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Highlights EM, The USD & Bond Yields: The turbulence in Turkey and other emerging markets has likely not been enough to move the Fed off its planned 25bp/quarter trajectory. It will take a larger and faster U.S. dollar appreciation, and more serious U.S. market declines, before the Fed backs down and bond yields fall more decisively. Stay below-benchmark on overall portfolio duration exposure, but only neutral on spread product exposure. Australia: Australian economic growth momentum is choppy and inflation is struggling to accelerate amidst ample excess capacity in labor markets. Stay overweight Australian government bonds, but temper return expectations after the big outperformance year-to-date. Feature It's All About The Dollar Chart of the WeekBad Things Happen More Often With A Rising USD Bad Things Happen More Often With A Rising USD Bad Things Happen More Often With A Rising USD The turmoil in Turkey and collapse of the lira has been the latest bout of financial market turbulence seen in 2018. From the VIX shock in early February, to the Italy yield spike in May, to the bear market in Chinese equities, there have been big market meltdowns that seem to come out of nowhere. Yet these are not isolated events. The slowing pace of bond buying by the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan, in addition to the Fed unwinding its huge balance sheet, have left the global financial system with diminished liquidity. More importantly, the Fed's tightening cycle has turned the U.S. dollar from a weak currency in 2017 to a strong currency in 2018 (Chart of the Week). Yes, U.S.-China trade tensions have compounded matters by raising uncertainties about global growth, but tightening monetary policies and more growth uncertainties have been the true cause of this year's market shocks. Turkey and Italy were questionable credits in 2017, but investors did not care when the dollar was soft and global growth was accelerating. Looking ahead, the key variable to watch will be the U.S. dollar. Many of BCA's strategists have made comparisons between the backdrop today and the late 1990s period that resulted in the 1998 Asian Crisis.1 Those comparisons are valid, given the high level of dollar debt in the emerging markets at a time of Fed tightening and a rising U.S. dollar (Chart 2). A key difference is that, in that late 1990s episode, the Fed was keeping U.S. monetary policy very tight as evidenced by the inverted U.S. Treasury yield curve and a fed funds rate that was well in excess of inflation (and well above what we now know to be the neutral r-star rate). The dollar surged during that period because global growth differentials strongly favored the U.S. Today, the Fed has not yet pushed the funds rate into restrictive territory and the dollar is still well below the peak seen in the late 1990s. With the Fed still not signaling any adjustment to its rate hike plans based on the latest bout of EM turmoil, there is scope for the dollar to continue appreciating over the next 6-12 months. The critical factor that could change this dynamic, however, is the pace of dollar appreciation. The U.S. trade-weighted dollar is now only 5% above the levels of a year ago. Looking back at the 2014/15 surge in the dollar, the peak annual pace of dollar appreciation reached 15% in mid-2015 (Chart 3). That move was big enough, and fast enough, to trigger a sharp U.S. economic growth slowdown, a contraction in U.S. corporate profit growth and a large fall in U.S. inflation (admittedly, helped by collapsing oil prices). It would take a 10% appreciation from current levels (think EUR/USD at 1.04) over the next four months to generate an equivalent pace of dollar appreciation (the black dotted line in all panels). So far, the EM turmoil and dollar strength have not resulted in much turbulence in U.S. financial markets (Chart 4). Corporate credit spreads have stayed well behaved, while U.S. equities are only modestly off the recent highs. Only U.S. Treasury yields have dipped lower from recent highs, even though yields are still contained within the range of the past few months. This is in sharp contrast to the 2015 episode, when U.S. financial markets eventually succumbed to the pressure of the strong dollar and EM selloff - but not without decisive evidence of slowing U.S. growth (top panel). Only then did the Fed finally capitulate and announce a pause after lifting rates just once at the end of 2015, sending Treasury yields sharply lower. Chart 2It's Not 1998##BR##...Yet It's Not 1998...Yet It's Not 1998...Yet Chart 3The Pace Of USD Appreciation##BR##Matters A Lot The Pace Of USD Appreciation Matters A Lot The Pace Of USD Appreciation Matters A Lot Chart 42015 Redux? Watch##BR##U.S. Growth & Earnings 2015 Redux? Watch U.S. Growth & Earnings 2015 Redux? Watch U.S. Growth & Earnings Until there is evidence that the U.S. economy is losing momentum, and that the stronger U.S. dollar and emerging market volatility are a root cause of slowing growth, global bond yields are unlikely to fall much lower on a sustainable basis. The next few readings on the ISM indices, employment growth and small business confidence, along with the third quarter earnings reports starting in October, will be critical in determining if the U.S. economy is falling victim to the "EM Flu". It will likely take more dollar strength before that happens, however. In the meantime, we continue to recommend a below-benchmark overall duration stance, with only a neutral allocation to global corporate bonds versus government debt. We still favor U.S. corporate debt over non-U.S. equivalents until there is evidence of slowing U.S. growth. Bottom Line: The turbulence in Turkey and other emerging markets has likely not been enough to move the Fed off its planned 25bp/quarter trajectory. It will take a larger and faster U.S. dollar appreciation, and more serious U.S. market declines, before the Fed backs down and bond yields fall more decisively. Stay below-benchmark on overall portfolio duration exposure, but only neutral on spread product exposure. Australia: Still Too Much Uncertainty For Rate Hikes One of our highest conviction calls since the start of 2018 has been to stay overweight Australian government bonds. The logic behind the view was simple; it would be very difficult for the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) to deliver even a single rate hike over the course of the year. A combination of a fragile consumer, persistent slack in labor markets and softening Chinese demand for Australian exports would all conspire to restrain Australian inflation and keep the RBA on the sidelines. So far, our view has largely come to fruition, to the benefit of Australian government bond performance. Chart 5Massive Australian Bond Outperformance vs USTs Massive Australian Bond Outperformance vs USTs Massive Australian Bond Outperformance vs USTs The RBA has held the benchmark Cash Rate at the same 1.5% level that has prevailed since August 2016. This has helped the Bloomberg Barclays Australia Treasury index deliver a local currency total return of 2.68% year-to-date. The performance has been even more impressive hedged into U.S. dollars, with an excess return over U.S. Treasuries of 3.95% - surpassing the overall Global (ex U.S.) Treasury index excess return by 85bps. The benchmark 10-year Australian yield has fallen 10bps since the end of 2017, in sharp contrast to the 46bps increase in the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield, with the spread between the two bonds now in negative territory for the first time since 1998 (Chart 5). Obviously, the potential for further outperformance of Australian bonds is diminished after such an impressive run. The Australian Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve is now only discounting a mere 15bps of rate hikes over the next twelve months, and a move to outright rate cuts will be difficult with the economy still growing above trend and inflation now back to the low end of the RBA's 2-3% target range. Headline unemployment is now down to 5.4%, the lowest level since 2012 and within hailing distance of the 5% level that the RBA believes to be full employment. Yet there are now enough uncertainties regarding the Australian economic outlook to suggest that Australian government bonds should continue to outperform developed market peers over the next 6-12 months. The Biggest Uncertainties: Consumer Spending, Housing & Banks Consumer spending - 60% of Australian GDP, the largest component - has struggled to gain much positive momentum in recent years. Since the end of 2013, the year-over-year growth rate of real consumption has ranged between 2.2% and 3.1%. The lack of spending power has been the biggest problem, with real wage growth averaging a mere 0.2% over the past five years and hours worked remaining stagnant (Chart 6). Anemic income growth means that the household saving rate had to fall from 8% to 2% just to maintain an uninspiring 2.5% average pace of real consumer spending. Both real wage growth and average weekly hours worked have decelerated since the start of 2017, with the former now only at 0.1% and the latter at an all-time low. This has compounded the biggest structural risk to the Australian consumer - high debt. Household debt is now up to a record 190% of disposable income, the fourth highest figure among OECD countries after having shot up thirty percentage points since the end of 2012 (bottom panel). The ability to carry that huge debt load is helped by low interest rates that have helped keep debt service ratios in line with long-run averages. More recently, house prices have been coming off the boil (Chart 7). National house prices were down 2.5% in July on a year-over-year basis, led by declines in the major markets of Sydney (down 5.5% from the July 2017 peak) and Melbourne (down 3% from the November 2017 peak). In the RBA's latest Statement on Monetary Policy released earlier this month, it was noted that even such a modest decline in housing values after years of substantial price gains could have an outsized impact on overall consumption if focused on the more highly indebted or credit-constrained households.2 Yet a cooling of overheated housing values is, as RBA Governor Philip Lowe noted in a speech last week, a "welcome development" after years of unsustainable price gains that greatly diminished housing affordability.3 Homebuyer sentiment and growth in housing approvals have already ticked up in response to the slowing pace of house price appreciation, although both remain well below levels seen during the boom years. One wild card that could short-circuit any rebound in house prices is the availability of credit from Australian banks. The entire Australian banking industry has come under harsh criticism from the findings of the government's Royal Commission on Misconduct in the Banking, Superannuation and Financial Services Industry.4 The Commission was established at the end of 2017, after years of public pressure regarding the questionable business practices of Australian financial firms. Evidence of bribery, forged documents, extending loans to those that could not afford it and even charging fees to dead clients has already come to light. With financial firms on the defensive, there is a risk that banks will raise lending standards for new loans going forward. Australian bank equities have already been underperforming and credit growth is slowing (Chart 8). The bigger concern is the sharp decline in bank deposit growth, which is now contracting modestly on a year-over-year basis. Already, Australian banks are facing some higher funding costs through rising money market rates. Much of that spike seen earlier in 2018 could be attributed to rise in the U.S. bank funding costs, but there is now a notable divergence between LIBOR-OIS spreads in Australia and the U.S., which may be a sign of uniquely Australian funding pressures. Chart 6Poor Fundamentals For##BR##The Australian Consumer Poor Fundamentals For The Australian Consumer Poor Fundamentals For The Australian Consumer Chart 7Weaker Prices =##BR##Stronger Housing Demand? Weaker Prices = Stronger Housing Demand? Weaker Prices = Stronger Housing Demand? Chart 8An Australian Credit##BR##Crunch Unfolding? An Australian Credit Crunch Unfolding? An Australian Credit Crunch Unfolding? The RBA has noted that the absolute levels of bank funding costs (bank debt spreads, deposit rates wholesale lending rates) remain low by historical standards, and that overall financial conditions remain supportive for Australian economic growth. Yet the marginal changes in funding dynamics, combined with the pressure on banks to be more prudent in extending loans, raise downside risks to Australian growth from future credit availability. Other Uncertainties: Capital Spending, Exports & Commodity Prices Australian businesses have ramped up capital spending over the past year, with the annual growth rate of machinery and equipment investment now at the fastest pace since 2012 (Chart 9). An improvement in Australian commodity prices and the overall terms of trade has helped boost corporate profits, helping to fund investment spending. Importantly, the recent pickup in commodity prices has been more broad-based than the iron ore boom in 2010/11, with prices of non-ferrous metals rising even with iron ore prices languishing. Looking ahead, there are increasing risks to the capital spending upturn from growing uncertainties surrounding the outlook for Chinese economic growth, and global trade activity more generally. The NAB business confidence survey, which leads capital spending intentions, has been falling over the past several months (bottom panel). This comes after a significant slowing of Australian export growth, the manufacturing PMI and capacity utilization (Chart 10). Much of that is due to diminished demand from China, which remains Australia's largest export market. Chart 9Capex Upturn At Risk From Global Trade Tensions Capex Upturn At Risk From Global Trade Tensions Capex Upturn At Risk From Global Trade Tensions Chart 10China Is A Big Source Of Uncertainty In Australia China Is A Big Source Of Uncertainty In Australia China Is A Big Source Of Uncertainty In Australia China is now undertaking some fresh economic stimulus in response to the growing trade war with the U.S. and the imposition of tariffs. Our colleagues at BCA's China Investment Strategy and Geopolitical Strategy recently penned a Special Report discussing the potential for China's stimulus measures to halt the Chinese growth deceleration seen so far in 2018.5 Their conclusion was that the overall size of the stimulus would be significant, with the surge in fiscal spending potentially equaling the 3% GDP boost seen in 2015/16. This would help support Australia export demand, on the margin, and could potentially boost the prices of Australia's key industrial commodities. However, the overall impact will be less than was seen in 2016/17 given that there will be some offsetting drag from the imposition of tariffs by China and the U.S. The Most Important Uncertainty: How Much Spare Capacity? Chart 11Still Lots Of Slack In The Australian Economy Still Lots Of Slack In The Australian Economy Still Lots Of Slack In The Australian Economy Given all these potential headwinds to Australian growth, the RBA has stated that they are in no hurry to raise interest rates, particularly without any serious threat of an acceleration in inflation. Headline Australian CPI inflation rose to 2.1% in the second quarter of 2018, while core inflation drifted down to 1.8%. Both measures have struggled to breach the lower bound of the RBA's 2-3% target range in recent years (Chart 11). The biggest reason for this is the continued existence of spare capacity in the economy. The IMF estimates that Australia will have a negative output gap of nearly -1% in 2018, unlike most other developed economies where the gap has been closed. Overall wage inflation remains modest, as discussed earlier. While the headline unemployment rate of 5.4% is below the IMF's estimate of the full employment NAIRU of 5.9% (middle panel), the RBA thinks NAIRU is closer to 5%. That implies that there is still slack in the labor market, which is evidenced by the high level of underemployment and the growing share of part-time employment (bottom panel). The RBA anticipates that full employment will not be reached until the end of 2020, even with real GDP growth expected to average 3.25% over the next two years. Both headline and core inflation are projected to rise only to 2.25% by the end of 2020, staying in the lower half of the RBA target band. Unsurprisingly, the RBA has provided guidance stating that it does not expect to raise the Cash Rate before then. Investment Conclusions The Australian OIS curve has now priced out much of the nearly 50bps of rate hikes that were discounted at the start of the year, but there are still 15bps of rate increases expected over the next twelve months. Yet our own Australia Central Bank Monitor has now flipped into negative territory, indicating that fundamental economic and inflation pressures are pointing to the RBA's next move being a rate cut (Chart 12). While that is not our expectation, we think the argument that supported our original investment thesis on Australian government bonds at the beginning of 2018 still holds. Growth uncertainties, ample spare capacity and moderate inflation pressures will ensure that the RBA will struggle to deliver even a single rate hike in 2018 or 2019. Chart 12Stay Overweight Australian Government Bonds Stay Overweight Australian Government Bonds Stay Overweight Australian Government Bonds The main risk to our view would come from a bigger-than-expected stimulus from China and/or a resolution of the U.S.-China trade war. This would boost Australian economic growth and commodity prices and potentially bring forward the timing of the next RBA hike. We continue to recommend an overweight stance on Australian government bonds in global fixed income portfolios. All positions should be run on a currency-hedged basis, as the Australian dollar is likely to remain under downward pressure from less supportive interest rate differentials. For dedicated Australian bond investors, we recommend a neutral duration stance, as we see yields broadly following the path laid out in the forwards. Bottom Line: Australian economic growth momentum is choppy and inflation is struggling to accelerate amidst ample excess capacity in labor markets. Stay overweight Australian government bonds, but temper return expectations after the big outperformance year-to-date. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Foreign Exchange Strategy/Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "The Bear And The Two Travelers", dated August 17th 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com and gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/smp/2018/aug/pdf/statement-on-monetary-policy-2018-08.pdf 3 https://www.rba.gov.au/speeches/2018/sp-gov-2018-08-17.html 4 https://financialservices.royalcommission.gov.au/Pages/default.aspx 5 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy/China Investment Strategy Special Report, "China: How Stimulating Is The Stimulus?", dated August 8th 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com and cis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Turmoil In Emerging Markets: Days Of Future Past Turmoil In Emerging Markets: Days Of Future Past Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Dear client, Our publishing schedule will be shifting over the next two weeks. Next Friday, we will publish a Special Report aggregating various pieces from our colleague Matt Gertken of BCA's Geopolitical Strategy detailing the reforms taking place in China and their past and future evolution, and the economic and investment implications for China and the rest of the world. Matt argues that Chinese reforms are in place and here to stay, which should deepen the malaise in EM and support the dollar. We will not publish any report on August 31st. We will resume our regular publishing schedule on September 7. I hope you enjoy the rest of your summer. Best regards, Mathieu Savary Highlights The 1997 Asian Crisis was a deflationary event, causing commodity prices, commodity currencies and the yen to fall against the dollar, but it had a limited impact on the euro. When Russia collapsed in 1998, the LTCM crisis hit the U.S. banking system, with fears of solvency dragging Treasury yields lower, hurting the dollar against the yen and the euro. Today is not 1997, but the tightness of the U.S. economy suggests the Federal Reserve will need a large shock before abandoning its current pace of a hike per quarter; additionally, global liquidity conditions are tightening and China is slowing. The EM crisis is therefore not over, and vulnerable Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Colombia and South Africa could still experience significant pain. Unlike in 1998, the hot potato is not hiding in the U.S. but in Europe. A contagion event is therefore more likely to hurt the euro than 20 years ago; meanwhile, the yen stands to benefit. DXY could hit 100, and commodity currencies still have ample downside, the AUD in particular. Continue to monitor our China Play Index to gauge if Chinese stimulus could delay the day of reckoning for EM; this index can also be employed as a hedge for investors long the dollar or short EM plays. Feature "Misfortune tests the sincerity of friends." - Aesop This summer is oddly reminiscent of that of 1997. The Federal Reserve is tightening policy because the U.S. economy is not only at full employment but is also growing strongly and generating increasing domestic inflationary pressures. But the most familiar echoes come from outside the U.S. Specifically, emerging market trepidations are once again front page news as the Turkish lira, which had already fallen by 24% between January 2018 and July 31st, dropped by an additional 28% at its worst in a mere two weeks. Consequently, investors are now fretting about the risks of contagion across EM markets, one that could reverberate among G10 economies as well. We too worry that the echoes of 1997 are becoming increasingly louder. EM economies have built up large stocks of debt, and have financed themselves heavily by tapping foreign investors. However, these investors can be rather fickle friends, and we are set to test their sincerity. In this piece, we review how the events of 1997-'98 unfolded, what it meant for G10 currencies, and whether the same lessons can be applied today. We find that in 2018, an EM crisis could ultimately be more supportive for the dollar versus the euro, as unlike in 1998, where the hot potatoes were held by U.S. hedge funds, this time the mess sits squarely in Europe. Tom Yum Goong Goes Viral Initiated in the second half of the 1980s, the peg of the Thai baht seemed like a very successful experiment. The stability created by this institutional setup not only contributed to keeping Thai inflation at manageable levels, but by incentivizing capital inflows in the country it also helped Thailand build up its capital stock. At the time, this yielded a large growth dividend, with real GDP growth averaging 9% from 1985 to 1996. However, the economic boost generated by this cheap financing had a dark side. The Thai current account balance ballooned to a deficit of 8% of GDP in 1995-'96. As Herb Stein famously expressed, if something cannot go on forever, it will stop. Like in Aesop's fable where one of two travelers climbed up a tree to avoid a bear, leaving his friend to fend off the bear on his own, foreign investors abandoned Thailand, which was left on its own to finance its large current account deficit. While the Bank of Thailand was able to fend off the attacks for a few weeks, on July 2nd, 1997, it abandoned its efforts. The THB was left to float freely and dropped 56% against the USD over the subsequent six months. Other EM countries including Malaysia, Brazil and Korea, to name a few, had implemented similar U.S. dollar pegs. They too enjoyed stable inflation, growing money inflows and improved growth, but also experienced growing current account deficits and foreign currency debt loads. It did not take long for investors to extrapolate Thailand's woes to other countries. The Malaysian ringgit and the Indonesian rupiah began falling soon after the THB, while the Korean won began its own steep descent four months later (Chart 1). The economic pain was felt globally. The collapse in EM Asian exchange rates and the deep recessions experienced in these countries caused their export prices to collapse, which created a global deflationary shock (Chart 2). This shock was compounded by a fall in commodity prices that materialized as market participants realized that demand for commodities from the crisis-stricken countries was set to evaporate (Chart 2, bottom panel). Chart 1How The Thai Crisis Morphed Into An Asian Crisis How The Thai Crisis Morphed Into An Asian Crisis How The Thai Crisis Morphed Into An Asian Crisis Chart 2The Asian Crisis Was A Deflationary Shock The Asian Crisis Was A Deflationary Shock The Asian Crisis Was A Deflationary Shock Not only did this deflationary shock lift the USD against EM currencies and commodity currencies, it also caused inflation breakevens in the U.S. to fall significantly (Chart 3). However, because the U.S. economy remained robust through the second half of 1997 and in the early days of 1998, real rates did not respond much (Chart 3, bottom panel). Markets where not very concerned that this shock would force the Fed to cut rates, as it did not seem to affect the outlook for U.S. growth and employment. However, this combination of stable real rates in the face of weaker growth in EM, as well as the collapse in commodity prices ended up having large second-round effects. Russia defaulted in August 1998, prompting a collapse in the ruble. To patch up its finances, Russia began pumping ever more oil out of the ground, causing oil prices to fall below US$10/bbl in December 1998, deepening the malaise in commodity prices. This caused the Brazilian real to collapse in 1999, and the Argentinian peso to follow in 2002 (Chart 4). Chart 31997: Falling Breakevens, Stable Real Yields 1997: Falling Breakevens, Stable Real Yields 1997: Falling Breakevens, Stable Real Yields Chart 4Asian Crisis Goes Global Asian Crisis Goes Global Asian Crisis Goes Global Among these contagions, the Russian default was the event with the greatest systemic impact. This was because it was a direct hit to the U.S. banking system. Long Term Capital Management, a large Connecticut-based hedge fund, had accumulated massive bets on Russia. The country's default plunged the fund into the abyss. However, LTCM had liabilities to banks to the tune of US$125 billion. The exposure was perceived as an existential threat to the banking sector, and the market began to anticipate a repeat of the 1907 panic.1 Junk bond spreads jumped, the S&P 500 fell by 18%, and U.S. government bond yields collapsed by 120 basis points (Chart 5). The Fed was forced to respond, coming out of hibernation and cutting rates by 75 basis points between September and November of 1998. As the Fed forcefully responded to this shock and 10-year Treasury yields fell, the dollar, which had managed to stay somewhat stable against the synthetic euro from July 1997 to August 1998, fell 11%. Within the same one-year window starting in July 1997, the yen dropped 23%, dragged lower by the competitive pressures created by weaker Asian currencies. However, as soon as U.S. bond yields collapsed, the yen began to surge, rising by 36% from August 1998 to January 1999 (Chart 6). Only once the Fed started increasing rates anew did the euro and the yen level off. Chart 5The Russian Default Was The Real Shock For The U.S. The Russian Default Was The Real Shock For The U.S. The Russian Default Was The Real Shock For The U.S. Chart 6The Dollar Buckled After LTCM The Dollar Buckled After LTCM The Dollar Buckled After LTCM In aggregate, the dollar's performance through the 1997-1998 period was very mixed. The trade-weighted dollar managed to rise from July 1997 to August 1998. Nevertheless, this was a complex picture. During this timeframe the dollar rose against EM currencies - against the CAD, the AUD, the NZD and the JPY - but was flat against the euro. The USD then fell against everything from August 1998 to the first half of 1999. Only once the Fed started hiking again in the summer 1999, was the greenback able to resuming its broad ascent, one that lasted all the way until late 2001. Bottom Line: In 1997, the first domino to fall was Thailand. Since many East Asian economies suffered the same ills - current account