as gains from our below-benchmark duration stance offset some underperformance from our overweight on global spread product. The story changed in early February, however, as the U.S. wage inflation "scare" and the associated VIX spike resulted in wider U.S. corporate bond spreads. This counteracted the gains on the government bond side of the portfolio as bond yields continued to climb. After yields peaked in mid-February, the portfolio gave back much of the outperformance from duration, with no recovery of the early February losses from spread product (Chart of the Week). In terms of the breakdown between the government bond and spread product allocations in our model portfolio, the former generated +9bps of outperformance versus our custom benchmark index while the latter underperformed by -19bps (Table 1). The bar charts showing the total and relative returns for each individual government bond market and spread product sector are presented in Charts 2 and 3. The main individual sectors of the portfolio that drove the excess returns were the following: Biggest outperformers Underweight U.S. Treasuries (+16bps) Underweight emerging market (EM) U.S. dollar (USD) denominated corporate debt (+5bps) Overweight Japanese government bonds (JGBs) with maturities of ten years or less (+4bps) Underweight EM USD-denominated sovereign debt (+2bps) Biggest underperformers Overweight U.S. investment grade (IG) Financials (-14bps) Overweight U.S. IG Industrials (-8bps) Underweight JGBs with maturities beyond ten years (-8bps) Overweight U.S. Ba-rated high-yield (HY) corporates (-4bps) Table 1GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1-2018 Overall Return Attribution Chart 2GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1-2018 Government Bond Performance Attribution By Country Chart 3GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1-2018 Spread Product Performance Attribution By Sector The hits from the overweight positions in U.S. corporate debt were the most surprising, given that the U.S. economy and corporate profits are still expanding at a solid pace. That would typically keep corporate credit spreads well-behaved, especially when U.S. Treasury yields are rising or stable as was the case in the first quarter. Yet volatility has spiked and stayed elevated in response to heightened uncertainty over slowing global growth momentum, rising U.S. inflation and worries about future U.S. trade policy. Investors have demanded moderately higher credit risk premiums in the U.S. as a result, to the detriment of U.S. corporate bond performance. This can be seen in Chart 4, which presents the returns of the individual countries and spread product sectors in the GFIS model bond portfolio. The returns are hedged into U.S. dollars (we do not take active currency risk in this portfolio) and also adjusted to reflect duration differences between each country/sector and the overall custom benchmark index for the model portfolio. We have also color coded the bars in each chart to reflect our recommended investment stance for each market.2 On this "apples-for-apples" basis, U.S. IG corporates were the worst performing fixed income market in the first quarter of 2018. Chart 4Ranking The Winners & Losers From The Model Portfolio In Q1 Looking ahead, we see no need yet to get out of our recommended overweight in global spread product or underweight in global government bond exposure (Chart 5). While there are some signs of slowing growth momentum in major economies (euro area, China), a deeper slowdown is not being heralded by leading economic indicators, which continue to rise. Much of the global economy continues to operate at or beyond full employment, which will continue to put moderate upward pressure on inflation rates. This will force central banks to maintain a relatively hawkish bias, despite more elevated financial market volatility. The most likely outcomes are still more bearish for government bonds than for corporate credit. Chart 5We're Sticking With Our##BR##Spread Product Overweight Having said that - the higher volatility environment does argue for some reduction in the size of the spread product overweight in the model portfolio. Especially after we consider some scenario analysis on returns, as we discuss in the next section. Bottom Line: The GFIS recommended model bond portfolio returned -0.55% (hedged into U.S. dollars) in the first quarter of 2018, underperforming the custom benchmark index by -11bps. The overweight to U.S. corporate bonds was the main drag on performance, thanks to the more elevated level of market volatility and spread widening during the quarter. Stress Tests & Scenario Analysis A common analytical tool used by professional fund managers is to perform "stress tests" on their portfolios. This is done to estimate the size of potential losses that could occur after major market moves, typically those that went against current positioning in a portfolio. Those estimates are critical to the effective risk management of a portfolio. As part of the ongoing development of the infrastructure for our model bond portfolio framework, we are introducing scenario analysis and stress testing of our current recommended allocations. The goal is to determine the magnitude of potential returns that could be expected under our base case and alternative scenarios. This is meant to complement the main risk management tool that we added last year, a "risk budget" based on the tracking error (i.e. volatility difference) of the portfolio versus our custom benchmark.3 We have deliberately been targeting a modest tracking error for our model portfolio, given the historical richness (low yields, tight spreads) of so many parts of the global bond universe. Yet our estimate of the GFIS model bond portfolio's tracking error has fallen even below the low end of the 40-60bp range that we have been targeting (Chart 6).4 Chart 6Lower Tracking Error Through Higher##BR##Corporate Bond Volatility This appears to be due to an odd development. The model bond portfolio's volatility was running below that of its benchmark index over the past year, but with the increase in the return volatility of U.S. IG corporate debt - the biggest overweight within spread product - the portfolio's volatility has been converging to that of the benchmark from below, hence lowering the tracking error. In other words, being overweight U.S. IG was a portfolio diversifier last year, but that is no longer the case. This obviously highlights some of the limitations of using tracking error as the sole risk management tool for a bond portfolio. Shifting cross-asset correlations and volatilities can wreak havoc on any "guesstimate" of a portfolio's underlying risk. A more simple solution is to conduct scenario analysis of expected returns, then shock the analysis for changes in the underlying assumptions. The key is having a reasonable framework for estimating returns for various asset classes. For our purposes in the model portfolio, we are using a simple approach to forecast the expected returns. We use a factor-based framework that models changes in global bond yields as a function of changes in the following four variables: the U.S. dollar, the price of oil, the fed funds rate and the VIX index. We show the regression results of our factor-based modeling of yield changes for each spread sector in our model bond portfolio in Table 2A. We ran the regressions for different time horizons, but we decided on using the post-crisis period since 2009 in all cases. We also attempted to model the yield changes of government bonds using those same four factors, but the R-squareds for all those regressions were far too low to make them useful. We instead used a simple approach of calculating the beta since 2009 of changes in individual bond yields to changes in U.S. Treasury yields for each corresponding maturity bucket. We present those yield betas in Table 2B. Table 2AFactor Regressions Used To Estimate Spread Product Yield Changes Table 2BEstimated Government Bond Yield Betas To U.S. Treasuries With these tools, we can forecast returns for each bond sector under different scenarios. We can then use those forecasts to predict the expected return for our model bond portfolio under those same scenarios. In Tables 3A & 3B. We show three differing scenarios, with all the following changes occurring over a one-year horizon: Table 3AScenario Analysis For The GFIS Model Portfolio Table 3BU.S. Treasury Yield Assumptions For The Scenario Analysis Our Base Case: the Fed delivers another 75bps of rate hikes, the U.S. dollar rises by 5%, oil prices rise by 20% (the non-consensus view of BCA's commodity strategists), the VIX index stays unchanged at current elevated levels and there is a modest bear steepening of the U.S. Treasury curve. A Very Hawkish Fed: the Fed delivers 150bps of rate hikes, the U.S. dollar rises by 10%, oil prices fall by 10%, the VIX index increases by ten points from current levels and there is a sharp bear flattening of the U.S. Treasury curve. Chart 7U.S. IG Corporates Have A##BR##High Yield Beta (a.k.a. Duration) A Very Dovish Fed: the Fed only hikes rates by 25bps, the U.S. dollar falls by 5%, oil prices fall by 5%, the VIX index increases by five points from current levels and there is a modest bull steepening of the U.S. Treasury curve. In Table 3A, we also show the expected yield changes generated by our regressions for each spread product sector and the yield betas to U.S. Treasuries for each government bond market. This produces expected returns for the GFIS model bond portfolio, which are shown in the top part of the table. In our base case, the portfolio is expected to outperform the benchmark by +42bps, but underperform by nearly equivalent amounts in both alternative scenarios. In the bottom part of the table, we show expected returns where we reduce our large overweight to U.S. IG corporates. The latter has a high sensitivity to rising global government bond yields compared to some of our other significant overweights like Japanese government debt and U.S. high-yield (Chart 7). We then take that reduced U.S. IG weighting and increase the exposure to euro area and EM corporate bonds. This adjusted portfolio results in higher excess returns not only in our base case (now +78bps) but even in the "very hawkish Fed" scenario (now +8bps). The "very dovish Fed" scenario produces a similar loss in this scenario (now -37bps), but that is to be expected since this includes a fall in global bond yields that would hurt our current underweight duration stance (Chart 8). Importantly, this adjusted portfolio would not alter the positive carry of the model portfolio (i.e. the portfolio yield remains at 16bps above that of the custom benchmark index, Chart 9) Chart 8Flattening Yield Curves##BR##Have Also Hurt Returns Chart 9Some Help From##BR##Positive Carry Based on this scenario analysis, we are going to implement the changes in the bottom half of Table 3A. We are cutting our overweight to U.S. IG corporates in half (which still leaves us overweight), raising euro area IG and HY corporate exposure to neutral and reducing the size of our EM corporate underweight. The changes to the model portfolio can be found on Page 14. These changes will reduce our exposure to a sector that not only has become riskier, but which also looks relatively expensive to U.S. high-yield (Chart 10) and which has been underperforming euro area (Chart 11) and EM equivalents (Chart 12). Chart 10U.S. IG Looks More##BR##Expensive Than U.S. HY Chart 11An Unexpected Underperformance##BR##Of U.S. IG vs. European Corporates Chart 12An Unexpected Underperformance##BR##Of U.S. IG Vs. Versus EM Corporates Bottom Line: We introduce a simple framework to conduct scenario analysis and stress testing of the model bond portfolio. Our conclusion is that some shifting in our corporate bond allocations - reducing exposure to U.S. investment grade, increasing exposure to euro area and emerging market corporates - can actually help eliminate expected losses in scenarios that run counter to our base case. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 The GFIS model bond portfolio custom benchmark index is the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index, but with allocations to global high-yield corporate debt replacing very high quality spread product (i.e. AA-rated). We believe this to be more indicative of the typical internal benchmark used by global multi-sector fixed income managers. 2 For Italy & Spain, the bars have two colors since the portfolio weights were changed in mid-February, when we upgraded Italian debt to neutral at the expense of a reduction in Spanish government bond exposure. 3 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "Adding A Risk Management Framework To Our Model Bond Portfolio", dated June 20th 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 4 In general, we aim to target a tracking error no greater than 100bps. We think this is reasonable for a portfolio where currency exposure is fully hedged and less than 5% of the portfolio benchmark is in bonds with ratings below investment grade. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Q1 earnings season looks robust, but trade policy is an uncertainty. Sizeable shifts in equity technicals and sentiment since the start of the year; valuation still stretched. Global growth may have peaked but fiscal, monetary and legislative backdrop remains supportive. The market is coming to terms with President Trump's willingness to put his policies where his campaign rhetoric was, at least on trade policy. Feature Chart 1Despite Setback In March, ##br## U.S. Labor Market Remains Strong U.S. equity prices fell last week as trade policy remained on the front pages. Gold was one of the few beneficiaries of the tariff talk. Investors hope to turn the page this week as the Q1 2018 earnings season kicks into high gear, but trade-related market volatility is here to stay. The bar is high for 2018 earnings growth, and the focus may shift to the prospects for 2019 sooner rather than later. The modest selloff in the S&P 500 since late January led to a shift in sentiment, but the technical picture for U.S. equities is mixed. Global growth may be rolling over, but we find that risk assets perform well anyway, if fiscal, monetary and legislative policy is aligned. Trump's actions on tariffs do not mean that we are necessarily headed for a trade war. The tariffs proposed but both sides have not yet been implemented and there is still time for compromise. We do not see March's modest 103,000 increase in non-farm payrolls as signaling a weaker labor market. First, the monthly data can be volatile. The soft increase in March follows an outsized 326,000 gain in February. The 3-month average, more reflective of the underlying trend, is a solid 202,000. Second, average hourly earnings increased by 0.3% m/m, which nudged the annual wage inflation rate to 2.7% from 2.6%. Firming earnings growth is a sign of a strong labor market (Chart 1). Despite the soft increase in March payrolls, the U.S. labor market and economy are on a firm footing. Aggregate hours worked increased by 2.0% at a quarterly annualized rate in Q1. Such a pace is consistent with about 3% GDP growth. Firm growth will allow inflation to head back to the 2% target and allow the Fed to continue with its gradual rate hikes. S&P 500 Earnings: Q1 2018 The consensus expects an 18% year-over-year increase in the S&P 500's EPS in Q1 2018 versus Q1 2017, and 20% in 2018. Energy, materials, financials and technology will lead the way in earnings growth in Q1, while real estate and consumer discretionary will struggle. Excluding the energy sector, the consensus expects a stout 17% increase in profits. The robust profit environment for Q1 2018 and the year ahead reflects sharply higher oil prices compared with early 2017 and the impact of last year's Tax Cut and Jobs Act. Moreover, improved global growth and still modest labor costs will support the Q1 results. Trade policy will likely replace tax cuts as a key topic when corporate managements report Q1 outcomes and provide guidance for Q2 and beyond. While no tariffs have yet been imposed, analysts will want to understand the impact that the proposed actions will have on input costs and margins. Moreover, investors must gauge to what extent trade policy-related uncertainty is weighing on business sentiment (details below in "Trade Skirmish...Or Trade War?"). Market volatility, rising interest rates and the modest upswing in U.S. labor costs will also be discussed during the Q1 earnings calls. As always, guidance from corporate leaders for Q2 2018 and ahead are more important than the actual results for Q1 2018. The markets probably have already priced in a robust 2018 earnings profile due to the Tax Cut and Jobs Act, and are looking ahead to 2019 (Chart 2). Investors typically stay focused on the current calendar year's EPS through to at least Q3 before turning their attention to the next year. However, this year may be different. The consensus is looking for 10% EPS growth in 2019, a sharp deceleration from the 20% increase expected this year. Chart 2The Bar Is High For 2018 EPS, But The Focus Is On 2019 Chart 3 shows that elevated readings on the ISM provide a very favorable backdrop for EPS in 2018. As indicated in Chart 4, industrial production (IP), a proxy for S&P 500 sales, is poised to advance in 2018 and lift corporate profits. Industrial production growth may be peaking, but we don't expect it to soften much on a year-over-year basis. Chart 3Elevated ISM Good News For 2018 EPS Growth Chart 4Stout Readings On IP Support S&P 500 Revenue Gains Global GDP growth estimates for 2018 and 2019 continue to move steadily higher in sharp contrast with prior years when forecasters relentlessly lowered GDP estimates (Chart 5). Chart 5U.S. And Global Growth Estimates Are Still Accelerating... ##br## But For How Much Longer? Chart 6The Dollar Should Not Be A Big Concern ##br## In Q1 Earnings Season The greenback should not be an issue for corporate results in Q1 2018 based on minimal references to a robust dollar in the past six Beige Books. This significantly differs from 2015 and early 2016 when there were surges in Beige Book mentions (Chart 6). The last time that six consecutive Beige Books had so few remarks about a strong dollar was in late 2014. BCA's stance is that the dollar will move modestly higher in 2018. The appreciation would trim EPS growth by roughly 1 to 2 percentage points, although most of this would occur next year due to lagged effects. Movements in the U.S. dollar also explain the divergent paths of profits, sales and margins of domestically focused corporations versus globally oriented ones. In recent quarters, a modestly weaker dollar has allowed profit and sales gains of global firms to rebound and outpace those of domestic businesses (Chart 7). Margins for U.S. companies have been steady at record heights since 2014, while margins for global businesses dipped along with oil prices in 2014-2016, but rebounded last year and are higher than margins of domestic companies. Nonetheless, a slowdown in growth outside the U.S. may reverse these trends (Please read below, "Global Growth Has Peaked, Now What?"). Investors are skeptical that margins can advance in Q1 2018 for the seventh consecutive quarter. BCA's view is that we are in a temporary sweet spot for margins, which should continue for the next couple of quarters. However, the secular mean reversion of margins will resume beyond that time as wage pressures begin to percolate. Chart 7Global EPS, Margins Outpacing Domestic Chart 8Strong S&P Growth Ahead, Will Start To Slow Soon Bottom Line: BCA expects that the earnings backdrop will be supportive of equity prices in 2018 (Chart 8). However, investors may have already priced in the benefits of the Tax Cut and Jobs Act on corporate results and are focused on 2019 figures. EPS growth will be more of a headwind for stock prices as we enter 2019 (Chart 8). Stay overweight stocks versus bonds. Technical, Sentiment And Valuation Update BCA's Technical Indicator is not at an extreme (Chart 9, panel 1) and the 7.8% pullback in the S&P 500 since January 26, 2018 leaves the index in the middle of its recovery trend channel (panel 2). The failure of the index to break out of this channel earlier this year suggests that a period of consolidation for equities awaits. Moreover, the upward slope in the NYSE advance/decline line (panel 3) is in jeopardy. The final panel of Chart 9 shows that stocks are no longer extremely overvalued, but they remain overvalued nonetheless. Stretched valuations say more about medium- and long-term returns than near-term performance.1 Chart 9Technicals And Valuations For U.S. Equities Chart 10Bullish Sentiment Took A Hit In Early 2018 But Is Still Elevated The shift in the equity sentiment since the market top in January is notable. BCA's investor sentiment composite index, which hit an all-time high at the end January, has pulled back in the past few months (Chart 10, panel 1). However, this metric has not yet returned to its long-term average (solid line on top panel of Chart 10). The drop in sentiment is broadly based; individual investors and advisors who serve them (panels 2 and 4) along with traders (panel 3) have lately curtailed their bullishness. Recent shifts in several other sentiment surveys are also worth noting: The American Association of Individual Investors, a contrary indicator of sentiment, turned bullish in recent weeks. The percentage of respondents who were bearish moved above 30%, while the percentage of bulls dipped to 32%. Neither measure is at an extreme (Chart 11). The National Association of Active Investment Managers (NAAIM) says that active managers have reduced equity risk since the beginning of Q4 2017 (Chart 12). At 52%, the average equity exposure of institutional investors is at the lowest level since March 2016 and is nearly half the 102% exposure at the start of 2017. In contrast, the March 2017 reading was the highest since 2007, just before the S&P 500 peak in October 2007. As in previous bear markets, BCA's equity speculation index moved into "high speculation" territory in early 2017 and has remained there. The index is at its highest point since the 2000 market peak (Chart 13, panel 1). Moreover, net speculative positions of S&P 500 stocks are roughly in balance, but have turned net short in recent weeks. Nonetheless, this metric is not at an extreme (panel 3). Chart 11Individual Investors Have Turned More Bearish Chart 12Active Managers Still Overweight Equities... Chart 13Equity Speculation Is High... Chart 14Pullback Has Relieved Some Technical Pressure The S&P 500 is close to its 200-day moving average. In late 2017, this indicator was at the upper end of its post-2000 range (Chart 14, panel 1). BCA's composite technical measure is in the middle of the 2007-2017 range and is not a concern (Chart 14, panel 5). Moreover, the percentage of NYSE stocks above their 10- and 30-week highs are below average and at the low end of their recent ranges. Furthermore, new highs minus new lows is at neutral (panel 2). Bottom Line: The 7.8% pullback in the S&P 500 since January 26 has relieved some technical pressure on the market, and sentiment levels are less stretched than at the late January 2018 peak. Moreover, institutions have cut their equity exposures. Nonetheless, stock speculation is rampant and valuations are elevated, which suggests lower returns in the coming decade. Moreover, a slowdown in global growth in ongoing trade tensions suggest that the risk/reward balance for equities has deteriorated. Global Growth Has Peaked, Now What? Chart 15Is Global Growth Peaking? In last week's report we stated that while BCA expects global growth to be solid this year, there are signs that global growth may near a top.2 March's PMI data support that view. Chart 15 shows that the Markit Global PMI dipped to 53.4 in March from 54.1 in February; the 0.7 drop was the largest since February 2016 (panel 2). Last month,3 we discussed 5 episodes in the past 35 years when global growth surged and fiscal, monetary and regulatory policies were aligned to boost the U.S. economy. The current episode of synchronized policy commenced in January 2016. Risk assets perform well when these policy tailwinds are in place, but these assets tend to struggle for 12 months after the tailwinds abate. BCA expects the ongoing era of pro-growth policies to end next year as the Fed raises rates into restrictive territory. However, some investors wonder if the peak in global growth changes our view of how risk assets will perform during periods of harmonized policy. We do not expect the peak in global growth to lead to a recession this year or next. Chart 16 and Table 1 show the performance of U.S.-based financial assets, gold, oil, the dollar and S&P 500 earnings when Fed, fiscal and legislative policies are stimulative and global growth is rolling over but still positive. There has been only a handful of such episodes, so investors should be cautious when interpreting these results. The S&P 500 beats Treasuries, investment-grade and high-yield credit outperforms Treasuries, and small caps outpace large caps. Gold and oil perform well in these periods, perhaps aided by a weaker dollar. S&P 500 earnings are positive. Chart 16Positive Policy Backdrop As Global Growth Is Rolling OverTable 1Three Periods Where Global Growth Rolled Over But Policy Backdrop Was Stimulative Bottom Line: A peak in global growth reduces the risk/reward balance for risk assets, and provides another reason to be cautious. Equity valuation, although improved recently, is still stretched. Central banks are slowly removing the punchbowl, margins have limited upside and the economic cycle is at a late stage. Long-term investors should already be scaling back on risk. Short-term investors should stay overweight risk for now, on the view that fiscal stimulus will provide a tailwind for earnings for the remainder of the year. Trade Skirmish...Or Trade War? BCA's Geopolitical Strategy service notes4 that the market is coming to terms with President Trump's willingness to put his policies where his campaign rhetoric was, at least on trade policy. U.S. equities are down by 5.7% since the White House announced tariffs on steel and aluminum and 2.34% since it declared impending levies against China. Although we have cautioned clients since November 2016 that protectionism is a real risk to global growth and risk assets, the U.S. demands on China justify the moniker of a trade skirmish, rather than a full-on war. In view of our position, we think the 5.7% drawdown is appropriate, if a bit sanguine. President Trump remains unconstrained on trade policy, giving him leeway to be tougher than the market expects. Therefore, it is appropriate for the market to price in a 20%-30% probability of a trade war developing. Given that the market drawdown in such a scenario could be 20% or more, the market is appropriately discounting the risks. Why would a trade war between the U.S. and China elicit a bear market in U.S. equities when a similar confrontation in the 1980s between Japan and the U.S. did not? First, the overvaluation of stocks is much greater today. Secondly, interest rates are much lower, restricting how much policymakers can react to adverse risks. Thirdly, supply chains are much more integrated, both globally and between China and the U.S. The U.S. Administration's trade policy is not haphazard. President Trump and U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer are on the same page: they have made China, and not NAFTA trade partners or South Korea, the target of U.S. protectionism (Chart 17). Chart 17China, Not NAFTA, In The Crosshairs Table 2U.S. Gradually Exempting Allies From Tariffs The rapid pace at which the Administration pivoted from global tariffs to targeting China is an indication of what lies ahead. The U.S. uses the threat of tariffs to cajole its allies into tougher trade enforcement against China (Table 2). This strategy can work, as outlined last week,5 but there is plenty of room for mistakes. Trump also wants to change the U.S. policy on immigration and he may use NAFTA negotiations to gain leverage over Mexico. Therefore, there is a slight probability that Trump may trigger Article 2205 to leave NAFTA, but we believe the risk has declined substantively since our 50% estimate in November 2017. Bottom Line: The Trump Administration has pursued a well-considered but tough trade policy toward China. Nonetheless, Trump's actions do not mean that we are necessarily headed for a trade war. The tariffs proposed by both sides have not yet been implemented and there is still time for compromise. The U.S. Treasury will release a list of exemptions on May 1. On May 21, Treasury will reassess its list of China's investments in the U.S. and China will likely retaliate. June 5 marks the end of a 60-day negotiation period when the Administration must decide whether to implement the announced tariffs. There still is a 30% chance that the trade skirmish will morph into a trade war. Trump could significantly escalate matters if he declares a national emergency on trade in June. Expect more trade-related volatility in U.S. financial markets until that time. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com Matt Gertken, Associate Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Asset Allocation Special Report, "What Returns Can You Expect?", dated November 15, 2017, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Has Global Growth Peaked?", dated April 2, 2018, available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Policy Line Up", dated March 12, 2018, available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Trump's Demands On China", dated April 4, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Taiwan Is A Potential Black Swan", dated March 30, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights Portfolio Strategy The capex upcycle, a soft U.S. dollar and improving end demand signal that it no longer pays to underweight the S&P tech sector. Lift exposure to neutral. Firming domestic and global final demand, the synchronized global capex upcycle, an overly pessimistic sell-side analyst community and cheap valuations compel us to upgrade the S&P tech hardware, storage & peripherals index to overweight. Recent Changes S&P Technology - Upgrade to neutral today. S&P Tech Hardware, Storage & Peripherals - Boost to overweight and add to the high-conviction overweight list today. Table 1 Feature The S&P 500 seesawed last week, and continues to absorb the early February drawdown. While global growth cannot continue its breakneck pace indefinitely and a soft patch is inevitable, global output growth remains significant and above trend. Our constructive cyclical equity market view remains intact, premised upon the longevity of the business cycle, at least for the next 9-12 months. In the U.S. specifically, the ISM manufacturing survey is perched closer to 60 than to 50, unemployment insurance claims hover near 50-year lows and the muted 10-year Treasury yield moves all signal that generalized fear has yet to grip markets (Chart 1). In fact, if one looks back at the 2015, 2011 and 2010 global growth scares, investors took shelter in U.S. Treasuries as the SPX sold off, sending the 10-year UST yield lower by 50, 70 and 70 bps respectively in a very short time span. The fact that the 10-year yield is only 15 bps below its peak should cause us to question whether the recent equity drawdown is really about slowing global growth. On the monetary policy front, while the Fed is increasing the fed funds rate and decreasing the size of its balance sheet and volatility is making a comeback (please see Chart 1 from the March 5th Special Report), the real fed funds rate remains below the zero line and the real 10-year UST yield is also close to nil (Chart 2). Economic slack measures confirm that the Fed remains behind the curve. The output and unemployment gaps have been closed for a while now, and BCA's unemployment diffusion index and the Taylor rule both signal that monetary policy is extremely accommodative (Chart 3). Chart 1Macro Conditions... Chart 2...Remain Conducive... Chart 3...To A Rising SPX The implication is that macro conditions remain conducive to a rising equity market from a cyclical time horizon perspective. Meanwhile, sifting through the noise reveals that the market is likely coming to grips with a calendar 2019 EPS growth of a more reasonable 10% annual rate compared with this year's near 20% peak growth rate. This transition, as we highlighted in recent research, will be turbulent,1 and likely an earnings validation phase will pave the way higher for the broad equity market. In fact, dissecting the tax relief impact on different sectors is in order. Charts 4 & 5 show the calendar 2018 forward estimates on December 31st, 2017 and what analysts pencil in today, respectively. Charts 6 & 7 highlight the delta in absolute terms and percentage change terms. Chart 42018 EPS Growth On March 30, 2018 Chart 52018 EPS Growth On December 31, 2017 Chart 6Delta Chart 7Delta % Change Telecom services will likely benefit tenfold from the lower corporate tax rate (shown truncated, Chart 7), and consumer discretionary stocks are also prime beneficiaries. But this also means that 2018 after-tax profit data are masking the negative underlying trend growth rate for both of these sectors which also sport grim operating metrics. The S&P telecom services sector is a high-conviction underweight,2 and we reiterate our recent downgrade to a below benchmark allocation in the S&P consumer discretionary sector.3 Industrials, energy and financials, also benefit greatly from tax relief (Chart 7), but higher commodity prices along with improving industry operating metrics contribute to the EPS euphoria for these sectors. Nevertheless, we have identified three key risks to our sanguine equity market view: Escalating geopolitical/regulatory uncertainty Severe global growth slowdown U.S. dollar surge All three risks are intertwined and could infiltrate profit growth in the coming months. As we have posited in recent research, U.S. dollar softness begets higher global growth and the two feed off of each other in a virtuous cycle. A depreciating currency is a profit fillip for SPX constituents with heavy export exposure, the opposite is also true (Chart 8). Chart 8S&P 500: Aggregate Sector International Revenue Exposure (%) If the Trump Administration continues to slap on tariffs with China retaliating, as we experienced last week, eventually triggering a global trade war, then all bets are off on the sustainability of global growth (Chart 9). Such an outcome would weigh heavily on both market sentiment and profits, as our Geopolitical Strategists argued last week.4 Chart 9Don't Throw In The Towel On Global Growth Yet Finally, regulatory clampdown on the tech sector specifically is also on our radar screen, especially given the monopolistic powers that a handful of U.S. tech titans command. This is not only a U.S. risk, but also a global one. However, the 2000s Microsoft and recent Google precedents suggest that a corporate breakup is a low probability event à la "Ma Bell" in 1983, and heavy fines are the most likely outcome (we will be covering this regulatory risk in an upcoming Special Report in conjunction with our sister Geopolitical Strategy publication, stay tuned). Adding it up, we assign low probabilities to all three risks. This week we are taking advantage of recent market weakness and adding some cyclical exposure to our portfolio. Lift Tech To Neutral... We have been offside on tech sector positioning, but are not dogmatic and given recent market action and positive changes in a number of key drivers, we recommend acting on our mid-January upgrade alert, booking losses and lifting exposure to neutral.5 Before exploring our thesis on why we are becoming more constructive on the largest S&P sector in terms of market capitalization weight, it is instructive to look back and identify what we missed. Two reasons for the tech sector's outperformance stand out. First, BCA's constructive view on the U.S. dollar has weighed heavily on our underweight positioning in the tech sector, especially since the greenback's peak in level terms in December 2016. U.S. tech firms garner 60% of their total revenues from abroad - the highest among the GICS1 sectors (Chart 8) - and the positive P&L translation gain effects have been a tonic to EPS. Irrespective of where the dollar will end 2018, due to lagged effects, the U.S. dollar's significant depreciation will continue to boost tech sector EPS. Second, the lack of inflation at this stage of the cycle has perplexed economists and presented a goldilocks macro backdrop for the tech sector that thrives in deflation/disinflation. This benign inflation backdrop has also coincided with the V-shaped global growth recovery following the late-2015/early-2016 global manufacturing recession and propelled technology stocks. Nevertheless, in mid-September we lifted the S&P software index to a benchmark allocation and subsequently to a high-conviction overweight in late-November in order to capitalize on one of BCA's key themes for 2018: synchronized global capex upcycle. Building on this thesis, the broad tech sector also benefits from rising capex (Chart 10). In fact, there is still pent up demand for tech spending that is being unleashed following over a decade of severe underinvestment. Not only is the tech sector gaining capex market share, largely at the expense of basic resources (Chart 11), but also in absolute terms tech spending is on fire and vaulting to fresh all-time highs (Chart 10). Chart 10Prime Capex Beneficiary Chart 11Sector Capex % Of Total National accounts confirm the stock market-reported capital outlays data and tech investment is firing on all cylinders (middle panel, Chart 12). In addition, consumer spending on tech goods is also at the highest level since the history of the data, underscoring that end-demand is upbeat (fourth panel, Chart 12). The San Francisco Fed's Tech Pulse Index encapsulates all this tech optimism underpinning tech stocks (second panel Chart 12).6 On the global demand front, EM Asian exports are climbing at the fastest clip in ten years, despite the smart rebound in the ADXY. Historically, tech sales and EM Asian exports are joined at the hip and the current message is positive (bottom panel, Chart 12). Importantly, a rising revenue backdrop is necessary, especially in the context of rising capital outlays, as they sustain the virtuous upcycle. A simple final demand indicator combining tech exports and new orders is also flashing green (Chart 13). Tack on the sizable losses in the U.S. dollar over the past year and resurgent tech exports will be a boon to tech EPS (bottom panel, Chart 13). Chart 12Firm End-Demand Chart 13Soft U.S. Dollar Helps Our tech profit model does an excellent job capturing all of these positive forces and is pointing to healthy growth for the rest of 2018 (second panel, Chart 14). However, there are also a few headwinds that the tech sector has to contend with and that prevent us from lifting exposure all the way to overweight. First, any knee-jerk bounce in the U.S. dollar is a clear negative for technology stocks. Second, BCA's second key theme we are exploring calls for higher interest rates in 2018 on the back of rising inflation (Chart 15). Were the selloff in the bond market to gain steam in the coming months as inflation rears its ugly head, then tech stocks would come under intense pressure. Third, as we highlighted above, regulatory/political risks have been at the epicenter of the recent tech sector wobble, and heightened regulatory uncertainty will continue to muddy the tech waters. Finally, while tech stocks are nowhere near as overvalued as in late-1999/early 2000, they are more expensive than the broad market on a number of valuation measures (third panel, Chart 14). Chart 14Our Tech Profit Model Flashes Green... Chart 15...But Interest Rates Are A Big Headwind Netting it all out, we are compelled to lift exposure in the S&P information technology sector to neutral, by augmenting the S&P tech hardware, storage & peripherals (THSP) index to an overweight stance. ...Via Boosting Tech Hardware To Overweight The way we are executing the upgrade to neutral on the broad S&P tech sector is by lifting the S&P THSP index to an overweight stance. We are also adding this index to our high-conviction overweight list. Building on the capex upcycle theme, U.S. tech hardware manufacturers also benefit from improving animal spirits and rising capital expenditures. U.S. capex intentions are as good as they can get, hanging near multi-decade highs (second panel, Chart 16). Already, U.S. factories are humming trying to fulfill perky end-demand. Industry production is far outpacing capacity growth and this represents a boon to pricing power that has exited deflation for the first time ever (bottom panel, Chart 16). The implication is that S&P THSP profits will overwhelm. Beyond U.S. shores, global fixed capital formation is also climbing sharply. This synchronized global capex upcycle represents a tailwind for this industry and will continue to underpin U.S. computer exports (Chart 17). Add on the depreciating greenback and U.S. manufacturers are well positioned for export market share gains (third panel, Chart 17). Chart 16Capex To The Rescue Chart 17Enticing Global ... Importantly, global trade remains buoyant and signals that the global export pie is increasing in size. In particular, EM Asian exports are expanding at a healthy clip, in spite of rising EM currencies, underpinning S&P THSP net earnings revisions (middle panel, Chart 18). The tech-laden Korean and Taiwanese stock markets have positive momentum and are an excellent leading indicator of tech-heavy EM Asian exports. The current message is to expect a durable export growth phase in the coming months (Chart 18). All of this suggests that S&P THSP sales and profits will shine in 2018, easily surpassing the extremely low relative hurdles that sell-side analysts are penciling in for the coming 12 months (second & third panels, Chart 19). Meanwhile, this industry that generates excessive amounts of free cash flow and sports a net debt/EBITDA ratio below par (Chart 20) will continue to be extremely generous to shareholders by continuing to aggressively retire equity and boost dividend payouts. Return on equity is also probing all-time highs. Chart 18...Demand Backdrop Chart 19Unwarranted Pessimism... Chart 20...Given Pristine B/S And Sky-High ROE Finally on the relative valuation front, this tech sub-index trades at a 20% discount to the broad market (and below the S&P tech sector) both on a forward P/E and EV/EBITDA basis, offering an appealing entry point. Bottom Line: Boost the S&P THSP index to an overweight stance for a loss of 16% since inception, and add it to the high-conviction overweight list. This shift also lifts the overall S&P tech sector to a benchmark allocation for a loss of 18% since inception. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the S&P THSP index are: BLBG: S5CMPE - HPQ, WDC, STX, XRX, AAPL, HPE, NTAP. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Bumpier Ride," dated March 26, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Manic-Depressive?" dated February 12, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Reflective Or Restrictive?" dated March 12, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Trump's Demands On China," dated April 4, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, "White Paper: Introducing Our U.S. Equity Sector Earnings Models," dated January 16, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 6 "The Tech Pulse Index is an index of coincident indicators of activity in the U.S. information technology sector. It can be interpreted as a summary statistic that tracks the health of the tech sector in a timely manner. The indicators used to compute the index are investment in IT goods, consumption of personal computers and software, employment in the IT sector, as well as industrial production of and shipments by the technology sector. The index extracts the common trend that drives these series." https://www.frbsf.org/economic-research/indicators-data/tech-pulse/ Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth. Stay neutral small over large caps (downgrade alert).
