Australia
Highlights Despite a tightening in Chinese monetary conditions, dollar bloc currencies have continued to rally. Rising global reserves and strong carry inflows into EM prompted by low global financial volatility have created plentiful liquidity conditions in EM, supporting dollar-bloc currencies. The beginning of the Fed's balance-sheet runoff could reverse these dynamics, hurting the AUD, CAD and NZD in the process. Monitor U.S. inflation, cross-currency basis swap spreads, gold, EM currencies and Chinese monetary conditions to judge when a break in dollar-bloc currencies will materialize. Feature The rally in the dollar-bloc currencies since July 2016 has been nothing short of stunning. We did highlight in April last year that commodity currencies had room to appreciate, but we did not anticipate such a prolonged move.1 In fact, the up leg that began in April 2017 caught us by surprise. At this juncture, it is essential to analyze whether or not the bull move in commodity currencies has further to run, or whether it is in its final innings. A principal component analysis of the returns of the AUD, the CAD, and the NZD shows that despite differing central bank postures in the three countries, a simple common factor explains 86% of their variability against the USD since 2010 (Chart I-1). Because of this result, our focus in this week's report are the global forces that may be driving this factor. Today, the key risk to the dollar-bloc currencies is global liquidity tightening. Behind this danger lies the removal of policy accommodation in the U.S., and the risks to carry trades created by the already-very-low volatility of risk assets. A China-Fueled Rebound, But Something Is Amiss... The key reason behind the rally in commodity currencies has been improvement in EM growth relative to DM economies since 2016 (Chart I-2). This growth outperformance has been underpinned by a few factors. Chart I-1One Factor To Drive Them All
One Factor To Drive Them All
One Factor To Drive Them All
Chart I-2Commodity Currencies And EM Growth
Commodity Currencies And EM Growth
Commodity Currencies And EM Growth
China has played an essential role. As the Chinese economy decelerated in 2015, Beijing implemented a large amount of fiscal stimulus, which saw government spending grow at a 25% annual rate in November 2015. Due to the lags of stimulus on the economy, the full force of that stimulus was felt in 2016. Direct fiscal goosing was not the only road taken by Beijing. The Chinese authorities also applied a considerable amount of monetary pressure on China. After tightening massively through 2015, Chinese monetary conditions eased greatly in 2016 as real borrowing costs collapsed from a peak of 10.5% in the fall of 2015 to a trough of -3.5% earlier this year (Chart I-3). Directed expansion of credit through banking channels was also used to support the economy, resulting in a surge in the Chinese credit impulse. However, in recent months these positives have dissipated. Chinese money growth has slowed, and the combined credit and fiscal impulse has been lessened. Yet EM equity prices, copper prices and commodity currencies are all continuing their rally, and are now re-testing their May 2015 levels - levels last experienced right before EM assets and related plays entered a vicious tailspin that lasted all the way until January 2016 (Chart I-4). Chart I-3China: From Tailwind ##br##To Headwind
China: From Tailwind To Headwind
China: From Tailwind To Headwind
Chart I-4EM, Copper, Dollar Bloc: ##br##Back To May 2015 Levels
EM, Copper, Dollar Bloc: Back To May 2015 Levels
EM, Copper, Dollar Bloc: Back To May 2015 Levels
Bottom Line: The rally in dollar-bloc currencies that begun in January 2016 was powered by improving growth performance within EM economies. The original driver behind this move was Chinese monetary and fiscal stimulus. However, even once the easing faded, EM plays, including the AUD, the CAD and the NZD continued to appreciate. Another factor is currently at play. ...And This Something Is Global Liquidity Our view is that global liquidity is now the key factor supporting EM plays in general and dollar-bloc currencies in particular. Since the end of 2016, we have seen a rebound in the Federal Reserve's custody holdings - one that has happened as foreign central banks resumed their purchases of Treasury securities (Chart I-5). Fed custodial holdings for other monetary authorities are a key component of our dollar-based liquidity indicator. A rebound in this indicator tends to be associated with a surge in high-powered money globally. The capital outflows from China have dissipated, helping high-powered money find its way into EM plays and the commodity-currency complex. Private FX settlements - a proxy for the Chinese private sector's selling of yuan - was CNY -43 billion in July, a massive improvement compared to the CNY 800 billion in outflows experienced in August 2015 (Chart I-6). Through stringent administrative controls and a lessening of deflation, China gained the upper hand over its capital account. This development has two implications: it means that China does not need to sell reserves anymore, and in fact has been accumulating Treasurys since February 2017. It also means that investors are now less afraid of a sudden devaluation in the CNY, which has heartened risk-taking globally - especially in assets most exposed to China, which includes EM, commodities and dollar-bloc currencies. Chart I-5Easing Global Liquidty In 2017
Easing Global Liquidty In 2017
Easing Global Liquidty In 2017
Chart I-6Chinese Capital Account Under Control
Chinese Capital Account Under Control
Chinese Capital Account Under Control
The collapse in the volatility of risk assets has been an additional element helping global liquidity make its way into EM plays and commodity currencies. As Chart I-7 illustrates, there is a relationship between the realized volatility of the U.S. stock market and the performance of dollar-bloc currencies. The first hunch is to dismiss the relationship as an artifact of the fact that both stock prices and commodity currencies are "risk-on" instruments. But there is an economic underpinning behind this relationship. As we argued in a Special Report on carry trades last year, the main reason carry trades have been able generate high Sharpe ratios since the 1980s is because they offer investors a risk premium for taking on exposure to unforeseen spikes in volatility.2 As a result, when the volatility of risk assets collapses, as has been the case recently, carry currencies outperform. The opposite holds true when volatility spikes back up. Chart I-7Dollar Bloc Currencies Like Low Vol
Dollar Bloc Currencies Like Low Vol
Dollar Bloc Currencies Like Low Vol
When carry trades do well, investors end up aggressively buying EM currencies. As a result of these purchases, they inject funds - i.e. liquidity - into these economies. These injections of liquidity end up boosting money growth and supporting their economic activity, which stimulates global trade, commodity prices, and thus commodity currencies - even if these are not currently "high-yielders." Bottom Line: Chinese monetary conditions have deteriorated, creating a handicap for EM assets and the dollar-bloc currencies. Nonetheless, an increase in high-powered money growth, a decline in the risk premium to compensate investors for the risk of sudden new Chinese devaluation, and a collapse in global financial volatility have reinforced each other to create the ideal breeding ground for a rally in the AUD, the CAD and the NZD. The Sweet Spot Is Passing At the current juncture, the sweet spot for the dollar-bloc currencies may be passing. To begin with, commodity currencies are trading at a significant premium to underlying commodity prices, suggesting they are expensive and vulnerable to a decrease in global liquidity (Chart I-8). The AUD and the NZD stand out as especially expensive, while the CAD is only trading at a small premium to its long-term fair value (Chart I-9). This suggests that the Canadian dollar is likely to continue to outperform the Australian and New Zealand currencies, as it has been doing in choppy fashion since November 2016. Chart I-8Dollar Bloc Currencies Are Expensive
Dollar Bloc Currencies Are Expensive
Dollar Bloc Currencies Are Expensive
Chart I-9AUD And NZD Are Expensive
AUD And NZD Are Expensive
AUD And NZD Are Expensive
Another problem for dollar-bloc currencies is that they have greatly overshot global liquidity metrics. Historically, the commodity currencies have moved in lockstep with the evolution of global central bank reserves - a key measure of global liquidity (Chart I-10). While global reserves have improved, the average of the AUD, the CAD and the NZD has over-discounted this positive, pointing to potential vulnerability once liquidity ebbs. The problem with this overshoot is that liquidity is likely to decline with the imminent reduction in the Fed's balance sheet size. As Chart I-11 shows, the USD has been closely linked to changes in the reserves of commercial banks held at the Fed. As commercial banks accumulate excess reserves, this provides fuel for the repo market and the Eurodollar market, creating a supply of globally available USD for offshore markets. However, mechanically, once the Fed lets the assets on its balance sheet run off (its holdings of Treasurys), a liability will also have to decrease. This liability is most likely to be excess reserves as banks buy the Treasurys sold by the Fed. A fall in the accumulation of reserves of commercial banks in the U.S. is also directly linked with weaker dollar-bloc currencies (Chart I-12). This is because falling reserves push up the dollar and hurt commodity prices - a negative terms-of-trade shock for the AUD, the CAD and the NZD. Moreover, less reserves point to less liquidity making its way into EM economies. This also hurts the expected returns of holding assets in dollar-bloc economies. This therefore means that not only is there less liquidity available to move into these markets, the rationale to do so also dissipates. Without this dollar-based liquidity support, the tightening in Chinese monetary conditions could finally show its true impact on commodity currencies. Chart I-10Commodity Currencies Have##br## Overshot Global Liquidity
Commodity Currencies Have Overshot Global Liquidity
Commodity Currencies Have Overshot Global Liquidity
Chart I-11Falling Excess Bank Reserves##br## Equals Strong Greenback
Falling Excess Bank Reserves Equals Strong Greenback
Falling Excess Bank Reserves Equals Strong Greenback
Chart I-12Falling Excess Reserves Equals##br## Falling Commodity Currencies
Falling Excess Reserves Equals Falling Commodity Currencies
Falling Excess Reserves Equals Falling Commodity Currencies
The last worrisome development for the dollar-bloc currencies is the volatility of financial assets. When volatility falls, it creates a wonderful environment for these currencies. But today, historical volatility is near the bottom of its distribution of the past 28 years. Being a highly mean-reverting series, it is thus more likely to rise than fall further going forward. There are three fundamental factors pointing to a potential reversal. First, share buyback activity has been declining, which historically points to rising volatility. Second, the U.S. yield curve slope also points toward a higher level of volatility. Volatility tends to bottom before the stock market peaks, and the stock market tends to peak before the economy enters recession. The yield curve itself tends to invert a year or so before a recession emerges. As a result, the yield curve begins to flatten around two years before volatility picks up (Chart I-13). Third, the anticipated decline in bank reserves - an important factor that has supported risk-taking around the globe - is likely to be the key catalyst supporting the relationship between the yield curve and volatility. If volatility increases, carry trades are likely to perform poorly, which will hurt EM currencies and result in outflows from these markets. This will cause liquidity conditions in EM economies to dry out, hurting their growth outlook. EM M1 growth has already weakened considerably, and is currently pointing to problems for commodity currencies (Chart I-14). The dry out in liquidity resulting from a reversal in carry trades will only amplify this phenomenon. Chart I-13Listen To The Yield Curve: ##br##Volatility Will Pick Up
Listen To The Yield Curve: Volatility Will Pick Up
Listen To The Yield Curve: Volatility Will Pick Up
Chart I-14EM M1 Growth Is Becoming ##br##A Headwind For The Dollar Bloc
EM M1 Growth Is Becoming A Headwind For The Dollar Bloc
EM M1 Growth Is Becoming A Headwind For The Dollar Bloc
Bottom Line: Global liquidity conditions are set to begin to tighten. While it is probably not enough to cause the bull market in stock prices to end now, it could be enough to affect the area of the global economy most exposed to this risk factor: carry trades and the dollar-bloc currencies. Specifically, commodity currencies are likely to be negatively affected by their elevated valuations, their strong sensitivity to excess bank reserves, and their high responsiveness to changes in financial market volatility. Key Indicators To Monitor After the surge that the dollar-bloc currencies have experienced since the spring and the large increase in the long exposure of speculators to these currencies, they are naturally at risk of experiencing a period of weakness. However, what worries us is not a retracement of 3-4%, but rather a 10-15% move. We suggest monitoring the following: First, watch U.S. inflation closely. The U.S. dollar is only likely to genuinely rally once the market believes the Fed can actually increase rates. So long as inflation remains tepid, investors will continue to second-guess the Fed. The market's response to this week's release of the most recent Federal Open Market Committee minutes only confirmed this. Mentions of debate on inflation within the FOMC was enough to send bond yields and the dollar reeling. However, based on the dynamics in the U.S. velocity of money, we continue to expect inflation to pick up in the second half of 2017 (Chart I-15).3 Second, follow cross-currency basis swap spreads. The cost of hedging U.S. assets back into euro or yen has normalized somewhat after hitting record levels in early 2016 (Chart I-16). If the removal of excess bank reserves in the U.S. system does affect global liquidity conditions, this market will be one of the first to be affected. Third, scrutinize the price of gold. The yellow metal remains a key gauge of global liquidity. Moreover, it is extremely sensitive to real rates and the dollar - two major determinants of the cost of global liquidity. In the summer of 2015, EM and dollar-bloc currencies severely suffered once gold broke below 1150. Today, a break below 1200 would be a sign of danger ahead. Fourth, watch EM currencies. A breakdown in EM currencies would be a key indication that carry trades are being reversed, and that global liquidity is no longer making its way into EM and EM-related plays. Commodity currencies are currently trading at a premium to their historical relationship with EM currencies, suggesting they would be highly vulnerable to such an event (Chart I-17). Chart I-15Watch U.S. Inflation
Watch U.S. Inflation
Watch U.S. Inflation
Chart I-16Monitor Cross-Currency Basis Swap Spreads
Monitor Cross-Currency Basis Swap Spreads
Monitor Cross-Currency Basis Swap Spreads
Chart I-17Dollar-Bloc Currencies At The Mercy Of EM FX
Dollar-Bloc Currencies At The Mercy Of EM FX
Dollar-Bloc Currencies At The Mercy Of EM FX
Finally, keep an eye on Chinese monetary conditions. If Chinese monetary conditions improve from here, it would alleviate some of the negative pressure exercised on dollar-bloc currencies by the upcoming deterioration in global liquidity. However, if Chinese monetary conditions deteriorate further, this would negatively affect commodity prices, EM returns and the commodity currency complex. It would also hurt expected returns on Chinese assets, re-kindling outflows out of China and thus raising the risk premium associated with what would become a growing risk of CNY depreciation. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report titled, "Pyrrhic Victories", dated April 29, 2016, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report titled, "Carry Trades: More Than Pennies And Steamrollers", dated May 6, 2016, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report titled, "Fade North Korea, And Sell The Yen", dated August 11, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 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
U.S. data has been mixed this week: The Empire State Manufacturing Index increased to 25.2, a significant jump and beat Retail Sales increased at a 0.5% monthly pace, with the ex. Autos measure increasing at 0.5%, both beating expectations; The Import Price Index increased by 1.5% since last year; Initial jobless claims dropped to 232,000, beating expectations significantly; However, housing starts and building permits both underperformed expectations. While the DXY has rebounded, the FOMC's July minutes discussed the recent shortfall of inflation, which was interpreted bearishly by markets. The Fed is likely to begin normalizing its balance sheet very soon, as well as raising rates again by the end of this year. The greenback will likely continue its ascent when firmer inflation data emerges. Report Links: Fade North Korea, And Sell The Yen - August 11, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
Improving euro area growth prospects have propelled the euro 12% higher since the beginning of the year. However, the market seems to begin questioning the ECB's hawkishness. In its minutes, the ECB expressed worries about a potential euro overshoot. Additionally, rumors emerged that Mario Draghi will not give much guidance in Jackson Hole. Together, these stories have reversed some of the euphoria that had engulfed the euro. The tightening in euro area financial conditions relative to the U.S. has prompted a roll over in relative economic and inflation surprises, justifying these budding doubts. Furthermore, U.S. inflation should begin to meaningfully accelerate in the fall. This is likely to add to the euro's weakness, as the greenback will resume its upward trend. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
Data in Japan was mixed this week: Annualized gross domestic product growth grew by 4% on an annualized basis, crushing expectations. Additionally the month-to-month growth of industrial production came in at 2.2%, also beating expectations. However both export and import growth underperformed, coming in at 13.4% and 16.3% respectively. On cue, after we placed a long USD/JPY trade last week, USD/JPY rallied half percentage point, even if it gave up some of the gain now. We continue to be bearish on the yen as we expect U.S. yields to start picking up, in an environment where market expectations are very depressed. But could a correction in EM caused by the rise in the dollar help the yen? Not in the short term, given that historically the yen only gains in very sharp EM selloffs that themselves weigh on bond yields. Report Links: Fade North Korea, And Sell The Yen - August 11, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
Data in the U.K. was mixed this week: Retail sales prices increased by 3.6% year-on-year, outperforming expectations. However, The trade balance not only worsened since last month but also came in below expectations, at -4.564 Billion pounds Crucially, most inflation metrics came in below expectations, with headline inflation coming in at 2.6% while PPI core output inflation came in at 2.4%. Overall, we continue to believe that the market's rate expectations for the BoE remain too hawkish. As the pass through from the currency dissipates, inflation should also start to come down. Furthermore, one has to remember that the BoE has a higher hurdle for raising rates than other central banks due to the unique situation in which the U.K. is currently in. Lowered rate expectations will be negative for cable in the short term. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
Despite initially weak data, a risk-on environment and increasing copper prices have fueled a rally in the AUD. Data from China has been soft, and Australian data has been neutral: Chinese retail sales increased annually by 10.4%, less than expected; Chinese industrial production also underperformed at 6.4%; Australian wages increased at a 1.9% annual pace, in line with expectations; Australian unemployment dropped to 5.6%; participation rate increased to 65.1%; and a net of 27,900 jobs were filled. However, full-time employment went down by 20,300 while part-time employment increased by 48,200, so hours worked contracted. This development is likely to comfort the RBA in its dovish stance. In its minutes, the RBA discussed its worries concerning the housing market, and that "borrowers investing in residential property had been facing higher interest rates". This further worries the RBA regarding the impact of higher interest rates, limiting the room for more hawkish speeches. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 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
Recent data in New Zealand has been positive: Retail sales and retail sales ex-autos Quarter-on-quarter growth strengthened relatively to the previous quarter, coming in at 2% and 2.1% respectively. Moreover quarter-on-quarter inflation both for producer prices in outputs and inputs outperformed expectations, coming in at 1.3% and 1.4%. Currently, differences in perception adjustment between the dovishness of the RBNZ and the RBA have pushed Australian rate expectations to the point that the market is now pricing a hike in Australia before New Zealand. Overall, this seems like a mispricing, as the kiwi economy is on a stronger footing than the aussie one. Moreover, a slowdown in China would be more harmful for Australia as iron ore is more sensitive to the Chinese industrial cycle than dairy products. Thus we remain bearish on AUD/NZD. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 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
The CAD has regained some composure despite weak oil prices. Even with the U.S. dollar weakening and inventories drawing massively, oil dropped. This dynamic is particularly worrying for oil, as the markets are doubting the durability of the curtailment in global oil production. While this could be worrying for the CAD, we still believe the USD 40-60/bbl equilibrium price level, as postulated by the BoC, will have a limiting effect on the oil-based currency, which has been driven by interest rate differentials. Both central banks are now hiking, but we believe that markets are underpricing Fed hikes. Thus, the CAD should weaken against USD. However, it will outperform other G10 currencies. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 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 has continued to show a mixed picture for the Swiss economy: Consumer prices inflation, increased slightly from the previous month, coming in at 0.3%, in line with expectations. The unemployment rate also came in in line of expectations at 3.2%, unchanged from the previous month. However, producer prices contracted by 0.1%, underperforming expectations. EUR/CHF has been weakening since its August second overbought extreme. For the moment, we expect the SNB to stand pat in its ultra-dovish monetary policy, at least until inflation and other economic indicators start to strengthen considerably. USD/CHF however might appreciate, given that the euro might fall the ECB minutes this week showed that the ECB is concerned by a potential euro overshoot. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 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
Data in Norway this week was mixed: Headline inflation came in at 1.5% in July, outperforming expectations. However, it softened from June's 1.9% reading. Core inflation came at 1.2% in July, in line with expectations, decreasing from 1.6% in June. Moreover, manufacturing output contracted by 0.6% year-on-year. We continue to be bullish on USD/NOK, as the increasing gap in real rate differentials between the United States and Norway should outweigh any oil rally. Indeed, the recent numbers in Norway illustrate the lack of inflationary pressures in this Scandinavian country. This should keep a lid on rates, and thus help USD/NOK. On the other hand EUR/NOK should follow the path of oil. Thus, the OPEC supply cuts will ultimately support oil prices and thus, weigh on this cross. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 A Market Update: June 23, 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
The SEK has had a particularly strong week, as inflation surprised to the upside on both a monthly and a yearly basis, coming in at 0.5% and 2.2% respectively. While it initially appreciated against all currencies, the uptick in commodity currencies on Wednesday made it lose its gains against AUD, CAD, NZD and NOK. As inflationary pressures grow, the SEK is likely to appreciate further, especially against the EUR and GBP. Additionally, with current Riskbank governor Stefan Ingves' term coming to an end by the end of this year, the hawkish rhetoric is likely to only increase. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Bloody Potomac - May 19, 2017 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Closed Trades
Highlights The bottom in the dollar will have to wait for clearer signs that U.S. inflation has hit a trough. DXY is unlikely to punch below its May 2016 low. We examine balance of payments dynamics across the G10. This analysis shows that while the euro has long-term upside, it is too early to bet on any move above 1.20. The Japanese balance of payment dynamics will deteriorate as the BoJ keeps pressing on the gas pedal. Markets will have to price out rate hikes from the U.K. Feature Our most recent attempt at selling EUR/USD ended promptly in failure, as the euro is currently supported by a perfect storm of factors, making the timing of a reversal of its powerful bull run a tricky exercise. On the one hand, European politics continue to enjoy a re-rating among investors. As 2017 began, observers were worried that France was about to fall under the control of populists - euro-skeptic politicians like Marine Le Pen. This could well have spelled the end of the euro. Instead, the French electorate delivered a pro-market outcome with Emmanuel Macron clinching the keys to the Elysée Palace, and his centrist, pro-reform party now controlling Parliament. Meanwhile, German politics remain steady, and the Italian political risk has been pushed back to 2018. On the other hand, investors started the year expecting a hyperactive Trump presidency that would deliver de-regulation and tax reforms. Instead, the U.S. has a Twitterer-in-Chief and a chaotic White House that has been able to only achieve political paralysis. While political developments have grabbed the most headlines, economics have played an even more crucial role. Most importantly, inflation dynamics have been at the crux of the euro's rally. Namely, U.S. inflation has been a big source of disappointment, as the core PCE deflator has fallen from 1.9% in late 2016 to 1.5% today - a move away from the Federal Reserve's 2% target. As a result, the dollar and interest rates have moved away from discounting the Fed's path as implied by the "dot plot" (Chart I-1). However, our work on capacity utilization and financial conditions highlights that the U.S. inflation slowdown has been a reflection of the lagged impact of massive financial tightening in late 2014, and subsequent deceleration in economic activity. In fact, improvements in both capacity utilization and financial conditions witnessed since then point to a turnaround in inflation this fall (Chart I-2). Chart I-1Downward Move In Inflation Rate Expectations
Downward Move In Inflation Rate Expectations
Downward Move In Inflation Rate Expectations
Chart I-2U.S. Inflation To Trough Soon
U.S. Inflation To Trough Soon
U.S. Inflation To Trough Soon
What should investors do in the meantime? The market will only believe the Fed's hiking intensions once inflation rears its head again. After so many false starts and disappointments, signs that inflation might be coming will not be enough, as narratives of a near-permanent state of zero percent inflation are taking hold of the general discourse. Because investors have purged their excess dollar longs and are now heavily positioned for a euro rally, the dollar downside is currently limited, and a significant breach below the May 5, 2016 low in the DXY is unlikely. However, the dollar-rebound camp will have to wait for clear evidence that U.S. inflation is exiting its doldrums. This is a story for the fall. A Look At Balance-Of-Payments Dynamics The U.S. Chart I-3U.S. Balance Of Payments
U.S. Balance Of Payments
U.S. Balance Of Payments
The U.S. current account deficit has been hovering below -2% of GDP for most of the post-great-financial-crisis period, and therefore has played little to no role in explaining the dollar's moves since 2011. However, the U.S. basic balance (current account plus net foreign direct investments) registered a sharp improvement in 2015 on the back of a surge in net FDI into the U.S. Despite a small pullback in the past 18 months, the U.S. basic balance remains consistent with levels recorded during the dollar bull market of the 1990s (Chart I-3). Portfolio flows in the U.S. have moved back into positive territory after a period of net outflows in 2015 and 2016. Yet, the total amount of net portfolio flows remains very low by historical standards, suggesting investors have not wagered aggressively on the U.S. economy's outperformance. Together, the aggregate U.S. balance-of-payment paints a neutral picture for the U.S. The deep imbalances in the current account and basic balance that prevailed prior to the financial crisis have been purged, but portfolio flows into the U.S. do not show any excessive optimism. In fact, the recent period of dollar weakness will likely help the U.S. balance of payments: It should support the trade balance, and make FDI and portfolio flows more attractive going forward as easing U.S. financial conditions help economic activity and asset returns. The Euro Area Chart I-4Euro Area Balance Of Payments
Euro Area Balance Of Payments
Euro Area Balance Of Payments
Since the euro area crisis, the region's current account has surged to a very large surplus of 3.5% of GDP (Chart I-4). This mostly reflects a large correction of imbalances in peripheral nations. Countries like Spain and Italy have seen their own current account balances morph from deficits of 10.2% of GDP and 3.8% of GDP in 2008 and 2011, respectively, to surpluses of 1.9% of GDP and 2.7% of GDP today. The large contraction in imports on the back of moribund domestic demand has been the key driver of this phenomenon. The euro area remains an exporter of FDIs, experiencing near-constant outflows since 2004. As a result, the euro area's basic balance has not experienced as pronounced an improvement as the current account. It is still nonetheless in surplus - something that did not prevent EUR/USD from experiencing a 25% decline from June 2014 to March 2015. Net portfolio flows in the euro area have moved into deeply negative territory, reflecting massive outflows from the bond market. European investors have also been avid buyers of foreign equities, despite the recent increase in foreign buying of euro area stocks. In aggregate, we would interpret the current balance-of-payments dynamic in Europe as potentially supportive of the euro down the line. Aggregate portfolio flows are so depressed that there is a greater likelihood they will improve than deteriorate. However, while the basic balance and portfolio flows bottomed in 2000, the euro was not able to rally durably until 2002. Together, this suggests the euro is unlikely to re-test parity this cycle, but could remain capped below 1.20 for a few more quarters. Japan Chart I-5Japan Balance Of Payments