deficits, foreign currency debt loads and falling foreign exchange reserves - Asian currencies followed, dragging the yen lower in the process. This generated a deflationary shock that hurt commodity prices and commodity currencies, leading to the infamous Russian default of 1998. The associated LTCM bankruptcy threatened the survival of the U.S. banking system, forcing bond yields much lower as the Fed cut rates three times. The dollar suffered because of this policy move, especially against the yen. However, once the Fed resumed its hiking campaign, the dollar recovered across the board, making new highs all the way to late 2001 and early 2002. Is 2018: 1997, 1998, Or 2018? In one key regard, today is not the late 1990s: Dollar pegs are few and far between. However, in many respects, similarities abound. First and most obviously, EM foreign currency debt loads, as measured against exports, GDP or reserves, are at similar levels to those prevailing in the late 1990s (Chart 7). This means that EM economies suffer when the dollar rises, as it represents an increase in their cost of capital, and thus a tightening in financial conditions. Second, the Fed has been increasing interest rates. Most importantly, the Fed is growingly concerned that domestic inflationary pressures in the U.S. are intensifying, courtesy of strong growth - at least relative to potential; a high degree of capacity utilization, especially in the labor market (Chart 8); and, unique to today, the U.S. has received a large degree of unneeded fiscal stimulus. Chart 7EM Dollar Debt Is High EM Have More ##br##Foreign-Currency Debt Than In The 1990s EM Dollar Debt Is High EM Have More Foreign-Currency Debt Than In The 1990s EM Dollar Debt Is High EM Have More Foreign-Currency Debt Than In The 1990s Chart 8The Foreign Pain Threshold For The Fed Is Much Higher ##br##Now Than In 2015 or 2016 The Foreign Pain Threshold For The Fed Is Much Higher Now Than In 2015 or 2016 The Foreign Pain Threshold For The Fed Is Much Higher Now Than In 2015 or 2016 This means it will take a lot of pain to derail the Fed from its desire to hike rates once a quarter. This also makes the current environment very different from 2015, the most recent episode of EM tumult. In 2015-2016, the Fed easily abandoned its hiking campaign. When it hiked rates in December 2015, the Fed anticipated increasing rates four times over the following 12 months. It delivered only one hike in December 2016. The reason was straightforward: Unlike today, the U.S. economy was still replete with slack (Chart 8) and was not on the receiving end of a large fiscal stimulus program, suggesting the Fed could not tolerate the deflationary impact of tightening financial conditions. Third, global liquidity is tightening, which is hurting the global growth outlook. Today, global excess money, as defined by the growth of broad money supply above that of loan growth in the U.S., the euro area and Japan, is contracting. Today, as in 1997, this indicator forebodes important weaknesses in global industrial production (Chart 9). U.S. liquidity is particularly important. Not only is dollar-based liquidity crucial to financing the large stock of dollar-denominated foreign debt, but the U.S. is also driving the fall in global excess money. The pick-up in U.S. economic activity is sucking liquidity from both the rest world and from the financial system to finance U.S. loan growth (Chart 10). This phenomenon was also at play in 1997. Chart 9Excess Money Is Contracting Global Excess ##br##Money Contracting, Just Like In Early 1997 Excess Money Is Contracting Global Excess Money Contracting, Just Like In Early 1997 Excess Money Is Contracting Global Excess Money Contracting, Just Like In Early 1997 Chart 10The U.S. Economy Is ##br##Sucking In Liquidity The U.S. Economy Is Sucking In Liquidity The U.S. Economy Is Sucking In Liquidity Why does this matter? Simply put, U.S. financial liquidity; built as a composite of 3-month T-bills, total bank deposits minus bank loans, bank investments, and M2 money supply; is a wonderful leading indicator. The current collapse in financial liquidity suggests that the global economy is about to hit a rough patch. As Chart 11 illustrates, the weakness of this indicator points to declines in our Global Leading Economic Indicators and in global commodity prices. This suggests the indicator is foretelling that a deflationary scare could materialize, an event normally also associated with a stronger dollar and downside in EM export prices (Chart 12). In a logically consistent fashion, the liquidity indicator is also warning that the AUD, CAD and NZD have substantial downside, while EM equity prices could also suffer more (Chart 13). Finally, it also highlights that even the U.S. stock market may not be immune to upcoming troubles (Chart 14). Chart 11U.S. Financial Liquidity Points To Weaker Growth... U.S. Financial Liquidity Points To Weaker Growth... U.S. Financial Liquidity Points To Weaker Growth... Chart 12...And A Stronger Dollar But Weaker EM Export Prices... ...And A Stronger Dollar But Weaker EM Export Prices... ...And A Stronger Dollar But Weaker EM Export Prices... Chart 13...Falling EM Stocks And Commodity Currencies... ...Falling EM Stocks And Commodity Currencies... ...Falling EM Stocks And Commodity Currencies... Chart 14...And Maybe Even A Correction In U.S. Stock Prices ...And Maybe Even A Correction In U.S. Stock Prices ...And Maybe Even A Correction In U.S. Stock Prices Fourth, gold is sending a similar signal as in the late 1990. As we have argued in the past, gold is a very good gauge of global liquidity conditions. During the Asian Crisis and the Russia/LTCM fiasco, industrial commodity prices only experienced a serious decline after the Thai baht had dragged down Asia into a tailspin. However, gold had been falling since 1996, a move predating the fall in Asian currencies (Chart 15). The precious metal was confirming that global liquidity was tightening and being sucked back into the booming U.S. economy. Today, gold prices are sending an ominous signal. After forming a large tapering wedge from 2011 to 2018, gold prices have broken down below the major upward-sloping trend line that had defined the bull market that began in 2001 (Chart 16). This indicates that gold may be starting another leg of a major bear market. Moreover, as the bottom panel of Chart 16 illustrates, it is true that net speculative positions in the yellow metal have plunged, but they remain far above the large net short positions that prevailed in the late 1990s. If gold is indeed entering another major down leg, this would confirm that tightening liquidity will further hurt EM asset prices, commodity prices and non-U.S. economic activity. Chart 15As Early As 1996, Gold Warned Of Upcoming Problems In Asia As Early As 1996, Gold Warned Of Upcoming Problems In Asia As Early As 1996, Gold Warned Of Upcoming Problems In Asia Chart 16Is A Secular Bear Market In Gold Beginning? Is A Secular Bear Market In Gold Beginning? Is A Secular Bear Market In Gold Beginning? Finally, adding insult to injury is China. The current communist party leadership is hell-bent on reforming the Chinese economy, moving it away from its dependence on capex and leverage. Consequently, China is in the midst of a major deleveraging campaign concentrated in the shadow banking sector, which has already caused money growth and total social financing to plumb to new lows (Chart 17). This is deflationary for the global economy as weaker Chinese credit weighs on capex, which in turns weighs on Chinese imports, as 69% of China's intake from the rest of the world are commodities and intermediate as well as industrial goods. Chart 17Chinese Monetary And Credit Conditions Remain ##br##Tight China Deleveraging Is Biting Chinese Monetary And Credit Conditions Remain Tight China Deleveraging Is Biting Chinese Monetary And Credit Conditions Remain Tight China Deleveraging Is Biting Chart 18No Capitulation ##br##Yet No Capitulation Yet No Capitulation Yet Moreover, the recent wave of renminbi weakness is exacerbating these deflationary pressures. The 9% fall in the yuan versus the dollar since April 11th represents a competitive devaluation that will hurt many EM countries. It also implies downside in China's import volumes, as it increases the prices paid by Chinese economic agents for foreign-sourced industrial goods and commodities.2 All these forces suggest that the pain that started in Argentina and Turkey could continue to spread across other vulnerable EM economies. It is doubtful that economies with large debt loads, large upcoming debt rollovers and other underlying economic problems will find it easy to receive financing in an environment of declining global liquidity, a strong dollar, budding deflationary pressures and a slowing China. Making this worry even more real, EM investors have not capitulated, as bottom-fishing has prompted massive inflows into Turkey in recent days (Chart 18). 2018 may not be 1997 or 1998, but it is likely to be a year to remember. Bottom Line: EM currency pegs to the dollar may not be as prevalent as they were back in the 1990s, but enough risks are present that contagion from Argentina and Turkey to other EM economies is a very real risk. Specifically, the domestic economic situation in the U.S. warrants higher interest rates, which suggests the Fed is unlikely to be fazed by EM market routs unless they become deep enough to present a threat to U.S. growth itself. Moreover, global liquidity conditions are tightening as the U.S.'s economic strength is sucking in capital from around the world. This combination means that EM countries with large dollar debt loads are likely to find debt refinancing a very onerous exercise. Finally, China is slowing and letting the RMB fall, which is exerting a deflationary impact on the world. Investment implications An environment of slower global economic activity, tightening global liquidity conditions and a potential deflationary scare is positive for the dollar. But 1998 shows that if the hot potato hides in the U.S. and the Fed is forced to ease aggressively, the dollar could nonetheless suffer. In order to get a sense as to whether the dollar can continue to strengthen or not, it is important to get a sense of where the exposure to an EM accident may lie. To begin this exercise, we need to first assess which EM countries are most vulnerable to catching the "Turkish Flu." To do so, we collaborated with our colleague Peter Berezin and his team at BCA's Global Investment Strategy to build a heat map of vulnerable EM economies. This heat map is based on the following factors: current account balance, net international investment position, external debt, external debt service obligation, external funding requirements, private sector savings/investment balance, private sector debt, government budget balance, government debt, foreign ownership of local currency bonds, and inflation. This method shows that after Turkey and Argentina, the next six most vulnerable countries are Colombia, Brazil, Mexico, Chile, South Africa, and Indonesia in this order (Chart 19). Chart 19Vulnerability Heat Map For Key EM Markets The Bear And The Two Travelers The Bear And The Two Travelers While our long-term valuation models show that the Colombian peso is already trading at a significant discount to its fair value, the BRL, the CLP, the ZAR, and the MXN are not (Chart 20). This highlights that these markets could provide serious fireworks in the coming months. Moreover, they all have their own idiosyncrasies that accentuate these risks. Brazil will soon undergo elections that will likely not result in a market-friendly outcome.3 Chile has an extremely large dollar-debt load, copper prices are tanking and the CLP is very pricey. Finally, South Africa is contemplating the kind of land expropriations reminiscent of those that plunged Zimbabwe into chaos - not a good optic for a still-expensive currency. So, who is most exposed to this potential mess? The answer is the euro area, most specifically, Spain. As Chart 21 shows, the exposure of Spanish banks to the most vulnerable EM markets totals nearly 170% of the banking system's capital and reserves. This means that 30% of the capital and reserves of the banking systems in the euro area's five largest economies is exposed to these markets. Making the risk even more acute, French banks have large exposure to Spain, and German banks to France. This combined exposure dwarfs the exposure of the U.K., Japan or the U.S. to the most vulnerable EM economies. To be fair to Spain, Spanish banks often have set up their foreign affiliates as separate legal entities. This means that the impact on the balance sheets of the Spanish banking system of defaults in vulnerable EM countries may be more limited than seems at face value. Yet, this is far from certain. Chart 20BRL, CLP, ZAR, And MXN Are Too Expensive##br## In Light Of Their Vulnerabilities BRL, CLP, ZAR, And MXN Are Too Expensive In Light Of Their Vulnerabilities BRL, CLP, ZAR, And MXN Are Too Expensive In Light Of Their Vulnerabilities Chart 21Who Has More Exposure To EM? The Bear And The Two Travelers The Bear And The Two Travelers As a result, we would not be surprised if the European Central Bank is forced by an EM accident to back away from its desire to abandon its extraordinary accommodative stance. The ECB would first use forward guidance to message that a hike will be delayed ever further in the future. The ECB may even be forced to resume government and corporate bonds purchases past 2018. This is a potential nightmare scenario for the euro. In fact, as Chart 22 illustrates, a euro at parity may not be a far stretch. Historically, the euro bottoms when it trades 10% below our fair value model, based on real short rate differentials, relative yield curve slopes and the ratio of copper to lumber prices. Such a discount would correspond to EUR/USD at parity. Because under such circumstances the Fed could be forced to pause its own hiking cycle for a quarter or two, a move to EUR/USD between 1.10 and 1.05 seems more likely than a collapse to parity right now. This also means that in conjunction with BCA's Geopolitical Strategy team, we recommend our clients close overweight positions in Spanish assets. Chart 22The Euro Still Has Downside If EM Go Bust The Euro Still Has Downside If EM Go Bust The Euro Still Has Downside If EM Go Bust What about the yen? In the late 1990s, the yen fell against the U.S. dollar as Asian currencies were collapsing, but surged once the Fed backtracked and bond yields tanked in 1998. This time could follow a different road map. Japan does not compete against Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, Chile and South Africa in the same way as it was competing against industrial companies in countries like Taiwan, Singapore or South Korea. This means that Japan is unlikely to need to competitively devalue to remain afloat if the BRL, COP, MXN, CLP and ZAR collapse further. However, since an EM shock is likely to prove to be a deflationary event, this means that bond yields could experience downside, especially as positioning in the U.S. bond market is massively crowded to the short side (Chart 23). A countertrend bull market in bonds would greatly flatter the yen. As a result, we are maintaining our short EUR/JPY bias over the coming months. The G10 commodity currency complex is also at risk. Not only does tightening dollar liquidity imply further weakness in this group of currencies, so does slowing EM activity and a deflationary scare. Additionally, the CAD and the NZD are not trading at much of a discount to their fair value, and the AUD trades at a premium (Chart 24). This means we would anticipate these currencies to suffer more in the coming quarters, led by the AUD, which is not only the most expensive of the group, but also the most geared to EM economic activity. Being short AUD/CAD still makes sense. Chart 23A Bond Rally Would ##br##Support The Yen A Bond Rally Would Support The Yen A Bond Rally Would Support The Yen Chart 24TDollar-Bloc Currencies Offer Limited Cushion##br## In The Event of An EM Selloff TDollar-Bloc Currencies Offer Limited Cushion In The Event of An EM Selloff TDollar-Bloc Currencies Offer Limited Cushion In The Event of An EM Selloff Finally, the pound is its own animal. GBP/USD is now quite cheap, but the U.K.'s large current account deficit of 3.9% of GDP, which is not funded through FDIs anymore, means that Great Britain remains vulnerable to tightening global liquidity conditions. Moreover, Brexit negotiations will heat up in the fall, as the March 2019 deadline for reaching a deal with the EU looms large. This means that political tumult in the U.K. will remain a large source of risk for the pound. We will explore the outlook for the pound in an upcoming report this September. Currently, our long DXY trade is posting an 8.5% profit, with a target at 98. The above picture suggests that the dollar could move well past 98, especially as the momentum factor that is so important to the greenback still plays in favor of the USD.4 As a result, we are upgrading our target on the dollar to 100. However, we are also tightening our stop loss to 94.88. We will update our stop loss to 97 if the DXY hits 98 in the coming weeks, in order to protect gains while still being exposed to the dollar's potential upside. Bottom Line: Beyond Turkey and Argentina, the EMs most vulnerable to tightening global liquidity conditions are Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, Chile and South Africa. Spanish banks have outsized exposure to these markets, which means the euro area is at risk if the "Turkish Flu" becomes contagious. As such, the ECB could be forced to remain easier than it wants to. The euro is still at risk. The yen could strengthen if global bond yields suffer. Hence, it still makes sense to be short EUR/JPY. While the CAD, AUD and NZD are also all vulnerable to a deflationary scare, the Aussie is the worst positioned of the three. Shorting AUD/CAD still makes sense. The DXY is likely to experience significant upside from here, with a move to 100 becoming an increasingly probable scenario. Risks To Our View Chart 25A Gauge And A Hedge Against Chinese Stimulus A Gauge And A Hedge Against Chinese Stimulus A Gauge And A Hedge Against Chinese Stimulus The biggest risk to our view is China. In 2016, a vicious EM selloff was staunched by a large wave of stimulus that put a floor under Chinese economic activity, and caused China to re-lever. The impact was felt around the world, lifting commodity prices and EM assets while plunging the dollar into a vicious selloff in 2017. It is conceivable that such an outcome materializes anew, especially as China is, in fact, injecting stimulus into its economy. However, as we wrote two weeks ago, the current stimulus still pales in comparison to what took place in 2015. Moreover, reforms and deleveraging have much greater primacy now than they did back then.5 BCA believes that the current wave of stimulus is not designed to cause growth to surge again, as was the case in 2015, but is instead aimed at limiting the negative impact of the ongoing trade war with the U.S. Yet, we cannot be dogmatic. Not only is it hard to gauge the actual degree of stimulus currently applied to the Chinese economy, there is a heightened risk that the flow of policy announcements causes a shift in the dominant narrative among market participants. Such a shift in attitudes could easily cause a mass buying of EM assets and commodities, delaying the day of reckoning for vulnerable EM. As a result, we continue to promulgate that investors track the behavior of our China Play Index, introduced two weeks ago (Chart 25).6 Not only does this index provide a live read on how traders are pricing in Chinese developments, but it also provides a great hedge for investors long the dollar, short EM, or short the commodity complex. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 In the panic of 1907, the Knickerbocker Trust Company went bankrupt, threatening the health of the U.S. banking system. The stock market crashed, money markets went into paralysis, and a consortium of bankers led by J.P. Morgan himself ended up acting as a lender of last resort, staunching the crisis. As a consequence of this panic, the Federal Reserve System was born in 1913. 2 For a more detailed discussion of the deflationary risk created by the RMB, please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "What Is Good For China Doesn't Always Help The World", dated June 29, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report, "Brazil: Faceoff Time", dated July 27, 2018, available at ems.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "Riding The Wave: Momentum Strategies In Foreign Exchange Markets", dated December 8, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "The Dollar And Risk Assets Are Beholden To China's Stimulus", dated August 3, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 6 Ibid. Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Feature Valuations, whether for currencies, equities or bonds, are always at the top of the list of the determinants of any asset's long-term performance. This means that after large FX moves like those experienced so far this year, it is always useful to pause and reflect on where currency valuations stand. In this optic, this week we update our set of long-term valuation models for currencies that we introduced In February 2016 in a Special Report titled, "Assessing Fair Value In FX Markets". Included in these models are variables such as productivity differentials, terms-of-trade shocks, net international investment positions, real rate differentials and proxies for global risk aversion.1 These models cover 22 currencies, incorporating both G-10 and EM FX markets. Twice a year, we provide clients with a comprehensive update of all these long-term models in one stop. The models are not designed to generate short- or intermediate-term forecasts. Instead, they reflect the economic drivers of a currency's equilibrium. Their purpose is therefore threefold. First, they provide guideposts to judge whether we are at the end, beginning or middle of a long-term currency cycle. Second, by providing strong directional signals, they help us judge whether any given move is more likely to be a countertrend development or not, offering insight on its potential longevity. Finally, they assist us and our clients in cutting through the fog, and understanding the key drivers of cyclical variations in a currency's value. The U.S. Dollar Chart 1Dollar: Back At Fair Value Dollar: Back At Fair Value Dollar: Back At Fair Value 2017 was a terrible year for the dollar, but the selloff had one important positive impact: it erased the dollar's massive overvaluation that was so evident in the direct wake of U.S. President Donald Trump's election. In fact, today, based on its long-term drivers, the dollar is modestly cheap (Chart 1). Fair value for the dollar is currently flattered by the fact that real long-term yields are higher in the U.S. than in the rest of the G-10. Investors are thus betting that U.S. neutral interest rates are much higher than in other advanced economies. This also means that the uptrend currently evident in the dollar's fair value could end once we get closer to the point where Europe can join the U.S. toward lifting rates - a point at which investors could begin upgrading their estimates of the neutral rate in the rest of the world. This would be dollar bearish. For the time being, we recommend investors keep a bullish posturing on the USD for the remainder of 2018. Not only is global growth still slowing, a traditionally dollar-bullish development, but also the fed funds rate is likely to be moving closer to r-star. As we have previously showed, when the fed funds rate rises above r-star, the dollar tends to respond positively.2 Finally, cyclical valuations are not a handicap for the dollar anymore. The Euro Chart 2The Euro Is Still Cheap The Euro Is Still Cheap The Euro Is Still Cheap As most currencies managed to rise against the dollar last year, the trade-weighted euro's appreciation was not as dramatic as that of EUR/USD. Practically, this also means that despite a furious rally in this pair, the broad euro remains cheap on a cyclical basis, a cheapness that has only been accentuated by weakness in the euro since the first quarter of 2018 (Chart 2). The large current account of the euro area, which stands at 3.5% of GDP, is starting to have a positive impact on the euro's fair value, as it is lifting the currency bloc's net international investment position. Moreover, euro area interest rates may remain low relative to the U.S. for the next 12 to 18 months, but the 5-year forward 1-month EONIA rate is still near rock-bottom levels, and has scope to rise on a multi-year basis. This points toward a continuation of the uptrend in the euro's fair value. For the time being, despite a rosy long-term outlook for the euro, we prefer to remain short EUR/USD. Shorter-term fair value estimates are around 1.12, and the euro tends to depreciate against the dollar when global growth is weakening, as is currently the case. Moreover, the euro area domestic economy is not enjoying the same strength as the U.S. right now. This creates an additional handicap for the euro, especially as the Federal Reserve is set to keep increasing rates at a pace of four hikes a year, while the European Central Bank remains as least a year away from lifting rates. The Yen Chart 3Attractive Long-Term Valuation, But... Attractive Long-Term Valuation, But... Attractive Long-Term Valuation, But... The yen remains one of the cheapest major currencies in the world (Chart 3), as the large positive net international investment position of Japan, which stands at 64% of GDP, still constitutes an important support for it. Moreover, the low rate of Japanese inflation is helping Japan's competitiveness. However, while valuations represent a tailwind for the yen, the Bank of Japan faces an equally potent headwind. At current levels, the yen may not be much of a problem for Japan's competitiveness, but it remains the key driver of the country's financial conditions. Meanwhile, Japanese FCI are the best explanatory variable for Japanese inflation.3 It therefore follows that any strengthening in the yen will hinder the ability of the BoJ to hit its inflation target, forcing this central bank to maintain a dovish tilt for the foreseeable future. As a result, while we see how the current soft patch in global growth may help the yen, we worry that any positive impact on the JPY may prove transitory. Instead, we would rather play the yen-bullish impact of slowing global growth and rising trade tensions by selling the euro versus the yen than by selling the USD, as the ECB does not have the same hawkish bias as the Fed, and as the European economy is not the same juggernaut as the U.S. right now. The British Pound Chart 4Smaller Discount In The GBP Smaller Discount In The GBP Smaller Discount In The GBP The real-trade weighted pound has been appreciating for 13 months. This reflects two factors: the nominal exchange rate of the pound has regained composure from its nadir of January 2017, and higher inflation has created additional upward pressures on the real GBP. As a result of these dynamics, the deep discount of the real trade-weighted pound to its long-term fair value has eroded (Chart 4). The risk that the May government could fall and be replaced either by a hard-Brexit PM or a Corbyn-led coalition means that a risk premia still needs to be embedded in the price of the pound. As a result, the current small discount in the pound may not be enough to compensate investors for taking on this risk. This suggests that the large discount of the pound to its purchasing-power-parity fair value might overstate its cheapness. While the risks surrounding British politics means that the pound is not an attractive buy on a long-term basis anymore, we do like it versus the euro on a short-term basis: EUR/GBP tends to depreciate when EUR/USD has downside, and the U.K. economy may soon begin to stabilize as slowing inflation helps British real wages grow again after contracting from October 2016 to October 2017, which implies that the growth driver may move a bit in favor of the pound. The Canadian Dollar Chart 5CAD Near Fair Value CAD Near Fair Value CAD Near Fair Value The stabilization of the fair value for the real trade-weighted Canadian dollar is linked to the rebound in commodity prices, oil in particular. However, despite this improvement, the CAD has depreciated and is now trading again in line with its long-term fair value (Chart 5). This lack of clear valuation opportunity implies that the CAD will remain chained to economic developments. On