Highlights Trade wars have captured investors' imaginations, but slowing global growth is a more immediate risk for both asset prices and exchange rates. As reflationary forces ebb, slow global growth will help the dollar stage a rally. EUR/USD and GBP/USD could decline over the next two quarters. We are selling EUR/CHF. The AUD has more downside. It is too early to close short AUD/NZD or AUD/JPY. Short EUR/CAD with a first target at 1.44. Feature The growing trade skirmish between China and the U.S. has been blamed for much of the movements in risk assets this year. We do not deny that this has been a very important factor determining the price action of all assets globally; after all, market participants are trying to price in the probability that global supply chains as we currently know them will be forever impaired. If this were to happen, global growth and profits would suffer considerably. This warrants a risk premium, one that is currently being estimated by the market.1 As we have written in recent weeks, this will be a stop-and-go pattern, and behind-the-scene negotiations between China and the U.S. will remain intense until June, when the U.S. tariffs are in fact implemented. However, trade wars are not the only force impacting asset returns today. Global asset prices are also slowly adjusting to a world where reflation is ebbing and where growth may be dipping from its heightened state. This week, we examine the role of liquidity and how it is affecting growth,2 and the implications for various currency pairs. From Reflation To Less Growth Through most of 2016 and 2017, risk assets, EM plays, commodity prices and growth greatly benefited from a wave of global reflation implemented by monetary and fiscal authorities around the world in the wake of a market meltdown that culminated in January 2016. A great victim of this reflationary effort was the U.S. dollar. Once global growth and inflation perked up, the dollar sold off. The U.S. economy is not as levered to global growth as the rest of the world is, thus investors were attracted by greater shift in expected returns outside the U.S. than in the U.S. But how is this reflation story faring today? Global monetary policy is not as supportive as it once was as central banks are not adding to global base money as forcefully as before. For example, the Federal Reserve has begun the rundown of its balance sheet, and the real fed funds rate is closing in on the Laubach-Williams estimate of the neutral rate; the European Central Bank has begun tapering it asset purchases, the European shadow policy rate has increased by 400 basis points; and the Bank of Japan has not hit its JGB target of JPY80 trillion of purchases since mid-2016. Even the Swiss National Bank has not seen any increase in its sight deposits since mid-2017. We like to use excess money growth to measure the impact of these changes in base money growth. Excess money supply growth is measured as the difference between broad money supply growth and money demand as approximated by loan growth. As base money and deposits become scarcer in the banking system relative to the pool of existing loans, the liquidity position of commercial banks deteriorates. This deprives them of the necessary fuel to generate further loan growth down the road. Chart I-1 not only shows that excess money in the U.S., euro area and Japan has been decelerating sharply in recent months, but also that this decline points toward slowing global industrial activity, widening junk spreads and decline EM stock prices. Beyond quantity-based measures of liquidity, price-based measures are sending a similar signal. The widening in the LIBOR-OIS spread has now been well documented. It is true that technical factors such as the issuance of T-bills by the Treasury and the progressive move away from LIBOR as a key benchmark for the pricing of loans partly explain this phenomenon. However, this development is now spreading outside the U.S., with Australia in particular experiencing some especially sharp widening in the spread between deposit rates and the OIS. In fact, the LIBOR-OIS spread for the G-10 as a whole is now at its widest since 2012 (Chart I-2). This also portends a situation where liquidity is becoming scarcer than it once was. Chart I-1Deteriorating Liquidity Conditions Chart I-2Price Of Liquidity Is Increasing Growth is responding to these dynamics, and the softening in PMIs around the world was in full display this week. Interestingly, two bellwethers of global growth are showing especially clear signs of a slowing.3 In Korea, exports have greatly decelerated, industrial production is contracting and PMIs are well below 50 (Chart I-3). Taiwan is also showing some signs of weakness, as exports and export orders are both slowing sharply (Chart I-4). Chart I-3Korea: A Key Global Bellweather Is Slowing Chart I-4Taiwan Echoes Korea's Message This message is also being relayed by the Japanese economy. Japan's exports to Asia have been slowing sharply as well. As Chart I-5 illustrates, weak Japanese shipments to Asia correlate closely with a weak AUD/JPY, weak EM stock prices and widening junk spreads, suggesting that these specific shipments capture systematic developments behind global growth. Key growth-sensitive currencies are flashing a similar signal. As the top panel of Chart I-6 shows, NZD/JPY has historically rolled over and declined ahead of recessions, growth slowdowns or EM crashes. It has clearly weakened for eight months now. Meanwhile, the bottom panel of Chart I-6 shows the Swedish krona versus the euro. This cross is also a good leading indicator of global growth, and it is clearly pointing south. Chart I-5Japanese Exports Point To A Malaise Chart I-6NZD/JPY And EUR/SEK: Confirming The Risks Finally, one of our favorite gauges to measure the impact of reflation has substantially weakened: the combination of global growth and inflation surprises. This indicator clearly shows that after a massive upsurge in reflationary forces over the past two years, reflation is now waning (Chart I-7). Chart I-7Economic Surprises Are Declining If reflation is about pushing growth and prices upward, removing stimulus could have the opposite impact. While it is clear that global growth is slowing, what about inflation? We do not think that global inflation is set to slow significantly: global growth is unlikely to move back below trend, and the U.S. is experiencing increasingly potent domestic inflationary pressures supercharged by fiscal profligacy. That being said, the uptrend in global inflation is nonetheless set to flatten for now as our Global Inflation Diffusion Index based on consumer and producer prices across 27 economies has begun to fall, which normally points to lower global headline and core consumer prices (Chart I-8). Bottom Line: The market's attention has been captured by the dramatic flare-up in trade tensions between the U.S. and China, but a more imminent risk has been garnering less press: the decline of reflation. China sent the first salvo on this front; DM central banks have also slowly been either tightening outright or not expanding monetary aggregates as aggressively as before. As a result, global liquidity is tightening and global growth is slowing. Global inflation is also set to decelerate as well, suggesting the decline in economic activity will not be a real phenomenon only, but a nominal one as well. Key Currency Market Implications One of the key implications of lower global growth and ebbing inflationary pressures is likely to be a stronger dollar. As Chart I-9 illustrates, when our Global Inflation Diffusion Index declines and global inflationary pressures ebb, the dollar tends to strengthen. This makes sense: the dollar does best when global growth weakens, inflation slows and commodity prices soften. This time around, the case for a few quarters of dollar strength may be even better defined. U.S. inflation is unlikely to decelerate as much as non-U.S. inflation as U.S. capacity utilization is tighter, the U.S. labor market is at full employment and America is receiving an extraordinarily large amount of fiscal stimulus at this late stage of the business cycle. Chart I-8No Acceleration For Now In Global Inflation Chart I-9Ebbing Inflationary Pressures Will Help The Dollar Technical considerations suggest the dollar is well placed to take advantage of these dynamics. On a short-term basis, both our intermediate-term oscillator and 13-week rate-of-change measures have formed positive divergences with the DXY itself (Chart I-10). While the pattern does not look as bullish as the one registered in 2014, it evokes deep similarities with the 2011 formation. On a longer-term basis, the dollar is massively oversold, as measured by the 52-week rate of change measure. It is true that it managed to stay at similarly oversold levels for nearly a year in 2003, but back then the dollar was much more expensive than today: the U.S. current account deficit was 4.4% of GDP versus 2.4% today and the basic balance of payments deficit was at 3% of GDP versus 2% today (Chart I-11). It is reasonable that with these stronger fundamentals, the dollar will not need to hit as oversold levels as back then before staging a significant rebound. Chart I-10Positive Divergences For The Greenback Chart I-11Dollar Technicals And Valuations: 2003 Vs. Today With global growth slowing, especially in Asia, it is easy to paint a picture where the dollar only strengthens against EM and commodity currencies - the currencies most exposed to both global growth and this specific geographic area. However, while we do see downside in USD/JPY, we expect the greenback to rally against the euro toward EUR/USD 1.15. Our model for EUR/USD shows that the euro is trading 10% above its fair value determined by real rate differentials, the relative slope of yield curves and the price of copper relative to lumber (Chart I-12). In fact, since Europe is more levered to global economic activity than the U.S., these drivers are likely to deteriorate a bit further for the remainder of 2018. Chart I-12EUR/USD Is Vulnerable GBP/USD also looks set to experience a period of weakness against the greenback. Historically, GBP/USD and EUR/USD have been correlated. This is a simple reflection of the fact that the U.K. has a deeper economic relationship with the euro area than the U.S., and thus benefits from the same economic impulses as the eurozone. Chart I-13GBP/USD: ##br##Extremely Overbought Some pound-specific factors will also play against GBP/USD. As we argued last week, the British domestic economy is rather weak; this week's construction PMI confirmed this assessment.4 Additionally, the British basic balance of payments is in deficit anew. This is not only a reflection of the U.K.'s current account deficit of 4% of GDP, it also reflects the fact that FDI into the U.K. has been melting in response to uncertainty surrounding Brexit. This means the U.K. is dependent upon global liquidity to finance this large deficit. An environment where global growth is set to decelerate and where global liquidity is tightening will make it more expensive to finance this large hole. The fastest means to increase expected returns on British assets to attract foreigners' funds is to depreciate the pound today. Finally, the GBP's annual momentum has hit levels consistent with a reversal in cable (Chart I-13). Staying in Europe, another pair is currently interesting and devoid of taking on any USD risk: EUR/CHF. While we think EUR/CHF has more upside over the remainder of the economic cycle,5 this is unlikely to be the case in the second and third quarters of 2018. The Swiss franc tends to outperform the euro when reflationary forces retreat, when global growth slows and when FX volatility increases - all views we espouse for the coming quarters. Moreover, Switzerland's current account and basic balance-of-payment surpluses are 6.5% of GDP and 11.5% of GDP greater than that of the euro area, providing further attraction in a growth soft spot. Finally, EUR/CHF is massively overbought right now, pointing to heightened vulnerability to the economic risks highlighted above (Chart I-14). We are opening a short EUR/CHF trade this week. In the same vein, we remain bearish EUR/JPY. Finally, in previous reports, we highlighted the AUD as being the currency most at risk from any downshift in global growth.6 Despite its recent weakness, we think the AUD is likely to remain very vulnerable. We have been short AUD/NZD since last October, and we do believe this pair will retest 1.04 before forming a base. Australia is experiencing even less inflationary pressures than New Zealand, and is more exposed to slower global industrial production than its neighbor. Technically, AUD/NZD still has some downside. As Chart I-15 illustrates, the 13-week rate of change measure for AUD/NZD has not yet hit the kind of depressed levels associated with complete capitulation. In fact, the recent breakdown in momentum points toward such capitulation as being imminent. AUD/JPY too is not yet oversold enough to be a buy, especially in the context of slowing global growth. Thus, we continue to recommend investors stay short this pair. Chart I-14Technical Indicators Confirm ##br##The Fundamental Vulnerability Of EUR/CHF Chart I-15AUD/NZD Has A Little Bit More Downside Bottom Line: Ebbing reflationary forces suggest the trade-weighted dollar is likely to rally over the coming months. We do see upside for the USD against EM and commodity currencies, but against European currencies as well. Only the yen is anticipated to buck this trend. Within the commodity-currency complex, we foresee that the AUD will suffer the most, and the CAD the least. Within the European currency complex, we are selling EUR/CHF. We are not selling EUR/USD as we are already long the DXY. A Cyclical Opportunity To Sell EUR/CAD This trade is an attractive means to bet on global growth slowing, especially relative to the U.S. As we have argued, U.S. financial conditions have eased relative to the rest of the world, the U.S. is enjoying large injections of fiscal stimulus and it is less exposed to declining global growth. As a result, we anticipate the outperformance of the U.S. ISM to continue relative to global PMIs. Historically, this is an environment where EUR/CAD tends to depreciate (Chart I-16). This is because while 75% of Canadian exports go to the U.S., only 13% of euro area exports end up there. Thus, Canada is much more exposed to the U.S. business cycle than Europe, who is exposed to the rest of the world's. Domestic factor also argues in favor of shorting EUR/CAD. Canadian core inflation is in an uptrend, and at 2% is at the Bank of Canada's target. European core inflation meanwhile only stands at 1%. Moreover, Canada's unemployment's rate is already 0.5% below equilibrium, while the euro area's is 0.4% above such equilibrium (Chart I-17). Thus, European wages and service sector inflation is likely to continue to lag behind Canada's. As a result, we continue to expect the BoC to keep hiking in line with the Fed, or another three times this year. The same cannot be said for the ECB. Chart I-16EUR/CAD: A Play Global Vs. U.S. Growth Chart I-17No Slack In Canada, Plenty In Europe Making the trade even more attractive, EUR/CAD is currently trading at a premium on many metrics. First, our augmented interest rate parity models show that the EUR/CAD trades anywhere between 10-15% above fair value (Chart I-18).7 Relative productivity trends have been a reliable long-term indicator of the path for EUR/CAD. On this metric as well, EUR/CAD is trading at a significant 9% premium (Chart I-19). Finally, EUR/CAD has tended to trend in an inverse relationship with oil prices. Today, it is well above levels implied by various oil prices (Chart I-20). Chart I-18EUR/CAD Trades At A Premium To Rate Differentials... Chart I-19...At A Premium To Relative Productivity... In our view, a key factor explains these discounts: Fears regarding the future of the North American Free Trade Agreement. An abandonment of NAFTA would hurt Canadian growth and prompt the BoC to be much more dovish than we anticipate. However, while there will be some small tweaks to NAFTA, the probability of a major overhaul that deeply affects the North American supply chain has declined, as Canada and Mexico are being exempted from steel and aluminum tariffs and as the White House has softened its stance on the U.S. content of Canadian auto exports back to the U.S. Our Geopolitical team assesses that the probability of a major NAFTA overhaul has declined from 50% to less than 20%, especially as Trump now has bigger fish to fry with China. As a result of these improvements in negotiations, EUR/CAD is potentially set to decline toward 1.44 over the rest of 2018, especially as our oil strategists continue to expect Brent prices to average US$74/bbl this year. Meanwhile, the ratio of copper prices to oil prices, which has been a decent early directional indicator for this cross, suggests the timing is ripe to bet against euro/CAD (Chart I-21), especially as slowing global growth will further weigh on copper relative to oil. Chart I-20...And A Premium To Oil Chart I-21Where Copper-To-Oil Goes, So Does EUR/CAD Bottom Line: An attractive means to bet on slowing global growth while benefiting from the impact of the U.S.'s fiscal stimulus is to short EUR/CAD. Not only is this cross a play on the differential between international and U.S. growth, it is also currently trading at a large premium on various metrics. Dissipating risks that NAFTA will be abrogated in a major way are providing an attractive cyclical entry point to short EUR/CAD, with an initial target of 1.44. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com Haaris Aziz, Research Analyst haarisa@bcaresearch.com 1 For more analysis on trade wars and the current China/U.S. spat, please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Are Tariffs Good or Bad For The Dollar?" dated March 9, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com as well as the Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Trump's Demands On China", dated April 4, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 We have already gone over the role of China at length to explain the global growth slowdown. For detailed discussions on the topic, Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "The Return Of Macro Volatility", dated March 16, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 3 For more indicators pointing toward slower global growth, Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Canaries In the Coal Mine Alert: EM/JPY Carry Trades", dated December 1, 2017 and "Canaries In the Coal Mine Alert 2: More On EM Carry Trades And Global Growth", dated December 15, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Do not Get Flat-Footed By Politics", dated March 30, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "The SNB Doesn't Want Switzerland To Become Japan", dated March 23, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "From Davos To Sydney, With a Pit Stop in Frankfurt", dated January 26, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 7 EUR/CAD trades 15% above a fair value model, that does not encapsulate the trend in the cross. If the recent cross is taken into account through a model that incorporates mean-reversion, EUR/CAD trades at a more modest 10% above its fair value. Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.S. has been mixed: ISM Manufacturing came in slightly weaker than expected at 59.3; However, ISM Prices Paid was a very strong number, 78.1, up from the previous 74.2; Services PMI and Non-Manufacturing ISM also disappointed expectations; The trade balance in February fell to US$ -57.6 bn; Initial jobless claims, however, came in much higher than expected at 242,000. The dollar is now up more than 2% from its February lows. This has been driven by slowing global growth, particularly in Korean and Taiwanese trade data. The greenback should fare well in this environment. Report Links: Do Not Get Flat-Footed By Politics - March 30, 2018 Are Tariffs Good Or Bad For The Dollar? - March 9, 2018 The Dollar Deserves Some Real Appreciation - March 2, 2018 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 European data was mixed: German retail sales disappointed, growing at a 0.7% monthly pace and a 1.3% annual pace; German Manufacturing PMI came in slightly lower than expected at 58.2; European unemployment dropped to 8.5% as expected; Headline inflation improved to 1.4% also as expected, but core inflation came in weaker than expected at 1%. The euro is set to experience a period of correction as inflation in the Eurozone remains weak and global growth is slowing, as Asian economic data increasingly shows. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 The Euro's Tricky Spot - February 2, 2018 From Davos To Sydney, With a Pit Stop In Frankfurt - January 26, 2018 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan has been mixed: Housing starts yearly growth outperformed despite coming in at -2.6%. The Nikkei manufacturing PMI surprised on the strong side, coming in at 53.1 However, the Markit Services PMI underperformed expectations coming in at 50.9. USD/JPY has been relatively flat this week. Overall, we expect that the yen will continue to strengthen, given that the market will continue to be rattled by the increasing a weakening in global growth. This risk off environment should benefit the yen. However, given the slowdown in Japanese economic data, the BoJ will eventually have to intervene to make sure that the rise in the yen does not derail the economic recovery and particularly, its inflation objective. Report Links: The Yen's Mighty Rise Continues... For Now - February 16, 2018 Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC! - January 12, 2018 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. has been mixed: Markit Manufacturing PMI outperformed expectations, coming in at 55.1. It also increased slightly from last month's reading. However PMI construction underperformed expectations substantially, coming in at 47. This is the lowest level in more than 2 years. GBP/USD has been relatively flat this week. Overall the latest construction PMI number confirms our analysis: the uncertainty caused by Brexit is weighing heavily on Britain's housing market. This weakness in the housing sector, coupled with a strong pound, will likely limit how high British interest rates can go. Therefore GBP/USD has downside on a tactical basis. Report Links: Do Not Get Flat-Footed By Politics - March 30, 2018 Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 The Euro's Tricky Spot - February 2, 2018 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Australian data was weak: The RBA's Commodity Index in SDR terms contracted by 2.1% annually, much more than the expected 0.1% contraction; Building permits contracted on a monthly basis at a rate of 6.2%, while also contracting at a 3.1% pace in annual terms; However, retail sales did pick up in monthly terms at a rate of 0.6%. At the monetary policy meeting on Tuesday, Governor Philip Lowe referenced the increase in short-term funding costs that have spilled over from the U.S. into foreign markets owing to higher volatility, particularly in Australia. An escalation of a trade war will also prove to be very damaging for the Australian economy, which is a large export-based and commodity-dependent nation. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 From Davos To Sydney, With a Pit Stop In Frankfurt - January 26, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 NZD/USD has been flat this week. Overall we expect this cross to weaken going forward, given that New Zealand is one of the most open economies in the G10, and thus, it stands to risks the most from both an increasing risk of trade wars and slowing global growth. Moreover, there are also some negative aspects of New Zealand on a more structural basis, as the neutral rate is set to be lowered. This is because the populist government is looking to lower immigration while also implementing a dual mandate for the central bank. All of these factors will cause the kiwi to suffer on a long term basis. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Data out of Canada was mixed: Manufacturing PMI came in line with expectations of 55.7; Exports and Imports for February came in at CAD 45.94 bn and CAD 48.63 bn, respectively, sinking the trade balance to CAD -2.69 bn. The CAD received a fillip on Tuesday as President Trump hopes to conclude preliminary negotiations for NAFTA by the end of next week. While the outcome for these negotiations remains uncertain, the Canadian economy is still in great shape, with a tight labor market, high wage growth and a closing output gap. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC! - January 12, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland has been mixed: Headline inflation outperformed expectations, coming in at 0.8%. Real retail sales yearly growth outperformed expectations, coming in at -0.2%. However, the SVME PMI underperformed expectations, coming in at 60.3. EUR/CHF has been relatively flat this week. Overall, we expect EUR/CHF to have further upside on a long-term basis. The Swiss economy is still weak and inflationary pressures are tepid. This means that any further appreciation by the franc will weigh heavily on the SNB's goals. While for now EUR/CHF could suffer as global growth declines, the SNB will fight this trend in order for them to achieve their inflation target. Thus, any rally in the CHF will prove temporary. Report Links: The SNB Doesn't Want Switzerland To Become Japan - March 23, 2018 Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 USD/NOK has been relatively flat this week. Overall, the krone should outperform most other commodity currencies given that oil should perform better than the rest of the commodity complex in the current environment. While all commodities would be affected by a possible slowdown in global growth and Chinese industrial production, oil will probably hold up the best given that advanced economies consume a greater proportion of oil than they do of other commodities, making oil less sensitive to gyrations in global industrial activity than metals. Moreover, the supply backdrop for oil remains more favorable than that of other commodities thanks to OPEC and Russia's production restrains. All of these developments should help the NOK outperform currencies like the NZD and the AUD. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC! - January 12, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Swedish data was disappointing: Manufacturing PM came in at 55.9, below last month's 59.9; New Orders increased annually only by 1.3% compared to 8.7% in January; Industrial production contracted in monthly terms by 0.5%, and grew annually by 5.7%, but it was still a deceleration relative to the previous 7.7% reading. The SEK has been weakening because of three factors: the talk of trade wars, the slowdown in the global manufacturing sector, and Sweden's housing bubble. While these risks are very real, Sweden's favorable macro backdrop of a cheap currency, a high basic balance of payments surplus and an economy operating above capacity mean that inflation will pick up meaningfully. This will prompt the SEK to rally once global growth can find its floor. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Canaries In The Coal Mine Alert 2: More On EM Carry Trades And Global Growth - December 15, 2017 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Feature Japan's economic experience in the post bubble era is often described as a fate to avoid at all costs. We would like to turn this common notion on its head. Rather than something to avoid, Japan's post bubble experience is a fate that other major economies should actively try to emulate, at least in parts. This report focusses on three specific lessons for European investors. Japan's so-called 'lost decades' describe the weak growth in its nominal GDP since the mid-1990s. But this emphasis on aggregate nominal income is grossly misleading. Standards of living do not depend on nominal GDP. What matters is real GDP per head combined with the absence of extreme income inequality. Real income must grow and this growth must benefit the majority, rather than a small minority. Since the late 1990s, the growth in Japan's real GDP per head has outperformed every other major economy (Chart Of The Week). And unlike other major economies, income inequality in Japan has not increased, remaining amongst the lowest in the developed world (Chart I-2). This is not surprising. Credit booms inflate bubbles in financial assets, which exacerbate income and wealth inequalities. Chart Of The WeekJapan Has Outperformed Everybody Chart I-2Income Inequality In Japan Has Not Increased Admittedly, the government has been running persistent deficits, but this is to counterbalance private sector de-levering. Total indebtedness as a share of GDP has not been rising. In the post credit boom era, Japan's real growth has come entirely from productivity improvements. Mankind's persistent ability to learn, experiment, and innovate produces more and/or better output from a fixed set of inputs. Unlike the unsustainable growth that is fuelled by credit booms and asset bubbles, real growth that comes from productivity improvements is sustainable. Genuine Price Stability: Something To Celebrate, Not Fear Japanese consumer prices are at the same level today as they were in 1992, meaning that Japan has experienced genuine price stability for two and a half decades (Chart I-3). But this is neither new, nor alarming - Britain enjoyed genuine price stability for two and a half centuries! At the height of the British Empire in 1914, consumer prices were little different to where they stood at the end of the English Civil War in 1651 (Chart I-4). Chart I-3Japan Has Experienced Genuine Price ##br## Stability For Two And A Half Decades... Chart I-4...But Britain Experienced Genuine Price Stability For Two And A Half Centuries! Nevertheless, central banks continue with the deception that price stability means an inflation rate of 2%. This is clearly nonsense. Think about it - if prices rise by 2% a year, then your money will lose a quarter of its purchasing power every decade. And after a typical working life, your money will have lost two-thirds of its value.1 How exactly does that qualify as price stability?2 Still, we frequently hear a strong counterargument - in a highly indebted economy, inflation and growth in nominal GDP do matter. As debt is a nominal amount, it is nominal incomes that determine the ability to service and repay the high level of debt. So given a free choice, policymakers would prefer to have inflation at 2% rather than at zero; and nominal GDP growth at 3.5% rather than at 1.5%. Unfortunately, policymakers do not have this free choice. Contrary to what central bankers promise, inflation and nominal GDP growth cannot be dialled up or down at will to hit a point target. As we explained a while back in The Case Against Helicopters, inflation is a non-linear phenomenon which is extremely difficult, if not impossible, to point target.3 Look at the standard identity of monetary economics: MV = PT M is the broad money supply, V is its velocity of circulation, P is the price level and T is the volume of transactions. PT is effectively nominal GDP. The big problem is that both the broad money supply M and its velocity V - whose product determines nominal GDP - are highly non-linear. Chart I-5The Money Multiplier Is Non-Linear M is non-linear because the commercial banking system money multiplier - the ratio of loans to bank reserves - is non-linear. At a tipping point of inflation, the onus suddenly flips from lending as little as possible to lending as much as possible (Chart I-5). Admittedly, the central bank (in cahoots with the government) could by-pass the commercial banking system to control the money supply M directly. But it can do nothing to change the extreme non-linearity of the other driver of nominal GDP, the velocity of money V. Again, at a tipping point, the onus suddenly flips to spending money - both newly created and pre-existing balances - as fast as possible. At this point, nominal GDP growth and inflation suddenly and uncontrollably phase-shift from ice to fire with little in between. What is the Japanese lesson for Europeans? Simply that just like the BoJ, the ECB will keep moving the 2% inflation goalpost further and further into the future, as it realises the impossibility of achieving and sustaining the 2% point target. So even with inflation in the 1-2% channel, the ECB will create a loophole to exit NIRP and ZIRP very soon after it exits QE. This will structurally support the euro. Do Not Own Banks For The Long Term (Or Now) Japanese financial sector profits stand at less than half their peak level in 1990. For euro area financial sector profits which peaked in 2007, the interesting thing is that they are tracking the Japanese experience with a 17-year lag. If euro area financial profits continue to follow in Japan's footsteps, expect no sustained growth through the next 17 years (Chart I-6). Chart I-6Euro Area Financial Profits May Experience No Sustained Growth In a post credit boom era, banks lose the lifeblood of their business: credit creation. This loss becomes a multi-decade headwind to financial sector profit growth and share price performance. Bank profits are dependent on two other drivers. One is operational leverage - the amount of equity held against the balance sheet. More stringent European regulation will make this a headwind too. Banks will have to hold more equity capital against assets, diluting their profitability. The other driver is the net interest margin - the difference between rates received on loans and rates paid on deposits, effectively a function of the yield curve slope. However, this is a cyclical driver, and as explained last week in Market Turbulence: What Lies Ahead? this driver is unlikely to be positive in the coming months.4 What is the Japanese lesson for Europeans? Simply that euro area financials is not a sector to buy and hold for the long term. Rather, it is a sector to play during periodic strong countertrend rallies, albeit now is not the time for such a cyclical play. A Surge In Female Participation Chart I-7Sales Of Personal Products Have Boomed Over the past twenty years, Japanese sales of skin cosmetics and beauty products have almost tripled (Chart I-7). This has helped the personal products sector to outperform very strongly. The personal products sector is dominated by female spending. So it is significant that in 1995, the Japanese government introduced a raft of policies to encourage women to join the labour force: paid maternity leave, subsidised childcare, and paid parental leave for both parents. Today in Japan, both mothers and fathers can take more than a year of paid parental leave at an average rate of 60% of earnings. The policies had their desired effect. The proportion of Japanese women in the labour force has surged from 57% to 67%, while the male labour participation rate has held at 85%. Therefore, all of the growth in the Japanese labour force through the past twenty years has come from women. Europe tells a similar tale. Through the past couple of decades, parental leave policies have become steadily more generous. Unsurprisingly, the proportion of European women in the labour force has also surged from 57% to 67%, while the male labour participation rate has held at 78%. So just as in Japan, all of the growth in European labour force participation through the past twenty years has come from women (Chart I-8). But for the ultimate end-point in the European trend, look to the Scandinavian countries which have had generous parental leave policies since the 1970s. As a result, labour force participation for Swedish women is almost identical to that for men: 80% versus 83%. If the EU eventually reaches the Scandinavian end-point, it would mean another 20 million women in the EU labour force. What is the Japanese lesson for Europeans? While Japanese financial profits have halved since 1990, Japanese personal products profits have quintupled. Once again, the useful thing is that euro area personal product profits are uncannily tracking the Japanese experience with a 17-year lag (Chart I-9). If euro area personal product profits continue to follow in Japan's footsteps, expect them to almost triple over the next 17 years. Stay overweight the European personal products sector. Chart I-8A Surge In Female Participation Chart I-9Personal Products Profits Set To Grow Very Strongly Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 Assuming you work for 50 years. 2 Admittedly, measured inflation probably overstates true inflation. However, estimates put this measurement error at no more than 0.3-0.5 percentage points. 3 Please see the European Investment Strategy Weekly Report 'The Case Against Helicopters' published on May 5 2016 and available at eis.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see the European Investment Strategy Weekly Report 'Market Turbulence: What Lies Ahead?' published on March 29 2018 and available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model* This week’s trade recommendation is to go long the Australian dollar versus the Norwegian krone. The profit target is 2% with a symmetrical stop-loss. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment’s fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-10 * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Solid fundamentals will keep the backwardation in the forward curves of the benchmark crude-oil streams - WTI and Brent - intact. If our long-held thesis is correct and OPEC 2.0 becomes a durable producer coalition, we believe it will maintain some level of production cuts in 2019.1 This will, in part, keep OECD commercial oil inventories close to their 2010 - 2014 levels, thus keeping oil forward curves backwardated beyond this year. Backwardation serves OPEC 2.0's interests by limiting the rate at which shale-oil production grows.2 It also drives returns from long-only commodity-index exposure, particularly the energy-heavy index exposure we favor, by maintaining an attractive roll yield for investors.3 We expect the S&P GSCI to return 10 - 20% this year. Energy: Overweight. Our recently concluded research shows commodity index exposure hedges portfolios against inflation risk. We remain long index exposure. Base Metals: Neutral. COMEX copper traded back through $3.00/lb on the back of strong official Chinese PMI data, indicating manufacturing activity continues to expand. It has since fallen back to ~ $3.00/lb, as U.S. - Sino trade-war fears grew. Precious Metals: Neutral. Gold remains range-bound, between $1,310 and $1,360/oz. Ags/Softs: Underweight. In a tit-for-tat fashion, Beijing announced on Wednesday that it would retaliate to the U.S. tariffs on $50 billion worth of Chinese imports. U.S. soybeans and beef are among the list of 106 items China plans to impose a 25% tariff on. Feature An unlikely commonality of interests unites the fates of OPEC 2.0 and long-only commodity index investors: The desire to see the crude-oil forward curves backwardated. Turns out, both interests benefit from the same configuration of the forward curves, in which prompt prices trade premium to deferred prices. Backwardation achieves a critical goal of OPEC 2.0 by making the prices most member states in the coalition receive on their crude oil sales - i.e., the spot price indexed in their term contracts - the highest point along the forward curve. A backwardated curve means the average price U.S. shale-oil producers realize over their hedging horizon - typically two years forward - is, perforce, lower than the spot price. We have shown rig counts are highly sensitive to the level and the shape of the WTI forward curve. A backwardated curve reduces the revenue that can be locked in by hedging. This reduces the number of rigs shale producers send to the field, which restrains - but does not quash - the rate at which they can grow their production (Chart of the Week). For commodity index investors - particularly those with exposure to the energy-heavy S&P GSCI index, where ~ 60% of the index is crude oil, refined products or natural gas - backwardation drives roll-yields, which are a critical component of the index's total returns. The steeper the backwardation, the higher the roll yield.4 Our balances modeling indicates oil markets will remain tight this year, given strong global growth in demand in excess of production growth, which will keep the market in a physical deficit (Chart 2). This will cause inventories to continue to draw this year (Chart 3), which will keep the crude-oil backwardation in place. This backwardation is one of the principal drivers of returns in the S&P GSCI. Chart of the WeekBackwardation Constrains##BR##Shale's Rate Of Growth Chart 2Balances Model Indicates##BR##Physical Deficit Persists This Year Chart 3Tighter Inventories Keep##BR##Backwardation In Place As for the other components of the S&P GSCI, we are neutral base and precious metals, expecting them to remain relatively well-balanced this year, and underweight ag markets, even though they appear to have bottomed, as the USDA indicated recently. As a result, we expect an energy-heavy commodity index exposure like the S&P GSCI will continue to perform for investors, driven largely by the stronger oil prices we expect this year, and the roll yields from backwardated energy futures. Any price upside from the other commodities will be a marginal contribution to returns, as energy price appreciation plus roll yields will be the primary driver of the long-index exposure. Can Crude Oil Backwardation Persist? Beyond 2018, reasonable doubts exist as to whether OPEC 2.0 can remain a durable coalition. These doubts arise from apparent differences in the long-term goals of OPEC 2.0's putative leaders, KSA and Russia. We believe that, over the short term (two years or so) KSA favors higher prices, and that the Kingdom's preferred range for Brent is $60 to $70/bbl, at least until the Saudi Aramco IPO is fully absorbed and trading in the market. Russia's apparent preference is for lower prices ($50 to $60/bbl), which will disincentivize U.S. shale producers from adding even more volume to the market and threaten its market share. How these goals are resolved within OPEC 2.0 as it negotiates its post-2018 structure will determine whether oil forward curves remain backwardated - the likely outcome if production cuts are extended into 2019 - or if OECD inventories start to rebuild and the backwardation returns to contango (i.e., deferred prices exceed prompt prices). This would happen if Russia and its allies decide they are uncomfortable with prices staying close to or above $70/bbl for too long, and therefore lift production and exports to bring them down. OPEC 2.0 Has Reconciled KSA's And Russia's Goals We believe OPEC 2.0 has reconciled KSA's desire for higher prices over the short term to allow a smooth IPO of Aramco. Both KSA and Russia share a longer-term goal of not overly incentivizing U.S. shale production, and production by others - e.g., Norway's Statoil - which also have significantly reduced their costs in order to remain competitive.5 If OPEC 2.0 is successful in achieving higher prices over the short term, it will have to offset them with lower prices further out the forward curve to reconcile KSA's and Russia's goals. This is the principal reason we believe backwardating the forward curve, and keeping it backwardated, achieves OPEC 2.0's short- and longer-term goals. After Aramco is IPO'd - something that, from time to time, seems doubtful - and the market's trading the stock, we believe KSA and Russia will want average prices to drift lower. KSA will, by that time, have lowered its fiscal break-even cost/barrel to $60 (they're at or below $70 now) and will be executing on its diversification strategy. But even with spot prices lower - we're assuming the target level would be ~ $60/bbl - the forward curve will have to remain backwardated to keep U.S. shale's growth somewhat contained. This can be done by keeping deferred contracts (2+ years out) close to $50/bbl using OPEC 2.0 production flexibility, global inventory holdings and forward guidance re production, export and inventory policies. By keeping the average price realization over the shale producers' hedging horizon in the low- to mid-$50s, OPEC 2.0 restrains rig deployment in the U.S. shales. Keeping the front of the forward curve closer to (or above) $60/bbl, means OPEC 2.0 member states get the high price on the forward curve, since their term contracts are indexed to spot prices. Once a persistent backwardation becomes a reliable feature of the forward curve, the short-term inelasticities of the global supply and demand curves - but mostly the supply curve - mean small changes by a production manager like OPEC 2.0 can readily change the price landscape and alter expectations along the forward curve covering the shale-oil producers' hedge horizon. OPEC 2.0 states already have lived through the alternative of not managing production to the best of their abilities during the 2014 - 2016 price collapse: A production free-for-all similar to what the market experienced then would again lead to massive unintended inventory accumulations globally. This would put the Brent and WTI forward curves into super-contangos, which occurred at the end of 2015 into early 2016. At that point, the market would, once again, begin pricing sub-$20/bbl oil as a global full-storage event becomes more probable. At that point, it's "game over" for OPEC 2.0 member states. The stakes remain sufficiently high for OPEC 2.0 member states to keep the coalition intact and to maintain production cuts to keep OECD inventories tight, and thus keep markets backwardated beyond 2018. Backwardation Works For Commodity Index Investors, Too We expect the S&P GSCI to continue to perform well this year - posting gains of 10 to 20% - given our expectation OPEC 2.0 will remain committed to maintaining production discipline. We've recently shown there is a close relationship between oil forward curves and oil inventories, expressed as the deviation of Days-Forward-Cover (DFC) from its 2- or 3-year average, and y/y percentage change (Chart 4).6 This analysis supports our view that - based on our expectation of a continuation of OECD commercial inventory decline - backwardation will continue throughout 2018 and early-2019. This tight relationship, allows us to include OECD commercial inventories as a proxy among our explanatory variables for the shape of the oil forward curves, when modeling and forecasting the GSCI total return. For 2018, we are modeling a continuation of the production cuts put in place at the beginning of 2017 to year end. At some point later this year, we expect the market to get forward guidance on what to expect in the way of OPEC 2.0 production levels for next year. In lieu of actual guidance, we've modelled three different scenarios for OPEC 2.0's production levels next year, leaving everything else affecting prices unchanged. This is a sensitivity analysis on OPEC 2.0's production only (Chart 5).7 Chart 4Oil Inventories, Spreads,##BR##DFC, Closely Related Chart 5BCA's 2019 Scenario Analysis##BR##For OPEC 2.0 Production Scenario 1: Our actual balances, most recently updated in our March 22, 2018, publication, with no production cuts in 2019; Scenario 2: An extension of the OPEC 2.0 production cuts to end-2019 at 100% of 2018 levels; Scenario 3: An extension of the OPEC 2.0 production cuts to end-2019 at 50% of 2018 levels. Under scenario 1, the GSCI's y/y returns slow in 2H18 and become negative in 3Q19. Returns peak in Feb/19 at 28%, and average 21% in 2018, and 9% in 2019. In scenario 2, y/y growth remains positive this year and next, peaking in Feb/19 at 30%, then falling to 13% in 2019. Average returns in 2018 are 21%, and in 2019 19%. In scenario 3, y/y growth remains positive in both years, and bottoms close to 0% but never turns negative. GSCI returns peak in Feb/19 at 29%, then fall to 3% in 2019. Average returns in 2018 are 21%, and in 2019 14%. Given the guidance already conveyed by KSA's oil minister Al-Falih, we would put a low weight on scenario 1, and attach a 50% probability to each of the 2019 simulations in scenarios 2 and 3. GSCI As An Inflation Hedge Our analysis shows the GSCI Total Return (TR) also is highly sensitive to the USD broad trade-weighted dollar (TWIB) and U.S. headline CPI inflation (Chart 6).8 This has powerful implications for the evolution of commodity-indices going forward. A decrease (increase) in the USD TWIB increases (decreases) USD-denominated commodity demand from buyers ex-U.S., thus raising prices, all else equal. An increase (decrease) in the U.S. CPI can lead to higher commodity costs, which are reflected in the GSCI, or to a positive (negative) net-inflow of cash into commodity-indices as a hedge against inflation risks. Importantly, we found the GSCI TR and U.S. CPI relationship to be bi-directional, enhancing the magnitude of the impact of a change in any of those variables. In other words, a rise in the GSCI TR causes inflation to rise which leads to a rise in the GSCI TR, and vice-versa until a new equilibrium is reached.9 Our colleagues at BCA's Global Fixed Income Strategy desk expect inflation pressures will continue to build this year. In particular, they note, "the global cyclical backdrop is boosting inflation."10 With 75% of OECD countries operating beyond full employment, capacity-utilization rates in the developed economies are approaching 80% - the highest level since mid-2008 (Chart 7, top panel). This closing of the global output gap likely will stoke inflation. Chart 6GSCI Highly Sensitive To USD, U.S. CPI Chart 7Inflation Risks Picking Up Consistent with our overweight view, we expect oil prices to move higher from current levels, as refiners come off 1Q18 maintenance turn-arounds and summer-driving-season demand picks up in the Northern Hemisphere (Chart 7, middle panel).11 Lastly, global export price inflation is showing no signs of slowing, suggesting that global headline inflation will continue moving higher (Chart 7, bottom panel). From the model shown in Chart 6, which captures ~ 82% of the variance in the y/y GSCI TR, we have high conviction that three of the four explanatory variables for the GSCI - crude spreads, DFC and U.S. CPI - will support the GSCI this year, leaving only a significant appreciation in USD TWIB as a potential risk to our view. Away from our modelling, other risks to our bullish oil case as a driver of GSCI returns remains a greater-than-expected economic deceleration in China arising from a policy error in Beijing as policymakers execute a managed slowdown, or a trade war with the U.S.12 These would affect our inflation and commodity-demand - hence commodity price - outlooks. Bottom Line: We expect persistent backwardation in the benchmark crude-oil forward curves- WTI and Brent - as OPEC 2.0 extends production cuts beyond 2018. This will achieve the goals of OPEC 2.0's leadership and underpin returns in the S&P GSCI, which we expect will post gains of 10 - 20% this year. Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger, Research Analyst Commodity & Energy Strategy HugoB@bcaresearch.com 1 Last month, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia's (KSA) oil minister, Khalid Al-Falih, indicated OPEC 2.0 production cuts could be extended into 2019. Al-Falih suggested the level of the cuts could be at a reduced level. Please see "Saudi expects oil producers to extend output curbs into 2019," published by uk.reuters.com March 22, 2018. 2 OPEC 2.0 is the producer coalition led by KSA and Russia, which, at the end of 2016, agreed to remove 1.8mm b/d of production from the market. 3 Commodity-index total returns are the sum of price appreciation registered by being long the index; "roll yield," which comes buying deferred futures in backwardated markets, letting them roll up the forward curve as they approach delivery, selling them, then replacing them with cheaper deferred contracts in the same commodity; and collateral yield, which accrues to margin deposits on the futures comprising the index. For a primer on commodity index investing, please see "Convenience Yields, Term Structures & Volatility Across Commodity Markets," by Michael Lewis in An Investor Guide To Commodities (pp. 18 - 23), published by Deutsche Bank April 2005. 4 By way of a simplistic example, assume the oil exposure in an index is established in a backwardated market - say, spot is trading at $62/bbl and the 3rd nearby WTI future trades at $60/bbl. Assuming nothing changes, an investor can hold the 3rd nearby contract until it becomes spot, then roll it (i.e., sell it in the spot month and replace it with another 3rd nearby contract at $60/bbl) for a $2/bbl gain. This process can be repeated as long as the forward curve remains backwardated. 5 Please see "How we cut the break-even prices from USD 100 to USD 27 per barrel" on Statoil's website at https://www.statoil.com/en/magazine/achieving-lower-breakeven.html and "OPEC 2.0 Getting Comfortable With Higher Prices," published by BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy February 22, 2018, where we discuss how KSA's and Russia's goals have been reconciled. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report titled "Oil Price Forecast Steady, But Risks Expand," dated March 22, 2018, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 7 This sensitivity analysis allows only for the path of OECD commercial inventories to vary while everything else is held constant. To obtain the forecasted values, we've combined the estimates of a set of different modelling techniques (i.e., a Markov switching model, threshold and break-OLS estimators). This increased the information and granularity obtained from the model and allowed us to capture time-varying characteristics in the global inventory/GSCI TR relationship. 8 We found there is two-way Granger-causality between the S&P GSCI and U.S. CPI y/y changes. This feedback loop indicates the GSCI will move with, and cause movement in, the CPI, as discussed herein. 9 This is supported statistically using Granger Causality tests in a VAR model of the GSCI TR and U.S. CPI inflation. 10 Please see BCA Research's Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report titled "Nervous Complacency," published March 27, 2018. Available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 11 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report titled "Oil Price Forecast Steady, But Risks Expand," for our latest oil price forecast. It was published March 22, 2018, and is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 12 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report titled "China's Managed Slowdown Will Dampen Base Metals Demand," for a discussion of this risk. It was published March 29, 2018, and is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2018 Summary of Trades Closed in 2017
Highlights Key Portfolio Highlights Our portfolio positioning remains firmly behind cyclicals over defensives, driven principally by our key 2018 investment themes: synchronized global capex growth (Chart 1A) and higher interest rates on the back of a pickup in inflation (Chart 1B). The positioning has been lifted by synchronized global growth and a soft U.S. dollar (Chart 1C), while the key risk to our portfolio of a hard landing in China looks to be mitigated (Chart 1D). A return of volatility, spurred on by Fed tightening (Chart 1E), caused an SPX pullback in February, and while the market pushed through that rough patch, it has since been replaced with fears of a trade war, exacerbated by musical chairs in the Trump administration (Chart 1F). Our buy-the-dip strategy remains appropriate on a cyclical time horizon (Chart 1G), given a dearth of evidence of a recession in the next year. SPX forward EPS estimates still show near-20% increases this calendar year (corroborated by our EPS growth model, Chart 1H) which should underpin outsized equity returns in the absence of a major valuation rerating. Still, the return of volatility warrants a review of our macro, valuation and technical indicators. The best combination in our review is S&P financials (Overweight) with an elevated and accelerating cyclical macro indicator (CMI), fed by both of our key capex growth and rising interest rate themes, combined with a modest undervaluation. The worst combination is S&P telecom services (Underweight, high-conviction), whose CMI recently touched a 30-year low as sector deflation hit acute levels. Valuations make the sector look cheap, but every indication is that telecoms are a value trap. Chart 1AGlobal Trade Is Rising... Chart 1B...But So Too Is Inflation Chart 1CA Weaker Dollar Is A Boon To Growth Chart 1DSoft Landing In China Seems Likely Chart 1EThe Return Of Vol May Spoil The Party... Chart 1F...And Policy Uncertainty Doesnt Help Chart 1GBuy The Dip Has Worked Out Nicely Chart 1HHeed The Message From A Booming EPS Model Feature S&P Financials (Overweight) Our financials cyclical macro indicator (CMI, Chart 2) has climbed to new cyclical highs with significant upward momentum, driven by broad improvement in virtually all of its underlying components. More than any other variable, rising yields and the accompanying higher price of credit are a boon to financials. Higher interest rates is one of BCA's key themes for 2018 and an ongoing selloff in the bond market bodes well for profits in the heavyweight banks sub-index and should deliver the next up leg in bank stocks performance (top panel, Chart 3). Another of BCA's key themes for 2018 is a global capex upcycle; higher demand for capital goods should drive outsized capital formation in the year to come. Our U.S. commercial banks loans and leases model echoes this positive outlook, pointing to the best loan growth of the past 30 years (middle panel, Chart 3). Lastly, a low unemployment rate drives both expanding consumer credit and much better credit quality. At present, the unemployment rate is testing all-time lows, sending an unambiguously positive message for financials profitability (bottom panel, Chart 3). Despite the much-improved cyclical outlook and a revival of overall animal spirits, our valuation indicator (VI) suggests that financials are modestly undervalued. At this point in the cycle, we would expect a modest overvaluation; the implication is that financials should be a core portfolio overweight. Our technical indicator (TI) has approached overbought levels several times over the course of this bull market, though history suggests it can stay at elevated levels for a considerable time. Chart 2S&P Financials (Overweight) Chart 3RS1 Rising Yields Are A Boon To Financials Earnings S&P Industrials (Overweight) Our industrials CMI (Chart 4) has gone vertical and is very near its all-time high. A combination of a supportive currency, a recovery in commodity prices and synchronized global growth are responsible for the rise. A falling U.S. dollar and capital goods producers' top line growth acceleration have historically moved hand-in-hand as this group is one of the most international of the S&P 500. The trade-weighted U.S. dollar has fallen by more than 10% from its most recent peak at the end of 2016 which suggests U.S. industrials should have a leg up in sales for the year to come (top panel, Chart 5). The slide in the U.S. dollar is coming at an opportune time; global growth is remarkably synchronized (and remains a key BCA theme for 2018) and has proven an excellent harbinger of industrials margins (bottom panel, Chart 5). Overall, an expanding top line and widening margins imply solid relative EPS gains. Our valuation gauge is near the neutral zone, where it has been for much of the past 3 years as the market has failed to capture the sector's outlook strength. Our TI echoes the neutral message, having unwound a significant overbought position at the beginning of last year. Chart 4S&P Industrials (Overweight) Chart 5Global Euphoria Should Lift Industrials S&P Energy (Overweight) Our energy CMI (Chart 6) has maintained its upward trajectory after bouncing off all-time lows last year. Importantly, the relative share performance does not yet reflect the drastically improved cyclical conditions, underpinning our overweight recommendation. Falling oil inventories and rising prices (top and second panel, Chart 7) combined with solid gains in domestic production underlie the CMI recovery. Our key themes for 2018 of a global capex expansion and synchronized global growth should be the most important drivers for energy stocks this year. With respect to the former, the capex intentions from the Dallas Fed survey hit their highest level in a decade, which usually presages domestic oil patch expansion and energy stock outperformance (third panel, Chart 7) With respect to global growth, emerging markets/Chinese demand is the swing determinant of overall oil demand, and non-OECD demand has been moving higher for most of the past year (bottom panel, Chart 7). Our VI has retreated far into undervalued territory, a result of the aforementioned failure of stocks to react to the enticing macro outlook. The TI too is in deeply oversold levels, suggesting that an oversold bounce could soon occur at a time when valuations are so appealing. Chart 6S&P Energy (Overweight) Chart 7Energy Share Prices Have Trailed Oils Recovery S&P Consumer Staples (Overweight) Our consumer staples CMI (Chart 8) has turned up recently, following a two year decline. Strong employment gains and positive retail sales are the key pillars underlying the modest recovery. The euphoric consumer continues to push our consumer staples EPS model higher, now pointing to the best earnings growth of the past 5 years (middle panel, Chart 9). Overall industry exports are expanding at a healthy clip as a consequence of a softening U.S. dollar and robust European and rebounding emerging markets demand. Deflating raw food commodity prices are offsetting rising energy and labor input costs, heralding a sideways move to margins. Sell side analysts are also currently penciling in a lateral profit margin move (bottom panel, Chart 9). Investors have been vehemently avoiding staples stocks during the board market's uninterrupted run up, and have put our positioning offside. However, in the context of our cyclical over defensive portfolio bent we refrain from putting all our eggs in one basket, and prefer to keep consumer staples as our sole defensive sector overweight. Further, our VI is waving a green flag as consumer staples are now nearly two standard deviations below their 30-year mean valuation. Technical conditions too are completely washed out, signaling widespread bearishness, which is positive from a contrary perspective. Chart 8S&P Consumer Staples (Overweight) Chart 9Robust Consumer Confidence Bodes Well S&P Utilities (Neutral) Our utilities CMI (Chart 10) has spent the last decade in a long-term downtrend, albeit one with periodic countertrend moves. The key underlying factors are natural gas prices and relative spending on utilities, both of which have been retreating since 2008 (middle panel, Chart 11). Encouragingly, the sector's wage bill has slowed from punitively high levels, though pricing power has followed it down, implying muted margin changes (bottom panel, Chart 11). Like other defensive sectors, utilities have underperformed cyclical sectors in the last year; utilities equities trade as fixed income proxies, and a rising interest rate environment is punitive. As a result of the underperformance and relatively constant earnings, valuations have collapsed to the neutral zone. We reacted by booking solid gains and upgrading to a benchmark allocation earlier this year; synchronized global growth and higher interest rates are headwinds for this niche defensive sector and prevent us from lifting positions further. Our TI has fallen steeply over the past year and is now closing in on two standard deviations below the 30-year average. Chart 10S&P Utilities (Neutral) Chart 11Pricing Is Falling But Margins Look Neutral S&P Real Estate (Neutral) Our real estate CMI (Chart 12) has been in decline since its most recent peak at the end of 2016. This is confirmed by a darkened outlook for REITs; rents have crested while the vacancy rate found its nadir in 2016, suggesting further rent weakness on the horizon (top panel, Chart 13). Further, bankers appear less willing to extend commercial real estate credit, despite recent stability in underlying prices; declines in credit availability will directly impact REIT valuations (bottom panel, Chart 13). Our VI is consistent with BCA's Treasury bond indicator (not shown), indicating that both are at fair value. Our TI is starting to firm from extremely oversold levels, a positive indication for both 12- and 24-month relative performance. Chart 12S&P Real Estate (Neutral) Chart 13Peaking Rents and Tight Credit Are Headwinds S&P Materials (Neutral) Our materials CMI (Chart 14) has maintained its downward trajectory, largely due to the ongoing Fed tightening cycle. The heavyweight chemicals component of the materials index typically sees earnings (and hence stock prices) underperform as rates are moving higher (top panel, Chart 15). BCA's view remains that a sizable selloff in the bond markets is the most likely scenario in 2018, representing a substantial headwind to sector performance. Still, the news is not all negative. Exceptionally strong global demand growth has revitalized chemicals prices (bottom panel, Chart 15). Combined with the industry's relatively newfound restraint, capacity has not overextended and the resulting productivity gains bode well for earnings growth. Despite the improving outlook, valuations have been retreating for much of the past year and our VI has fallen back to the neutral zone. Our TI has been hovering near the neutral line for the past year, though a recent hook downward indicates a loss of momentum and downside relative performance risks. Chart 14S&P Materials (Neutral) Chart 15Rising Rates Are Offset By Improving Demand S&P Consumer Discretionary (Underweight) Our consumer discretionary CMI (Chart 16) has fallen back after reaching highs earlier in 2017, though remains elevated relative to the long term trend. Rising interest rates (top panel, Chart 17) are more than offsetting higher home prices and real wage growth, both have which have recently stalled. This rising short-term interest rate backdrop is not conducive to owning the extremely interest rate-sensitive equities that fall into the S&P consumer discretionary index. Both the household financial obligation ratio and household debt service payments have bottomed and are actually increasing. A higher interest rate backdrop will sustain the upward pressure on both and likely weigh on consumer discretionary relative share prices (third and bottom panels, Chart 17). This underpins our recent downgrade to a below benchmark allocation. Elevated valuations support our negative thesis as our valuation indicator has been rising recently out of the neutral zone. Our TI has fully recovered from oversold levels, and is now well into overbought territory, though historically this indicator has been excessively volatile. Chart 16S&P Consumer Discretionary (Underweight) Chart 17Higher Borrowing Costs Bode Ill For Consumer Discretionary S&P Health Care (Underweight) Our health care CMI (Chart 18) rolled over last year and has been treading water at these lower levels, driven by weak fundamentals in the key pharmaceuticals sector. Poor pricing power, a soft spending backdrop and a depreciating U.S. dollar have been pressuring the sector and keeping a tight lid on the CMI (top and second panels, Chart 19). Other non-pharma indicators are mixed as lower healthcare consumer spending is offset by a tick up in overall pricing power. Relative valuations have fallen deep into undervalued territory and are approaching one standard deviation below the 25 year average. Our TI too has reversed course and is well into oversold territory. However, the message from our health care earnings model is that sector earnings will continue to decelerate; this environment in not conducive for a sector re-rating (bottom panel, Chart 19). Chart 18S&P Health Care (Underweight) Chart 19Pharma Pricing Power Continues To Collapse S&P Telecommunication Services (Underweight) Our telecom services CMI (Chart 20), after moving sideways for much of the past decade, has recently fallen to a new 30-year low. Extreme deflation continues to reign in the beleaguered sector as relative consumer outlays on telecom services have nosedived (top panel, Chart 21) which is broadly matched by melting selling prices (middle panel, Chart 21) as demand contracts. This is reflected in our S&P telecom services revenue growth model, which remains deep in contractionary territory (bottom panel, Chart 21). The sector remains chronically cheap, exacerbated by the recent sell-off, and is currently as cheap as it has ever been. Still, given the brutal operating environment, we think such valuations have created a value trap. Our Technical Indicator has sunk but, like the VI, cycles deep in the sell zone have not proven reliable indicators that a relative bounce is in the offing. We recently downgraded the sector to underweight and added it to our high-conviction underweight list based on the factors noted above.1 Chart 20S&P Telecommunication Services (Underweight) Chart 21Telecom Services Remain A Value Trap S&P Technology (Underweight, Upgrade Alert) The technology CMI (Chart 22) has been falling for the past three years, driven by ongoing relative pricing power declines and new order weakness. However, the sector has proven resilient, at least until recently, as a handful of stocks (the FANGs, excluding the consumer discretionary components) and the red-hot semiconductor group have provided support. Still, market euphoria aside, tech stocks thrive in a disinflationary/deflationary environment and suffer during inflationary periods; inflation is gradually rising after a prolonged disinflationary period (bottom panel, Chart 23). Valuations, while still in the neutral zone, have reached their highest level in a decade. This may prove risky should inflation mount faster than expected; a de-rating phase in technology would likely follow. Our TI is extremely overbought, though it has been at this high level for several years. Chart 22S&P Technology (Underweight, Upgrade ALert) Chart 23Inflation Is No Friend To Tech Size Indicator (Neutral Small Vs. Large Caps) Our size CMI (Chart 24) has fallen back to the boom/bust line. Keep in mind that this CMI is not designed as a directional trend predictor, but rather as a buy/sell oscillator; the current message is neutral. Small company business optimism is near modern highs, as pricing and consumption vigor push domestic revenues higher (top panel, Chart 25). A smaller government footprint, i.e. fewer regulatory hurdles, and tax relief will disproportionately benefit SMEs. Earlier this year, we downgraded our recommendation on small caps vs. large caps to a neutral allocation, based on a deterioration in small cap margins and too-high leverage.2 Recent NFIB surveys would suggest this move was prescient; firms reporting planned labor compensation increases have steadied near a two decade high, while price increases are trailing far behind (middle panel, Chart 25). With "quality of labor" having overtaken "taxes" as the single most important problem facing businesses, labor compensation growth seems likely to continue moving up at an elevated pace and small cap margins should likely continue to trail large cap peers (bottom panel, Chart 25). Valuations have improved and small caps are relatively undervalued, though our TI echoes a neutral message. Chart 24Size Indicator (Neutral Small Vs. Large Caps) Chart 25Small Businesses Remain Exceptionally Confident Chris Bowes, Associate Editor chrisb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Manic-Depressive?" dated February 12, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Too Good To Be True?" dated January 22, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights Chart 1Inflation Pressures Mount Spread product underperformed equivalent-duration Treasuries for the second consecutive month in March. But last month's underperformance was different than February's in one important way. In February it was the fear of inflation and tighter Fed policy that prompted the sell-off in spread product. Investment grade corporate bonds underperformed Treasuries by 62 basis points, while the Treasury index provided a total return of -75 bps and TIPS outperformed nominals. In March, the sell-off in spread product coincided with Treasury returns of +94 bps and TIPS underperformed nominals. The negative correlation between yields and spreads re-asserted itself signaling that the sell-off was not driven by inflation, but by concerns about a potential slow-down in global growth. A severe slow-down in global growth is not imminent. But higher inflation and tighter Fed policy remain our chief concerns. With that in mind, core inflation printed higher again last month (Chart 1), and we think it is only a matter of time before our TIPS breakeven target range of 2.3% to 2.5% is met. That will trigger a reduction in our recommended allocation to corporate bonds. Stay tuned. Feature Investment Grade: Overweight Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview Investment grade corporate bonds underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 91 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -81 bps. The sell-off of the past two months has returned some value to the investment grade corporate space, but spreads are still quite tight relative to history. The 12-month breakeven spread for a Baa-rated corporate bond has only been tighter 19% of the time since 1989.1 Our opinion of investment grade corporate bonds is unchanged. We continue to view value as relatively unattractive, and will reduce our overweight allocation once both the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates are above 2.3%. Corporate profit data for the fourth quarter of 2017 were released last week, and our measure of EBITD for the non-financial corporate sector grew at an annualized rate of 2.4%, slightly below the 3% annualized increase in corporate debt. Gross leverage for the non-financial corporate sector ticked higher as a result (Chart 2). In a recent report we showed that sustained periods of corporate spread widening almost always coincide with rising gross leverage.2 We also showed that while most leading profit indicators are still in good shape, a profit margin proxy based on the difference between corporate selling prices and unit labor costs is sending a warning sign. We expect profit growth to fall sustainably below debt growth later this year, driven by rising unit labor costs. Table 3ACorporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation* Chart 3BCorporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward* High-Yield: Overweight Chart 3High-Yield Market Overview High-Yield underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 114 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -19 bps. The average index option-adjusted spread widened 18 bps on the month and currently sits at 354 bps. The 12-month trailing speculative grade default rate ticked up to 3.56% in February, its highest reading since last July, but Moody's still expects it to decline to 1.96% during the next year. Based on the Moody's default rate projection and our own estimate of the recovery rate, we forecast High-Yield default losses of 0.97% for the next 12 months. This translates to a 12-month excess return of 257 bps for the High-Yield index versus Treasuries, assuming an un-changed junk spread (Chart 3). One hundred basis points of spread widening would lead to an excess return of -149 bps during this time horizon, and 100 bps of spread tightening would lead to an excess returns of +664 bps. However, such a large amount of spread tightening is probably over-optimistic. As inflation continues to rise and the Fed applies the brakes, a floor will likely remain under the VIX index of implied equity volatility and this will prevent junk spreads from recovering their cycle lows (top panel). We continue to await a firmer signal from our inflation indicators before reducing our allocation to high-yield. MBS: Neutral Chart 4MBS Market Overview Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 14 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -39 bps. The conventional 30-year zero-volatility MBS spread widened 7 bps on the month, split between a 4 bps widening in the option-adjusted spread (OAS) and a 3 bps widening in the compensation for prepayment risk (option cost). The widening in MBS OAS has not been as severe as the widening in investment grade corporate OAS. As a result, mortgages no longer appear cheap relative to investment grade corporates (Chart 4). But while the value proposition in mortgages is less alluring, we still see limited potential for spreads to widen during the next 6-12 months. Refinancing risk will remain muted as interest rates rise (bottom panel), and in past reports we showed that extension risk will likely be immaterial.3 In the structured product space, Agency MBS offer 11 bps less spread than Aaa-rated consumer ABS, but are supported by falling residential mortgage delinquencies and easing bank lending standards. In contrast, consumer credit (auto loan and credit card) delinquency rates have bottomed and banks have begun to tighten lending standards (see page 12 for further details). Government-Related: Underweight Chart 5Government-Related Market Overview The Government-Related index underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 20 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +2 bps. Sovereign debt underperformed the Treasury benchmark by 58 bps on the month, while Foreign Agencies underperformed by 38 bps and Local Authorities underperformed by 33 bps. Domestic Agencies outperformed duration-equivalent Treasuries by 6 bps, and Supranationals underperformed by a single basis point. USD-denominated sovereign bonds have performed worse than Baa-rated U.S. corporate bonds during the past six months, despite persistent weakness in the U.S. dollar (Chart 5). However, we do not think recent dollar weakness will provide much support for sovereign bond returns going forward. Rather, it is more likely that the U.S. dollar will appreciate during the next 6-12 months as the distribution of global growth shifts toward the United States. This month's issue of the Bank Credit Analyst discusses the cyclical and structural outlook for the U.S. dollar in detail.4 Elsewhere, Foreign Agencies and Local Authorities continue to offer attractive spreads after adjusting for duration and credit rating. We remain overweight those segments of the Government-Related universe despite an overall underweight allocation. Municipal Bonds: Underweight Chart 6Municipal Market Overview Municipal bonds underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 56 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +29 bps (before adjusting for the tax advantage). The average Aaa-rated Municipal/Treasury yield ratio widened 4% on the month, with short maturities performing somewhat worse than long maturities. The tax-adjusted yield for a 10-year municipal bond remains about 17 bps below the yield offered by an equivalent-duration corporate bond (Chart 6). As we have shown in prior research, investors typically get an opportunity to shift out of corporates and into munis at a positive spread differential before the end of the cycle.5 We will await this more attractive entry point before aggressively shifting our allocation in favor of munis. In a recent report we noted that state and local governments are still working to repair their budgets.6 More states enacted tax increases than decreases in fiscal year 2018 and the projected nominal budget increase across all states is a paltry 2.3%. Fortunately, our Municipal Health Monitor indicates that the hard work is paying off, and suggests that ratings upgrades should continue to outpace downgrades for the time being (bottom panel). Treasury Curve: Favor 5-Year Bullet Over 2/10 Barbell Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview The Treasury curve flattened in March, as long maturity yields fell quite sharply despite a small increase in yields out to the 2-year maturity point. The 2/10 slope flattened 15 basis points on the month and currently sits at 47 bps. The 5/30 slope flattened 7 bps on the month and currently sits at 41 bps. The trade-off between the pace of Fed rate hikes on the one hand, and the re-anchoring of long-dated TIPS breakeven inflation rates on the other will dictate the path for the yield curve during the next six months. Last month the Fed lifted rates for the sixth time this cycle, and signaled its desire to hike another 2-3 times before the end of the year. But just as further rate hikes will apply flattening pressure to the curve, the recent rebound in inflation will exert some offsetting steepening pressure. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate is still 25-45 bps below a range that is consistent with inflation being anchored around the Fed's target. We recommend a curve steepening trade for now, specifically a position long the 5-year bullet and short a duration-matched 2/10 barbell, because upward pressure on inflation will make it difficult for the curve to flatten much further during the next few months. We will shift aggressively into flatteners once TIPS breakevens reach our target range. Further, the 2/5/10 butterfly spread is priced for 19 bps of 2/10 flattening during the next six months (Chart 7). In other words, the 2/10 slope needs to flatten by more than 19 bps for a long 5-year bullet position to underperform. We view this as unlikely. TIPS: Overweight Chart 8TIPS Market Overview TIPS underperformed the duration-equivalent nominal Treasury index by 17 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +67 bps. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate fell 7 bps on the month and currently sits at 2.05%. The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate fell 2 bps on the month and currently sits at 2.18%. As we explained in a recent report, we view the first stage of the bond bear market as being driven by the re-anchoring of inflation expectations.7 We will consider inflation expectations well anchored when both the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates are in a range between 2.3% and 2.5%, where they were the last time that inflation was well anchored around the Fed's target. If the recent trend in realized inflation continues, then this re-anchoring could occur relatively soon. February data show that the annualized 6-month rate of change in trimmed mean PCE rose to 2.03% (Chart 8), and while the 12-month rate of change held steady at 1.7%, it will start to move higher in March when the strong inflation prints from January and February 2017 are removed from the sample. Pipeline measures of inflation pressure also suggest that inflation will head higher, as evidenced by our Pipeline Inflation Indicator, and in particular, the Prices Paid component of the ISM Manufacturing index which just hit its highest level since 2011 (panel 4). ABS: Neutral Chart 9ABS Market Overview Asset-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 3 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -19 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for Aaa-rated ABS widened 2 bps on the month and currently sits at 44 bps, 11 bps above its pre-crisis low. While in prior research we highlighted that consumer ABS offer attractive spreads relative to many other sectors, we also pointed out that collateral credit quality is starting to weaken.8 With respect to value, Aaa-rated Consumer ABS offer a 12-month breakeven spread of 21 bps, while Agency MBS offer a spread of 6 bps and Agency CMBS offer a spread of 9 bps.9 However, household debt service ratios and delinquency rates appear to have bottomed for the cycle (Chart 9). While the pace of consumer credit accumulation remains robust, it has also moderated in recent months alongside rising delinquencies and tightening lending standards. We maintain a neutral allocation to ABS for the time being due to attractive valuation, but expect to downgrade in the future as household credit quality deteriorates. Non-Agency CMBS: Underweight Chart 10CMBS Market Overview Non-Agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 36 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +11 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for non-agency Aaa-rated CMBS widened 9 bps on the month and currently sits at 72 bps, close to one standard deviation below its pre-crisis mean. While a spread of 72 bps is still attractive compared to similarly-rated alternatives, we remain concerned about the gap that has emerged between CMBS spreads and the rate of appreciation in commercial real estate (CRE) prices (Chart 10). While bank lending standards on CRE loans are still tightening, they are tightening less aggressively than in recent years (bottom panel). This could eventually remove a headwind from CRE prices, but for now we view a position in non-agency CMBS as overly risky. Agency CMBS: Overweight Agency CMBS underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 22 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -14 bps. The index option-adjusted spread widened 6 bps on the month and currently sits at 47 bps. The Agency CMBS sector continues to offer an attractive spread pick-up relative to similar investment alternatives, and has historically exhibited low excess return volatility.10 Remain overweight. Treasury Valuation Chart 11Treasury Fair Value Models The current reading from our 2-factor Treasury model (based on Global PMI and dollar sentiment) pegs fair value for the 10-year Treasury yield at 2.96% (Chart 11). While the fair value reading from our 2-factor model remains elevated for now, we expect it to fall once March Global PMI data are released this week. Based on a combination of final PMI data and Flash estimates for countries that have yet to report final March figures, we estimate that the Global PMI will decline to 53.8 in March from 54.2 in February. When combined with the most recent reading for dollar bullish sentiment, this gives a fair value of 2.85% for the 10-year Treasury yield. We will provide an official update to the model in next week's report, after the data are finalized. For further details on our Treasury models please refer to U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Message From Our Treasury Models", dated October 1, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com At the time of publication the 10-year Treasury yield was 2.74%. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com Alex Wang, Research Analyst alexw@bcaresearch.com Jeremie Peloso, Research Assistant jeremiep@bcaresearch.com 1 The 12-month breakeven spread is the spread widening required during the next 12 months for the bond to break even with a position in an equivalent-duration Treasury security. 2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Brainard Gives The Green Light", dated March 13, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Monetary Restraints", dated February 27, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Bank Credit Analyst, "U.S. Twin Deficits: Is The Dollar Doomed?", dated March 29, 2018, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Monetary Restraints", dated February 27, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Profiting From A Higher LIBOR", dated March 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Two-Stage Bear Market In Bonds", dated February 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 8 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Monetary Restraints", dated February 27, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 9 The 12-month breakeven spread is the spread widening required during the next 12 months for the bond to break even with a position in an equivalent-duration Treasury security. 10 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Monetary Restraints", dated February 27, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification Corporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation Total Return Comparison: 7-Year Bullet Versus 2-20 Barbell (6-Month Investment Horizon)
Highlights Recommended Allocation Due to the boost from U.S. fiscal stimulus, we do not expect recession until 2020. Despite some signs that growth is peaking, global economic fundamentals remain robust. Markets have wobbled because of the risk of trade war and rising inflation. We think neither likely to derail growth. Not one of our recession indicators is yet sending a warning signal. We are late cycle and volatility is likely to remain high (particularly if the trade war intensifies). But, given strong earnings growth and three further Fed rate hikes this year, we expect global equities to beat bonds over the next 12 months. Except for particularly risk-averse investors, who care mostly about capital preservation, we continue to recommend overweights in risk assets. We are overweight equities (especially euro area and Japan), cyclical equity sectors such as financials and industrials, credit (especially cross-overs and high-yield), and return-enhancing alternative assets such as private equity. Feature Overview Stimulus Trumps Tariffs Risk assets have been choppy so far this year, with global equities flat in the first quarter and the stock-to-bond ratio turning down (Chart 1). Markets were battered by worries about a trade war, signs of growth peaking, a rise in inflation, and bad news from the tech sector. This late in the cycle, with stock market valuations stretched and investors skittish about what might go wrong, we expect volatility to stay high. But the global economy remains robust - and will be boosted by U.S. fiscal stimulus - earnings are growing strongly, and the usual signs of recession and equity bear markets are absent. Though the going will be bumpy over coming quarters, we continue to expect risk assets to outperform at least through the end of this year. U.S. tariffs on steel and aluminum and the threat of $50 billion of tariffs on Chinese imports so far represent a trade skirmish, not a trade war. The amounts pale by comparison with the positive impact coming though from U.S. tax cuts, increased fiscal spending, and repatriation (Chart 2). In history, fights over trade have rarely had a serious impact on growth. They flared up frequently in the 1980s, which was a period of strong economic growth. Even the infamous Smoot-Hawley tariff increase of 1930 is now viewed by most economic historians as having played only a minor role in the collapse of trade during the Great Depression.1 Of course, trade war could escalate. China, as the biggest part of the U.S. trade deficit, is the White House's clear target (Chart 3). Japan in the 1980s, an ally of the U.S., agreed to voluntary exports restraints and to relocate production to the U.S. But China is a global rival.2 Chart 1A Tricky Quarter Chart 2Stimulus Tops Tariffs Chart 3China Is The Target For now, we expect the impact to be limited since some degree of compromise is the most likely outcome. President Trump sees the stock market as his Key Performance Indicator and would be likely to back off if stocks fell sharply. China knows that it has the most to lose in a prolonged fight. It might suit Xi Jinping's reformist agenda to boost consumption, cut excess capacity, and allow the RMB to appreciate modestly. While the U.S. has some justification for arguing that China's investment rules are unfair, China can also argue that it has made significant progress in recent years in reducing its dependence on exports, its current account surplus, and the undervaluation of its currency (Chart 4). But jitters will continue for a while. May could be a particularly tricky month, with the Iran sanctions waiver expiring on May 12, and the 60-day consultation period for China tariffs ending on May 21. Investors should expect that volatility, which in early January was remarkably low in all asset classes, should stay significantly higher until the end of this cycle (Chart 5). Chart 4...But Has Reduced Dependence On Exports Chart 5Volatility Likely To Stay High? Meanwhile, economic fundamentals generally remain strong. The Global Manufacturing PMI has dipped slightly from its cycle-high level in December, with recent currency strength causing some softness in the euro area and Japan (Chart 6). But the diffusion index shows that only three out of the 48 countries currently have PMIs below 50 (Egypt, Indonesia and South Africa). Consensus forecasts expect 2018 global GDP growth to come in at around 3.3%, similar to last year, and as yet show no signs of faltering (Chart 7). On the back of this, BCA's models suggest that global earnings growth will continue to grow at a double-digit pace for at least the rest of this year (Chart 8). Despite the strong growth, we see U.S. inflation picking up only steadily towards the Fed's 2% target.3 Jerome Powell in his first congressional testimony and press conference as Fed Chair showed no rush to accelerate the pace of rate hikes. We think the Fed is likely to hike four times, not three, but the market should not find this unduly hard to digest, as long as it is against a background of robust growth. Chart 6Dip In Growth Momentum? Chart 7Economists' Forecasts Not Faltering Chart 8Earnings Still Growing Strongly For the past year, we have highlighted a number of simple indicators we are watching carefully that have previously been reliable indicators of recessions and equity bear markets. Several have started to move in the wrong direction, but none is yet flashing a warning signal (Table 1, Chart 9). Table 1What To Watch For Chart 9No Warnings Flashing Here In February, BCA pushed out its forecast of the next recession to 2020, on the back of the U.S. fiscal stimulus. That would suggest turning more cautious on risk assets towards the end of this year - at which time some of these indicators may be flashing. But, until then we continue to recommend - except for the most risk-averse investors who care mainly about capital preservation and not about maximizing quarterly performance - an overweight allocation to risk assets. Garry Evans, Senior Vice President garry@bcaresearch.com Chart 10Not A Full Blown Trade War... For Now! What Our Clients Are Asking What Are The Implications Of U.S. Tariffs? Following recent announcements of tariffs on steel and aluminum and possible broad-based tariffs on Chinese imports, investors have started to worry about the future of global trade. But these moves should be no surprise since President Trump is merely delivering on electoral promises. From a macro-perspective, here are the key implications of rising trade barriers: An all-out trade war would certainly hurt U.S. growth, but a minor skirmish would have little impact. The U.S. is the advanced economy least exposed to global trade, which makes it harder for nations to retaliate. Running a large trade deficit, with imports from China representing 2.7% of GDP whereas exports to China are just 1.0% of U.S. GDP, gives the U.S. considerable leverage in negotiations. Additionally, the majority of Chinese imports from the U.S. are agricultural products, making it harder for China to retaliate with tariffs since these would raise prices for Chinese consumers (Chart 10). On the other hand, U.S. trade partners also have a case. With trade growth trailing output growth, other nations will be less willing to give in to U.S. threats. Additionally, unlike the Cold War era, when the U.S. had a greater influence on Europe and Japan, the world is moving toward a more multipolar structure. However, we do not believe nations will retaliate by dumping U.S. Treasuries, as that would deliver the U.S.'s desired end result of a weaker dollar. Chart 11Rising Wages Are The Missing Factor Finally, if tariffs lead to a smaller trade deficit and firms start to move production back to the U.S., aggregate demand will increase. And, given a positive output gap in the U.S., the Fed would be forced to turn more hawkish, ultimately forcing the dollar up. Equity markets do not like tariffs, and bonds will follow the path that real growth and inflation take. How the situation will develop depends on whether Trump embraces America's traditional transatlantic alliance with Europe and harnesses it for the trade war against China. If he does so, the combined forces of the U.S. and Europe will likely force China to concede. But if Trump goes it alone, a prolonged U.S.-China trade war could turn into a significant risk to global growth. How Quickly Will U.S. Inflation Rise? The equity sell-off in early February was triggered by a slightly higher-than-expected average hourly earnings number. In recent meetings, we find that clients, who last year argued that the structural pressures would keep inflation depressed ("the Philips Curve is dead"), now worry that it will quickly exceed 2%. And it is true that the three-month rate of change of core CPI has jumped recently (Chart 11, panel 1). Investors are clearly skittish about the risk of higher inflation, which would push the Fed to accelerate the pace of rate hikes. We continue to argue that core PCE inflation (the Fed's main measure) will rise slowly to 2% over the next 12 months, but we do not see it accelerating dramatically. Inflation tends to lag GDP growth by around 18 months and the pickup in growth from Q2 last year should start to feed through. This will be magnified by the 8% weakness in the US dollar over the past 12 months, which has already pushed up import prices by 2% YoY. What is missing, however, is wage pressure. Average hourly earnings are growing only at 2.6% YoY. We find that wage growth tends to lag profits by around 24 months (panel 2) and, since profits moved sideways for close to two years until Q2 last year, it may be a few quarters yet before companies feel confident enough to raise wages. Note, too, that wages have been weak compared to profits in this cycle. This is likely partly because of automation, but also because the participation rate for the core working population continues to recover towards its 2007 level, indicating there is more slack in the labor market than the headline unemployment data suggest (panel 3). Should Investors Still Own Junk Bonds? Chart 12Credit Cycle Still On The current late stage of the economic cycle has investors worried about the credit cycle and the outlook for corporate credit, in particular high-yield bonds. The number-one concern is stretched valuations. Spreads are close to all-time lows, which means investors should not expect significant capital gain. However, spreads can stay low for extended periods, especially in the late stages of the credit cycle. Junk bonds are a carry trade at this point, and investors can continue to pick up carry before a sustained period of spread widening sets in (Chart 12). A flattening yield curve is bad for junk returns, as it signals monetary policy is too restrictive. But, as inflation continues to trend higher, the curve is likely to steepen while allowing the Fed to deliver rate hikes close to its median projection. The key risk is a scenario in which inflation falters, but the Fed continues to hike. In this case a risk-off episode in credit markets would be likely, but this would be a buying opportunity and not the end of the cycle. Corporate balance-sheets have weakened, and logically investors should demand greater compensation to hold high-yield bonds. But spreads have diverged from this measure since early 2016. However, we expect improvements in corporate health since the outlook for profit growth is strong. However, a great deal of bond issuance has been used for share buybacks. If capital structures have less of an equity cushion, then recovery rates are likely to be lower when defaults do start to rise. Cross-asset volatility has returned. But credit spreads have remained calm thanks to accommodative monetary policy and easing bank lending standards. Also, stricter post-crisis bank capital regulations have mitigated the risk. Finally, the growing presence of open-ended junk bond funds and ETFs increases the risk that, once spreads start to widen, they will widen much more quickly than they would have otherwise. Who Should Invest In Hedged Foreign Government Bonds? In a recently published Special Report,4 we found that hedged foreign government bonds are a good source of diversification for bond portfolios. Hedging not only reduces the volatility of the foreign bonds, it reduces it so much that the risk-adjusted return ratio has significantly improved for investors with home currency in USD, GBP, AUD, NZD, CAD and EUR (Table 2). This is true across different time periods for most fixed income investors other than those in Japan, as shown in Chart 13. Table 2Domestic And Foreign Government Risk Return Profile (December 1999 - January 2018) Chart 13Domestic Vs. Foreign Treasury Bonds: Consistent Performance Across Time So the answer depends on investors' objectives and constraints: If investors are comfortable with the volatility in their local aggregate bond indexes, which are already a lot lower than equities, then investors in the U.S., the U.K., Canada and the euro area are better off staying home for higher returns without dealing with hedging operations. For Aussie, kiwi and Japanese investors, however, going abroad enhances returns. If investors focus on lower volatility, then all investors should invest a large portion of their portfolios overseas, with the exception of Japanese investors. If investors focus on risk-adjusted returns, then investors in Australia, New Zealand, the U.S., the U.K. and Canada are better off investing a large portion overseas. Global Economy Overview: Global growth remains robust, though momentum has slowed slightly in recent weeks. No recession is likely before 2020 at the earliest due to strong U.S. fiscal stimulus. Inflation will slowly rise towards central bank targets but there is little reason to expect it to accelerate dramatically, and so we see no need for aggressive monetary tightening. U.S.: Short-term, growth looks to have softened, with the Citigroup Economic Surprise Index turning down (Chart 14, top panel), and the regional Fed NowCasts for Q1 GDP growth pointing to 2.4%-2.7%. However, growth over the next two years should be boosted by the recent tax cuts and government spending increases, which we estimate will push up GDP growth by 0.8% in 2018 and 1.3% in 2019. Wages should start to rise from their current sluggish levels (average hourly earnings only up 2.6% YoY) given the tight labor market, which should boost consumption. Capex (panel 5) is likely to continue to recover due to tax cuts and a high level of businesses confidence. Euro Area: Growth has been steady in recent quarters, with Q4 GDP rising 2.5% QoQ annualized. However, lead indicators such as the PMI (Chart 15, top panel) have rolled over, probably because of the strong euro (up 6.2% in trade-weighted terms over the past 12 months). The effect has yet to be seen in exports, which continue to grow strongly, 6.2% YoY in February, but earnings results for Q4 surprised much less on the upside in the euro area than in the U.S. Chart 14Growth Robust, But Momentum Slowing Chart 15Strong Currencies Denting EU And Japanese Growth Japan: As an export-oriented, cyclical economy, Japan has also benefitted from better global conditions, with GDP rising by 1.6% QoQ annualized in Q4. However, like Europe, the stronger currency has begun to dent the external sector, with industrial production and the leading index slowing (Chart 15, panel 2). However, more encouraging signs are appearing domestically: retail sales rose by 2.5% YoY in January and part-time wages are up 2.0% YoY. As a result, inflation is finally emerging, with CPI (excluding food and energy) up 0.3% YoY. Emerging Markets: China's growth remains steady, with the Caixin PMI at 51 (panel 3). However, credit and money supply growth continue to point to a slowdown in coming months. This may be evident when March data (unaffected by the shifting timing of Chinese New Year) becomes available. Elsewhere in EM, growth has picked up moderately: Q4 GDP growth came in at an annualized rate of 7.2% in India, 3.0% in Korea, and even 2.1% in Brazil and 1.8% in Russia. Interest rates: A modest rise in inflation expectations (panel 4) has led to a rise in long-term rates, with the U.S. 10-year yield rising from 2.5% to almost 3% during Q1 before slipping back a little. We expect the Fed to hike four times this year, and think this will push up the 10-year Treasury yield to 3.3-3.5% by year-end. The ECB continues to emphasize that it will move only slowly to raise rates after halting asset purchases later this year, and we think the market has correctly priced the timing of the first hike for Q4 2019. We see no reason why the BoJ will end its Yield Curve Control policy, with inflation still well below the 2% target. Chart 16Cautiously Optimistic Global Equities Tip-Toeing Through The Late Cycle. Global equities experienced widespread corrections in the first quarter after a very strong start in January gave way to fear of rising inflation in the U.S., fear of slowing growth in China, and fear of rising geopolitical tensions globally. The return of macro volatility was so violent that it pushed the VIX to high readings not seen since 2015. Granted, a background of stretched valuations, complacency, and the "fear of missing out" also contributed to the market correction. The healthy correction of global equities from the high in late January has seen valuations contracting as earnings continued to grow at strong pace (Chart 16). BCA's house view is that global growth may be peaking, but should remain strong and above trend, underpinning decent earnings growth for the next 9-12 months. As such, we retain our pro-cyclical tilts in global equity allocations, overweight cyclical sectors and underweight defensive sectors; overweight high-beta DM markets (Japan and euro area); neutral on the U.S. and Canada; and underweight EM and Australia, the markets that would suffer most from a deceleration in Chinese growth. However, we are late in the cycle and valuations remain stretched by historical standards despite the recent correction. With macro volatility returning, investors should be very conscious of potential risks that could derail the uptrend in equities. For investors with higher aversion to risk, we suggest raising cash by selling into strength or dialing down the overweight of cyclicals vs defensives. Anatomy Of EM/DM Outperformance Since their low in early 2016, EM equities have outperformed DM in total return terms by more than 20%, of which 262 bps came in the first quarter of 2018, despite the rising volatility in all asset classes recently. As show in Chart 17, the outperformance of EM over DM has been dominated by three sectors: Technology, Financials and Energy. In the two-year period ending December 2017, over half of the EM outperformance came from the Tech sector, followed by Financials and Energy, accounting for 32% and 14% respectively. In Q1 2018, however, Tech's contribution dropped sharply to 0.3%, while Financials and Energy shot up to 51% and 33% respectively. Even though Energy is a relatively small sector, accounting for 6-7% of benchmark weights in both EM and DM, the diverging performance between EM and DM Energy sectors has played an important role in the EM outperformance. In the two years ending December 2017, EM Energy outperformed its DM counterpart by 32%, the same magnitude as the Tech sector (Table 3). In Q1 2018, EM Energy gained 7.6% while DM Energy suffered a 5.2% decline, resulting in a staggering 13% outperformance (Table 4). Chart 17Sector Contributions To EM/DM Outperformance Table 3Two-Year Performance Attribution* (December 2015 - December 2017) Table 4Q1/2018 Attribution* (December 2015 - December 2017) Country-wise, Brazil and China led the outperformance, helped by the Brazilian real's 30% appreciation against the U.S. dollar. BCA's EM Strategy believes that Brazilian equities and the real will both weaken given the country's weak governance and poor fiscal profile. Chart 18Style Performance We are neutral on Tech globally, and the general reliance of EM equities on Chinese growth, and the high leverage in EM do not bode well for EM equities. Remain underweight EM vs. DM. A Sector Approach To Style Year to date, the equal-weighted multi-factor portfolio has outperformed the global benchmark slightly, largely driven by the strong outperformance of Momentum and Quality, while Value and Minimum Volatility (MinVol) have underperformed (Chart 18, top three panels). This is in line with our previous regime analysis that indicated rising growth and inflation is a good environment for Momentum and Quality, but a bad one for Min Vol.5 As we have argued before, we prefer sector positioning to style positioning because 1) the major style tilts such as Value/Growth, Min Vol and Small Cap/Large Cap have seen significant sector shifts over time, and 2) sector selection offers more flexibility. As shown in Chart 18 (bottom three panels), the relative performance of Min Vol is a mirror image of Cyclicals vs Defensives, while Value/Growth is highly correlated with Cyclicals/Defensives. In a Special Report,6 we elaborated in-depth that sector selection is a better alternative to size selection, especially in the U.S. We maintain our neutral view on styles, and continue to favor Cyclicals versus Defensives. Given that we are at the late stage of the business cycle, investors with lower risk tolerance may consider gradually dialing down exposure to cyclical tilts. For stock pickers, this would mean favoring stocks with low volatility, high quality and strong momentum. Government Bonds Maintain Slight Underweight On Duration. Despite rising volatility due to changes in inflation expectations and uncertain developments in geopolitics, the investment backdrop has been evolving in line with our 2018 Strategy Outlook. Global growth continues at a strong pace (Chart 19) and our U.S. Bond Strategy has increased its yield forecast to the range of 3.3-3.6%, from 2.80-3.25% previously, reflecting both a higher real yield and higher inflation expectations. The U.S. 10-year Treasury yield increased by 34 bps in Q1 to 2.74%, still lower than our fair value estimate, implying that there is still upside risk for global bond yields. As such, investors should continue to underweight duration in global government bonds. Favor Linkers Vs. Nominal Bonds. The base case forecast from our U.S. Bond Strategy is that the U.S. TIPS breakeven will rise to 2.3-2.5% around the time that U.S. core PCE reaches the Fed's 2% target rate, likely sometime in 2H 2018. Compared to the current level of 2.05, this means the 10-year TIPS has upside of 25-45 bps, an important source of relative return in the low-return fixed income space (Chart 20). Maintain overweight TIPS vs. nominal bonds. In terms of relative value, however, TIPS are no longer cheap. For those who have not moved to overweight TIPS, we suggest "buying TIPS on dips". In addition, inflation-linked bonds (ILBs) in Australia and Japan are still very attractive vs. their respective nominal bonds (Chart 20, bottom panel). Overweight ILBs in those two markets also fits well with our macro themes. Chart 19Further Upside In Bond Yields Chart 20Favor Inflation linkers Corporate Bonds We continue to favor both investment grade and high-yield corporate bonds within the fixed-income category. High-yield spreads barely reacted to the sell-offs in equities in February and March (Chart 21). We see credit spreads as a useful indicator of recessions and equity bear markets and so the fact that they did not rise suggests no broad-based risk aversion. Moreover, this resilience comes despite significant outflows from high-yield ETFs, $4.4 billion year-to-date, almost completely reversing the inflows over the previous three quarters. We still find spreads in this space attractive. BCA estimates the default-adjusted spread is still around 250 basis points (assuming default losses of 1.3% over the coming 12 months) which, while not cheap, is less overvalued than other fixed-income categories (Chart 22). Investment grade spreads, however, have widened in recent weeks (Chart 21), with the rise concentrated in the highest-quality credits. This is most likely because investors see little value in these securities. We keep our overweight but we focus on cross-over credits and sectors where valuations are still reasonable, for example energy, airlines and insurance companies. Excessive leverage remains a concern for corporate bond losses in the next recession. BCA's Corporate Health Monitor (Chart 23) has improved in recent quarters, mostly due to stronger profitability. But the deterioration in interest coverage ratios in recent years makes companies vulnerable to higher rates. We estimate that a 100 basis point increase in interest rates across the corporate curve would lead to a drop in the ratio of EBITDA to interest expenses from 4.0 to 2.5.7 Sectors such as Materials, Technology, Consumer Discretionary and Energy appear especially at risk.8 Chart 21IG Spreads Have Widened, But Not HY Chart 22Junk Bonds Still Offer Some Value Chart 23Leverage Is A Worry For The Next Recession Commodities Chart 24OPEC Agreements Hold The Key Energy (Overweight): Demand/supply fundamentals have been driving prices in crude oil markets (Chart 24). Fundamentals remain favorable as strong global demand is keeping the market in physical deficit. However, the outlook for demand has turned cloudy as the market may start to price in the possibility of a trade war which would dent growth. Also, threats of renewed sanctions against Iran and deeper ones against Venezuela could potentially disrupt supply sufficiently to push up the crude price. Given rising uncertainties with the demand and supply outlook, we expect increased volatility in the crude price. We maintain our forecasts for the average 2018 prices for Brent and WTI at $74 and $70 respectively. Industrial Metals (Neutral): As President Trump moves ahead with protectionist policies, markets are being spooked by the possibility of a trade war. Looking past the noise, since China remains the largest source of demand, price action will follow domestic Chinese market fundamentals which are a function of how authorities handle a possible growth slowdown. The possibility of global trade disruptions, coupled with a recovery in the U.S. dollar, suggests increased price volatility. We are particularly negative on zinc. Spanish zinc has been flooding into China, depressing physical premiums and causing inventory accumulation (Chart 24, panel 3). Precious Metals (Neutral): Rising trade protectionism, geopolitical tensions, and diverging monetary policy will be sources of increased market volatility for the rest of the year. When equity markets went through a minor correction earlier this year, gold outperformed global equities by 6%. However, rising interest rates and a potentially stronger U.S. dollar are two headwinds for the gold price. We continue to recommend gold as a safe haven asset against unexpected market volatility and inflation surprises (Chart 24, panel 4). Currencies Chart 25Dollar Will Stage A Recovery Rally U.S. Dollar: Following its 7% depreciation last year, the greenback is flat year to date. A positive output gap and strong inflation readings are giving the Fed enough reasons not to fall behind the curve. Secondly, the proposed fiscal stimulus is likely to increase the U.S.'s twin deficits which has historically been bullish for the currency, as long as it is accompanied by rising real rates. Finally, speculative positions in the dollar are net short, which means any positive surprises will be bullish for the currency. We expect the U.S. dollar to stage a recovery rally in the coming months (Chart 25, panel 1). Carry Trades: Cross-asset class volatility is making a strong comeback. Carry trades fare poorly in volatile FX markets. High-yielding EM currencies like the BRL, TRY, and ZAR will underperform, whereas low yielding safe-haven funding currencies like the Swiss franc and Japanese yen, in countries with outsized net international investment positions, will be the winners. Finally, the return of volatility could hurt global economic sentiment and possibly weigh on growth-sensitive currencies like the KRW, AUD and NZD (Chart 25, panel 2). Euro: Analyzing the euro's strength, we see a 9% divergence in performance between the EUR/USD pair and the trade-weighted euro. Global synchronized growth was driven predominantly by a recovery in manufacturing which benefited the euro area more than the U.S. Also looking at history, the euro tends to appreciate relative to USD in the last two years of economic upswings driven by strong growth. Finally, the recent divergence in relative interest rates is a clear sign that other fundamental factors, such as the current account balance, have been exerting pressure. Sentiment and positioning remain extremely euro bullish, hence any disappointment with economic data will force a correction (Chart 25, panel 3). GBP: Since 2017, the pound has strengthened by over 16% vs. USD. An appreciating currency has dented inflation readings, thereby limiting the pass-through effects via the Bank of England hiking rates. A hurdle to further appreciation is negative growth in real disposable income and declining household confidence. Finally, weak FDI inflows will hurt the U.K.'s basic balance. Since the BoE will find it difficult to tighten policy much, we expect a correction in the next few months (Chart 25, panel 4). Alternatives Investors have been increasing their allocation to alternatives, pushing AUM to a record $7.7 trillion. We continue to recommend allocations through three different buckets: 1) among return enhancers, we favor private equity vs hedge funds; 2) favor direct real estate vs. commodity futures in inflation hedges; 3) favor farmland & timberland vs. structured products as volatility dampeners. But alternatives have a few challenges that require special consideration. Private Equity: Key drivers of returns have changed. In the past, managers were able to succeed by "buying low/selling high". But today, investors need to pick general partners (GPs) who can identify attractive targets and effect strategic and operational improvements. $1.7 trillion of dry powder. Global buyout value grew by 19% in 2017, but deal count grew by only 2%. High valuations multiples, stiff competition, and an uncertain macro outlook will force funds to be selective. Competition from corporate buyers. GPs are fighting with large corporations looking for growth through acquisition. Private equity's share of overall M&A activity globally declined in 2017 for the fourth year running. Competition for targets is boosting entry multiples in the middle-market segment. Hedge Funds: Net exposure for long/short managers has remained static over market cycles, which means investors pay too much for market exposure. But if we see market rotation or increased dispersion of single stock returns, this hedge fund group will benefit. Discretionary macro will benefit from differing growth outlooks, idiosyncratic events, and local rate cycles. Also, potential for more dispersion in the large-cap space and at the index level will benefit systematic macro. Event-driven funds have been hurt by deal-spread volatility as shareholder opposition, anti-trust concerns and political issues led to deal delays. But we continue to favor short-term special situations in less-followed markets such as Asia. Real Estate: After strong growth in capital values, driven by low rates and cap rate compression, investors need to focus on income-driven total returns. Additionally, income returns do not vary across markets nearly as much as capital value growth. Increase focus on core strategies. Look for properties in prime locations with long and stable lease contracts. Investors can also consider loans made to high-quality borrowers which are secured against properties with stable cash flows. Private Debt: With ultra-low yields, private debt offers attractive risk-adjusted return, diversification, and a potential cash flow profile ideal for institutional investors. However, it is critical to source a differentiated pipeline of opportunities. Infrastructure debt, with a long expected useful life, can provide effective duration for liability matching. Risk-adjusted returns can be enhanced by directly sourcing and structuring. Risks To Our View We see the risks to our main scenario (strong growth continuing through 2019, moderate inflation, late cycle volatility, and rising geopolitical risks) as balanced. There are a number of obvious downside risks, including an escalating trade war, a sharp upside surprise to inflation, and the Fed turning more hawkish (perhaps in an attempt to demonstrate its independence if President Trump pressures it not to raise rates). Among the risks less appreciated by investors is a slowdown in China. Leading indicators of the Chinese economy, particularly money supply and credit growth, continue to slow (Chart 26). Xi Jinping's recent senior appointments suggests he is serious about structural reform, which would mean accepting slower growth in the short-term to put China on a sounder long-term growth path. Linked to this, we also think investors are insufficiently concerned about the impact of rising rates on emerging market borrowers. If, as we expect, U.S. long rates rise to close to 3.5% over the next year and the dollar strengthens, the $3.5 trillion of foreign-currency borrowing by EM borrowers could become a burden (Chart 27). Chart 26What If China Slows? Chart 27Highed Indebted EM Borrowers Are A Risk Chart 28Presidents Like Markets To Rise Upside risk centers on a continuation of strong growth and dovish central banks. We may be underestimating the impact of U.S. fiscal policy. Our assumption that it will peter out in 2020 may be wrong, if President Trump goes for further stimulus ahead of the presidential election - the third and fourth years of presidential cycles are usually the best for stocks (Chart 28). Wages may stay low because of automation. In the face of this the Fed may stay dovish: it already shows some signs of allowing an overshoot of its 2% inflation target, to balance the six years that it missed it to the downside. All this could produce a stock market meltup, similar to 1999. 1 See, for example, Clashing Over Commerce: A History of U.S. Trade Policy, Douglas J, Irwin, Chicago 2017, chapter 8. 2 For an analysis of the geopolitical implications, please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "We Are All Geopolitical Strategists Now," dated March 27, 2018. 3 Please see the What Our Clients Are Asking: How Quickly Will U.S. Inflation Rise? on page 8 of this Quarterly Portfolio Outlook for the reasons why this is our view. 4 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report, "Why Invest In Foreign Government Bonds?" dated March 12, 2018 available at gaa.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report, "Is Smart Beta A Useful Tool In Global Asset Allocation?" dated July 8, 2016, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report, "Small Cap Outperformance: Fact Or Myth?" dated April 7, 2017, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst, "Leverage And Sensitivity To Rising Rates: The U.S. Corporate Sector," dated February 22, 2018. 8 Please see also What Our Clients Are Asking: Should Investors Still Own Junk Bonds, on page 9 of this Quarterly Update, for more analysis of this asset class. GAA Asset Allocation