Japan Balance Of Payments
Japan Balance Of Payments
Thanks to large investment income emanating from a net international investment position of 62% of GDP, Japan sports a current account surplus 2.5% of GDP greater than its trade balance. However, as the country continues to export capital abroad, it still carries a 3.1%-of-GDP deficit in terms of net FDI. This means that the Japanese basic balance of payments remains around 0% of GDP (Chart I-5). Meanwhile, net portfolio flows into Japan have improved greatly in 2017, explaining the yen's strength this year. While we see more upside for equity inflows into Japan, the efforts by the Bank of Japan to suppress JGB yields are likely to result into continued outflows on the fixed-income front. Since BCA is calling for higher global bond yields, fixed income portfolio outflows are likely to grow bigger, making the recent improvement in the Japanese balance of payments a fleeting phenomenon. This will weigh on the yen. We continue to expect the JPY to be one of the worst-performing currencies over the next 12-18 months. The U.K. Chart I-6U.K. Balance Of Payments
U.K. Balance Of Payments
U.K. Balance Of Payments
Financing the U.K.'s current account deficit of 4% of GDP has taken center stage in the wake of the Brexit vote last year. However, while the trade-weighted pound has depreciated 12% since then, the British basic balance of payments has improved and moved back into positive territory. Net FDI inflows lie behind this stunning development. FDI into the U.K. has been surging since 2016 (Chart I-6). However, the recent slowdown in M&A deals into the U.K. points to a potential end for this GBP support. The key costs of controlling the free movement of people in the U.K. - a demand of Brexit voters - will be the loss of passporting rights for the financial services sector. Since this sector has been the biggest magnet for FDI in the U.K., net FDI could soon become a drag on the basic balance of payments. In contrast to FDI, net portfolio flows into the U.K. have followed the anticipated post-Brexit script, falling from 5% of GDP in Q2 2016 to zero earlier this year. This development was the biggest contributor to the pound's weakness last year. Going forward, the case for the Bank of England to turn hawkish is likely to dissipate as the inflation pass-through from the weak pound dissipates (see below). For the pound to rally further, a continued expansion in global liquidity will be necessary. However, we anticipate global liquidity to deteriorate for the remainder of 2017 as the Fed begins the runoff of its balance sheet, and the PBoC keeps tightening the screws on the bubbly Chinese real estate market. Hence, we would position ourselves for pound weakness against the USD in the second half of 2017. Canada Chart I-7Canada Balance Of Payments
Canada Balance Of Payments
Canada Balance Of Payments
Canada runs a current account deficit of 3% of GDP. This is not a new development. Canada has been running a current account deficit since 2009 (Chart I-7), as weakness in the CAD from 2011 to 2016 was counterbalanced by weak export growth to the U.S. and poor oil prices. From a balance-of-payment perspective, the capacity of the CAD to rally may be limited. A surge in FDI to boost the basic balance of payments is unlikely. In 2001, the Canadian dollar was much cheaper than at present, and the impact of the tech bubble was still influencing M&A inflows into the country. In 2008, oil was trading near US$150/bbl. Today, Canada is a high-cost oil producer in a world of cheap oil, making Canadian oil plays unattractive, at least much more so than in 2007-2008. Additionally, net portfolio inflows into the country are already at near-record high levels, explaining the strong performance of the CAD since January 2016. However, going forward, oil prices are unlikely to double once more, and the combination of elevated Canadian indebtedness along with bubbly house prices and rising interest rates will create headwinds for the Canadian economy. Such an outcome would hurt expected returns on Canadian assets, and thus portfolio flows. However, if the hole in Canadian banks' balance sheets proves much bigger than BCA anticipates, this could prompt a repatriation of funds held abroad by banks - assets that currently equal nearly 50% of their balance sheets, temporarily helping the CAD. Australia Chart I-8Australia Balance Of Payments
Australia Balance Of Payments
Australia Balance Of Payments
While the Australian trade balance has moved back in positive territory, the current account remains in deficit, burdened with negative international incomes associated with a negative net international investment position of -60% of GDP. Yet, because the current account has nonetheless improved, the Australian basic balance of payments is back in positive territory, as net FDI inflows have remained steady around 4% of GDP (Chart I-8). From a balance-of-payments perspective, the Australian dollar looks good. The current account balance is likely to remain well supported as the capex needs of Western Australia have decreased - exerting downward pressure on imports - but new mines are coming online and generating revenues and exports. Meanwhile, portfolio flows in Australia are quite depressed, suggesting some long-term upside as investors seem to be underweight Australian assets. That being said, the Aussie is currently trading at 12% above its long-term fair value. Moreover, any tightening in global liquidity thanks to the Fed and the PBoC could increase the cost of financing Australia's large negative net international investment position, and cause a last down leg in metals prices and the AUD. New Zealand Chart I-9New Zealand Balance Of Payments
New Zealand Balance Of Payments
New Zealand Balance Of Payments
New Zealand's current account has been stable at around -3% of GDP since 2010. While New Zealand has been a constant magnet for FDI (Chart I-9), the positive balance in this account has not been able to lift the national basic balance of payments above the zero line. Interestingly, despite still-higher interest rates offered by New Zealand compared to the rest of the G10, the kiwi has been experiencing net portfolio outflows so far this year, potentially explaining why NZD/USD has not been able to break out like AUD/USD. Balance-of-payment dynamics looks supportive for the AUD relative to the NZD, as Australia runs a positive basic balance while New Zealand does not. Additionally, while Australian portfolio flows are very depressed, New Zealand's could suffer more downside. Mitigating these positives for AUD/NZD, the New Zealand economy is much stronger than that of Australia, and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand is in much better position to increase rates than the Reserve Bank of Australia is.1 Switzerland Chart I-10Switzerland Balance Of Payments
Switzerland Balance Of Payments
Switzerland Balance Of Payments
The Swiss franc may be expensive relative to its purchasing power parity, and it may also be contributing to the country's strong deflationary tendencies, but it does not seem to be hampering its international competitiveness. The Swiss trade balance is at a massive 6% of GDP. Additionally, thanks to the international income generated by Switzerland's gigantic net international investment position of 127% of GDP, the country runs an incredible current account surplus of around 11% of GDP (Chart I-10). Being a nation with a steady current account surplus, Switzerland re-exports much capital abroad, generating a nearly permanent deficit in its net FDI account. However, this deficit is not enough to generate a basic balance-of-payments deficit. Instead, the BBoP still stands at 6% of GDP, creating a long-term support for the CHF. In terms of portfolio flows, Switzerland has historically run a deficit, reflecting its status as a capital exporter. Only at the height of the euro area crisis did Switzerland experience net portfolio inflows. Today, portfolio flows continue to leave the country, albeit at a slower pace than before the euro area crisis. Over the next 12 months, the CHF is likely to experience continued downside against both the euro and the USD, as the Swiss National Bank remains steadfast in its fight against domestic deflationary forces. However, from a long-term perspective, Switzerland will continue to run a balance-of-payments surplus that will support the structural upward trend in the real trade-weighted CHF. Sweden Chart I-11Sweden Balance Of Payments
Sweden Balance Of Payments
Sweden Balance Of Payments
The Swedish trade balance recently moved into deficit territory, but the nation's current account remains in a healthy surplus of more than 4% of GDP, reflecting large amounts foreign income extracted by Sweden's thanks to its large amount of assets held abroad - a legacy of decades of current account surpluses. The net FDI balance has recently moved into positive territory, as Sweden possesses some of the strongest long-term economic fundamentals in Western Europe. Thanks to this development, the basic balance of the largest Nordic economy is at its highest level in eight years (Chart I-11), representing a long-term positive for the cheap SEK. Finally, portfolio flows into Sweden are at a neutral level. However, we expect the Riksbank to begin increasing rates early next year, putting it well ahead of its European peers. This should result in growing inflows into the country, supporting the SEK, at least against the EUR and the GBP. Norway Chart I-12Norway Balance Of Payments
Norway Balance Of Payments
Norway Balance Of Payments
Due to the collapse in oil prices since 2014, the Norwegian trade surplus has melted from a gargantuan 15% of GDP to a more modest 5% of GDP (Chart I-12). However, falling oil prices and North-Sea production have also resulted in a collapse of FDIs into the country. Because of these developments, the Norwegian basic balance of payments has fallen into deficit for the first time in more than 20 years. This combination could explain why the NOK has been trading at its deepest discount to long-term fair value in decades. Ultimately, the constantly positive BBoP has historically been one of the key drivers of the krone. Without this support, since the Norges Bank stands among the most dovish central banks in the G10, the NOK does need a greater-than-normal discount. Norway too has historically experienced net portfolio outflows, also a consequence of its massive current account surplus. Thus, we do not read today's relatively small portfolio outflows as a positive. Instead, they simply reflect the deterioration in the current account and basic balance. Putting it all together, while balance-of-payment dynamics do explain why the NOK is trading at a historically large discount to fair value, we remain positive on this currency relative to the euro. When all is said and done, even accounting for these exceptional factors, the NOK is too cheap. Additionally, BCA does expect oil prices to move back toward US$60/bbl, which should help move the basic balance back into positive territory. Bottom Line: Balance-of-payment dynamics rarely have much impact on G10 currencies in the short run. However, in the long run, they can become paramount. Using this framework, while the USD could experience some upside in the next 12 months or so, any such upside is likely to mark the last hurrah of the bull market: the U.S. balance of payments is relatively neutral, but Europe's is currently excessively handicapped by extremely depressed portfolio flows. This latter situation is likely to be reversed in the coming years. The yen balance-of-payment dynamics will become increasingly tenuous if the BoJ continues on its current policy path. Among commodity currencies, the AUD has the best long-term profile in terms of balance-of-payment dynamics. Finally, the SNB faces a Herculean task: While it is currently keeping the CHF at bay in order to alleviate deflationary tendencies in Switzerland, the country's perennially strong balance of payment will ultimately prove too great a hurdle to overcome. The CHF could overtake the yen as the true risk-off currency of the world in future. BoE Is Stuck With Low Rates For Now In our January 13 Special Report titled, "GBP: Dismal Expectations,"2 we discussed why fears of any calamity that Brexit could bring to the British economy was overdone, and thus why buying the pound was an attractive opportunity. So far, our view has been validated, as cable has rallied by almost 8%. However, although we stand by our analysis on a cyclical horizon, a tactical selloff in the pound may be due. At the beginning of the year, the U.K. economy outperformed almost every forecast. Since then, expectations have risen along with the pound, but the British economy has shifted from star performer to disappointment (Chart I-13). For example, house price growth has collapsed to levels not seen since the euro area crisis (Chart I-14, top panel). Furthermore, the rapid rise in inflation has also caused a contraction in real disposable income comparable to that of 2012 (Chart I-14, bottom panel). Chart I-13Shift In U.K. Surprises
Shift In U.K. Surprises
Shift In U.K. Surprises
Chart I-14Cracks In The U.K.
Cracks In The U.K.
Cracks In The U.K.
Rate expectations have become too lofty. After the 2016 collapse in the pound, both headline and core inflation rose above the BoE's target. Consequently, rate expectations spiked, particularly after three MPC members voted for hikes. But can this rate of inflation continue? Looking at individual components of inflation, it is clear that the pound selloff was an important culprit behind the inflation surge. Thus, as the pass-through from the currency dissipates, inflation will also subside (Chart I-15). Falling inflation and weaker growth are already forcing the BoE to retreat from its relative hawkishness. Yesterday, as the "Old Lady" curtailed both its growth and wage forecast for 2017 and 2018, only two members voted for a hike. Political dynamics have also supported cable so far this year. Today, the U.K. policy uncertainty index is at par with that of the U.S. as the Trump White House continues to be in disarray, and the outlook for tax reform and/or infrastructure spending looks grim (Chart I-16). But the U.S. is not the country engaging in its most contentious and significant treaty negotiation in 50 years. Instead, the U.K. is this country, with a weakened government at its helm following its recent electoral debacle. Thus, we would expect a reversal of the currently pro-pound relative political uncertainty indexes, as Brexit negotiations heat up in the coming quarters. Chart I-15U.K. Inflation Is Peaking
U.K. Inflation Is Peaking
U.K. Inflation Is Peaking
Chart I-16Does Trump Really Trump Brexit?
Does Trump Really Trump Brexit?
Does Trump Really Trump Brexit?
While policy and political considerations are likely to hurt the pound this fall, for GBP/USD to correct, a fall in the euro will be needed as well. In the meantime, investors may look to continue to buy EUR/GBP. Since July 7th, we have been anticipating this cross to hit the 0.93 level. This analysis confirms this view. Bottom Line: The U.K. economy should be able to weather its exit from the European Union. This should help the pound on a cyclical horizon. However, the pound has become overbought and interest rate expectations are too elevated, as the market has forgotten that a price still has to be paid for Brexit. GBP/USD is too dependent on the EUR/USD dynamics to short cable outright right now. As such, investors may keep buying EUR/GBP for now, and look to sell GBP/USD near 1.33. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com Juan Manuel Correa, Research Analyst juanc@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy and Global Alpha Sector Strategy Special Report titled, "Who Hikes Next?", dated June 30, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report titled "GBP: Dismal Expectations", dated January 13, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 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
The U.S. has shown some signs of strength this week, however the data remains mixed: Both headline PCE and core PCE beat expectations, coming in at 1.4% and 1.5% respectively; While the headline ISM manufacturing number weakened, the Price Paid component rebounded to 62. Initial jobless claims beat expectations by 2,000; however, continuing claims underperformed; Factory orders improved on a monthly basis. While the U.S. is still in an inflation slump, we believe that inflation is close to bottoming out. The depreciation in the greenback and the rally in risk assets have greatly eased financial conditions, creating support for the economy. This should push the greenback up as the markets begin to reprice Fed hikes. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Look Ahead, Not Back - June 9, 2017 Capacity Explosion = Inflation Implosion - June 2, 2017 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
Euro appreciation has continued. While the general tone of data remains strong, some leading indicators are showing early cracks: Unemployment, a lagging indicator, decreased to 9.1%, outperforming expectations; Headline inflation remained steady at 1.3%, however core inflation increased to 1.2%; GDP numbers came in as expected, growing at a 0.6% quarterly rate, and a 2.1% annual rate; However, German and EMU Markit Manufacturing PMIs both underperformed expectations. Momentum is on the euro's side, which traded above 1.19 on Wednesday. The euro area owes much of its economic growth to the 25% depreciation since mid-2014. While data has surprised to the upside, the ECB remains the central bank of the peripheries, where inflation has failed to emerge as strongly. Rate differentials will weigh on the euro towards the end of the year, but momentum could continue to push the euro up in the coming weeks. Report Links: Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 A Market Update: June 23, 2017 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
Japanese data came in positive: Overall household spending yearly growth came in above expectations at 2.3% Japan's job-to-applicants ratio came in at 1.51. Above expectations and growing from the previous month. The unemployment rate fell to 2.8%, coming in below expectations of 3%. These two last data points are important, as they show that the Japanese labor market is getting increasingly tight. However, as evidenced by the last 2 years, inflation will not be able to rise sustainably without a depreciating yen, even if the labor market is tight. Thus, the recent selloff in USD/JPY will only incentivize authorities to remain very accommodative while other central banks are exiting maximum accommodation, reinforcing our negative cyclical view on the yen. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 A Market Update: June 23, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
Data in the U.K. was mixed this week: Both Markit Manufacturing and Markit Services PMI beat expectations coming in at 55.1 and 53.8 respectively. However both consumer credit and mortgage approvals fell from the previous month and underperformed expectations. Up to yesterday the pound had gained almost 2% during the week, however following the interest rate decision by the BoE, the pound fell by roughly 1%. The reason for this fall, was that the BoE is becoming less hawkish. Not only did the number of MPC members voting for a hike decrease from 3 to 2, but the bank also lowered its forecast for growth and wages. We believe this will start a trend toward a less hawkish BoE, which will weigh on the pound on the short term. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 The Last Innings Of The Dollar Correction - April 21, 2017 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
Momentum is showing signs of topping out. The MACD is rolling over, and is converging with the Signal line; and the RSI is weakening from deeply overbought levels. This week, AUD has displayed broad-based weaknesses. Despite one key blotch, data relevant to Australia has been good: TD Securities Inflation increased at a 2.7% rate in July; Chinese Caixin Manufacturing PMI came out better than expected at 51.1; Building permits increased at a striking 10.9% monthly rate. They contracted at a 2.3% yearly pace, a sharp improvement over the the previous month's 18.7% contraction. However, the trade balance underperformed missed expectations by a large margin, coming in at AUD856mn, compared to the expected AUD1,800mn. The recent RBA statement highlighted that the recent appreciation in the Australian dollar "is expected to contribute to subdued price pressures", and "is weighing on the outlook for output and employment". This could add substantial pressure on the AUD in the near future. Report Links: Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 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
Even as the dollar has fallen, the kiwi has depreciated by almost 1.4% this week, as New Zealand data has come in weak: Both the ANZ Activity outlook and the ANZ business confidence came in below the previous month reading at 40.3% and 19.4 respectively. The participation rate came below expectations at 70%. Meanwhile employment also came below expectations contracting by 0.2% Month-on-Month. Overall we continue to be bearish on commodity currencies in general and the kiwi in particular. Recently, the Chinese authorities have been getting tougher on credit excesses. This could be the trigger for a risk off period in emerging markets, which wouldweigh on the NZD. That being said, we are more bearish on AUD/NZD, as the kiwi economy is on much stronger footing than the Australian one. Report Links: Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 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
The CAD has displayed some considerable broad-based weakness this week following weak data releases: Industrial Product Price contracted monthly by 1% in June; The Raw Material Price Index also contracted, at 3.7%; However, the Markit Manufacturing PMI saw an increase to 55.5 from 54.7. Markets have priced in a 75% probability of a hike by the end of this year by the BoC, compared to 42% for the Fed. Although we agree with the market's perception of the BoC, we disagree that the probability of the Fed hiking is this low. We therefore believe the CAD could correct further in the upcoming weeks. Report Links: Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Exploring Risks To Our DXY View - May 26, 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 positive: The KOF leading indicator came at 106.8, beating expectations. Real retail sales grew by 1.5% year on year, increasing from last month number and beating expectations. The SVME Purchasing Manager Index came in very strong at 60.9, beating expectations and also increasing from last month's reading. While data was positive, EUR/CHF went vertical this week, rising by more than 3%. At this point EUR/CHF is the most overbought it has been in more than 4 years, and at least a small correction seems overdue. The SNB will be satisfied with a depreciating currency, as this dramatic fall should help ease deflationary pressures in the alpine country. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 The Fed And The Dollar: A Gordian Knot - April 14, 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
Recent data has been mixed in Norway: The Labor forced survey, which measures unemployment, came in at 4.3% outperforming expectations of 4.5%. The above data point was confirmed by the registered unemployment reading, which also outperformed expectations, coming in at 2.8%. However retail sales contracted by 0.6% month-on-month. Even as the dollar continues to fall, USD/NOK has stayed relatively flat this week. Curiously this has also happened amid rising oil prices. Overall, we expect USD/NOK to rally in the fall, as the Norwegian economy remains tepid, and inflation is not likely to rise above target any time soon, while investors are still underestimating the Fed's will to push interest rates higher. That being said, we are bearish on EUR/NOK, as this cross trades as a mirror image of oil, and the OPEC deal should continue to remove excess supply from the market and push prices higher. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 A Market Update: June 23, 2017 Exploring Risks To Our DXY View - May 26, 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
Sweden has been generating substantial inflationary pressures, and increasing economy activity is likely to support these pressures, hence the Riksbank's recent hawkishness. With China tightening policy, SEK strength could be a story of rate differentials going forward, appreciating against EUR, AUD, NZD and NOK, as the Riksbank is likely to become increasingly nervous in the face of rising inflationary pressures. However, as the market currently underprices the risk of a more hawkish Fed, the picture for USD/SEK is less clear. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Bloody Potomac - May 19, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights EUR/USD is likely to correct over the course of the coming weeks, however, the picture remains too murky to be aggressive. The dollar move since 2015 is still in line with previous sideways consolidations. Economic developments suggest that the USD is more likely to break out than breakdown over the next 12 months. Inflation will hold the keys to the next big trend. The RBA is hampered by a high degree of labor underutilization, and the roll-over in the Chinese Keqiang index bodes poorly for the AUD. Feature The euro's recent strength has been nothing short of stunning. Abandoning our "dollar correction" stance at the end of May was clearly a mistake.1 Now that EUR/USD has punched back above its 2015 high, it is time to reflect whether this year's dollar decline was indeed a correction or whether the euro's bear market is over, in which case EUR/USD could move back above its PPP fair value of 1.33. A Dollar Move Chart I-1The Dollar Is Weak Against Everything
The Dollar Is Weak Against Everything
The Dollar Is Weak Against Everything
The rally in EUR/USD has been more than just a period of euro strength: it has been reflective of a broad-based decline in the USD. As Chart I-1 illustrates, the plunge in the dollar's advance/decline line indicates the greenback has been weak against pretty much everything out there. While the White House's failures and its lack of action on the fiscal stimulus front have played a role in explaining the dollar's weakness, the Federal Reserve's absence of credibility among market participants has been an even greater factor. Weak U.S. inflation, with core CPI at 1.7% and core PCE at 1.4%, implies that the Fed is not achieving its 2% inflation target. Thus, the probability of another rate hike in December has now fallen below 50%, and the OIS curve only anticipates one interest rate hike per year for the next two years. We can add color by looking at specific contracts. At the end of 2016, the December 2019 Eurodollar futures sported a nearly 2.6% implied rate. Today, the same contract trades below 2%. This seems too complacent. For one, U.S. financial conditions have massively eased in response to the collapse in the dollar and the rally in risk assets. This suggests U.S. growth should perk up toward 3% for the remainder of 2017 (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Financial Conditions Will Support Growth
Financial Conditions Will Support Growth
Financial Conditions Will Support Growth
Moreover, this is not happening in a vacuum. The official U.S. output gap is more or less closed, and our Composite Capacity Utilization Gauge - which incorporates both the traditional capacity utilization measure along with the unemployment gap - has now moved decisively into "no slack" territory. Under such circumstances, accelerating growth is likely to put heightened pressures on existing resources, raising the risk of a resumption in inflation. Also, in and of itself, this indicator has historically displayed long leads on inflation. Based on this measure, inflation should bottom during the third quarter of 2017 (Chart I-3). With the narrative that inflation is low forever well-entrenched in the market, an inflation surprise in the fall is a growing threat that would prompt a violent repricing of the Fed's path toward something closer to the "dots." This would support a rebound in the DXY. Would this rebound be playable? Our bias is to say yes. The U.S. labor market is still much tighter than the rest of the G10. The U.S. unemployment remains 2.7 percentage points below its 10-year moving average, versus 0.3 percentage points for the rest of the G10 (Chart I-4). Hence, U.S. rates have more upside relative to other advanced economies. This suggests that peak monetary divergences have yet to be seen. Moreover, from a technical perspective, it is far from clear that the dollar bull market is over. While the dollar A/D line has swooned, it has yet to break down - a pattern reminiscent of the second half of the 1990s, when the dollar bull market also experienced a long pause before powering ahead again (Chart I-5). Chart I-3The Trough In Inflation Is Coming
The Trough In Inflation Is Coming
The Trough In Inflation Is Coming
Chart I-4The U.S.: In A Tighter Spot
The U.S.: In A Tighter Spot
The U.S.: In A Tighter Spot
Chart I-5Too Early To Tell If The Greenback Is Dead
Too Early To Tell If The Greenback Is Dead
Too Early To Tell If The Greenback Is Dead
Bottom Line: The euro's strength has been a reflection of generalized weakness in the USD. So far, the USD's weakness in 2017 continues to look and smell like a correction, similar to the action in the late 1990s. However, we cannot be dogmatic: the USD will remain under the thralls of inflationary dynamics in the U.S. The easing in U.S. financial conditions, along with the elevated level of resource utilization, suggests U.S. inflation will pick up this fall, which should prompt a repricing of the Fed's path by investors. The Euro Specifics When it comes to that specifics of the euro, the economic fundamentals are in favor of the dollar right now. First, it is undeniable the euro area inflation has been surprising to the upside relative to that of the U.S. However, this is principally a reflection of the lagging stimulative impact of the 25% collapse in the euro from April 2014 to March 2015. Its 12% appreciation since then points to a reversal of this dynamic (Chart I-6). Second, aggregate relative financial conditions (FCI) tell a similar story. The tightening in euro area FCI relative to the U.S. also points to a slowdown in relative growth in favor of the U.S. Most crucially though, this tightening in relative FCI also portends a change in relative inflation dynamics. As Chart I-7 illustrates, the change in relative FCI has been a reliable leading indicator of comparative inflation dynamics. At this juncture, it argues that inflation in Europe should slow down relative to the U.S. Chart I-6Inflation Surprises Will Move##br## From Europe To The U.S.
Inflation Surprises Will Move From Europe To The U.S.
Inflation Surprises Will Move From Europe To The U.S.
Chart I-7FCIs Point To A Reversal ##br##Of Inflation Fortunes
FCIs Point To A Reversal Of Inflation Fortunes
FCIs Point To A Reversal Of Inflation Fortunes
This makes sense. The U.S. has had trouble generating much inflation despite the U6 unemployment rate standing at 8.5% - a level at which wages and inflation accelerated in previous cycles. Meanwhile, the euro area's labor underutilization remains very high, especially outside Germany. This suggests that euro area inflation could be vulnerable to the tightening in financial conditions that has materialized in the wake of the euro's rally. In other words, the euro's strength is doing the ECB's job while the dollar's weakness is undoing some of the Fed's tightening. Third, the trading action around the release of the German Ifo survey this past Tuesday was very interesting. The Ifo came in at 116, another record reading and substantially above market expectations, yet the euro fell on the news until it was rescued by the Fed. What is fascinating is that, while the German Ifo is near record highs, the Belgian Business Confidence (BCC) survey has begun to sag (Chart I-8). Because Belgium is a logistical center deeply intertwined within European supply chains, the BCC has been an even better leading indicator of European growth trends than the Ifo. The current extreme gap between the Ifo and the BCC confirms that Europe owes a lot of its current health to Germany's boom - and indicates that the rest of the euro area is already suffering blowbacks from the euro's rally. Fourth, euro area equities have eradicated all of their gains for the year relative to U.S. equities. This is happening exactly as the euro area economic surprise index has rolled over against its U.S. counterpart (Chart I-9). This corroborates the economic risks created by the tightening of FCI in Europe versus the U.S. Fifth, the EUR/USD is trading at its greatest premium to our preferred intermediate-term fair value measure since December 2009 (Chart I-10). This measures incorporate real rate differentials at both the short end and long end of the curve, global risk aversion, and commodity prices, suggesting that the EUR/USD has dissociated from most reasonable guides.2 Chart I-8European Growth Is About Germany
European Growth Is About Germany
European Growth Is About Germany
Chart I-9Stocks Are Sending A Dark Omen For The Euro
Stocks Are Sending A Dark Omen For The Euro
Stocks Are Sending A Dark Omen For The Euro
Chart I-10Euro And Fair Value
Euro And Fair Value
Euro And Fair Value
Bottom Line: European financial conditions have tightened considerably, especially relative to the U.S. This suggests European inflation will once again lag that of the U.S. Moreover, the pain of tighter FCIs is rearing its head: European stocks are once again underperforming the U.S., and the relative economic surprise index has markedly rolled over. We are thus experiencing a euro overshoot. Timing Chart I-1Skewed Positioning In EUR/USD
Skewed Positioning In €/$
Skewed Positioning In €/$
These fundamental considerations do point to a weaker EUR/USD, but they provide little guidance in terms of timing the end of the euro bull run. Most metrics we follow are in fact pointing to trouble ahead. As we highlighted, euro longs are at all-time highs, while euro shorts have been massively purged. This suggests that chasing any further gains in the euro could be a high-risk proposition (Chart I-11). Additionally, the euro's fractal dimension is fully indicative of massive groupthink, and warns that both short-term and long-term investors are both positioned on the long side of the trade (Chart I-12). While the paucity of willing sellers in the market has been a key ingredient bidding up the euro, this also makes the currency vulnerable to a buying exhaustion phase as potential future buyers are already in the market, and will not be there to support it in the coming months. However, because of this very scarcity of sellers, only a few new buyers are necessary to bid up the euro further. Therefore, with the euro having broken above its 2015 high, a rally toward 1.2 could materialize in the blink of an eye. Because of this risk, we have been shorting the euro through the EUR/SEK, EUR/CAD, and EUR/NOK pairs, a strategy that has paid off. This week, for traders with greater liquidity needs, we recommend a tactical speculative short EUR/USD bet, with a tight stop at 1.182 and a target 1.12. Chart I-12Groupthink In Action
Groupthink In Action
Groupthink In Action
Bottom Line: The euro is displaying signs of massive groupthink on the long side. Moreover, speculators are excessively long. Our preferred strategy is still to play a euro correction on its crosses, where the risk reward ratio seems more attractive. However, we are opening a tactical short EUR/USD bet this week with a tight stop. The Almighty AUD In a Special Report published four weeks ago, we positioned Australia in the middle of the pack within G10 central banks in terms of hiking sequence.3 Essentially, while Australia does not suffer from as much slack as the euro area and Switzerland, and from as much uncertainty as the U.K., or as severely entrenched inflation expectations as Japan, it still suffers from much more labor underutilization than Canada, Sweden, or New Zealand. As Chart I-13 illustrates, labor underutilization in Australia is still hovering near 20-year highs, underpinning low wage growth and policy rates. This weakness in wages is likely to continue to weigh on core inflation (Chart I-14). Chart I-13The Root Cause Of The RBA's Dovishness
The Root Cause Of The RBA's Dovishness
The Root Cause Of The RBA's Dovishness
Chart I-14Wages Continue To Weigh On Core CPI
Wages Continue To Weigh On Core CPI
Wages Continue To Weigh On Core CPI
Furthermore, while being deeply embedded in the Asian business cycle has helped Australia avoid a recession since 1991, this also means that Australian inflation has been greatly influenced by regional dynamics. Thus, based on recent trends, Aussie headline inflation could endure another down leg, especially as the AUD has rallied 16% since January 2016 (Chart I-15). This means that on all fronts, Australian inflationary pressures will remain muted. The recent speech by Governor Philip Lowe focusing on the flatness of the Australian Philips curve highlights that all these concerns are at the forefront of the Reserve Bank of Australia's mind. As a result, we continue to expect Australian interest rates to lag those in the U.S. As Chart I-16 illustrates, when the unemployment gap - as measured by the difference between unemployment and its 10-year moving average - is greater in Australia than in the U.S., the RBA lags the Fed. This also highlights that the AUD is at risk of a sharp correction once the broad USD rally resumes, especially as its recent strength is completely out of line with policy differentials. Chart I-15The Asian Inflation Anchor
The Asian Inflation Anchor
The Asian Inflation Anchor
Chart I-16The Labour Market Points To A Weaker AUD
The Labour Market Points To A Weaker AUD
The Labour Market Points To A Weaker AUD
Beyond the USD's own weakness, the rebound in the Chinese economy has been the main reason behind the Australian dollar's rally - despite the continued dovish bias of the RBA. Australian exports expressed in U.S. dollar terms have surged in response to the Chinese mini boom in late 2016/early 2017 (Chart I-17). However, this positive for the Australian economy and Australian profits is dissipating: the Chinese Keqiang index has rolled over, and Beijing is likely to continue to limit speculative excesses in Chinese real estate - a key source of demand for Australian exports. Chart I-17China's Boost Is Dissipating
China's Boost Is Dissipating
China's Boost Is Dissipating
Moreover, the Australian dollar is trading 10% above its PPP, has moved out of line with interest rate differentials, and investors are massively long this currency; yet Australia still sports a negative international investment position of 60% of GDP. This combination makes the Aussie's strength untenable. When EM stocks break, a view espoused by our Emerging Market Strategy sister service, the AUD should prove the greatest victim within the G10 FX space. Bottom Line: Inflationary pressures in the Australian economy remain muted as labor underutilization remains plentiful. As a result, the RBA is likely to keep a dovish tone at least until the end of the year. The rebound in Chinese activity has been the key factor that has supported the AUD this year. However, the recent rollover in China's Keqiang index indicates this pillar of support to growth and profits is vanishing. The AUD will prove the greatest victim of any EM weakness or risk-off event. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com Haaris Aziz, Research Assistant haarisa@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report titled, "Bloody Potomac", dated May 19, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report titled, "In Search Of A Timing Model", dated July 22, 2016, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy and Global Alpha Sector Strategy Special Report titled, "Who Hikes Next?", dated June 30, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 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
U.S. Dollar U.S. data was somewhat mixed recently: Continuing and initial jobless claims both came in higher than expected; New home sales also increased at a lesser-than-anticipated pace, with home prices also fairing worse than investors hoped for; However, durable goods increased by very solid 6.5%; Building permits and housing starts, however, are also growing robustly. The DXY has hit a crucial point. It has given up all of its gains since 2015 and even from mid-2016. The greenback has previously fared well at this level, and a buying opportunity should emerge when U.S. inflation picks up as positioning is skewed against the dollar. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Look Ahead, Not Back - June 9, 2017 Capacity Explosion = Inflation Implosion - June 2, 2017 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
Data in core Europe is still firm, although it is becoming increasingly mixed: Headline inflation is staying at the consensus figure of 1.3% and core inflation came in higher than expected at 1.2%; PPI is increasing at a 2.4% pace annually; The IFO survey was robust, with the current assessment, business climate and expectations all beating expectations; However, ZEW survey was weaker than expected; PMIs were also weaker across the board. The recent strength in the euro was also compounded by weakness in the U.S. The euro has failed to appreciate nearly as much against commodity currencies due to higher global growth. Given its much lofty momentum, we are reluctant to bet on more euro upside. Report Links: Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 A Market Update: June 23, 2017 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
Japanese trade balance worsened as exports and imports grew at 9.7% and 15.5% respectively; However, the all-industry activity index declined by 0.9% in May; The Leading Economic Indicator increased by only 0.4 to 104.6; The Coincident Index, however, declined to 115.8 from 117.1; USD/JPY has been declining recently due to softer U.S. data and lower bond yields. However, we remain yen bears as the absence of inflation remains the key challenge facing the Japanese economy. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 A Market Update: June 23, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
Data out of the U.K. was mixed: Real retail sales expanded at a 2.9% annual pace, with the 'ex-Fuel' measure expanding at 3%; PPI managed to increase by 2.9%; However, CPI came in at 2.6%, falling short of the 2.9% expected. GBP/USD has managed to appreciate close to 10% since the beginning of the year, while depreciating around 5% against EUR in the same time period. We still believe the pound has more short-term downside against the euro, and longer-term downside against the greenback. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 The Last Innings Of The Dollar Correction - April 21, 2017 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
The economic data flow in Australia saw a somewhat softer patch this week: RBA trimmed-mean CPI increased at a 1.8% pace, in line with consensus but below the previous data point; Headline CPI, however, increased by 1.9%, which was less than expected; Both the export price index and the import price index contracted 5.7% and 0.1% quarterly. Weaker data from the U.S. is helping the AUD sustain its gains, however, external pressures from China are proving to be even more paramount to the Aussie's strength. Domestically, however, the Australian economy remained challenged by persistent underemployment. We therefore believe the RBA is unlikely to follow the Bank of Canada in 2017. Report Links: Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 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
Data out of New Zealand has been mixed: Visitor Arrivals increased at a 17.3% annual pace; The trade balance improved slightly, and both exports and imports also increased; The Global Dairy Trade price index increased by 0.2%; However, CPI came in at 1.7%, disappointing consensus by 0.2%, and falling short of the previous 2.2% figure. While the NZD has strengthened against the USD, it has lagged the euro and the rest of the commodity currency complex. WHile the RBNZ is better placed than the RBA to increase rates, it will continue to lag the BoC and the Fed this year. Report Links: Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 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
The Canadian economy continues to exhibit signs of strength: Wholesale sales increased at a 0.9% monthly pace in May; Manufacturing shipments increased at a 1.1% monthly pace; Foreign portfolio investment in Canadian securities also increased to USD 29.46 bn; The CAD has experienced an unbelievable couple of months, appreciating more than 9% in the process. Weak U.S. data, a hawkish BoC, and somewhat stronger oil, have all added to the CAD's gains. We believe that the BoC will stay hawkish and Saudi Arabia will remain adamant in reducing oil inventories to their 5-year average by the end of the year. While these factors will limit the CAD downside this year, it is now vulnerable to a short-term pullback. Report Links: Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Exploring Risks To Our DXY View - May 26, 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
Swiss data has been mixed: Trade balance disappointed at 2,813 mn; UBS Consumption Indicator improved to 1.38 from 1.32; However, the ZEW Survey's Expectations increased to 34.7 from 20.7. EUR/CHF has appreciated more than 2% this past week, while USD/CHF has also been strong. This weakness is welcomed by the SNB, but more softness is needed before durable inflation trend can emerge in the Alpine Confederation. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 The Fed And The Dollar: A Gordian Knot - April 14, 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
Norway's recent labor force survey showed that the unemployment rate fell to 4.3%, better than the consensus 4.5%. Along with rebounding oil prices, this has been a key source of support for the NOK. BCA Energy Strategists continue to believe that oil inventories will be reduced to their 5-year average by the end of the year, which should warrant a healthy degree of downside for EUR/NOK. Against the dollar, the picture will become less positive once U.S. inflation picks up again. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 A Market Update: June 23, 2017 Exploring Risks To Our DXY View - May 26, 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
This week's data in Sweden has been somewhat weak: PPI increased at a 4.8% annual pace, less than the previous 7.2%; Consumer confidence decreased to 102.2, below the expected 103.1, and less than the previous 102.6; Unemployment rate increased to 7.4% from 7.2; However, the trade balance increased by 4.2 bn from the previous month. These explain the recent softness in the krona in recent days, however, we doubt that this represents the end of the period of weakness in EUR/SEK. The SEK's appreciation has been the result of an aggregate strengthening in Swedish data, especially on the inflation front, which has prompted a hawkish switch in the Riksbank's rhetoric. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Bloody Potomac - May 19, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights Major central banks outside the U.S. have fired a warning shot across the bow of global bond markets by signaling that "emergency" levels of monetary accommodation are no longer required. Pipeline inflation pressures have yet to show up at the consumer price level outside of the U.K. Most central bankers argue that temporary factors are to blame, but longer-lasting forces could be at work. There are numerous examples of deflationary pressure driven by waves of innovation, cost cutting and changing business models. However, this is not confirmed in the productivity data. Productivity is dismally low and we do not believe it is due to mismeasurement. The Phillips curve is not dead. We expect that inflation will firm by enough to allow central banks to continue scaling back monetary stimulus. The real fed funds rate is not far from the neutral short-term rate, but it is still well below the Fed's estimate of the long-run neutral rate. Market expectations for the Fed are far too complacent; keep duration short. The failure to repeal Obamacare could actually increase the motivation of Republicans to move forward on tax cuts. Expansionary fiscal policy would make life more difficult for the FOMC, given that unemployment is on course to reach the lowest level since 2000. This would force the Fed to act more aggressively, possibly triggering a recession in 2019. The peak Fed/ECB policy divergence is not behind us, implying that recent dollar weakness will reverse. However, the next dollar upleg has been delayed. Fading market hopes for U.S. fiscal stimulus this year have not weighed on equities, in part because of a solid earnings backdrop. Global EPS growth continues to accelerate in line with the recovery in industrial production. In the U.S., results so far suggest that Q2 will see another quarter of margin expansion. Overall earnings growth should peak above our 20% target later this year. It will be tougher sledding in the equity market once profit growth peaks in the U.S. because of poor valuation. Expect to downgrade stocks in the first half of 2018. Corporate bonds are also benefiting from the robust profit backdrop. Balance sheet health continues to deteriorate, but the spark is missing for a sustained corporate bond spread widening. Feature Chart I-1Sell-Off In Global Bond Markets ##br##Triggered By Central Bank Talk
Sell-Off In Global Bond Markets Triggered By Central Bank Talk
Sell-Off In Global Bond Markets Triggered By Central Bank Talk
Major central banks outside the U.S. fired a warning shot across the bow of global bond markets by signaling a recalibration of monetary policy at the ECB's Forum on Central Banking in late June (Chart I-1). The heads of the Bank of England (BoE), Bank of Canada (BoC) and Swedish Riksbank all took a less dovish tone, warning that the diminished threat of deflation has reduced the need for ultra-stimulative policies. The BoC quickly followed up in July with a rate hike and a warning of more to come. The central bank now expects the economy to reach full employment and hit the inflation target by mid-2018, much earlier than previously expected. The Riksbank also backed away from its easing bias at its most recent policy meeting. The ECB's shift in stance was evident even before its Forum meeting, when President Draghi gave a glowing description of the underlying strength of the Euro Area economy. The labor market is about two percentage points closer to full employment than the U.S. was just before the infamous 2013 Taper Tantrum.1 European core inflation is admittedly below target today, but so was the U.S. rate leading up to the 2013 Tantrum. We have not forgotten about Europe's structural problems or the inherent contradictions of the single currency. Banks are still laden with bad debt (although the recapitalization of Italian banks has gone well so far). Nonetheless, from a cyclical economic standpoint, solid momentum this year will allow Draghi to scale back the ECB's ultra-accommodative monetary stance by tapering its asset purchase program early in 2018. The message that "emergency" levels of monetary accommodation are no longer needed is confirmed by our Central Bank (CB) Monitors, which measure pressure on central bankers to raise or lower interest rates (Chart I-2). The Monitors became less useful when rates hit the zero bound and quantitative easing was the only game in town, but they are becoming relevant again as more policymakers consider their exit strategy. All of our CB Monitors are currently in "tighter policy required" territory except for Japan and the Eurozone (although even those are close to the zero line). The Monitors have been rising due to both their growth and underlying inflation components. Another tick higher in PMI's for the advanced economies in July underscored that the rebound in industrial production is continuing (Chart I-3). Our short-term forecasting models, which include both hard and soft data, point to stronger growth in the major countries in the second half of 2017 (Chart I-4). Chart I-2Most In The "Tighter Policy Required" Zone
Most In The "Tighter Policy Required" Zone
Most In The "Tighter Policy Required" Zone
Chart I-3Industrial Production Recovery Is Intact
Industrial Production Recovery Is Intact
Industrial Production Recovery Is Intact
On the inflation side, our pipeline indicators have all signaled a modest building of underlying inflation pressure over the past year (although they have softened recently in the U.S. and Eurozone; Chart I-5). In terms of the components of these indicators, rising core producer price inflation has been partly offset by slower gains in unit labor costs in some economies. Chart I-4Our Short-Term Growth Models Are Bullish
Our Short-Term Growth Models Are Bullish
Our Short-Term Growth Models Are Bullish
Chart I-5Some Rise In Pipeline Inflation Pressure
Some Rise In Pipeline Inflation Pressure
Some Rise In Pipeline Inflation Pressure
These pipeline pressures have yet to show up at the consumer level. Most central bankers argue that temporary special factors are to blame, but many investors are wondering if longer-lasting forces are at work. There are numerous examples of deflationary pressure driven by waves of innovation, cost cutting and changing business models. Amazon, Uber, robotics and shale oil production are just a few examples. If this is the main story, then the inability for central banks to reach their inflation targets is a "good thing" because it reflects the adaptation of game-changing new technology. There is no doubt that important strides are being made in certain areas where new technologies are clearly driving prices down. The problem is that, at the macro level, it is not showing up in the productivity data. Productivity is dismally low across the major countries and we do not believe it is simply due to mismeasurement. A Special Report from BCA's Global Investment Strategy2 service makes a convincing case that mismeasurement is not behind the low productivity figures. In fact, it appears that productivity is over-estimated in some industries. It is also important to keep in mind that technological change is nothing new. There is a vigorous debate in academic circles on whether today's new technologies are anywhere near as positive as previous ones like indoor plumbing, electricity, the internal combustion engine and the internet. We are wowed by today's new gizmos, but they are not as transformative as previous innovations. While productivity is surging in some high-profile firms, studies show that there is a long tail of low-productivity companies that drag down the average. A full discussion is beyond the scope of this report and more research needs to be done, but we are not of the view that technology and productivity preclude rising inflation. We expect that inflation will firm by enough to allow central banks to continue scaling back monetary stimulus in the coming months and quarters. Did Yellen Turn Dovish? As with other central banks, the consensus among Fed policymakers is willing to "look through" low inflation for now. Yellen's Congressional testimony did not deviate from that view, although investors interpreted her remarks as dovish. The financial press focused on her statement that "...the policy rate is not far from neutral." However, this was followed up by the statement that "...because we also anticipate that the factors that are currently holding down the neutral rate will diminish somewhat over time, additional gradual rate hikes are likely to be appropriate over the next few years to sustain the economic expansion and return inflation to our 2 percent goal." Chart I-6Bond Market Does Not Believe The Fed
Bond Market Does Not Believe The Fed
Bond Market Does Not Believe The Fed
The Fed believes there are two neutral interest rates: short-term and long-term. Yellen argued that the actual policy rate is currently close to the short-term neutral level, which is depressed by economic headwinds. However, Yellen and others have made the case that the short-term neutral rate is trending up as headwinds diminish, and will converge with the long-term neutral rate over time. The Fed's Summary of Economic Projections reveals what the FOMC thinks is the neutral long-term real fed funds rate; the median forecast calls for a nominal fed funds rate of 2.9% at the end of 2019 and 3% in the longer run. Incorporating a 2% inflation target, we can infer that the Fed anticipates a real neutral rate of 1% in the longer run. The Fed is likely tracking the real neutral fed funds rate using an estimate created by Laubach and Williams (LW).3 Chart I-6 shows this estimate of the neutral rate, called R-star, alongside the real federal funds rate that is calculated using 12-month trailing core PCE. The resulting real fed funds rate has risen sharply during the past seven months due to both three Fed rate hikes and a decline in inflation. If the Fed lifts rates once more this year and core inflation stays put, then the real fed funds rate would end 2017 close to zero, only 42 bps below neutral. However, it's more likely that the Fed will need to see inflation rebound before it delivers another rate hike. In a scenario where core inflation rises to 1.9% and the Fed lifts rates once more, then the real fed funds rate would actually decline between now and the end of the year. The implication is that the real fed funds rate is not far from R-star, but the nominal rate will have to rise a long way before the real rate reaches the Fed's estimate of the long-term neutral rate. Investors simply don't believe Fed policymakers. According to the bond market, the real fed funds rate will not shift into positive territory until 2021 (see real forward OIS line in Chart I-6). We think this is far too complacent. U.S. Health Care Reform: RIP The speed at which short-term rates converge with the long-run neutral rate will depend importantly on the path of fiscal policy. The Republicans' failure to pass their health care legislation is leading the investors to doubt the prospect for (stimulative) tax cuts. This may be premature. Ironically, the failure to jettison Obamacare may turn out to be a blessing in disguise for President Trump and the Republican Party. According to the Congressional Budget Office, the proposed legislation would have caused 22 million fewer Americans to have health insurance in 2026 compared with the status quo. The Senate bill would have also led to substantial cuts to Medicaid relative to existing law, as well as deep cuts to insurance subsidies for many poor and middle-class families. Many of these voters came out in support of Trump last year. The failure to repeal Obamacare could actually increase the motivation of Republicans to move forward on tax cuts anyway. The chances for broad tax reform have certainly diminished, since that will be just as difficult to get passed as healthcare reform. The GOP also wanted to use the roughly $200 billion in savings from healthcare reform to fund reduced tax rates. However, tax cuts are something that all Republicans can easily agree too, and they will need to show a legislative victory ahead of next year's mid-term elections. The difficulty will be how to pay for these cuts. We expect them to be "fully funded" in the sense that there will be offsetting spending cuts, but these will be back-loaded toward the end of the 10-year budget window, whereas the tax cuts will be front-loaded. This would generate a modest amount of fiscal stimulus over the next few years. Sub-4% U.S. Unemployment Rate Followed By Recession? Chart I-7Inside The Fed's Forecasts
Inside The Fed's Forecasts
Inside The Fed's Forecasts
Expansionary fiscal policy would make life more difficult for the FOMC, which may have already fallen behind the curve. The unemployment rate is below the Fed's estimate of the full employment level, and it will continue to erode unless productivity picks up soon. We backed out the productivity growth rate implied by the Fed's latest Summary of Economic Projections, given its assumption that real GDP growth will be roughly 2% over the next couple of years and that the unemployment rate will stabilize near the current level. This combination implies that productivity growth will accelerate from the average rate observed so far in this expansion (0.7%) to about 1%, which is consistent with monthly payrolls of 135,000 assuming real GDP growth of 2% (Chart I-7). If we instead assume that productivity does not accelerate (and real GDP growth is 2%), then payrolls must jump to 160,000 and the unemployment rate would fall below 4% next year. The implication is that the unemployment rate is likely to soon reach levels not seen since 2000, which would force the FOMC to tighten more aggressively. The Fed would hope for a soft landing as it tries to nudge the unemployment rate higher, but the more likely result is a recession in 2019. For this year, we expect the Fed to begin balance sheet runoff in the autumn, followed by a rate hike in December. The latter hinges importantly on at least a modest rise in core PCE inflation in the coming months. A rebound in oil prices would help the Fed reach its inflation goal, even though energy prices affect the headline by more than the core rate. Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih indicated at a recent press conference in St. Petersburg that no changes are presently needed to the production deal under which OPEC and non-OPEC producers pledged to remove 1.8mn b/d from the market. The Saudi energy minister's remarks leave open the possibility of deeper cuts later this year if global inventories do not draw fast enough, or for the cuts to be extended beyond March 2018 if officials are not satisfied with progress on the storage front. We still believe they are capable of meeting this goal, despite rising shale production. Chart I-8Forecast Of Oil Inventories
Forecast Of Oil Inventories
Forecast Of Oil Inventories
Our commodity strategists expect OECD oil inventories to reach their five-year average level by year-end or early 2018 Q1 (Chart I-8). In the absence of additional cuts, the five-year average level of OECD inventories will be higher than we estimated earlier this year, indicating that our expectation for the overall inventory drawdown later this year has been trimmed. Still, our oil strategists believe the inventory drawdowns will be sufficient to push WTI above the mid-$50s by year-end. If this forecast pans out, rising oil prices will push up headline inflation and inflation expectations in the major advanced economies. The bottom line is that the backdrop has turned bond-bearish now that central bankers in the advanced economies are in the process of scaling back the easier monetary policy that followed the deflationary 2014/15 oil shock. Duration should be kept short within global fixed income portfolios. In terms of country allocation, our global fixed income strategists have downgraded the Eurozone government bond market to underweight, joining the Treasury allocation, in light of the pending ECB tapering announcement that could place more upward pressure on yields. This was offset by upgrading Japan to maximum overweight. Max Policy Divergence Has Not Been Reached Chart I-9Europe Has A Lower Neutral Rate
Europe Has A Lower Neutral Rate
Europe Has A Lower Neutral Rate
The change in tone by central bankers outside the U.S. has weighted heavily on the U.S. dollar. The Canadian dollar and the Euro have been particularly strong. Investors have apparently decided that the peak Fed/ECB policy divergence is now behind us. We do not agree. The ECB may be tapering, but rate hikes are a long way off because there remains a substantial amount of economic slack in the Eurozone. Laubach and Williams estimate R-star in the Eurozone to be close to zero, which is 50 basis points below the U.S. neutral rate (Chart I-9). The difference is related to slower potential growth and greater unemployment. Labor market slack across the euro area as a whole is still 3.2 percentage points higher than in 2008, and 6.7 points higher outside of Germany. The current real short-term rate is about -1%. We expect U.S. R-star to rise in absolute terms and relative to the neutral rate in the Eurozone because the U.S. is further advanced in the economic expansion. As Fed rate hike expectations ratchet up in the coming months, interest rate differentials versus Europe will widen in favor of the dollar. It is the same story for the dollar/yen rate because the Bank of Japan is a long way from raising or abandoning its 10-year bond yield peg. Japanese core inflation has fallen back to zero and medium-to-long-term inflation expectations have dipped so far this year. The annual shunto wage negotiations this summer produced little in the way of salary hikes. The major exception to our "strong dollar" call is the Canadian loonie, which we expect to appreciate versus the greenback. We also like the Aussie dollar, provided that the Chinese economy continues to hold up as we expect. Stocks Get A Free Pass For Now Chart I-10Global EPS And Industrial Production
Global EPS And Industrial Production
Global EPS And Industrial Production
Fading market hopes for U.S. fiscal stimulus have weighed on both U.S. Treasury yields and the dollar, but the equity market has taken the news in stride. Are equity investors simply in denial? We do not think so. The equity market appears to have been given a "free pass" for now because earnings have been supportive. The combination of robust earnings growth, steady real GDP growth of around 2%, and low bond yields has been bullish for stocks so far in this expansion. At the global level, EPS growth continues to accelerate in line with the recovery in industrial production, which is a good proxy for top line growth (Chart I-10). Orders and production for capital goods in the major advanced economies have been particularly strong in recent months. The global operating margin flattened off last month according to IBES data, although margins continued to firm in the U.S. and Europe (Chart I-11). The profit acceleration is widespread across these three economies in the Basic Materials and Consumer Discretionary sectors. Industrials, Energy, Health Care and Consumer Staples are also performing well in most cases. Telecom is the weak spot. Our sector profit diffusion indexes paint an upbeat picture for the near term (Chart I-12). Chart I-11Operating Margins On The Rise
Operating Margins On The Rise
Operating Margins On The Rise
Chart I-12Earnings Diffusion Indexes Are Bullish
Earnings Diffusion Indexes Are Bullish
Earnings Diffusion Indexes Are Bullish
In the U.S., the second quarter earnings season is off to a good start. Results so far suggest that Q2 will see another quarter of margin expansion. We believe that U.S. margins are in a secular decline, but they are in the midst of a counter-trend rally that will last for the rest of this year. Using blended results for the second quarter, trailing S&P 500 EPS growth hit 18½% on a 4-quarter moving total basis (Chart I-13). The acceleration in earnings is impressive even after excluding the Energy sector. We projected early this year that EPS growth would peak at around 20%4 by year end, but it appears that earnings will overshoot that level. Chart I-13Robust EPS Growth Even Without Energy
Robust EPS Growth Even Without Energy
Robust EPS Growth Even Without Energy
It will be tougher sledding in the equity market once profit growth peaks in the U.S. because of poor valuation. We are expecting to scale back our overweight equity recommendation sometime in the first half of 2018, although the global rally could be extended by constructive earnings data in Europe and Japan. The earnings recovery in both economies is behind the U.S., such that peak growth will come later in 2018. There is also more room for margins to expand in Europe than in the U.S. The relative earnings cycle is one of the reasons why we continue to favor Eurozone and Japanese stocks to the U.S. in local currency terms. Japanese stocks are also cheap to the U.S. based on our top-down valuation indicator (Chart I-14). European stocks are not far from fair value relative to the U.S., after adjusting for the fact that Europe trades structurally on the cheap side. The message from our top-down valuation indicator for European stocks is confirmed when using the bottom-up information contained in the new BCA Equity Trading Strategy platform. The Special Report beginning on page 20 describes a bottom-up valuation measure that we will use in conjunction with our top-down (index-based) measures. Corporate Bonds: Kindling And Sparks Healthy EPS growth momentum is also constructive for corporate bonds, although overall balance sheet health continues to erode in the U.S. The release of the U.S. Flow of Funds data allows us to update BCA's Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) for the first quarter (Chart I-15). The level of the CHM moved slightly deeper into "deteriorating health territory." Chart I-14Top-Down Relative Equity Valuation
Top-Down Relative Equity Valuation
Top-Down Relative Equity Valuation
Chart I-15Deteriorating Since 2015, But...
Deteriorating Since 2015, But...
Deteriorating Since 2015, But...
The Monitor has been a reliable indicator for the trend in corporate bond spreads over the years, calling almost all major turning points in advance. However, spreads have trended tighter over the past year even as the CHM began to signal deteriorating health in early 2015. Why the divergence? The CHM is only one of three key items on our checklist to underweight corporate bonds versus Treasurys. The other two are tight Fed policy (i.e. real interest rates that are above the neutral level) and the direction of bank lending standards for C&I loans. On its own, balance sheet deterioration only provides the kindling for a spread blowout. It also requires a spark. Investors do not worry about high leverage or a profit margin squeeze, for example, until the outlook for defaults sours. The latter occurs once inflation starts to rise and the Fed actively targets slower growth via higher interest rates. Banks see trouble on the horizon and respond by tightening lending standards, thereby restricting the flow of credit to the business sector. Defaults start to ramp up, buttressing banks' bias to curtail lending in a self-reinforcing negative feedback loop. The three items on the checklist normally occurred at roughly the same time in previous cycles because a deteriorating CHM is typically a late-cycle phenomenon. But this has been a very different cycle. High stock prices and rock-bottom bond yields have encouraged the corporate sector to leverage up and repurchase stock. At the same time, the subpar, stretched-out recovery has meant that it has taken longer than usual for the economy to reach full employment. It will be some time before U.S. short-term interest rates reach restrictive territory. As for banks, they tightened lending standards a little in 2015/16 due to the collapse of energy prices, but this has since reversed. The implication is that, while corporate health has deteriorated, we do not have the spark for a sustained corporate bond spread widening. Indeed, Moody's expects that the 12-month default rate will trend lower over the next year, which is consistent with constructive trends in corporate lending standards, industrial production and job cut announcements (all good indicators for defaults). Chart I-16 presents a valuation metric that adjusts the HY OAS for 12-month trailing default losses (i.e. it is an ex-post measure). In the forecast period, we hold today's OAS constant, but the 12-month default losses are a shifting blend of historical losses and Moody's forecast. The endpoint suggests that the market is offering about 200 basis points of default-adjusted excess yield over the Treasury curve for the next 12 months. This is roughly in line with the mid-point of the historical data. In the past, a default-adjusted spread of around 200 basis points provided positive 12-month excess returns to high-yield bonds 74% of the time, with an average return of 82 basis points. It is also a positive sign for corporate bonds that the net transfer to shareholders, in the form of buybacks, dividends and M&A activity, eased in the fourth quarter 2016 and the first quarter of 2017 (Chart I-17). Ratings migration has also improved (i.e. moderating net downgrades), especially for shareholder-friendly rating action, which is a better indicator for corporate spreads. The diminished appetite to "return cash to shareholders" may not last long, but for now it supports our overweight in both investment- and speculative-grade bonds versus Treasurys. That said, excess returns are likely to be limited to the carry given little room for spread compression. Chart I-16Still Some Value In ##br##High-Yield Corporates
Still Some Value In High-Yield Corporates
Still Some Value In High-Yield Corporates
Chart I-17Net Transfers To Shareholders ##br##Eased In Past Two Quarters
Net Transfers To Shareholders Eased In Past Two Quarters
Net Transfers To Shareholders Eased In Past Two Quarters
Within balanced portfolios, we recommend favoring equities to high-yield at this stage of the cycle. Value is not good enough in HY relative to stocks to expect any sustained period of outperformance in the former, assuming that the bull market in risk assets continues. Investment Conclusions A key change in the global financial landscape over the past month is a signal from central banks that they see the need for policy recalibration. Policymakers view sub-target inflation as temporary, and some are concerned that low interest rates could contribute to the formation of financial market bubbles. The bond market remains skeptical, given persistent inflation undershoots and growing anecdotal evidence that new technologies are very deflationary. It would be extremely bullish for stocks if these new technologies were indeed boosting the supply side of the economy at a faster pace than the official data suggest. Robust advances in output-per-worker would allow profits to grow quickly, and would provide the economy more breathing space before hitting inflationary capacity limits (keeping the bond vigilantes at bay). We acknowledge that there are important technological breakthroughs being made, but we do not see any evidence that this is occurring on a widespread basis sufficient to "move the dial" in terms of overall productivity growth. Indeed, the stagnation of middle class personal income is consistent with a poor productivity backdrop. Chart I-18 highlights that "creative destruction" is in a long-term bear market. Chart I-18Less Creative Destruction
Less Creative Destruction
Less Creative Destruction
That said, the equity market is benefiting from the mini-cycle in corporate profits, which are still recovering from the earnings recession in 2015/early 2016. We expect the recovery to be complete by early 2018, which will set the stage for a substantial slowdown in EPS growth next year. It won't be a disaster, absent a recession, but demanding valuations suggest that the market could struggle to make headway through next year. We expect to trim exposure sometime in the first half of 2018. To time the exit, we will watch for a roll-over in the growth rate of S&P 500 EPS on a 4-quarter moving total basis. Investors should look for a peak in industrial production growth as a warnings sign for profits. We are also watching for a contraction in excess money, which we define as M2 divided by nominal GDP. Finally, a rise in core PCE inflation to 2% would be a signal that the Fed is about to ramp up interest rates. For now, remain overweight equities relative to bonds and cash. Favor equities to high yield, but within fixed-income portfolios, overweight investment- and speculative-grade corporates versus Treasurys. We are comfortable with our pro-risk recommendations and our below-benchmark duration stance. Unfortunately, that can't be said of our bullish U.S. dollar and oil price house views. Both are controversial calls among our strategists. As for oil, supply and demand are finely balanced and our positive view hinges importantly on OPEC agreeing to more production cuts. The obvious risk is that these cuts do not materialize. The dollar call has gone against us as the latest signs of improving global growth momentum have admittedly been outside the U.S. Meanwhile, the U.S. is stuck in a political morass, which delays the prospect of fiscal stimulus. This is not to say that U.S. growth will slow. Rather, the growth acceleration may fall short of the high expectations following last November's election. We continue to believe that the market is too complacent on the pace of Fed rate hikes in the coming quarters. An upward adjustment in rate expectations should push the dollar higher on a trade-weighted basis, as outlined above. Nonetheless, this shift will require higher U.S. inflation, the timing of which is highly uncertain. We remain dollar bulls on a 12-month horizon, but we are stepping aside and calling for a trading range in the next three months. Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst July 27, 2017 Next Report: August 31, 2017 1 Please see Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Central Banks Are Now Playing Catch-Up," dated July 4, 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "Weak Productivity Growth: Don't Blame The Statisticians," dated March 25, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com 3 Kathryn Holston, Thomas Laubach, and John C. Williams "Measuring The Natural Rates Of Interest: International Trends And Determinants," Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, Working Paper 2016-11 (December 2016). 4 Calculated as a year-over-year growth rate of a 4-quarter moving total of S&P data. II. The BCA ETS Trading Platform Approach To Valuing Eurozone Stocks The performance of European stocks relative to the U.S. has been dismal in the post-Lehman period. However, the Eurozone economy is performing impressively, profit growth is accelerating and margins are rising. This points to a period of outperformance for Eurozone stocks, at least in local currency terms. Standard valuation measures based on index data suggest that Eurozone stocks are cheap to the U.S. Nonetheless, the European market almost always trades at a discount, due to persistent lackluster profit performance. In Part II of our series on valuation, we approach the issue from a bottom-up perspective, utilizing the powerful analytics provided by BCA's exciting new Equity Trading Strategy (ETS) platform. The ETS software allows us to compare U.S. and European companies on a head-to-head basis and rank them based on a wide range of characteristics. The bottom-up approach avoids the problems of index construction. Investors can be confident that they will make money on a 12-month horizon by taking a position when the new bottom-up indicator reaches +/-1 standard deviations over- or under-valued, although technical information should be taken on board to sharpen the timing. The +/-2 sigma level gives clear buy/sell signals irrespective of fundamental or technical factors. Valuation alone does not justify overweight Eurozone positions at the moment, although we like the market for other reasons. The bottom-up valuation indicator will not replace our top-down version that is based on index data, but rather will be considered together when evaluating relative value. Total returns in the European equity market have bounced relative to the U.S. since 2016 in both local-currency and common currency terms (Chart II-1). However, this has offset only a tiny fraction of the dismal underperformance since 2007. In local currencies, the relative EMU/U.S. total return index is still close to its lowest level since the late 1970s. Compared with the pre-Lehman peak, the U.S. total return index is more than 96% higher according to Datastream data, while the Eurozone total return index is only now getting back to the previous high-water mark when expressed in U.S. dollars (Chart II-2). Chart II-1EMU Stocks Lag Massively...
EMU Stocks Lag Massively...
EMU Stocks Lag Massively...
Chart II-2...Due To Depressed Earnings
...Due To Depressed Earnings
...Due To Depressed Earnings
The yawning return gap between the two equity markets was almost entirely due to earnings as market multiples have moved largely in sync. Earnings-per-share (EPS) generated by U.S. companies now exceed the pre-Lehman peak by about 19%. In contrast, earnings produced by their Eurozone peers are a whopping 48% below their peak (common currency). This reflects both a slower recovery in sales-per-share growth and lower profit margins. Operating margins in Europe have been on the upswing for a year, but are still depressed by pre-Lehman standards. Margin outperformance in the U.S. is not a sector weighting story; in only 2 of 10 sectors do European operating margins exceed the U.S. The return-on-equity data tell a similar story. Nonetheless, a turning point may be at hand. Chart II-3Europe Trades At A Discount
Europe Trades At A Discount
Europe Trades At A Discount
The Eurozone economy has been performing well, especially on a per-capita basis, and forward-looking indicators suggest that growth will remain above-trend for at least the next few quarters. U.S. profit margins have also been (temporarily) rising, but the Eurozone economy has more room to grow because there is still slack in the labor market. There is also more room for margins to rise in the Eurozone corporate sector than is the case in the U.S., where the profit cycle is further advanced. Traditional measures of value based on the MSCI indexes suggest that European stocks are on the cheap side. But are they really that cheap? Based on index data, Eurozone stocks trade at a hefty discount across most of the main valuation measures (Chart II-3). This is the case even for normalized measures such as price-to-book (P/B). However, Eurozone stocks have almost always traded at a discount. There are many possible explanations as to why there is a persistent valuation gap between these two markets, including differences in accounting standards, discount rates and sector weights. The wider use of stock buybacks in the U.S. also favors American stock valuations relative to Europe. But most important are historical differences in underlying corporate fundamentals. U.S. companies on the whole were significantly more profitable even before the Great Financial Crisis (Chart II-3). U.S. companies also tend to have lower leverage and higher interest coverage. Better profitability metrics in the U.S. are not solely an artifact of sector weighting either. RoE and operating margins are lower in Europe even applying U.S. sector weights to the European market.1 Why corporate Europe has been a perennial profit under-achiever is beyond the scope of this paper. U.S. companies reaped most of the benefit from productivity gains over the past 25 years, with the result that the capital share of income soared while the labor share collapsed. European companies were less successful in squeezing down labor costs. Measuring Value In the first part of our two-part Special Report on valuation, published in July 2016, we took a top-down approach to determine whether Eurozone stocks are cheap versus the U.S. after adjusting for different sector weights and persistent differences in the underlying profit fundamentals. A regression approach that factored in various profitability measures performed reasonably well, but the top-down "mechanical" approach that relied on a 5-year moving average provided the most profitable buy/sell signals historically. We approach the issue from a bottom-up perspective in Part II of our series, utilizing the powerful analytics provided by BCA's exciting new Equity Trading Strategy (ETS) platform. The software allows us to compare U.S. and European companies on a head-to-head basis and rank them based on a wide range of characteristics. The bottom-up approach avoids the problems of index construction when trying to gauge valuation across countries. The web-based platform uses over 24 quantitative factors to rank approximately 10,000 individual stocks in 23 countries, allowing clients to find stocks with winning characteristics at the global level. Users can rank and score individual equities to support a broad set of investment strategies and apply macro and sector views to single-name investments. The ETS approach has an impressive track record. Historically, the top-decile of stocks ranked using the "BCA Score" methodology have outperformed stocks in the bottom decile by over 25% a year.2 The BCA Score includes all 24 factors when ranking stocks, but we are interested in developing a valuation metric that provides valued added on its own and is at least as good as the top-down index-based measure developed in Part I. The five valuation measures in the ETS database are trailing P/E, forward P/E, price-to-book, price-to-sales and price-to-cash flow. We combine all of the Eurozone and U.S. companies that have total assets of greater than $1 billion into one dataset. The ETS platform then ranks the stocks from best to worst on a daily basis (i.e. cheapest to most expensive), using an equally-weighted average of the five valuation measures. The average score for U.S. stocks is subtracted from the average score for European stocks, and then divided by the standard deviation of the series. This provides a valuation metric that fluctuates roughly between +/- 2 standard deviations. Chart II-4 presents the resulting bottom-up indicator, along with our previously-published top-down valuation measure. A high reading indicates that European stocks are cheap to the U.S., while it is the opposite for low readings. Chart II-4Eurozone Equity Relative Valuation Indicators
Eurozone Equity Relative Valuation Indicators
Eurozone Equity Relative Valuation Indicators
The underlying bottom-up data extend back to 2000. However, the bursting of the tech bubble in the early 2000's causes major shifts in relative valuation among sectors and between the U.S. and Eurozone that skew the indicator when constructed using the entire data set. We obtain a cleaner indicator when using only the data from 2005. As with any valuation indicator, it is only useful when it reaches extremes. We calculated the historical track record for a trading rule that is based on critical levels of over- and under-valuation. For example, we calculated the (local currency) excess returns over 3, 6, 12 and 24-month horizon generated by (1) overweighting European stocks when that market was one and two standard deviations cheap versus the U.S. market, and (2) overweighting the U.S. when the European market was one and two standard deviations expensive (Table II-1). Table II-1Value Indicator: Trading Rule Returns And Batting Average
August 2017
August 2017
The trading rule returns were best when the indicator reached two standard deviations cheap or expensive, providing average returns of almost 11 percent over 12 months. The trading rule returns when the indicator reached +/-1 standard deviation were not as good, but still more than 3% on 12- and 24-month horizons. Table II-1 also presents the trading rule's batting average. That is, the number of positive excess returns generated by the trading rule as a percent of the total number of signals. The batting average ranged from 50% on a 3-month horizon to 68% over 24 months when buy/sell signals are triggered at +/- 1 standard deviation. The batting average is much higher (80-100%) using +/- 2 standard deviations as a trigger point, although there were only five months over the entire sample when the indicator reached this level. The charts and tables in the Appendix present the results of the same analysis at the sector level. The results are equally as good as the aggregate valuation indicator, with a couple of exceptions. European stocks are cheap to the U.S. in the Energy, Financials, and Utilities sectors, while U.S. stocks offer better value in Consumer Discretionary, Consumer Staples, Health Care, Industrials and Technology. Materials, Real Estate, and Telecommunications are close to equally valued. Sharpening The Buy/Sell Signals We then augmented the valuation analysis by adding information on company fundamentals, such as EPS growth and profit margins among others. The ETS software ranked the companies after equally-weighting the valuation and fundamental factors. However, this approach yielded poor results in terms of the trading rule. This is because, for example, when European stocks reach undervalued levels relative to the U.S., it is usually because the European earnings fundamentals have underperformed those of the U.S. companies. Thus, favorable value is offset by poor fundamentals, muddying the message provided by valuation alone. In contrast, adding some information from the technical factors in the ETS model does add value, at least when using +/-1 standard deviations as the trigger point for trades (Chart II-5). Excess returns to the trading rule rise significantly when the medium-term momentum and long-term mean reversion factors are included in the valuation indicator (Table II-2). The batting average also improves. Chart II-5Indicators: Value And Value With Technical Information
Indicators: Value And Value With Technical Information
Indicators: Value And Value With Technical Information
Table II-2Value And Technical Indicator: Trading Rule Returns And Batting Average
August 2017
August 2017
Adding technical information does not improve the trading rule performance when +/-2 sigma is used as the trigger point. Investment Conclusions Our new ETS platform provides investors with a unique way of picking stocks by combining top-down macro themes with company-specific information. It also allows us to develop valuation tools that avoid some of the pitfalls of index data by comparing stocks on a head-to-head basis. Historical analysis using a trading rule demonstrates that the new bottom-up valuation indicator provides real value to investors. We would normally evaluate its track record using stretching analysis, where we use only the historical information available at each point in time when determining relative value. However, the relatively short history of the available data precludes this test because we need at least a few cycles to best gauge the underlying volatility in the data. Still, investors can be fairly confident that they will make money on a 12-month horizon by taking a position when the bottom-up indicator reaches +/-1 sigma over- or under-valued, although technical information should be taken on board to sharpen the timing. The +/-2 sigma level gives clear buy/sell signals irrespective of the fundamental or technical factors. The bottom-up valuation indicator will not replace our top-down version that is based on index data, but rather will be considered together when evaluating relative value. At the moment, the top-down version proposes that European stocks are somewhat cheap to the U.S., while the bottom-up indicator points to slight overvaluation. Considering the two together suggests that valuation is close enough to fair value that investors cannot make the decision on value alone. Valuation indicators need to be near extremes to be informative. Our global equity strategists recommend overweighting Eurozone stocks versus the U.S. at the moment, although not because of valuation. Rather, the Eurozone economy and corporate earnings have more room to grow because of lingering labor market slack. This also means that the ECB can keep rates glued to the zero bound for at least the next 18 months while the Fed hikes, which will place upward pressure on the dollar and downward pressure on the euro. Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst Appendix: Trading Rule Returns By Sector Chart II-6, Chart II-7, Chart II-8, Chart II-9, Chart II-10, Chart II-11, Chart II-12, Chart II-13, Chart II-14, Chart II-15, Chart II-16. Chart II-6Consumer Discretionary
Consumer Discretionary
Consumer Discretionary
Chart II-7Consumer Staples
Consumer Staples
Consumer Staples
Chart II-8Energy
Energy
Energy
Chart II-9Financials
Financials
Financials
Chart II-10Health Care
Health Care
Health Care
Chart II-11Industrials
Industrials
Industrials
Chart II-12Materials
Materials
Materials
Chart II-13Real Estate
Real Estate
Real Estate
Chart II-14Utilities
Utilities
Utilities
Chart II-15Technology
Technology
Technology
Chart II-16Telecommunication
Telecommunication
Telecommunication
1 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Special Report, "Are Eurozone Stocks Really That Cheap?" July 2016, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see Equity Trading Strategy Special Report, "Introducing ETS: A Top Down Approach to Bottom-Up Stock Picking," December 2, 2015, available at ets.bcaresearch.com. III. Indicators And Reference Charts Stocks continue to outperform bonds against a constructive backdrop of improving global economic prospects and accelerating EPS growth, while low inflation is expected to keep central banks from tightening quickly. Our main equity and asset allocation indicators remain bullish for risk, with a few exceptions. Our new Revealed Preference Indicator (RPI) jumped back to a 100% equity weighting in July. We introduced the RPI in last month's Special Report. Quite simply, it combines the idea of market momentum with valuation and policy measures. It provides a powerful bullish signal if positive market momentum lines up with constructive signals from the policy and valuation measures. Conversely, if constructive market momentum is not supported by valuation and policy, investors should lean against the market trend. Our Willingness-to-Pay (WTP) indicators are also bullish on stocks for the U.S., Europe and Japan. These indicators track flows, and thus provide information on what investors are actually doing, as opposed to sentiment indexes that track how investors are feeling. Investors often say they are bullish but remain conservative in their asset allocation. The U.S. WTP remains bullish, but has topped out, suggesting that flows into the U.S. market are beginning to moderate. In contrast, the WTP indicators for both the Eurozone and Japan are rising from a low level. This suggests that a rotation into these equity markets is underway, although it has not yet shown up in terms of equity market outperformance versus the U.S. On the negative side, our Monetary Indicator last month fell a little further below the zero line and our composite Technical Indicator appears to be rolling over; the latter generates a 'sell' signal when it drops below its 9-month moving average. Value is stretched, but our Valuation Indicator has not yet reached the +1 standard deviation level that indicates clear over-valuation. As highlighted in the Overview section, the U.S. and global earnings backdrop continues to support equity markets. Forward earnings estimates are in a steep uptrend, and the recent surge in the net revisions ratio and the earnings surprise index suggests that EPS growth will remain impressive for the remainder of the year. Bond valuation is largely unchanged from last month, sitting very close to fair value. We still believe that fair value is rising as economic headwinds fade. However, much depends on our forecast that core inflation in the major countries will grind higher in the coming months. Central banks stand ready to "remove the punchbowl" if they get the green light from inflation. The dollar's downdraft in July reduced some of its overvaluation based on purchasing power parity measures. The dollar appears less overvalued based on other measures. Our composite Technical Indicator has fallen hard, but has not reached oversold levels. This suggests that the dollar has more downside before it finds a bottom. EQUITIES: Chart III-1U.S. Equity Indicators
U.S. Equity Indicators
U.S. Equity Indicators
Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk
Willingness To Pay For Risk
Willingness To Pay For Risk
Chart III-3U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators
U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators
U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators
Chart III-4Revealed Preference Indicator
Revealed Preference Indicator
Revealed Preference Indicator
Chart III-5U.S. Stock Market Valuation
U.S. Stock Market Valuation
U.S. Stock Market Valuation
Chart III-6U.S. Earnings
U.S. Earnings
U.S. Earnings
Chart III-7Global Stock Market And Earnings: ##br##Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Chart III-8Global Stock Market And Earnings: ##br##Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
FIXED INCOME: Chart III-9U.S. Treasurys And Valuations
U.S. Treasurys and Valuations
U.S. Treasurys and Valuations
Chart III-10U.S. Treasury Indicators
U.S. Treasury Indicators
U.S. Treasury Indicators
Chart III-11Selected U.S. Bond Yields
Selected U.S. Bond Yields
Selected U.S. Bond Yields
Chart III-1210-Year Treasury Yield Components
10-Year Treasury Yield Components
10-Year Treasury Yield Components
Chart III-13U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
Chart III-14Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Chart III-15Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
CURRENCIES: Chart III-16U.S. Dollar And PPP
U.S. Dollar And PPP
U.S. Dollar And PPP
Chart III-17U.S. Dollar And Indicator
U.S. Dollar And Indicator
U.S. Dollar And Indicator
Chart III-18U.S. Dollar Fundamentals
U.S. Dollar Fundamentals
U.S. Dollar Fundamentals
Chart III-19Japanese Yen Technicals
Japanese Yen Technicals
Japanese Yen Technicals
Chart III-21Euro/Yen Technicals
Euro/Yen Technicals
Euro/Yen Technicals
Chart III-20Euro Technicals
Euro Technicals
Euro Technicals
Chart III-22Euro/Pound Technicals
Euro/Pound Technicals
Euro/Pound Technicals
COMMODITIES: Chart III-23Broad Commodity Indicators
Broad Commodity Indicators
Broad Commodity Indicators
Chart III-24Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Chart III-25Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Chart III-26Commodity Sentiment
Commodity Sentiment
Commodity Sentiment
Chart III-27Speculative Positioning
Speculative Positioning
Speculative Positioning
ECONOMY: Chart III-28U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop
U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop
U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop
Chart III-29U.S. Macro Snapshot
U.S. Macro Snapshot
U.S. Macro Snapshot
Chart III-30U.S. Growth Outlook
U.S. Growth Outlook
U.S. Growth Outlook
Chart III-31U.S. Cyclical Spending
U.S. Cyclical Spending
U.S. Cyclical Spending
Chart III-32U.S. Labor Market
U.S. Labor Market
U.S. Labor Market
Chart III-33U.S. Consumption
U.S. Consumption
U.S. Consumption
Chart III-34U.S. Housing
U.S. Housing
U.S. Housing
Chart III-35U.S. Debt And Deleveraging
U.S. Debt And Deleveraging
U.S. Debt And Deleveraging
Chart III-36U.S. Financial Conditions
U.S. Financial Conditions
U.S. Financial Conditions
Chart III-37Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Chart III-38Global Economic Snapshot: China
Global Economic Snapshot: China
Global Economic Snapshot: China
Highlights The RBA will not hike as quickly as markets expect. Weak wage growth and high underemployment suggest plenty of spare capacity. Inflation is only barely at the bottom of the central bank's range. Massive household debt levels will make it difficult for consumers to handle higher interest rates. Australian banks, although relatively healthy, are still enormously exposed to Australian housing and interest-only mortgages. House prices have nearly quadrupled since 2000 and exhibit the characteristics of a bubble. Still, it will likely take considerable monetary tightening before the bubble bursts. We do not think this will occur anytime soon. Maintain a neutral exposure to Australian government bonds, but enter into a 2-year/10-year Australian government bond yield curve flattener. Feature Chart 1Diverging Trends In##BR##The Australian Economy
Diverging Trends In The Australian Economy
Diverging Trends In The Australian Economy
Australia remains one of the more difficult bond markets on which to take a decisive investment stance at the moment. The recent Moody's downgrade of Australian banks has put the spotlight back on the housing boom Down Under. With home prices continuing to climb - despite the introduction of macro-prudential measures on mortgage lending and with household indebtedness reaching exorbitant levels - investors are becoming increasingly concerned over a potential housing crash that could have spillover effects on the Australian banking system (Chart 1). At the same time, the domestic economy continues to suffer a hangover from the end of the mining boom earlier this decade, with excess capacity keeping inflation pressures subdued. Naturally, this has put the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) in a difficult position. Interest rate cuts in response to low inflation would add further fuel to the housing bubble. On the other hand, any attempt to try and normalize the current accommodative monetary policy settings with rate hikes could trigger an unwanted surge in the Australian dollar and prompt a correction in house prices. The latter could lead to financial instability and raise recession risks with consumers already dealing with negative real wage growth, low savings and massive debt loads. In this Special Report, we examine Australia's monetary policy trajectory, analyze its concentrated banking sector and the potential risks from a downturn in house prices, and revisit our positioning on Australian government debt. Our conclusions still lead us to stick with a neutral duration stance and country allocation on Australian debt, but with a bias towards a flatter government bond yield curve. RBA On Hold... For Now Chart 2Aussie Bonds Caught##BR##In The Global Selloff
Aussie Bonds Caught In The Global Selloff
Aussie Bonds Caught In The Global Selloff
Earlier this month, the RBA decided to leave the cash rate unchanged at 1.5%. The central bank maintained its fairly neutral rhetoric, though they did cite that the "broad-based pick-up in the global economy is continuing." The central bank upgraded its economic forecasts, with real GDP growth now projected to reach slightly above 3% over the next two years. The minutes from that July 4 monetary policy meeting revealed that a discussion over the ideal level of the real cash rate took place.1 The conclusion was that equilibrium inflation-adjusted rate is now around 1%, meaning that the "neutral" nominal rate is 3.5% after adding an inflation expectation of 2.5% (the middle of the RBA inflation target band). That implies that the RBA has lots of catching up to do on interest rates once the next tightening cycle begins. The timing of that discussion on real rates came shortly after the rebound in global bond yields that began after policymakers in other countries, most notably the European Central Bank and the Bank of Canada, began hinting that a move to dial back the emergency monetary easings of 2015/16 was about to begin (Chart 2). With the RBA possibly sending a similar message, investors responded by raising interest rate expectations and bidding up the Australian dollar (AUD). 30bps of RBA hikes are now priced in over the next year, while our proxy for the market-implied pricing of the terminal (i.e. equilibrium) cash rate - the 5-year AUD overnight index swap rate, 5-years forward - shot up to just over 3%. We believe that this market repricing of potential RBA rate hikes is too optimistic. Australian monetary policy must remain highly accommodative for some time. Our more dovish case is based on our assessment of the RBA's policy mandates, which include full employment, price stability and the 'welfare of the Australian people'. Because of Australia's heavy economic exposure to iron ore prices, its largest export, we also include an outlook on the commodity to aid in our forecast of RBA policy. Employment: The latest readings on the Australian labor market have shown marked improvement so far in 2017 (Chart 3). The unemployment rate now sits at 5.6%. Employment growth is accelerating while the participation rate has edged higher in recent months. The National Australia Bank business confidence index is steadily improving, while job vacancies are at a five-year high. In the statement released after the June monetary policy meeting, RBA governor Philip Lowe stated that "forward-looking indicators point to continued growth in employment in the period ahead." Chart 3Labor Demand##BR##Picking Up...
Labor Demand Picking Up...
Labor Demand Picking Up...
Chart 4...But All Signs Point To Lots##BR##Of Spare Labor Capacity
...But All Signs Point To Lots Of Spare Labor Capacity
...But All Signs Point To Lots Of Spare Labor Capacity
While Governor Lowe also noted that the overall employment picture is 'mixed' in some aspects, we are far more pessimistic (Chart 4). The underemployment rate has been rising and now sits only slightly below its almost 50-year high of 8.8%.2 Part-time workers as a percentage of total employment has experienced a structural increase to nearly 33%, while hours worked have declined. Additionally, nominal wages have been flat and real wages are declining. This suggests that there is plenty of slack in labor markets and that Australia is still far from full employment, even with the headline jobless rate sitting slightly below the OECD's current NAIRU estimate of 5.9%.3 Inflation: Core inflation has been slowing since 2014 and only reached an anemic 1.45% in the first quarter of 2017 (Chart 5). Although headline inflation has rebounded over the past year, at 2.1% it remains only at the bottom of the RBA's 2-3% target range. Additionally, the downtrend in inflation expectations for 2017 appears to be intact. Chart 5Inflation Staying Within The RBA 2-3% Target
Inflation Staying Within The RBA 2-3% Target
Inflation Staying Within The RBA 2-3% Target
Chart 6Australian Consumer Spending Slowing
Australian Consumer Spending Slowing
Australian Consumer Spending Slowing
Weak productivity growth, leading to lackluster wage growth, is keeping overall inflation subdued. The trade-weighted currency has rallied since June, presenting an additional headwind for consumer prices. Even if the recovery in headline inflation persists and starts to pass through to core readings, policymakers will likely err on the side of caution. A higher realized inflation rate will be tolerated in the near term to ensure expectations stay well within the 2-3% target band - the RBA's definition of "price stability" - before any interest rate increases are considered. Consumer: Australian households face a challenging environment. Real wages are declining, with the wage cost index in a downtrend since 2011. Real retail spending growth has been slowing and is nearing negative territory, while consumer sentiment is quite pessimistic (Chart 6). As income growth is lacking, consumers have had to dip into savings to maintain consumption, with the savings rate collapsing from 10% to 5% over the last few years. Part of that decline is likely due to the rising cost of "essentials" spending, such as utilities, health care, education and transportation. The inflation rates for those sectors have been outpacing overall headline and core readings (Chart 7), suggesting that Australian households are saving less just to "make ends meet." Chart 7Spending More On The "Essentials"
Spending More On The "Essentials"
Spending More On The "Essentials"
Overall, Australian consumers remain incredibly indebted. The household debt-to-income ratio is nearing 200% - the fourth highest figure among the OECD countries.4 Households have been able to handle the massive debt loads (so far) due to record-low interest rates, which have allowed debt service ratios to fall in line with long-term averages. However, hiking interest rates against this backdrop of highly leveraged consumers - especially given the huge exposure of Australian household balance sheets to overvalued house prices - could severely test the 'economic prosperity and welfare of the Australian people' element of the RBA's mandates. In other words, the RBA would need to see decisive signs that the economy was pushing up against inflationary capacity constraints before embarking on a tightening cycle, for fear of the spillover effects of pricking the housing bubble too soon (as we discuss later in this report). Iron Ore: Historically, Australia's growth has been tightly linked to the performance of industrial commodities, in particular iron ore which represents nearly 20% of total Australian exports. Our commodity strategists are neutral on iron ore on a cyclical horizon and bearish on a strategic basis. Chinese iron ore import growth has recently ticked up, but should remain subdued as Chinese inventories are still high (Chart 8). Chinese property construction activity, which accounts for roughly 35% of total Chinese steel demand, remains depressed. Globally, iron ore supply is set to increase throughout the year as many mining projects will come on stream. On a longer-term basis, Chinese demand for metals will likely slow due to the ongoing structural economic shift away from excessive reliance on infrastructure investment and house-building to an economy based on consumption and services. Summing it all up, none of the RBA's policy mandates is being threatened in a way that should force policymakers to begin shifting to a less dovish stance. There is little evidence that Australia has reached full employment, inflation and inflation expectations remain within the RBA target band, growth momentum remains moderate and the housing bubble remains an existential risk to the future health of the economy. Additionally, Australian policymakers will want to keep rates as low as possible to ensure that a weaker currency helps prop up exports, support the economy in its transition away from the heavy reliance on mining investment. Real GDP growth fell below 2% and the output gap is still far in negative territory, suggesting plenty of slack (Chart 9). Our own Australian Central Bank Monitor has rolled over and is now barely in the "tight policy required" zone (bottom panel). Projected fiscal drag over the next few years will also dampen growth. RBA growth forecasts appear highly optimistic relative to median economist estimates. All of these factors point to a delay in rate hikes. Chart 8No Big Boost To Iron Ore Prices From China
No Big Boost To Iron Ore Prices From China
No Big Boost To Iron Ore Prices From China
Chart 9No Pressure On The RBA To Hike Rates
No Pressure On The RBA To Hike Rates
No Pressure On The RBA To Hike Rates
Bottom Line: Markets are overpricing the potential for RBA tightening. There is still spare capacity in labor markets, inflation is subdued and consumers cannot handle higher rates. Monitoring The Banks In June, Moody's downgraded all Australian banks, citing a "rise in household leverage and the rising prevalence of interest-only and investment loans" (Chart 10). The downgrade raised concern among investors, with banks being the largest component of the Australian equity market, and short positions have noticeably risen. Despite subdued income growth and enormous household debt levels, escalating house prices have supported consumption through the wealth effect, but this is clearly unsustainable. Political pressures are also building, as evidenced by the introduction of a bank levy in South Australia. Chart 10A Relentless Climb In Household Debt
A Relentless Climb In Household Debt
A Relentless Climb In Household Debt
The Chairman of the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA), Wayne Byres, wants to make bank capital levels "unquestionably strong." His recent comments indicate that Australian banks will need to raise capital before 2020 to adhere to global standards, with some estimates reaching as high as $20bn (in USD). This process is crucial for instilling confidence in markets that banks can meet these targets through organic capital generation or dividend re-investment plans. As the increased capital required is relatively small - only 2% of the capital base of the Australian banks - it should not be difficult to raise that amount. The greatest risk to the financial system is still the exposure to Australian housing. For the four major banks, Australian housing loans make up slightly over 50% of their lending mix, far greater than for U.S. banks prior to the Great Financial Crisis of 2008 (Chart 11). Of those loans, approximately 40% are non-traditional (interest-only, sub-prime, reverse mortgages). Several macro-prudential measures have been implemented by Australian financial regulators to decrease risks within the banking sector. The regulations have been focused on interest-only loans, which are more vulnerable to rate rises. Such loans are riskier, typically shorter in maturity and requiring larger deposit amounts. Banks are tightening their lending standards for these loans and risk weights will likely be increased, thereby requiring more capital. Additionally, the standard variable rate on interest-only loans has increased by 30-35bps and APRA has imposed a 30% cap on interest-only loans as a percentage of new loans. This will cause a meaningful decline in the risk profile of banks' mortgage books, as consumers with interest-only loans will shift to less expensive principal-plus-interest loans. Another source of risk is the Australian banks' increasing reliance on offshore short-term wholesale funding. When credit growth outpaces deposit growth, which has been the case, banks need to balance the equation through increased wholesale funding. This raises the potential for a liquidity crunch, as capital may be unavailable during a crisis. Credit growth to the private sector is slowing, though, reducing the immediate need for this type of funding. Additionally, authorities are prompting banks to substitute away from the heavy reliance on short-term wholesale funding through the implementation of a net stable funding ratio. This is defined as the available amount of stable funding (i.e. core deposits, equity and long-term wholesale funding) over the required regulatory level of stable funding. Banks will have until 2018 to increase this ratio above 100%. As a result, long-term wholesale debt issuance rose sharply in 2016 and that amount is projected to be relatively similar for 2017. Overall, current metrics suggest that Australian banks are fairly healthy, even before the additional capital requirements. Tier 1 capital ratios have gradually increased since 2007 and are fairly strong, non-performing loans are subdued and net interest margins are rising (Chart 12). In fact, Tier 1 ratios are substantially higher in Australia than they were in the U.S. prior to the Global Financial Crisis. Return-on-assets and return-on-capital have bounced slightly, although increasing capital will certainly dampen the earnings prospects for the Australian banks. Chart 11Australian Banks Heavily Exposed##BR##To Risky Mortgage Lending
Australia: Stuck Between A Rock And A Hard Place
Australia: Stuck Between A Rock And A Hard Place
Chart 12Aussie Banks In##BR##Good Shape Right Now...
Aussie Banks In Good Shape Right Now...
Aussie Banks In Good Shape Right Now...
Since the Moody's downgrade, credit default swap spreads for Australian banks have actually declined to near the 2014 lows, suggesting markets are not concerned about the risk of future bank stresses. We remain concerned, however. Macro-prudential measures on mortgage loan sizes and higher capital requirements are certainly welcome and will reduce perceived risks within the banking sector. However, these measures have done little to curb the rise in Australian house prices. Given their huge exposure to Australian housing, the banks will likely not be able to withstand a meaningful decline in house values - the outlook for which depends critically on the RBA's future monetary policy path. Bottom Line: Australia bank metrics are fairly healthy but they will need to raise more capital. This should not be too problematic. However, the banks' massive exposure to Australian housing, elevated number of interest-only mortgage loans and heavy reliance on short-term wholesale funding present substantial risks. Even if the bank capital levels are 'unquestionably strong,' they will not be enough to withstand a meaningful downturn in house prices. When Will The Housing Bubble Burst? House prices in Australia have nearly quadrupled since 2000. With the exception of Perth, house prices in the other major cities have continued their massive run-up over the last year, suggesting macro-prudential measures have done little to cool the market (Chart 13). Price gains have been supported by robust demand, both domestic and foreign. However, the steady rise in debt-fueled speculation (i.e. loans for investment purposes), the magnitude of the price increases, and the lack of any correction in over 25 years, suggest Australian housing is indeed in the midst of a bubble. On the supply side, steadily rising completions over the past decade have not curbed price gains (Chart 14). While construction has slowed since its peak at the end of 2016 and building approvals have declined, we find the argument that there has been a shortage in supply to be fairly weak. In fact, the rate of dwelling completions has outpaced population growth since 2012 and dwelling completions per 1,000 people are much higher in Australia than its G7 counterparts. Chart 13...Just Don't Prick##BR##The Housing Bubble
...Just Don't Prick The Housing Bubble
...Just Don't Prick The Housing Bubble
Chart 14Supply Not Rising Enough To##BR##Slow House Price Growth
Supply Not Rising Enough To Slow House Price Growth
Supply Not Rising Enough To Slow House Price Growth
History teaches us that bubbles never deflate calmly. Nevertheless, we view the likelihood of a systemic crash over the next 6-12 months as highly unlikely. While growth estimates may not meet the RBA's lofty goals, Australia will also not experience its first recession in over 25 years, which would crimp housing demand. The two most likely candidates to act as a catalyst for a housing downturn are therefore: a slowdown in capital inflows from Chinese property buyers and/or a shift to restrictive monetary policy from the RBA. It will not require a complete halt in capital inflows from China, simply a considerable slowdown, for the Australian housing market to come under pressure. While there is always a possibility for Chinese authorities to clamp down on outflows, particularly if the RMB comes under pressure, we view this as fairly unlikely. Current capital outflows have eased a bit and a long-term goal is to deregulate the capital account. Continued capital liberalization in China will aid in maintaining capital flows into Australian housing. Additionally, the millionaire class in China is growing and the private sector wants to diversify its assets. While Australian house prices are expensive, prices are far more affordable than those metropolitan areas such as Hong Kong, indicating Chinese money will continue to drift into Australian real estate. Chart 15A Long Way From Restrictive Policy Rates
A Long Way From Restrictive Policy Rates
A Long Way From Restrictive Policy Rates
The more likely candidate for a bursting of the housing bubble is through the monetary policy channel. In the case of the U.S., multiple Fed rate hikes in the mid-2000s pushed monetary conditions into restrictive territory, prompting the housing crash. As we previously argued, the RBA will likely stay on hold for an extended period due to a lack of serious inflation pressures. Yet even if the RBA were to begin tightening sooner than we expect, it will take multiple rate hikes before monetary conditions become even close to restrictive. Using a simple measure of the equilibrium RBA cash rate, like a combination of Australian potential GDP growth and a five-year moving average of headline CPI inflation or the Taylor Rule formulation that we introduced in a recent Weekly Report, it is clear that the RBA is a long way from a restrictive policy stance (Chart 15).5 Bottom Line: Australian house prices have nearly quadrupled since 2000 and exhibit the characteristics of a bubble. Still, it will likely take considerable monetary tightening before the bubble bursts. We do not think this will occur anytime soon. Investment Implications We currently hold a neutral recommended stance on Australian government debt, both in terms of duration exposure and country allocation in global fixed income portfolios. Australian bond yields are above the lows seen in 2016 but have yet to break out of the structural downtrend with the benchmark 10-year now at 2.67% (Chart 16). We hesitate to go outright overweight on Australian debt in our model bond portfolio, however, even with our relatively dovish view on the RBA's future policy moves. Without any slowing in house prices, and with realized and expected inflation having clearly bottomed after last year's downturn, a big move lower in Australian bond yields is unlikely. At best, Australian yields will not rise by as much as we expect to see in the U.S. or Euro Area over the next 6-12 months. At the same time, if that view pans out, the Australian currency will likely underperform which will erode into the returns of an overweight Australian bond position (either through currency hedging costs or the outright losses on unhedged currency exposure). We do, however, see an opportunity to enter into an Australian 2-year/10-year yield curve flattening position (Chart 17). As previously mentioned, the short end of the curve will be anchored by an inactive central bank. The long end, however, faces multiple downward pressures. Macro-prudential measures and political pressures will continue to dampen credit growth. While we believe there is scope for realized inflation to grind a bit higher in the coming quarters, longer-term inflation expectations are likely to remain well-anchored. Additionally, the economic surprise index is elevated after several positive data releases and has plenty of scope for disappointment, which will limit any rise in longer-dated bond yields. Chart 16No Bear Market##BR##In Australian Bonds
No Bear Market In Australian Bonds
No Bear Market In Australian Bonds
Chart 17Enter A 2yr/10yr##BR##Australian Curve Flattener
Enter a 2yr/10yr Australian Curve Flattener
Enter a 2yr/10yr Australian Curve Flattener
The added benefit of entering a curve flattener is that the trade will likely work if our RBA view turns out to be wrong in a hawkish direction. If the RBA does indeed begin to hike rates sooner than we expect to deal with an improving economy or to begin deflating the housing bubble, this should put flattening pressure on the curve as the market prices in additional future rate increases. Only in the case of a breakout in longer-term inflation expectations that bear-steepens the curve, or a severe economic downturn that prompts RBA rate cuts and bull-steepens the curve, will a flattening trade underperform. Given our views on Australian growth and inflation, we see more likely scenarios where the curve flattens than steepens, particularly versus the only modest amount of flattening currently priced in the forwards. Bottom Line: Enter into a 2-year/10-year Australian government bond yield curve flattener. The short end of the curve will be anchored by an inactive central bank. On the long end, slowing credit growth, fiscal drag and an elevated economic surprise index will put downward pressure on yields. Patrick Trinh, Associate Editor Patrick@bcaresearch.com Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 http://www.rba.gov.au/monetary-policy/rba-board-minutes/2017/2017-07-04.html 2 The "underemployed" is defined as full-time workers on reduced hours for economic reasons and part-time workers who would like, and are available, to work more hours. 3 NAIRU = Non-Accelerating Inflation Rate Of Unemployment. 4 https://data.oecd.org/hha/household-debt.htm 5 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Dangerous Duration", dated July 11 2017. Available at gfis.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights The Fed is behind the curve in raising rates, as is the Bank of Canada, the Reserve Bank of Australia, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand, and the Swedish Riksbank. In contrast, the Bank of Japan, the ECB, and the Swiss National Bank have little need to tighten monetary policy. Accordingly, investors should favor USD, CAD, SEK, NZD, and to a lesser extent, AUD. EUR, CHF, and JPY will weaken. GBP will trade sideways. Short-term momentum could push EUR/USD to 1.18, but the euro will ultimately reach parity against the dollar next year, as the Fed is forced to accelerate the pace of rate hikes. Stay structurally long DXY. Go long SEK/CHF. We are closing our longstanding overweight positions in Australian and New Zealand government bonds for a handsome profit. Remain overweight global equities for now, but be prepared to turn bearish in the second half of 2018. Feature The Fed: It's Time To Get A Bit More Hawkish In our December 2015 report "The Fed Makes An Unforced Error," we made the case that the Federal Reserve would regret its decision to tighten monetary policy.1 Subsequent events validated this view: U.S. growth sagged in the first half of 2016, leading to a sharp flattening in the yield curve. It would be another 12 months before the Fed raised rates again. As bond prices and the economic data evolved over the course of 2016, our recommendations changed accordingly. On July 5th, we published a note entitled "The End Of The 35-Year Bond Bull Market" arguing that it was time to take profits on long duration positions.2 As luck would have it, this was the exact same date that the 10-year Treasury yield hit a record closing low of 1.37%. Fast forward to the present and investors are once again debating the next steps that central banks are likely to take. However, unlike in 2015, a strong case can be made that the Fed is now behind the curve in raising rates, rather than ahead of it. There are three reasons for this: There is less slack now than in 2015. The unemployment rate stands at 4.4%, down from 5% in December 2015. The broader U-6 unemployment rate has fallen even more, from 9.9% to 8.6%. Other measures of labor market slack are also closing in on their past business-cycle lows (Table 1). Table 1Comparing Current Labor Market Slack With Past Cycles
Are Central Banks Behind The Curve Or Ahead Of It?
Are Central Banks Behind The Curve Or Ahead Of It?
The neutral interest rate has likely risen somewhat over the past 18 months (Chart 1). Household debt has continued to decline as a share of disposable income. The share of national income going to labor has increased. Wage growth among lower-income workers who tend to spend most of their paychecks has accelerated. All this should give consumers the wherewithal to spend more, warranting higher interest rates. Bank balance sheets have also continued to improve, as evidenced by the recent stress test results. In addition, fiscal policy has eased modestly and could ease even more if Congress is able to pass legislation cutting taxes later this year or in early 2018. Financial conditions have eased significantly since the start of the year, which should boost growth in the second half of this year (Chart 2). This is in sharp contrast to 2015, a year when financial conditions tightened sharply. Easier financial conditions are boosting credit growth. The annualized 3-month change in bank credit has accelerated from 1.1% in April to 4.2% at present. (Chart 3). Chart 1Households Have The Wherewithal To Spend More
Households Have The Wherewithal To Spend More
Households Have The Wherewithal To Spend More
Chart 2Financial Conditions Have Eased
Financial Conditions Have Eased
Financial Conditions Have Eased
Chart 3Credit Growth Has Picked Up
Credit Growth Has Picked Up
Credit Growth Has Picked Up
The prospect of stronger growth over the next few quarters implies that the unemployment rate is likely to fall below 4% early next year, possibly breaking through the 2000 low of 3.8%. If that were to happen, the unemployment rate would end up being nearly a full percentage point below the Fed's estimate of NAIRU. It is possible, of course, that the true value of NAIRU is lower than official estimates suggest. Older workers change jobs less frequently, and so an aging workforce tends to produce less frictional unemployment. The internet has also improved the ability of companies to fill vacancies with suitable workers. On the flipside, declining geographical mobility and falling demand for low-skilled labor may have raised structural unemployment. On balance, we are skeptical that the current estimate of NAIRU of 4.7% - already one percentage point below its post-1960 average (Chart 4) - is significantly overstated. A tighter U.S. labor market will put upward pressure on wages. While recent wage data has been on the soft side, our wage tracker is still growing twice as fast as in 2010 (Chart 5). Indeed, for all the talk about how wage growth is "inexplicably" slow, real wages have been rising more quickly than productivity for three straight years now - the longest stretch since the late 1990s (Chart 6). Chart 4NAIRU Is Low By Historic Standards
NAIRU Is Low By Historic Standards
NAIRU Is Low By Historic Standards
Chart 5A Stronger Labor Market Will Lead To Faster Wage Growth
A Stronger Labor Market Will Lead To Faster Wage Growth
A Stronger Labor Market Will Lead To Faster Wage Growth
Chart 6Real Wages Now Increasing Faster Than Productivity
Real Wages Now Increasing Faster Than Productivity
Real Wages Now Increasing Faster Than Productivity
Inflation: A Lagging Indicator When will accelerating wage growth translate into sharply higher price inflation? Probably not this year. Historically, inflation has been the mother-of-all lagging indicators. Core inflation peaked at 2.5% in August 2008, eight months after the start of the recession. In fact, core inflation has topped out in every single business cycle over the past 40 years only after the expansion has ended and the recession begun (Chart 7). Likewise, core inflation typically bottoms several years after the economic recovery is underway. This suggests that inflation could stay subdued for the next 12 months as the labor market slowly overheats, before moving higher in the second half of 2018. Chart 7Inflation Is A Lagging Indicator
Are Central Banks Behind The Curve Or Ahead Of It?
Are Central Banks Behind The Curve Or Ahead Of It?
If the Fed drags its feet in raising interest rates, it will be difficult to achieve a soft landing. Stabilizing the economy is akin to landing a plane: You don't just need to know the speed at which you have to hit the runway, you also have to time your descent in order to touch the ground at precisely the right speed. Even if the Fed knew where the neutral interest rate stood (which it doesn't), tightening monetary policy too late could end up pushing the unemployment rate to such a low level that it has nowhere to go but up. And as we have shown before, once the unemployment rate starts rising, it generally keeps rising, owing to the presence of numerous negative feedback loops.3 The Fed has arguably already fallen into the trap of waiting too long. If so, gradual rate hikes this year will give way to more aggressive hikes late next year, setting the stage for a recession in 2019. The Bank Of Canada Turns Hawkish On the other side of the 45th parallel, the Bank of Canada raised rates last week and signaled that further hikes lie in store. The BoC revised up its GDP growth forecasts for 2017 and 2018. It also indicated that the output gap would close later this year, rather than next year as it had earlier projected. The Bank of Canada's newfound optimism was bolstered by the most recent Business Outlook Survey, which pointed to accelerating growth, dwindling spare industrial capacity, and an increasingly tight labor market (Chart 8). The moose in the living room is the Canadian housing market (Chart 9). Central bankers are generally reluctant to use the blunt tool of tighter monetary policy to target excessive property prices. However, when stricter macroprudential regulations fail to do the job, the standard prescription is to tighten monetary policy slowly but early. The Bank of Canada has done the former but not the latter. Consequently, as my colleague Jonathan LaBerge argued in last week's Special Report, the coming housing bust is likely to be a nasty affair.4 This will be the price the Bank of Canada pays for being behind the curve. Chart 8Canadian Growth Picture Is Upbeat
Are Central Banks Behind The Curve Or Ahead Of It?
Are Central Banks Behind The Curve Or Ahead Of It?
Chart 9Housing Bubbles Abound
Housing Bubbles Abound
Housing Bubbles Abound
For now, we remain long the Canadian dollar in our currency recommendations. We are expressing this view by being long CAD/EUR, a trade that has gained 3.5% in the nine weeks since we initiated it. We also recommend being underweight Canadian government bonds within a global fixed-income portfolio. It is important to stress, however, that these are 12-month views. Most Canadian mortgages are floating rate. Higher borrowing costs will likely trigger a housing bust late next year or in 2019, forcing the Bank of Canada to slow or even reverse the pace of rate hikes. The RBA And RBNZ ... Behind The Curve Too Australia and New Zealand have also been grappling with dangerously overvalued housing markets, and just as in Canada, the RBA and RBNZ have been behind the curve in responding to the brewing excesses. That is starting to change. The Reserve Bank of Australia struck a hawkish tone in the July 4 meeting minutes released this week, sending the Aussie dollar to a 26-month high against the greenback. The RBA highlighted the improvement in business conditions and a tightening labor market. It also indicated that the "neutral cash rate" was 3.5%, two points higher than the rate of 1.5%. Australia's terms of trade have been recovering of late and this should support the economy as well as the Aussie dollar (Chart 10). The RBNZ is even further behind the curve than the RBA (Chart 11). Nominal GDP is growing at over 6% and retail sales are expanding at nearly 8%. Population growth has risen sharply in recent years due to increased immigration, leading to greater demand for housing. The government has increased infrastructure spending and cut taxes. The unemployment rate has fallen back to an 8-year low of 4.9%, while the terms of trade is approaching record-high levels. Chart 10RBA Behind The Curve...
RBA Behind The Curve...
RBA Behind The Curve...
Chart 11... And RBNZ Too?
... And RBNZ Too?
... And RBNZ Too?
With all this in mind, we are closing our longstanding overweight positions in Australian and New Zealand government bonds for gains of 59.5% and 74.2%, respectively.5 Riksbank: End Of NIRP? The Swedish repo rate stands at -0.5%, despite the fact that the output gap has moved into positive territory (Chart 12). Inflation is still slightly below target, but is moving higher. The Riksbank is taking notice of the changing economic environment. The central bank backed away from its easing bias at its most recent policy meeting. The facts on the ground support this decision. Sweden's GDP is now 0.7% above potential and the economy continues to strengthen. The Riksbank's resource utilization indicator points to a sharp acceleration in Swedish inflation in the coming quarters. Nonfinancial private credit has reached 237% of GDP, up from 106% in 2000. If the Riksbank falls too far behind the curve, it will be forced to jack up rates very aggressively down the road, reviving the specter of the debt crisis of the early 1990s. The ECB, SNB, And BoJ: Take It Easy Whereas a strong case can be made that the central banks discussed above are behind the curve in normalizing monetary policy, the same cannot be said for the ECB, Swiss National Bank, or Bank of Japan. Labor market slack across the euro area as a whole is still 3.2 percentage points higher than in 2008 and 6.7 points higher outside of Germany (Chart 13). Moreover, as we discussed two weeks ago, the neutral rate in the euro area remains very depressed.6 Thus, even if the euro area economy were close to full employment, the ECB would still not have much scope to raise rates. Chart 12NIRP In Sweden: R.I.P.
NIRP In Sweden: R.I.P.
NIRP In Sweden: R.I.P.
Chart 13Euro Area: Labor Market Slack Still High Outside Of Germany
Euro Area: Labor Market Slack Still High Outside Of Germany
Euro Area: Labor Market Slack Still High Outside Of Germany
In this light, investors have gotten too optimistic about the ability of the ECB to tighten monetary policy. While the ECB will further taper asset purchases as early as this autumn, sustained rate hikes are still a few years away. Mario Draghi explicitly said during his press conference yesterday that "the last thing that the governing council may want is actually an unwanted tightening of the financing conditions." This is in sharp contrast to the Fed, which is trying to tighten financial conditions by raising rates. Swiss monetary conditions are far from accommodative, despite a policy rate that remains buried in negative territory (Chart 14). Core inflation is close to zero and wage growth is anemic. An overvalued currency has offset the benefits from lower interest rates. Given the SNB's policy of intervening in the currency markets to keep EUR/CHF within a reasonably tight range, the recent appreciation of the euro will further add to the deflationary pressures weighing on the Swiss economy. Investors should position for a weaker franc (and euro) in the months ahead. Go long SEK/CHF (Chart 15). Chart 14The Swiss Economy Still Needs Low Rates
The Swiss Economy Still Needs Low Rates
The Swiss Economy Still Needs Low Rates
Chart 15Long SEK/CHF
Long SEK/CHF
Long SEK/CHF
Similar to the ECB and the SNB, the Bank of Japan is in no position to tighten monetary policy. Core inflation has fallen back to zero and medium-to-long-term inflation expectations have dipped so far this year (Chart 16). The annual shunto wage negotiations this summer produced little in the way of salary hikes. And even if inflation were to rise, the government would likely want to tighten fiscal policy before contemplating removing the monetary punch bowl. The Bank Of England: A Tough Call If one didn't know what transpired last June, the case for tighter monetary policy in the U.K. would be fairly straightforward. The unemployment rate is at a 9-year low and inflation is well above target. The trade-weighted pound has weakened by 21% since November 2015, which in most cases, would translate into stronger growth in the years ahead. Reflecting these points, our Central Bank Monitors show that the U.K. is more in need of tighter money than any other major developed economy (Chart 17). Chart 16BoJ: In No Position To Tighten
BoJ: In No Position To Tighten
BoJ: In No Position To Tighten
Chart 17The Message From Our Central Bank Monitors
The Message From Our Central Bank Monitors
The Message From Our Central Bank Monitors
Brexit negotiations are likely to cast a pall over the economy, however. The EU will be forced to take a tough line with the U.K., for fear that the Brexit vote could prompt other countries to follow's Britain's lead. BCA's geopolitical strategists ultimately expect a "hard Brexit" to be averted, but things may need to be brought to the precipice before that happens. The pound is cheap and so we do not expect it to weaken significantly from current levels. Nevertheless, the upside for both sterling and gilt yields will remain constrained until political uncertainty abates. Investment Conclusions As a rule of thumb, investors should favor currencies in economies whose central banks are behind the curve. Such central banks are likely to find themselves in a position where they have to scramble to tighten monetary policy. We noted on July 7th that short-term momentum favors the euro and that we would not be surprised if EUR/USD reaches 1.18 over the coming weeks. Looking further ahead, the appreciation of the euro in the first half of this year will weigh on growth in the remainder of 2017 and into early 2018. This will force the ECB to cool its heels. In contrast, U.S. growth should accelerate. Against the backdrop of diminished spare capacity, this will prompt the Fed to turn more hawkish. We expect EUR/USD to fall to 1.05 by year-end, and reach parity next year as the Fed ramps up the pace of rate hikes. The market is betting that the Fed will deliver fewer rate hikes than implied by the 'dots'. Our hunch is that the Fed will deliver more hikes than what its forecast suggests, especially starting early next year when inflation is liable to accelerate. Bullish sentiment towards the dollar has collapsed. Investors should turn contrarian and position for a stronger greenback over the next 12 months. In addition to the dollar, we like the Swedish krona, Canadian dollar, and New Zealand dollar. The Aussie dollar should also perform reasonably well, provided that the Chinese economy continues to hold up, as we expect it will. The Japanese yen remains our least favorite currency. Despite the dollar selloff, USD/JPY has managed to gain 3% since mid-April. As the Fed and a number of other central banks raise rates, the spread in yields between foreign government bonds and JGBs will widen. This will push down the yen, helping Japanese stocks in the process. As far as overall risk sentiment is concerned, another rule of thumb says that stocks rarely fall on a sustained basis outside of recessions (Chart 18). We do not expect a recession in the U.S. or elsewhere until 2019. This implies that investors should maintain an overweight position in global equities for now, favoring cyclical sectors over defensive ones. Chart 18Stocks Rarely Fall On A Sustained Basis Outside Of Recessions
Stocks Rarely Fall On A Sustained Basis Outside Of Recessions
Stocks Rarely Fall On A Sustained Basis Outside Of Recessions
Peter Berezin, Global Chief Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Fed Makes An Unforced Error," dated December 18, 2015, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "End Of The 35-Year Bond Bull Market," dated July 5, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "When Doves Cry," dated June 9, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "Canada: A (Probably) Happy Moment In An Otherwise Sad Story," dated July 14, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Calculated as the total excess return on the 10-year bond index relative to global government benchmark since inception in 2009, foreign-currency hedged since 2014. The 10-year yield for New Zealand government bonds has dropped from 4.28% at the time of inception to 2.94% today. The 10-year yield for Australian government bonds has fallen from 4.10% to 2.74% over this period. 6 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Draghi's Dilemma," dated July 7, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights DM Rates Strategy: Many central banks are responding to the strong global economic backdrop by signaling not only a shift in the bias of monetary policy, but actual changes in interest rates or asset purchases. We continue to recommend a below-benchmark overall portfolio stance, but with more diverse views on country allocation: underweight the U.S., Euro Area, & Canada; maximum overweight on Japan; and neutral on the U.K. and Australia. Expect steeper yield curves in the U.S., Euro Area and U.K., and continued flattening in Canada. U.S. Corporate Bond Liquidity: There are few signs of diminished liquidity in U.S. corporate bond markets, despite the sharply reduced inventories of primary dealers. ETFs and institutional investors have picked up the slack from the dealers, as has electronic trading directly between market participants. Feature Chart of the Week2013 Revisited
2013 Revisited
2013 Revisited
Developed Market (DM) policymakers continue to push towards a less accommodative monetary stance. Last week, the Bank of Canada (BoC) became the second central bank to hike rates this year, following the Fed's earlier tightenings. The European Central Bank (ECB) continues to signal a move to reduce the pace of its asset purchases, likely to be announced at the September policy meeting. A very public debate has opened up among the members of the Bank of England (BoE) policy committee against the stagflationary backdrop of high inflation and cooling growth. This current backdrop is reminiscent of the 2013 synchronized global economic upturn that also put pressure on policymakers to become less accommodative according to our Central Bank Monitors (Chart of the Week). That year was terrible for government bonds, but spread product held in well given the solid growth backdrop. A big difference now is that there is greater evidence of diminished economic slack (lower unemployment rates, higher capacity utilization) than in 2013, so the underlying inflation pressures should be greater. Realized inflation rates remain subdued in most countries (excluding the U.K.), but central bankers are attributing that to temporary factors that should soon fade. That forecast may prove to be wrong, which risks a potential policy mistake if interest rates move up too much or too fast. For now, however, central banks are in charge and bond investors should position accordingly by limiting duration exposure and overweighting growth-sensitive assets like corporate bonds versus sovereign debt. A Country-By-Country Summary Of Our Interest Rate Views With central banks now in the process of adjusting policy settings to varying degrees, financial markets are starting to show a greater level of diversification than in previous years. This can be seen in the moves in bond yields, equity markets and currencies since the speech by ECB President Mario Draghi on June 27 that ignited the latest bond sell-off (Chart 2). The largest yield moves have occurred in the Euro Area, U.K., Canada and Australia, which have also coincided with currency strength and equity market underperformance in those countries. As the markets now try to sort out the growing divergences between monetary policies, this has opened up opportunities for diversification of duration exposures, country allocation and yield curve strategies. This week, we present a brief summary of our individual country recommendations for the remainder of the year. United States: underweight duration, underweight country allocation, steeper yield curve, long inflation protection The Fed remains on track for a move to begin reducing its balance sheet at the September FOMC meeting, with another rate hike expected in December. The inflation data of late has started to raise concern among some FOMC members about how many more interest rate increases will be necessary for this tightening cycle. We expect U.S. growth to show solid improvement over the latter half of 2017, and for this current downdraft in realized inflation to soon bottom out led by tightening labor markets and the lagged impact of this year's decline in the U.S. dollar. Treasury yields will continue to grind higher in the months ahead, led more by rising inflation expectations that will bear-steepen the yield curve. (Chart 3) Chart 2Market Moves Since Draghi's Portugal Speech
Global Interest Rate Strategy For The Remainder Of 2017
Global Interest Rate Strategy For The Remainder Of 2017
Chart 3U.S. Rates Strategy Summary
U.S. Rates Strategy Summary
U.S. Rates Strategy Summary
Germany: underweight duration, underweight country allocation, steeper yield curve, long inflation protection France: underweight duration, underweight country allocation, steeper yield curve, long inflation protection Italy: underweight duration, underweight country allocation (versus Spain), steeper yield curve The ECB is clearly signaling that a taper of its asset purchase program will begin in 2018. The Wall Street Journal reported last week that Mario Draghi will speak at the upcoming Fed Jackson Hole conference in late August.1 Similar to his speech at the ECB Forum in late June, this will likely be another opportunity for Draghi to prepare financial markets and other central bankers for the ECB's policy shift. We expect an announcement of a "Fed-like" tapering of bond purchases that will begin in January and end sometime in the fourth quarter of 2018. A rate hike is still some time away, most likely in the first half of 2019 at the earliest. The ECB will want to see more signs of lower unemployment and sustainable higher core Euro Area inflation before contemplating higher short-term interest rates - especially given the likely positive impact on the euro from such a move that would risk an unwanted tightening of financial conditions. There is far more risk in longer-dated bond yields to reprice via higher term premia and/or inflation expectations, thus we are recommending a bearish stance not only on European duration and country allocation, but also a bias toward steeper yield curves (Chart 4 & Chart 5). Tapering will also put upward pressure on Peripheral European yields and spreads, particularly in Italy, as risk premiums normalize away from the tight levels seen during the ECB asset purchase program. We do not anticipate a rout in Italian debt given the current improvements in the domestic economy and the positive moves seen in consolidating and recapitalizing the troubled Italian banking sector. However, we do see continued underperformance of Italian debt versus Spanish sovereigns, thus we are maintaining an overweight stance on Spain versus Italy in our model bond portfolio (Chart 6). Chart 4Germany Rates Strategy Summary
Germany Rates Strategy Summary
Germany Rates Strategy Summary
Chart 5France Rates Strategy Summary
France Rates Strategy Summary
France Rates Strategy Summary
Chart 6Italy & Spain Strategy Summary
Italy & Spain Strategy Summary
Italy & Spain Strategy Summary
U.K.: underweight duration, neutral country allocation, neutral yield curve We have been maintaining a neutral allocation to U.K. Gilts, but with an underweight duration exposure and a curve steepening bias (Chart 7). The growing rift among the members of the BoE Monetary Policy Committee does suggest that there could be more two-way risk in U.K. interest rates than at any time seen since last year's Brexit vote. The BoE responded to that political surprise with rate cuts and a new round of asset purchases, even though the U.K. economy was operating at full employment at the time and inflation pressures were rising. Now, the chickens have come home to roost for the BoE, with inflation remaining stubbornly high despite signs of slowing growth (Chart 8). With real wage growth slowing substantially and household saving rates at very low levels, the risk of a consumer spending slowdown - that the BoE was flagging earlier in the year - is increasing. Chart 7U.K. Rates Strategy Summary
U.K. Rates Strategy Summary
U.K. Rates Strategy Summary
Chart 8Stagflation In The U.K.
Stagflation In The U.K.
Stagflation In The U.K.
Given the ongoing uncertainties from the upcoming Brexit negotiations that will likely continue to weight on business confidence and investment spending, and with consumption likely to continue losing steam, we see little case for the BoE to seriously consider a rate hike before year-end. We are only recommending a neutral stance on Gilts, though, as realized inflation continues to run well above the BoE's target, supported by the stubbornly soft British pound. We continue to recommend a steepening bias on the Gilt curve until there is more decisive evidence that U.K. inflation is rolling over. Japan: overweight duration, maximum overweight country allocation, neutral yield curve and neutral inflation protection We continue to recommend a maximum overweight on Japanese government bonds (JGBs). JGBs are a low-beta market with the BoJ still targeting a 0% level on the benchmark 10-year yield, even as other global bond markets sell off. The BoJ has been particularly aggressive in capping any rise in JGB yields of late, offering to buy 10-year bonds in unlimited size and also increasing its purchases at shorter maturities (Chart 9). With Japanese inflation still struggling to stay in positive territory, even with the economy estimated to be operating at full employment, the BoJ will do the only thing it can do to put a floor under inflation - keep JGB yields at low levels to trigger a new wave of yen weakness and, hopefully, some imported inflation pressures via the currency. Against this backdrop, JGBs will continue to outperform other DM bond markets during this move towards strong growth and less accommodative monetary policies outside of Japan. Stay overweight Japan against global hedged bond benchmarks. Canada: underweight duration, underweight country allocation, flatter yield curve, long inflation protection We moved our Canadian country allocation to underweight last week in advance of the BoC's expected rate hike, but we had been recommending bearish Canadian trades (curve flatteners and spread wideners versus U.S. Treasuries) in our Tactical Overlay Trade Portfolio for much of the year so far.2 The BoC's 180-degree policy shift over the past month has taken many investors by surprise, but the very strong upturn in the Canadian economy is forcing the BoC into action. With the BoC now projecting the Canadian output gap to be closed this year, expect another one, even two, rate hikes by the end of 2017. This will put additional upward pressure on Canadian bond yields and bear-flatten the Canadian government bond yield curve (Chart 10). Australia: neutral duration, neutral country allocation, neutral curve Australia has been one of the trickier markets on which to have a strong opinion, given the combination of a tight labor market, low inflation, mixed readings on domestic demand and heavy exposure to China's economy. This has led us to be neutral across the board on Australian bonds (Chart 11). We will be covering the outlook for Australia in a Special Report to be published next week, in which we will re-examine our current Australia recommendations. Chart 9Japan Rates Strategy Summary
Japan Rates Strategy Summary
Japan Rates Strategy Summary
Chart 10Canada Rates Strategy Summary
Canada Rates Strategy Summary
Canada Rates Strategy Summary
Chart 11Australia Rates Strategy Summary
Australia Rates Strategy Summary
Australia Rates Strategy Summary
Bottom Line: Many central banks are responding to the strong global economic backdrop by signaling not only a shift in the bias of monetary policy, but actual changes in interest rates or asset purchases. We continue to recommend a below-benchmark overall portfolio stance, but with more diverse views on country allocation: underweight the U.S., Euro Area, & Canada; maximum overweight on Japan; and neutral on the U.K. and Australia. Expect steeper yield curves in the U.S., Euro Area and U.K., and continued flattening in Canada. An Update On The State Of U.S. Corporate Bond Market Liquidity In the Fed's latest Monetary Policy Report, presented by Janet Yellen to the U.S. Congress last week, an entire section was devoted to the state of U.S. corporate bond market liquidity.3 The Fed's conclusion was that, according to many commonly used metrics like average bid/ask spreads, corporate debt has not become more difficult to trade in recent years. This goes against the intuition of many bond investors who have perceived a deterioration of liquidity in corporate credit markets since the 2008 Financial Crisis. The Fed likely felt compelled to dedicate three pages of its Monetary Policy Report to a topic as mundane as bond market functionality as a defense of its current regulatory framework for U.S. banks. The Fed has taken a lot of flak from major U.S. financial institutions, conservative free-market politicians and, since last November, the Trump White House over the "heavy-handed" rules shackling the banks. Chart 12U.S. Dealers Don't Matter
U.S. Dealers Don't Matter
U.S. Dealers Don't Matter
Regulations such as the Volcker Rule and the Supplementary Leverage Ratio have almost certainly reduced the odds of another financial crisis caused by undercapitalized banks speculating in risky assets. Yet the critics continue to point out that banks which are more worried about meeting regulatory targets are less able to make loans or, in the case of investment banks, make markets in risky assets like corporate debt. This is important for bond investors given the sharply reduced footprint of investment banks in corporate debt markets. The Fed's data on primary dealer positioning in corporates shows a massive decline from the pre-crisis peak in 2007 of $280bn to only $20bn this year (Chart 12). Over the same period, the size of the U.S. corporate bond market has more than tripled to $6.5 trillion (using the market capitalization of the Barclays Investment Grade and High-Yield indices as a proxy). On the surface, that indicates that dealers held 10% of "the market" at the peak. Now, dealer inventories barely represent only 0.3% of corporate debt outstanding. While that is low, it is not much lower than the share of corporates held by dealers in the early 2000s. When looking at the full span of the available data, the huge dealer footprint in the U.S. corporate bond market in the years prior to the Financial Crisis was the exception and not the norm. Like most other market participants in those years, the investment banks were seduced by the extended period of low macro and market volatility and ended up taking too much risk on their balance sheets. Now, dealers are much more cautious when trading with clients, acting more as an "agent" that matches buyers and sellers for individual trades and less as a "principal" that holds the bonds themselves. The smaller presence of dealers could create a liquidity problem for corporate debt, especially if dealers in their usual role as market-makers cannot be there to absorb the selling pressure from investors during market sell-offs. Yet corporate bond markets have functioned well since the dark days of the Lehman crisis. According to data from SIFMA, average daily trading volumes in the U.S. corporate bond market rose from a low in 2008 of $14bn to $30bn in 2016 (Chart 13). Corporate bond issuance has surged as well, but corporate bond turnover - total annualized trading volumes relative to total bonds outstanding - has improved by nearly 35% since the 2008 low. In addition, the reduced dealer presence has not resulted in any unusual widening of typical relationships like the basis between Credit Default Swaps and corporate bond spreads (bottom panel). The Fed noted this in its Monetary Policy Report as a sign that market liquidity was not impaired since there were not many "unrealized arbitrage opportunities". It is evident that other market participants have picked up the slack from the dealers in U.S. corporate bond trading. Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) are the obvious candidate, led by the popular iShares HYG and the SPDR JNK funds that have a combined $30bn in assets under management. According to the Fed's database on the Financial Accounts of the United States (formerly known as the Flow of Funds), the share of corporate bonds held by all retail funds, including ETFs, soared from 6.5% in 2008 to nearly 19% in Q1 of this year (Chart 14). This nearly offset the decline in the share of corporates held directly by households, as individual investors shifted their preferences toward the ease of trading corporate debt ETFs over individual bonds. Chart 13U.S. Corporate Bond Market Turnover Has Improved
U.S. Corporate Bond Market Turnover Has Improved
U.S. Corporate Bond Market Turnover Has Improved
Chart 14Shifting Ownership Patterns For U.S. Corporates
Shifting Ownership Patterns For U.S. Corporates
Shifting Ownership Patterns For U.S. Corporates
Importantly, institutional investors like insurance companies and pension funds have seen their influence in corporate bond markets increase, as they now hold a combined 35% of corporate debt, up from 26% in 2008 (bottom two panels). These groups will likely control an even greater share of the corporate bond market in the years to come with the growing usage of so-called "all-to-all" electronic trading platforms like MarketAxess or Bloomberg that allow users to trade directly with each other. All-to-all has already established a major market footprint, as activity on MarketAxess now represents 16% of all trading volume in U.S. Investment Grade corporates and 34% for High-Yield, according to The Economist.4 This is a hugely important development. If more professional bond investors can now transact directly with one another, this helps to alleviate any reduction in market liquidity caused by a smaller dealer presence in the market. Even with so much evidence pointing to no serious liquidity problems in U.S. corporate debt, some worrisome issues remain. Chart 15Market Performance Leads Fund Inflows,##BR##Not Vice Versa
Market Performance Leads Fund Inflows, Not Vice Versa
Market Performance Leads Fund Inflows, Not Vice Versa
Average trade sizes in corporates are smaller now compared to pre-crisis levels - perhaps as much as 20% smaller according to estimates by the New York Fed.5 This is likely the result of the reduced risk-taking by the dealers and the growing share of direct electronic trading. This creates an effect where it may feel like liquidity is impaired since it now takes longer to execute a large bond trade, even though transaction costs for individual trades have not been increasing, on average. Corporate bond ETFs are easier to trade than the underlying bonds held in the ETFs themselves. This has worried many investors who fear that a corporate bond market downturn could turn into a much larger rout if rapid ETF redemptions cause "fire sales" of the bonds held in the ETFs to quickly raise cash. Admittedly, the unique ETF structure - where the shares of the ETF are traded and not the underlying bonds, similar to a closed-end mutual fund - has not yet been tested in a true credit bear market. However, there have been several episodes of "risk-off" bond sell-offs over the past few years, most notably for High-Yield ETFs during the 2014/15 oil bear market, which did not result in any disorderly disruption of corporate bond markets. If anything, the historical experience of U.S. corporate bond mutual funds shows that net flows into funds tend to follow, and not lead, the performance of markets (Chart 15). This may exaggerate bond market moves at turning points but, in general, outflows are a symptom, not a cause, of corporate bond downturns. Net-net, we agree with the assessment of the Fed that corporate bond market liquidity shows little sign of impairment and does not represent a threat to market stability. Bottom Line: There are few signs of diminished liquidity in U.S. corporate bond markets, despite the sharply reduced inventories of primary dealers. ETFs and institutional investors have picked up the slack from the dealers, as has electronic trading directly between market participants. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 https://www.wsj.com/articles/draghi-may-address-future-of-ecb-stimulus-at-jackson-hole-1499944342 2 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Dangerous Duration", dated July 11 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 3 https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/20170707_mprfullreport.pdf 4 https://www.economist.com/news/finance-and-economics/21721208-greater-automation-promises-more-liquidity-investors-digitisation-shakes-up 5 http://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed.org/2015/10/has-us-corporate-bond-market-liquidity-deteriorated.html Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
Global Interest Rate Strategy For The Remainder Of 2017
Global Interest Rate Strategy For The Remainder Of 2017
Highlights EM equity breadth has moved into negative territory, DM-based excess liquidity measures are set to roll-over, and China-based liquidity measures are also weak. Individually, each of these factors are not enough to raise alarm bells, but together they point to a period of heightened risks for EM assets and commodity currencies. AUD/CAD and NZD/JPY are set to suffer in this environment. EUR/USD will rise to 1.15-1.16, but unlike in 2015, it should not receive much of a fillip from EM volatility. Feature Chart I-1Technical Risk In EM
Technical Risk In EM
Technical Risk In EM
An interesting development has unfolded in emerging markets. While the pause in the EM rally has hit investors' radar screens, the more puzzling event concerns breadth. Not only has the advanced/decline line rolled over, but more worrisomely, it has recently moved into negative territory. Historically, when more stocks are declining rather than advancing, EM equities tend to experience sharp selloffs (Chart I-1). This development is important when put into a global context. EM stocks and related assets like commodity currencies have been buoyed by plentiful global liquidity conditions. However, global liquidity is set to deteriorate. A rocky second half may emerge in EM assets. Global Liquidity Is Slowing Following in the Federal Reserve's footsteps, DM central banks are moving away from monetary accommodation. Last week, European Central Bank President Mario Draghi made a speech that was interpreted as representing an abandonment of the ECB's dovish bias. With the anticipation that its bond-buying program will be tapered early in 2018 and reports that the ECB is having problems buying its quota of German and Finnish bonds, global bonds suffered, with Bund and T-Note yields moving up 33 and 23 basis points since June 27, respectively. The ECB is not the only central bank to have changed its tack. The Bank of Canada's communications have been crystal clear that it intends to increase rates this summer, or early fall at the latest. Even the perennially dovish Riksbank is moving away from its easy bias, as Sweden's resource utilization points to a continued acceleration in core inflation. But does this even matter? The global economy is strong, and beginning to remove accommodation is not quite the same thing as pushing rates into tight territory. The advanced economies are unlikely to suffer much from this development. However, the picture for EM is more concerning. Some key leading indicators of EM activity have already begun to roll over. For example, Taiwanese IP, a key bellwether of overall EM strength, is now contracting on a year-on-year basis (Chart I-2, top panel). Meanwhile EM PMIs rolled over three months ago and EM narrow money growth, a key forecaster of EM profits, is slowing sharply (Chart I-2, bottom panel). Despite these negative developments, EM stocks have remained resilient. The factor underpinning this impressive performance has been the rise in global liquidity. More technically, the rise in the global Marshallian K - the ratio of money to nominal GDP - over the past six months. Excess money has had to go somewhere. Among the many refuges, EM has been a key pole of attraction, with massive inflows supporting assets prices. The 8% appreciation in EM currencies versus the dollar since their January 2016 trough has been a vivid illustration of this phenomenon. The driver of the rise in excess money has been the ratio's numerator, dollar-based liquidity. The Fed's various QE programs were key determinants of dollar-based liquidity (Chart I-3). However, its tapering in late 2014 was enough to prompt a contraction of the measure. Now that the Fed is intent on decreasing its balance sheet while the ECB tapers and other smaller DM central banks begin increasing rates, the small improvement witnessed in the past three months is likely to end. The recent weakness in gold prices, despite the softness in the dollar, could be a sign that markets are beginning to sniff out the imminent tightening of global liquidity conditions. Chart I-2EM/China Profits Growth To Roll Over (I) EM Growth ##br##Has Deteriorated, Profits Will Suffer
EM/China Profits Growth To Roll Over (I) EM Growth Has Deteriorated, Profits Will Suffer
EM/China Profits Growth To Roll Over (I) EM Growth Has Deteriorated, Profits Will Suffer
Chart I-3The Fed Balance Sheet Runoff ##br##Will Hurt Global Liquidity
The Fed Balance Sheet Runoff Will Hurt Global Liquidity
The Fed Balance Sheet Runoff Will Hurt Global Liquidity
Additionally, not only are global central banks, led by the Fed, tightening or looking to tighten policy, they are doing so despite an absence of actual inflation. As a result, this means DM real yields are set to rise. As Chart I-4 illustrates, rising real DM yields have historically been a harbinger of poor EM bond performance. In fact, the action in DM real yields since mid-2016 already points to a problematic second half for EM bonds. As a result, EM bond investors are likely to suffer some losses in the coming months. Such losses would not only tighten EM financial conditions, but would also be symptomatic of capital leaving the region. Less money in those markets simply means less liquidity. With EM corporate spreads near historical lows, a repricing of credit risk on the back of softening global and EM liquidity is likely to prompt both a selloff in EM stocks and in EM currencies (Chart I-5). As a result, DM commodity currencies, the NZD and AUD in particular, could suffer. Chart I-4EM Financial Conditions##br## Are Set To Deteriorate
EM Financial Conditions Are Set To Deteriorate
EM Financial Conditions Are Set To Deteriorate
Chart I-5If Liquidity Dries, Spreads Widen ##br##And EM Stocks Fall
If Liquidity Dries, Spreads Widen And EM Stocks Fall
If Liquidity Dries, Spreads Widen And EM Stocks Fall
Bottom Line: In November 2016, a new leg of the EM rally began - a move driven by an expansion in global liquidity, even as a key bellwether of EM economic activity rolled over in the interim. Global excess liquidity is set to roll over as DM central banks abandon their dovish biases and the Fed begins to let its balance sheet run off. With EM weaker from a technical perspective, the second half of 2017 could be a tough environment for EM plays. Chinese Liquidity Joins The Fray In May 2015, EM equities in U.S.-dollar terms peaked just before global liquidity began to roll over. Compounding the risks, back then Chinese economic conditions were also problematic. Excess capacity and massive deflationary forces were wearing down on profits and investment. China is thus another key factor to watch. In this optic, beyond DM liquidity, a key driver of the rebound in EM last year was actually Chinese liquidity conditions. In the second half of 2015, China's own Marshallian K - based on M2 relative to nominal GDP growth - was rebounding sharply, as the PBoC was easing policy and the fiscal authorities were pressing on the gas pedal, expanding both public expenditures and pushing credit growth through the economy. However, that was then. Today, China has joined the tightening party. The quarterly moving average of Chinese interbank rates has increased by 100 basis points over the past year. Crackdowns on real estate and excess leverage have also resumed. Most importantly, the issuance of bonds by small and medium banks - a key source of grease to total social financing - has also massively decelerated, which points to a sharp slowdown and even a contraction in the Chinese credit impulse (Chart I-6). Thanks to this development, the Chinese Marshallian K is now in negative territory. The global impact of tighter Chinese monetary conditions is also flashing a red flag. Our indicator is based on the relative performance of Chinese bank stocks and USD/HKD. Underperformance of Chinese banks tends to send warning signs that tightening policy is beginning to negatively affect the outlook for Chinese credit growth. Additionally, USD/HKD is at an 18-month high because Hong Kong interest rates have not been able to follow U.S. ones, as loan demand by mainland-China entities has been poor. Most of the time, this indicator tends to move with EM stock prices, providing very little information. However, as Chart I-7 illustrates, this gauge is at its most useful when it diverges from EM equity prices. In each case, such as in 2007, 2011, and 2014, the divergences between the falling price-based Chinese liquidity indicator and rising EM stock prices was resolved by a correction in the latter. Today, the indicator points to a large amount of downside risk for EM stocks. Chart I-6Chinese Credit Impulse Will Slow
Chinese Credit Impulse Will Slow
Chinese Credit Impulse Will Slow
Chart I-7A Worrying Divergence
A Worrying Divergence
A Worrying Divergence
Again, it is important to reiterate that in and of itself, such a divergence is not enough to prompt investors to run for the hills and ditch EM stocks and related plays. However, when this happens as DM liquidity is also set to deteriorate, and most crucially, when EM breadth turns negative, decreasing EM exposure makes sense. Bottom Line: Chinese liquidity conditions are also deteriorating. The People's Bank of China may not want to push the economy into another slowdown cycle, which will most likely limit how far the Chinese central bank will tighten policy. However, this tightening has not been priced in by EM equities, and is happening as DM central banks are also reducing accommodation and as EM breadth has greatly deteriorated. A sizeable correction in EM plays is becoming increasingly likely. Investment Implications Chart I-8Global Liquidity Leads EM ##br##By More Than A Year
Global Liquidity Leads EM By More Than A Year
Global Liquidity Leads EM By More Than A Year
A tightening of dollar-based liquidity and Chinese-based liquidity is a big problem for non-China EM economies. EM economies outside of China and OPEC nations still run an annual current account deficit of more than US$200 billion. They need liquidity. Moreover, they still have at least US$3.6 trillion in foreign-currency debt. With liquidity conditions deteriorating, we should expect a widening of EM spreads, falling EM stock prices and falling commodity currencies. In fact, we are today in the window of maximum risk. Chart I-8 shows the combined G7 and Chinese Marshallian K, standardized. This indicator tends to have long leads over EM equity prices. It turned negative in the summer of 2006, though EM stock prices did not peak until the fourth quarter of 2007. It turned negative again in the early days of 2010, but EM equity prices did not peak until April 2011. The indicator moved below zero in mid-2014, yet EM equities only sold off in the second quarter of 2015. This time around, the combined liquidity indicator became negative in early 2016, suggesting great risks for EM assets and related plays in the second half of 2017. High carry EM currencies like the BRL or the TRY are at risk. The ZAR looks especially poorly positioned as well but the RUB seems better cushioned against these risks. The MXN could suffer too as Mexico has a lot of U.S. dollar-denominated debt. Nonetheless, MXN remains much cheaper than the BRL and could still outperform its Brazilian brethren. The SGD is very sensitive to global liquidity conditions, as Singapore is a key banking center for EM, and could also suffer substantially against the USD. In terms of timing for the G10 currency markets, the deterioration of EM breadth has historically been a dangerous sign for commodity currencies (Chart I-9). This combination of deteriorating liquidity and breadth is often associated with a sharp selloff in NZD/JPY (Chart I-10). Investors should short this cross, and we are re-opening this trade this week. Chart I-9Commodity Currencies##br## Prefer A Fresh Breadth...