the negative side, the CAD still faces some potentially acrimonious NAFTA negotiations, especially as U.S. President Donald Trump could continue with his bellicose trade rhetoric until the mid-term elections. Additionally, global growth is slowing and emerging markets are experiencing growing stresses, which may hurt commodity prices and therefore pull the CAD's long-term fair value lower. On the positive side, the Canadian economy is strong and is exhibiting a sever lack of slack in its labor market, which is generating both rapidly growing wages and core inflation of 1.8%. The Bank of Canada is therefore set to increase rates further this year, potentially matching the pace of rate increase of the Fed over the coming 24 months. As a result of this confluence of forces, we are reluctant to buy the CAD against the USD, especially as the former is strong. Instead, we prefer buying the CAD against the EUR and the AUD, two currencies set to suffer if global growth decelerates but that do not have the same support from monetary policy as the loonie. The Australian Dollar Chart 6The AUD Is Not Yet Cheap The AUD Is Not Yet Cheap The AUD Is Not Yet Cheap The real trade-weighted Australian dollar has depreciated by 5%, which has caused a decrease in the AUD's premium to its long-term fair value. The decline in the premium also reflects a small upgrade in the equilibrium rate itself, a side effect of rising commodity prices last year. However, despite these improvements, the AUD still remains expensive (Chart 6). Moreover, the rise in the fair value may prove elusive, as the slowdown in global growth and rising global trade tensions could also push down the AUD's fair value. These dynamics make the AUD our least-favored currency in the G-10. Additionally, the domestic economy lacks vigor. Despite low unemployment, the underemployment rate tracked by the Reserve Bank of Australia remains nears a three-decade high, which is weighing on both wages and inflation. This means that unlike in Canada, the RBA is not set to increase rates this year, and may in fact be forced to wait well into 2019 or even 2020 before doing so. The AUD therefore is not in a position to benefit from the same policy support as the CAD. We are currently short the AUD against the CAD and the NZD. We have also recommended investors short the Aussie against the yen as this cross is among the most sensitive to global growth. The New Zealand Dollar Chart 7NZD Vs Fair Value NZD Vs Fair Value NZD Vs Fair Value After having traded at a small discount to its fair value in the wake of the formation of a Labour / NZ first coalition government, the NZD is now back at equilibrium (Chart 7). The resilience of the kiwi versus the Aussie has been a key factor driving the trade-weighted kiwi higher this year. Going forward, a lack of clearly defined over- or undervaluation in the kiwi suggests that the NZD will be like the Canadian dollar: very responsive to international and domestic economic developments. This gives rise to a very muddled picture. Based on the output and unemployment gaps, the New Zealand economy seems at full employment, yet it has not seen much in terms of wage or inflationary pressures. As a result, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand has refrained from adopting a hawkish tone. Moreover, the populist policy prescriptions of the Ardern government are also creating downside risk for the kiwi. High immigration has been a pillar behind New Zealand's high-trend growth rate, and therefore a buttress behind the nation's high interest rates. Yet, the government wants to curtail this source of dynamism. On the international front, the kiwi economy has historically been very sensitive to global growth. While this could be a long-term advantage, in the short-term the current global growth soft patch represents a potent handicap for the kiwi. In the end, we judge Australia's problems as deeper than New Zealand's. Since valuations are also in the NZD's favor, the only exposure we like to the kiwi is to buy it against the AUD. The Swiss Franc Chart 8The SNB's Problem The SNB's Problem The SNB's Problem On purchasing power parity metrics, the Swiss franc is expensive, and the meteoric rise of Swiss unit labor costs expressed in euros only confirms this picture. The problem is that this expensiveness is justified once other factors are taken into account, namely Switzerland's gargantuan net international investment position of 128% of GDP, which exerts an inexorable upward drift on the franc's fair value. Once this factor is incorporated, the Swiss franc currently looks cheap (Chart 8). The implication of this dichotomy is that the Swiss franc could experience upward pressure, especially when global growth slows, which is the case right now. However, the Swiss National Bank remains highly worried that an indebted economy like Switzerland, which also suffers from a housing bubble, cannot afford the deflationary pressures created by a strong franc. As a result, we anticipate that the SNB will continue to fight tooth and nail against any strength in the franc. Practically, we are currently short EUR/CHF on a tactical basis. Nonetheless, once we see signs that global growth is bottoming, we will once again look to buy the euro against the CHF as the SNB will remain in the driver's seat. The Swedish Krona Chart 9What The Riksbank Wants What The Riksbank Wants What The Riksbank Wants The Swedish krona is quite cheap (Chart 9), but in all likelihood the Riksbank wants it this way. Sweden is a small, open economy, with total trade representing 86% of GDP. This means that a cheap krona is a key ingredient to generating easy monetary conditions. However, this begs the question: Does Sweden actually need easy monetary conditions? We would argue that the answer to this question is no. Sweden has an elevated rate of capacity utilization as well as closed unemployment and output gaps. In fact, trend Swedish inflation has moved up, albeit in a choppy fashion, and the Swedish economy remains strong. Moreover, the country currently faces one of the most rabid housing bubbles in the world, which has caused household debt to surge to 182% of disposable income. This is creating serious vulnerabilities in the Swedish economy - dangers that will only grow larger as the Riksbank keep monetary policy at extremely easy levels. A case can be made that with large exposure to both global trade and industrial production cycles, the current slowdown in global growth is creating a risk for Sweden. These risks are compounded by the rising threat of a trade war. This could justify easier monetary policy, and thus a weaker SEK. When all is said and done, while the short-term outlook for the SEK will remained stymied by the global growth outlook, we do expect the Riksbank to increase rates this year as inflation could accelerate significantly. As a result, we recommend investors use this period of weakness to buy the SEK against both the dollar and the euro. The Norwegian Krone Chart 10The NOK Is The Cheapest Commodity Currency In The G-10 The NOK Is The Cheapest Commodity Currency In The G-10 The NOK Is The Cheapest Commodity Currency In The G-10 The Norwegian krone has experienced a meaningful rally against the euro and the krona this year - the currencies of its largest trading partners - and as such, the large discount of the real trade-weighted krone to its equilibrium rate has declined. On a long-term basis, the krone remains the most attractive commodity currency in the G-10 based on valuations alone (Chart 10). While we have been long NOK/SEK, currently we have a tactical negative bias towards this cross. Investors have aggressively bought inflation protection, a development that tends to favor the NOK over the SEK. However, slowing global growth could disappoint these expectations, resulting in a period of weakness in the NOK/SEK pair. Nonetheless, we believe this is only a short-term development, and BCA's bullish cyclical view on oil will ultimately dominate. As a result, we recommend long-term buyers use any weakness in the NOK right now to buy more of it against the euro, the SEK, and especially against the AUD. The Yuan Chart 11The CNY Is At Equilibrium The CNY Is At Equilibrium The CNY Is At Equilibrium The fair value of the Chinese yuan has been in a well-defined secular bull market because China's productivity - even if it has slowed - remains notably higher than productivity growth among its trading partners. However, while the yuan traded at a generous discount to its fair value in early 2017, this is no longer the case (Chart 11). Despite this, on a long-term basis we foresee further appreciation in the yuan as we expect the Chinese economy to continue to generate higher productivity growth than its trading partners. Moreover, for investors with multi-decade investment horizons, a slow shift toward the RMB as a reserve currency will ultimately help the yuan. However, do not expect this force to be felt in the RMB any time soon. On a shorter-term horizon, the picture is more complex. Chinese economic activity is slowing as monetary conditions as well as various regulatory and administrative rules have been tightened - all of them neatly fitting under the rubric of structural reforms. Now that the trade relationship between the U.S. and China is becoming more acrimonious, Chinese authorities are likely to try using various relief valves to limit downside to Chinese growth. The RMB could be one of these tools. As such, the recent strength in the trade-weighted dollar is likely to continue to weigh on the CNY versus the USD. Paradoxically, the USD's strength is also likely to mean that the trade-weighted yuan could experience some upside. The Brazilian Real Chart 12More Downside In The BRL More Downside In The BRL More Downside In The BRL Despite the real's recent pronounced weakness, it has more room to fall before trading at a discount to its long-term fair value (Chart 12). More worrisome, the equilibrium rate for the BRL has been stable, even though commodity prices have rebounded. This raises the risk that the BRL could experience a greater decline than what is currently implied by its small premium to fair value if commodity prices were to fall. Moreover, bear markets in the real have historically ended at significant discounts to fair value. The current economic environment suggests this additional decline could materialize through the remainder of 2018. Weak global growth has historically been a poison for commodity prices as well as for carry trades, two factors that have a strong explanatory power for the real. Moreover, China's deceleration and regulatory tightening should translate into further weakness in Chinese imports of raw materials, which would have an immediate deleterious impact on the BRL. Additionally, as we have previously argued, when the fed funds rate rise above r-star, this increases the probability of an accident in global capital markets. Since elevated debt loads are to be found in EM and not in the U.S., this implies that vulnerability to a financial accident is greatest in the EM space. The BRL, with its great liquidity and high representation in investors' portfolios, could bear the brunt of such an adjustment. The Mexican Peso Chart 13The MXN Is A Bargain Once Again The MXN Is A Bargain Once Again The MXN Is A Bargain Once Again When we updated our long-term models last September, the peso was one of the most expensive currencies covered, and we flagged downside risk. With President Trump re-asserting his protectionist rhetoric, and with EM bonds and currencies experiencing a wave of pain, the MXN has eradicated all of its overvaluation and is once again trading at a significant discount to its long-term fair value (Chart 13). Is it time to buy the peso? On a pure valuation basis, the downside now seems limited. However, risks are still plentiful. For one, NAFTA negotiations are likely to remain rocky, at least until the U.S. mid-term elections. Trump's hawkish trade rhetoric is a surefire way to rally the GOP base at the polls in November. Second, the leading candidate in the polls for the Mexican presidential elections this summer is Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the former mayor of Mexico City. Not only could AMLO's leftist status frighten investors, he is looking to drive a hard bargain with the U.S. on NAFTA, a clear recipe for plentiful headline risk in the coming months. Third, the MXN is the EM currency with the most abundant liquidity, and slowing global growth along with rising EM volatility could easily take its toll on the Mexican currency. As a result, to take advantage of the MXN's discount to fair value, a discount that is especially pronounced when contrasted with other EM currencies, we recommend investors buy the MXN versus the BRL or the ZAR instead of buying it outright against the USD. These trades are made even more attractive by the fact that Mexican rates are now comparable to those offered on South African or Brazilian paper. The Chilean Peso Chart 14The CLP Is At Risk The CLP Is At Risk The CLP Is At Risk We were correct to flag last September that the CLP had less downside than the BRL. But now, while the BRL's premium to fair value has declined significantly, the Chilean peso continues to trade near its highest premium of the past 10 years (Chart 14). This suggests the peso could have significant downside if EM weakness grows deeper. This risk is compounded by the fact that the peso's fair value is most sensitive to copper prices. Prices of the red metal had been stable until recent trading sessions. However, with the world largest consumer of copper - China - having accumulated large stockpiles and now slowing, copper prices could experience significant downside, dragging down the CLP in the process. An additional risk lurking for the CLP is the fact that Chile displays some of the largest USD debt as a percent of GDP in the EM space. This means that a strong dollar could inflict a dangerous tightening in Chilean financial conditions. This risk is even more potent as the strength in the dollar is itself a consequence of slowing global growth - a development that is normally negative for the Chilean peso. This confluence thus suggests that the expensive CLP is at great risk in the coming months. The Colombian Peso Chart 15The COP Is Latam's Cheapest Currency The COP Is Latam's Cheapest Currency The COP Is Latam's Cheapest Currency The Colombian peso is currently the cheapest currency covered by our models. The COP has not been able to rise along with oil prices, creating a large discount in the process (Chart 15). Three factors have weighed on the Colombian currency. First, Colombia just had elections. While a market-friendly outcome ultimately prevailed, investors were already expressing worry ahead of the first round of voting four weeks ago. Second, Colombia has a large current account deficit of 3.7% of GDP, creating a funding risk in an environment where liquidity for EM carry trades has decreased. Finally, Colombia has a heavy USD-debt load. However, this factor is mitigated by the fact that private debt stands at 65% of Colombia's GDP, reflecting the banking sector's conservative lending practices. At this juncture, the COP is an attractive long-term buy, especially as president-elect Ivan Duque is likely to pursue market-friendly policies. However, the country's large current account deficit as well as the general risk to commodity prices emanating from weaker global growth suggests that short-term downside risk is still present in the COP versus the USD. As a result, while we recommend long-term investors gain exposure to this cheap Latin American currency, short-term players should stay on the sidelines. Instead, we recommend tactical investors capitalize on the COP's cheapness by buying it against the expensive CLP. Not only are valuations and carry considerations favorable, Chile has even more dollar debt than Colombia, suggesting that the former is more exposed to dollar risk than the latter. Moreover, Chile is levered to metals prices while Colombia is levered to oil prices. Our commodity strategists are more positive on crude than on copper, and our negative outlook on China reinforces this message. The South African Rand Chart 16The Rand Will Cheapen Further The Rand Will Cheapen Further The Rand Will Cheapen Further Despite its more than 20% depreciation versus the dollar since February, the rand continues to trade above its estimate of long-term fair value (Chart 16). The equilibrium rate for the ZAR is in a structural decline, even after adjusting for inflation, as the productivity of the South African economy remains in a downtrend relative to that of its trading partners. This means the long-term trend in the ZAR will continue to point south. On a cyclical basis, it is not just valuations that concern us when thinking about the rand. South Africa runs a deficit in terms of FDI; however, portfolio inflows into the country have been rather large, resulting in foreign ownership of South African bonds of 44%. Additionally, net speculative positions in the rand are still at elevated levels. This implies that investors could easily sell their South African assets if natural resource prices were to sag. Since BCA's view on Chinese activity as well as the soft patch currently experienced by the global economy augur poorly for commodities, this could create potent downside risks for the ZAR. We will be willing buyers only once the rand's overvaluation is corrected. The Russian Ruble Chart 17The Ruble Is At Fair Value The Ruble Is At Fair Value The Ruble Is At Fair Value There is no evidence of mispricing in the rubble (Chart 17). Moreover the Russian central bank runs a very orthodox monetary policy, which gives us comfort that the RUB, with its elevated carry, remains an attractive long-term hold within the EM FX complex. On a shorter-term basis, the picture is more complex. The RUB is both an oil play as well as a carry currency. This means that the RUB is very exposed to global growth and liquidity conditions. This creates major risks for the ruble. EM FX volatility has been rising, and slowing global growth could result in an unwinding of inflation-protection trades, which may pull oil prices down. This combination is negative for both EM currencies and oil plays for the remainder of 2018. Our favorite way to take advantage of the RUB's sound macroeconomic policy, high interest rates and lack of valuation extremes is to buy it against other EM currencies. It is especially attractive against the BRL, the ZAR and the CLP. The only EM commodity currency against which it doesn't stack up favorably is the COP, as the COP possesses a much deeper discount to fair value than the RUB, limiting its downside if the global economy were to slow more sharply than we anticipate. The Korean Won Chart 18Despite Its Modest Cheapness, The KRW Is At Risk Despite Its Modest Cheapness, The KRW Is At Risk Despite Its Modest Cheapness, The KRW Is At Risk The Korean won currently trades at a modest discount to its long-term fair value (Chart 18). This suggests the KRW will possess more defensive attributes than the more expensive Latin American currencies. However, BCA is worried over the Korean currency's cyclical outlook. The Korean economy is highly levered to both global trade and the Chinese investment cycle. This means the Korean won is greatly exposed to the two largest risks in the global economy. Moreover, the Korean economy is saddled with a large debt load for the nonfinancial private sector of 193% of GDP, which means the Bank of Korea could be forced to take a dovish turn if the economy is fully hit by a global and Chinese slowdown. Moreover, the won has historically been very sensitive to EM sovereign spreads. EM spreads have moved above their 200-day moving average, which suggests technical vulnerability. This may well spread to the won, especially in light of the global economic environment. The Philippine Peso Chart 19Big Discount In The PHP Big Discount In The PHP Big Discount In The PHP The PHP is one of the rare EM currencies to trade at a significant discount to its long-term fair value (Chart 19). There are two main reasons behind this. First, the Philippines runs a current account deficit of 0.5% of GDP. This makes the PHP vulnerable in an environment where global liquidity has gotten scarcer and where carry trades have underperformed. The second reason behind the PHP's large discount is politics. Global investors remain uncomfortable with President Duterte's policies, and as such are imputing a large risk premium on the currency. Is the PHP attractive? On valuation alone, it is. However, the current account dynamics are expected to become increasingly troubling. The economy is in fine shape and the trade deficit could continue to widen as imports get a lift from strong domestic demand - something that could infringe on the PHP's attractiveness. However, on the positive side, the PHP has historically displayed a robust negative correlation with commodity prices, energy in particular. This suggests that if commodity prices experience a period of relapse, the PHP could benefit. The best way to take advantage of these dynamics is to not buy the PHP outright against the USD but instead to buy it against EM currencies levered to commodity prices like the MYR or the CLP. The Singapore Dollar Chart 20The SGD's Decline Is Not Over The SGD's Decline Is Not Over The SGD's Decline Is Not Over The Singapore dollar remains pricey (Chart 20). However, this is no guarantee of upcoming weakness. After all, the SGD is the main tool used by the Monetary Authority of Singapore to control monetary policy. Moreover, the MAS targets a basket of currencies versus the SGD. Based on these dynamics, historically the SGD has displayed a low beta versus the USD. Essentially, it is a defensive currency within the EM space. The SGD has historically moved in tandem with commodity prices. This makes sense. Commodity prices are a key input in Singapore inflation, and commodity prices perform well when global industrial activity and global trade are strong. This means that not only do rising commodity prices require a higher SGD to combat inflation, higher commodity prices materialize in an environment where this small trading nation is supported by potent tailwinds. Additionally, Singapore loan growth correlates quite closely with commodity prices, suggesting that strong commodity prices result in important amounts of savings from commodity producers being recycled in the Singaporean financial system. To prevent Singapore's economy from overheating in response to these liquidity inflows, MAS is being forced to tighten policy through a higher SGD. Today, with global growth softening and global trade likely to deteriorate, the Singaporean economy is likely to face important headwinds. Tightening monetary policy in the U.S. and in China will create additional headwinds. As a result, so long as the USD has upside, the SGD is likely to have downside versus the greenback. On a longer-term basis, we would expect the correction of the SGD's overvaluation to not happen versus the dollar but versus other EM currencies. The Hong Kong Dollar Chart 21The HKD Is Fairly Valued The HKD Is Fairly Valued The HKD Is Fairly Valued The troughs and peaks in the HKD follow the gyrations of the U.S. dollar. This is to be expected as the HKD has been pegged to the USD since 1983. Like the USD, it was expensive in early 2017, but now it is trading closer to fair value (Chart 21). Additionally, due to the large weight of the yuan in the trade-weighted HKD, the strength in the CNY versus the USD has had a greater impact on taming the HKD's overvaluation than it has on the USD's own mispricing. Moreover, the HKD is trading very close to the lower bound of its peg versus the USD, which has also contributed to the correction of its overvaluation. Even when the HKD was expensive last year, we were never worried that the peg would be undone. Historically, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority has shown its willingness to tolerate deflation when the HKD has been expensive. The most recent period was no different. Moreover, the HKMA has ample fire power in terms of reserves to support the HKD if the need ever existed. Ultimately, the stability created by the HKD peg is still essential to Hong Kong's relevance as a financial center for China, especially in the face of the growing preeminence of Shanghai and Beijing as domestic financial centers. As a result, while we could see the HKD become a bit more expensive over the remainder of 2018 as the USD rallies a bit further, our long-term negative view on the USD suggests that on a multiyear basis the HKD will only cheapen. The Saudi Riyal Chart 22The SAR Remains Expensive The SAR Remains Expensive The SAR Remains Expensive Like the HKD, the riyal is pegged to the USD. However, unlike the HKD, the softness in the USD last year was not enough to purge the SAR's overvaluation (Chart 22). Ultimately, the kingdom's poor productivity means that the SAR needs more than a 15% fall in the dollar index to make the Saudi economy competitive. However, this matters little. Historically, when the SAR has been expensive, the Saudi Arabia Monetary Authority has picked the HKMA solution: deflation over devaluation. Ultimately, Saudi Arabia is a country that imports all goods other than energy products. With a young population, a surge in inflation caused by a falling currency is a risk to the durability of the regime that Riyadh is not willing to test. Moreover, SAMA has the firepower to support the SAR, especially when the aggregate wealth of the extended royal family is taken into account. Additionally, the rally in oil prices since February 2016 has put to rest worries about the country's fiscal standing. On a long-term basis, the current regime wants to reform the economy, moving away from oil and increasing productivity growth. This will be essential to supporting the SAR and decreasing its overvaluation without having to resort to deflation. However, it remains to be seen if Crown Prince Mohamed Bin Salman's ambitious reforms can in fact be implemented and be fruitful. Much will depend on this for the future stability of the riyal. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 For a more detailed discussion of the various variables incorporated in the models, please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "Assessing Fair Value In FX Markets", dated February 26, 2016, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 2 For a more detailed discussion of the various variables incorporated in the models, please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "Assessing Fair Value In FX Markets", dated February 26, 2016, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC!", dated January 12, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary
Highlights After having written about the role of the U.S. yield curve in forecasting recessions, we are devoting this Special Report to addressing the widely asked question on the effectiveness of the yield curve in determining asset allocation. A naïve, rules-based approach is applied to the yield curve in each of seven countries/regions to produce a dynamic allocation signal between equities and bonds in each country/region. Despite its simplicity, we find that the dynamic portfolio systematically outperforms the 60/40 equity/bond benchmark portfolio in the U.S., Canada, euro area, Switzerland, U.K. and Australia from a long-term perspective (four years), with Japan being the outlier. Despite the dominance of the U.S. in the global economy and also in global asset markets, the equity/bond performance cycle outside the U.S. does not necessarily follow the U.S. Instead, the yield curve in each country provides a consistently better signal than just following U.S. decisions alone. Currently, signals from yield curves still favor equities over bonds. Feature U.S. yield curve inversion has been a good leading indicator for recessions in the U.S. Since the mid-1950s, every U.S. recession has been preceded with curve inversion, as shown in Chart 1. The lead time, however, varies from one month to 18 months. In addition, even though it is true that stocks underperform bonds in a recession, stocks can begin to underperform bonds long before a recession starts and can also continue to underperform long after a recession ends. For example, U.S. stocks/bonds performance ratio peaked in December 1999 and then troughed in September 2002 with a more than 50% drawdown, yet only about 6% occurred between March 2001 and November 2001 - the NBER official dates for the 2001 recession. So could information from the U.S. yield curve itself systematically add value to a stock-bond allocation decision in the U.S.? Even if it could in the U.S., could the same apply elsewhere, given that yield curves in different countries do not move in a synchronized fashion? (Chart 2) Chart 1U.S. Yield Curve Vs. Recession U.S. Yield Curve Vs. Recession U.S. Yield Curve Vs. Recession Chart 2Global Yield Curve Cycle Global Yield Curve Cycle Global Yield Curve Cycle In this Special Report, we use a simplified naïve, rules-based approach to attempt to demonstrate if information from yield curves in seven countries - the U.S., Japan, the U.K, Euro Area, Canada, Australia and Switzerland - can systematically add value in asset allocation decisions. Yield Curves Are An Effective Indicator For Long-Term Asset Allocation The test results are quite encouraging, despite the simplicity and need for further refinement. Except in Japan, yield curves in all six other countries provide value-add information for stock-bond allocation decisions. The solid lines in Chart 3 are the relative total return performance of the active stock/bond portfolio versus the benchmark for each country. The active portfolio is simply constructed based on a naïve rule such that a 10% underweight is given to equities and a 10% overweight is given to bonds when the yield curve reaches the lower band from above. Once the yield curve reaches the upper band from below, the allocation is reversed. The upper and lower bands are explained in our methodology section on page 5, we omit Japan from these charts because, as explained on page 9, its stock/bond ratio has not had a consistent relationship with the yield curve. The dash lines in Chart 3 are the monthly four-year rolling return differentials between the active portfolios and the benchmarks. It is encouraging to see that the four-year rolling performance in each country has suffered only very limited downside. Chart 4 is the same as Chart 3 except that the active bet is maxed out to 40% over- or underweight relative to the 60/40 equity/bond benchmark - i.e. when the signal is bullish for stocks, 100% is in stocks, and when it is bullish for bonds, the weights are 80% bonds and 20% stocks. This is a more extreme version of risk-taking, though the upside/downside trade-off is still quite impressive. This simple approach illustrates that in the long run, the yield curve is a useful indicator for equity/bond allocations. However, it does not do very well on a shorter-term time horizon. As shown in Chart 5, the one-year performance differentials are less appealing. Chart 3Backtest Base Case Backtest Base Case Backtest Base Case Chart 4Backtest Aggressive Case Backtest Aggressive Case Backtest Aggressive Case Chart 5Short-Term Risk Reward Less Appealing Short-Term Risk Reward Less Appealing Short-Term Risk Reward Less Appealing So how are the back tests conducted? The Methodology The Passive Benchmark: A 60/40 fixed-weight equity/bond benchmark is constructed for each country using the MSCI equity total return index and Bloomberg/Barclays Treasury Total Return Index, all in local currencies. The Active Allocation Rule: For each country, a range is set for its yield curve with an upper band and a lower band. The bands are set based on yield curve cycles and also their correlation with stock/bond performance cycles. When the curve reaches the upper band from below, an overweight is assigned to equities until the yield curve reaches the lower band from above, at which point the overweight then shifts to bonds. To determine how the size of the over- and underweight positions impacts the efficacy of the signal, we tested four different bet sizes - from 10% to 40% - in 10% increments, since no short selling is allowed. Objective: The active portfolio in each country is aimed to outperform its passive benchmark with a minimal four-year rolling drawdown. The same approach is applied to all seven countries. In terms of yield curve, the 3M/10 curve works better than the 2/10 curve for the U.S. because the former has better cyclicality. For all other countries, 2/10 yield curves are used. Despite the simplicity of our approach, some interesting observations are worth highlighting: U.S. And Canada: Reduce Risk When Yield Curve Inverts As shown in Chart 6, yield curve inversion in these two countries has historically been a good indication to reduce risk in equities. Bonds in general start to outperform equities after the curve is inverted and continue to do so as the yield curve steepens. However, when the curves steepens near to its cyclical high, then it's time to add risk in equities. Historically, the upper threshold for the U.S. 3M/10 is 3.4%, while for the Canadian 2/10 it is 1.8%. Currently, this indicator alone still favors equities in these two countries. Chart 6AU.S. & Canada: Curve Inversion ##br##Triggers Risk Reduction (I) U.S. & Canada: Curve Inversion Triggers Risk Reduction (I) U.S. & Canada: Curve Inversion Triggers Risk Reduction (I) Chart 6BU.S. & Canada: Curve Inversion ##br##Triggers Risk Reduction (II) U.S. & Canada: Curve Inversion Triggers Risk Reduction (II) U.S. & Canada: Curve Inversion Triggers Risk Reduction (II) Euro Area And Switzerland: Reduce Risk Before Yield Curve Approaches Inversion As shown in Chart 7, the yield curve of the euro area does not invert often, while the Swiss curve has never gone into inversion during the short period for which we have historical data. However, both curves have good cyclicality, which makes the 0.2%-1.8% range works very well for both. Chart 7AEuro Area & Swiss: Reduce Risk##br## Before Curve Inverts (I) Euro Area & Swiss: Reduce Risk Before Curve Inverts (I) Euro Area & Swiss: Reduce Risk Before Curve Inverts (I) Chart 7BEuro Area & Swiss: Reduce Risk ##br##Before Curve Inverts (II) Euro Area & Swiss: Reduce Risk Before Curve Inverts (II) Euro Area & Swiss: Reduce Risk Before Curve Inverts (II) U.K And Australia: Reduce Risk After Yield Curve Has Inverted 2/10 yield curves in both the U.K. and Australia invert more often than in other countries. However, unlike other countries, equities can continue to outperform bonds even after the curve is inverted. The turning point is about minus 50 basis points, as shown in Chart 8. The upper band for Australia is 1.25% and 0.9% for the U.K. Chart 8AU.K. & Australia: Reduce Risk ##br##After Yield Curve Has Inverted (I) U.K. & Australia: Reduce Risk After Yield Curve Has Inverted (I) U.K. & Australia: Reduce Risk After Yield Curve Has Inverted (I) Chart 8BU.K. & Australia: Reduce Risk ##br##After Yield Curve Has Inverted (II) U.K. & Australia: Reduce Risk After Yield Curve Has Inverted (II) U.K. & Australia: Reduce Risk After Yield Curve Has Inverted (II) Japan: Yield Curve Does Not Provide Consistent Information The Japanese stock/bond ratio does not have a consistent relationship with the 2/10 yield curve, as shown in Chart 9. This makes it very difficult to apply the simple approach employed here. Country Divergence U.S. economic cycles have been widely studied. But as shown in Chart 1, correctly identifying recessions in the U.S. does not systematically capture equity/bond relative performance cycles because even U.S. equities can underperform bonds before a recession starts and after a recession ends. Using the yield curve, on the other hand, does a much better job in capturing the equity/bond performance cycle in each country. Chart 10 shows that investors in different countries should pay more attention to local yield curve cycles other than just following a U.S.-centric analysis, even though the U.S. does play a dominant role in the global economy and in global equity and bond indices. Chart 9Japan Is The Outlier Japan Is The Outlier Japan Is The Outlier Chart 10Country Divergences Country Divergences Country Divergences Bottom Line: The yield curve is an effective indicator for equity/bond allocation in most developed countries from a long-run perspective. Currently, yield curve-based signals from the U.S., Canada, Euro Area, Switzerland, the U.K. and Australia all still favor equities over bonds. Xiaoli Tang, Associate Vice President xiaoliT@bcaresearch.com
Highlights In this Weekly Report, we review all of the individual trades in our Tactical Overlay portfolio. These are positions that are intended to complement our strategic Model Bond Portfolio, typically with shorter holding periods, and sometimes in smaller or less liquid markets that are outside our usual core bond coverage (like Swedish government bonds or euro area CPI swaps). This report includes a summary of the rationale for each position, as well as a decision on whether to retain the position, close it or switch it into a new trade that has more profit potential for the same theme underlying the original trade (Table 1). Table 1Global Fixed Income Strategy Tactical Overlay Trades Hold, Close Or Switch: Reviewing Our Tactical Overlay Trades Hold, Close Or Switch: Reviewing Our Tactical Overlay Trades Feature U.S. Long 5-year U.S. Treasury bullet vs. 2-year/10-year duration-matched barbell (CLOSE AND SWITCH TO NEW TRADE) Long U.S. TIPS vs. nominal U.S. Treasuries (HOLD) Short 10-year U.S. Treasuries vs. 10-year German Bunds (HOLD) Chart 1UST Curve Trading More Off The Funds##BR##Rate Than Inflation Expectations UST Curve Trading More Off The Funds Rate Than Inflation Expectations UST Curve Trading More Off The Funds Rate Than Inflation Expectations We have three U.S.-focused tactical trades that are all expressions of our core views on U.S. inflation expectations and future Fed monetary policy moves. We first recommended a U.S. butterfly trade, going long the 5-year U.S. Treasury bullet and short a duration-matched 2-year/10-year Treasury barbell (Chart 1), back on December 20th, 2016. We have kept the recommendation during periodic reviews of our tactical trades since then. This is a position that was expected to benefit from a bearish steepening of the U.S. Treasury curve as the market priced in higher longer-term inflation expectations. The trade has not performed according to our expectations, however, generating a loss of -0.40% since inception.1 There was a positive correlation between the slope of the Treasury curve, the butterfly spread and TIPS breakevens shortly after trade inception. However, the Treasury curve flattened through 2017 as the Fed continued to hike rates, even as realized inflation fell (2nd panel), pushing the real fed funds towards neutral levels as measured by estimates like r* (3rd panel). This has left the 2/5/10 Treasury butterfly cheap on our valuation model (bottom panel), Looking ahead, the case for a renewed bear-steepening of the U.S. Treasury curve, and widening of the 2/5/10 butterfly spread, rests on the Fed accommodating the current rise in U.S. inflation by being cautious with future rate hikes. Recent comments from Fed officials suggest that policymakers are in no hurry to rapidly raise rates in order to cool off an "overheating" U.S. economy. Yet at the same time, U.S. inflation continues to rise and the economy is in good shape, so the Fed can't take a pause on rate hikes. This will likely leave the Treasury curve range bound, with the potential for some periods of bear-steepening as inflation expectations rise. Our conviction on this Treasury butterfly spread trade has fallen of late. Yet with our model suggesting that the belly of the curve is somewhat cheap to the wings, and given our view that U.S. inflation expectations have not reached a cyclical peak, we are reluctant to completely exit this position. Instead, we are opting to switch out of the 2/5/10 U.S. Treasury butterfly into another butterfly that our colleagues at BCA U.S. Bond Strategy have identified as cheap within their newly-expanded curve modeling framework - the 1/7/20 butterfly (long the 7-year bullet vs. short a duration-matched 1/20 barbell).2 That butterfly offers better carry than the 2/5/10 butterfly (Chart 2), and is nearly one standard deviation cheap to estimated fair value. Another of our U.S.-focused tactical trades has been to directly play for rising U.S. inflation expectations by going long TIPS versus nominal U.S. Treasuries. This is a long-held trade (initiated on August 23rd, 2016) which has performed very well, delivering a return of 4.13%.3 We continue to see the potential for TIPS breakevens to widen back to levels consistent with the market believing that inflation can sustainably return to the Fed's 2% target on the PCE deflator, which is equivalent to 2.4-2.5% on CPI-based 10-year TIPS inflation expectations. Given the persistent strong correlation between oil prices and breakevens, and with the BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy team continuing to forecast Brent oil prices jumping above $80/bbl over the next year (Chart 3), there is still solid underlying support for wider breakevens. This is especially true given the uptrend in overall global inflation (middle panel), and the likelihood that core U.S. inflation can also continue to rise alongside an expanding U.S. economy (bottom panel). We are sticking with our long TIPS position vs. nominal Treasuries. Chart 2Switch The UST Butterfly##BR##Trade From 2/5/10 to 1/7/20 Switch The UST Butterfly Trade From 2/5/10 to 1/7/20 Switch The UST Butterfly Trade From 2/5/10 to 1/7/20 Chart 3Stay Long U.S. TIPS##BR##Vs. Nominal Treasuries Stay Long U.S. TIPS vs. Nominal Treasuries Stay Long U.S. TIPS vs. Nominal Treasuries Our final U.S.-focused tactical trade is actually a cross-market trade where we are short 10-year U.S. Treasuries versus 10-year German Bunds. We initiated that trade on August 8th, 2017 when the Treasury-Bund spread was at 179bps. With the spread now at 252bps, the trade has delivered a solid total return of 4.23%. This was driven primarily by the rapid move higher in Treasury yields in response to faster U.S. growth (Chart 4), more rapid U.S. inflation and Fed rate hikes versus a stand-pat European Central Bank (ECB).4 From a medium-term perspective, those three fundamental drivers of the Treasury-Bund spread continue to point to U.S. bond underperformance (Chart 5). From this perspective, the peak in the spread will not be reached until U.S. economic growth and inflation peak and the Fed signals an end to its current tightening cycle. None of those outcomes is on the horizon, and we continue to target an eventual cyclical top in the 10-year Treasury yield in the 3.25-3.5% range as inflation expectations move higher. Yet the Treasury-Bund spread has reached an overvalued extreme according to our "fair value" model (Chart 6). In other words, the markets have moved to more than fully discount the cyclical differences between the U.S. and euro area - a trend that surely reflects the huge short positioning in the U.S. Treasury market. Yet it is also important to note that the fair value spread continues to steadily climb higher. In our model, the spread is primarily a function of differences in central bank policy rates between the Fed and ECB, relative unemployment rates and relative headline inflation rates. All three of those factors continue to move in a direction favorable to a wider Treasury-Bund spread, and the gap is only growing wider with both growth and inflation in the euro zone losing momentum. Chart 4Stay Long 10yr UST##BR##Vs. 10yr German Bund Stay Long 10yr UST vs 10yr German Bund Stay Long 10yr UST vs 10yr German Bund Chart 5UST-Bund Spread Widening##BR##Due To Relative Fundamentals... UST-Bund Spread Widening Due To Relative Fundamentals... UST-Bund Spread Widening Due To Relative Fundamentals... Chart 6...But The Spread##BR##Has Overshot A Bit ...But The Spread Has Overshot A Bit ...But The Spread Has Overshot A Bit The spread is currently being pushed to even wider extremes by the current turmoil in Italy, which is pushing money out of Italian BTPs into safer assets like Bunds. The situation remains fluid and new elections are likely in Italy later this year, thus it is unlikely that any more to restore investor confidence in Italy is on the immediate horizon. This will keep Bund yields depressed versus Treasuries, even as the ECB continues to signal that it will fully taper its asset purchases by year-end (rate hikes remain a long way off in Europe, however). We continue to recommend staying short Treasuries versus Bunds, and would view any tightening of the spread back towards our model estimate of fair value as an opportunity to enter the position or add to an existing position. Euro Area Long 10-year euro area CPI swaps (HOLD, BUT ADD A STOP AT 1.5%) Short 5-year Italy government bonds vs. 5-year Spain government bonds (HOLD) Chart 7Stay Long 10-Year Euro Area CPI Swaps Stay Long 10-Year Euro Area CPI Swaps Stay Long 10-Year Euro Area CPI Swaps We have two tactical trades that are purely within the euro area: positioning for higher inflation expectations through a long position in 10-year euro CPI swaps, and playing relative credit quality within the Peripheral countries by shorting 5-year Italian bonds versus a long position in 5-year Spanish debt. The long 10-year CPI swaps trade, which was initiated on December 20th, 2016, has generated a total return of +0.45% over the life of the trade so far (Chart 7).5 The rationale for the recommendation, and our conviction behind it, has evolved over that time. We first recommended the trade when the ECB was aggressively easing monetary policy and there was clear positive momentum in euro area economic growth that was driving down unemployment. At a time when oil prices were steadily climbing and the euro was very weak, the case for seeing some improvement in inflation expectations in the euro area was a strong one. Inflation expectations stayed resilient in 2017, however, despite the unexpected strength of the euro. Continued gains in oil prices and above-trend economic growth that rapidly absorbed spare capacity in the euro area more than offset any downward pressure on inflation from a stronger currency. Looking ahead, the combination of renewed weakness in the euro and firm oil prices should allow headline inflation in the euro area to drift higher from current levels in the next 3-6 months (2nd panel). However, the euro area economy has lost the positive momentum seen last year with steady declines in cyclical data like manufacturing PMIs, industrial production and exports (3rd panel). Admittedly, that deceleration has come from a high level and leading indicators are not yet pointing to a prolonged period of below-potential growth that could raise unemployment and reduce domestic inflation pressures. Yet with core inflation still struggling to climb beyond the 1% level (bottom panel), any worsening of euro area economic momentum could lead to inflation expectations stalling out well before getting close to the ECB's 2% target level. Thus, we continue to recommend this long 10-year CPI swaps position, but we are adding a new stop-out level at 1.5% to protect against downside risks if the euro area growth outlook darkens. On our other euro area tactical trade, we have been recommending shorting Italian government bonds versus Spanish equivalents. We initiated that trade on December 16th, 2016 and it has produced a total return of +0.57% over the life of the trade. The original logic for the trade was based on an assessment that Italy's medium-term growth potential, sovereign debt fundamentals and political stability were all much worse than that of Spain (Chart 8), yet Italian bond yields were still trading at too low a spread to Spanish debt. The cyclical improvement in the Italian economy in 2017 helped pushed Italian yields even closer to Spanish yields, yet we stuck with the trade given the looming political risk from the Italian parliamentary elections. The recent political turmoil in Italy has justified our persistence with this trade, with the 5-year Italy-Spain spread widening out by 46 bps over just the past two weeks. With the situation remaining highly fluid as the Italian coalition partners (the 5-Star Movement and the League) struggle to form a new government, Italian assets will continue to trade with a substantial risk premium to Spain and other European bond markets. Yet with the Italian economy now also showing signs of losing cyclical momentum, the case for continued Italian bond underperformance is a strong one, and we moved to a strategic underweight stance on Italian debt last week.6 Looking ahead, we see the potential for additional spread widening between Italy and Spain in the coming months. Spain is enjoying better economic growth, the deficit outlook is worsening for Italy with the new coalition government proposing a stimulus that could widen the budget deficit by as much as 6% of GDP, and Spanish support for the euro currency is far higher than it is in Italy. All those factors justify a wider risk premium for Italian debt over Spanish bonds (Chart 9). Chart 8Spain Trumps Italy On All Fronts Spain Trumps Italy On All Fronts Spain Trumps Italy On All Fronts Chart 9Stay Short 5-Year Italy Versus 5-Year Spain Stay Short 5-Year Italy Versus 5-Year Spain Stay Short 5-Year Italy Versus 5-Year Spain Our view on Italian debt, both from a tactical and strategic viewpoint, is bearish. We are maintaining our tactical trade, and we also advise selling into any rallies in Italy rather than buying the dips. U.K. Long 5-year Gilt bullet vs. duration-matched 2-year/10-year Gilt barbell (HOLD) We entered into a U.K. Gilt butterfly trade, long the 5-year bullet versus the duration-matched 2-year/10-year barbell, back on March 27th, 2018.7 The logic of the trade was a simple one. We simply did not believe that the Bank of England (BoE) would follow through on its hawkish commentary by hiking rates as much as was discounted in the Gilt curve. Our view came to fruition as the BoE held rates steady at the May monetary policy meeting, which resulted in a bullish steepening at the front end of the Gilt curve. Our butterfly trade has returned +0.25% since inception, and we see more to come in the coming months.8 The U.K. economy has lost considerable momentum, with no growth shown in Q1 (real GDP only expanded +0.1%). The OECD leading economic indicator for the U.K. is at the weakest level in five years, and now consumer confidence is rolling over as rising oil costs are offsetting the pickup in wages (Chart 10). Overall headline inflation has peaked, however, after the big currency-fueled surge in 2016 and 2017 (bottom panel). With both growth and inflation slowing, and with the lingering uncertainty of the Brexit negotiations weighing on business confidence and investment, the BoE will have a tough time hiking rates even one more time this year. There are still 34bps of rate hikes priced into the U.K. Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve, which leaves room for 2-year Gilts to decline as the BoE stays on hold for longer (Chart 11). This will cause the front-end of the Gilt curve to steepen. Meanwhile, longer-term Gilt yields will have a difficult time falling given the deceleration of global central bank asset purchase programs that is slowly raising depressed term premia on government bonds (3rd panel). Another factor that will help keep the Gilt curve steeper, all else equal, is the path of the inflation expectations curve. Shorter-dated expectations are likely to fall faster as growth slows and headline inflation continues to drift lower (bottom panel). Chart 10Fading Momentum For##BR##U.K. Growth & Inflation Fading Momentum For U.K. Growth & Inflation Fading Momentum For U.K. Growth & Inflation Chart 11Stay Long The 5yr U.K. Gilt Bullet##BR##Vs. The 2/10 Gilt Barbell Stay Long The 5yr U.K. Gilt Bullet vs The 2/10 Gilt Barbell Stay Long The 5yr U.K. Gilt Bullet vs The 2/10 Gilt Barbell Although some narrowing of the butterfly spread is already priced in the forwards (top panel), we see that outperformance of the 5-year happening faster, and by a greater amount, than the forwards. Stay long the belly of the Gilt curve versus the wings. Canada Long 10-year Canada inflation-linked government bonds vs. nominal Canada government bonds (HOLD) We recommended entering a long Canada 10-year breakeven inflation trade on January 9th, 2018.9 Since then, the 10-year breakeven inflation rate rose by 6bps along with the rise in oil prices denominated in Canadian dollars (Chart 12). This has helped our tactical trade deliver a return of +0.64% since inception.10 More fundamentally, the breakeven has risen as strong Canadian growth has helped close the output gap and push realized Canadian inflation back to the middle of the Bank of Canada (BoC)'s 1-3% target band. The rapid rate of real GDP growth has decelerated a bit after approaching 4% last year, and the OECD leading economic indicator for Canada may be peaking at a high level (Chart 13). Growth in consumer spending is also look a bit toppy, with bigger downside risks evident in the sharp declines in the growth of retail sales and house prices (3rd panel). Both were affected by a harsher-than-usual Canadian winter, but the cooling of the overheated Canadian housing market (especially in Toronto) is a welcome development for financial stability. Chart 12Stay Long Canadian##BR##Inflation Breakevens Stay Long Canadian Inflation Breakevens Stay Long Canadian Inflation Breakevens Chart 13Canadian Inflation At BoC Target,##BR##But Has Growth Peaked? Canadian Inflation At BoC Target, But Has Growth Peaked? Canadian Inflation At BoC Target, But Has Growth Peaked? On balance, however, the current state of Canadian economic data shows an economy that is slowing a bit from a very overheated pace, but is still likely to grow above potential with no spare capacity available. Both headline and core inflation will remain under upward pressure against this backdrop, at a time when the BoC's policy rate is still well below neutral. We continue to recommend staying long Canadian inflation-linked government bonds over nominal equivalents with a near-term target of 2% on the 10-year breakeven inflation rate. We will re-evaluate the position with regards to Canadian growth and inflation trends once that target is reached. Australia Long December 2018 Australian Bank Bill futures (SELL AND SWITCH TO NEW TRADE). We entered into a long December 2018 Australian Bank Bill futures trade on October 17, 2017 as a focused way to express the view that the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) would stay on hold for longer than markets expect. The trade has worked out nicely, generating a profit of +0.25%. The potential for further upside is fairly low at these levels so we are now closing the trade. However, our view remains that the RBA will not be able to hike as early as markets are pricing. As such, we are opening a new position - long October 2019 Australia Bank Bill futures. Markets expect the first rate hike will occur in nine months' time. The October 2019 Australia Bank Bill futures are currently pricing in a massive 180bps of rate hikes over the next sixteen months. That will not happen. The RBA will not be able to hike this much given the lack of inflation pressures and a wide output gap. Our Australia Central Bank Monitor, which measures cyclical growth and inflation pressures, has pulled back to the zero line, confirming that there is no current need to tighten policy (Chart 14). Real GDP growth slowed to 2.4% in Q4 2017, from 2.9% the previous quarter. Weakness in the OECD leading economic indicator and Citigroup economic surprise index for Australia suggest that the Q1 reading will also disappoint. Consumer spending will be dampened by weak wage growth, softening consumer sentiment and the recent decline in house prices in multiple major cities. As a result of easing house prices, the growth rate of household net wealth was considerably lower in 2017 relative to the previous four years. Additionally, credit growth has been slowing, even before the recent news of the bank scandals that will force banks to be more stringent with lending practices. Most importantly, however, inflation remains below the RBA's target and there is a lack of inflationary pressures. The inflation component of our Central Bank Monitor has collapsed and is now well below the zero line. Both headline and core inflation readings are stable but remain persistently below 2%. Tradeable goods prices have declined for nine consecutive months despite the currency weakness seen in the Australian dollar over the past twelve months. The IMF is not projecting Australia to have a closed output gap until 2020, and that is with the optimistic expectation that Australia achieves 3% growth. Labor markets have plenty of slack as evidenced by rising unemployment rate, nonexistent wage growth and elevated level of underemployment. The RBA estimates that the current unemployment rate is still approximately 0.5% above full employment. Against this backdrop, it is unlikely that inflation will sustainably rise enough to force the RBA's hand, leaving scope for interest rate expectations to decline (Chart 15). Chart 14The RBA Will##BR##Stay Dovish The RBA Will Stay Dovish The RBA Will Stay Dovish Chart 15Switch Long Australia Bank Bill Futures##BR##Trade From Dec/18 Contract To Oct/19 Contract Switch Long Australia Bank Bill Futures Trade From Dec/18 Contract To Oct/19 Contract Switch Long Australia Bank Bill Futures Trade From Dec/18 Contract To Oct/19 Contract New Zealand Long 5-year New Zealand government bonds vs. 5-year U.S. Treasuries, currency-hedged into U.S. dollars (HOLD) Long 5-year New Zealand government bonds vs. 5-year German government bonds, with no currency hedge (HOLD) One of our more successful tactical trades has been in New Zealand (NZ) government bonds. We entered long positions in 5-year NZ debt versus 5-year U.S. Treasuries and 5-year German Bunds on May 30th, 2017, but we reviewed, and decided to maintain, those positions in a recent Weekly Report.11 The NZ-US spread trade has returned 4.67% since inception, hedged into U.S. dollars (Chart 16).12 The NZ-Germany trade, however, was a very rare instance where we recommended a cross-country spread trade on a currency UN-hedged basis, based on the negative view on the euro that we had last year. With the euro rising sharply against the New Zealand dollar, the unhedged return on that trade has been -2.87% (a return that, if hedged back into the euro denomination of the German bonds, would have generated a return of +3.56%). Looking ahead, we see continued scope for NZ bond outperformance, although the return potential is far less than it was when we first put on the trade. NZ economic growth is in the process of peaking, with export growth already rolling over (Chart 17, top panel). Net immigration inflows, which have been a major support for the NZ housing market and overall consumer spending over the past five years, have already begun to slow with the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) projecting bigger declines in the next couple of years (2nd panel). Both headline and core CPI inflation took a surprising downward turn in Q1 of this year, and both are well below the midpoint of the RBNZ target band (3rd panel). Chart 16Stay Long NZ 5yr Bonds##BR##Vs. The U.S. & Germany... Stay Long NZ 5yr Bonds Vs The U.S. & Germany... Stay Long NZ 5yr Bonds Vs The U.S. & Germany... Chart 17...With NZ Growth &##BR##Inflation Losing Momentum ...With NZ Growth & Inflation Losing Momentum ...With NZ Growth & Inflation Losing Momentum With both growth and inflation slowing, the RBNZ can remain dovish on monetary policy. An additional factor is the NZ government has recently changed the mandate of the RBNZ to include both inflation targeting and "maximizing employment" in a similar fashion to the Federal Reserve. With inflation posing no threat, the RBNZ can focus on its employment mandate by maintaining highly accommodative policy settings. With the NZ OIS curve still discounting one full 25bp RBNZ hike over the next year (bottom panel), there is scope for NZ bonds to outperform as that hike will not happen. This will allow NZ bond spreads to tighten, or at least outperform versus the forwards where some modest widening is currently priced. We are sticking with both spread trades, but we are choosing to leave the NZ-Germany trade currency unhedged given the renewed weakness in the euro (the unhedged return has already improved by over two full percentage points since the euro peaked earlier this year). We will monitor levels of the NZD/EUR currency cross rate to determine when to potentially hedge the currency exposure of our trade back into euros. Sweden Long Sweden 10-year government bond vs. 2-year government bond Short 2-year Sweden government bond vs. 2-year German government bond We recently entered two Sweden tactical bond trades on May 8, 2018, going long the Swedish 10-year vs. the 2-year and shorting the Swedish 2-year vs. the German 2-year (Chart 18).13 We expect that strong growth momentum, rising inflation and a tight labor market will force the Riksbank to raise rates earlier, and by more, than markets expect. Since inception for these "young" trades, each has returned -1bp.14 Sweden's economy made a solid recovery in 2017, with year-over-year real GDP growth reaching 3.3% in Q4. Going forward, export growth will remain supported by strong global activity, low unit labor costs, and a weak krona. Our own Swedish export growth model is already signaling a pickup over the rest of 2018. Consumption has been resilient and should continue to be supported by steadily recovering wages. Capital spending has been robust and industrial confidence remains in an uptrend. Additionally, leading indicators are still signaling positive growth momentum. The Riksbank's preferred measure of inflation, CPIF, slowed to 1.9% in April after briefly touching the central bank's target last month (Chart 19). In our view, this is a minor pullback rather than the start of a sustained reversal. Our core inflation model projects a gradual increase in the coming months, driven by above-trend growth that has soaked up all spare capacity. Labor markets have tightened considerably, and the unemployment rate is now more than one percentage point below the OECD's estimate of the full-employment NAIRU. During the last period when unemployment was this far below NAIRU, wage growth surged to over 4%. Chart 18Stay In A Sweden 2/10 Curve Flattener##BR##& Short 2yr Swedish Bonds Vs Germany Stay In A Sweden 2/10 Curve Flattener & Short 2yr Swedish Bonds Vs Germany Stay In A Sweden 2/10 Curve Flattener & Short 2yr Swedish Bonds Vs Germany Chart 19The Riksbank Will Not Ignore##BR##The Coming Inflation Overshoot The Riksbank Will Not Ignore The Coming Inflation Overshoot The Riksbank Will Not Ignore The Coming Inflation Overshoot For the curve flattener trade, our expectation is that the Riksbank will shift to a more hawkish tone in the coming months, leading markets to reprice the shape of the Swedish yield curve, as too few rate hikes are discounted in the short-end. With their mandates met, the Riksbank will be forced to act more aggressively. Importantly, there is no flattening currently priced into the Swedish bond forward curve, thus there is no negative carry associated with putting on a flattener now. In the relative value trade, we shorted the Swedish 2-year relative to the German 2-year. Growth in Sweden is likely to outpace that of the euro area once again in 2018. Swedish inflation is almost at the Riksbank target while euro area inflation continues to undershoot the ECB benchmark. The ECB is signaling that it is in no hurry to begin raising interest rates, therefore policy rate differentials will drive the 2-year Sweden-Germany spread wider over the next 12-18 months, with no spread move currently priced into the forwards. South Korea Short Korea 10-Year Government Bonds Vs. Long 2-Year Korea Government Bonds (CLOSE) We first introduced this trade on May 30th, 2017, after the election of Moon Jae-In as the South Korean president.15 The new government made major campaign promises to greatly expand fiscal spending on social welfare, public sector job creation, and increased aid to North Korea. With the central government's budget balance set to worsen significantly, we expected longer-term Korean bond yields to begin to price in faster growth and rising future debt levels, resulting in a bearish steepening of the yield curve (Chart 20). Since the new president was elected, however, the Korean economy worsened - even as much of the global economy was enjoying a cyclical upturn - with the trend likely to continue (Chart 21). The OECD leading economic indicator for Korea is weakening, while the annual growth in industrial production now sits at -4.2% - the worst level since the 2009 recession. Capital spending and exports are also slowing rapidly. Chart 20Close The 2yr/10y Korean##BR##Government Bond Curve Steepener Close The 2yr/10y Korean Government Bond Curve Steepener Close The 2yr/10y Korean Government Bond Curve Steepener Chart 21Korean Curve Stable,##BR##Despite Slower Growth & Fiscal Stimulus Korean Curve Stable, Despite Slower Growth & Fiscal Stimulus Korean Curve Stable, Despite Slower Growth & Fiscal Stimulus Due to the slowdown in the economy, Korean firms' capacity utilization is now at the worst level since the middle of 2009. Although businesses were already suffering from downward pressure on revenues, the Moon administration dramatically increased the minimum wage last year, directly leading to a rise in bankruptcies for small and medium size firms (the bankruptcy rate rose from 1.9% in the first half of 2017 to 2.5% in the latter half). Looking ahead, the Moon government will continue to increase spending on welfare and financial aid for North Korea, especially if the domestic economy continues to struggle. We still believe that the rise in deficits and debt will eventually lead the market to price in some increase in the fiscal risk premium and a steeper Korean yield curve. Yet with the Bank of Korea (BoK) having already surprised the markets last November with a rate hike, and with Korean inflation now ticking higher alongside a stable won, we fear that any renewed steepening of the Korean curve awaits a shift to a more dovish BoK that is not yet on the horizon. For now, given the competing forces on the Korean yield curve, we are choosing to close our 2/10 Korea curve steepener at a loss of -0.63%.16 We will continue to monitor the Korean situation to look for opportunities to re-enter the trade at a later date. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Patrick Trinh, Associate Editor Patrick@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com 1 Returns are calculated using Bloomberg pricing of the total return of a 2/5/10 butterfly. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "More Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies", dated May 15th 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 3 Return is taken directly from Bloomberg Barclays index data on the duration-adjusted excess return of the entire TIPS index versus the entire Treasury index. 4 This return is calculated using Bloomberg data on actual U.S. and German bonds, and is shown on a currency-hedged basis into U.S. dollars - the currency denomination of the bond we are short in this spread trade. 5 Returns are calculated using Bloomberg Barclays inflation swap index data for a euro area CPI swap with a rolling 10-year maturity. 6 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Is It Partly Sunny Or Mostly Cloudy?", dated May 22nd 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Nervous Complacency", dated March 27th, 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 8 Returns are calculated using Bloomberg data on actual Gilts, rather than bond index data. 9 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Let The Good Times Roll", dated January 9th 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 10 This return is measured as the total return of the Canadian inflation-linked bond index less that of the nominal Canadian government bond index from the Bloomberg Barclays family of bond indices. 11 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Serenity Now", dated May 15th 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 12 Returns are calculated using Bloomberg data on actual New Zealand government bonds, with our own adjustments for the impact on returns from currency hedging. 13 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "Sweden: The Riksbank Cannot Kick The Can Down The Road Anymore", dated May 8th 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 14 Returns are calculated using Bloomberg data for actual individual Swedish government bonds, rather than bond index data. Both legs of the trade are duration-matched. 15 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Distant Early Warning", dated May 30th 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 16 Returns are calculated using Bloomberg data for actual individual Korean government bonds, rather than bond index data. Both legs of the trade are duration-matched and funding costs are included. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Hold, Close Or Switch: Reviewing Our Tactical Overlay Trades Hold, Close Or Switch: Reviewing Our Tactical Overlay Trades Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Uncovered Interest Rate Parity still works for currencies. However, it needs to be based on a combination of short- and long-term real rates. Currencies are also affected by global risk appetite, as approximated by corporate spreads and commodity prices. For the next six months, the euro has additional downside, while the dollar's rebound could run further. The CAD also looks attractive. Feature In July 2016, in a Special Report titled, "In Search Of A Lost Timing Model," we introduced a set of intermediate-term models to complement our long-term fair value models for various currencies.1 These groups of models provide additional discipline - a sanity check if you will - to our regular analysis. Additionally, these models can help global equity investors manage their currency exposure, having increased the Sharpe ratio of global equity portfolios vis-à-vis other hedging strategies, and also for a host of base-currencies.2 In this report, we review the logic underpinning these intermediate-term models and provide commentary on their most recent readings for the G10 currencies vis-à-vis the USD. UIP, Revisited The Uncovered Interest Rate Parity (UIP) relationship is at the core of this modeling exercise. This theory suggests that an equilibrium exchange rate is the one that will make an investor indifferent between holding the bonds of Country A or Country B. This means that as interest rates rise in Country A relative to Country B, the currency of Country B will fall today in order to appreciate in the future. These higher expected returns are what will drive investors to hold the lower-yielding bonds of Country B. Chart 1Interest Rate Parity: ##br##Generally Helpful, But... Interest Rate Parity: Generally Helpful, But... Interest Rate Parity: Generally Helpful, But... There has long been debate as to whether investors should focus on short rates or long rates when looking at exchange rates through the prism of UIP. This debate has regained vigor in the past six months as the dollar has greatly lagged the levels implied by 2-year rate differentials (Chart 1). Research by the Federal Reserve and the IMF suggests incorporating longer-term rates to UIP models increase their accuracy.3 This informational advantage works whether policy rates are or aren't close to their lower bound.4 Incorporating long-term rates as an explanatory variable increases the performance of UIP models because exchange rate movements do not only reflect current interest rate conditions, but currency market investors also try to anticipate the path of interest rates over many periods. By definition, long-term bonds do just that, as they are based on the expected path of short rates over their maturity - as well as a term premium, which compensates for the uncertain nature of future interest rates. There is another reason why long-term rate differential changes improve the power of UIP models. Since UIP models are based on the concept of indifference of investors between assets in two countries, changes in the spreads between 10-year bonds in these two countries will create more volatility in the currency pair than changes in the spreads between 3-month rates. This is because an equivalent delta in the 10-year spread will have much greater impact on the relative prices of the bonds than on the short-term paper, courtesy of their much more elevated duration. To compensate for these greater changes in prices, the currency does have to overshoot its long-term PPP to a much greater extent to entice investors trading the long end of the curve. Bottom Line: The interest rate parity relationship still constitutes the bedrock of any shorter-term currency fair value model. However, to increase its accuracy, both long-term and short-term rates should be used. Real Rates Really Count Another perennial question regarding exchange rate determination is whether to use nominal or real rate differentials. At a theoretical level, real rates are what matter. Investors can look through the loss of purchasing power created by inflation. Therefore, exchange rates overshoot around real rate differentials, not nominal ones. On a practical level, there are additional reasons to believe that real rates should matter, especially when trying to explain currency moves beyond a few weeks. Indeed, various surveys and studies on models used by forecasters and traders show that FX professionals use purchasing power parity as well as productivity differential concepts when setting their forex forecasts.5 Indeed, as Chart 2 illustrates, real rate differentials have withstood the test of time as an explanatory variable for exchange rate dynamics, albeit with periods where rate differentials and the currency can deviate from one another. It is true that very often, nominal rate differentials can be used as a shorthand for real rate differentials, as both interest rate gaps tend to move together. However, regularly enough, they do not. In countries with very depressed inflation expectations (Japan immediately comes to mind), nominal and real rate differentials can in fact look very different (Chart 3). With the informational cost of incorporating market-based inflation expectations being very low, we find the shorthand unnecessary when building UIP-based models. Chart 2Real Rates Work Better Over The Long Run Real Rates Work Better Over The Long Run Real Rates Work Better Over The Long Run Chart 3Real And Nominal Rate Spreads Can Differ Real And Nominal Rate Spreads Can Differ Real And Nominal Rate Spreads Can Differ Finally, it is important to remark that in environments of high inflation, inflation differentials dominate any other factor when it comes to exchange rate determination. However, the currencies discussed in this report currently are not like Zimbabwe or Latin America in the early 1980s. Bottom Line: When considering an intermediate-term fair value model for exchange rates, investors should focus on real, not nominal, long-term rate differentials. Global Risk Aversion And Commodity Prices Chart 4The Dollar Benefits From Global Stresses The Dollar Benefits From Global Stresses The Dollar Benefits From Global Stresses Global risk appetite is also a key factor in trying to model exchange rates. Risk-aversion shocks tend to lead to an appreciation in the U.S. dollar, which benefits from its status as the global reserve currency.6 Literature has often focused on the use of the VIX as a gauge for global risk appetite. Our exercise shows stronger explanatory power with options-adjusted spreads on junk bonds (Chart 4). Commodity prices, too, play a key role. Historically, commodity prices have displayed a very strong negative correlation with the dollar.7 This correlation is obviously at its strongest for commodity-producing nations, as rising natural resource prices constitute a terms-of-trade shock for them. However, this relationship holds up for the euro as well, something already documented by the European Central Bank.8 The Models The models for each cross rate are built to reflect the insight gleaned above. Each cross is modeled on three variables, with the model computed on a weekly timeframe. Real rates differentials: We use the average of 2-year and 10-year real rates. The rates are deflated using inflation expectations. Global risk appetite, approximated by junk OAS. Commodity prices: We use the Bloomberg Continuous Commodity Index. For all countries, the variables are statistically highly significant and of the expected signs. These models help us understand in which direction the fundamentals are pushing the currency. We refer to these as Fundamental Intermediate-Term Models (FITM). We created a second set of models, based on the variables above, which also include a 52-week moving average for each cross. The real rates differentials, junk spreads and commodity prices remain statistically very significant and of the correct sign. They are therefore trend- and risk-appetite adjusted UIP-deviation models. These models are more useful as timing indicators on a three- to nine-month basis, as their error terms revert to zero much faster. We refer to these as Intermediate-Term Timing Models (ITTM). Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com The U.S. Dollar Chart 5Dollar Back In Line With Fundamentals Dollar Back In Line With Fundamentals Dollar Back In Line With Fundamentals Chart 6More Upside For Now More Upside For Now More Upside For Now To model the dollar index (DXY), we used two approaches. In the first one, we took all the deviation from fair value for the pairs constituting the index, based on their weights in the DXY. In the second approach, we ran the model specifically for the DXY, using the three variables described above. U.S. real rates were compared to an average of euro area, Japanese, Canadian, British, Swiss and Swedish real rates, weighted by their contribution to the DXY. We then averaged both approaches, which gave us very similar results to begin with. After a short period when it traded below its FITM, the dollar's recent strength has pushed the greenback back to its equilibrium, suggesting the easy gains are behind us. However, the rising risks in EM along with the continued widening in rate differentials between the U.S. and the rest of the world could put upward pressure on the dollar for a few more months (Chart 5). When the trend in the dollar is included, the greenback also trades in line with the ITTM (Chart 6). This confirms the idea that the dollar could experience some more upside for the remainder of 2018, as periods of undervaluation to the ITTM tend to be followed by overshoots. The return of inflation, along with the injection of large amounts of fiscal stimulus in the U.S., could be the narratives that push the greenback up by another 5%. Despite a positive outlook for 2018, we remain concerned about the dollar's longer-term performance. Not only is it still trading at a 16% premium on a PPP basis, European rates have room to increase substantially once euro area economic slack is fully absorbed. We are not there yet, but continued robust growth in the euro area will let the ECB increase rates more aggressively than the Fed beyond 2020. The Euro Chart 7The Euro Is Not A Bargain Anymore... The Euro Is Not A Bargain Anymore... The Euro Is Not A Bargain Anymore... Chart 8...And Has More Downside Before Year End ...And Has More Downside Before Year End ...And Has More Downside Before Year End The FITM for EUR/USD continues to point south, dragged down by widening interest rate differentials in favor of the greenback. However, unlike in early 2017, the euro is no longer trading at a big discount to its fair value (Chart 7). As a result, unlike last year, the euro is not able to avoid the downward gravitational pull of a falling FITM. More worrisome for the euro's performance over the coming six months, EUR/USD is still trading at a premium to its ITTM, which adjusts our FITM by taking account of the euro's trend (Chart 8). Currently, the fair value for EUR/USD stands at 1.15, but the euro tends to undershoot its equilibrium after large overshoots such as when EUR/USD traded around 1.25. Moreover, if China's economic slowdown deepens, commodity prices will suffer, which will drag down both the FITM and the ITTM for the euro. We are not yet willing buyers of the euro at current levels. While we espouse a bearish short-term view on the euro, we will be looking to purchase it once it moves to the 1.15-1.10 range. On longer-term metrics, EUR/USD still trades at a significant discount to its fair value. Moreover, long-term rates could rise in Europe relative to the U.S. once investors begin to lift their expectations for future euro area policy rates more aggressively. As such, we continue to closely monitor the slowdown in both euro area and global growth. Once we see signs of stabilization, the euro should again catch a durable bid. The Yen Chart 9A Dovish BoJ Is Pushing Down ##br##The Yen's Fundamentals A Dovish BoJ Is Pushing Down The Yen's Fundamentals A Dovish BoJ Is Pushing Down The Yen's Fundamentals Chart 10Tactically, The Yen Is At Risk, But Softening Global ##br##Growth Will Limit Its Downside This Year Tactically, The Yen Is At Risk, But Softening Global Growth Will Limit Its Downside This Year Tactically, The Yen Is At Risk, But Softening Global Growth Will Limit Its Downside This Year The FITM for the yen is falling fast, and as a result the JPY cannot rally anymore against the dollar (Chart 9). The ITTM provides a very similar message: the yen still trades at a premium to its short-term equilibrium, and is vulnerable to the dollar's strength (Chart 10). Softness in the yen has materialized despite growing stresses in emerging markets and budding signs of a slowdown in global growth - two normally yen-bullish developments - making it clear that the breakdown between USD/JPY and interest rate differentials could not withstand a period of generalized strength in the dollar. While the yen could weaken against the dollar, it is likely to rally further against the euro. Weakness in global growth is likely to limit the yen's downside to the equilibrium implied by its ITTM. Meanwhile, EUR/USD is likely to undershoot this same equilibrium. This contrast points to further weakness in EUR/JPY. The British Pound Chart 11The Pound Is ##br## At Equilibrium The Pound Is At Equilibrium The Pound Is At Equilibrium Chart 12GBP/USD May Be Dragged Lower By A Falling ##br## EUR/USD, But Cable Is Less At Risk Than The Euro GBP/USD May Be Dragged Lower By A Falling EUR/USD, But Cable Is Less At Risk Than The Euro GBP/USD May Be Dragged Lower By A Falling EUR/USD, But Cable Is Less At Risk Than The Euro GBP/USD is in a very different position than EUR/USD. While the pound's FITM points south, driven by interest rate differentials, cable trades below its equilibrium level (Chart 11). For the FITM to move up from this point onward, the U.K. economy needs to stabilize. We do think this will happen as British inflation slows, which will support household real incomes, and thus consumer spending. This message is also confirmed by the fact that unlike EUR/USD, GBP/USD does not trade at a premium to the ITTM, which incorporates the trend in the pair (Chart 12). While investors bid up the pound against the dollar as the greenback weakened in 2017 and early 2018, they are still embedding a risk premium in the GBP, a consequence of the murky political outlook that has shrouded the U.K. ever since the Brexit referendum. The models confirm our analysis of two weeks ago: that the pound could experience some downside against the dollar if the euro were to weaken, but that nonetheless cable will suffer less than EUR/USD.9 As a result, EUR/GBP is likely to experience downside as the correction in EUR/USD unfolds. On a longer-term basis, traditional valuation metrics such as PPP suggest that the GBP remains cheap. However, for this judgment to be true, much will depend on the evolution of the negotiations between the U.K. and the rest of the EU. A British exit from the common market will invalidate the message from PPP models, as the economic relationship between the U.K. and its largest trading partner will change drastically, implying that the models are specified over a sample that is not relevant anymore. However, it remains far from clear what form Brexit will ultimately take. The Canadian Dollar Chart 13NAFTA Risk Premia Evident Here... NAFTA Risk Premia Evident Here... NAFTA Risk Premia Evident Here... Chart 14...And Here ...And Here ...And Here Not only is the loonie trading well below the levels implied by the FITM, but augmented interest rate differential models for the CAD still point north, suggesting its fundamental drivers are currently very supportive (Chart 13). The ITTM for the Canadian dollar confirms this message; even after adjusting for its trend the CAD still trades at a discount to equilibrium (Chart 14). Both formulations of the models highlight that a risk premium has been embedded into the Canadian dollar, reflecting still-possible hazards and setbacks surrounding NAFTA negotiations. However, BCA expects a benign outcome for Canada in the coming weeks, which should help the loonie down the road. Not only does the absence of a major overhaul to NAFTA imply that trade flows between the U.S. and Canada will avoid a major shock, it also means that the Bank of Canada can resume tightening monetary policy. The biggest risk for the Canadian dollar versus the greenback is global growth. So long as global growth has not stabilized, the CAD will find it hard to rally durably against the USD. As a result, we prefer to buy the CAD versus other currencies, the EUR and AUD in particular. The Swiss Franc Chart 15No Evident Deviation From ##br## Fundamentals In The Franc No Evident Deviation From Fundamentals In The Franc No Evident Deviation From Fundamentals In The Franc Chart 16Rising EM Stresses And Better Value Will ##br##Help The Swiss Franc Versus The Euro Rising EM Stresses And Better Value Will Help The Swiss Franc Versus The Euro Rising EM Stresses And Better Value Will Help The Swiss Franc Versus The Euro The FITM for the Swissie continues to move upward (Chart 15). In fact, the franc currently trades at a discount to its ITTM. This suggests that downside for the Swiss franc versus the dollar is limited for the remainder of the year (Chart 16). Since the Swiss franc already trades at a discount to the USD, but the euro does not, logically, the EUR/CHF is currently very pricey. Hence, it will be difficult for the euro to rally further against the franc this year. Moreover, the slowdown in global growth and the trouble facing EM assets and currencies are likely to further contribute to the current deceleration in European economic data. As a result, both short-term valuation metrics and economic considerations argue for selling EUR/CHF on a six-month basis. Longer term, the Swiss franc's strength in recent years has contributed to a sharp deterioration in Swiss competitiveness. Since the Swiss economy is very flexible, this has mostly been translated into strong deflationary pressures in the alpine state. As a result, the Swiss National Bank will continue to fight off any appreciation in the franc, maintaining very easy monetary conditions. Thus, long-term investors should not short EUR/CHF, but instead, they should use any weakness in this cross this year to accumulate larger bets on the long side. The Australian Dollar Chart 17AUD Fundamentals At Risk AUD Fundamentals At Risk AUD Fundamentals At Risk Chart 18AUD Not Cheap Enough To Flash A Buy Signal AUD Not Cheap Enough To Flash A Buy Signal AUD Not Cheap Enough To Flash A Buy Signal The FITM for the Aussie is currently in a holding pattern (Chart 17). Meanwhile, AUD/USD trades at a marginal discount to the trend-augmented version of the model, the ITTM (Chart 18). Do not get lulled into a sense of comfort by these observations. First, AUD/USD never stops a move at the ITTM; it tends to overshoot its equilibrium. In fact, undershoots tends to culminate at an 8% discount to the short-term fair value. Additionally, the global economic environment suggests that both the AUD's FITM and ITTM could experience downside in the coming months. Slowing global activity and budding EM stress weigh on commodity prices - key components of the models. They also weigh on Australian interest rate differentials vis-à-vis the U.S. - especially as the Australian economy is replete with slack - keeping wage pressures, inflationary pressures, and consequently the Reserves Bank of Australia at bay. This picture is in sharp contrast to Canada. Canadian labor market conditions are tight and the BoC is likely to resume its hiking campaign once uncertainty around NAFTA dissipates. Since the CAD trades at a much larger discount to both its FITM and ITTM, the relative economic juncture supports being short AUD/CAD. The New Zealand Dollar Chart 19NZD Weaker Than ##br##Fundamentals Imply NZD Weaker Than Fundamentals Imply NZD Weaker Than Fundamentals Imply Chart 20NZD Is Cheap Enough To Warrant ##br## A Buy Versus The AUD NZD Is Cheap Enough To Warrant A Buy Versus The AUD NZD Is Cheap Enough To Warrant A Buy Versus The AUD As was the case with the Aussie, the FITM for the kiwi has stabilized (Chart 19). However, unlike with the AUD, the NZD trades at a meaningful discount to the ITTM (Chart 20). The NZD has greatly suffered in response to a deceleration in New Zealand economic data and to investors' worries about the Adern government - a coalition of the left-leaning Labour and populist New Zealand First parties. Investors are especially concerned over limitation to immigration on long-term growth, as well as risks to the Reserve Bank of New Zealand's independence. These concerns are real, and warrant taking a cautious stance on the NZD. New Zealand growth has greatly benefited from decades of a large immigration influx and from a staunchly independent central bank. Moreover, slowing global growth and trade as well as rising EM stresses are also likely to exert downward pressure on the NZD's short-term fair-value estimates. We have been taking advantage of the NZD's discount to its FITM and ITTM by selling the Aussie/kiwi cross. AUD/NZD trades at a premium to its relative ITTM. Moreover, the deceleration in global growth and the stress in EM are likely to exact a greater toll on metals than agricultural prices. This represents a greater negative terms-of-trade shock for Australia than New Zealand. Since Australia displays greater labor market slack than New Zealand, this disinflationary shock will bit the larger of the two economies harder. Therefore, interest rate differentials should move against the AUD, pushing the relative ITTM and FITM down. The Norwegian Krone Chart 21NOK Still A Value Play Among ##br## Commodity Currencies... NOK Still A Value Play Among Commodity Currencies... NOK Still A Value Play Among Commodity Currencies... Chart 22...But It Could Experience Further Downside ##br##Against The Dollar This Year ...But It Could Experience Further Downside Against The Dollar This Year ...But It Could Experience Further Downside Against The Dollar This Year The fundamental model for the Norwegian krone remains in an uptrend, established since the beginning of 2016 (Chart 21). This reflects rallying oil prices, the key determinant of Norwegian terms-of-trade and growth. However, the NOK still trades slightly above its ITTM, its fundamentals adjusted for the trend in the currency pair (Chart 22). Over the next six months, the Norwegian krone could experience further downside versus the USD. Corrections in this pair tends to end when it trades 4% below its ITTM. Additionally, the rise in EM volatility and the great sensitivity of the Norwegian krone to USD fluctuations adds an economic impetus to this risk. Moreover, EUR/USD normally exerts a gravitational pull on the NOK/USD. Since we expects the euro to weaken further, this should drag the krone along for a ride. However, we continue to see downside in EUR/NOK as short-term valuations are not attractive, and as oil is likely to outperform the broad commodity complex. In the longer term, we are positive on the NOK. It is cheap based on long-term models that take into account Norway's stunning net international position of 220% of GDP. Moreover, the high inflation registered between 2015 and 2016 is now over as the pass-through from the weak trade-weighted krone between 2014 and 2015 is gone. This means that the NOK's PPP fair value has stopped deteriorating. The Swedish Krona Chart 23The SEK Has Been Clobbered ##br##Beyond Fundamentals... The SEK Has Been Clobbered Beyond Fundamentals... The SEK Has Been Clobbered Beyond Fundamentals... Chart 24...And Is Becoming Attractive,##br## But Beware The Riskbank ...And Is Becoming Attractive, But Beware The Riskbank ...And Is Becoming Attractive, But Beware The Riskbank The Swedish krona's short-term valuations are attractive. As was the case with the krona, the SEK's FITM remains in an uptrend (Chart 23), and the SEK trades at a sizeable discount to its ITTM (Chart 24). Despite this benign picture, we are reluctant to bet on the SEK. To begin with, the SEK displays the greatest sensitivity to the dollar of all the G-10 currencies; our dollar-bullish stance for the rest of the year thus bodes poorly for the krona, pointing to greater undervaluation ahead. Additionally, despite an economy running 2% above potential GDP, the Riksbank still runs an extremely accommodative monetary policy. In fact, recent communications by the Swedish central bank demonstrate a high degree of comfort with the SEK's weakness. It seems as though Riksbank Governor Stefan Ingves wants to competitively devalue the krona. With global growth softening, the Riksbank is likely to encourage further SEK depreciation as the Swedish business cycle is tightly linked to EM growth. We were long NOK/SEK until two weeks ago, when our target level was hit. While we look to re-open this position, the NOK/SEK currently trades at a small premium to its relative ITTM, and thus the corrective episode could run a few more months. Meanwhile, the relative short-term valuation picture suggests that the recent bout of weakness in EUR/SEK could run a bit further. However, weakening global growth and the Riksbank's dovish proclivities suggest that visibility on this cross remains exceptionally low. 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy / Global Investment Strategy Special Report titled, "Assessing Fair Value In FX Markets", dated February 26, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com and gis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy / Global Asset Allocation Special Reports titled, "Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Equity Investors", dated September 29, 2017, and "Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Equity Investors (Part II)", dated October 13, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com and gaa.bcaresearch.com. 3 Ravi Balakrishnan, Stefan Laseen, and Andrea Pescatori, "U.S. Dollar Dynamics: How Important Are Policy Divergence And FX Risk Premiums?" IMF Working Paper No.16/125 (July 2016); and Michael T. Kiley, "Exchange Rates, Monetary Policy Statements, And Uncovered Interest Parity: Before And After The Zero Lower Bound", Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2013-17, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (January 2013). 4 Michael T. Kiley (January 2013). 5 Please see Yin-Wong Cheung and Menzie David Chinn, "Currency Traders and Exchange Rate Dynamics: A Survey of the U.S. Market", CESifo Working Paper Series No. 251 (February 2000); and David Hauner, Jaewoo Lee, and Hajime Takizawa, "In which exchange rate models do forecasters trust?" IMF Working Paper No.11/116 (May 2010) for revealed preference approach based on published forecasts from Consensus Economics. 6 Ravi Balakrishnan, Stefan Laseen, and Andrea Pescatori (July 2016) 7 Ravi Balakrishnan, Stefan Laseen, and Andrea Pescatori (July 2016) 8 Francisco Maeso-Fernandez, Chiara Osbat, and Bernd Schnatz, "Determinants Of The Euro Real Effective Exchange Rate: A BEER/PEER Approach", Working Paper No.85, European Central Bank (November 2001). 9 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report titled, "A Long, Strange Cycle", dated May 4, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights Global corporate bond markets have seen both ups and downs so far in 2018. Credit spreads in the developed markets and emerging markets, both for investment grade (IG) and lower quality credit tiers, tightened in January. This was followed by a sharp widening of spreads in the two months after the "VIX spike" in early February. Spreads have begun narrowing again in April, but remain above levels that began the year in all major countries with one notable exception - U.S. high-yield. Feature The volatility in corporate credit is a reflection of the growing list of investor worries, coming at a time when yields and spreads still remain near historically low levels in almost all markets. Topping that list is the fear that low unemployment and rising inflation rates will force the major central banks to maintain a more hawkish (or, at least, less dovish) policy bias in the medium term, even with the global economy losing some upside momentum so far this year after a robust 2017. Add in other concerns over U.S. trade policy (i.e. tariffs), U.S. fiscal policy (i.e. wider deficits, more U.S. Treasury issuance) and even signs of potential stresses in global funding markets (i.e. wider LIBOR-OIS spreads), and it is no surprise that more uncertain investors have become less comfortable with the risks stemming from credit exposure. This can be seen in the volatility of mutual fund and ETF flows into riskier bond categories like U.S. high-yield (HY), which saw a whopping -$19.8bn in outflows in Q1/2018, but has already seen +$3.8bn in inflows in April - possibly in response to the surprisingly strong results seen in Q1 U.S. corporate earnings reports.1 Against this backdrop of more uncertainty in credit markets, we are presenting our latest update of the BCA Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) Chartbook. The CHMs are composite indicators of balance sheet and income statement ratios (using both top-down and bottom-up data) that are designed to assess the financial well-being of the overall non-financial corporate sectors in the major developed economies. A brief overview of the methodology is presented in Appendix 1 on page 16. In this CHM Chartbook, we introduce new country coverage to our CHM universe, adding a bottom-up measure for Japan and both top-down and bottom-up CHMs for Canada. After these new additions, we now have CHMs covering 92% of the Barclays Bloomberg Global Corporate Bond Index universe, based on country market capitalization weightings. The broad conclusion from the latest readings on our CHMs is that global credit quality has enjoyed a cyclical improvement in response to the coordinated growth seen in 2017, but with important geographical differences (Chart 1): Chart 1Global Corporates: Now Supported##BR##By Growth, Not Central Banks Global Corporates: Now Supported By Growth, Not Central Banks Global Corporates: Now Supported By Growth, Not Central Banks Credit quality in the U.S. has improved on the back of the solid performance of U.S. profits over the past year, but high leverage and low interest coverage suggest corporates are highly vulnerable to any slowing in economic growth Underlying credit quality in euro area corporates remains supported by low interest rates and the easy money policies of the European Central Bank (ECB), but the CHMs are trending in the wrong direction due to poor profitability metrics - most notably, a very depressed return on capital - and rising leverage among core European issuers U.K. corporate health continues to benefit from a very robust short-term liquidity position, although sluggish profitability and weak interest coverage suggest potential medium-term problems beneath the surface Japanese corporates are in good shape, enjoying strong interest coverage and low leverage, although absolute levels of profitability remain much lower than the other countries in our CHM universe Canadian corporate health has enjoyed some modest cyclical improvement, but low absolute levels on profitability and interest coverage, combined with high leverage, point to underlying risks. Looking ahead, the tailwinds that have supported corporate health and the performance of global corporate debt in the past couple of years - a coordinated cyclical upturn driving solid earnings growth, with low inflation allowing monetary policies to stay accommodative - are becoming headwinds. Inflation expectations are moving higher in most countries, fueled by low unemployment rates and rising oil prices. This is most evident in the U.S., where the additional boost to growth from fiscal stimulus will keep the Fed on its rate hiking path over the next year. A mild inflation upturn is also visible in the euro area and Japan, where the ECB and Bank of Japan (BoJ) are already contributing to a less favorable liquidity backdrop for corporates by reducing the pace of their asset purchases. That trend is projected to continue over the next year, to the detriment of credit market returns that have been boosted by those unusual monetary policies (see the bottom panel of Chart 1). At some point within the 6-12 months, more hawkish central banks will act to slow global economic growth, triggering a more fundamental underperformance of corporates versus government bonds. For now, the backdrop remains supportive, but the clock is ticking as the end of this credit cycle draws closer. U.S. Corporate Health Monitors: A Cyclical Improvement, But Underlying Problems Persist Our top-down CHM for the U.S. has been flashing "deteriorating health" for fourteen consecutive quarters dating back to the middle of 2014 (Chart 2). Yet there has been a modest cyclical improvement seen in many of the individual CHM ratios over the past couple of years - most importantly, return on capital and profit margins - helping push the top-down level to close to the zero line. It is important to note that, due to delays in the reporting of the data used in the top-down U.S. CHM, the latest reading is only from the 4th quarter of 2017.2 A move into "improving health" territory in the 1st quarter of 2018 would require additional increases in cyclical profitability measures. This will be difficult to achieve with U.S. economic growth cooling off a bit in the first three months of 2018 (although the enactment of the Trump corporate tax cuts will likely help support the after-tax measure of margins used in the top-down CHM as 2018 progresses). From a longer-term perspective, the fact that the top-down CHM return on capital metric is well off the post-crisis peak is a disturbing development, given that non-financial corporate profit margins have been stable over the same period. This suggests a more fundamental problem with weak U.S. productivity growth and lower internal rates of return on marginal investments for companies, which is a longer-term concern for U.S. corporate health when the economic growth backdrop becomes less friendly. The bottom-up versions of the U.S. CHMs for IG corporates (Chart 3) and HY companies (Chart 4) have also both improved, with the HY indicator sitting right at the zero line. This confirms that the signal from our top-down CHM is being reflected in both higher-rated and lower quality companies. Yet the longer-term problems of high leverage and low returns on capital are not going away. In particular, HY interest and debt coverage remains near multi-decade lows. Chart 2Top-Down U.S. CHM:##BR##A Cyclical Pause Of A Structural Deterioration Top-Down U.S. CHM: A Cyclical Pause Of A Structural Deterioration Top-Down U.S. CHM: A Cyclical Pause Of A Structural Deterioration Chart 3Bottom-Up U.S. Investment Grade CHM:##BR##A Bit Better, But Still Deteriorating Bottom-Up U.S. Investment Grade CHM: A Bit Better, But Still Deteriorating Bottom-Up U.S. Investment Grade CHM: A Bit Better, But Still Deteriorating What is rather worrying is the fact that IG interest coverage has fallen in recent years, despite high profit margins and historically low corporate borrowing rates. This indicates that the stock of debt has now expanded to a point where the interest expense required to service that debt is eating up a greater share of corporate earnings, even at a time when profit growth is still quite strong. This will raise downgrade risk if corporate borrowing rates were to increase significantly or the U.S. experiences a major economic downturn. Interest costs would rise while earnings deteriorate, which would push interest coverage to historic lows, as was discussed in a recent report from our flagship Bank Credit Analyst service.3 For now, we are still recommending playing the growth phase of the business cycle by staying overweight U.S. corporate debt within global fixed income portfolios (Chart 5). The time to scale back positions will come after U.S. inflation expectations rise to levels consistent with the Fed's inflation target (i.e. when both the 5-year/5-year forward U.S. TIPS breakeven and the outright 10-year TIPS breakevens reach 2.4-2.5%). This will give the Fed confidence to follow through on its rate hike projections, pushing the funds rate to restrictive levels. In turn, that will dampen future corporate profit expectations and raise risk premiums on U.S. corporate bonds. With those breakevens now sitting at the highest point in four years (2.19%), that tipping point for credit markets is drawing nearer. Chart 4Bottom-Up U.S. High-Yield CHM:##BR##A Strong Cyclical Improvement Bottom-Up U.S. High-Yield CHM: A Strong Cyclical Improvement Bottom-Up U.S. High-Yield CHM: A Strong Cyclical Improvement Chart 5The Beginning Of The End Of##BR##The U.S. Credit Cycle The Beginning Of The End Of The U.S. Credit Cycle The Beginning Of The End Of The U.S. Credit Cycle Euro Corporate Health Monitors: Getting Better Thanks To The Economy & The ECB Our top-down Euro Area CHM remains in "improving health" territory, as it has for the entire period since the 2008 crisis. The trend in the indicator has been steadily worsening since 2015, however, and the top-down CHM now sits just below the zero line (Chart 6). The steady deterioration of the top-down CHM is due to declines in profit margins, return on capital and debt coverage. This is offsetting the high and rising levels of short-term liquidity and interest coverage, which are being supported by the easy money policies of the ECB (negative short-term interest rates, liquidity programs designed to prompt low-cost bank lending, and asset purchase programs that include buying of corporate bonds). Compared to the top-down CHMs we have constructed for other countries, there is an even longer lag on data availability from euro area government statisticians. Our top-down euro area CHM is only available to the 3rd quarter of 2017 and, therefore, does not reflect the strong performance of the euro area economy at the end of last year. Our bottom-up versions of the euro area CHMs for IG (Chart 7) and HY (Chart 8), which are based on individual earnings data that is more timely, both show that corporate health continued to improve at the end of 2017. Return on capital for euro area IG issuers (both domestic issuers and foreign issuers in the European bond market) is between 8-10%, similar to the level in the bottom-up U.S. IG CHM but higher than the equivalent measures in our U.K., Japan and Canada CHMs. Both interest coverage and liquidity ratios for euro area IG are also close to U.S. IG levels. The euro area HY CHM is also showing improvement though declining leverage, although these results should be interpreted with caution as the sample size is relatively small. Chart 6Top-Down Euro Area CHM:##BR##Health Improving At A Diminishing Rate Top-Down Euro Area CHM: Health Improving At A Diminishing Rate Top-Down Euro Area CHM: Health Improving At A Diminishing Rate Chart 7Bottom-Up Euro Area##BR##Investment Grade CHMs: Steady Improvement Bottom-Up Euro Area Investment Grade CHMs: Steady Improvement Bottom-Up Euro Area Investment Grade CHMs: Steady Improvement Within the Euro Area, our bottom-up CHMs show that the gap has closed between issuers from the core countries versus those in the periphery, but all still remain in the "improving health" zone. (Chart 9). Return on capital, interest coverage and debt coverage are higher in the core, while liquidity is better in the periphery despite more highly levered balance sheets. Chart 8Bottom-Up Euro Area High-Yield CHMs:##BR##Steady Improvement As Leverage Declines Bottom-Up Euro Area High-Yield CHMs: Steady Improvement As Leverage Declines Bottom-Up Euro Area High-Yield CHMs: Steady Improvement As Leverage Declines Chart 9Bottom-Up Euro Area IG CHMs:##BR##Core Vs. Periphery Bottom-Up Euro Area IG CHMs: Core Vs. Periphery Bottom-Up Euro Area IG CHMs: Core Vs. Periphery While all of our euro area CHMs are indicating healthier balance sheets, that fact is already discounted in the low yields and tight spreads for both IG and HY issuers (Chart 10). Euro area corporates are also benefitting from the supportive bid of the ECB, which buys credit as part of its asset purchase program. We expect the ECB to fully taper its government bond purchases by the end of 2018, while continuing to reinvest the proceeds of maturing debt in 2019 and beyond. It is less clear what the ECB will do with its corporate bond buying program, and there has been some speculation that the ECB could leave its corporate program untouched while tapering the government purchases. That would be a scenario that could be keep euro area credit spreads tight, although the momentum in the euro area economy will likely be the more important driver of credit valuations. If the soft patch in growth seen in the first few months of 2018 continues in the coming months, euro area credit spreads would likely widen, although by less than if the ECB was not buying corporates. We have preferred to own U.S. corporates over Euro Area equivalents for much of the past year. The gap between our top-down CHMs for the U.S. and Europe has proven to be an excellent directional indicator for the relative performance of U.S. credit vs. Europe (Chart 11). That CHM gap continues to favor U.S. credit, although that has not yet flowed through into any meaningful outperformance of U.S. IG and HY corporates. Chart 10European Credit:##BR##Spreads & Yields Have Bottomed Out European Credit: Spreads & Yields Have Bottomed Out European Credit: Spreads & Yields Have Bottomed Out Chart 11Relative Top-Down CHMs##BR##Still Favor The U.S. Over Europe Relative Top-Down CHMs Still Favor The U.S. Over Europe Relative Top-Down CHMs Still Favor The U.S. Over Europe U.K. Corporate Health Monitor: Still No Major Causes For Concern The top-down U.K. CHM remains firmly in the "improving health" zone, led by cyclical improvements in profit margins and interest coverage, combined with very strong short-term liquidity (Chart 12). Return on capital remains near 20-year lows around 6%, however, mirroring levels seen in this ratio in the CHMs for other countries. Profit margins remain at 20%, near the middle of the historical range. U.K. credit has benefitted from highly stimulative monetary policy settings by the Bank of England (BoE) - especially after the 2016 Brexit shock when the central bank not only lowered policy rates, but announced bond buying programs for both Gilts and U.K. corporates. The BoE has begun to take back some of that monetary easing by raising rates 50bps since last November. However, we remain skeptical that the central bank will be able to deliver much additional tightening over the rest of 2018 given sluggish growth, falling realized inflation and lingering Brexit uncertainties weighing on business confidence. An environment of mushy domestic growth and a stand-pat central bank would typically be good for risk assets like corporate credit. Yet both yields and spreads have been drifting higher in recent months, mirroring the trends seen in other global corporate bond markets (Chart 13). It is difficult to paint a scenario of renewed outperformance of U.K. credit versus Gilts without a fresh catalyst like accelerating growth or monetary easing. Yet the combination of accommodative monetary policy with a solid credit backdrop leads us to maintain a neutral recommendation on U.K. corporate debt. Chart 12U.K. Top-Down CHM:##BR##Steady Improvement U.K. Top-Down CHM: Steady Improvement U.K. Top-Down CHM: Steady Improvement Chart 13U.K. Credit: Yields & Spreads##BR##Are Drifting Higher U.K. Credit: Yields & Spreads Are Drifting Higher U.K. Credit: Yields & Spreads Are Drifting Higher Japan Corporate Health Monitor: A Small, But Very Healthy, Market We introduced our Japan CHM in a recent Weekly Report.4 We only have a bottom-up version of the indicator at the moment, as there is not the same consistency of top-down data sources as are available in other countries. Furthermore, the Japanese corporate bond market is small, as companies have historically chosen to borrow money (when needed) through bank loans and not bond issuance. This means that we have a much more limited amount of data available with which to build a Japan CHM, which covers only 43 companies and only goes back to 2006. The Japan CHM has been in "improving health" territory for the past decade, driven by very healthy liquidity levels and rising return on capital and interest coverage (Chart 14). While the trend in the latter two ratios differs from what is shown in all CHMs for other countries, it is noteworthy that Japan's return on capital has risen to a "high" level (6%) that is similar to the current historically low levels in the U.S. and Europe. The comparison is even less flattering when looking at profit margins, which have been steadily improving over the past five years but are only around 6% - less than half the levels seen in the bottom-up IG CHMs for the U.S. and Europe. Turning to the corporate spread, it has slightly widened in 2018, but by a far smaller amount than seen in other corporate bond markets (Chart 15). We have shown that Japanese corporate spreads are highly correlated to the level of the yen. The direct effect is obvious, as a stronger yen will hurt the competitiveness and profitability of the exporter-heavy Japanese non-financial corporate sector. Yet a strong yen is also a reflection of the market's belief in the next move by the BoJ with regards to Japanese monetary policy. On the front, we continue to expect the BoJ to maintain a very dovish policy stance, with no change in the central bank's interest rate targets (both for short-term interest rates and the 10yr JGB yield). The bigger issue will be if the current softness in the Japanese economic data turns into a broader trend, which would damage corporate profits and likely result in some widening of Japanese credit spreads.  Chart 14Japan Bottom-Up CHM:##BR##Very Healthy Japan Bottom-Up CHM: Very Healthy Japan Bottom-Up CHM: Very Healthy Chart 15Japanese Corporates##BR##Will Continue To Outperform JGBs Japanese Corporates Will Continue To Outperform JGBs Japanese Corporates Will Continue To Outperform JGBs Canada Corporate Health Monitor: In Good Shape On A Cyclical Basis In this CHM Chartbook, we are introducing new CHMs for Canada. Like Japan, this is another relatively small market. Canadian corporates represent a slightly larger share of the Bloomberg Barclays Global Investment Grade Corporate Bond Index (5%) than Japan (3%). The average credit rating of the Canadian corporate bond index is A2/A3, which is higher quality than that of the U.S. IG index with but with similar credit spreads over their respective government bonds. However, due to the lack of liquidity and market accessibility, Canadian corporates are considered a niche market that has not gained much attention from global investors. We created both a top-down and bottom-up version of the Canada CHM. For the bottom-up CHM, we gathered data on 85 companies from both the Bloomberg Canadian dollar-denominated IG and HY indices. We combined IG and HY bonds into one set of data given the small sample sizes of each category, which also allows us to compare it to the top-down Canadian CHM that does not distinguish by credit quality. Both Canadian CHMs are firmly in the "improving health" territory (Chart 16). Unsurprisingly, these CHMs have shown a reasonably strong correlation to oil prices, which are a key driver of the Canadian economy through the energy sector. This can be seen in the deterioration in the CHMs after global oil prices collapsed in 2014/15, and the subsequent improvement as oil prices have recovered over the past couple of years. Going through the individual CHM components, leverage has been steadily rising and currently sits around 100%. While Canada's problems with high household debt levels are well known, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) noted in its March 2018 Quarterly Review that high Canadian corporate leverage could also pose a future problem for the Canadian economy.5 Among the other CHM ratios, return on capital and profit margin have fallen for nearly a decade, although there has been some moderate improvement of late thanks to higher oil prices. Debt coverage and interest coverage are also showing some very moderate recovery due to low interest rates - a trend also observed in other countries where central banks have maintained easy monetary policy. Canadian corporate bond valuations are not cheap at the moment, with the index spread around decade-lows of 100bps (Chart 17). BCA's commodity strategists expect global oil prices to continue climbing over the next year, which should support Canadian corporate valuations versus government bonds given past correlations. We also expect the Bank of Canada to continue to slowly raise interest rates over the next year, as well, mimicking moves we also anticipate from the U.S. Federal Reserve. Given the cyclical signs of improving corporate health from our Canadian CHMs, and our bearish views on Canadian government bonds, we are upgrading our recommended allocation on Canadian corporates to overweight while downgrading governments. This is strictly a carry trade, however, as we do not anticipate spreads narrowing much from current levels. Chart 16Canada CHMs:##BR##Cyclical Improvements, Structural Problems Canada CHMs: Cyclical Improvements, Structural Problems Canada CHMs: Cyclical Improvements, Structural Problems Chart 17Canadian Corporates:##BR##No Cyclical Case For Spread Widening Yet Canadian Corporates: No Cyclical Case For Spread Widening Yet Canadian Corporates: No Cyclical Case For Spread Widening Yet Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com Appendix 1: An Overview Of The BCA Corporate Health Monitors The BCA Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) is a composite indicator designed to assess the underlying financial strength of the corporate sector for a country. The Monitor is an average of six financial ratios inspired by those used by credit rating agencies to evaluate individual companies. However, we calculate our ratios using top-down (national accounts) data for profits, interest expense, debt levels, etc. The idea is to treat the entire corporate sector as if it were one big company, and then look at the credit metrics that would be used to assign a credit rating to it. Importantly, only data for the non-financial corporate sector is used in the CHM, as the measures that would be used to measure the underlying health of banks and other financial firms are different than those for the typical company. The six ratios used in the CHM are shown in Table 1 below. To construct the CHM, the individual ratios are standardized, added together, and then shown as a deviation from the medium-term trend. That last part is important, as it introduces more cyclicality into the CHM and allows it to better capture major turning points in corporate well-being. Largely because of this construction, the CHM has a very good track record at heralding trend changes in corporate credit spreads (both for Investment Grade and High-Yield) over many cycles. Top-down CHMs are now available for the U.S., euro area, the U.K. and Canada. The CHM methodology was extended in 2016 to look at corporate health by industry and by credit quality.6 The financial data of a broad set of individual U.S. and euro area companies was used to construct individual "bottom-up" CHMs using the same procedure as the more familiar top-down CHM. Some of the ratios differ from those used in the top-down CHM (see Table 1), largely due to definitional differences in data presented in national income accounts versus those from actual individual company financial statements. The bottom-up CHMs analyze the health of individual sectors, and can be aggregated up into broad CHMs for Investment Grade and High-Yield groupings to compare with credit spreads. In 2018, we introduced bottom-up CHMs for Japan and Canada. With the country expansion of our CHM universe, we now have coverage for 92% of the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Corporate Bond Index (Appendix Chart 1). Table 1Definitions Of Ratios##BR##That Go Into The CHMs BCA Corporate Health Monitor Chartbook Update: Growth Is Papering Over The Cracks BCA Corporate Health Monitor Chartbook Update: Growth Is Papering Over The Cracks Appendix Chart 1We Now Have CHM Coverage For 92% Of##BR##The Developed Market Corporate Bond Universe BCA Corporate Health Monitor Chartbook Update: Growth Is Papering Over The Cracks BCA Corporate Health Monitor Chartbook Update: Growth Is Papering Over The Cracks 1 http://lipperalpha.financial.thomsonreuters.com/2018/04/high-yield-bond-funds-attract-investor-attention/ 2 The majority of data used in the top-down U.S. CHM comes from the Federal Reserve's quarterly Financial Accounts Of The United States Z1 release (formerly known as the Flow of Funds), which is typically published in the third month following the end of a quarter. Thus, those data inputs for Q1/2018 will not be available until June. 3 Please see Section II of the March 2018 edition of The Bank Credit Analyst, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Sticking With The Plan", dated March 13th 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 5 https://www.bis.org/publ/qtrpdf/r_qt1803.htm 6 Please see Section II of The Bank Credit Analyst, "U.S. Corporate Health Gets A Failing Grade", dated February 2016, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. Appendix 2: U.S. Bottom-Up CHMs For Selected Sectors APPENDIX 2: ENERGY SECTOR APPENDIX 2: ENERGY SECTOR APPENDIX 2: MATERIALS SECTOR APPENDIX 2: MATERIALS SECTOR APPENDIX 2: COMMUNICATIONS SECTOR APPENDIX 2: COMMUNICATIONS SECTOR APPENDIX 2: CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY SECTOR APPENDIX 2: CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY SECTOR APPENDIX 2: CONSUMER STAPLES SECTOR APPENDIX 2: CONSUMER STAPLES SECTOR APPENDIX 2: HEALTH CARE SECTOR APPENDIX 2: HEALTH CARE SECTOR APPENDIX 2: INDUSTRIALS SECTOR APPENDIX 2: INDUSTRIALS SECTOR APPENDIX 2: TECHNOLOGY SECTOR APPENDIX 2: TECHNOLOGY SECTOR APPENDIX 2: UTILITIES SECTOR APPENDIX 2: UTILITIES SECTOR The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index BCA Corporate Health Monitor Chartbook Update: Growth Is Papering Over The Cracks BCA Corporate Health Monitor Chartbook Update: Growth Is Papering Over The Cracks Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Trade wars have captured investors' imaginations, but slowing global growth is a more immediate risk for both asset prices and exchange rates. As reflationary forces ebb, slow global growth will help the dollar stage a rally. EUR/USD and GBP/USD could decline over the next two quarters. We are selling EUR/CHF. The AUD has more downside. It is too early to close short AUD/NZD or AUD/JPY. Short EUR/CAD with a first target at 1.44. Feature The growing trade skirmish between China and the U.S. has been blamed for much of the movements in risk assets this year. We do not deny that this has been a very important factor determining the price action of all assets globally; after all, market participants are trying to price in the probability that global supply chains as we currently know them will be forever impaired. If this were to happen, global growth and profits would suffer considerably. This warrants a risk premium, one that is currently being estimated by the market.1 As we have written in recent weeks, this will be a stop-and-go pattern, and behind-the-scene negotiations between China and the U.S. will remain intense until June, when the U.S. tariffs are in fact implemented. However, trade wars are not the only force impacting asset returns today. Global asset prices are also slowly adjusting to a world where reflation is ebbing and where growth may be dipping from its heightened state. This week, we examine the role of liquidity and how it is affecting growth,2 and the implications for various currency pairs. From Reflation To Less Growth Through most of 2016 and 2017, risk assets, EM plays, commodity prices and growth greatly benefited from a wave of global reflation implemented by monetary and fiscal authorities around the world in the wake of a market meltdown that culminated in January 2016. A great victim of this reflationary effort was the U.S. dollar. Once global growth and inflation perked up, the dollar sold off. The U.S. economy is not as levered to global growth as the rest of the world is, thus investors were attracted by greater shift in expected returns outside the U.S. than in the U.S. But how is this reflation story faring today? Global monetary policy is not as supportive as it once was as central banks are not adding to global base money as forcefully as before. For example, the Federal Reserve has begun the rundown of its balance sheet, and the real fed funds rate is closing in on the Laubach-Williams estimate of the neutral rate; the European Central Bank has begun tapering it asset purchases, the European shadow policy rate has increased by 400 basis points; and the Bank of Japan has not hit its JGB target of JPY80 trillion of purchases since mid-2016. Even the Swiss National Bank has not seen any increase in its sight deposits since mid-2017. We like to use excess money growth to measure the impact of these changes in base money growth. Excess money supply growth is measured as the difference between broad money supply growth and money demand as approximated by loan growth. As base money and deposits become scarcer in the banking system relative to the pool of existing loans, the liquidity position of commercial banks deteriorates. This deprives them of the necessary fuel to generate further loan growth down the road. Chart I-1 not only shows that excess money in the U.S., euro area and Japan has been decelerating sharply in recent months, but also that this decline points toward slowing global industrial activity, widening junk spreads and decline EM stock prices. Beyond quantity-based measures of liquidity, price-based measures are sending a similar signal. The widening in the LIBOR-OIS spread has now been well documented. It is true that technical factors such as the issuance of T-bills by the Treasury and the progressive move away from LIBOR as a key benchmark for the pricing of loans partly explain this phenomenon. However, this development is now spreading outside the U.S., with Australia in particular experiencing some especially sharp widening in the spread between deposit rates and the OIS. In fact, the LIBOR-OIS spread for the G-10 as a whole is now at its widest since 2012 (Chart I-2). This also portends a situation where liquidity is becoming scarcer than it once was. Chart I-1Deteriorating Liquidity Conditions Deteriorating Liquidity Conditions Deteriorating Liquidity Conditions Chart I-2Price Of Liquidity Is Increasing Price Of Liquidity Is Increasing Price Of Liquidity Is Increasing Growth is responding to these dynamics, and the softening in PMIs around the world was in full display this week. Interestingly, two bellwethers of global growth are showing especially clear signs of a slowing.3 In Korea, exports have greatly decelerated, industrial production is contracting and PMIs are well below 50 (Chart I-3). Taiwan is also showing some signs of weakness, as exports and export orders are both slowing sharply (Chart I-4). Chart I-3Korea: A Key Global Bellweather Is Slowing Korea: A Key Global Bellweather Is Slowing Korea: A Key Global Bellweather Is Slowing Chart I-4Taiwan Echoes Korea's Message Taiwan Echoes Korea's Message Taiwan Echoes Korea's Message This message is also being relayed by the Japanese economy. Japan's exports to Asia have been slowing sharply as well. As Chart I-5 illustrates, weak Japanese shipments to Asia correlate closely with a weak AUD/JPY, weak EM stock prices and widening junk spreads, suggesting that these specific shipments capture systematic developments behind global growth. Key growth-sensitive currencies are flashing a similar signal. As the top panel of Chart I-6 shows, NZD/JPY has historically rolled over and declined ahead of recessions, growth slowdowns or EM crashes. It has clearly weakened for eight months now. Meanwhile, the bottom panel of Chart I-6 shows the Swedish krona versus the euro. This cross is also a good leading indicator of global growth, and it is clearly pointing south. Chart I-5Japanese Exports Point To A Malaise Japanese Exports Point To A Malaise Japanese Exports Point To A Malaise Chart I-6NZD/JPY And EUR/SEK: Confirming The Risks NZD/JPY And EUR/SEK: Confirming The Risks NZD/JPY And EUR/SEK: Confirming The Risks Finally, one of our favorite gauges to measure the impact of reflation has substantially weakened: the combination of global growth and inflation surprises. This indicator clearly shows that after a massive upsurge in reflationary forces over the past two years, reflation is now waning (Chart I-7). Chart I-7Economic Surprises Are Declining The Reflation Trade In One Chart Economic Surprises Are Declining The Reflation Trade In One Chart Economic Surprises Are Declining If reflation is about pushing growth and prices upward, removing stimulus could have the opposite impact. While it is clear that global growth is slowing, what about inflation? We do not think that global inflation is set to slow significantly: global growth is unlikely to move back below trend, and the U.S. is experiencing increasingly potent domestic inflationary pressures supercharged by fiscal profligacy. That being said, the uptrend in global inflation is nonetheless set to flatten for now as our Global Inflation Diffusion Index based on consumer and producer prices across 27 economies has begun to fall, which normally points to lower global headline and core consumer prices (Chart I-8). Bottom Line: The market's attention has been captured by the dramatic flare-up in trade tensions between the U.S. and China, but a more imminent risk has been garnering less press: the decline of reflation. China sent the first salvo on this front; DM central banks have also slowly been either tightening outright or not expanding monetary aggregates as aggressively as before. As a result, global liquidity is tightening and global growth is slowing. Global inflation is also set to decelerate as well, suggesting the decline in economic activity will not be a real phenomenon only, but a nominal one as well. Key Currency Market Implications One of the key implications of lower global growth and ebbing inflationary pressures is likely to be a stronger dollar. As Chart I-9 illustrates, when our Global Inflation Diffusion Index declines and global inflationary pressures ebb, the dollar tends to strengthen. This makes sense: the dollar does best when global growth weakens, inflation slows and commodity prices soften. This time around, the case for a few quarters of dollar strength may be even better defined. U.S. inflation is unlikely to decelerate as much as non-U.S. inflation as U.S. capacity utilization is tighter, the U.S. labor market is at full employment and America is receiving an extraordinarily large amount of fiscal stimulus at this late stage of the business cycle. Chart I-8No Acceleration For Now In Global Inflation No Acceleration For Now In Global Inflation No Acceleration For Now In Global Inflation Chart I-9Ebbing Inflationary Pressures Will Help The Dollar Ebbing Inflationary Pressures Will Help The Dollar Ebbing Inflationary Pressures Will Help The Dollar Technical considerations suggest the dollar is well placed to take advantage of these dynamics. On a short-term basis, both our intermediate-term oscillator and 13-week rate-of-change measures have formed positive divergences with the DXY itself (Chart I-10). While the pattern does not look as bullish as the one registered in 2014, it evokes deep similarities with the 2011 formation. On a longer-term basis, the dollar is massively oversold, as measured by the 52-week rate of change measure. It is true that it managed to stay at similarly oversold levels for nearly a year in 2003, but back then the dollar was much more expensive than today: the U.S. current account deficit was 4.4% of GDP versus 2.4% today and the basic balance of payments deficit was at 3% of GDP versus 2% today (Chart I-11). It is reasonable that with these stronger fundamentals, the dollar will not need to hit as oversold levels as back then before staging a significant rebound. Chart I-10Positive Divergences For The Greenback Positive Divergences For The Greenback Positive Divergences For The Greenback Chart I-11Dollar Technicals And Valuations: 2003 Vs. Today Dollar Technicals And Valuations: 2003 Vs. Today Dollar Technicals And Valuations: 2003 Vs. Today With global growth slowing, especially in Asia, it is easy to paint a picture where the dollar only strengthens against EM and commodity currencies - the currencies most exposed to both global growth and this specific geographic area. However, while we do see downside in USD/JPY, we expect the greenback to rally against the euro toward EUR/USD 1.15. Our model for EUR/USD shows that the euro is trading 10% above its fair value determined by real rate differentials, the relative slope of yield curves and the price of copper relative to lumber (Chart I-12). In fact, since Europe is more levered to global economic activity than the U.S., these drivers are likely to deteriorate a bit further for the remainder of 2018. Chart I-12EUR/USD Is Vulnerable EUR/USD Is Vulnerable EUR/USD Is Vulnerable GBP/USD also looks set to experience a period of weakness against the greenback. Historically, GBP/USD and EUR/USD have been correlated. This is a simple reflection of the fact that the U.K. has a deeper economic relationship with the euro area than the U.S., and thus benefits from the same economic impulses as the eurozone. Chart I-13GBP/USD: ##br##Extremely Overbought GBP/USD: Extremely Overbought GBP/USD: Extremely Overbought Some pound-specific factors will also play against GBP/USD. As we argued last week, the British domestic economy is rather weak; this week's construction PMI confirmed this assessment.4 Additionally, the British basic balance of payments is in deficit anew. This is not only a reflection of the U.K.'s current account deficit of 4% of GDP, it also reflects the fact that FDI into the U.K. has been melting in response to uncertainty surrounding Brexit. This means the U.K. is dependent upon global liquidity to finance this large deficit. An environment where global growth is set to decelerate and where global liquidity is tightening will make it more expensive to finance this large hole. The fastest means to increase expected returns on British assets to attract foreigners' funds is to depreciate the pound today. Finally, the GBP's annual momentum has hit levels consistent with a reversal in cable (Chart I-13). Staying in Europe, another pair is currently interesting and devoid of taking on any USD risk: EUR/CHF. While we think EUR/CHF has more upside over the remainder of the economic cycle,5 this is unlikely to be the case in the second and third quarters of 2018. The Swiss franc tends to outperform the euro when reflationary forces retreat, when global growth slows and when FX volatility increases - all views we espouse for the coming quarters. Moreover, Switzerland's current account and basic balance-of-payment surpluses are 6.5% of GDP and 11.5% of GDP greater than that of the euro area, providing further attraction in a growth soft spot. Finally, EUR/CHF is massively overbought right now, pointing to heightened vulnerability to the economic risks highlighted above (Chart I-14). We are opening a short EUR/CHF trade this week. In the same vein, we remain bearish EUR/JPY. Finally, in previous reports, we highlighted the AUD as being the currency most at risk from any downshift in global growth.6 Despite its recent weakness, we think the AUD is likely to remain very vulnerable. We have been short AUD/NZD since last October, and we do believe this pair will retest 1.04 before forming a base. Australia is experiencing even less inflationary pressures than New Zealand, and is more exposed to slower global industrial production than its neighbor. Technically, AUD/NZD still has some downside. As Chart I-15 illustrates, the 13-week rate of change measure for AUD/NZD has not yet hit the kind of depressed levels associated with complete capitulation. In fact, the recent breakdown in momentum points toward such capitulation as being imminent. AUD/JPY too is not yet oversold enough to be a buy, especially in the context of slowing global growth. Thus, we continue to recommend investors stay short this pair. Chart I-14Technical Indicators Confirm ##br##The Fundamental Vulnerability Of EUR/CHF Technical Indicators Confirm The Fundamental Vulnerability Of EUR/CHF Technical Indicators Confirm The Fundamental Vulnerability Of EUR/CHF Chart I-15AUD/NZD Has A Little Bit More Downside AUD/NZD Has A Little Bit More Downside AUD/NZD Has A Little Bit More Downside Bottom Line: Ebbing reflationary forces suggest the trade-weighted dollar is likely to rally over the coming months. We do see upside for the USD against EM and commodity currencies, but against European currencies as well. Only the yen is anticipated to buck this trend. Within the commodity-currency complex, we foresee that the AUD will suffer the most, and the CAD the least. Within the European currency complex, we are selling EUR/CHF. We are not selling EUR/USD as we are already long the DXY. A Cyclical Opportunity To Sell EUR/CAD This trade is an attractive means to bet on global growth slowing, especially relative to the U.S. As we have argued, U.S. financial conditions have eased relative to the rest of the world, the U.S. is enjoying large injections of fiscal stimulus and it is less exposed to declining global growth. As a result, we anticipate the outperformance of the U.S. ISM to continue relative to global PMIs. Historically, this is an environment where EUR/CAD tends to depreciate (Chart I-16). This is because while 75% of Canadian exports go to the U.S., only 13% of euro area exports end up there. Thus, Canada is much more exposed to the U.S. business cycle than Europe, who is exposed to the rest of the world's. Domestic factor also argues in favor of shorting EUR/CAD. Canadian core inflation is in an uptrend, and at 2% is at the Bank of Canada's target. European core inflation meanwhile only stands at 1%. Moreover, Canada's unemployment's rate is already 0.5% below equilibrium, while the euro area's is 0.4% above such equilibrium (Chart I-17). Thus, European wages and service sector inflation is likely to continue to lag behind Canada's. As a result, we continue to expect the BoC to keep hiking in line with the Fed, or another three times this year. The same cannot be said for the ECB. Chart I-16EUR/CAD: A Play Global Vs. U.S. Growth EUR/CAD: A Play Global Vs. U.S. Growth EUR/CAD: A Play Global Vs. U.S. Growth Chart I-17No Slack In Canada, Plenty In Europe No Slack In Canada, Plenty In Europe No Slack In Canada, Plenty In Europe Making the trade even more attractive, EUR/CAD is currently trading at a premium on many metrics. First, our augmented interest rate parity models show that the EUR/CAD trades anywhere between 10-15% above fair value (Chart I-18).7 Relative productivity trends have been a reliable long-term indicator of the path for EUR/CAD. On this metric as well, EUR/CAD is trading at a significant 9% premium (Chart I-19). Finally, EUR/CAD has tended to trend in an inverse relationship with oil prices. Today, it is well above levels implied by various oil prices (Chart I-20). Chart I-18EUR/CAD Trades At A Premium To Rate Differentials... EUR/CAD Trades At A Premium To Rate Differentials... EUR/CAD Trades At A Premium To Rate Differentials... Chart I-19...At A Premium To Relative Productivity... ...At A Premium To Relative Productivity... ...At A Premium To Relative Productivity... In our view, a key factor explains these discounts: Fears regarding the future of the North American Free Trade Agreement. An abandonment of NAFTA would hurt Canadian growth and prompt the BoC to be much more dovish than we anticipate. However, while there will be some small tweaks to NAFTA, the probability of a major overhaul that deeply affects the North American supply chain has declined, as Canada and Mexico are being exempted from steel and aluminum tariffs and as the White House has softened its stance on the U.S. content of Canadian auto exports back to the U.S. Our Geopolitical team assesses that the probability of a major NAFTA overhaul has declined from 50% to less than 20%, especially as Trump now has bigger fish to fry with China. As a result of these improvements in negotiations, EUR/CAD is potentially set to decline toward 1.44 over the rest of 2018, especially as our oil strategists continue to expect Brent prices to average US$74/bbl this year. Meanwhile, the ratio of copper prices to oil prices, which has been a decent early directional indicator for this cross, suggests the timing is ripe to bet against euro/CAD (Chart I-21), especially as slowing global growth will further weigh on copper relative to oil. Chart I-20...And A Premium To Oil ...And A Premium To Oil ...And A Premium To Oil Chart I-21Where Copper-To-Oil Goes, So Does EUR/CAD Where Copper-To-Oil Goes, So Does EUR/CAD Where Copper-To-Oil Goes, So Does EUR/CAD Bottom Line: An attractive means to bet on slowing global growth while benefiting from the impact of the U.S.'s fiscal stimulus is to short EUR/CAD. Not only is this cross a play on the differential between international and U.S. growth, it is also currently trading at a large premium on various metrics. Dissipating risks that NAFTA will be abrogated in a major way are providing an attractive cyclical entry point to short EUR/CAD, with an initial target of 1.44. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com Haaris Aziz, Research Analyst haarisa@bcaresearch.com 1 For more analysis on trade wars and the current China/U.S. spat, please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Are Tariffs Good or Bad For The Dollar?" dated March 9, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com as well as the Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Trump's Demands On China", dated April 4, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 We have already gone over the role of China at length to explain the global growth slowdown. For detailed discussions on the topic, Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "The Return Of Macro Volatility", dated March 16, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 3 For more indicators pointing toward slower global growth, Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Canaries In the Coal Mine Alert: EM/JPY Carry Trades", dated December 1, 2017 and "Canaries In the Coal Mine Alert 2: More On EM Carry Trades And Global Growth", dated December 15, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Do not Get Flat-Footed By Politics", dated March 30, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "The SNB Doesn't Want Switzerland To Become Japan", dated March 23, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "From Davos To Sydney, With a Pit Stop in Frankfurt", dated January 26, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 7 EUR/CAD trades 15% above a fair value model, that does not encapsulate the trend in the cross. If the recent cross is taken into account through a model that incorporates mean-reversion, EUR/CAD trades at a more modest 10% above its fair value. Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.S. has been mixed: ISM Manufacturing came in slightly weaker than expected at 59.3; However, ISM Prices Paid was a very strong number, 78.1, up from the previous 74.2; Services PMI and Non-Manufacturing ISM also disappointed expectations; The trade balance in February fell to US$ -57.6 bn; Initial jobless claims, however, came in much higher than expected at 242,000. The dollar is now up more than 2% from its February lows. This has been driven by slowing global growth, particularly in Korean and Taiwanese trade data. The greenback should fare well in this environment. Report Links: Do Not Get Flat-Footed By Politics - March 30, 2018 Are Tariffs Good Or Bad For The Dollar? - March 9, 2018 The Dollar Deserves Some Real Appreciation - March 2, 2018 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 European data was mixed: German retail sales disappointed, growing at a 0.7% monthly pace and a 1.3% annual pace; German Manufacturing PMI came in slightly lower than expected at 58.2; European unemployment dropped to 8.5% as expected; Headline inflation improved to 1.4% also as expected, but core inflation came in weaker than expected at 1%. The euro is set to experience a period of correction as inflation in the Eurozone remains weak and global growth is slowing, as Asian economic data increasingly shows. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 The Euro's Tricky Spot - February 2, 2018 From Davos To Sydney, With a Pit Stop In Frankfurt - January 26, 2018 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan has been mixed: Housing starts yearly growth outperformed despite coming in at -2.6%. The Nikkei manufacturing PMI surprised on the strong side, coming in at 53.1 However, the Markit Services PMI underperformed expectations coming in at 50.9. USD/JPY has been relatively flat this week. Overall, we expect that the yen will continue to strengthen, given that the market will continue to be rattled by the increasing a weakening in global growth. This risk off environment should benefit the yen. However, given the slowdown in Japanese economic data, the BoJ will eventually have to intervene to make sure that the rise in the yen does not derail the economic recovery and particularly, its inflation objective. Report Links: The Yen's Mighty Rise Continues... For Now - February 16, 2018 Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC! - January 12, 2018 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. has been mixed: Markit Manufacturing PMI outperformed expectations, coming in at 55.1. It also increased slightly from last month's reading. However PMI construction underperformed expectations substantially, coming in at 47. This is the lowest level in more than 2 years. GBP/USD has been relatively flat this week. Overall the latest construction PMI number confirms our analysis: the uncertainty caused by Brexit is weighing heavily on Britain's housing market. This weakness in the housing sector, coupled with a strong pound, will likely limit how high British interest rates can go. Therefore GBP/USD has downside on a tactical basis. Report Links: Do Not Get Flat-Footed By Politics - March 30, 2018 Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 The Euro's Tricky Spot - February 2, 2018 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 Australian data was weak: The RBA's Commodity Index in SDR terms contracted by 2.1% annually, much more than the expected 0.1% contraction; Building permits contracted on a monthly basis at a rate of 6.2%, while also contracting at a 3.1% pace in annual terms; However, retail sales did pick up in monthly terms at a rate of 0.6%. At the monetary policy meeting on Tuesday, Governor Philip Lowe referenced the increase in short-term funding costs that have spilled over from the U.S. into foreign markets owing to higher volatility, particularly in Australia. An escalation of a trade war will also prove to be very damaging for the Australian economy, which is a large export-based and commodity-dependent nation. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 From Davos To Sydney, With a Pit Stop In Frankfurt - January 26, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 NZD/USD has been flat this week. Overall we expect this cross to weaken going forward, given that New Zealand is one of the most open economies in the G10, and thus, it stands to risks the most from both an increasing risk of trade wars and slowing global growth. Moreover, there are also some negative aspects of New Zealand on a more structural basis, as the neutral rate is set to be lowered. This is because the populist government is looking to lower immigration while also implementing a dual mandate for the central bank. All of these factors will cause the kiwi to suffer on a long term basis. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 Data out of Canada was mixed: Manufacturing PMI came in line with expectations of 55.7; Exports and Imports for February came in at CAD 45.94 bn and CAD 48.63 bn, respectively, sinking the trade balance to CAD -2.69 bn. The CAD received a fillip on Tuesday as President Trump hopes to conclude preliminary negotiations for NAFTA by the end of next week. While the outcome for these negotiations remains uncertain, the Canadian economy is still in great shape, with a tight labor market, high wage growth and a closing output gap. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC! - January 12, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 CHF Technicals 1 CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 CHF Technicals 2 CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland has been mixed: Headline inflation outperformed expectations, coming in at 0.8%. Real retail sales yearly growth outperformed expectations, coming in at -0.2%. However, the SVME PMI underperformed expectations, coming in at 60.3. EUR/CHF has been relatively flat this week. Overall, we expect EUR/CHF to have further upside on a long-term basis. The Swiss economy is still weak and inflationary pressures are tepid. This means that any further appreciation by the franc will weigh heavily on the SNB's goals. While for now EUR/CHF could suffer as global growth declines, the SNB will fight this trend in order for them to achieve their inflation target. Thus, any rally in the CHF will prove temporary. Report Links: The SNB Doesn't Want Switzerland To Become Japan - March 23, 2018 Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 USD/NOK has been relatively flat this week. Overall, the krone should outperform most other commodity currencies given that oil should perform better than the rest of the commodity complex in the current environment. While all commodities would be affected by a possible slowdown in global growth and Chinese industrial production, oil will probably hold up the best given that advanced economies consume a greater proportion of oil than they do of other commodities, making oil less sensitive to gyrations in global industrial activity than metals. Moreover, the supply backdrop for oil remains more favorable than that of other commodities thanks to OPEC and Russia's production restrains. All of these developments should help the NOK outperform currencies like the NZD and the AUD. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC! - January 12, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 Swedish data was disappointing: Manufacturing PM came in at 55.9, below last month's 59.9; New Orders increased annually only by 1.3% compared to 8.7% in January; Industrial production contracted in monthly terms by 0.5%, and grew annually by 5.7%, but it was still a deceleration relative to the previous 7.7% reading. The SEK has been weakening because of three factors: the talk of trade wars, the slowdown in the global manufacturing sector, and Sweden's housing bubble. While these risks are very real, Sweden's favorable macro backdrop of a cheap currency, a high basic balance of payments surplus and an economy operating above capacity mean that inflation will pick up meaningfully. This will prompt the SEK to rally once global growth can find its floor. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Canaries In The Coal Mine Alert 2: More On EM Carry Trades And Global Growth - December 15, 2017 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights In this Weekly Report, we present our semi-annual chartbook of the BCA Central Bank Monitors. When the chartbook was last published in September 2017, the main message was that less accommodative monetary policy was required in the developed economies. This was largely driven by solid global growth and diminishing economic slack visible in measures like falling unemployment rates and rising capacity utilization. Since then, there have been multiple rate hikes in the U.S., single rate increases in Canada and the U.K., and a slowing of the pace of central bank asset purchases in the euro area and Japan. No other central banks have made any moves, however, with inflation still struggling to return to policymaker targets in most countries. A new element that central banks are dealing with is the increased financial market volatility seen in 2018. Yet the BCA Central Bank Monitors continue to point to a need for tighter monetary policy in all countries (Chart of the Week). This means policymakers are unlikely to "come to the rescue" of less stable financial markets through more dovish (and bond bullish) policy without evidence that slower global growth was leading to an easing of cyclical inflation pressures. Chart of the WeekGreater Divergences Between Our Central Bank Monitors Now Versus 2016/17 Greater Divergences Between Our Central Bank Monitors Now Versus 2016/17 Greater Divergences Between Our Central Bank Monitors Now Versus 2016/17 Feature An Overview Of The BCA Central Bank Monitors Chart 2The Cyclical Backdrop Remains Bond Bearish The Cyclical Backdrop Remains Bond Bearish The Cyclical Backdrop Remains Bond Bearish The BCA Central Bank Monitors are composite indicators designed to measure the cyclical growth and inflation pressures that can influence future monetary policy decisions. The economic data series used to construct the Monitors are not the same for every country, but the list of indicators generally measure the same things (i.e. manufacturing cycles, domestic demand strength, commodity prices, labor market conditions, exchange rates, etc). The data series are standardized and combined to form the Monitors. Readings above the zero line for each Monitor indicate pressures for central banks to raise interest rates, and vice versa. Through the nexus between growth, inflation, and market expectations of future interest rate changes, the Monitors do exhibit broad correlations to government bond yields in the Developed Markets (Chart 2). Currently, the Monitors are above the zero line for all countries for which we have built the indicator. This implies that the conditions are not yet present to expect a period of declining global bond yields driven by more dovish central banks. Yet differences in the trajectories of the Monitors have opened up. The BoE, RBA and RBNZ Monitors have fallen well off their peaks, while the Fed, ECB, BoC and even the BoJ Monitors are all still at or close to recent highs. In each BCA Central Bank Monitor Chartbook, we include a new chart for each country that we have not shown previously. In this edition, we show the Monitors plotted against our 12-Month Discounters, which measure the expected change in interest rates over the following year taken from OIS curves. Fed Monitor: Market Turbulence Not Yet Enough To Change Fed Plans Our Fed Monitor remains in the "tight money required" zone, signalling that cyclical pressures are still pointing toward additional Fed rate hikes (Chart 3A). FOMC officials are now expressing strong conviction that the Fed's growth and inflation forecasts for 2018 will be realized, and even upgraded those projections last month. That increased confidence comes amid signs that core inflation is finally moving higher after last year's surprising slump (Chart 3B). Chart 3AU.S.: Fed Monitor U.S.: Fed Monitor U.S.: Fed Monitor Chart 3BNo Spare Capacity In The U.S. No Spare Capacity In The U.S. No Spare Capacity In The U.S. The growth and inflation subcomponents of the Fed Monitor have both accelerated since our last Central Bank Monitor Chartbook was published last September. In particular, the inflation subcomponent is on the cusp of breaching the zero line for the first time since 2011 (Chart 3C). The Fed Monitor (unlike the other Central Bank Monitors) includes a Financial Conditions component that is rolling over from very elevated (i.e. supportive) levels. Chart 3CSteady Pressure On The Fed To Tighten, But More From Growth Than Inflation Steady Pressure On The Fed To Tighten Steady Pressure On The Fed To Tighten The sharp sell-off in U.S. equity markets seen since early February is a development that would typically give the Fed pause on the need to tighten monetary policy further. Yet there are no real signs - yet - that any slowing of U.S. growth is in the cards for the next few quarters. Leading indicators are still climbing, employment growth has been accelerating in recent months, and both consumer and business confidence remain around multi-year highs. The Fed is likely to deliver on its projection of an additional 50bps of rate hikes in 2018, which is already discounted in money markets (Chart 3D). Additional increases beyond that in 2019 are still likely to occur, barring any signs that the current financial market volatility is altering the current rising trends in growth and inflation. Chart 3DThe Fed Will Continue To Hike In 2018 & 2019 The Fed Will Continue To Hike In 2018 The Fed Will Continue To Hike In 2018 BoE Monitor: Diminishing Pressures To Hike The Bank of England (BoE) Monitor is drifting lower, but remains in the "tighter money required" zone as it has since late 2015 (Chart 4A). Despite that persistent signal, the BoE has raised the base rate only once over that period - in November of last year. On the surface, inflation pressures remain strong. The U.K. unemployment rate is well below NAIRU with an output gap that is now estimated to be closed (Chart 4B). Yet realized inflation has peaked, largely because the British pound is now up 9% off the post-Brexit 2016 lows. Rapid declines in pipeline price pressures (PPI, imported goods price inflation) point to additional slowing of CPI inflation in the next several months. Chart 4AU.K.: BoE Monitor U.K.: BoE Monitor U.K.: BoE Monitor Chart 4BTight Capacity In The U.K. Tight Capacity In The U.K. Tight Capacity In The U.K. Meanwhile, the economic picture looks mixed. Leading economic indicators have rolled over, as have cyclical measures like the manufacturing PMI and industrial production. Yet at the same time, recent readings on both consumer and business confidence have shown modest improvement. Looking at the breakdown of our BoE Monitor, both the growth and inflation sub-components of the indicator are now falling (Chart 4C). Given the decelerating path of leading economic indicators, and with the currency-fueled rise in U.K. inflation now starting to reverse, we think the BoE will be hard pressed to deliver more than the 41bps of rate hikes over the next year currently discounted in U.K. money markets (Chart 4D). Chart 4CGrowth & Inflation Components Of The BoE Monitor Are Slowing Growth & Inflation Components Of The BoE Monitor Are Slowing Growth & Inflation Components Of The BoE Monitor Are Slowing Chart 4DThe BoE Will Not Deliver More Hikes In 2018 Than Currently Discounted The BoE Will Not Deliver More Hikes In 2018 Than Currently Discounted The BoE Will Not Deliver More Hikes In 2018 Than Currently Discounted We continue to recommend an overweight stance on Gilts, which continue to trade as a "defensive" lower-beta alternative to U.S. Treasuries and core European debt, within dedicated global government bond portfolios. ECB Monitor: Tapering? Yes. Rate Hikes? No. Our European Central Bank (ECB) Monitor has been grinding higher over the past couple of years and broke sustainably above zero in July 2017 (Chart 5A). The broad-based cyclical economic upturn in the euro area has continued to absorb spare capacity, with the unemployment rate for the entire region now down to 8.6%, right at the OECD's NAIRU estimate (Chart 5B). Chart 5AEuro Area: ECB Monitor Euro Area: ECB Monitor Euro Area: ECB Monitor Chart 5BEuro Area Economy Now At Full Capacity Euro Area Economy Now At Full Capacity Euro Area Economy Now At Full Capacity Despite strong growth, headline (1.1%) and core (1.0%) inflation remain well below the ECB's target of "just below" 2%. This lack of upward momentum flies in the face of the inflation subcomponent of our ECB Monitor, which has been steadily moving higher for the past three years (Chart 5C). Chart 5CRising Pressure On ECB To Tighten Monetary Conditions Rising Pressure On ECB To Tighten Monetary Conditions Rising Pressure On ECB To Tighten Monetary Conditions The ECB remains on track to deliver some of the monetary tightening that our ECB Monitor is calling for later this year, but it will not be through interest rate hikes (Chart 5D). ECB officials have made it clear that a tapering of asset purchases will take place when the current program ends this September. However, it will take more evidence that inflation will sustainably return to the ECB's target before rate hikes will commence. Chart 5DECB Will Deal With Tightening Pressures First By Tapering Asset Purchases ECB Will Deal With Tightening Pressures First By Tapering Asset Purchases ECB Will Deal With Tightening Pressures First By Tapering Asset Purchases The recent softening of cyclical euro area economic data like manufacturing PMIs, combined with underwhelming inflation prints, justifies the ECB's cautiousness on rates. Although leading economic indicators are still pointing to another year of above-trend growth in 2018. The likelihood of a taper later this year leads us to recommend a moderate underweight stance on core European government bonds, but with a neutral stance on Peripheral European debt which benefits from an expanding economy. BoJ Monitor: Still Far Too Soon To Expect Any Policy Changes The Bank of Japan (BoJ) Monitor has inched into the "tighter money required" zone for the first time since 2007 (Chart 6A), thanks largely to a robust economy. Yet while growth has been enjoying strong momentum, inflation remains stuck below the BoJ's 2% target - even with record low unemployment and a positive output gap (Chart 6B). Chart 6AJapan: BoJ Monitor Japan: BoJ Monitor Japan: BoJ Monitor Chart 6BJapanese Inflation Still Too Low Japanese Inflation Still Too Low Japanese Inflation Still Too Low Japanese businesses remain reluctant to boost wages despite robust profitability and a tight labor market. This makes it difficult for the BoJ to hit the 2% inflation target even using extreme policy tools like negative interest rates and asset purchases. Yet even these policies are approaching limits. Liquidity in the Japanese government bond (JGB) market is severely impaired with the BoJ now owning nearly one-half of all outstanding JGBs. This is the main reason why the BoJ shifted from targeting a 0% yield on the 10-year JGB back in September 2016, aiming to target the price of bonds purchased instead of the quantity. With both the inflation and growth components of our BoJ Monitor are now above the zero line (Chart 6C), a case could be made for the BoJ to consider raising its yield target on the 10-year JGB. In our view, any shift in the BoJ yield curve target will only happen if the yen is much weaker (the 115-120 range), core inflation and wage growth both hit at least 1.5%, and global bond yields hit new cyclical highs (i.e. the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield approaching 3.5%). Chart 6CGrowth & Inflation Pressures Have Picked Up In Japan Tight Labor Market, But Still No Inflation Tight Labor Market, But Still No Inflation We continue to recommend an overweight stance on Japan, as the BoJ remains a long way from signaling to the markets that interest rate expectations must begin to rise (Chart 6D). Chart 6DThe BoJ Will Not Signal Any Change In Policy In 2018 The BoJ Will Not Signal Any Change In Policy In 2018 The BoJ Will Not Signal Any Change In Policy In 2018 BoC Monitor: Still Following The Fed The Bank of Canada (BoC) Monitor has stayed above the zero line since the beginning of 2017 (Chart 7A). The BoC has hiked rates three times since last summer, with Canada's robust growth justifying the tightening of monetary policy. Real GDP expanded by 3% in 2017, enough to push Canada's output gap into positive territory and drive the unemployment rate (5.8%) to below NAIRU (6.5%). As a result, both headline and core inflation are now back to the midpoint of the BoC's 1-3% target range (Chart 7B). Chart 7ACanada: BoC Monitor Canada: BoC Monitor Canada: BoC Monitor Chart 7BNo Spare Capacity In The Canadian Economy No Spare Capacity In The Canadian Economy No Spare Capacity In The Canadian Economy Growth has cooled a bit recently, though, most notably in consumer spending and housing data. In addition, the inflation component of the BoC Monitor has slowed and is diverging from the rising growth component (Chart 7C). These developments may be a sign that previous BoC hikes are starting to have an impact, although overall GDP growth remains well above trend and leading economic indicators are not slowing. Chart 7CA Divergence In The Growth & Inflation Components Of The BoC Monitor A Divergence In The Growth & Inflation Components Of The BoC Monitor A Divergence In The Growth & Inflation Components Of The BoC Monitor Looking ahead, the Trump administration's rising protectionist rhetoric is a potential threat to both Canada's economy and the value of the Canadian dollar. However, Canada was exempted from the recent tariffs imposed on U.S. steel and aluminum imports, suggesting that Trump may only seek a renegotiation, rather than a tearing up, of NAFTA. We continue to recommend an underweight stance on Canadian government bonds. Only 51bps of rate hikes are discounted over the rest of 2018 (Chart 7D), a pace that can be surpassed if the BoC follows its typical behavior of following the policy lead of the U.S. Fed, which is still expected to deliver 2-3 more rate hikes this year. Chart 7DThe BoC Will Continue Its Hiking Cycle This Year The BoC Will Continue Its Hiking Cycle This Year The BoC Will Continue Its Hiking Cycle This Year RBA Monitor: Lagging Behind While our Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) Monitor remains in "tighter policy required" territory, it has pulled back considerably over the past four months and is now near the zero line (Chart 8A). This move suggests that there is no imminent need to adjust monetary policy, given tepid inflation pressures. Despite the recent surge in employment growth, labor markets still have plenty of slack. Part time employment as a percentage of total employment and the underemployment rate are both near all-time highs. Wage growth is weak and a substantial recovery is unlikely given that real GDP growth slowed in Q4 and the output gap is still wide (Chart 8B). Chart 8AAustralia: RBA Monitor Australia: RBA Monitor Australia: RBA Monitor Chart 8BAustralian Inflation Remains Subdued Australian Inflation Remains Subdued Australian Inflation Remains Subdued Looking ahead, consumption is at risk. Real wage growth has been nonexistent, so households have supported their spending by reducing savings. However, the rate of increase for house prices has slowed and prices in Sydney actually declined in Q4. If overall house prices were to decline going forward, then the lack of a wealth effect boost would force already massively-indebted consumers to reverse the savings downtrend and cut spending. Both headline and underlying inflation remain below the RBA's target range of 2-3%, with policymakers expecting underlying inflation to reach 2% only in June of 2019 with just a gradual improvement in labor markets. The inflation component of our RBA Monitor has already declined significantly on the back of collapsing iron ore prices, softening survey-based inflation measures and cooling house prices (Chart 8C). Chart 8CThe Inflation Component Of The RBA Monitor Has Plunged The Inflation Component Of The RBA Monitor Has Plunged The Inflation Component Of The RBA Monitor Has Plunged As such, we maintain our overweight position on Australian government debt, as the RBA will not even deliver the one 25bp rate hike in 2018 currently discounted by markets (Chart 8D). Chart 8DThe RBA Will Not Deliver The Discounted Rate Hikes In 2018 The RBA Will Not Deliver The Discounted Rate Hikes In 2018 The RBA Will Not Deliver The Discounted Rate Hikes In 2018 RBNZ Monitor: No Inflation, No Rate Hikes Our Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) Monitor, which was the most elevated of all our Central Bank Monitors in last September's update, has plunged sharply since then (Chart 9A). Inflation remains stubbornly below the midpoint of the RBNZ's 1-3% target range, even with a tight labor market and no spare capacity in the New Zealand economy (Chart 9B). Chart 9ANew Zealand: RBNZ Monitor New Zealand: RBNZ Monitor New Zealand: RBNZ Monitor Chart 9BNZ At Full Employment, But Inflation Peaking NZ At Full Employment, But Inflation Peaking NZ At Full Employment, But Inflation Peaking Both the growth and inflation sub-components have fallen sharply, with the inflation measure now down below the zero line (Chart 9C). A firmer New Zealand dollar, the flipside of the weaker U.S. dollar, has played a large role in dampening traded goods price inflation. Chart 9CStrong NZ Inflation Pressures, But Growth May Be Peaking Strong NZ Inflation Pressures, But Growth May Be Peaking Strong NZ Inflation Pressures, But Growth May Be Peaking The February RBNZ Monetary Policy Report expressed an optimistic view on growth supported by elevated terms of trade, population growth, fiscal stimulus and low interest rates. Headline CPI inflation, however, is not projected to rise back to 2% level until 2020. Unsurprisingly, the RBNZ is signaling no change in policy rates until then, even with the central bank projecting the New Zealand dollar to weaken in the next couple of years. We have been recommending long positions in New Zealand government debt versus other developed market debt since last May. New Zealand bonds have outperformed strongly over that period, as markets have priced in no change in rates from RBNZ (Chart 9D) unlike other countries where rate hikes were repriced and, in some cases, delivered. With the RBNZ on hold for at least this year and likely much of 2019, we our staying long New Zealand government bonds. Chart 9DRBNZ Will Stay On Hold In 2018 RBNZ Will Stay On Hold In 2018 RBNZ Will Stay On Hold In 2018 Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Patrick Trinh, Associate Editor Patrick@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index BCA Central Bank Monitor Chartbook: Policymakers Are In A Tough Spot BCA Central Bank Monitor Chartbook: Policymakers Are In A Tough Spot Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns