Real Estate
Highlights Financial markets in both mainstream EM and China are undergoing an adjustment that is not yet complete. EM equity and currency valuations are neutral. When valuations are neutral, the profit and liquidity cycles become the key drivers of share prices. Both these factors are currently headwinds to equity prices. Our investment strategy is to remain defensive going into the new year. Yet, the longer-term outlook is brighter. We see with high odds that the first half of the year will present an opportunity to turn positive on EM assets in absolute terms, and upgrade EM versus DM within global equity and fixed-income portfolios. Our checklist of fundamental factors that will cause us to turn bullish on EM and China include: (1) significant stimulus in China leading to a strong recovery in its credit impulse; (2) a rollover in Latin America’s core inflation that will open the door for monetary policy easing in these economies; and (3) the Fed abandoning its plans to hike rates, creating conditions for durable US dollar weakness. Feature Introduction: Beyond Omicron There is low visibility regarding the Omicron variant of the COVID-19 virus’s impact on societies and economies. We do not pretend to be experts in virology and on pandemics. So, in this 2022 outlook, we will focus on the macro fundamentals that go beyond Omicron. If the latter proves to be very disruptive for many economies, EM risk assets will sell off materially in the coming weeks. If Omicron proves to be a non-issue, macro fundamentals will prevail. In this case (and if our analysis is correct) EM risk assets will still fare poorly, at least in the early months of 2022. Chart 1The EM Selloff Has Been Occurring Since February 2021 Notably, the cross rate between the Swedish krona and Swiss franc correlates well with EM share prices and both had already been falling well before Omicron arrived (Chart 1). Overall, our investment strategy is to remain defensive going into the new year. Nevertheless, odds are significant that in H1 2022 there will be a buying opportunity in EM assets in absolute terms, and a better entry point to upgrade EM relative to DM within global equity and fixed-income portfolios. China’s Business Cycle And Macro Policy Will China ease policy substantially? It depends on how bad the economy, financial markets and business/consumer sentiment get. Beijing has already initiated piecemeal monetary and fiscal easing. However, if the growth slowdown is gradual and orderly, and financial markets do not panic, then policy easing will be measured. On the contrary, if growth tumbles sharply, business and consumer confidence deteriorate markedly and onshore share prices sell off hard, then policymakers will accelerate the stimulus. In a nutshell, substantial policy easing is not likely unless Chinese onshore stocks experience a meaningful deterioration. In the meantime, the Mainland economy will continue disappointing, and the path of least resistance for China-related plays is down: The annual change in excess reserves – that PBOC injects into the banking system – leads the credit impulse by six months (Chart 2, top panel). The former has stabilized but has not yet turned up. Hence, in the near term, the credit impulse will be stabilizing at very low levels but will not revive materially until spring 2022. This entails more growth disappointments in China’s old economy (Chart 2, bottom panel). In turn, the average of the manufacturing PMI’s new orders and backlog of orders series heralds more downside in EM non-TMT share prices (Chart 3). Chart 2China: An Economic Revival Is Not Imminent Chart 3EM Non-TMT Stocks Remain At Risk Property construction will not recover quickly. Marginal easing of real estate regulations and restrictions will not be sufficient to revive animal spirits among property developers and buyers. As we argued in a recent special report on the property market, real estate in China benefited from the biggest carry trade in the world over the past decade. With borrowing costs below the pace of house price appreciation, property developers in China have done what any business would do: they borrowed as much as they could and accumulated real estate assets in the forms of land, incomplete construction, and completed but unsold properties. Chart 4The Carry Trade In China's Real Estate The top panel of Chart 4 illustrates that developers have been starting many more projects than they have been completing. As a result, their unfinished construction has ballooned (Chart 4, bottom panel). Such a business model was profitable since developers’ borrowing costs were below the pace of real estate asset price appreciation. This dynamic will reverse going forward: real estate asset price appreciation will be below developers’ borrowing costs. Thus, property developers have every incentive to shed their assets as quickly as possible. This will discourage new land investment and new construction. In brief, odds are rising that the property market downtrend will be an extended one. In 2015, when property inventories swelled (Chart 4, bottom panel), it took outright monetization of residential properties by the PBOC through the PSL program1 to revive real estate demand and construction. Currently, anything short of aggressive monetization or a very large policy boost will be insufficient to reignite property market sentiment. Thus, the real estate market will continue to struggle. Chart 5 illustrates that real estate developer financing has dried up, heralding a significant contraction in floor space completion, i.e., construction activity. This will weigh on industrial commodities (Chart 5, bottom panel). Even if the government approves a larger special bond quota for local governments, traditional infrastructure spending is unlikely to accelerate meaningfully (Chart 6). The basis is that local governments will continue facing financing constraints from an ongoing slump in their land sales. The RMB 3.65 trillion special bond issuance quota in 2021 accounted for only 18% of local government on- and off-budget revenues. Meanwhile, land sales by local governments account for 40% of their on- and off-budget revenues. As the property market travails continue, local governments will not be able to materially increase traditional infrastructure spending. Chart 5Less Funding = Less Completions = Less Commodity Demand Chart 6China: Traditional Infrastructure Has Been Weak In sum, the Chinese economy has developed formidable downward momentum that will not be easy to reverse. That said, authorities will likely begin injecting more stimulus in 2022 to secure a stable economy and financial markets in the second half of 2022, ahead of the important Party Congress. Bottom Line: The slowdown in the Chinese old economy will continue for now with negative ramifications for China-related financial markets. A buying opportunity for China plays leveraged to its old economy is likely sometime in 2022. Chinese Internet Stocks Chart 7Chinese Internet Stocks Are Not Cheap The outlook for Chinese TMT stocks remains uninspiring. We maintain that the regulatory changes affecting Chinese internet stocks are structural rather than cyclical in nature. There could be periods when the pace of regulatory clampdown eases, but these regulations will not be rolled back in any meaningful way. While Chinese platform companies’ equity valuations have already de-rated, these stocks are not cheap: their trailing and forward P/E ratios stand at 35 and 30, respectively (Chart 7). Their multiples will compress further for the following reasons: Their business models have to change because of regulatory requirements. Higher uncertainty about their future business models currently entails a higher equity risk premium. Authorities will cap these companies’ profitability like regulators do with monopolies and oligopolies, which heralds a lower return on equity. In addition, in line with the common prosperity policy, these companies will perform social duties – redistributing profits from shareholders to the society. All these will lower their profitability, warranting permanently lower multiples than those in the past 10 years. Beijing’s involvement in their management and the prioritization of national and geopolitical objectives over shareholder interests will lead foreign investors to dis-invest from these companies. Some large companies face non-trivial risks of delisting from the US. Last week, Beijing reportedly asked Didi to delist from the US due to concerns over its data security. For very different reasons, US and Chinese authorities do not want Chinese companies to be listed in the US. And when Chinese and US authorities do not want to see some of these stocks listed in the US, they will not be. Odds are rising that a few of them might be delisted in the coming years. In such a scenario, US institutional investors will offload their holdings of these companies. Chart 8China: Online Retail Sales Have Slowed Down In addition to the risk to multiples, these internet companies’ profits are also under threat. Chart 8 shows that online retail sales of goods and services have been lackluster compared to their torrid pace in the past 10 years. Bottom Line: The path of least resistance for Chinese internet/platform share prices remains down. Mainstream EM Economies In the majority of EM economies ex-China, Korea and Taiwan (herein referred to as mainstream EM), domestic demand will remain in the doldrums in H1 2022: Monetary policy has tightened in Latin America and Russia while real interest rates are elevated/restrictive in the ASEAN region. In countries where central banks have been hiking rates, domestic demand is bound to decelerate (Chart 9, top panel). In fact, domestic demand remains below pre-pandemic levels in many mainstream EMs (Chart 9, bottom panel). Rate hikes and/or high borrowing costs in real terms will continue to weigh on money and credit growth. The annual growth rates of broad money and bank loans have already reached record lows in both nominal and real terms (Chart 10). These are equity market-weighted aggregates for EM ex-China, Korea and Taiwan. Chart 9Mainstream EM: Domestic Demand Is At Risk Of A Relapse Chart 10Mainstream EM: Tepid Money And Credit Growth Chart 11Mainstream EM: No Fiscal Reprieve In 2022 For the same universe, the fiscal thrust in 2022 will be around -1% of GDP (Chart 11). Chart 12 illustrates the 2022 fiscal thrust – defined as the yearly change in the cyclically adjusted budget deficit – for individual countries. Only Turkey is projected to have a small positive fiscal thrust next year. The slowdown in China’s old economy will weigh on Asian economies and commodity producers elsewhere. Table 1 demonstrates that China is the top destination for Asian and commodity producing economies’ exports. Finally, political uncertainty and volatility will remain high in Latin America while geopolitical tensions will linger and escalate from time to time around Russia and Taiwan. We do not think political and geopolitical risks are fully reflected in these financial markets. This leaves these bourses vulnerable to these risks. Bottom Line: Economic growth in mainstream EM economies will disappoint, at least in H1 2022. What We Are Looking To Turn Bullish On EM Assets? Equities: A combination of the following will make us consider issuing a buy recommendation on EM equities: Significant stimulus in China leading to a strong recovery in its credit impulse (shown in Chart 2 above). A rollover in Latin America’s core inflation that will open the door for monetary policy easing in these economies. Regarding indicators, we would need to see all three of the following: EM M1 growth accelerates (Chart 13) Analysts’ net EPS expectations drop to their previous lows (Chart 14) Investor sentiment on EM equities declines to its previous lows (Chart 15). EM equity valuations are neutral in absolute terms. When valuations are neutral, share prices could rise or fall. In these cases, the profit cycle is the key driver of share prices. EM equity market cap-weighted narrow money (M1) growth suggests that EM EPS growth will decelerate well into 2022 (Chart 13 above). Such a profit slump is not yet priced in according to Chart 14. Chart 13An EM Profit Slump Is Imminent Chart 14Analysts Are Not Pricing In An EM Profit Slump Chart 15Investor Sentiment On EM Stocks Is Not Downbeat Chart 16Mainstream EM Currencies: Spot And Total Return Indexes Exchange Rates: The mainstream EM equity market cap-weighted currency spot rate versus the US dollar is not far from its 2020 spring lows. On a total return basis – when carry is taken into account – mainstream EM currencies are still above their March 2020 lows (Chart 16). Chart 17Mainstream EM: Real Effective Exchange Rates Critically, EM currencies are not particularly cheap (Chart 17). Given the lingering headwinds, they are likely to depreciate further. The mainstream EM aggregate real effective exchange rate will likely drop to one or two standard deviations below its mean before these currencies find a bottom (Chart 17). Barring a scenario in which the Omicron variant becomes a major drag on the US economy, the Federal Reserve will maintain its recent hawkish rhetoric due to rising core US inflation. This will support the US dollar and weigh on EM currencies. If Omicron produces a major selloff in financial markets, EM currencies will depreciate. In a nutshell, weak domestic demand and return on capital, political volatility, a slowdown in China and potentially lower commodity prices will all continue depressing EM currencies in the early months of 2022. In the following section about local rates, we list signposts that will make us turn positive on EM currencies Local Rates: EM local rates have gone up a great deal and they offer good value. However, as long as EM currencies do not find a floor, interest rates in high-yield local bond markets will not decline. Critically, US dollar returns on EM local currency bonds are primarily determined by exchange rates. Hence, a buying opportunity for international investors in EM high-yield local bonds will coincide with a bottom in their currencies. We recommend turning positive on mainstream EM currencies versus the US dollar if two out of these three conditions are met: The Fed abandons its intention to hike rates. Significant stimulus in China leading to a strong recovery in its credit impulse Mainstream EM’s aggregate real effective exchange rate drops more than one standard deviation below its mean (Chart 17). Chart 18EM Credit Spreads Are Driven By The EM Business Cycle And Currencies Credit Markets: As we discussed in a report published earlier this year titled A Primer on EM USD Bonds, the two key drivers of EM sovereign and corporate credit spreads are economic growth and the exchange rate (Chart 18). A positive turn on the EM/China business cycles and their currencies will make us immediately bullish on EM sovereign credit. As for high-yield Chinese USD property developers’ bonds, they are not a buy given their extremely high indebtedness and the dismal outlook for real estate. Investment Strategy Odds are that there will be a buying opportunity in EM equities, fixed income and currencies in 2022. The checklists we highlighted above outline what we will be monitoring to make us turn positive on EM equities, local rates, exchange rates and credit. Our current investment stance is as follows: There is likely to be more downside in EM equities in absolute terms. They will also continue underperforming their DM peers. We downgraded EM equities from neutral to underweight on March 25, 2021 and this strategy remains intact. Within the EM benchmark, our overweights are Korea, Singapore, China (favoring A shares over investable stocks), Vietnam, Russia, central Europe and Mexico. Our equity underweights are Brazil, Chile, Peru, Colombia, South Africa, Turkey and Indonesia. We recommend a neutral allocation to all other bourses in mainstream EM. A word on India, Korea and Mexico is warranted. We will publish a report on India next week. Concerning our overweight in the Korean bourse, lower DRAM prices and China’s slowdown have weighed on its performance in 2021 (Chart 19). However, weakness in semiconductor prices will prove to be short lived as the semiconductor industry is in a structural upswing. Besides, Korea and Mexico are two countries in the EM universe that will benefit from the US industrial boom – one of our major multi-year themes. Chart 20 shows that Korea’s relative equity performance versus the overall EM benchmark closely tracks global industrials relative share prices versus global non-TMT stocks. Chart 19A Soft Spot In The DRAM Industry Chart 20Overweight The KOSPI Within The EM Equity Space The path of least resistance for EM currencies versus the US dollar is presently down. We continue to recommend shorting the following basket of EM currencies versus the US dollar: BRL, CLP, COP, PEN, ZAR, KRW, THB and PHP. Last week, we recommended adding the Indonesian rupiah to this list and today we are booking profits on the short position in TRY. The currencies that we currently favor are CNY, INR, MYR, SGD, TWD, RUB, CZK and MXN. In local rates, we have been betting on the yield curve flattening in Mexico and Russia, have been recommending receiving 10-year swap rates in China and Malaysia as well as paying 10-year rates in the Czech Republic. In the EM credit space, we continue to recommend underweighting EM versus US corporate credit, quality adjusted. As with equities, we downgraded this allocation from neutral to underweight on March 25, 2021. Within the EM credit space, we favor sovereign versus corporate credit, quality adjusted. For EM sovereign credit and domestic bond portfolios, our recommended allocations across various countries are shown in the tables enclosed below. Finally, today we are closing our volatility trades: long EM equity volatility and EM currency volatility. Both positions were initiated on February 4, 2021 and have been profitable. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1Pledged Supplementary Lending was in effect in 2014-2018: The PBOC lent at very low interest rates to the three policy banks who in turn re-lent to local governments and regional property developers (mainly in tier-2 and smaller cities). These entities then bought slums from their owners, putting cash in their hands to purchase new and better properties. Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
Dear Client, We will be working on our 2022 Outlook for China, which will be published on December 8. Next week we will be sending you BCA Research’s Annual Outlook, featuring long-time BCA client Mr. X, who visits towards the end of each year to discuss the economic and financial market outlook for the year ahead. Best regards, Jing Sima China Strategist Feature In meetings with our North American clients this past week, we expressed the view that China’s economic growth is on a downward trend and easing measures have been gradual and modest in scope. Most clients agreed that China’s economy faces tremendous headwinds, however, some investors were more optimistic about the outlook for Chinese stocks in the next 6 to 12 months. Valuations in both China’s onshore and offshore equity markets have dropped to multi-year lows and macro policies have started to ease. Cheaply valued Chinese stocks should have more upside in the wake of policy support. Policy tone recently pivoted to a more growth supporting bias, but the existing easing measures will not offset the deceleration in both credit growth and domestic demand. China’s economic activity may worsen before it stabilizes in mid-2022. Moreover, China’s financial markets do not seem to have priced in the economic weakness. Therefore, in the next one to two quarters, risks to Chinese stocks are tilted toward the downside. Chart 1Chinese Stocks Will Truly Bottom When The Economy Troughs Below are some of the main questions from our meetings and our answers. Q: Policies have started to be more pro-growth. Why do you still underweight Chinese stocks? A: There are two reasons that we maintain a cautious view on Chinese stocks for at least the next six months, in both absolute terms and relative to global equities. First, we do not think that the magnitude of existing easing measures is sufficient to offset the economy’s downward momentum. Secondly, China’s business cycle lags credit growth by about six to nine months. The timing of a turnaround in the economy and stock prices may be later than investors have priced in. In short, we need to see more reflationary measures and a rebound in credit growth to have a legitimate macro fundamental basis to overweight Chinese stocks (Chart 1). Credit growth on a year-on-year basis stopped falling in October. The underlying data in credit creation, however, points to a weakening in demand for corporate loans (Chart 2). Loans to the housing sector are well below a year ago (Chart 3). Chart 2Weakening Loan Demand Chart 3Bank Loans To The Housing Sector Have Not Turned Around Chart 4It Will Take Time For Policy Easing To Restore Confidence In The Corporate Sector Despite an acceleration in local government bond issuance in October and RMB300 billion in additional bank loans to support small and medium enterprises, growth in medium- to long-term corporate loans peaked (Chart 4). In previous cycles, a rollover in corporate demand for longer-term bank lending on average lasted more than nine months, suggesting that any policy adjustments will take a while to restore confidence in the corporate sector. Without a decisive pickup in credit growth, corporate earnings growth will be at risk of deteriorating. Moreover, policy tightening since earlier this year is still working its way through the economy and major economic indicators in China continue to decline (Chart 5). We think that China’s economy is set to decelerate even more in the next several months, suggesting that earnings uncertainty will likely rise. This, combined with reactive policymakers, already slowing earnings momentum, and a downward adjustment in 12-month forward earnings, suggests that investors have not yet reached the maximum bearishness for Chinese stock prices (Chart 6). Chart 5No Signs Of Improvement In The Economy Chart 6The Earnings Adjustement Process Is Only Beginning Q: What is the impact of China’s property market slowdown on the economy? Will recent policy easing stop deterioration in the real estate sector? A: Policy has been recalibrated by relaxing restrictions on mortgage lending and rules for land sales.1 However, the negative financing loop among developers, households and local governments may take longer to improve. Meanwhile, the market may underestimate the downside risks in housing-related activity in the next 6 to 12 months. Chart 7Households' Home Buying Intentions Have Plummeted Our view is based on the following: Home sales will likely remain in contraction in the next two quarters. Aggressive crackdowns on property market speculation in the past 12 months have fundamentally shifted consumers’ expectations for future home prices. The impending pilot property tax reform2 (details yet to be disclosed) will only encourage the wait-and-see sentiment of potential buyers. Home sales contracted by 24% in October from a year ago. In previous cycles, contractions in home sales normally lasted for more than 12 months. Moreover, the proportion of households planning to buy a house dropped to only 7.7% in Q3 2021 from 11.6% in Q4 2020 (Chart 7). Real estate developers have slashed new projects and land purchases to preserve liquidity for debt servicing (Chart 8, first and second panels). Policymakers may succeed in prompting banks to resume lending to developers in order to alleviate the escalating risk of widespread defaults. However, so far the marginal easing has failed to reverse the downward trend in bank credit to developers along with home sales (Chart 8, third and bottom panels). Funding constraints for real estate developers will probably be sustained for another six months, despite the recent easing measures. Construction activity, housing starts, and real estate investment will likely remain in doldrum at least through 1H22 (Chart 9). Chart 8Housing Activities Are Still Falling Chart 9Less Funding = Less Investment And Completions The marked reduction in land sales will impede local governments’ revenues and weigh on infrastructure investment (Chart 10). Real estate and infrastructure financing contributed 50% of the increase in total Chart 10Local Government Revenues Largely Depend On The Housing Sector social financing in 2020. Given that local governments face funding constraints from a slump in land sale incomes, policies on leverage from local government financing vehicles (LGFVs) will have to meaningfully loosen up to allow a rise in bank lending to support infrastructure investment. As discussed in previous reports, an acceleration in local government special-purpose bond issuance can only partially offset weak credit growth. Furthermore, shadow banking activity, which comprises LGFV borrowing and is highly correlated with China’s infrastructure investment growth, remains in contraction and indicates that growth in infrastructure investment is unlikely to rebound strongly (Chart 11). The sharp weakening of real estate construction activities will drag down the demand for building materials, machinery, home appliances and automobiles. Real estate accounts for about 60% of Chinese households’ wealth, thus any substantial drop in home prices will further weaken households’ propensity to consume (Chart 12). Chart 11More Easing Needed For A Meaningful Pickup In Infrastructure Investment Chart 12Falling Demand For Commodities And Consumer Goods Chart 13AOn The Surface Housing Inventories Are Lower Than Six Years Ago... There are nontrivial risks that the real estate slowdown will evolve into a downturn similar to that of 2014-15. Although the existing housing inventory is more modest than the start of the 2014/15 property downturn, developers have accumulated more debt and unfinished projects in this cycle than in the past (Charts 13A & 13B). Policymakers will have to relax property sector policies much more forcefully to prevent the downturn from intensifying. In the interim, we will likely witness more deterioration in the sector. Chart 13B...But Developers Have Built Up Massive Leverages And Hidden Inventories In The Past Three Years Q: If the property market accounts for such a big portion of local governments’ revenues, why hasn’t the waning housing market forced policymakers to loosen restrictions? A: We think regulators have been slow to backtrack property market reforms because this year China’s fiscal deficit has narrowed from last year due to lower government spending and improved income from corporate taxes. In previous property market downturns, such as 2011/12, 2015/16 and 2019, property policy restrictions were lightened following major declines in government revenues (Chart 14). However, in 2021 China’s fiscal balance sheet has been stronger than in previous cycles; central and local governments have collected much more taxes, particularly corporate taxes, than in 2020 (Chart 15). Meanwhile, government expenditures so far this year have been lower, resulting in a large improvement in the country’s fiscal deficit (Chart 16). Chart 14Falling Gov Revenues Forced Policymakers To Backtrack Reforms In The Past... Chart 15...But This Year Gov Tax Revenues Have Been Strong Chart 16Fiscal Deficit Improved This Year Despite Falling evenues From Land Sales As discussed above, slightly loosened restrictions on land purchases by some regional governments will not restore developers’ confidence and boost the demand for land. The sharp increase in government's corporate tax collection will also start to ebb as economic growth slows and corporate profits decline. As such, even if government expenditures remain the same next year, the fiscal deficit will grow because revenues will be under substantial downward pressure. We expect that Chinese policymakers will have to take more actions to stabilize fiscal conditions. Forecasting exactly when this will occur is difficult, but a benign government balance sheet in much of this year is delaying policymakers’ response to the flagging housing market. Meantime, both policymakers and investors may be complacent about the state of the economy until the full scale of the property sector spillover risk becomes clear. Q: Rates are low and industrial profit growth has been strong this year. Why has capex been so sluggish? A: Investment growth in the manufacturing sector has been lackluster because their profit margins have been squeezed by rising input costs. On the other hand, investment in the mining industry has been constrained by policy restrictions. An acceleration in China’s de-carbonization efforts this year has likely constrained investment in the mining sector. Even though industrial profit growth has been concentrated among the upstream industries such as mining which profits grew by a stunning 100% this year, investment in the sector was mostly flat from a year ago (Chart 17). During the first half of the year, mid- to downstream firms were caught between rising input prices and a weak recovery in domestic consumption. Manufacturing investment grew faster than the mining sector, but manufacturing profit growth only increased by about 30% year to date (Chart 18). However, we think manufacturing investment growth may improve slightly into 2022 as the sector continues to gain pricing power. Chart 17Mining Sector's Profit Growth Way Outpaced Investment Chart 18Manufacturing Sector Profit Growth Has Been Much More Muted Than Upstream Industries Q: The RMB has been strong against the dollar, despite China’s maturing business cycle. What is your outlook for the RMB next year? A: The RMB exchange rate has been boosted by China’s record current account surplus, wide interest rate differentials and speculation that tension between the US and China will abate. However, all three favorable conditions supporting the RMB are in danger of reversing next year. Chart 19The RMB Has Been Appreciating Despite A Strong USD Chart 20The RMB's Appreciation Deviates From Economic Fundamentals Despite broad-based dollar strength, the CNY/USD has appreciated by 4.5% year to date (Chart 19). The RMB’s appreciation deviates from China’s economic fundamentals (Chart 20). Strong global demand for goods has boosted Chinese exports while travel restrictions curbed foreign exchange outflows by domestic households (Chart 21). China-US real interest rate differentials have been in favor of the CNY versus USD, bringing net foreign inflows to China’s onshore bond market (Chart 22). Additionally, the recent meeting between President Joe Biden and President Xi Jinping has prompted speculation that the US will lessen tariffs on Chinese imports. Chart 21Large Current Account Surplus Chart 22Favorable Interest Rate Differentials And Strong Fund Inflows Chart 23China's Extremely Robust Export Growth Unlikely To Sustain In 2022 Chart 24A Strong RMB Does Not Bode Well For Chinese Exporters' Profits These factors will likely turn against the CNY next year. First, export growth will moderate as the composition of US consumption rotates from goods to services (Chart 23). Secondly, it would not be in the PBoC’s best interests to let the RMB strengthen too rapidly because an appreciating currency would be a deflationary force on China’s export and manufacturing sectors (Chart 24). While we expect policymakers to maintain their preference for a gradual approach to stimulus, we assign a high probability to a reserve requirement ratio (RRR) cut in early 2022. In this environment, Chinese bond yields will decline, which would narrow the China-US interest rate differential. Finally, while there may be some changes to US tariffs on China, it is doubtful that there would be a broad-based removal of tariffs. Chart 25The CNY/USD Will Likely Fall And Converge To Chinese Stocks' (Under)performance The CNY’s outperformance stands out as it marks a break from its correlation with China’s relative equity performance vis-à-vis the US (Chart 25). The signal from the currency suggests that either global equity investors are overly pessimistic about economic and regulatory risks in China, or overly optimistic about the value of China’s currency. The latter option is more likely at the moment, and the CNY/USD exchange rate is at the risk of converging to the underperformance of Chinese investable stocks next year. Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 China Cities Ease Land Bidding Rules as Property Stress Spreads - Bloomberg 2 China’s Pilot Property Tax Reforms Benefit Markets Despite Short-Term Pain, Analysts Say - Caixin Global Market/Sector Recommendations Cyclical Investment Stance
October new home prices fell for the second consecutive month in China (see The Numbers). Given how highly leveraged the Chinese property sector is, a continued decline in home prices would be an unwelcome development for Chinese policymakers. It raises the…
Highlights Geopolitical conflicts point to energy price spikes and could add to inflation surprises in the near term. However, US fiscal drag and China’s economic slowdown are both disinflationary risks to be aware of. Specifically, energy-producers like Russia and Iran gain greater leverage amid energy shortages. Europe’s natural gas prices could spike again. Conflict in the Middle East could disrupt oil flows. President Biden’s $1.75 trillion social spending bill is a litmus test for fiscal fatigue in developed markets. It could fail, and even assuming it passes it will not prevent overall fiscal drag in 2022-23. However, it is inflationary over the long run. China’s slowdown poses the chief disinflationary risk. But we still think policy will ease to avoid an economic crash ahead of the fall 2022 national party congress. We are closing this year’s long value / short growth trade for a loss of 3.75%. Cyclical sectors ended up being a better way to play the reopening trade. Feature Equity markets rallied in recent weeks despite sharp upward moves in core inflation across the world (Chart 1). Inflation is fast becoming a popular concern and we see geopolitical risks that could drive headline inflation still higher in the short run. We also see underrated disinflationary factors, namely China’s property sector distress and economic slowdown. Several major developments have occurred in recent weeks that we will cover in this report. Our conclusions: Biden’s domestic agenda will pass but risks are high and macro impact is limited. Congress passed Biden’s infrastructure deal and will probably still pass his signature social spending bill, although inflation is creating pushback. Together these bills have little impact on the budget deficit outlook but they will add to inflationary pressures. Energy shortages embolden Russia and Iran. Winter weather is unpredictable, the energy crisis may not be over. But investors are underrating Russia’s aggressive posture toward the West. Any conflict with Iran could also cause oil disruptions in the near future. US-China relations may improve but not for long. A bilateral summit between Presidents Joe Biden and Xi Jinping will not reduce tensions for very long, if at all. Climate change cooperation is an insufficient basis to reverse the cold war-style confrontation over the long run. Chart 1Inflation Rattles Policymakers The investment takeaway is that geopolitical tensions could push energy prices still higher in the short term. Iran and Russia need to be monitored. However, China’s economic slowdown will weigh on growth. China poses an underrated disinflationary risk to our views. US Congress: Bellwether For Fiscal Fatigue While inflation is starting to trouble households and voters, investors should bear in mind that the current set of politicians have long aimed to generate an inflation overshoot. They spent the previous decade in fear of deflation, since it generated anti-establishment or populist parties that threatened to disrupt the political system. They quietly built up an institutional consensus around more robust fiscal policy and monetary-fiscal coordination. Now they are seeing that agenda succeed but are facing the first major hurdle in the form of higher prices. They will not simply cut and run. Inflation is accompanied by rising wages, which today’s leaders want to see – almost all of them have promised households a greater share of the fruits of their labor, in keeping with the new, pro-worker, populist zeitgeist. Real wages are growing at 1.1% in the US and 0.9% across the G7 (Chart 2). Even more than central bankers, political leaders are focused on jobs and employment, i.e. voters. Yet the labor market still has considerable slack (Chart 3). Almost all of the major western governments have been politically recapitalized since the pandemic, either through elections or new coalitions. Almost all of them were elected on promises of robust public investment programs to “build back better,” i.e. create jobs, build infrastructure, revitalize industry, and decarbonize the energy economy. Thus while they are concerned about inflation, they will leave that to central banks, as they will be loathe to abandon their grand investment plans. Chart 2Higher Wages: Real Or Nominal? Still, there will be a breaking point at which inflation forces governments to put their spending plans on hold. The US Congress is the immediate test of whether today’s inflation will trigger fiscal fatigue and force a course correction. Chart 3Policymakers Fear Populism, Focus On Employment President Biden’s $550 billion infrastructure bill passed Congress last week and will be signed into law around November 15. Now he is worried that his signature $1.75 trillion social spending bill will falter due to inflation fears. He cannot spare a single vote in the Senate (and only three votes in the House of Representatives). Odds that the bill fails are about 35%. Democratic Party leaders will not abandon the cause due to recent inflation prints. They see a once-in-a-generation opportunity to expand the role of government, the social safety net, and the interests of their constituents. If they miss this chance due to inflation that ends up being transitory then they will lose the enthusiastic left wing of the party and suffer a devastating loss in next year’s midterm elections, in which they are already at a disadvantage. Biden’s social bill is also likely to pass because the budget reconciliation process necessary to pass the bill is the same process needed to raise the national debt limit by December 3. A linkage of the two by party leaders would ensure that both pass … and otherwise Democrats risk self-inflicting a national debt default. The reconciliation bill is more about long-term than short-term inflation risk. The bill does not look to have a substantial impact on the budget outlook: the new spending is partially offset by new taxes and spread out over ten years. The various legislative scenarios look virtually the same in our back-of-the-envelope budget projections (Chart 4). However, given that the output gap is virtually closed, this bill combined with the infrastructure bill will add to inflationary pressures. The fiscal drag will diminish by 2024, not coincidentally the presidential election year 2024, not coincidentally the presidential election year. The deficit is not expected to increase or decrease substantially between 2023 and 2024. From then onward the budget deficit will expand. The increased government demand for goods and services and the increased disposable income for low-earning families will add to inflationary pressures. Other developed markets face a similar situation: inflation is picking up, but big spending has been promised and normalizing budgets will marginally weigh on growth in the next few years (Chart 5). True, growth should hold up since the private economy is rebounding in the wake of the pandemic. But politicians will not be inclined to renege on campaign promises of liberal spending in the face of fiscal drag. The current crop of leaders is primed to make major public investments. This is true of Germany, Japan, Canada, and Italy as well as the United States. It is partly true in France, where fiscal retrenchment has been put on hold given the presidential election in the spring. The effect will be inflationary, especially for the US where populist spending is more extravagant than elsewhere. The long run will depend on structural factors and how much the new investments improve productivity. Bottom Line: A single vote in the US Senate could derail the president’s social spending bill, so the US is now the bellwether for fiscal fatigue in the developed world. Biden is likely to pass the bill, as global fiscal drag is disinflationary over the next 12 months. Yet inflation could stay elevated for other reasons. And this fiscal drag will dissipate later in the business cycle. Russia And Iran Gain Leverage Amid Energy Crunch The global energy price spike arose from a combination of structural factors – namely the pandemic and stimulus. It has abated in recent weeks but will remain a latent problem through the winter season, especially if La Niña makes temperatures unusually cold as expected. Rising energy prices feed into general producer prices, which are being passed onto consumers (Chart 6). They look to be moderating but the weather is unpredictable. There is another reason that near-term energy prices could spike or stay elevated: geopolitics. Tight global energy supply-demand balances mean that there is little margin of safety if unexpected supply disruptions occur. This gives greater leverage to energy producers, two of which are especially relevant at the moment: Russia and Iran. Russia’s long-running conflict with the West is heating up on several fronts, as expected. Russia may not have caused the European energy crisis but it is exacerbating shortages by restricting flows of natural gas for political reasons, as it is wont to do (Chart 7). Moscow always maintains plausible deniability but it is currently flexing its energy muscles in several areas: Chart 6Energy Price Depends On Winter ... And Russia/Iran! Ukraine: Russia has avoided filling up and fully utilizing pipelines and storage facilities in Ukraine, where the US is now warning that Russia could stage a large military action in retaliation for Ukrainian drone strikes in the still-simmering Russia-Ukraine war. Belarus: Russia says it will not increase the gas flow through the major Yamal-Europe natural gas pipeline in 2022 even as Belarus threatens to halt the pipeline’s operation entirely. Belarus, backed by Russia, is locked in a conflict with Poland and the EU over Belarus’s funneling of migrants into their territory (Chart 8). The conflict could lead not only to energy supply disruptions but also to a broader closure of trade and a military standoff.1 Russia has flown two Tu-160 nuclear-armed bombers over Belarus and the border area in a sign of support. Moldova: Russia is withholding natural gas to pressure the new, pro-EU Moldovan government. Russia’s main motive is obvious: it wants Germany and the EU to approve and certify the new Nord Stream II pipeline. Nord Stream II enables Germany and Russia to bypass Ukraine, where pipeline politics raise the risk of shortages and wars. Lame duck German Chancellor Angela Merkel worked with Russia to complete this pipeline before the end of her term, convincing the Biden administration to issue a waiver on congressional sanctions that could have halted its construction. However, two of the parties in the incoming German government, the Greens and the Free Democrats, oppose the pipeline. While these parties may not have been able to stop the pipeline from operating, Russia does not want to take any chances and is trying to force Germany’s and the EU’s hand. The energy crisis makes it more likely that the pipeline will be approved, since the European Commission will have to make its decision during a period when cold weather and shortages will make it politically acceptable to certify the pipeline.2 The decision will further drive a wedge between Germany and eastern EU members, which is what Russia wants. EU natural gas prices will likely subside sometime next year and will probably not derail the economic recovery, according to both our commodity and Europe strategists. A bigger and longer-lasting Russian energy squeeze would emerge if the Nord Stream II pipeline is not certified. This is a low risk at this point but the next six months could bring surprises. More broadly, the West’s conflict with Russia can easily escalate from here. First, President Vladimir Putin faces economic challenges and weak political support. He frequently diverts popular attention by staging aggressive moves abroad. There is no reason to believe his post-2004 strategy of restoring Russia’s sphere of influence in the former Soviet space has changed. High energy prices give him greater leverage even aside from pipeline coercion – so it is not surprising that Russia is moving troops to the Ukraine border again. Growing military support for Belarus, or an expanded conflict in Ukraine, are likely to create a crisis now or later. Second, the US-Germany agreement to allow Nord Stream II explicitly states that Russia must not weaponize natural gas supply. This statement has had zero effect so far. But when the energy shortage subsides, the EU could pursue retaliatory measures along with the United States. Of course, Russia has been able to weather sanctions. But tensions are already escalating significantly. After Russia, Iran also gains leverage during times of tight energy supplies. With global oil inventories drawing down, Iran is in the position to inflict “maximum pressure” on the US and its allies, a role reversal from the 2017-20 period in which large inventories enabled the US to impose crippling sanctions on Iran after pulling out of the 2015 nuclear deal (Chart 9). Iran is rapidly advancing on its nuclear program and a new round of diplomatic negotiations may only serve to buy time before it crosses the “breakout” threshold of uranium enrichment capability as early as this month or next. In a recent special report we argued that there is a 40% chance of a crisis over Iran in the Middle East. Such a crisis could ultimately lead to an oil shock in the Persian Gulf or Strait of Hormuz. Chart 9Now Iran Can Use 'Maximum Pressure' Bottom Line: Russia’s natural gas coercion of Europe could keep European energy prices high through March or May. More broadly Russia’s renewed tensions with the West confirm our view that oil producers gain geopolitical leverage amid the current supply shortages. Iran also gains leverage and its conflict with the US could lead to global oil supply disruptions anytime over the next 12 months. Until Nord Stream II is certified and a new Iranian nuclear agreement is signed, there are two clear sources of potential energy shocks. Moreover in today’s inflationary context there is limited margin of safety for unexpected supply disruptions regardless of source. Xi’s Historical Rewrite China continues to be a major source of risk for the global economy and financial markets in the lead-up to the twentieth national party congress in fall 2022. While Chinese assets have sold off this year, global risk assets are still vulnerable to negative surprises from China. The five-year political reshuffle in 2022 is more important than usual since President Xi Jinping was originally supposed to step down but will instead stick around as leader for life, like China’s previous strongmen Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping.3 Xi’s rejection of term limits became clear in 2017 and is not really news. But Xi will fortify himself and his faction in 2022 against any opposition whatsoever. He is extremely vigilant about any threats that could disrupt this process, whether at home or abroad. The Communist Party’s sixth plenary session this week highlights both Xi’s success within the Communist Party and the sensitivity of the period. Xi produced a new “historical resolution,” or interpretation of the party’s history, which is only the third such resolution. A few remarks on this historical resolution are pertinent: Mao’s resolution: Chairman Mao wrote the first such resolution in 1945 to lay down his version of the party’s history and solidify his personal control. It is naturally a revolutionary leftist document. Deng’s revision of Mao: General Deng Xiaoping then produced a major revision in 1981, shortly after initiating China’s economic opening and reform. Deng’s interpretation aimed to hold Mao accountable for “gross mistakes” during the Cultural Revolution and yet to recognize the Communist Party’s positive achievements in founding the People’s Republic. His version gave credit to the party and collective leadership rather than Mao’s personal rule. Two 30-year periods: The implication was that the party’s history should be divided into two thirty-year periods: the period of foundations and conflict with Mao as the party’s core and the period of improvement and prosperity with Deng as the core. Jiang’s support of Deng: Deng’s telling came under scrutiny from new leftists in the wake of Tiananmen Square incident in 1989. But General Secretary Jiang Zemin largely held to Deng’s version of the story that the days of reform and opening were a far better example of the party’s leadership because they were so much more stable and prosperous.4 Xi’s reaction to Jiang and Deng: Since coming to power in 2012, Xi Jinping has shown an interest in revising the party’s official interpretation of its own history. The central claim of the revisionists is that China could never have achieved its economic success if not for Mao’s strongman rule. Mao’s rule and the Communist Party’s central control thus regain their centrality to modern China’s story. China’s prosperity owes its existence to these primary political conditions. The two periods cannot be separated. Xi’s synthesis of Deng and Mao: Now Xi has written himself into that history above all other figures – indeed the communique from the Sixth Plenum mentions Xi more often than Marx, Mao, or Deng (Chart 10). The implication is that Xi is the synthesis of Mao and Deng, as we argued back in 2017 at the end of the nineteenth national party congress. The synthesis consists of a strongman who nevertheless maintains a vibrant economy for strategic ends. What are the practical policy implications of this history lesson? Higher Country Risk: China’s revival of personal rule, as opposed to consensus rule, marks a permanent increase in “country risk” and political risk for investors. Autocratic governments lack institutional guardrails (checks and balances) that prevent drastic policy mistakes. When Xi tries to step down there will probably be a succession crisis. Higher Macroeconomic Risk: China is more likely to get stuck in the “middle-income trap.” Liberal or pro-market economic reform is de-emphasized both in the new historical resolution and in the Xi administration’s broader program. Centralization is already suppressing animal spirits, entrepreneurship, and the private sector. Higher Geopolitical Risk: The return to autocracy and the withdrawal from economic liberalism also entail a conflict with the United States, which is still the world’s largest economy and most powerful military. The US is not what it once was but it will put pressure on China’s economy and build alliances aimed at strategic containment. Bottom Line: China is trying to escape the middle-income trap, like Taiwan, Japan, and South Korea, but it is trying to do so by means of autocracy, import substitution, and conflict with the United States. These other Asian economies improved productivity by democratizing, embracing globalization, and maintaining a special relationship with the United States. China’s odds of succeeding are low. China will focus on power consolidation through fall 2022 and this will lead to negative surprises for financial markets. China Slowdown: The Disinflationary Risk While it is very unlikely that Xi will face serious challenges to his rule, strange things can happen at critical junctures. Therefore the regime will be extremely alert for any threats, foreign or domestic, and will ultimately prioritize politics above all other things, which means investors will suffer negative surprises. The lingering pandemic still poses an inflationary risk for the rest of the world while the other main risk is disinflationary: Inflationary Risk – Zero COVID: The “Covid Zero” policy of attempting to stamp out any trace of the virus will still be relevant at least over the next 12 months (Chart 11). Clampdowns serve a dual purpose since the Xi administration wants to minimize foreign interference and domestic dissent before the party congress. Hence the global economy can suffer more negative supply shocks if ports or factories are closed. Inflationary Risk – Energy Closures: The government is rationing electricity amid energy shortages to prioritize household heating and essential services. This could hurt factory output over the winter if the weather is bad. Disinflationary Risk – Property Bust: The country is still flirting with overtightening monetary, fiscal, and regulatory policies. Throughout the year we have argued that authorities would avoid overtightening. But China is still very much in a danger zone in which policy mistakes could be made. Recent rumors suggest the government is trying to “correct the overcorrection” of regulatory policy. The government is reportedly mulling measures to relax the curbs on the property sector. We are inclined to agree but there is no sign yet that markets are responding, judging by corporate defaults and the crunch in financial conditions (Chart 12). Chart 12China Has Not Contained Property Turmoil Evergrande, the world’s most indebted property developer, is still hobbling along, but its troubles are not over. There are signs of contagion among other developers, including state-owned enterprises, that cannot meet the government’s “three red lines.” 5 Credit growth has now broken beneath the government’s target range of 12%, though money growth has bounced off the lower 8% limit set for this year (Chart 13). China is dangerously close to overtightening. China’s economic slowdown has not yet been fully felt in the global economy based on China’s import volumes, which are tightly linked to the combined credit-and-fiscal-spending impulse (Chart 14). The implication is that recent pullbacks in industrial metal prices and commodity indexes will continue. Chart 13China Tries To Avoid Over-Tightening Chart 14China Slowdown Not Yet Fully Felt Until China eases policy more substantially, it poses a disinflationary risk and a strong point in favor of the transitory view of global inflation. It is difficult for China to ease policy – let alone stimulate – when producer prices are so high (see Chart 6 above). The result is a dangerous quandary in which the government’s regulatory crackdowns are triggering a property bust yet the government is prevented from providing the usual policy support as the going gets tough. Asset prices and broader risk sentiment could go into free fall. However, the party has a powerful incentive to prevent a generalized crisis ahead of the party congress. So we are inclined to accept signs that property curbs and other policies will be eased. Bottom Line: The full disinflationary impact of China’s financial turmoil and economic slowdown has yet to be felt globally. Biden-Xi Summit Not A Game Changer As long as inflation prevents robust monetary and fiscal easing, Beijing is incentivized to improve sentiment in other ways. One way is to back away from the regulatory crackdown in other sectors, such as Big Tech. The other is to improve relations with the United States. A stabilization of US ties would be useful before the party congress since President Xi would prefer not to have the US interfering in China’s internal affairs during such a critical hour. No surprise that China is showing signs of trying to stabilize the relationship. The US is apparently reciprocating. Presidents Biden and Xi also agreed to hold a virtual bilateral summit next week, which could lead to a new series of talks. The US Trade Representative also plans to restart trade negotiations. The plan is to enforce the Phase One trade deal, issue waivers for tariffs that hurt US companies, and pursue new talks over outstanding structural disputes. The Phase One trade deal has fallen far short of its goals in general but on the energy front it is doing well. China will continue importing US commodities amid global shortages (Chart 15). The summit alone will have a limited impact. Biden had a summit with Putin earlier this year but relations could deteriorate tomorrow over cyber-attacks, Ukraine, or Belarus. However, there is some basis for the US and China to cooperate next year: Iran. Xi is consolidating power at home in 2022 and probably wants to use negotiations to keep the Americans at bay. Biden is pivoting to foreign policy in 2022, since Congress will not get anything done, and will primarily focus on halting Iran’s nuclear program. If China assists the US with Iran, then there is a basis for a reduction in tensions. The problem is not only Iran itself but also that China will not jump to enforce sanctions on Iran amid energy shortages. And China is not about to make sweeping structural economic concessions to the US as the Xi administration doubles down on state-guided industrial policy. Meanwhile the US is pursuing a long-term policy of strategic containment and Biden will not want to be seen as appeasing China ahead of midterm elections, especially given Xi’s reversion to autocracy. What about cooperation on climate change? The US and China also delivered a surprise joint statement at the United Nations climate change conference in Scotland (COP26), confirming the widely held expectation that climate policy is an area of engagement. These powers and Europe have a strategic interest in reducing dependency on Middle Eastern oil (Chart 16). Climate talks will begin in the first half of next year. However, climate cooperation is not significant enough alone to outweigh the deeper conflicts between the US and China. Moreover climate policy itself is somewhat antagonistic, as the EU and US are looking at applying “carbon adjustment fees” to carbon-intensive imports, e.g. iron and steel exports from China and other high-polluting producers (Chart 17). While the EU and US are not on the same page yet, and these carbon tariffs are far from implementation, the emergence of green protectionism does not bode well for US-China relations even aside from their fundamental political and military disputes. Bottom Line: Some short-term stabilization of US-China relations is possible but not guaranteed. Markets will cheer if it happens but the effect will be fleeting. Chinese assets are still extremely vulnerable to political and geopolitical risks. Investment Takeaways Gold can still go higher. Financial markets are pricing higher inflation and weak real rates. Gold has been our chief trade to prepare both for higher inflation and geopolitical risk. We are closing our long value / growth equity trade for a loss of 3.75%. We are maintaining our long DM Europe / short EM Europe trade. This trade has performed poorly due to the rally in energy prices and hence Russian equities. But while energy prices may overshoot in the near term, investors will flee Russian equities as geopolitical risks materialize. We are maintaining our long Korea / short Taiwan trade despite its being deeply in the red. This trade is valid over a strategic or long-term time horizon, in which a major geopolitical crisis and/or war is likely. Our expectation that China will ease policy to stabilize the economy ahead of fall 2022 should support Korean equities. Matt Gertken Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Over the past year President Alexander Lukashenko’s repression of domestic unrest prompted the EU to impose sanctions. Lukashenko responded by organizing an immigration scheme in which Middle Eastern migrants are flown into Belarus and funneled into the EU via Poland. The EU is threatening to expand sanctions while Belarus is threatening to cut off the Yamal-Europe pipeline amid Europe’s energy crisis. See Pavel Felgenhauer, “Belarus as Latest Front in Acute East-West Standoff,” Jamestown Foundation, November 11, 2021, Jamestown.org. 2 Both Germany and the EU must approve of Nord Stream II for it to enter into operation. The German Federal Network Agency has until January 8, 2022 to certify the project. The Economy Ministry has already given the green light. Then the European Commission has two-to-four months to respond. The EU is supposed to consider whether the pipeline meets the EU’s requirement that gas transport be “unbundled” or separated from gas production and sales. This is a higher hurdle but Germany’s clout will be felt. Hence final approval could come by March 8 or May 8, 2022. The energy crisis will put pressure for an early certification but the EU Commission may take the full time to pretend that it is not being blackmailed. See Joseph Nasr and Christoph Steitz, “Certifying Nord Stream 2 poses no threat to gas supply to EU – Germany,” Reuters, October 26, 2021, reuters.com. 3 Xi is not serving for an “unprecedented third term,” as the mainstream media keeps reporting. China’s top office is not constant nor were term limits ever firmly established. Each leader’s reign should be measured by their effective control rather than technical terms in office. Mao reigned for 27 years (1949-76), Deng for 14 years or more (1978-92), Jiang Zemin for 10 years (1992-2002), and Hu Jintao for 10 years (2002-2012). 4 See Joseph Fewsmith, “Mao’s Shadow” Hoover Institution, China Leadership Monitor 43 (2014), and “The 19th Party Congress: Ringing In Xi Jinping’s New Age,” Hoover Institution, China Leadership Monitor 55 (2018), hoover.org. 5 Liability-to-asset ratios less than 70%, debt-to-equity less than 100%, and cash-to-short-term-debt ratios of more than 1.0x. Strategic View Open Tactical Positions (0-6 Months) Open Cyclical Recommendations (6-18 Months) Open Trades & Positions
Nearly two-thirds of the S&P 500 companies reported their Q3 earnings, and the earnings season is drawing to a close. 83% of companies have beaten the street expectations with an average earnings surprise standing at 11% (40% earnings growth vs. 29% expected on October 1, 2021). Sales beats are only marginally worse: 77% of the companies have exceeded expectations with an average sales surprise of 3%. Quarter-on-quarter earnings growth is 0.25% exceeding expected 6% contraction. Compared to Q3-2019, eps CAGR is 12%. Chart 1 Financials, Energy, and Health Care have delivered the largest earnings surprises. Financials have done well on the back of the robust M&A activity, while the unfolding energy crisis has lifted the overall S&P 500 Energy complex. Pent-up demand for the elective medical procedures has translated into strong Health Care earnings. Industrials and Materials were amongst the worst: China-related headwinds continue to weigh on both of these sectors. However, some analysts expect China to ease in Q1-2022, providing a tailwind for these sectors. Most companies commented that supply chain bottlenecks and soaring shipping costs are the major headwinds. However, as we see, most have navigated a challenging economic environment swimmingly. Strong pricing power and operating leverage have preserved margins and earnings so far. Looking ahead, companies’ ability to raise prices further is waning (Chart 1), while costs continue marching up. These factors are the ubiquitous reasons for a negative guidance – 52.6% of companies are guiding lower for Q4-2021 (compare that to 32.7% previous quarter). Bottom Line: Companies are exceeding analysts’ expectations both in terms of sales and earnings growth.
The markets were deluged by a lot of information in late October. Several central banks made surprise moves towards tightening (the Bank of Canada, for example, ended asset purchases, and the Reserve Bank of Australia effectively abandoned its yield-curve control). Inflation continued to surprise on the upside (headline CPI in the US is now 5.4% year-on-year). But, at the same time, there were signs of faltering growth with, for example, US real GDP growth in Q3 coming in at only 2.0% quarter-on-quarter annualized, compared to 6.7% in Q2. This caused a flattening of the yield curve in many countries, as markets priced in faster monetary tightening but lower long-term growth (Chart 1). Nonetheless, equities shrugged off the barrage of news, with the S&P500 ending the month at a new high. All this highlights what we discussed in our latest Quarterly: That the second year of a bull market is often tricky, resulting in lower (but still positive) returns from equities and higher volatility. For risk assets to continue to outperform, our view of a Goldilocks environment needs to be “just right”: The economy must not be too hot or too cold. We think it will be – and so stay overweight equities versus bonds. But investors should be aware of the risks on either side. How too hot? Inflation is broadening out (at least in the US, UK, Australia and Canada, though not in the euro zone and Japan) and is no longer limited to items which saw unusually strong demand during the pandemic but where supply is constrained (Chart 2). Chart 1What Is The Message Of Flattening Yield Curves? Chart 2Inflation Is Broadening Out In The US There is a risk that this turns into a wage-price spiral as employees, amid a tight labor market, push for higher wages to offset rising prices. We find that wages tend to follow prices with a lag of 6-12 months (Chart 3). The Atlanta Fed Wage Tracker (good for gauging underlying wage pressures since it looks only at employees who have been in a job for 12 months or more) is already at 3.5% and looks set to rise further. On the back of these inflationary moves, the market has significantly pulled forward the date of central bank tightening. Futures now imply that the Fed will raise rates in both July and December next year (Chart 4) and that other major developed central banks will also raise multiple times over the next 14 months (Table 1). Breakeven inflation rates have also risen substantially (Chart 5). Chart 3Wages Tend To Rise After Prices Rise Chart 4Will The Fed Really Hike This Soon? Table 1Futures Implied Path Of Rate Hikes Chart 5Breakevens Suggest Higher Inflation We think these moves are a little excessive. There are several reasons why inflation might cool next year. Companies are rushing to increase capacity to unblock supply bottlenecks. For example, semiconductor production has already begun to increase, bringing down DRAM prices over the past few months (Chart 6). Another big contributor to broad-based inflation has been a 126% increase in container shipping costs since the start of the year (Chart 7). But currently the number of container ships on order is at a 10-year high; these new ships will be delivered over the next two years. Such deflationary forces should pull down core inflation next year (though we stick to our longstanding view that for multiple structural reasons – demographics, the end of globalization, central bank dovishness, the transition away from fossil fuels – inflation will trend up over the next five years). Chart 6DRAM Prices Falling As Production Ramps Up Chart 7All Those Ships On Order Should Bring Down Shipping Costs The Fed, therefore, will not be in a rush to raise rates. It does not see the labor market as anywhere close to “maximum employment” – it has not defined what it means by this, but we would see it as a 3.8% unemployment rate (the median FOMC dot for the equilibrium unemployment rate) and the prime-age participation rate back to its 2019 level (Chart 8). We continue to expect the first rate hike only in December next year. The Fed will feel the need to override its employment criterion only if long-term inflation expectations become unanchored – but the 5-year 5-year forward breakeven rate is only at 2.3%, within the Fed’s effective CPI target range of 2.3-2.5% (Chart 5). We remain comfortable with our view of only a moderate rise in long-term rates, with the US 10-year Treasury yield at 1.7% by end-2021, and reaching 2-2.25% at the time of the first Fed rate hike. It is also worth emphasizing that even a fairly sharp rise in long-term rates has historically almost always coincided with strong equity performance (Chart 9 and Table 2). This has again been evident in the past 12 months: When rates rose between August 2020 and March 2021, and then from July 2021, equities performed strongly. Chart 8We Are Not Back To "Maximum Employment" Chart 9Rising Rates Are Usually Accompanied By A Rising Stock Market Table 2Episodes Of Rising Long-Term Rates Since 1990 But could the economy get too cold? We would discount the weak US GDP reading: It was mostly due to production shortages, especially in autos, which pushed down consumption on durable goods by 26% QoQ annualized, and by some softness in spending on services due to the delta Covid variant, the impact of which is now fading. US growth should continue to be supported by a combination of the $2.5 trillion of excess household savings, strong capex as companies boost their production capacity, and a further 5% of GDP in fiscal stimulus that should be passed by Congress by year-end. Similar conditions apply in other developed economies. Chart 10Real Estate Is A Big Part Of Chinese GDP We see three principal risks to this positive outlook: A new strain of Covid-19 that proves resistant to current vaccines – unlikely but not impossible. Our geopolitical strategists worry about Iran, which may have a nuclear bomb ready by December, prompting Israel to bomb the country. Iran would likely react by hampering oil supplies, even blocking the Strait of Hormuz, through which 25% of global oil flows. Chinese growth has been slowing and the impact from the problems at Evergrande is still unclear. Real estate is a major part of the Chinese economy, with residential investment comprising 10% of GDP (Chart 10) and, broadly defined to include construction and building materials, real estate overall perhaps as much as one-third. Our China strategists don’t expect the government to launch a major stimulus which would bail out the industry, since it is happy with the way that property-related lending has been shrinking in recent years (Chart 11). We expect the slowdown in Chinese credit growth to bottom out over the coming few months, but economic activity may have further to slow (Chart 12), and there is a risk that the authorities are unable to control the fallout from the property market. Chart 11Chinese Authorities Are Happy To See Slowing Property Lending Chart 12When Will Credit Growth Bottom? Fixed Income: Given the macro environment described above, we remain underweight bonds and short duration. If we assume 1) a Fed liftoff in December 2022, 2) 100 basis points of rate hikes over the following year, and 3) a terminal Fed Funds Rate of 2.08% (the median forecast from the New York Fed’s Survey of Market Participants), 10-year US Treasurys will return -0.2% over the next 12 months, and 2-year Treasurys +0.3%.1 TIPs have overshot fair value and, although we remain neutral since they a tail-risk hedge against high inflation over the next five years, we would especially avoid 2-year TIPS which look very overvalued. We see some pockets of selective value in lower-quality high-yield bonds, specifically US Ba- and Caa-rated issues, which are still trading at breakeven spreads around the 35th historical percentile, whereas higher-rated bonds look very expensive (Chart 13). For US tax-paying investors, municipal bonds look particularly attractive at the moment, with general-obligation (GO) munis trading at a duration-matched yield higher than Treasurys even before tax considerations (Chart 14). Our US bond strategists have recently gone maximum overweight. Chart 14Muni Bonds Are A Steal Equities: We retain our longstanding preference for US equities over other Developed Markets. US equities have outperformed this year, irrespective of whether rates were rising or falling, or how US growth was surprising relative to the rest of the world, emphasizing the much stronger fundamentals of the US market (Chart 15). Analysts’ forecasts for the next few quarters look quite cautious, and so earnings surprises can push US stock prices up further (Chart 16). We reiterate the neutral on China but underweight on Emerging Markets ex-China that we initiated in our latest Quarterly. Our sector overweights are a mixture of cyclicals (Industrials), rising-interest-rate plays (Financials), and defensives (Heath Care). Chart 15US Equites Outperformed This Year Whatever Happened Chart 16Analysts Are Pessimistic About The Next Couple Of Quarters Currencies: We continue to expect the US dollar to be stuck in its trading range and so stay neutral. Recent moves in prospective relative monetary policy bring us to change two of our currency recommendations. We close our underweight on the Australian dollar. The recent rise in Australian inflation (with both trimmed mean and 10-year breakevens now above 2% – Chart 17) has brought forward the timing of the first rate hike and should push up relative real rates (Chart 18). We lower our recommendation on the Japanese yen from overweight to neutral. The Bank of Japan will not raise rates any time soon, even when other central banks are tightening. This will push real-rate differentials against the yen (Chart 18, panel 2). Chart 17Australian Inflation Is Picking Up Chart 18Real Rates Moving In Favor Of The AUD And Against The JPY Chart 19Chinese-Related Metals' Prices Are Falling Commodities: We remain cautious on those industrial metals which are most sensitive to slowing Chinese growth and its weakening property market. The fall in iron ore prices since July is now being followed by aluminum. However, metals which are increasingly driven by investment in alternative energy, notably copper, are likely to hold up better (Chart 19). We are underweight the equity Materials sector and neutral on the commodities asset class. The Brent crude oil price has broadly reached our energy strategists’ forecasts of $80/bbl on average in 2022 and $81 in 2023 (Chart 20). Although the forward curve is lower than this, with December-22 Brent at only $75/bbl, it is a misapprehension to characterize this as the market forecasting that the oil price will fall. Backwardation (where futures prices are lower than spot) is the usual state of affairs for structural reasons (for example, producers hedging production forward). The market typically moves to contango only when the oil price has fallen sharply and reserves are high (Chart 21). We remain neutral on the equities Energy sector. Chart 20Brent Has Reached Our 2022 And 2023 Forecast Level Chart 21Lower Oil Futures Don't Mean Oil Price Is Forecast To Fall Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Global Asset Allocation garry@bcaresearch.com GAA Asset Allocation
With 119 S&P 500 companies having reported Q3-2021 earnings, it’s time to take a pulse of the interim results. So far, the blended earnings growth rate is 34.8% while actual reported growth rate is 49.9%. The blended sales growth rate is 14.4%, while the actual reported rate is 16.6%. Analysts expected Q3-2021 earnings to be 6% below the Q2-2021 level. As of now, this quarter’s earnings are only 3% lower. Most of the companies that have reported are beating analysts’ forecasts are surprising to the upside. Currently, 83% of companies reported EPS above expectations, with five out of eleven sectors delivering an impressive 100% beat score. In terms of the magnitude of the beats, the overall number currently stands at 14% with Financials and Technology leading the pack. However, these results are bound to change as more companies report: less than 5% of the market cap has reported within the Energy, Materials, Real Estate, and Utilities sectors. The big theme for the current earnings season is input cost inflation. Many industrial giants, including Honeywell (HON), are complaining about supply-chain cost increases, and their potential adverse effect on margins. As a result, many companies are reducing guidance for the fourth quarter. So far, there are 59 positive pre-announcements, and 45 negative. On the bright side, the majority of companies are reporting that demand for their products remains strong, potentially offsetting some of the cost increases. This is especially the case with consumer demand: a few consumer staples companies, such as P&G, commented that their recent price hikes have not dampened demand for their products and have fortified their bottom line against rising costs. Bottom Line: The earnings season is gaining speed, and so far, it appears that Q3-2021 growth expectations are set at a low bar, that is easy to clear for most companies.
Highlights Inflation in the US and many other countries is likely to follow a “two steps up, one step down” trajectory of higher highs and higher lows over the remainder of the decade. Goods inflation will ease in 2022, while energy price pressures will abate. This suggests that we are currently near the top of those two steps. Any decline in inflation will be short-lived, however. Tight labor markets will bolster wages. Rent inflation is also poised to pick up, especially in the US. The Fed and other central banks will face political pressure to keep interest rates low in order to suppress debt-servicing costs. This could lead to overheating. While we are not as bullish on stocks as we were at the start of the year, the combination of low interest rates and above-trend growth over the next 12 months will support equities. Investors should favor cyclicals, value stocks, small caps, and non-US markets. The Stairway To Higher Inflation In past reports, we argued that global inflation had reached a secular bottom and would begin to reaccelerate (see here, here, and more recently here). While it is still too early to be certain, recent developments appear to have vindicated that view. The path to structurally higher inflation is likely to be a bumpy one. We have generally contended that the shift to a more inflationary regime would follow a “two steps up, one step down” pattern, characterized by a series of higher highs and higher lows for inflation. In thinking about the inflation process, it is useful to distinguish between transitory shocks and structural forces. Unfortunately, much of the recent discussion about inflation has been politically charged, with one camp arguing that high inflation is entirely transitory (mainly due to pandemic disruptions) and another camp arguing that it is entirely structural in nature (big budget deficits, QE, and “dollar debasement” are often cited). The idea that both transitory shocks and structural forces may be driving inflation seems to generate a lot of cognitive dissonance in peoples’ minds. Our view is that transitory shocks have pushed up inflation, but that structural forces (both policy and non-policy related) are playing an important role too. In other words, we think that we are near the top of those metaphorical two steps. The next step for inflation is likely down, even though the longer-term trend is to the upside. Team Transitory Is Right About One Thing During most recessions, cyclically-sensitive durable goods spending falls, while the service sector serves as a ballast for the economy. The pandemic flipped this pattern on its head (Chart 1). While durable goods spending did dip briefly, it came roaring back due to generous stimulus payments and stay-at-home restrictions which cut many households off from the services they normally purchase. In March of this year, US real consumer durable spending was 27% above its pre-pandemic trend (Chart 2A and 2B). Chart 1Unlike During Most Recessions, Durable Goods Spending Spiked Due To Stimulus Checks And Stay-At-Home Restrictions Chart 2ADurable Goods Spending Has Begun To Normalize, But Durable Goods Prices Keep Rising Due To Supply Bottlenecks (I) Chart 2BDurable Goods Spending Has Begun To Normalize, But Durable Goods Prices Keep Rising Due To Supply Bottlenecks (II) Durable goods spending has retreated since then, however. As of August, it was only 8% above its trendline. Supply-chain bottlenecks have curbed durable goods spending over the past eight months. A tell-tale sign of a supply shock is when spending declines and prices nonetheless rise. Between January 2020 and March 2021, durable goods spending increased at an annualized rate of 29% while prices rose at an annualized pace of 2%. Since March 2021, durable goods spending has fallen at an annualized pace of 28%, but price inflation has accelerated to 15% (Chart 3). Even more than other categories of durable goods, vehicle production has been stymied by supply-chain disruptions. Motor vehicles and auto parts represent about 40% of the durable goods sold in the US and accounted for nearly two-thirds of the decline in real durable goods spending between March and August. The downward trend in vehicle sales continued in September, with unit sales declining by 7.2% on the month. In the US, vehicle sales are now back to where they were in 2011 when the unemployment rate was 9%. In the euro area, they are below their sovereign debt crisis lows (Chart 4). The chip shortage hampering vehicle production will abate in 2022. However, vehicle prices are likely to come down only slowly. Auto inventories in the US are only a third of what they were prior to the pandemic (Chart 5). Until dealers are able to rebuild inventories, they will have little incentive to cut prices. Chart 4The Chip Shortage Has Caused Auto Sales To Tumble Chart 5Dealer Inventories Have Collapsed Energy Price Pressures Should Abate, But Probably Not As Fast As Investors Expect Investors believe the recent surge in energy prices will reverse. The futures curves for oil, natural gas, and coal are all in steep backwardation (Chart 6). We agree that energy price pressures are likely to abate in 2022. However, as we discussed last week, the odds are that prices do not fall as quickly as anticipated. This concern is especially acute in Europe, where La Niña could lead to another cold winter and uncertainty abounds over the status of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. Looking beyond the next 12 months, the risk is that years of declining investment in the oil and gas sector lead to continued energy shortages during the remainder of the decade. In 2020, 12% of global energy production came from renewable sources such as solar, wind, and hydro. The IEA estimates that this share will rise to 20% in 2030. However, the IEA also reckons that the global economy will still need about 5% more oil and natural gas than it consumes now (Table 1). Given the reluctance of many countries to invest in nuclear power generation, the phase-out of carbon-based fuels may take longer than expected. Table 1Oil And Gas Consumption Will Not Peak Until The Next Decade Near-Term Upside For Rents Despite increasing home prices in most economies, rent inflation decelerated in the first year of the pandemic (Chart 7). More recently, however, the rental market has begun to heat up. US rents rose by 0.5% in September, the fastest monthly growth since the 2006 housing boom (Chart 8). The Zillow rent index, which looks only at units turning over, has spiked (Chart 9). Chart 7Rent Inflation Is Bouncing Back After Falling During The Pandemic Chart 8More Upside To Rent Inflation Strong job growth, the end of the nationwide eviction moratorium, and the loosening of regulations freezing rents in a number of US cities and states are all contributing to higher rent inflation. A shortage of homes is also putting upward pressure on home prices and rents. After having surged during the Great Recession, the homeowner vacancy rate has fallen to record low levels (Chart 10). Chart 9Newly Listed Apartments Are Being Marked Up Sharply Chart 10The Home Vacancy Rate Is Very Low In addition to encouraging more construction, higher home prices could indirectly boost inflation through the wealth effect. According to the Federal Reserve, homeowner equity increased by $4.1 trillion, or 21%, between 2019Q4 and 2021Q2. Empirical estimates of the wealth effect suggest that consumption rises between 5 and 8 cents for every additional dollar in housing wealth. For the US, this would translate into 0.9%-to-1.4% of GDP in incremental annual consumption since the start of the pandemic. Higher Nominal Income Growth Would Make Housing More Affordable Chart 11Many Developed Economies Feature Overheated Housing Markets The housing wealth effect would turn negative if home prices were to fall. While this is less of a risk in the US where housing is still reasonably affordable in many states, it is more of a risk in countries such as Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Sweden where home prices have reached stratospheric levels in relation to incomes and rents (Chart 11). Not only would a decline in nominal home prices curb construction and consumer spending, but it would also potentially undermine the financial system by reducing the value of the collateral backing mortgage loans. To support spending and preclude an outright fall in home prices, central banks would likely keep interest rates at fairly low levels. Low rates, in turn, would incentivize governments to maintain accommodative fiscal policies. The IMF expects the cyclically-adjusted primary budget deficit to be 2% of GDP larger in advanced economies in 2022-26 compared to 2014-19 (Chart 12). The combination of low interest rates and loose fiscal policies will help drive nominal income growth, thus allowing for improved home affordability without the need for a disruptive decline in home prices. As Japan’s experience demonstrates, a deflationary environment is toxic for the property market and the financial system. Labor Markets Getting Tighter There is little doubt that the US labor market is heating up. Even though there are 5 million fewer people employed now than at the start of the pandemic, the job vacancy rate is near record high levels and workers are displaying few misgivings about quitting their jobs (Chart 13). Part of the apparent tightness in the US labor market stems from pandemic-related factors. Although enhanced federal unemployment benefits have expired, households are still sitting on $2.4 trillion in excess savings (Chart 14). This cash cushion has allowed workers to be choosy in entertaining job offers. In addition, decreased immigration flows and a spate of early retirements have decreased labor supply. More recently, the introduction of vaccine mandates has caused some disruptions to the labor market. About 100 million US workers are currently subject to the mandates. According to the Census Household Pulse Survey, about 8 million of them are unvaccinated and attest that “they will definitely not get the vaccine.” Although many of them will reconsider, the anecdotal evidence suggests that some will not. In one glaring example, 4.6% of workers resigned from a rural hospital in upstate New York, causing the maternity ward to temporarily suspend operations. Prospects For A Wage-Price Spiral Chart 15Wages At The Bottom End Of The Income Distribution Are Rising Briskly So far, much of the pick-up in wage growth has been confined to the bottom end of the income distribution (Chart 15). Wage pressures are likely to become more broad-based over time as the unemployment rate continues to decline. A full-blown wage-price spiral would worry the Fed. However, such a spiral does not appear imminent. While respondents to the University of Michigan survey in October expected inflation to reach 4.8% over the next 12 months, they anticipated inflation of only 2.8% over a 5-to-10-year horizon (Chart 16). This is not much higher than their pre-pandemic expectations and is lower than the 3.0% figure reported for September. Chart 16Long-Term Inflation Expectations Have Risen But Remain At Historically Low Levels It is easy to dismiss households’ beliefs about future inflation as being largely irrelevant. However, these beliefs do influence spending decisions. For example, a record share of households say that this is a bad time to buy a car (Chart 17). The top reason given is that prices are too high. In other words, many households are deferring the purchase of a vehicle in the hopes of getting a better deal. Automobile demand would be a lot higher now if households thought that prices would keep rising, as this would incentivize them to buy a car before prices rose even more. Chart 17Households Think That This Is The Worst Time Ever To Buy A Car Chart 18Inflation Started Accelerating Quickly Only When Unemployment Reached Very Low Levels In The 1960s What should be acknowledged is that inflation expectations tend to be governed by complex social feedback loops, which makes the relationship between slack and inflation highly non-linear. The experience of the 1960s provides a pertinent example. The US unemployment rate reached NAIRU in 1962. However, it was not until 1966, when the unemployment rate was two percentage points below NAIRU, that inflation expectations became unhinged. Within the span of ten months, both wage growth and CPI inflation doubled, with the latter reaching 6% by the end of the decade (Chart 18). The lesson is clear: While long-term inflation expectations are well anchored today, there is no guarantee they will stay that way indefinitely. Is this a lesson that the Fed will heed? Like Larry Summers, we have our doubts, suggesting that the long-term risks to inflation are to the upside. Fighting The Last War Just as military generals are prone to fighting the last war, the same is true of economic policymakers. Central bankers have been staring down the barrel of the deflationary gun for over two decades. In the 1960s, policymakers prioritized high employment over low inflation. With memories of the Great Depression still fresh in their minds, they kept policy rates too low for too long. This time around, policymakers have an additional reason to drag their heels in raising rates: government debt is very high. Higher borrowing costs would force governments to shift spending from social programs to pay off bondholders. Needless to say, that would not be very popular with most voters. Reducing debt-to-GDP ratios via higher nominal income growth will prove to be more politically palatable than fiscal austerity. Investment Conclusions The path to high interest rates is lined with low interest rates. Structurally higher inflation will eventually lead to higher nominal interest rates, but not before an extended period of negative real rates. Chart 19Neither The Fed Nor The Markets Think The Neutral Rate Of Interest Is All That High Neither the Fed nor the markets think the neutral rate of interest is all that high (Chart 19). We think the neutral rate is higher than widely believed. However, this will not become apparent until the unemployment rate falls well below its full employment level. For now, the Fed’s leadership will want to avoid rocking the boat by turning more hawkish. While the US 10-year Treasury yield will trend higher over time, it will pause at around 1.8% in the first half of next year as the unwinding of pandemic-related bottlenecks leads to a “one step down” for inflation. The ECB and the Bank of Japan are even more reluctant to tighten monetary policy than the Fed. Some developed economy central banks like those of the UK, Norway, Sweden, Canada, and New Zealand are more inclined to normalize monetary conditions. That said, they too will be constrained by the fear that going it alone in raising rates will put undue upward pressure on their currencies. While we are not as bullish on stocks as we were at the start of the year, the combination of low interest rates and above-trend growth over the next 12 months will support equities. As we discussed in our recent strategy outlook, investors should favor cyclicals, value stocks, small caps, and non-US markets. Bitcoin Trade Update After being up as much as 50%, our short Bitcoin trade got stopped out for a loss. We remain bearish on Bitcoin and have decided to reinstate the trade. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist pberezin@bcaresearch.com View Matrix Special Trade Recommendations Current MacroQuant Model Scores
In a recent daily report, we analyzed relative performance of the S&P 500 sectors and styles under different US 10-year Treasury yield (UST10Y) regimes. Today we expand our analysis and map relative performance of the S&P 500 sectors and styles under the distinct US Treasury yield curve regimes, defined as a three-months change between 10-year and 2-year yields. To analyze sector and style performance by regime, we calculate contemporaneous three-months relative returns of sectors and styles. To summarize the results, we calculate median relative return of each sector/style in each regime. We subtract total period median to remove the sector and style biases in the long-term performance. In a flattening yield curve environment, Defensives, Quality, and Growth tend to outperform, as it indicates scarcity of growth. Accordingly, Real Estate, Technology, Utilities, and Communications Services also outperform. Yield curve steepening is usually associated with growth acceleration. This regime gives boost to more economically sensitive and capex intensive sectors and styles: Value, Small caps, and Cyclicals. Bottom Line: The shape of the US Treasury yield curve will be an important variable to monitor going forward, as it has a substantial effect on relative sector and style performance.