Commodity Currencies Prefer A Fresh Breadth...
Commodity Currencies Prefer A Fresh Breadth...
Chart I-10...So Does ##br##NZD/JPY
...So Does NZD/JPY
...So Does NZD/JPY
The dynamics highlighted above also explain why despite our positive stance on Canada and the CAD, we are not willing to chase the selloff in USD/CAD further, and prefer to play the CAD's strength through its crosses. The risk-reward ratio seems better this way, as we are not as negatively exposed to an EM selloff as we would be buying the CAD against the USD. Indeed, a cleaner way to play the BoC's change of tone while gaining exposure to an EM-risk off theme, is to short AUD/CAD, a trade that is already on our book. On the domestic front, this week the Reserve Bank of Australia disappointed markets and did not try to indicate a change in stance away from its dovish bias. Markets have taken notice, with the AUD incapable of rallying against a weak USD, despite very strong trade data yesterday. Meanwhile, the BoC is telegraphing a rate hike in the very near future. Additionally, an abnormal gap has emerged between AUD/CAD and AUD/USD. As Chart I-11 shows, historically, AUD/CAD and AUD/USD have tracked one another. This makes sense. The Australian economy is very levered to Asian growth and liquidity dynamics, while Canada is a crucial link in the North American supply chain. With the U.S. and Canadian business cycles so tightly integrated, the CAD tends to mimic the greenback when compared to non-USD currencies. Chart I-11AUD/CAD Is A Short
AUD/CAD Is A Short
AUD/CAD Is A Short
The points in time when AUD/CAD has been much stronger than the AUD/USD deserve closer attention. They are periods of booms in EM Asia, such as the middle of the 1990s, or 2004 to 2005. Today, AUD/CAD is again out of line with AUD/USD, reflecting the boom in EM assets prices in 2016 and in the first half of 2017. However, if our view is correct that EM is entering a dangerous zone, AUD/CAD should weaken further. Chart I-12When Investors Are Short, ##br##EUR/USD Likes EM Selloffs
When Investors Are Short, EUR/USD Likes EM Selloffs
When Investors Are Short, EUR/USD Likes EM Selloffs
Last but certainly not least the euro. EUR/USD has much momentum and could continue to rally into the 1.15-1.16 zone. In fact, historically, EM shocks have been able to lift the euro, albeit temporarily. This definitely was the case in 2015 when EM sold off: in April 2015, when EM began to weaken, in August 2015, when a temporary selling climax emerged after the Chinese floated the CNY, and in December 2015, after the Fed hiked. The euro spiked in all three instances. However, investors were very short EUR/USD entering each of these periods, and the ensuing rallies were short-covering rallies (Chart I-12). This time around, investors are very long the euro, suggesting that the euro has not been used as a funding vehicle to the same extent as it was in 2015. Additionally, in all these previous episodes, EUR/USD traded at a small discount to the fair value implied by real rate differentials, today it is trading at a premium. Thus, the same kind of short-covering rally is unlikely. As a result, we do not anticipate EUR/USD to break out of its range on the back of an EM risk-off event. That being said, EUR could outperform GBP in this type of environment. The pound remains very dependent on global liquidity conditions to finance its current account deficit of more than 4% of GDP. With big financial institutions announcing more divesture from the U.K., these hot-money flows could prove even more crucial. As a result, we are removing our call to short EUR/GBP if it moves above 0.88, and expect a move in EUR/GBP toward 0.92-0.93 in the second half of 2017. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 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
The greenback slipped on weak as the ADP employment, the ISM-non manufacturing employment component, and continuing as well as initial jobless claims all underperformed expectations. While the dollar reacted negatively to this news, the Fed's hawkish stance should ultimately help the USD. Supplementing the increases in interest rates, are plans to reverse the multi-year quantitative easing program.The FOMC is also increasingly worried about the "quite high" stock valuations which, could lead to financial instability. U.S. 10-year yields have gone up 4 basis points following the release of the minutes, after the 20 bps spike following initial Fed comments on June 27. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Look Ahead, Not Back - June 9, 2017 Capacity Explosion = Inflation Implosion - June 2, 2017 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
The euro's strength extends as the union experienced strong services and composite PMI measures this Wednesday. While it is true that the ECB may be looking to draw back its excessively easy monetary policy, Draghi and Praet have highlighted that accommodative policy is still needed as inflationary pressures are not yet entrenched. The euro's recent appreciation and weak producer price numbers could vindicate this view. The euro's strength has also weighed on manufacturing activity, as PMIs underperformed expectations. This is likely to weigh on EUR/USD going forward, especially as European stocks have been underperofming U.S. ones in recent weeks. EUR/SEK can face considerable pressure ahead due to the Riksbank's change in rhetoric. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 A Market Update: June 23, 2017 Europe's Divine Comedy Part II: Italy In Purgatorio - June 21, 2017 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: National inflation came in at 0.4%, while Tokyo ex fresh food and energy inflation contracted by 0.2%. Both of these measures underperformed expectations. On the other hand, Japan's job-to-applicant ratio continues to climb, coming in at 1.49, and outperforming expectations. This last data point is key, as it highlights that the Japanese labor market is very tight, and that the stage is set for inflation to come back to Japan. However, as evidenced by the recent disappointments in data, the currency holds the key to unleash inflation in Japan. Thus, not only is a selloff in the yen needed for inflation to remerge, but this selloff would feed on itself, as a falling currency and a tight labor market would raise inflation (and thus lower real rates, as Japanese 10-year rates are anchored at 0), which would push the yen down further. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 A Market Update: June 23, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 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 declined from last month's reading and also came in below expectations at 54.3. Construction PMI also declined and came in below expectations at 53.4 However credit had a strong showing as net lending to individuals, consumer credit and mortgage approvals all came in above expectations at 5.3 billion pounds, 1.73 billion pounds and 65 thousand respectively. Various BoE members have stated that rising interest rates might be necessary to keep a lid on the island's high inflation. Although there are still some voices within the BoE who are more cautious, given the uncertainty that Brexit poses, overall the BoE has shown a much more hawkish tone in recent weeks. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 The Last Innings Of The Dollar Correction - April 21, 2017 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
The AUD has experienced considerable weakness this week, following a drawback in inflation estimates for June by the TD Securities measure, of 2.3% from 2.8% and a less hawkish than anticipated RBA. While retail sales beat expectations of 0.2% - coming in at 0.6% - the pace of appreciation in the RBA Commodity Index in SDR terms continues to slow Nevertheless, these factors were not the only contributors to the recent AUD weakness. Australia remains highly levered to emerging markets, and the Fed tightening remains a major risk for the AUD. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 U.S. Households Remain In The Driver's Seat - March 31, 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
Recent data in New Zealand has been mixed: The annual trade balance underperformed expectations, coming in at a deficit of 3.75 billion U.S. dollars. However the ANZ business confidence index continued climbing, and now stands at the highest level in 8 months Overall the New Zealand economy continues to be one of the best performing in the G10. If one were to be guided merely by domestic factors, the RBNZ should be the next central bank to hike after the Fed. However the picture is slightly more nuanced, as the RBNZ is still worried about foreign developments, particularly EM weakness. This justifies why they continue to state that "monetary policy will remain accommodative for a considerable period". Thus, we continue to be bullish on the NZD against the AUD, while we are shorting it against the JPY, as a mean to benefit from a potential EM dislocation. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 U.S. Households Remain In The Driver's Seat - March 31, 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
USD/CAD has broken down from a crucial technical level following Poloz's statements about the Canadian economy. He states that the "cuts have done their job". When asked about oil, the reply was reassuring, declaring that the expected level of WTI is at USD 40-50 bbl, which implies that fluctuations within that band should not influence movements the BoC path, helping the CAD in the process. He also suggested that "the adjustment we've been talking about... is largely complete now". While inflation is weak, the BoC governor highlighted that forward looking indicators for inflation should be monitored instead of current inflation. These variables are pointing to stronger growth, and are in line with the bank's expectations of a closing output gap in the first half of 2018. While this may be true, a strengthening CAD will remain a risk for inflation. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Exploring Risks To Our DXY View - May 26, 2017 Bloody Potomac - May 19, 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: Although real retail sales yearly growth came in negative at -0.3%, it outperformed expectations and was better than last month. Additionally, the SVME PMI came also blew away expectations, increasing from last month's 55.6 reading to 60.1. However Consumer price inflation came in at -0.1%, underperforming expectations. The Swiss economy continues to be haunted by the ghost of deflation. Nonetheless, some economic indicators appear to be ticking up, most likely as a result of the sharp rally in EUR/CHF. We continue to believe that a rally of EUR/CHF beyond 1.1 is unlikely, as most of the good news in the euro area are already priced into the euro. Furthermore, any disappointments, particularly in EM could trigger a selloff in this cross. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 The Fed And The Dollar: A Gordian Knot - April 14, 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
The Labor Force survey, which measures the number of unemployed people as a percentage of the total civilian labor force came in at 4.6%, increased since last month. This measure shows that despite the increase in oil prices the Norwegian labour market continues to be tepid. The Norges Bank agrees with our assessment, as it lowered its projected near term policy rate path. Furthermore, they projected that rates in Norway will not rise until the beginning of 2019. The reasons for this are two fold: first, inflation should continue to remain weak, as the pass through from the collapse in the currency has faded. Additionally, bubbly real estate prices, which were the only factor, which could incite the Norges Bank to become more hawkish, have gone down, following reform in lending standards. Thus, despite its good value, the NOK will continue to underperform amongst commodity currencies. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 A Market Update: June 23, 2017 Exploring Risks To Our DXY View - May 26, 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
It is true that the Riksbank recently hinted towards a more neutral stance, acknowledging "that inflation has recently been slightly higher than expected", which has made it "less likely than before that the Riksbank will cut the repo rate in the near term". However, the Riksbank also highlighted the fact that the bank is "prepared to implement further monetary policy easing if necessary to stabilize inflation". A very nuanced statement referred to the exchange rate, which "is important that [it] does not appreciate too rapidly", further stating that "this could happen if, for example, the Riksbank's monetary policy deviates clearly from that of other countries." This conclusively highlights that the bank is wary of diverging rates lifting undesirably on the krona, which is a limiting factor for substantial krona strength in the near term. However, the change of guard at the helm of this central bank in early 2018 could change all this caution. Report Links: Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Bloody Potomac - May 19, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Feature Chart 1Global Growth Pick Up
Global Growth Pick Up
Global Growth Pick Up
As a whole, G10 economies have been in expansion for more than seven years now. Moreover, after a near-recessionary episode in late 2015 / early 2016, the global economy is on a renewed upswing, with global trade and capex having regained vigor (Chart 1). Similar upswings in aged economic expansions have historically been the ideal breeding ground for global monetary tightening. However, the world economy is still dealing with two deflationary anchors: two decades of over-investment in emerging markets that have led to chronic overcapacity globally, and a strong preference for savings - a legacy of the great financial crisis (GFC) in the West and of financial repression in China. Thanks to this confluence of forces, global central banks have been fearful of tightening policy, hence, global policy rates continue to hover near multi-generational lows. Yet, now that the Federal Reserve has opened Pandora's box and raised rates four times, the question on every investor's mind is who is next. In this piece, we examine a few key domestic indicators for each G10 central bank (CB), and try to categorize CBs according to their likelihood of being the next one to tighten policy. We find three groups. The first one with the highest likelihood of hiking includes New Zealand, Sweden, and Canada. We place Australia, the U.K., and the Euro Area in the somewhat-likely-to-tighten camp. Finally, among the economies where we see little scope for tighter policy are Norway, Switzerland, and Japan. Using this ranking, we examine the implications for these countries' respective currencies and equity markets' relative performance. In this optic, it is important to remember that while conventional wisdom dictates that the stock market needs a depreciating currency in order to advance, empirically, countries with appreciating exchange rates have tended to outperform the global equity benchmark, reflecting the effect of international flows into these economies and markets.1 Finally, we look forward to publish in the coming months a quantitative model based on the indicators used in this report. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President Global Alpha Sector Strategy & U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com Most Likely To Increase Rates First: 1) New Zealand Chart 2New Zealand
New Zealand
New Zealand
The real Official Cash Rate has never been at such a discount to trend real GDP growth (Chart 2). As a result, nominal GDP is growing at a strong 6% a year, and core inflation is moving back toward 2%. Additionally, nominal retail sales are expanding at nearly 8% per year, the highest pace since 2007. According to the OECD, GDP is now nearly 2% above trend, which highlights the inflationary nature of New Zealand's economy. Supporting that, capacity constraints are becoming rampant, despite strong immigration into the country, unemployment is now nearly 1% below equilibrium, further confirming that the Reserve Bank of New Zealand is keeping policy at too-stimulative levels. This time around, hiking rates will not be a policy mistake as it was in both 2010 and 2014. In 2010, the difference between real rates and trend real GDP growth was much narrower than today, and the output gap was still very negative. In 2014, measures of slack were also not supportive of higher rates, and a rollover in core inflation as well as muted retail sales growth created additional headwinds. Most Likely To Increase Rates First: 2) Sweden Chart 3Sweden
Sweden
Sweden
The Riksbank's repo rate has been driven lower in response to the European Central Bank's own bias, resulting in a Swedish repo rate of -0.5%. The gap between the real policy rate in Sweden and trend GDP growth is hovering around record-low levels (Chart 3). Supported by such a stimulative policy setting, Swedish non-financial private credit has expanded massively, hitting 230% of GDP. Today, the output gap is in positive territory and the unemployment gap indicates that the labor market has tightened considerably. In fact, both measures are congruent with the levels recorded during prior rate-tightening cycles. Core inflation is still below the central bank's 2% target, but is accelerating higher. The Riksbank's resource utilization indicator is further confirming this trend and points toward much higher inflation in the second half of 2017.2 Retail sales have been soggy, but they are picking up anew, clearing the way for a rate hike. Crucially, under the tutelage of Stefan Ingves, the Riksbank has been extremely dovish, but his second term as head of the institution ends this year. For now, he does not look set to be re-appointed. His re-appointment constitutes the greatest risk to our Riksbank view. Most Likely To Increase Rates First: 3) Canada Chart 4Canada
Canada
Canada
The gap between the real policy rate and trend real GDP growth is still very negative, much more so in fact than was the case in 2010, the last time the Bank of Canada (BoC) tried to hike interest rates. The output gap and the unemployment gap continue to point toward a small degree of slack in the Canadian economy (Chart 4). Nonetheless, the BoC expects the output gap to close in 2018. However, the amount of slack in the economy remains very low compared to what prevailed in 2010. Like in the U.S., core inflation has recently sagged, but retail sales continue to grow at a healthy pace. Canadian policy rates have rarely diverged from those in the U.S. for long as the Canadian economy is deeply integrated in the U.S. supply chain. This means that economic impulses in the U.S. are often transferred to Canada. The Fed increasing rates in the U.S. puts pressure on the BoC. If rates diverge for too long, the Loonie will weaken considerably, exacerbating inflationary pressures in Canada. Recent communications of the BoC's most senior staff indicate a very sharp move away from dovishness. Middle Of The Pack: 1) Australia Chart 5Australia
Australia
Australia
The gap between real policy rates and trend real GDP growth is in stimulative territory, but it is not at the level seen in New Zealand, Sweden or Canada. While the unemployment gap suggests the labor market is becoming increasingly tight, the OECD's measure of the output gap still stands near record lows, suggesting that in aggregate there remains substantial slack in Australia (Chart 5). This paints a mixed picture rather than an indubitably good or bad one. Core inflation remains in a downtrend and nominal retail sales are growing at very low rates, further highlighting that monetary policy is not as accommodative as in New Zealand or Canada. Improvement in global trade continues to support the Australian economy, and strong real estate activity suggests that policy is too easy for domestic asset prices. These two forces are critical in preventing Australia from falling into the bottom basket of central banks. Even if a small deceleration in global activity emerges, so long as it does not degenerate into the kind of vicious commodity selloff experienced in the second half of 2015 and early 2016, the Australian economy will be able to avoid another deceleration. Middle Of The Pack: 2) The U.K. Chart 6U.K.
U.K.
U.K.
On many fronts, the U.K. looks ripe for an imminent rate hike. The gap between the real policy rate and trend real GDP growth is as depressed as the levels recorded in the countries in the first bucket, suggesting that the Bank of England's policy stance is extremely accommodative (Chart 6). However, like in Australia, measures of economic slack paint a mixed picture. The unemployment gap points to an absence of slack, while the output gap remains negative and indicative of some slack in the U.K. Retail sales have been lifted by the recent surge in inflation, with core consumer prices now growing at a 2.6% annual rate. However, this picture is distorted. Real retail sales have massively decelerated, and the surge in inflation has had nothing to do with domestic conditions but has been entirely due to the pass-through associated with the near-20% collapse in the trade-weighted pound since November 2015. Beyond the negative output gap, the key reason why the BoE is not at the top of the list of potential hikers is because U.K. household inflation expectations remain well behaved, and the economy could continue to decelerate in the face of uncertainty associated with Brexit. This could even prompt Mark Carney to keep an even more dovish stance that we or the market currently anticipate. Middle Of The Pack: 3) The Euro Area Chart 7Euro Area
Euro Area
Euro Area
The gap between the real policy rate and trend real GDP growth in the euro area is actually also at extremely stimulative levels (Chart 7), partly explaining why the European economy has been able to generate so many positive data surprises. However, the euro area economy still needs easy policy. The output gap remains very negative and unemployment is still below equilibrium. In fact, as we have argued, this latter indicator may even underestimate the amount of labor market slack in Europe, as measures of labor underutilization remain very elevated. Euro area core inflation has been moving up, but at around 1% remains well shy of the ECB's objective of close to but below 2%. True, officially the ECB targets headline inflation, but Draghi's emphasis on underlying domestic inflation trends belies a focus on core inflation. Ultimately, the combination of labor underutilization, simmering political risk in Italy and a still-negative output gap suggests the ECB in unlikely to lift interest rates until at least late 2018. The biggest risk to our view would be for the ECB to tighten policy more than we or even the market anticipate. This would put the ECB ahead of the BoE. The Laggards: 1) Norway Chart 8Norway
Norway
Norway
The gap between Norway's real policy rate and trend real GDP growth is still indicative of an easy policy stance. However, the recent dip in core inflation has caused an inadvertent policy tightening, as illustrated by the gap's sharp narrowing (Chart 8). The OECD's measure of Norway's output gap is very negative, and the unemployment rate has not been this deeply above equilibrium in more than 20 years. As such, there seems to remain large amounts of slack in the Norwegian economy. Corroborating this assessment, Norwegian wages are contracting at a 4% annual pace. Norwegian retail sales have been very weak, and core inflation has collapsed from 4% to 1.5%. This easing in inflation is a blessing for the Norges Bank as this allows it to focus on the large amount of slack still present in the economy. The Laggards: 2) Switzerland Chart 9Switzerland
Switzerland
Switzerland
Despite a deeply negative nominal policy rate and a continuously expanding central bank balance sheet, Switzerland monetary policy does not seem to be very easy, as the gap between the real policy rate and the trend real GDP growth rate is in neutral territory (Chart 9). The OECD's output gap and the difference between the headline unemployment rate and equilibrium unemployment rate both point toward plentiful slack in the Swiss economy. Swiss wage growth also remains quite tame, only hitting 0.1% last quarter. Core inflation remains well below target as it only modestly moved back into positive territory three months ago. The confluence of not-so-easy monetary policy and plentiful excess capacity suggests that despite the challenging conditions for Swiss pension plans and insurance companies created by deeply negative rates the Swiss economy is not yet ready to handle tighter monetary policy. The Laggards: 3) Japan Chart 10Japan
Japan
Japan
Japan might be the most perplexing economy in the G10 right now, and the Bank of Japan is in the toughest position of all the major central banks in the advanced economies. Like Switzerland, despite negative nominal short-term interest rates and large asset purchases by the BoJ, the gap between Japan's real policy rates and trend real GDP growth suggests that policy is only at a neutral setting (Chart 10). This would seem appropriate given that both the output gap and the unemployment gap point to little spare capacity in Japan. However, this does not square with core inflation moving back into negative territory and barely expanding retail sales. Ultimately, Japan's problem is two-fold. First, the unemployment gap underestimates the amount of labor underutilization in Japan, as output per hour worked remains 11% and 34% behind that of the OECD and the U.S, respectively. Second, extremely depressed Japanese inflation expectations continue to result in an extraordinarily flat Philips curve. Due to these dynamics, we expect that it will take continued sustained efforts by the BoJ to overheat the economy before any signs of inflation emerge. FX Implications Based on our assessments, we would expect the RBNZ, the Riksbank and the BoC to be the first central banks to hike now that the Fed has blazed the trail. Within this group, the RBNZ is potentially the cleanest story, as all factors are aligned. We would expect the RBNZ to hike late summer / early fall 2017. Technically, the Riksbank seems in a better place to hike rates than the BoC. However, the leadership of the BoC is already preparing the market for higher rates. Canadian rates could also rise as soon as late summer / early fall 2017. Meanwhile, so long as Ingves remains head of the Riksbank, the Swedish central bank will likely stand pat. Thus, we would expect the first hike to materialize early next year, as soon as a new governor takes the helm, although, we believe markets will begin pricing in such a hike as soon as his replacement is announced. In the second group of central banks, we expect the RBA to be the first to increase rates. The BoE does face a much more inflationary environment than the RBA, but the U.K.'s economic uncertainty remains such that the BoE is likely to tread carefully and wait to see how the economy handles the new wave of political trauma unleashed by this month's election. The ECB is likely to begin tapering its own purchases at the end of 2017, but our base case anticipates that it will not touch policy rates until well into 2018. Among the laggards, the Norges Bank will most likely be the first to push up rates - something we do not anticipate until late 2018. While BCA expects oil prices to rebound, this is unlikely to boost the economy fast enough to close the output gap for at least 18 months. Switzerland and Japan need to do a lot of work before their respective economies generate any kind of inflationary pressures. We do not anticipate any tightening for Switzerland until well after the ECB has moved. The BoJ may not tighten policy for the remainder of this decade. This means that the CAD and the NZD are likely to prove to be the best-performing currencies in the dollar bloc. Investors should stay short AUD/NZD and AUD/CAD. CAD/NOK also possesses more upside. The SEK could prove to be the best performing European currency. Swedish money markets are pricing in only 40 basis points of hikes over the next 12 months, something that seems too low considering the inflationary risk in that country. Stay short EUR/SEK. The EUR/USD rebounded this week on the back of seemingly hawkish comments by Draghi. Even when the ECB somewhat backtracked and communicated that the market had misinterpreted the speech, EUR/USD looked the other way. This confirms our fear that the momentum in this pair is too strong to fight. EUR/USD should retest 1.15-1.16, the upper bound of its trading range put in place since March 2015. Based on our economics work, any move above 1.15 should be used to short the euro. The pound will continue to suffer from a political discount, however, because our base case expects the BoE to tighten policy before the ECB, we continue to recommend that investors use moves above 0.88 to begin shorting EUR/GBP. The SNB is unlikely to remove its cap on the Swiss franc, which means the natural upward pull created by the large net international position of Switzerland will be of little solace for investors. Finally, the JPY should be the worst performing currency in the G10 as the BoJ will not be able to lift rates - a great handicap when, as BCA expects, global bond yields are likely to enjoy more upside than downside over the next 12 months. Equity Implications U.S. Equities Chart 11U.S.
U.S.
U.S.
Contrary to popular belief equities and the currency are joined at the hip especially during currency bull markets. A rising currency tends to attract flows and equities outperform in common and local currency terms. Keep in mind that domestic equity exposure dominates stock market weightings, further solidifying the positive currency and equity correlation. The top panel of Chart 11 shows that this relationship is extremely tight in the U.S. with equities outperforming the MSCI ACWI when the dollar advances and suffering a setback when the greenback depreciates. The Fed has raised rates three times since December 2015 and is slated to tighten monetary policy one more time later this year. This is well telegraphed to the markets, and thus the U.S. dollar has been in sell off mode for the past 6 months, weighing on relative equity performance. The relative economic surprise indexes also have an excellent track record in forecasting relative equity momentum, and the current message is grim for relative share prices. We expect the U.S. to continue to trail other G10 bourses in the coming months and the MSCI ACWI as other CBs have more scope to tighten monetary policy, and recommend an underweight stance in global equity portfolios. Bank/financials performance is also closely linked to monetary policy. While the yield curve flattening tends to suppress net interest margins (NIM), the recovery in loan volumes and drop in NPLs owing to a pickup in economic growth more than offsets the fall in NIMs. We continue to recommend overweight exposure in U.S. banks/financials both in global and U.S. only portfolios.3 New Zealand Equities Chart 12New Zealand
New Zealand
New Zealand
The positive stock and currency correlation exists in New Zealand. Currently, the Kiwi has been rising, but relative equities have not followed suit. If our analysis proves prescient and the RBNZ becomes the next G10 CB to hike, then a playable relative equity catch up phase will materialize (Chart 12). The relative surprise index is firing on all cylinders and corroborates the bullish economic message from our macro analysis and hints that New Zealand equities are a buy. We recommend an overweight stance in New Zealand stocks in global equity portfolios. While all the rest of the G10 have a domestic banking sector, New Zealand is the exception. Australian banks dominate the banking scene in New Zealand, and thus serve as a good proxy. We are comfortable to have a modest Australian banks/financials exposure in New Zealand only portfolios. However, there is one caveat: the housing market is bubbly. While excesses are well documented, we doubt that the housing markets would burst either in Australia or in New Zealand in the coming 6-12 months and bring down the Australian banking sector. In such a time frame, both CBs will still be early in their respective tightening cycles. Swedish Equities Chart 13Sweden
Sweden
Sweden
The Swedish krona moves in lockstep with relative share prices, a relationship that has been in place for the better part of the past two decades (Chart 13). Were the Riksbank to raise the policy rate from deeply negative territory, as our macroeconomic analysis pegs it as second most likely, then equities will outperform the MSCI ACWI, and we recommend an above benchmark allocation in global equity portfolios. Economic surprises in Sweden continue to outnumber the G10, heralding additional momentum gains in relative share prices (bottom panel). The elimination of NIRP would also benefit the banking sector. NIRP serves as a noose around banks' necks, as bankers cannot pass on NIRP to retail depositors weighing on NIMs. Chart 21 in the Appendix shows that Swedish financials comprise over 30% of the overall Swedish market and drive overall market performance. Thus, we are comfortable with an overweight stance in financials in Swedish only equity portfolios given the prospects of tighter monetary policy in the coming quarters. Canadian Equities Chart 14Canada
Canada
Canada
The Loonie and relative equity performance also move in tandem (Chart 14). At the current juncture the bear market in oil prices has dampened both the currency and equities, as Canada is an excellent proxy for commodity prices in general and oil prices in particular. The BoC is the third most likely CB to raise interest rates in the coming months according to our analysis, raising the odds of a reversal of fortunes for Canadian equities. The relative economic surprise index is surging, opening a wide gap with relative share price momentum. If our thesis proves accurate and the BoC pulls the trigger soon, then Canadian equities will gain some traction. Under such a backdrop we recommend an overweight stance in global equity portfolios. In terms of financials, Canadian financials' market capitalization weight is the second largest in the G10, exerting significant influence in overall equity direction. If the commodity complex is healthy enough for the BoC to tighten monetary policy, then banks will outperform on the back of firming loan growth and receding commodity related NPLs. Nevertheless, the housing market poses a clear risk. Were a housing crisis to grip the Canadian economy, bank earnings and thus performance would suffer a sizable blow. Our sense is that such an outcome is highly unlikely in the next year, making us comfortable recommending overweight financials exposure in Canadian only equity portfolios. Australian Equities Chart 15Australia
Australia
Australia
The positive correlation between FX rates and relative equity performance is prevalent in Australia (Chart 15). Currently, the Aussie has stayed resilient, but equities have given way suffering alongside commodities in general and iron ore prices in particular. The RBA sits in the middle of the pack in terms of hiking interest rates next according to our thesis, but still remains the fourth most likely CB in the G10 to pull the trigger ahead of the BoE and the ECB. As such, we recommend a neutral weight in global equity portfolios. While the relative economic surprise index has vaulted higher, the positive correlation with relative share price momentum seems to have broken down in recent years. Similar to Canada, Australian financials comprise a large chunk of the broad equity market (see Chart 21 in the Appendix on page 24), setting the tone for overall equity returns. If Canada's housing market is frothy, then Australia is a definite bubble and poses a significant risk to the banking sector. The APRA is breathing down banks' necks and that is reflected in recent bank underperformance. As we mentioned earlier, we doubt the Australian housing market blows up in the next 6-12 months as the RBA will be in the early innings of a tightening cycle. As a result, only a benchmark allocation is warranted in Australian banks in Australian only portfolios. U.K. Equities Chart 16U.K.
U.K.
U.K.
Cable and relative U.K. equity performance also follow our currency/FX positive correlation playbook (Chart 16). Relative share prices have ticked up recently taking cue from the rebound in sterling. British economic surprises have been outnumbering the G10 post Brexit, and sport a positive correlation with relative share price momentum. Our U.K. macroeconomic analysis highlights that the BoE stands right in the middle of the CB pack. Importantly, the BoE is our "surprise risk" of staying easy for longer than the economic variables would suggest as the dust clears from the Brexit aftermath. Under such a backdrop we recommend a modest underweight in U.K. equities in global equity portfolios. Similarly, U.K. banks also warrant a slight underweight stance in U.K. only equity portfolios. Eurozone Equities Chart 17Euro Area
Euro Area
Euro Area
Euro area stocks and the euro have been positively correlated especially since 2003. Year-to-date EUR/USD is up roughly 10% and Eurozone equities have been stellar outperformers. The catalyst for the euro's sizable gains has been the market's realization that the ECB passed its maximum easing in Q1/2017. Receding geopolitical uncertainty has also played a key role. In addition, the economy has responded well both to the extraordinarily easy monetary policy measures and move away from austerity. The bottom panel of the Chart 17 shows that relative economic surprises are probing 5-year highs pulling relative equity momentum higher. While our macro analysis suggests that the ECB stays pat for a while longer, our "surprise risk" is that the ECB moves earlier than we expect and removes some of the extreme monetary accommodation. As a result we continue to recommend above benchmark exposure both in Eurozone equities and banks/financials. Importantly, not only will euro area banks benefit from the eventual ECB's removal of NIRP and the related boost to NIMs, but also NPLs have peaked and will continue to drift lower along with the unemployment rate. More recently, the speedy and contained resolution of two Italian bank failures along with the absorption of two Spanish banks by Santander and Bankia are a giant step in the right direction. These moves also suggest that there is political will to overcome the banking issues in the euro area. Additional bank cleanup is likely and this is a welcome development in the Eurozone that should entice healthier banks to extend credit to the economy. Norwegian Equities Chart 18Norway
Norway
Norway
Over the past two decades, the Norwegian krone and relative equity performance have moved in lockstep (Chart 18). Year-to-date, relative Norwegian equities have fallen to fresh cycle lows. Similar to Canada, the country's substantial oil dependency has weighed on relative share prices and also knocked down the krone. Our macro analysis concluded that the Norges Bank will be late in lifting interest rate and sits at the bottom of the G10 CBs. As a result, we recommend underweight exposure in Norwegian stocks in global equity portfolios. Financials in Norway comprise one fifth of the stock market's capitalization (Chart 21 in the Appendix on page 24) and have been on a nearly uninterrupted run since the end of the GFC and catapulted to multi-decade highs. Given our thesis of the Norges Bank staying late in raising rates we recommend lightening up on financials equities in Norwegian only equity portfolios. Swiss Equities Chart 19Switzerland
Switzerland
Switzerland
Since the late 1990s relative Swiss share prices and the CHF have been enjoying an almost perfect positive correlation (Chart 19). At the current juncture Swiss stocks have been propelling higher versus the MSCI ACWI as the franc has been appreciating. There are extremely low odds that the SNB would move the needle in terms of normalizing interest rates any time soon, according to our analysis. Keep in mind that the SNB is conducting the ultimate QE experiment by purchasing U.S. stocks, underscoring that there are a lot of layers/levers of momentary policy easing that it will have to eventually to unwind. The implication is that we would lean against recent strength in the Swiss equity market and recommend a below benchmark allocation. Switzerland financials have the third lowest market cap weight in the G10 as UBS and CS are still licking their wounds from the aftermath of the GFC. Relative financials performance has been soft and taken a turn for the worse recently in marked contrast with global financials exuberance since Brexit. Our macro analysis suggests that a below benchmark allocation is warranted in financials in Swiss only portfolios. Japanese Equities Chart 20Japan
Japan
Japan
The Japanese yen and relative equity performance were joined at the hip from the mid-1990s until 2009. From the end of the GFC until 2015 this correlation broke down as Japan has been in-and-out of recession. Since then however, there is tentative evidence that Japanese equities and the yen have resumed moving in tandem (Chart 20). Our macroeconomic analysis suggests that Japan will be the last G10 CB to lift interest rates. While our study would signal that investors should avoid Japanese equities, we do not have high confidence in that view. The break and resumption in the equity/currency correlation is worrisome and suggests that other more important factors are in play dictating relative share price performance. As a result, we would modestly overweight Japanese equities in global equity portfolios in line with BCA’s Global Investment Strategy service view.4 On the financials front, relative performance in Japan has fallen into oblivion. NIRP is anchoring NIMs. But, an extremely low unemployment rate suggests that NPLs will continue to probe multi decade lows and provide an offset to bank EPS. Thus, we would stick with a neutral weighting in Japanese financials.5 Appendix Chart 21G10 Financial Market Cap Weights
Who Hikes Next?
Who Hikes Next?
1 For a more detailed discussion on the correlation between equity prices and the currency market, please see Global Alpha Sector Strategy Special Report titled, "Can The S&P 500 Rise Alongside The U.S. Dollar?", dated October 7, 206, available at gss.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report titled, "Central Banks Are Sticking To Their Guns", dated June 16, 017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report titled, "Girding For A Breakout?", dated May 1, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy - Strategy Outlook "Third Quarter 2017: Aging Bull", June 30, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see Global Alpha Sector Strategy Weekly Report titled "The Year Of The Letter "R"", January 13, 2017, available at gss.bcaresearch.com
Highlights Duration: The opposing forces currently pulling on global bonds - softer growth and core inflation readings vs. tightening labor markets - are keeping yields locked into narrow trading ranges. We expect the strength of the global upturn to reassert itself, leading to higher government bond yields and corporate credit outperformance over the balance of 2017. U.K./Canada/Australia: Economic data, as well as our bond market indicators, are giving conflicting signals for the outlook for yields in the U.K., Canada & Australia. Our analysis of the relative growth and inflation dynamics in the three countries leads us to recommend a 2-year/30-year yield curve box trade, positioning for a relatively flatter curve in Canada and a relatively steeper curve in the U.K. Portugal Trade Update: Improving growth indicators, and declining measures of banking sector risk, in Portugal have resulted in a sharp narrowing of government spreads versus Germany. We are exiting our short 10-year Portugal/long 10-year Germany Tactical Overlay trade this week, at a loss of -1.6%. Feature Chart of the WeekMarket Volatility Is Low For A Good Reason
Market Volatility Is Low For A Good Reason
Market Volatility Is Low For A Good Reason
What was once a fairly straightforward narrative for global bond markets earlier this year is now being challenged. Growth data has cooled a bit in the U.S. and China, while commodity prices have fallen, suggesting that the global economy may be losing steam even with leading indicators still rising and the European economy looking robust. At the same time, core inflation measures have ticked lower despite the signs of tighter labor markets throughout the developed world. These moves on the margin have stalled the upturn in global bond yields, resulting in lower fixed income market volatility that is likely playing a role in keeping realized equity market volatility at depressed levels (Chart of the Week). We continue to see the recent pullback in U.S. data as being temporary in nature. The economy should improve in the coming months given the still-solid trends in U.S. corporate profits and household income and the still-low level of interest rates. The signs of a building China slowdown are potentially more worrisome, especially on the inflation front given how much Chinese demand has boosted commodities and overall traded goods prices over the past year. Although we are not expecting a major Chinese downturn that could spill over more broadly to the world economy, it is likely that the next leg up in inflation in the developed economies will come from diminished spare capacity and rising core inflation, rather than a commodity-driven reacceleration of headline inflation. We continue to recommend a strategic underweight overall portfolio duration stance, as we expect the Fed to deliver on its planned rate hikes before year-end and the European Central Bank (ECB) to soon begin signaling a tapering of its asset purchases next year. We continue to favor corporate credit over sovereign debt, particularly in the U.S., given the strength of the current global upturn, but staying up in credit quality (i.e. focusing on Investment Grade and higher-rated credit tiers in High-Yield). Stuck On Neutral: Considering Trades Between Canada, Australia & The U.K. Over the past few months, we have upgraded our stance on government bond exposure in the U.K., Canada and Australia - all to neutral and all for essentially the same reason. There was not a compelling enough case to expect any of the central banks in those countries to move interest rates before year-end, in either direction, given the lack of sustainable inflation pressures and mixed messages on growth. With policymakers stuck on hold for the foreseeable future, keeping our recommended bond weightings at benchmark was the logical (albeit unexciting) choice. Even the mixed messages sent by our own bond indicators highlight the difficulty in making a decisive market call at the moment. Our Central Bank Monitors for Canada and Australia have recently flipped into the "tighter policy required" zone, joining the U.K. Monitor which has been there for some time (Chart 2).1 This would suggest moving to an underweight stance in anticipation of tighter monetary policy in those countries that is currently not priced into money market curves (bottom panel). Yet the best performing bond market of the three over the past two years has been the U.K. - a trend that started before last year's Brexit vote when the U.K. economy was in relatively good shape and the Bank of England (BoE) was starting to send hawkish messages. Gilts now look the most overvalued judging by the current negative real yields on offer (Chart 3), yet our U.K. Central Bank Monitor is showing signs of topping out, further adding to the confusion. Chart 2Markets Don't Expect Anything From BoE/BoC/RBA
Markets Don't Expect Anything From BoE/BoC/RBA
Markets Don't Expect Anything From BoE/BoC/RBA
Chart 3Gilts Look Most Expensive
Gilts Look Most Expensive
Gilts Look Most Expensive
Having mixed directional signals, however, does not imply that there are not trade opportunities within these markets. Even if the BoE, the Bank of Canada (BoC) and the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) are not in a hurry to begin hiking interest rates, domestic growth and inflation pressures are building at a different pace within these economies, creating potential cross-market trade opportunities. Economic Growth: Canada has the strongest leading economic indicator, manufacturing PMI and consumer sentiment, but the softest business confidence (Chart 4) - perhaps because of concerns over the future protectionist trade policies of U.S. President Donald Trump. In the U.K., a combination of falling real wage growth and persistently high levels of political uncertainty after Brexit are weighing on consumer sentiment, yet business confidence is the strongest of the three countries. Meanwhile, overall confidence in Australia is the weakest, even with manufacturing in a strong upturn. Most worryingly, real consumer spending is slowing rapidly in all three countries, although it is holding up relatively better in Canada. Inflation: The differences in price pressures are less pronounced (Chart 5). Inflation rates are similar among the three economies as Australian core CPI inflation appears to have finally bottomed out in the first quarter of this year after falling steadily since 2014. All three countries are witnessing decelerating wage growth, however, even with solid job growth in Canada over the past year. Spare capacity measures like the output gap and unemployment gap show the U.K. economy being closest to full employment (Chart 6). Spare capacity is steadily being absorbed in Canada, although the BoC attributes this to a slower pace of potential GDP growth, according to last month's BoC Monetary Policy Report (MPR).2 Chart 4Canadian Economic Data Looks Strongest
bca.gfis_wr_2017_05_16_c4
bca.gfis_wr_2017_05_16_c4
Chart 5No Major Inflation Differences
No Major Inflation Differences
No Major Inflation Differences
Home Prices & Debt: The housing markets remain an issue in Canada and Australia, where home prices look severely overvalued with household debt at elevated levels (Chart 7). The governments in both countries are trying to use regulatory and macro-prudential solutions to cool red-hot housing demand, but rapid growth in housing wealth remains a source of stimulus for consumers at the moment. The situation is different in the U.K., where home valuations and debt levels are nowhere near as elevated as in the other two countries (although London homeowners may disagree). Chart 6No Spare Capacity In The U.K.
No Spare Capacity In The U.K.
No Spare Capacity In The U.K.
Chart 7Household Debt A Concern In Canada & Australia
Household Debt A Concern In Canada & Australia
Household Debt A Concern In Canada & Australia
Exports: Each country is also exposed to a different major economy via the export channel. The OECD leading economic indicators for the U.S., Euro Area and China (the largest export markets for Canada, the U.K. and Australia, respectively) are all ticking higher, suggesting that export demand should pick up for Canada, the U.K. and Australia in the near term (Chart 8). However, Australian exports to China have already expanded at a 60% annual rate and our Emerging Market and China strategists are expecting some cooling of Chinese growth in the latter half of this year; slower export growth should be expected. Chart 8An Unsustainable Surge In Aussie##BR##Export Demand From China
An Unsustainable Surge In Aussie Export Demand From China
An Unsustainable Surge In Aussie Export Demand From China
After adding up all the pieces, it is still difficult to select one government bond market over the others in absolute terms. The U.K. would appear to have the least bond-friendly backdrop, with higher inflation and very low real interest rates. Yet the BoE is worried about many factors - Brexit uncertainties on trade and business confidence, declining real household income growth - that should prevent them from shifting to a less accommodative monetary stance before year-end that would involve reduced Gilt purchases and/or outright interest rate hikes. Conversely, Australia seems to have the most bond-bullish climate - a still-negative output gap, plunging consumer confidence, very low inflation and the heaviest exposure to a Chinese economy that is set to cool off. Yet while core inflation remains low at 1.5%, it appears to be bottoming out and the RBA is currently forecasting that its preferred measure of underlying inflation will move up to 2% - the low end of its 2-3% target range - by early 2018, according to their just-released Statement on Monetary Policy.3 In Canada, the BoC continues to take a very cautious view on Canadian growth, despite the robust 4% real GDP growth seen in the first quarter of this year. Sluggish growth in exports and capital spending is expected to be a drag on growth this year, according to the April BoC MPR. Yet the central bank is now "decidedly neutral" and is no longer considering a rate cut as it was earlier this year according to BoC Governor (and BCA alumnus) Stephen Poloz.4 Given all the various factors pushing and pulling on these three economies and central banks, it is perhaps no surprise that yield moves have been highly correlated across these bond markets over the past several months (Chart 9). The most attractive near-term risk/reward opportunities now appear to be in relative yield curve trades rather than directional allocations or cross-country spread trades. Specifically, we see an opportunity to play for a steeper Gilt curve, and a relatively flatter Canadian government bond curve, via a 2-year/30-year box trade. Given the strong readings on current and leading economic indicators in Canada, combined with our view that the recent patch of slower U.S. growth will prove to be temporary, we see the greatest potential for upside growth surprises in Canada. The BoC is likely to wait before delivering rate hikes until there is decisive evidence of accelerating inflation, especially given the potential economic risks deriving from the Canadian housing bubble. However, better-than-expected growth will exert more flattening pressure on the Canadian yield curve than the U.K. or Australian curves, where downside growth risks are greater. Already, the very front end of the Canadian curve is starting to disengage from the U.K. and Australian curves, with the 2-year/5-year flattening modestly in Canada and the other markets showing steepening curves at similar maturities (Chart 10, top panel). We expect that relative flattening pressure to exert itself further out the yield curve for Canadian government debt over the latter half of 2017. Chart 9Yields Are Highly Correlated...
Yields Are Highly Correlated...
Yields Are Highly Correlated...
Chart 10...Curve Slopes, Slightly Less Correlated
...Curve Slopes, Slightly Less Correlated
...Curve Slopes, Slightly Less Correlated
In the U.K., the long end of the Gilt curve has rallied to very rich levels, with the 10-year/30-year slope now trading near the bottom of the range that has prevailed since 2014 (bottom panel). Much of that has been driven by a decline in longer-term inflation expectations that has accompanied the more stable British Pound. While the uncertainty surrounding the upcoming Brexit negotiations with the European Union will likely weigh on business confidence and investment spending in the U.K., the immediate impact of the robust Euro Area economy on U.K. exports should provide a boost to U.K. economic growth. Coming at a time when the U.K. is at, or even beyond, full employment, this should put some mild upward pressure on inflation expectations further out the curve, leading to steepening pressures on a relative basis to Canada. This can already be seen in looking at the 2-year/30-year yield curve box between the Canada and the U.K. in Chart 11. In all three panels, we show the steepness of the Canadian bond curve minus that of the Gilt curve, alongside the differentials in actual inflation, and market-based inflation expectations from the index-linked markets, between Canada and the U.K. As can be seen in the top two panels, the Canadian curve looks too steep relative to the U.K. curve given the higher rates of headline and core inflation in the U.K. The bottom panel shows that the 2-year/30-year box is in line with the relative inflation expectations within the two countries. We see this as a sign that U.K. inflation expectations are too low relative to actual U.K. inflation, leaving the Gilt curve too flat relative to the Canadian curve. While this would appear to argue for a relative trade between inflation-linked bonds in Canada and the U.K., the poor liquidity of the small Canadian linker market makes this a difficult trade for most investors to put on. We prefer to express the view via yield curves, particularly with the 2-year/30-year Canada-U.K. box currently priced in the bond forwards to move sideways over the rest of the year (Chart 12). This means that betting on a steeper Gilt curve relative to Canada does not incur negative carry - important for a trade with a more medium-term horizon like this. Chart 11Gilt 2/30 Curve Too Flat Relative To Canada
Gilt 2/30 Curve Too Flat Relative To Canada
Gilt 2/30 Curve Too Flat Relative To Canada
Chart 12Enter A 2/30 Canada-U.K. Box Trade
Enter A 2/30 Canada-U.K. Box Trade
Enter A 2/30 Canada-U.K. Box Trade
This week, we are adding this 2-year/30-year Canada-U.K. position to our strategic model portfolio at -7bps. The initial target is for the box to return to -50bps - the bottom of the range that has prevailed since 2015. A deeper decline would occur if the BoC begins to signal a rate hike in Canada at some point that puts even more flattening pressure on the Canadian curve, although that is not our base case expectation over the rest of 2017. The risk to the trade would come from a deceleration of U.K. inflation that eliminates the current divergence between realized and expected inflation. What about Australia? We anticipate that there will be an opportunity to move to an eventual overweight position in Australian bonds in the coming months to position for the slowing of Chinese growth, and the related demand for Australian exports, that we expect. We are choosing to stay neutral for now, however, given the current uptick in Australian inflation that muddies the water on any call on RBA monetary policy. Bottom Line: Economic data, as well as our bond market indicators, are giving conflicting signals for the outlook for yields in the U.K., Canada & Australia. Our analysis of the relative growth and inflation dynamics in the three countries leads us to recommend a 2-year/30-year yield curve box trade, positioning for a flatter curve in Canada and a steeper curve in the U.K. Tactical Overlay Housekeeping: Cutting Losses On Portugal Shorts One of our long-held positions in our Tactical Overlay trade portfolio has been a short position in Portugal 10-year government bonds versus a long position in 10-year German Bunds. We put the trade on last summer as part of a broader allocation at the time out of Peripheral European sovereign debt into core European debt. The logic was straightforward - the combined stress of decelerating economic growth and struggling banking systems in the Periphery (made worse by the ECB's negative interest rate policies) would result in some spread widening in Italy, Spain and Portugal. While that story remains true in Italy, both leading economic indicators and measures of financial sector risk like credit default swap (CDS) spreads for senior banks have a decline in Spain and Portugal. While we have already upgraded our recommended allocation to Spanish debt in our model portfolio, we had been reluctant to consider a similar move in Portugal given our concerns about its economy and, more importantly, its banking system. But with leading economic indicators starting to perk up and bank CDS spreads in Portugal falling sharply, and with German Bund yields rising alongside growing market nervousness of a potential ECB taper, Portugal-Germany spreads have tightened sharply. We are belatedly cutting our losses on this position this week and closing out the position at a loss of -1.6%. We plan on publishing a deeper dive on Portugal in the coming weeks to update our views on the country and its bond markets. Bottom Line: Improving growth indicators, and declining measures of banking sector risk, in Portugal have resulted in a sharp narrowing of government spreads versus Germany. We are exiting our short 10-year Portugal/long 10-year Germany Tactical Overlay trade this week, at a loss of -1.6%. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "BCA Central Bank Monitor Chartbook", dated March 28 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 2 http://www.bankofcanada.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/mpr-2017-04-12.pdf 3 http://www.rba.gov.au/publications/smp/2017/may/pdf/statement-on-monetary-policy-2017-05.pdf 4 https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-04-12/poloz-sees-faster-canada-return-to-full-capacity-key-takeaways The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
Adventures In Fence-Sitting
Adventures In Fence-Sitting
Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns