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Highlights Short oil and gas versus financials. Stick with underweights in the classically cyclical sectors. Downgrade the FTSE100 to neutral. Overweight France, Ireland, Switzerland and Denmark. Underweight Italy, Spain, Sweden and Norway. European equities will struggle to make much headway versus the technology-dominated S&P500 and MSCI Emerging Markets. Overall market direction will be range-bound through the summer. Feature Two market oddities stood out in the first half of the year. The first oddity was the abrupt decoupling of bank equity performance from bond yields (Chart I-2). For many years, bank equity performance and bond yields have been joined at the hip (Chart I-3). The faithful relationship exists because higher bond yields tend to signal stronger economic growth, either real or nominal. Stronger growth should be good for banks as it is associated with both accelerating credit growth and lower provisions for non-performing loans. Chart of the WeekWhen Technology Outperforms, European Equities Struggle Versus Emerging Market Equities When Technology Outperforms, European Equities Struggle Versus Emerging Market Equities When Technology Outperforms, European Equities Struggle Versus Emerging Market Equities Chart I-2Oddity 1: Banks Abruptly Decoupled##br## From Bond Yields Oddity 1: Banks Abruptly Decoupled From Bond Yields Oddity 1: Banks Abruptly Decoupled From Bond Yields Chart I-3Banks And Bond Yields Have Been ##br##Joined At The Hip For Years Banks And Bond Yields Have Been Joined At The Hip For Years Banks And Bond Yields Have Been Joined At The Hip For Years The second oddity was the abrupt decoupling of crude oil from industrial metal prices (Chart I-4). It is rare for crude oil to outperform copper by 30% in the space of just six months (Chart I-5). Chart I-4Oddity 2: The Crude Oil Price Abruptly ##br##Decoupled From Metal Prices It Is Rare For Crude Oil To Outperform Copper By 30% In Six Months It Is Rare For Crude Oil To Outperform Copper By 30% In Six Months Chart I-5It Is Rare For Crude Oil To Outperform ##br##Copper By 30% In Six Months It Is Rare For Crude Oil To Outperform Copper By 30% In Six Months It Is Rare For Crude Oil To Outperform Copper By 30% In Six Months Explaining The Oddities In The 1st Half The underperformance of banks is consistent with similar underperformances in the other classically growth-sensitive sectors - industrials, and basic materials (Chart I-6). Furthermore, the underperformances of these cyclicals is closely tracking the downswing in the global 6-month credit impulse (Chart I-7). Chart I-6The Odd Man Out: ##br##Oil And Gas The Odd Man Out: Oil And Gas The Odd Man Out: Oil And Gas Chart I-7The Underperformance Of Cyclicals Is Closely ##br##Tracking The Global 6-Month Credit Impulse The Underperformance Of Cyclicals Is Closely Tracking The Global 6-Month Credit Impulse The Underperformance Of Cyclicals Is Closely Tracking The Global 6-Month Credit Impulse Note also that these underperformances started well before any inkling of a trade spat. Hence, the recent escalation in the trade skirmishes is reinforcing a change of trend that was already in place. Taken together, this evidence would strongly suggest that global growth is not accelerating; it is decelerating. Oil is the odd man out because its supply dynamics, rather than demand dynamics, have been dominating its price action, lifting its year-on-year inflation rate to 60%. However, a large part of this surge in year-on-year inflation is also to do with the 'base effect', the dip in the oil price to $45 a year ago. The base effect is a statistical quirk, and shouldn't really bother markets. After all, most people do not consciously compare today's price with that exactly a year ago. Unfortunately, central banks' inflation targets are based on year-on-year comparisons, and this could explain why bond yields have decoupled from growth. If oil price inflation is running at 60% it will underpin headline CPI inflation, central bank reaction functions, and thereby bond yields. So here's the explanation for the oddities in the first half. Banks, industrials, and the other classically cyclical sectors are taking their cue from global growth and industrial activity, which does appear to be losing momentum. In contrast, bond yields are taking their cue from the oil price, given its major impact on headline inflation and on central bank reaction functions. Spotting An Opportunity In The 2nd Half Chart I-8Crude Oil's 12-Month Inflation Rate Is 60% Crude Oil's 12-Month Inflation Rate Is 60% Crude Oil's 12-Month Inflation Rate Is 60% Ultimately, an oil price spike based on supply dynamics without support from stronger demand is unsustainable - because the higher price eventually leads to demand destruction (Chart I-8). On the other hand, if global demand growth does reaccelerate, it is the beaten-down bank equity prices that have the recovery potential. Either way, this leads us to a compelling intra-cyclical trade: short oil and gas versus financials. In aggregate though, we expect cyclical sectors to continue underperforming defensives through the summer. Based on previous credit impulse mini-cycles, we can confidently say that mini-deceleration phases last at least six to eight months and that the typical release valve is a decline in bond yields. In this regard, the apparent disconnect between decelerating growth and slow-to-budge bond yields risks protracting this mini-deceleration phase. Therefore, through the summer, it is appropriate to stick with underweights in the classically cyclical sectors. The strategy has worked well since we initiated it at the start of the year, and it is too early to take profits. Likewise, the portfolio of high-quality government 30-year bonds which we bought in early May is performing well, and we expect it to continue doing so for the time being. Don't Over-Complicate The Investment Process! To reiterate, stick with an underweight to the classical cyclicals versus defensives; and within the cyclicals, short oil and gas versus financials. These sector stances then have a very strong bearing on regional and country equity allocation. This is because up to a quarter of the market capitalisation of each major stock market is in one dominant sector, and this dominant sector gives each equity index its defining fingerprint (Table I-1): for the FTSE100, it is oil and gas; for the Eurostoxx50 it is financials; for the Nikkei225 it is industrials. So all three of these regional indexes are dominated by classical cyclicals. Table I-1Each Major Stock Market Has A Defining Sector Fingerprint Oddities In The 1st Half, Opportunities In The 2nd Half Oddities In The 1st Half, Opportunities In The 2nd Half For the S&P500 and MSCI Emerging Markets indexes, the dominant sector is technology. Although the technology sector is not strictly speaking defensive, it is much less sensitive to growth accelerations and decelerations than the classical cyclicals. There is another important factor to consider: the currency. The FTSE100 oil and gas stock, BP, receives its revenue and incurs its costs in multiple major currencies, such as euros and dollars. In this sense, BP's global business is currency neutral. But BP's stock price is quoted in London in pounds. This means that if the pound strengthens, the company's multi-currency profits will decline relative to the stock price and weigh it down. Conversely, if the pound weakens, it will lift the BP stock price. So the currency is the channel through which the domestic economy can impact its stock market, albeit it is an inverse relationship: a strong currency hinders the stock market; a weak currency helps it. The upshot is that the defining sector fingerprints for the major indexes turn out to be: FTSE100 = global oil and gas shares expressed in pounds. Eurostoxx50 = global banks expressed in euros. Nikkei225 = global industrials expressed in yen. S&P500 = global technology expressed in dollars. MSCI Emerging Markets = global technology expressed in emerging market currencies. Professional investors might argue that this trivializes an investment process on which they spend a lot of time, resource, research, and ultimately money. But we would flip this argument around. To justify the large amounts of time and resource spent on the investment process, professional investors are often guilty of over-complicating it! We fully admit that many factors influence the financial markets, but these factors follow the Pareto Principle, also known as the 80:20 rule. A small number of causes explain the majority of effects. And the 20% that explains 80% of a stock market's relative performance is its defining sector fingerprint. The Chart of the Week and Chart I-9-Chart I-12 should dispel any lingering doubts that readers might have. Chart I-9FTSE 100 Vs. S&P 500 = Global Oil And Gas##br## In Pounds Vs. Global Tech In Dollars FTSE 100 Vs. S&P 500 = Global Oil And Gas In Pounds Vs. Global Tech In Dollars FTSE 100 Vs. S&P 500 = Global Oil And Gas In Pounds Vs. Global Tech In Dollars Chart I-10FTSE 100 Vs. Nikkei 225 = Global Oil And Gas ##br##In Pounds Vs. Global Industrials In Yen FTSE 100 Vs. Nikkei 225 = Global Oil And Gas In Pounds Vs. Global Industrials In Yen FTSE 100 Vs. Nikkei 225 = Global Oil And Gas In Pounds Vs. Global Industrials In Yen Chart I-11FTSE 100 Vs. Euro Stoxx 50 = Global Oil And Gas ##br##In Pounds Vs. Global Banks In Euros FTSE 100 Vs. Euro Stoxx 50 = Global Oil And Gas In Pounds Vs. Global Banks In Euros FTSE 100 Vs. Euro Stoxx 50 = Global Oil And Gas In Pounds Vs. Global Banks In Euros Chart I-12Euro Stoxx 50 Vs. S&P 500 = Global Banks ##br##In Euros Vs. Global Tech In Dollars Euro Stoxx 50 Vs. S&P 500 = Global Banks In Euros Vs. Global Tech In Dollars Euro Stoxx 50 Vs. S&P 500 = Global Banks In Euros Vs. Global Tech In Dollars So what does all of this mean for investors right now? A stance that is short oil and gas versus financials necessarily implies that the FTSE100 will struggle versus the Eurostoxx50, given the FTSE100's oil and gas fingerprint and the Eurostoxx50's banks fingerprint. Hence, today we are taking profits in our overweight to the FTSE100, and downgrading this position to neutral. This leaves us with overweight positions to France, Ireland, Switzerland and Denmark, and underweight positions to Italy, Spain, Sweden and Norway. Meanwhile, a stance that is underweight the classical cyclicals necessarily implies that European equities will struggle to make much headway versus the technology-dominated S&P500 and MSCI Emerging Markets. Finally, in terms of overall market direction, we expect the range-bound pattern established in the first half of the year to hold through the summer. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model* There are no new trades this week. However, we reiterate that the outperformance of oil and gas versus financials is technically very stretched, which reinforces the fundamental arguments in the main body of this report to go short oil and gas versus financials. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-13 Short oil and gas versus financials Short oil and gas versus financials The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Contagion risk from Italy to its European peers presents a buying opportunity; Italian policymakers are constrained by the bond market and avoiding brinkmanship; In a game of chicken between Berlin and Rome, Chancellor Angela Merkel is behind the wheel of a 2.5-ton SUV; Italy's ultimate constraint is its bifurcated economic system - staying in the EU helps manage this problem; Underweight Italian bonds in a global portfolio and short Italian bonds versus their Spanish equivalents. Feature Chart 1Is Contagion Warranted? Is Contagion Warranted? Is Contagion Warranted? On May 31, Italy formed the second overtly populist government in the Euro Area. The first was the short-lived SYRIZA government in Greece, which lasted from January to September 2015. Under the leadership of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and his colorful finance minister Yanis Varoufakis, Athens took Greece to the brink of Euro Area exit in the summer of 2015. Ultimately, Greek politicians blinked, folded, and re-ran the January election in September, transforming SYRIZA from an overtly euroskeptic party to a europhile party in just eight months. Investors are concerned that "this time will be different." We disagree. To use a poker analogy, Italian policymakers are better positioned to "bluff" their European counterparts as their chip stack is larger. But they are still holding a bad hand, and other players at the table still hold big stacks. The recent turbulence in Italian bond markets has spilled over into other Mediterranean countries (Chart 1). This contagion is unwarranted, as there has been much improvement across the region over the past few years, both politically and economically. As for Italy itself, it is positive that populists have come to power today, for several reasons. First, it will force them to actually run the country, a sobering process that often tempers anti-establishment zeal, as it did in Greece. Second, they will run the country at a time when popular support for the Euro Area and EU remains strong enough to deter an overt attempt to exit those institutions. Third, Italy remains massively constrained by material forces outside of their control, which will force compromises in negotiations with Brussels and fellow EU member states. There Will Be No Contagion From Italy Markets overreacted to the political risks emanating from Italy in recent weeks. Fundamentally, Italy's peripheral peers have emerged stronger from the Euro Area crisis. Since the onset of the Euro Area crisis, Greece, Portugal, Ireland, and Spain - the hardest-hit economies in 2010 - have seen their unit labor costs contract by an average of 8.7%. Over the same period, the rest of the Euro Area inflated its labor cost structure by around 10.9% (Chart 2). Italy remains saddled with a rigid, under-educated, and rather unproductive workforce that has seen no adjustment in labor costs.1 Meanwhile, its Mediterranean peers have practically closed their once-enormous unit labor-cost gap with Germany. Furthermore, all southern European countries now run primary surpluses, reducing the need for external funding (Chart 3). It is fair that the market should apply a fiscal premium to Italy, given the new government's plans to blow out the budget deficit. But no such fiscal plan is in the works in the rest of the Mediterranean. The cyclically-adjusted primary balance - for Italy, Spain, Portugal, and Greece - has gone from a deficit of 4.4% during the height of the debt crisis, to a surplus of 1.4% today. One can argue about whether such fiscal austerity was really necessary. The advantage, however, is that the improvement in structural budget balances has diminished the need for additional austerity measures and could also provide greater fiscal space during the next recession. Finally, household balance sheets have been on the mend for some time. Consumer debt levels as a percentage of disposable income in Spain, Portugal, and Ireland - the epicenter of the original Euro Area debt crisis - have now dipped below U.S. levels. In the case of Italy, importantly, the household sector was never over-indebted to begin with (Chart 4). Chart 2Italy Has Had No Labor-Cost Adjustment Italy Has Had No Labor-Cost Adjustment Italy Has Had No Labor-Cost Adjustment Chart 3Mediterranean Austerity Is Over Mediterranean Austerity Is Over Mediterranean Austerity Is Over Chart 4No Household Credit Bubble In Italy No Household Credit Bubble In Italy No Household Credit Bubble In Italy On the political front, Italians are clearly more euroskeptic than their Euro Area peers (Chart 5). Although only 30% of Italians oppose the common currency, in line with Greece, this is still considerably higher than in Spain and Portugal (Chart 6). Italians also feel less "European" than the Spanish or the Portuguese - i.e., they identify more exclusively with their unique nationality. Again this is in line with Greek sentiment (Chart 7). Italians were not always this way: in the early 1990s, they felt the most European. Chart 5Italy Lags In Support For The Euro... Italy Lags In Support For The Euro... Italy Lags In Support For The Euro... Chart 6...But Only 30% Of Italians Want Out ...But Only 30% Of Italians Want Out ...But Only 30% Of Italians Want Out Chart 7Italians Are Feeling More Italian Italians Are Feeling More Italian Italians Are Feeling More Italian In Portugal and Spain, parties across the political spectrum have responded to improving political and economic fundamentals. In Spain, the mildly euroskeptic Podemos is polling below its June 2016 election result. Its leadership has also abandoned any ambiguity on its support of the common currency, although it still campaigned in 2016 on restructuring Spain's foreign debt. The leading party in the Spanish polls is the centrist Ciudadanos (Chart 8), led by 38-year old Albert Rivera. Much like French President Emmanuel Macron, Rivera has a background in finance - he worked as a legal counsel at La Caixa - and presents a centrist vision for Europe, favoring more integration. The rise of Ciudadanos is important as Spain could have new elections soon. Conservative Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy resigned following a vote of no-confidence engineered by the Spanish Socialist Party (PSOE) leader Pedro Sánchez. However, PSOE only holds 84 seats of the 350-seat parliament. As such, it is unclear how the Socialist minority government will govern, particularly with the budget vote coming in early fall. But investors should welcome, not fear, early elections in Spain. With Ciudadanos set to join a governing coalition, it is clear that Spain's commitments to the Rajoy structural reforms will remain in place while no discussions of Spanish exit from European institutions is on any investment-relevant horizon. In Portugal, the minority government of Prime Minister António Costa has overseen a brisk economic recovery. Costa's center-left Socialist Party has received support in parliament from the far-left, euroskeptic Left Bloc, plus the Communists and Greens. Despite the involvement of the Left Bloc, the minority government has not initiated any euroskeptic policy. The latest polling suggests that Costa could win a majority in 2019. An election has to be held by October of that year, thus potentially strengthening the pro-European credentials of the Portuguese government (Chart 9). Finally, in Greece, the once overtly euroskeptic SYRIZA is polling well below their 2015 levels of support. Ardently europhile and centrist New Democracy (ND) is set to win the next election - which must be held by October 2019 - if polling remains stable (Chart 10). The fascist and euroskeptic Golden Dawn remains a feature of Greek politics, but has a support rate under 10%, as it has over the past decade. In fact, the rising player in Greek politics is the centrist and europhile Movement for Change, an alliance that includes the vestiges of the center-left PASOK, which polls around 10%. Chart 8There Is No Populism In Spain... There Is No Populism In Spain... There Is No Populism In Spain... Chart 9...Or Portugal... ...Or Portugal... ...Or Portugal... Chart 10...And Surprisingly None In Greece ...And Surprisingly None In Greece ...And Surprisingly None In Greece Bottom Line: Italy stands alone in the Mediterranean as a laggard on both economic and political fundamentals. Contagion risk from Italy to the rest of its European peers should be faded by investors. It represents a buying opportunity every time it manifests itself. What Car Is Italy Driving In This Game Of Chicken? The new ruling coalition in Rome has a democratic mandate for a confrontation with Brussels over fiscal spending. The coalition consists of the Five Star Movement (M5S) and the League (Lega), formerly known as the "Northern League." In his inaugural speech to the Italian Parliament, Prime Minister Guiseppe Conte emphasized that the mandate of the new coalition includes "reducing the public debt ... by increasing our wealth, not with austerity."2 So, the gloves are off! Not really. Almost immediately, Conte pointed out that "we are optimistic about the outcome of these discussions and confident of our negotiating power, because we are facing a situation in which Italy's interests... coincide with the general interests of Europe, with the aim of preventing its possible decline. Europe is our home." PM Conte subsequently focused in his speech on increasing social welfare payments to the poor, conditional on vocational training and job reintegration. Talk of a "flat tax" was replaced with an eponymous concept that is anything but a "flat tax."3 And there was no mention of overturning unpopular pension reforms, but merely "intervening in favor of retirees who do not have sufficient income to live in dignity."4 We may be reading too much into one speech. However, the time for brinkmanship is at the beginning of a government's mandate. And Conte's opening salvo suggests that the M5S-Lega coalition has already punted on three of its most populist promises: wholesale change to retirement reforms, a flat tax of 15%, and universal basic income. The back-of-the-envelope cost of these three proposals is €100bn, which would easily blow out Italy's budget deficit by 5% of GDP, putting the total at 7%. There was also no mention of issuing government IOUs that would create a sort of "parallel currency" in the country. Conte's relatively tame speech represents one of three concessions that Rome has made before it even engaged Brussels in brinkmanship. The two others were to replace the original economy minister designate - euroskeptic Paulo Savona - and to form a government in the first place. The latter is particularly telling. Polls have shown that the two populist parties would have an even stronger hand if they waited until the fall to re-run the election (Chart 11). In particular, Lega has seen its support rise by 9% since the election. It is politically illogical to form a governing coalition with less political capital when a new election would strengthen the hand of both populist parties. So why the concessions? Because Italian policymakers are not interested in brinkmanship. The populist campaign rhetoric and hints of euroskepticism were an act. And perhaps the act would have continued, but the bond market reaction was so quick and jarring (Chart 12) - including the largest day-to-day selloff since 1993 (Chart 13) - that it has disciplined Italy's policymakers almost immediately. Chart 11Lega Gave Up A Lot By Forming A Coalition Lega Gave Up A Lot By Forming A Coalition Lega Gave Up A Lot By Forming A Coalition Chart 12Bond Vigilantes Are... Bond Vigilantes Are... Bond Vigilantes Are... Chart 13...A Massive Constraint On Rome ...A Massive Constraint On Rome ...A Massive Constraint On Rome This is instructive for investors. In 2015, Greece decided to play the game of brinkmanship with Europe and ultimately lost. Our high-conviction view at the time was that Athens would back off from brinkmanship because it was massively constrained.5 Not only would an exit from the Euro Area mean a government default and the redenomination of all household saving into "monopoly money," but the level of euroskepticism in Greece was not high enough to support such a high-risk strategy. At the time, we pointed out that most investors - and practically all pundits - were wrong when they argued that brinkmanship between Greece and Brussels was "unpredictable." This conventional view was supported by an incorrect reading of game theory, particularly the "game of chicken." Game theory teaches us that a game of chicken is the most dangerous game because it can create an equilibrium in which all rational actors have an incentive to stick to their guns - to "keep driving" in the parlance of the game - despite the risks.6 In Diagram 1, we can see that continuing to drive carries the most risks, but it also carries the most reward, provided that your opponent swerves. Since all actors in a game of chicken assume the rationality of their opponents, they also expect them to eventually swerve. When this does not happen, the bottom-right quadrant emerges, one of chaos and deeply negative payouts for everyone involved in the crash. The problem with this analysis is that - as with most game theory - its parsimony belies deep complexity that often varies due to a number of factors. The first such factor is replayability. The decisions of Italian policymakers will be informed by the outcomes of the 2015 Greek episode, which did not go well for Athens. Another factor that obviously varies the payout matrix is the relative strength of each player; or, to stick with the analogy, the type of vehicle driven by each actor. Greece and its Euro Area peers were not driving the same car. The classic game of chicken only produces the payouts from Diagram 1 if all participants are driving the same vehicle. However, if Angela Merkel is behind the wheel of a Mercedes-Benz G-Class SUV, while Greek PM Alexis Tsipras is riding a tricycle, then the payouts are going to be much different in the case of a crash. In that case, the payouts should approximate something closer to Diagram 2. Diagram 1Regular Game Of Chicken Mediterranean Europe: Contagion Risk Or Bear Trap? Mediterranean Europe: Contagion Risk Or Bear Trap? Diagram 2Greece Versus Euro Area In 2015 Mediterranean Europe: Contagion Risk Or Bear Trap? Mediterranean Europe: Contagion Risk Or Bear Trap? So the crucial question for investors is what vehicle are Italian policymakers driving? We do not doubt that it is an actual car, unlike Tsipras's tricycle. But it is more likely to be a finely-crafted Italian sportscar, adept at hugging the twists and turns of Rome's policy, rather than an SUV capable of colliding with Merkel's ominous truck. Why doesn't Rome have more capability than Greece? Because of time horizons. An Italian exit from the Euro Area would undoubtedly shake the foundations of the common currency and the European integrationist project. But Rome actually has to exit in order to shake those foundations. As we have learned with Brexit, such an "exit" scenario could take months, if not years. In the process of trying to exit, the Italian banking system would become insolvent, turning household savings and retirements into linguini. This would occur immediately and would exert economic, financial, and - most importantly - political pressure on Italian policymakers instantaneously. Our colleague Dhaval Joshi, BCA's Chief European Strategist, has argued that a 4% Italian bond yield is the "line in the sand" regarding the survival of Italy's banks.7 As Dhaval points out, investors start to get nervous about a bank's solvency when equity capital no longer covers net non-performing loans (NPLs). Based on this rule, the largest Italian banks now have €165 billion of equity capital against €130 billion of net NPLs, implying excess capital of €35 billion (Chart 14). Although the net NPL figure has improved much from the peak in 2015, it remains large. It follows that there would be fresh doubts about Italian banks' mark-to-market solvency if their bond valuations sustained a drop of just a tenth from the recent peak. Dhaval estimates that this equates to the 10-year BTP yield breaching and remaining above 4% (Chart 15). Chart 14Italian Banks' Equity Capital ##br##Exceeds Net NPLs By Euro 35 Bn Italian Banks' Equity Capital Exceeds Net NPLs By Euro 35 Bn Italian Banks' Equity Capital Exceeds Net NPLs By Euro 35 Bn Chart 15Italian Banks' Solvency Would Be In ##br##Question If The 10-Year BTP Yield Breached 4% Italian Banks' Solvency Would Be In Question If The 10-Year BTP Yield Breached 4% Italian Banks' Solvency Would Be In Question If The 10-Year BTP Yield Breached 4% Additionally, while Italian support for the common currency is relatively low, there is still a majority of around 60% that support the euro. This is similar to the level of support for the euro in Greece in 2015. We would suspect that the support for the currency would rise - and that populist parties would decline in popularity - if Italian policymakers set off a bond market riot that caused the insolvency of Italian banks. Does this mean that the bond market is a permanent constraint on Italian exit from the Euro Area? No. At some point in the future, after a deep recession that raises unemployment levels substantively, popular support for the common currency could tank precipitously. But we are far from that point. In fact, Italy has enjoyed a relatively robust recovery over the past 18 months. As such, any economic crisis today will be blamed on the populist policymakers themselves, yet another reason for them to moderate and seek the path of calm negotiations with the EU. Bottom Line: With regards to any potential "game of chicken" negotiations with the rest of Europe, Italian policymakers are not riding a tricycle like their Greek counterparts were in 2015. Italians are behind the wheel of a finely-crafted, titanium-chassis, Italian roadster. Unfortunately, Chancellor Angela Merkel is still in a Mercedes SUV that weighs 2.5 tons. This is a high-conviction view based on the actions of Italian policymakers over the past month. Despite an improvement in polling, populists have backed off from calling for a new election (which would have been perfectly logical) and that would have been advantageous to them and have abandoned some of the most controversial - and expensive - platforms of their coalition agreement. Unlike their peers in Greece, Italian populists have proven to have little stomach for actual confrontation. The Ultimate Constraint: Risorgimento In a report published back in 2016, we argued that Italy's original sin was its unification in 1861.8 Risorgimento brought together the North and South in a political and economic union that made little sense. The North had developed a market economy during the Middle Ages (and gave the West its Renaissance!), while the South had remained under feudalism well into the early twentieth century. Given the limited resources, governance, and technology of the mid-nineteenth century, the scope, ambition, and yes, folly of uniting Italy were probably several orders of magnitude greater than the effort to forge a common currency union in Europe in the twenty-first century. To this day, Italy remains an economically bifurcated country. Map 1 shows that the four wealthiest and most-productive regions of Europe, outside of capital cities, are the German Rhineland, Bavaria, the Netherlands, and Northern Italy. Meanwhile, the Italian South - or Mezzogiorno - is as undeveloped as Greece and Eastern Europe. Map 1Core Europe Extends Well Into Northern Italy Mediterranean Europe: Contagion Risk Or Bear Trap? Mediterranean Europe: Contagion Risk Or Bear Trap? The units of analysis in Map 1 are the so-called EU "nomenclature of territorial units for statistics" (NUTS).9 These regions matter because Brussels uses them to determine how much "structural funding" - essentially development aid - each country receives from the EU. The EU "regional and cohesion" funding - totaling €351.8 billion for the 2014-2020 budget period - is not distributed based on the aggregate wealth of each country, since that would favor the new entrants into the union. The EU's discerning eye when it comes to distributing development funds is not accidental. It is a product of decades of lobbying by Italy (and Spain) to prevent a shift of structural funding to Eastern European member states. From Rome's perspective, the real European development project is not in Poland or Greece, but in the Mezzogiorno. Chart 16Italy Shares The Burden Of The Mezzogiorno With The EU Mediterranean Europe: Contagion Risk Or Bear Trap? Mediterranean Europe: Contagion Risk Or Bear Trap? To this day, Italy and Spain receive the second and third largest amount of EU development aid (Chart 16). Despite contributing, in gross terms, 13% to the EU's total revenues, Italy's net contribution per person is smaller than those of the Netherlands, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, and Austria (Chart 17). Given that Italy is a wealthy EU state, its net budget contribution of approximately €3 billion, 0.2% of GDP, essentially means that it gets the benefits of EU membership for free. Chart 17Italy Gets To Join The Club For Free Mediterranean Europe: Contagion Risk Or Bear Trap? Mediterranean Europe: Contagion Risk Or Bear Trap? And EU membership comes with many benefits. Membership in the Euro Area - combined with sharing the same "lender of last resort" with Germany, the European Central Bank - allows Italy to finance its budget deficits at low interest rates and to issue government debt in the world's second largest reserve currency (Chart 18). These financial benefits are even greater than the rebate it gets from Europe. Access to cheap financing allows Italy to carry the costs of Mezzogiorno on its own. Chart 18The Big Difference Between 2011 & Today The Big Difference Between 2011 & Today The Big Difference Between 2011 & Today It is somewhat ironic that Lega is today preaching populism and euroskepticism. In the early 1990s, its main target of angst was not the EU and Brussels, but Italy's South and profligate Rome, which funneled the North's taxes to the South. This early iteration of the party was quite pro-EU, as it saw Italy's North as genuinely European and worthy of membership in EU institutions. Some of its politicians and voters hoped that Northern Italy could meld into the EU, leaving the Mezzogiorno to fend for itself. Hence there is no deep, ideological euroskepticism in Lega's DNA. The party's evolution also illustrates how opportunistic and pragmatic Italian policymakers can be. The reality is that if Italy were to act on its threat of "exit," it would undoubtedly become far worse off economically. Not only would Northern Italy have to support the Mezzogiorno alone, but any structural reforms that could lift productivity and education in the South would become far less likely as anti-establishment forces took hold. Bottom Line: Our high-conviction view is now the same as it was in 2016. Italy is "bluffing." Leaving the EU or the Euro Area makes no sense given its economic bifurcation, which is the result of Risorgimento. Both policymakers and voters understand this. The real intention in the game of chicken between Brussels and Rome is to see an easing of austerity. We expect that Italian policymakers will ultimately succeed in getting leniency from Brussels on allowing deficit-widening fiscal stimulus, but the stimulus will be much smaller than their original plans that spooked the bond market laid out. To European and Italian politicians, Italy's economic bifurcation is well understood. Jean-Claude Juncker, the President of the European Commission, specifically referred to it when he said, "Italians have to take care of the poor regions of Italy." He was later forced to apologize for his comments, with leaders of M5S and Lega faking outrage. But given that the ideological roots of Lega are precisely in the same intellectual vein as Juncker's comments, investors should understand that politicians in Rome are well aware of their fundamental constraints. Juncker's comments were a dog whistle to Rome. The actual message was: we know you are bluffing. Investment Implications Our analysis suggests that the path of least resistance for the M5S-Lega coalition is to negotiate some austerity relief from the EU Commission, but to definitively pivot away from talk of "exit" from European institutions. PM Conte has reaffirmed that exiting the euro is off the table and that it was never on the table to begin with. The new economy minister, Giovanni Tria, followed this up with a comment that "the position of this government is clear and unanimous... there are no discussions taking place about any proposal to leave the euro." Meanwhile, Lega leader and new Italian interior minister Matteo Salvini has focused his early efforts and commentary on the party's promise to check illegal immigration to Italy. This will be a policy upon which Lega will test its populist credentials, not a fight with Brussels. Is the worst of the crisis therefore "over"? Is it time to buy Italian assets? Not yet. Both Italian bonds and equities rallied throughout 2017. Italian equities, for example, have a higher Shiller P/E ratio than both Spanish and Portuguese stocks (Chart 19). As such, a sell-off was long overdue. Chart 19Why Did Italian Equities Rally So Much? Why Did Italian Equities Rally So Much? Why Did Italian Equities Rally So Much? Chart 20Italy's Binary Future Italy's Binary Future Italy's Binary Future Furthermore, we do not expect Rome's negotiations with Brussels to proceed smoothly. It is very likely that the bond market will have to continue to play the role of disciplinarian. The government debt-to-GDP ratio could quickly become unsustainable if the current primary budget balance is thrown into a deficit (Chart 20). According to the IMF and BCA Research calculations, Italian long-term debt dynamics are stable even with real interest rates rising to 2% - from just 0.5% today - and real GDP growth remaining at a muted 1%. But this stability requires the country to continue to run a primary budget surplus of around 2% of GDP (Chart 21). Conversely, running a persistent primary deficit of 2% would result in an explosive increase in Italy's debt dynamics. Even if that stimulus produces real GDP growth of 3%, the "bond vigilantes" could protest the surge in debt and drive real interest rates to 3.5% or higher. As such, the country's fiscal space will ultimately be determined by the bond market. Rome can afford to lower its primary budget surplus, but only so far as the bond market does not riot. Our colleague Dhaval Joshi believes that the math behind an Italian fiscal stimulus would make sense if it provides enough of a sustainable boost to economic growth without blowing out the budget deficit.10 We suspect that the bond market will eventually agree, but only if Brussels and Berlin bless the ultimate fiscal package as well. While investors wait to see the outcome of Rome-Brussels budget talks, which will likely last well into Q4, we prefer to play Mediterranean politics by shorting Italian government bonds versus their Spanish equivalents. BCA's Global Fixed Income Strategy initiated such a trade on December 16, 2016, which has produced a total return of 5.8%. The original logic for the trade was based on an assessment that Italy's medium-term growth potential, sovereign-debt fundamentals, and political stability were all much worse than those of Spain (Chart 22). These differences were not reflected in relative bond prices. Chart 21Three Factors Will Influence Italy's Debt Trajectory Three Factors Will Influence Italy's Debt Trajectory Three Factors Will Influence Italy's Debt Trajectory Chart 22Spain Trumps Italy On All Fronts Spain Trumps Italy On All Fronts Spain Trumps Italy On All Fronts Ongoing political turmoil in Italy has justified sticking with the trade. Looking ahead, there is potential for additional spread widening between Italy and Spain in the coming months. Spain is enjoying better economic growth; the deficit outlook will invariably worsen for Italy with the new coalition government; and Spanish support for the euro and establishment policymakers remains far higher and more buoyant than in Italy. All these factors justify a wider risk premium for Italian debt over Spanish bonds (Chart 23). Chart 23Stay Short 5-Year Italy Vs. 5-Year Spain Stay Short 5-Year Italy Vs. 5-Year Spain Stay Short 5-Year Italy Vs. 5-Year Spain Chart 24Stay Underweight Italian Debt Stay Underweight Italian Debt Stay Underweight Italian Debt One final critical point - the timing of any budget related uncertainty could not be worse for Italy. Economic growth is slowing and leading indicators say that this trend will continue, which suggests that Italian government bonds should continue to underperform global peers (Chart 24). Our Global Fixed Income Strategy team has argued that government debt in the European "periphery" should be treated more like corporate credit rather than sovereign debt.11 Faster economic growth leads to fewer worries about debt sustainability and increased risk-taking behavior by investors, both of which lead to reduced credit risk premiums and eventually, stronger growth. In other words, think of Italian BTPs as a BBB-rated corporate bond rather than a "risk-free" Euro Area government bond. So as long as the Italian economy continues to lose momentum, an underweight stance on Italian government bonds is justified. Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Europe's Divine Comedy Part II: Italy In Purgatorio," dated June 21, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see Repubblica, "Il discorso di Conte in Senato, la versione integrale," dated June 6, 2018, available at repubblica.it. 3 Conte's exact quote was "the objective is the 'flat tax,' that is a tax reform characterized by the introduction of rates that are fixed, with a system of deductions that can guarantee that the tax code remains progressive." This is our own translation from Italian and therefore we may be missing something. However, a "flat tax" that has a number of different rates and that remains progressive is, by definition, not a flat tax. 4 In fact, the speech could be read with an eye towards some genuine supply-side reforms, particularly in bringing the country's youth into the labor force, improving governance, reforming the judiciary, cracking down on corruption and privileges of the political class, and generally de-bureaucratizing Italy. If successful, these would all be welcome reforms. 5 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, "After Greece," July 8, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 6 The game derives its name from a test of manhood by which two drivers drive towards each other on a collision course, preferably behind the wheel of a 1950s American muscle car. Whoever swerves loses. Whoever keeps driving, wins and gets the girl. 7 Please see BCA European Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Italy's 'Line In The Sand,'" dated May 31, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Europe's Divine Comedy: Italian Inferno," dated September 14, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 9 The acronym stands for Nomenclature des Unités Statistiques. 10 Please see BCA European Investment Strategy Special Report, "Italy Vs. Brussel: Who's Right?" dated May 24, 2018, available at eis.bcaresearch.com. 11 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Is It Partly Sunny Or Mostly Cloudy?" dated May 22, 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights One of Europe's major success stories is the structural and broad-based increase in female labour participation rates. The trend is set to continue for the next decade. Stay overweight the Personal Products sector as a long-term position. Italy's decade-long stagnation is not a deep-seated structural malaise. It is a protracted cyclical downturn resulting from a banking system that was never repaired after the 2008 financial crisis combined with wholly inappropriate fiscal austerity. We expect Italy's new government to push back against the EU's misguided fiscal rules and correct this decade-long error. Buy exposure to Italian real estate as a new long-term position either directly or through Italy's small real estate equity sector. Feature Some analysts persist on comparing economic performances on the basis of real GDP per head of total population. But the total population includes children and the elderly who cannot contribute to economic output. Therefore, a correct assessment of economic performance should look at real GDP per head of working-age population. Chart I-1AWomen Are Powering The European Economy... Women Are Powering The European Economy... ...Less So In The U.S. Women Are Powering The European Economy... ...Less So In The U.S. Chart I-1B ...Less So In The U.S. Women Are Powering The European Economy... ...Less So In The U.S. Women Are Powering The European Economy... ...Less So In The U.S. Admittedly, as the retirement age rises, the definition of 'working-age' will gradually change, but the general principle still holds: only count in the denominator those who can contribute to economic output. GDP per head of working-age population can grow in several ways. One way is to get more output or better output from each hour worked through improvements in efficiency and/or quality. As this improvement is theoretically limitless, it is the main source of productivity gains in the long run. A second way is for each worker to work more hours. But given the physical and legal constraints on productive working time, there is only limited scope to increase output in this way. How Women Are Powering The European Economy There is one other way to increase GDP per head of working-age population: increase the percentage of the working age population that is in the labour force.1 In other words, structurally increase the labour participation rate. If this participation rate is already high - as it is for men - then there is little scope to increase it much further. But if the participation rate is low - as it is for European women - then there is considerable scope to increase it. This brings us to one of Europe's major, and largely untold, success stories - the structural and broad-based increase in female participation rates (Chart I-1-Chart I-5). Over the past twenty years, the EU28 female participation rate has risen from 57% to 68%, with an especially large contribution from the socially conservative southern countries. In Spain, female participation has surged from 47% to 70%. In Italy, it has shot up from 42% to 56% and has clear scope to rise much further. Chart I-2Italy: Labour Force Participation Rate Italy: Labour Force Participation Rate Italy: Labour Force Participation Rate Chart I-3Spain: Labour Force Participation Rate Spain: Labour Force Participation Rate Spain: Labour Force Participation Rate Chart I-4Germany: Labour Force Participation Rate Germany: Labour Force Participation Rate Germany: Labour Force Participation Rate Chart I-5France: Labour Force Participation Rate France: Labour Force Participation Rate France: Labour Force Participation Rate What is driving this structural trend? Two things. First, the employment sectors that are growing structurally - healthcare, social care, and education - tend to employ more women than men. Second, European countries have legislated a raft of policies encouraging women to join and remain in the labour force: generous paid maternity leave and subsidised childcare. The trend is for further improvements, with the focus now on improving paternity leave. Sharing parental and family responsibilities between mothers and fathers allows more women to enter and stay in the labour force.2 For the ultimate end-point in the trend, look to the Scandinavian countries which started such policies in the early 1970s. In Sweden, labour force participation for women and men is almost identical: 81% versus 84%. If the EU eventually adopts the Scandinavian model, it would mean another 20 million European women in employment and contributing to economic output (Chart I-6). Chart I-6Another 20 Million European Women ##br##Could Join The Labour Force Another 20 Million European Women Could Join The Labour Force Another 20 Million European Women Could Join The Labour Force Dispelling Two Myths: The Euro Area And Italy Having established that economic performances should be compared on the basis of GDP per head of working age population, we can now dispel two common myths. The first myth is that the U.S. generates superior productivity growth than the euro area. It is true that the U.S. has been better at getting more output from each hour worked, so on this measure, the U.S. does win. Against this, the euro area has been much better at getting more of its working-age population - albeit mostly women - into employment. So on this measure, the euro area wins (Chart of the Week). The net result is that, over the past twenty years, the U.S and the euro area have generated exactly the same growth in real GDP per working-age population (Chart I-7). Of course, the euro area's structural improvement in female participation rates cannot continue forever, but it can certainly continue for another decade or so, and this is generally the longest time horizon that most investors care about. Chart I-7The Euro Area And The U.S.: Identical Growth In Real GDP Per Head Of Working-Age Population The Euro Area And The U.S.: Identical Growth In Real GDP Per Head Of Working-Age Population The Euro Area And The U.S.: Identical Growth In Real GDP Per Head Of Working-Age Population The second myth concerns the subject du jour: Italy. Many people claim that Italy's economic stagnation is due to deep-seated structural problems which differentiate it from other major economies. The problem with this narrative is that from the mid-1990s until 2008 the growth in Italy's real GDP per head of working age population was little different to that in Germany, France or the U.S. (Chart I-8). Chart I-8Italy Performed In Line With Other Major Economies Until 2008 Italy Performed In Line With Other Major Economies Until 2008 Italy Performed In Line With Other Major Economies Until 2008 Italy's economic stagnation only started after the 2008 global financial crisis. After a financial crisis which cripples the banking system, there are two golden rules: unleash fiscal stimulus; and repair the banking system as quickly as possible. The U.S. and U.K. followed the golden rules perfectly and immediately; Ireland followed a couple of years later; Spain waited until 2013. But in each case, the economies rebounded very strongly as the fiscal stimulus kicked in and the banks recuperated. Italy neither unleashed fiscal stimulus, nor repaired its banks - so its economy has stagnated for a decade. Moreover, if output stagnates for a decade, it follows arithmetically that productivity growth will also look poor. In a back-to-front argument, critics have pounced on this as evidence of excessive 'red tape' and 'structural problems'. But this is a misdiagnosis of the malaise. To reiterate, Italy's real GDP per working-age population was growing very respectably before 2008. Italy's misfortune is that its indebtedness has an unusual profile: more public debt than private debt. France and Spain (and other major euro area economies) have the usual profile: less public debt than private debt. So the EU's fiscal rules - which can see only public debt and are blind to private debt - have severely and unfairly constrained Italy's ability to respond to financial crises. While every other major economy followed the golden rules to recover from the 2008 crisis, Italy could neither unleash fiscal stimulus to kick start the economy nor recapitalise its dysfunctional banking system. We expect Italy's new government to push back against the EU's misguided fiscal rules and correct this decade-long error. Two Structural Investment Conclusions This week's two investment conclusions are both long term, and require a buy and hold mentality. The first conclusion reiterates a structural position: overweight the Personal Products sector. This is based on our expectation that, in Europe, female participation rates will continue their structural uptrend; while in the U.S. we expect female participation rates to continue outperforming male participation rates. Therefore the sales and profits of the Personal Products sector, in which female spending dominates, will benefit from a multi-year tailwind, at least relative to other sectors. And the extent of this tailwind is not fully discounted in valuations. The second conclusion is a new long-term recommendation: buy exposure to Italian real estate. This is based on our assessment that Italy's decade-long stagnation is not a deep-seated structural malaise. Instead, it is a protracted cyclical downturn resulting from a banking system that was never repaired after the 2008 financial crisis combined with wholly inappropriate fiscal austerity. Removing these shackles will allow a long-term recovery, just as it did for Spain in 2013. If we are right, the best multi-year buy and hold play is Italian real estate which has been in a decade-long bear market (Chart I-9). For those that cannot directly invest in property, Italy has a small real estate equity sector which faithfully tracks the long term profile of real estate prices (Chart I-10), and whose main component is Beni Stabili. The caveat is that the stock has a market cap of just €2 billion; the appeal is that it offers a juicy dividend yield of 4.5%. Chart I-9Italian Real Estate Has Suffered ##br##A Decade-Long Bear Market Italian Real Estate Has Suffered A Decade-Long Bear Market Italian Real Estate Has Suffered A Decade-Long Bear Market Chart I-10Italian Real Estate Equities##br## Track Real Estate Prices Italian Real Estate Equities Track Real Estate Prices Italian Real Estate Equities Track Real Estate Prices Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 And in employment. 2 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Female Participation: Another Mega-Trend" published on April 6, 2017 and available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model* This week, we note that the 130-day fractal dimension for platinum versus nickel is close to its lower bound, a level which has consistently predicted a tradeable countertrend move over the following 130 days. Hence, this week's trade is long platinum/short nickel on a 130 horizon before expiry. The profit target is 14% with a symmetric stop-loss. Our two other open trades, long SEK/GBP and long PLN/USD, are both in profit. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-11 Long Platinum / Short Nickel Long Platinum / Short Nickel The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights The global trade slowdown will intensify, even if U.S. domestic demand remains robust. The large emerging Asian bourses will recouple to the downside with their EM peers. Market-neutral EM equity portfolios should consider going long consumer staples while shorting banks. In Chile, receive 3-year swap rates. Continue to overweight stocks relative to the EM benchmark. Short the Colombian peso versus the Russia ruble. Stay neutral on Colombian equities and local bonds but overweight sovereign credit within their respective EM universes. Feature Performance of large equity markets in north Asia - Korean, Taiwanese and Chinese investable stocks -- has been relatively resilient compared with other EM bourses. Specifically, the EM ex-China, Korea and Taiwan equity index has already dropped 16% in U.S. dollar terms, while the market cap-weighted index of investable Chinese, Korean and Taiwanese stocks is down only 8% from its peak in late January.1 These three markets account for 60% of the MSCI EM stock index. A pertinent question is whether these North Asian markets will de-couple from or re-couple with the rest of EM. Our bias is that they will re-couple to the downside. Global equity portfolios should continue to underweight Asian stocks versus the DM bourses in general, and the S&P 500 in particular. That said, dedicated EM equity portfolios should overweight Korea and Taiwan and maintain a neutral stance on China and Hong Kong relative to the EM and Asian equity benchmarks. The Global Trade Slowdown Will Intensify Emerging Asian stock markets are very sensitive to global trade cycles. Slowing global trade is typically negative for them. There is growing evidence that the global trade deceleration will intensify: The German IFO index for business expectations in German manufacturing - a good leading indicator for global trade - is pointing to a further slowdown in global exports (Chart I-1). Chart I-1Global Trade Slowdown Will Persist Global Trade Slowdown Will Persist Global Trade Slowdown Will Persist Export volume growth has already slowed across manufacturing Asia (Chart I-2). The most recent data points for these series are as of April. Asia's booming tech/semiconductor industry is also slowing. Both Taiwan's export orders growth and Singapore's technology PMI new orders-to-inventory ratio have relapsed (Chart I-3). Chart I-2Asian Exports Growth: Heading Southward Asian Exports Growth: Heading Southward Asian Exports Growth: Heading Southward Chart I-3Asian Tech: Feeling The Pinch Asian Tech: Feeling The Pinch Asian Tech: Feeling The Pinch One of the causes of weakness in the global semiconductor cycle could be stagnating global auto sales (Chart I-4). The latter are being weighed down by weakness in auto sales in China and the U.S. Cars require a significant amount of semiconductors, and lack of improvement in global auto sales will suppress semiconductor demand. So far, China has not been at the epicenter of investors' concerns, but this will soon change as its growth slowdown intensifies. Credit conditions continue to tighten in China, which entails downside risks to mainland capital spending and consequently imports. China's imports are set to slump considerably, reinforcing the global trade downturn.2 First, China's bank loan approvals have dropped considerably in the past 18 months, suggesting a meaningful slowdown in bank financing and in turn the country's investment expenditures (Chart I-5). Chart I-4Global Auto And Semiconductor Sales Global Auto And Semiconductor Sales Global Auto And Semiconductor Sales Chart I-5China: Bank Loan Approval And Capex China: Bank Loan Approval And Capex China: Bank Loan Approval And Capex Second, not only are bank loan standards tightening but costs of financing are also rising. The share of loans extended above the prime lending rate has risen to a 15-year high (Chart I-6, top panel). This represents marginal tightening. Finally, onshore corporate bond yields as well as offshore U.S. dollar-denominated corporate bond yields have broken to new highs in this cycle (Chart I-6, bottom panels). Mounting borrowing costs and tighter credit standards in China point to further deceleration in credit-sensitive spending such as investment expenditures and property purchases. On the whole, rising interest rates and material currency depreciation in EM ex-China and credit tightening in China will prompt a considerable slump in imports, depressing world trade. EM including Chinese imports account for 30% of global imports, while the U.S. and EU together make up 24% of global imports values. Hence, global trade will disappoint if and as EM and Chinese imports stumble. A final word on the history of de-coupling among EM regions is in order. There have been a few episodes when emerging Asian and Latin American stocks de-coupled: In 1997-'98, the home-grown Asian crisis devastated regional markets, but Latin American stocks continued to rally until mid-1998 - when they plummeted (Chart I-7, top panel). Chart I-6China: Rising Borrowing Costs China: Rising Borrowing Costs China: Rising Borrowing Costs Chart I-7De-coupling Between Asia And Latin America De-coupling Between Asia And Latin America De-coupling Between Asia And Latin America In 2007-'08, emerging Asian equities tumbled along with the S&P 500, but Latin American bourses fared well until the middle of 2008 due to surging commodities/oil prices (Chart I-7, middle panel). Finally, the bottom panel of Chart I-7 illustrates that in early 2015, Asian stocks performed well, supported by the inflating Chinese equity bubble. Meanwhile, Latin American stocks plunged. In all of these episodes, the de-coupling between Asia and Latin America proved to be unsustainable, and the markets that showed initial resilience eventually re-coupled to the downside. Bottom Line: Global trade is set to head southward, even if U.S. demand remains robust. China's growth slump will be instrumental to this global trade slowdown. Consequently, Chinese, Korean and Taiwanese equities will be vulnerable. Heeding To Market Signals Financial markets often move ahead of economic data, and simply tracking data is not always helpful in gauging turning points in business cycles. By the time economic data change course, financial markets would typically have already partially adjusted. Besides, past economic and financial market performance is not a guarantee of future performance. This is why we rely on thematic fundamental analysis and monitor intermediate- and long-term trends in financial markets to navigate through markets. There are presently several important market signals that investors should be heeding to: EM corporate bond yields are surging, which typically foreshadows falling EM share prices (Chart I-8). Meanwhile, there is no robust correlation between EM equities and U.S. bond yields. Chart I-8EM Share Prices Always Decline When EM Corporate Bond Yields Rise EM Share Prices Always Decline When EM Corporate Bond Yields Rise EM Share Prices Always Decline When EM Corporate Bond Yields Rise The basis: So long as the rise in U.S. bond yields is offset by compressing EM credit spreads, EM corporate bond yields decline and EM share prices rally. But when EM corporate (or sovereign) yields rise, irrespective of whether this is due to rising U.S. Treasury yields or widening EM credit spreads, EM equity prices come under considerable selling pressure. Lately, both EM credit spreads have been widening, offsetting the drop in U.S. bond yields. Hence, a drop in U.S. bond yields is not in and of itself sufficient to halt a decline in EM share prices. So long as EM corporate and sovereign credit spreads are widening by more than the decline in U.S. Treasury yields, EM corporate and sovereign bond yields will rise, heralding lower EM share prices. The ratio of total return (including carry) of six commodities currencies relative to safe-haven currencies3 is breaking below its 200-day moving average after having bounced from this technical support line several times in the past 12 months (Chart I-9). This could be confirming that the bull market in EM risk assets is over, and a bear market is underway. Chinese property stocks listed onshore have broken down, and those trading in Hong Kong seem to be forming a head-and-shoulder pattern (Chart I-10). In the latter case, such a technical formation will likely be followed by a considerable down-leg. Chart I-9An Important Breakdown bca.ems_wr_2018_05_31_s1_c9 bca.ems_wr_2018_05_31_s1_c9 Chart I-10Chinese Property Stocks Look Very Vulnerable Chinese Property Stocks Look Very Vulnerable Chinese Property Stocks Look Very Vulnerable Further, China's onshore A-share index has already dropped by 15% from its cyclical peak in late January. Finally, both emerging Asia's relative equity performance against developed markets, as well as the emerging Asian currency index versus the U.S. dollar (ADXY) seem to be rolling over at their long-term moving averages (Chart I-11). The same technical pattern is presenting itself for global energy and mining stocks in absolute terms, and also in the overall Brazilian equity index (Chart I-12). Chart I-11Asian Equities And Currencies Are ##br##At Critical Juncture Asian Equities And Currencies Are At Critical Juncture Asian Equities And Currencies Are At Critical Juncture Chart I-12Commodity Equities And Brazil ##br##Are Facing Technical Resistance Commodity Equities And Brazil Are Facing Technical Resistance Commodity Equities And Brazil Are Facing Technical Resistance The failure of these markets to break above their long-term technical resistance levels may be signalling that their advance since early 2016 has been a cyclical - not structural - bull market, and is likely over. These technical chart profiles so far confirm our fundamental analysis that the EM and commodities rallies since early 2016 did not represent a multi-year secular bull market. If correct, the downside risks to EM including Asian markets are substantial, and selling/shorting them now is not too late. Bottom Line: EM including Asian stocks, currencies and credit markets are at risk of gapping down. Absolute-return investors should trade these markets on the short side. Asset allocators should underweight EM markets relative to DM in general and the U.S. in particular. A complete list of our currency, fixed-income and equity recommendations is available on pages 20-21. An EM Equity Sector Trade: Long Consumer Staples / Short Banks EM consumer staples have massively underperformed banks as well as the overall EM index since January 2016 (Chart I-13). The odds are that their relative performance is about to reverse. Equity investors should consider implementing the following equity pair trade: long consumer staples / short banks: Consumer staples are a low-beta sector because their revenues are less cyclical. As EM growth downshifts, share prices of companies with more stable revenue streams will likely outperform. Bank stocks are vulnerable as local interest rates in many EMs rise in response to the selloff in their respective currencies (Chart I-14). Consumer staples usually outperform banks when local borrowing costs are rising. Chart I-13Go Long EM Consumer Staples / ##br##Short EM Banks Go Long EM Consumer Staples / Short EM Banks Go Long EM Consumer Staples / Short EM Banks Chart I-14EM Banks Stocks Are Inversely Correlated With##br## EM Local Bond Yields EM Banks Stocks Are Inversely Correlated With EM Local Bond Yields EM Banks Stocks Are Inversely Correlated With EM Local Bond Yields We expect more currency depreciation in EM, which will exert further upward pressure on local rates, including interbank rates. Further, growth weakness in EM economies typically leads to rising non-performing loan (NPL) provisions. Chart I-15A and Chart I-15B demonstrates that weakening nominal GDP growth (shown inverted on the charts) leads to higher provisioning. Hence, a renewed EM growth slowdown will hurt bank profits. Chart I-15AWeaker Nominal GDP Growth Entails ##br##Higher NPL Provisions Weaker Nominal GDP Growth Entails Higher NPL Provisions Weaker Nominal GDP Growth Entails Higher NPL Provisions Chart I-15BWeaker Nominal GDP Growth Entails ##br##Higher NPL Provisions Weaker Nominal GDP Growth Entails Higher NPL Provisions Weaker Nominal GDP Growth Entails Higher NPL Provisions Our assessment is that banks in many EM countries have provisioned less than what is probably necessary following years of a credit boom. Indeed, in the last 12-18 months or so, many banks have even been reducing their NPL provisions to boost profits. Hence, a reversal of these dynamics will undermine banks' earnings. Bottom Line: Market-neutral EM equity portfolios should consider going long consumer staples while shorting banks. This is in addition to our long-term strategy of shorting EM banks versus U.S. banks as well as shorting banks in absolute terms in individual markets such as Brazil, Turkey, Malaysia and small-cap banks in China. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 These calculations are done using MSCI investible stock indexes in U.S. dollars terms. 2 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, "The Dollar Rally And China's Imports", dated May 24, 2018, available at ems.bcaresearch.com. 3 Average of cad, aud, nzd, brl, clp & zar total returns (including carry) relative to average of jpy & chf total returns (including carry). Chile: Stay Overweight Equities, Receive Rates 31 May 2018 Chart II-1Chilean Equities Relative Performance And Copper Prices Chilean Equities Relative Performance And Copper Prices Chilean Equities Relative Performance And Copper Prices It is often assumed that Chilean financial markets are a play on copper. While this largely holds true for the Chilean peso, it is not always correct regarding its stock market's relative performance to its EM peers. Chile has outperformed in the past amid declining copper prices (Chart II-1). Despite our negative view on copper prices, we are reiterating our overweight allocation to this bourse within an EM equity portfolio. There are convincing signs that growth in the Chilean economy is moving along fine for now (Chart II-2). While weakness in global trade will weigh on the economy, the critical variable that makes Chile stand out from other commodities producers in the EM universe is its ability to cut interest rates amid currency depreciation. Chart II-3 illustrates that interest rates in Chile can and do fall when the peso depreciates. This stands in stark contrast with many others economies in the EM universe. There are a number of factors that suggest inflationary pressures will remain dormant for some time. This will allow the Central Bank of Chile (CBC) to cut rates as and when required. Chart II-2Chile: Economic Conditions Chile: Economic Conditions Chile: Economic Conditions Chart II-3Interest Rates In Chile Can Fall When Peso Depreciates Interest Rates In Chile Can Fall When Peso Depreciates Interest Rates In Chile Can Fall When Peso Depreciates First, the output gap is negative and has been widening, which has historically led to falling core inflation (Chart II-4). Second, a wide range of consumer inflation measures - services and trimmed-mean inflation rates - are very low and remain in a downtrend (Chart II-5). Chart II-4Chile: Output Gap And Inflation Chile: Output Gap And Inflation Chile: Output Gap And Inflation Chart II-5Chile: Inflation Is Very Low And Falling Chile: Inflation Is Very Low And Falling Chile: Inflation Is Very Low And Falling Finally, there are no signs of wage inflation, which is the key driver of genuine inflation. In fact, wage growth is decelerating sharply (Chart II-6). Odds are that this disinflationary rout will go on for longer, given Chile's demographic and labor market dynamics. The country's labor force growth has accelerated and the economy does not seem able to absorb this excess labor supply (Chart II-7). Consistently, our labor surplus proxy - calculated as the number of unemployed looking for a job divided by the number of job vacancies - has surged to all-time highs (Chart II-8). Chart II-6Chile: Wage Growth Is Very Weak Chile: Wage Growth Is Very Weak Chile: Wage Growth Is Very Weak Chart II-7Chile: Rising Labor Force Chile: Rising Labor Force Chile: Rising Labor Force Chart II-8Chile: Excessive Labor Supply... Chile: Excessive Labor Supply... Chile: Excessive Labor Supply... Interestingly, this is not happening because of weak employment. Chart II-9 shows that the employment-to-working population ratio is at a record high, while employment growth is robust. This upholds that decent job growth is not sufficient to absorb the expanding supply of labor. All in all, a structural excess supply of labor as well as a cyclical slowdown in global trade and lower copper prices altogether will likely warrant a decline in interest rates in Chile. Consequently, we recommend a new fixed income trade: Receive 3-year swap rates. The recent rise provides a good entry point (Chart II-10). Chart II-9...Despite Robust Employment Growth ...Despite Robust Employment Growth ...Despite Robust Employment Growth Chart II-10Chile: Receive 3-Year Swap Rates Chile: Receive 3-Year Swap Rates Chile: Receive 3-Year Swap Rates The ability to cut interest rates will mitigate the effect of weaker exports on the economy. We recommend dedicated EM investors maintain an overweight allocation in Chile in their equity, local currency bond and corporate credit portfolios. For absolute return investors, the risk-reward profiles for Chilean stocks and the currency are not attractive. The peso will depreciate considerably, and shorting it versus the U.S. dollar will prove profitable. Consistent with our negative view on copper prices, we have been recommending a short position in copper with a long leg in the Chilean peso. This allows traders to earn some carry while waiting for copper prices to break down. Stephan Gabillard, Senior Analyst stephang@bcaresearch.com Colombia: The Currency Will Be A Release Valve The structural long-term outlook for Colombia is positive, as a combination of pro-market orthodox policies and reform initiatives amid positive tailwinds from demographic should ensure a reasonably high potential GDP growth rate. In the first round of presidential elections held last weekend, the gap between right wing candidate Ivan Duque and left-wing candidate Gustav Petro came out large enough to make a Duque victory highly likely in the second round to be held on June 17. His election would entail a positive backdrop for the reform agenda and business investment over the coming years. Yet despite the positive structural backdrop, Colombia is still facing a major imbalance - excessive reliance on oil in sustaining stable balance of payments (BoP) dynamics. The trade balance deficit - including oil - is $8 billion, while excluding oil it stands at $20 billion, or 7.5% of GDP (Chart III-1). Hence, if oil prices drop materially in the second half of this year - as we expect - Colombia's balance of payments will be strained. Consequently, the currency will come under depreciation pressure. The peso is presently fairly valued as the real effective exchange rate based on unit labor costs is at its historical mean (Chart III-2). Chart III-1Colombia's Achilles' Hill: Trade Balance Excluding Oil Colombia's Achilles' Hill: Trade Balance Excluding Oil Colombia's Achilles' Hill: Trade Balance Excluding Oil Chart III-2The Colombian Peso Is Fairly Valued The Colombian Peso Is Fairly Valued The Colombian Peso Is Fairly Valued The central bank has adopted a "hands-off" approach toward the exchange rate, and is likely to allow the peso to depreciate if the BoP deteriorates. Weak economic conditions will likely prevent it from hiking interest rates to bolster the peso: Even though the central bank has reduced its policy rate by 350 basis points since the end of 2016, lending rates remain restrictive when compared with the nominal GDP growth rate (Chart III-3, top panel). Fiscal policy has been tight, with government expenditures subdued and the primary deficit narrowing (Chart III-3, bottom panel). This is unlikely to change for now if conservative candidate, Ivan Duque, wins the election. Consumer and business demand has failed to pick up, and shows little sign of recovery (Chart III-4). Non-performing loans (NPL) continue to rise, forcing banks to raise their NPL provisioning (Chart III-5). Weak nominal GDP growth suggests provisions may rise further. Chart III-3Colombia: Little Sign Of Recovery Colombia: Little Sign Of Recovery Colombia: Little Sign Of Recovery Chart III-4Colombia: Little Sign Of Recovery Colombia: Little Sign Of Recovery Colombia: Little Sign Of Recovery Chart III-5Colombian Banks: NPL And NPL Provision Continue Rising bca.ems_wr_2018_05_31_s3_c5 bca.ems_wr_2018_05_31_s3_c5 Overall, banks' balance sheets remain impaired, hampering their ability to extend loans. Investment Recommendations Despite a favorable structural outlook, Colombia's cyclical growth and financial market outlooks remain poor. Chances are that the peso will come under selling pressure as the external environment deteriorates - i.e., the currency will act as a release valve. We recommend staying neutral on Colombian stocks and local bonds relative to their EM peers, and to overweight Colombian sovereign credit within an EM credit portfolio. The basis is that sound and tight fiscal policies and a continuation of supply side reforms will benefit this credit market. To capitalize on potential currency depreciation while hedging for the uncertainty of oil price decline, we recommend shorting the peso against the Russian ruble. Although Colombia's structural outlook is more promising than Russia's, the latter's BoP dynamics is healthier and its cyclical growth outlook is better than Colombia's. Andrija Vesic, Research Analyst AndrijaV@bcaresearch.com Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Dear Clients, Please note that next week's report will be a joint effort with our geopolitical team, focused on North Korea. The report will be sent to you two days later than usual, on Friday June 8. Best regards, Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports Highlights Most episodes of negative relative Chinese equity performance this year have been driven by global stock market selloffs or related to the trade dispute with the U.S. Since Chinese ex-tech stocks have continued to outperform their global peers during this period, we recommend against downgrading China for now, barring hard evidence of a pernicious global slowdown or that severe protectionist action from the U.S. will indeed occur. Our list of charts to watch over the coming months highlights, among several other important points, that monetary conditions are not overly restrictive and that financial conditions are not tightening sharply. This is in spite of a recent clustering in corporate bond defaults that has concerned some investors. Besides broad-based stimulus in response to an impactful trade shock, a sustained pickup in housing construction remains the most plausible catalyst for an acceleration in domestic demand. For now tepid sales volume casts doubt on this scenario, but investors should continue to watch Chinese housing market dynamics closely. Feature There have been several developments affecting Chinese and global stock markets over the past two weeks. On the trade front, Secretary Mnuchin's statement on May 20 that the U.S. would be "putting the trade war" with China on hold was greeted by a material pushback from Congressional Republicans, particularly the administration's plan to ease previously announced sanctions on ZTE Group. The administration's trade rhetoric has since become more hawkish, as evidenced by yesterday's statement from the White House that referenced specific dates for the imposition of tariffs and the announcement of new restrictions on Chinese investment. This uptick in tough language sets the scene for Secretary Ross' Beijing visit this weekend to continue negotiations. More recently, a political crisis in Italy has caused euro area periphery bond yields to rise sharply, roiling global financial markets. The Italian President's rejection of Paolo Savona as proposed finance minister by the anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S) and Euroskeptic Lega has led to the installation of a caretaker government until the fall, when new elections are set to take place. The sharp tightening in financial conditions for Italy and Spain over the past week has exacerbated concerns about a potential growth slowdown in Europe, and has fed a relative selloff in emerging market equities that began in late-March. Despite the recent turmoil, our recommendation to investors is to avoid making any major changes to their allocation to Chinese ex-tech stocks within a global portfolio. Unless presented with hard evidence that the slowdown in the global economy is more than a simple deceleration from an above-trend pace, or that protectionist action from the U.S. will occur in a severe fashion, Table 1 suggests that investors should stay overweight Chinese ex-tech stocks (with a short leash). The table highlights that most episodes of negative relative Chinese ex-stock performance since the beginning of the year been driven by global stock market selloffs or related to the trade dispute with the U.S., despite the ongoing slowdown in China's industrial sector that we have repeatedly flagged. Since Chinese ex-tech stocks have continued to outperform their global peers during this period, our interpretation is that investors are well aware of the deceleration in China's economy, but do not yet regard it as a material threat to ex-tech equity prices. Table 1YTD Weakness In Chinese Stock Prices Has Been Driven By Global Events 11 Charts To Watch 11 Charts To Watch Clearly, however, this assessment on the part of global investors can change, underscoring that the situation in China merits continual re-assessment. With the goal of providing investors with a toolkit to continually monitor the state of the Chinese economy and the resulting implications for related financial asset prices, this week's report presents a list of 11 charts "to watch" across five categories of analysis. In our view these charts span key potential inflection points for the economic and profit outlook, and will serve as an important basis for us to update our view on China over the months ahead. Monetary & Fiscal Policy Chart 1: The Policy Rate Versus Borrowing Rates Chart 1Borrowing/Policy Rate Divergence Should Not Last,##br## But Is Worth Monitoring Borrowing/Policy Rate Divergence Should Not Last, But Is Worth Monitoring Borrowing/Policy Rate Divergence Should Not Last, But Is Worth Monitoring An interesting divergence has occurred lately between the 3-month interbank repo rate (currently the de-facto policy rate) and both corporate bond yields and the average lending rate. While the repo rate fell non-trivially after it became apparent in late-March that the PBOC would extend the deadline for the implementation of new regulatory standards for asset management products, corporate bond yields have recently risen sharply and China's weighted-average lending rate ticked higher in Q1. As we highlighted in last week's Special Report, the recent clustering of corporate bond defaults does not (for now) appear to be a source of systemic risk. First, by our estimation, the recent defaults cited above account for only 0.09% of outstanding corporate bonds. Second, the latest PBOC monetary report changed the tone from emphasizing "deleveraging" to "stabilizing leverage and restructuring", which shows that regulators are as concerned about the stability of the economy as they are about reducing excessive debts. But the possibility remains that the ongoing crackdown on China's shadow banking sector will cause some degree of persistence in the recent divergence between the interbank market and actual borrowing rates, implying that investors should continue to watch Chart 1 over the months for signs of materially tighter financial conditions. Chart 2: The Correlation Between Sovereign Risk And The Repo Rate We noted in a February Special Report that investors could use the rolling 1-year correlation between the 3-month interbank repo rate and the relative sovereign CDS spread between China and Germany as a gauge of whether Chinese monetary policy has become too restrictive for its economy.1 Despite the fact that actual sovereign credit risk in China is extremely low, Chart 2 shows that the relative CDS spread has acted as a good bellwether for growth conditions in the Chinese economy. It shows that the correlation between this spread and the 3-month interbank repo rate was initially positive in late-2016 (representing concern on the part of investors that monetary policy is restrictive), but has since come back down into negative territory. Interestingly, the correlation was consistently positive from mid-2011 to mid-2014, when average lending rates averaged 7% or higher and the benchmark lending rate exceeded the IMF's Taylor Rule estimate by about 1%.2 For now the correlation remains negative (as it was when we published our February report), meaning that it currently supports our earlier conclusion that monetary conditions are not overly restrictive and that financial conditions more generally are not tightening sharply (despite the recent rise in corporate bond yields). Chart 2No Sign Yet That Monetary Policy Is Overly Restrictive No Sign Yet That Monetary Policy Is Overly Restrictive No Sign Yet That Monetary Policy Is Overly Restrictive Chart 3Watch For Signs Of Fiscal Stimulus Watch For Signs Of Fiscal Stimulus Watch For Signs Of Fiscal Stimulus Chart 3: The Fiscal Spending Impulse Chart 3 presents the Chinese government's budgetary expenditure as an "impulse", calculated as expenditure over the past year as a percent of nominal GDP. Panel 2 shows the year-over-year change in the impulse. When compared with a similar measure for private sector credit, cyclical fluctuations in China's government spending impulse are relatively small. For this reason, BCA's China Investment Strategy service has not strongly emphasized fiscal spending as a major driver of China's business cycle. However, we also noted in a recent report that fiscal stimulus stands out as one of the "least bad" options available to policymakers to combat a negative export shock from U.S. protectionism, were one to occur.3 The potential for broader stimulus from Chinese authorities in response to an impactful trade shock raises the interesting possibility of another economic mini cycle in China, since the economy accelerated meaningfully in response to the last episode of material fiscal & monetary easing. As such, investors should closely watch over the coming months for signs that fiscal spending is accelerating, particularly if combined with potential signs of easing monetary policy. External Demand Chart 4: Global Demand And Chinese Export Growth Chart 4For Now, Resilient Exports ##br##Are Supporting China's Economy For Now, Resilient Exports Are Supporting China's Economy For Now, Resilient Exports Are Supporting China's Economy We have noted in several recent reports that a resilient export sector remains the most favorable pillar of Chinese growth. Besides the clear risk to Chinese trade from U.S. protectionism, two other factors have the potential to negatively impact the trend in export growth. The first (and most important) of these risks is a reduction in global demand, which some investors have recently been concerned about given the decline in global manufacturing PMIs. However, Chart 4 highlights that our global PMI diffusion indicator has done an excellent job of leading the global PMI over the past few years, and has barely registered a decline over the past few months. From our perspective, the odds are good that the recent deceleration in the PMI has been caused by sudden caution (even in developed countries) over the Trump administration's protectionist actions, and does not reflect a material or long-lasting slowdown in the global economy. But we will be closely watching the PMI releases over the coming months to rule out a more painful slowdown in global demand. Importantly, we have also highlighted that stronger exports may actually presage a further slowdown in China's industrial sector if it emboldens policymakers to intensify their reform efforts over the coming year. We argued in our May 2 Weekly Report that China's reform pain threshold is positively correlated with global growth momentum,4 meaning that the external sector of China's economy may have less potential to counter weakness in the industrial sector than many investors believe. In this regard, extreme export readings (to the up and downside) should be regarded by investors as a potentially problematic development. Chart 5: The Competitiveness Impact Of A Rising RMB Chart 5 highlights the second non-protectionist risk to Chinese export growth, namely the significant appreciation in the RMB that has occurred since mid-2017. The chart shows the percentile rank of three different trade-weighted RMB indexes since 2014, and highlights that all three are between their 70th & 80th percentiles (with our BCA Export-Weighted RMB index having risen the most). Importantly, the 2015-high shown in Chart 5 represents the strongest point for the currency in over two decades, suggesting that further currency strength may exacerbate the significant deceleration in export prices that has already occurred. Chart 5A Surging RMB Could Undercut Competitiveness A Surging RMB Could Undercut Competitiveness A Surging RMB Could Undercut Competitiveness Housing Chart 6: Housing Sales Versus Starts We have presented a variation of Chart 6 several times over the past few months, but it is important enough that it deserves to be continually monitored by investors over the coming year. Chart 6 tells the story of China's housing market from the perspective of an investor who is primarily interested in the sector because of its implications for growth. The chart highlights that residential floor space started, our best proxy for the real contribution to growth from residential investment, has fallen significantly relative to sales since 2012-2014. This appears to have occurred because of a significant build up in housing inventories, which has since reversed materially (even though the level remains elevated). To us, this suggests that the gap between housing sales and construction that has persisted for the past several years may finally be over, suggesting that the latter may pick up durably if sales trend higher. For now sales volume remains tepid, but this will be a key chart for investors to watch over the coming year given our view that housing is a core pillar of China's business cycle. The Industrial Sector Chart 7: The BCA Li Keqiang Leading Indicator And Its Components Chart 7 presents our leading indicator for the Li Keqiang index (LKI), which we developed in a November Special Report.5 There are six components of the indicator, all of which are related to changing monetary/financial conditions, and the growth in money and credit. Chart 6Housing Construction Could Accelerate##br## If Sales Pick Up Housing Construction Could Accelerate If Sales Pick Up Housing Construction Could Accelerate If Sales Pick Up Chart 7A Downtrend In Our LKI Leading Indicator, ##br##Within A Wide Component Range A Downtrend In Our LKI Leading Indicator, Within A Wide Component Range A Downtrend In Our LKI Leading Indicator, Within A Wide Component Range The indicator is at the core of our view, and we have been presenting monthly updates of the series in our regular reports since late last year. However, Chart 7 looks at the indicator from a different perspective, by showing it within a range that identifies the weakest and strongest components at any given point in time. Two points are noteworthy from the chart: While the overall LKI indicator has been trending down since early-2017, there is currently a wide range between the components. This gap is in stark contrast to the very narrow range that prevailed from 2014-2015, when the economy slowed considerably. This could mean that some of the components of the indicator are unduly weak, which in turn could imply that the severity of the slowdown in China's industrial sector will be less intense than the overall indicator would otherwise suggest. At least one component provided a lead on the subsequent direction of the overall indicator from late-2011 to late-2012, the last time that a significant gap existed between the components. This is in contrast to the situation today, in that all of the components are currently in a downtrend (albeit with differing paces as well as magnitudes). The key point for investors from Chart 7 is that all of the components of our indicator are moving in the same direction, which suggests with high conviction that China's economy is slowing. However, the wide range among the components suggests that indicator's message about the intensity of the slowdown is less uniform than it has been in the past, meaning that investors should be sensitive to a sustained pickup in the top end of the range. Equity Market Signals Chart 8: The Beta Of Our BCA China Sector Alpha Portfolio Chart 8 revisits a unique insight that we presented in our May 16 Weekly Report.6 The chart shows the rolling 1-year beta of our BCA China Investable Sector Alpha Portfolio versus the investable benchmark alongside China's performance versus global stocks, and suggests that the former may reliably lead the latter. While we noted in the report that drawing market-wide inferences from the beta characteristics of risk-adjusted performers is a not a conventional approach, finance theory is supportive of the idea. If investors are seeking to maximize their risk-adjusted returns and are engaging in tactical allocation across sectors, then it is entirely possible that beta-adjusted sector returns reflect the risk-on/risk-off expectations of market participants. For the purposes of China-related investment strategy over the coming year, our emphasis on Chart 8 will increase markedly if we see a sharp decline in the beta of our Sector Alpha Portfolio. As we noted in our May 16 report, the model is for now sending a curiously bullish signal, which we see as partial validation of our view that investors should have a high threshold to cut exposure to China within a global equity portfolio. Chart 8Watch For A Decline In The Beta Of ##br##Our Sector Alpha Portfolio Watch For A Decline In The Beta Of Our Sector Alpha Portfolio Watch For A Decline In The Beta Of Our Sector Alpha Portfolio Chart 9Decelerating Earnings Growth Could##br## Undermine Investor Sentiment Decelerating Earnings Growth Could Undermine Investor Sentiment Decelerating Earnings Growth Could Undermine Investor Sentiment Chart 9: Ex-Tech Earnings Versus The Li Keqiang Index We noted above that predicting the Li Keqiang index (LKI) is at the core of our view, and Chart 9 highlights why. The chart shows that a model based on the LKI closely fits the year-over-year growth rate of Chinese investable ex-tech earnings and, crucially, provides a lead. While the chart does not suggest that an outright contraction in ex-tech earnings is in the cards over the coming year, it does show that earnings growth is about to peak. This is potentially problematic, and warrants close attention, for two reasons: First, our leading indicator for the LKI suggests that it will decelerate further over the coming year, which could push our earnings growth estimate towards or below zero. Second, the peak in earnings growth could dampen investor sentiment towards Chinese ex-tech stocks, especially since bottom up analyst estimates for 12-months forward earnings growth have recently moved higher and are currently above what is predicted by our model. Chart 10: The Alpha Of Chinese Banks By now, the narrative surrounding Chinese banks is well known among global investors. The enormous leveraging of China's non-financial corporate sector is viewed by many as a clear sign of capital misallocation, meaning that a (potentially material) portion of the loan book of Chinese banks will have to be written off as bad debt. The ultimate scope of the bad debt problem in China is far from clear, but these longstanding concerns about loan quality suggest that Chinese bank stocks are likely to materially underperform their global peers if China's shadow banking crackdown begins to pose a significant threat to growth via restrictions on the provision of credit to the real economy. As such, we recommend that investors monitor Chart 10 over the coming year, which shows the rolling 1-year alpha significance for Chinese banks vs their global peers. While the rolling 1-year alpha of small banks has become less positive over the past few weeks, it remains in positive territory, similar to that of investable bank stocks. So, for now, this indicator supports our earlier conclusion that recent divergence between the interbank market and actual borrowing rates highlighted in Chart 1 is not heralding a material tightening in Chinese financial conditions. Chart 10Investors Should Monitor Chinese Bank Alpha ##br##For Significant Declines 11 Charts To Watch 11 Charts To Watch Chart 11No Technical Breakdown (Yet) In Ex-Tech Relative Performance No Technical Breakdown (Yet) In Ex-Tech Relative Performance No Technical Breakdown (Yet) In Ex-Tech Relative Performance Chart 11: The Technical Performance Of Ex-Tech Stocks BCA's approach to forecasting financial markets rests far more on top-down macroeconomic assessments than it does on technical analysis. However, technical indicators do contain important information, particularly when our top-down macro approach signals that a change in trend may be imminent. In this regard, technical indicators can provide valuable opportunities to enter or exit a position. To the extent that the technical profile of Chinese ex-tech stocks is informative in the current environment, Chart 11 shows that it is telling investors to stay invested despite the myriad risks to the economic outlook. This message is consistent with that of Table 1, namely that the negative performance of Chinese ex-tech stocks has been in response to global rather than idiosyncratic, China-specific risk. From our perspective, a technical breakdown in relative Chinese ex-tech stock performance in response to China-specific news would serve as a strong basis for a downgrade within a global equity portfolio, and we will be monitoring closely for such a development over the coming weeks and months. Stay tuned! Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "Seven Questions About Chinese Monetary Policy", dated February 22, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Monetary Tightening In China: How Much Is Too Much?" dated January 18, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Question That Won't Go Away", dated April 18, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "China: A Low-Conviction Overweight", dated May 2, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "The Data Lab: Testing The Predictability Of China's Business Cycle", dated November 30, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Three Pillars Of China's Economy", dated May 16, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Feature The prospect of a 5S-Lega government in Italy is unnerving some analysts and commentators. Italy's sovereign debt-to-GDP ratio is already one of the highest in the world. A seemingly endless economic stagnation is constraining GDP, and now the populists are proposing policies that would increase the deficit, lifting sovereign debt even higher. Feature ChartFiscal Thrust Has Driven Italy's ##br##Growth In Recent Years Fiscal Thrust Has Driven Italy's Growth In Recent Years Fiscal Thrust Has Driven Italy's Growth In Recent Years The suggested cures to Italy's high sovereign debt-to-GDP ratio divide into two opposing camps. One camp - Italy's populists - wants to boost GDP, the ratio's denominator. The other camp - Brussels - wants to rein in sovereign debt, the ratio's numerator. Who's right? It is not a simple choice. Growth and debt are not independent variables. It is impossible to boost growth quickly without a positive credit impulse from some part of the economy. Equally, reducing government borrowing can have a devastating impact on growth (Chart I-2). Therefore, to resolve the conflict between Italy's populists and Brussels, we need to understand the specific relationship in Italy between government debt, GDP, and their interaction: the fiscal multiplier. Chart I-2The Fiscal Multiplier Is High ##br##When The Private Sector Or Banks Are Financially Unhealthy Italy Vs Brussels: Who's Right? Italy Vs Brussels: Who's Right? Italy Is Right, Brussels Is Wrong Imagine that government debt starts at 130 and GDP starts at 100. Imagine also that each unit of government borrowing to spend lifts GDP by one unit, meaning the fiscal multiplier equals one. Under these assumptions, three units of fiscal thrust would lift debt to 133 and lift GDP to 103, reducing the debt-to-GDP ratio to 129%. Conversely, three units of fiscal drag would reduce debt to 127 and reduce GDP to 97, paradoxically increasing the debt-to-GDP ratio to 131% and making the austerity strategy entirely counterproductive. Critics will snap back that these two assumptions appear inconsistent. When sovereign indebtedness is already high, at say 130% of GDP, it seems implausible that the fiscal multiplier could also be high: the government has already done its useful borrowing to spend and, at the margin, additional borrowing is likely to be 'fiscally irresponsible'. This criticism would be valid if the government was the only part of the economy that could borrow. But it isn't. Whether the fiscal multiplier is high or low also depends on what is happening in the private sector (Chart I-3). Chart I-3The Fiscal Multiplier Is Low ##br##When The Private Sector And Banks Are Financially Healthy Italy Vs Brussels: Who's Right? Italy Vs Brussels: Who's Right? Fiscal multipliers become very high when there is a breakdown in the ability of households and firms to borrow and/or a breakdown in the ability of banks to lend. After such a breakdown, credit flows to the private sector remain depressed however low (or negative) interest rates go. Specifically, this happens after a severe economic trauma when large numbers of households and firms are simultaneously repairing their badly damaged balance sheets and/or when banks are insolvent. If the one and only engine of demand - government spending - then cuts out, the economy can enter a prolonged stagnation. Under such conditions, thrift reinforces thrift: one unit of fiscal drag can trigger an additional private sector spending cut, magnifying the impact of the original cut. In other words, the fiscal multiplier can exceed one and reach a level as high as two according to several academic and empirical studies.1 During and immediately after the global financial crisis, fiscal multipliers surged. Through 2009-12, fiscal thrust had a very strong explanatory power for GDP growth; across 14 major economies, the regression slope of 1.5 confirms a high average fiscal multiplier. In other words, each unit of fiscal thrust boosted GDP by 1.5 units; and each unit of fiscal drag depressed GDP by 1.5 units.2 Another way to see this is to observe that in the global financial crisis the economies that had the largest fiscal thrusts tended to experience the least severe recessions. The annual fiscal thrust in the U.S., U.K. and France equalled 2% of GDP; in Spain it equalled 3%.3 By contrast, Germany and Italy had negligible fiscal thrusts, and they suffered the worst recessions. But by 2012, households and firms around the world were willing to borrow again, and banks were sufficiently recapitalised to lend. Hence, fiscal multipliers slumped: fiscal thrust no longer had any explanatory power for GDP growth (Charts I-4 - I-7). Chart I-4Post 2012: No Connection Between##br## Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The U.S. Post 2012: No Connection Between Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The U.S. Post 2012: No Connection Between Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The U.S. Chart I-5Post 2012: No Connection Between##br## Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The U.K. Post 2012: No Connection Between Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The U.K. Post 2012: No Connection Between Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The U.K. Chart I-6Post 2012: No Connection Between ##br##Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The Germany Post 2012: No Connection Between Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The Germany Post 2012: No Connection Between Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The Germany Chart I-7Post 2012: No Connection Between##br## Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The France Post 2012: No Connection Between Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The France Post 2012: No Connection Between Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The France There was one glaring exception to this trend: alas, poor Italy. Trapped in the EU's inflexible and misguided fiscal compact, and without an outright crisis, the Italian government could not recapitalise the dysfunctional banks. Although the solvency of the banks has improved in the past year, the evidence strongly suggests that fiscal thrust remains the main driver of the Italian economy (Feature Chart). On this evidence, the best economic policy for Italy right now is not to adhere slavishly to the misguided one-size-fits-all EU fiscal compact. The best policy is to use fiscal thrust intelligently to boost growth. We conclude that, on this specific point, Italy's populists are right and Brussels is wrong. Italy Needs Growth Italian BTPs offer a yield premium over German bunds as a compensation for two possible risks. One risk is a haircut or, more euphemistically, a 'restructuring'. But the likelihood of such a restructuring is very low. Putting aside the damage it would do to Italy's international standing, the simpler explanation is that it would kill the Italian banking system. As a rule of thumb, a bank's investors start to get nervous about its solvency when equity capital no longer covers its net non-performing loans (NPLs). In this regard, the largest Italian banks now have €165 billion of equity capital against €130 billion of NPLs, implying excess capital of €35 billion. The banks also hold around €350 billion of Italian government bonds (Chart I-8). Chart I-8Italian Banks Own 350 Billion Euro Of Italian Government Bonds Italy Vs Brussels: Who's Right? Italy Vs Brussels: Who's Right? So a mere 10% haircut on these BTPs could cripple the banking system and send the economy into a new tailspin. Meaning, it is in nobody's interest to restructure Italian bonds. The more likely risk to BTP holders - albeit still small - is redenomination out of the euro and into a reinstated lira. In which case the yield premium on BTPs ought to equal: (The likely loss on being paid in liras rather than deutschmarks) multiplied by (the annual probability of Italy leaving the euro) The first of these terms captures Italy's competitiveness shortfall versus Germany, which will change quite gradually. The second term captures a political risk, as leaving the euro would require a mandate from the Italian people. This means that the second term is very sensitive (inversely) to the popularity of the euro in Italy. It follows that a policy that kick starts growth and improves living standards - thereby boosting the popularity of the euro amongst the Italian people - is also a good policy for Italian bonds, banks, sustainable growth in Italy, and therefore for the euro itself. Bear in mind that Italy's structural deficit, at just 1%, is nowhere near the double-digit percentage levels that reliably signal the onset of a sovereign debt trap (Table I-1). Table I-1Italy's Structural Deficit Has Almost Disappeared Italy Vs Brussels: Who's Right? Italy Vs Brussels: Who's Right? Given Italy's high fiscal multiplier, we conclude once again that Italy's populists are right and Brussels is wrong. Some Investment Considerations Italian assets rallied strongly at the start of the year and certainly did not discount an election outcome in which the unlikely bedfellows 5S and La Lega formed a government. Therefore, from a technical perspective, the rally was extended and ripe for a pullback. A further consideration for Italy's MIB is that it is over-weighted to banks, so a sustained outperformance from the stock market requires a sustained outperformance from global banks, which we do not expect to start imminently. So in the near term, we prefer France's CAC to Italy's MIB. We have also opened a tactical pair-trade: long Poland's Warsaw General Index, short Italy's MIB. However, later this year, we expect both our credit impulse (cyclical) indicator and fractal dimension (technical) indicator to signal a better entry point into banks, into the Italian equity market and for BTP yield spread compression. Italy's structural deficit, at 1%, is amongst the lowest in the world, so Italy has plenty of 'fiscal space'. Moreover, fiscal stimulus can deliver bang for its buck because Italy appears to have a high fiscal multiplier. This differentiates Italy from other major economies, and makes the EU's one-size-fits-all fiscal compact entirely counterproductive for the euro area's third largest economy. This means that policies that push back against Brussels on this specific point might finally permit Italy to escape its decade-long growth trap. And therefore, somewhat paradoxically, they will enable the yield premium on 10-year Italian BTPs versus 10-year French OATs ultimately to compress. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 For example, please see: When Is The Government Spending Multiplier Large? Christiano, Eichenbaum and Rebelo, Northwestern University. 2 Even removing the outlier data point that is Greece, the best-fit line has a slope of 1.1. And the r-squared explanatory power remains significant at 0.5. 3 Through 2008-9.
Overweight Despite a blockbuster earnings season, banks have come under pressure recently. Worrisomely, they have not followed the 10-year Treasury yield higher and that is cause for concern, particularly since they have re-established a correlation with the yield curve. This positive correlation shift from interest rates to the yield curve slope is important as it will likely squeeze banks' net interest margins, a key profit driver (second panel). The third and bottom panels show that there is increasing empirical evidence that banks have already started making this transition away from the 10-year UST yield and toward the 10/2 yield curve, and we are thus compelled to book profits and remove this early cyclical index from the high-conviction overweight call list. The S&P banks index is now also on downgrade alert. Bottom Line: Stay overweight banks for now, but lock in gains of 6% and remove the S&P banks index from the high-conviction overweight call list, as our confidence is not as high as in late-November. Further, we are putting this key financials sub index on downgrade alert reflecting the negative implication from our later stages of the business cycle analysis (please see our Weekly Report for our analysis of the business cycle). The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5BANKX - WFC, JPM, BAC, C, USB, PNC, BBT, STI, MTB, FITB, CFG, RF, KEY, HBAN, CMA, ZION, PBCT, SIVB. Put Banks On Downgrade Watch Put Banks On Downgrade Watch
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Firming industry demand at a time when global energy capital spending budgets are renormalizing, along with rising crude oil prices, signal that high-beta energy services equities have more running room. Our confidence in additional significant bank relative price gains has decreased. There is budding evidence that the bank/yield curve correlation is getting re-established, as we had posited last autumn, and coupled with later cycle dynamics signal that the bank outperformance is getting long in the tooth. Recent Changes Crystalize gains of 6% in the S&P banks index and remove from the high-conviction overweight call list. Put the S&P banks index on downgrade alert. Prefer large caps to small caps (please refer to the May 10th Sector Insight). Table 1 Resilient Resilient Feature Equities staged a breakout attempt last week and the SPX reclaimed the 50-day moving average, with the energy sector leading the pack. However, the lateral move in place over the past quarter is not over yet as the market is still digesting the February 5th drawdown. Importantly, EPS euphoria cannot last forever and the inevitable profit growth deceleration post the calendar 2018 onetime tax reform fillip is weighing on the market. The 12-month forward EPS growth rate has come down to 15%, and as we move into the back half of 2018 it will continue to glide toward a still impressive 10% (or two times nominal GDP growth), which is where the calendar 2019 estimate currently stands (Chart 1). Following up from last week's 'Til Debt Do Us Part' Special Report, the overall market's (ex-financials and ex-real estate) 'Altman Z-score' is waving a mini yellow flag. Cyclical momentum in this indicator is giving way and the broad market's deteriorating creditworthiness is also, at the margin, anchoring profit growth (Chart 2). Chart 1Unsustainable EPS Euphoria Unsustainable EPS Euphoria Unsustainable EPS Euphoria Chart 2Watching Balance Sheets... Watching Balance Sheets… Watching Balance Sheets… Nevertheless, we remain constructive on the broad market from a cyclical 9-12 month horizon as the odds of recession are close to nil, and interpret recent market action as a sign of resiliency. The SPX refuses to give way to the bearish narrative plagued by geopolitical uncertainty/fears and slowing global growth. Chart 3 shows an extremely economically sensitive indicator, lumber, alongside the ISM manufacturing survey. Since 1969 when lumber futures first commenced trading, these two series have been tightly positively correlated. Recently, a rare and steep divergence is visible and our inclination is to expect all-time high lumber prices to arrest the ISM's fall in the coming months. True, lumber prices reflect a NAFTA-related premium and at the current juncture cannot be fully trusted that they are emitting an accurate economic signal. We, thus, resort to another - daily reported - global growth barometer, the Baltic Dry Index (BDI). The third panel of Chart 3 shows that a wide gap has opened between the ISM manufacturing index and the BDI. If our assessment is correct and this global growth soft patch is transitory, then the ISM will remain squarely clear of the 50 boom/bust line. Taken together, these two economically sensitive high frequency series comprise our Global Trade Indicator which is underscoring that global export growth will pick up in the back half of the year (bottom panel, Chart 3). Finally, on the domestic freight front,1 the composite freight index is also reaccelerating, signaling that domestic demand conditions are firing on all cylinders (fourth panel, Chart 3). Circling back to profit growth, long-term S&P 500 EPS growth expectations have vaulted to the highest level since the dotcom bubble (bottom panel, Chart 4). While in isolation, this measure signals we are in overshoot territory and such breakneck EPS growth is clearly unsustainable, the SPX PEG ratio tells a different story (we divide the 12-month forward price to earnings ratio by the long-term EPS growth rate to arrive at the current reading near 1 on the S&P 500 PEG ratio, Chart 4). Chart 3...But Economy Is Humming …But Economy Is Humming …But Economy Is Humming Chart 4Market Is Cheap According To PEG Ratio Market Is Cheap According To PEG Ratio Market Is Cheap According To PEG Ratio On this valuation measure the SPX appears cheap. Historically, every time the PEG ratio has sunk to one standard deviation below the mean, at least a reflex rebound ensued. Table 2 summarizes the five most recent iterations we included in the analysis since 1985. While we cannot rule out a steep undershoot, if history at least rhymes, the S&P should be higher in the subsequent 12 months (Chart 5). Chart 5SPX Cycle-On-Cycle Return Profile When The PEG Ratio Gets Depressed SPX Cycle-On-Cycle Return Profile When The PEG Ratio Gets Depressed SPX Cycle-On-Cycle Return Profile When The PEG Ratio Gets Depressed Table 2S&P 500 Yearly Returns* Resilient Resilient This week we are removing an early cyclical index from our high-conviction call list, locking in handsome profits, and updating a high-beta energy sub-index. Put Banks On Downgrade Watch Despite a blockbuster earnings season, banks have come under pressure recently. Worrisomely, they have not followed the 10-year Treasury yield higher and that is cause for concern. We first cautioned last October that banks would shatter their near one-to-one relationship with the 10-year UST yield and re-establish it with the yield curve likely in the back half of 2018 as the Fed would further lift the fed funds rate away from the zero lower bound.2 This positive correlation shift from interest rates to the yield curve slope is important as it will likely squeeze banks' net interest margins, a key profit driver (Chart 6). Charts 7 & 8 show that there is increasing empirical evidence that banks have already started making this transition away from the 10-year UST yield and toward the 10/2 yield curve, and we are thus compelled to book profits of 6% and remove this early cyclical index from the high-conviction overweight call list. The S&P banks index is now also on downgrade alert. Chart 6NIM Trouble? NIM Trouble? NIM Trouble? Chart 7Monitoring Shifting... Monitoring Shifting… Monitoring Shifting… Chart 8...Correlations …Correlations …Correlations What would cause us to change our yearlong cyclical constructive view and move to a benchmark allocation, is a lack of relative price outperformance in the next 10-year Treasury yield jump. Crudely put, if banks fail to best the market when the bond market further sells off roughly to 3.25%, as BCA's fixed income strategists expect, we will pull the trigger and downgrade to a neutral stance. Another reason we are likely to become more wary of bank relative performance in the coming quarters is the stage of the business cycle. Importantly, we wanted to test our hypothesis that in the late/later stages of the expansion early cyclicals, banks included, fare poorly. Therefore, at some point we should move away from our sanguine view on this index and not overstay our welcome as the current expansion has become the second longest on record according to the NBER designated recessions. In more detail, what we did to test this hypothesis was to document relative bank performance from when the ISM manufacturing peaked for the cycle until the recession commenced going back to the 1960s (Chart 9). Table 3 aggregates the results using monthly data. What is clear is that if the recession is a financial crisis related recession, then shy away from banks. But, in 4 out of the 7 last cycles dating back to the 1960s, banks outperformed the broad market in the later stages of the business cycle. Chart 9Banks Tend To Slump In Later Stages Of The Cycle Banks Tend To Slump In Later Stages Of The Cycle Banks Tend To Slump In Later Stages Of The Cycle Table 3Late Cycle Analysis Resilient Resilient Nevertheless, breaking down the results in two periods is instructive. One period recalibrates the bank relative returns from the ISM peak until the SPX peak, and the second one from the SPX peak until the recession commences (Table 3). Banks clearly underwhelm 4 out of the 7 iterations as the SPX crests, confirming our negative return hypothesis. Subsequently, as the SPX deflates when the economy heads into recession, relative bank performance significantly improves with the caveat that during financial crises, banks continue to bleed (in an upcoming Special Report we will be performing the same analysis on the GICS1 U.S. equity sectors, stay tuned). Two weeks ago we lifted our peak SPX target to 3200,3 and the implication is that banks' best days have likely passed, if history at least rhymes. Bottom Line: Stay overweight banks for now, but lock in gains of 6% and remove the S&P banks index from the high-conviction overweight call list, as our confidence is not as high as in late-November.4 Further, we are putting this key financials sub index on downgrade alert reflecting the negative implication from our later stages of the business cycle analysis. We are closely monitoring the yield curve slope and interest rate correlation with bank performance, and if banks refrain from participating in the next leg up in interest rates it will serve as a catalyst to prune exposure to neutral. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5BANKX - WFC, JPM, BAC, C, USB, PNC, BBT, STI, MTB, FITB, CFG, RF, KEY, HBAN, CMA, ZION, PBCT, SIVB. Energy Servicers: The Phoenix Is Rising Quarter-to-date the S&P energy services index is up 12% compared with the 2% rise in the broad market. Even year-to-date, oil servicing companies have bested the market by 600bps. The steep rebound in oil prices primarily lies behind such stellar outperformance, and BCA's Commodity & Energy Strategy still-upbeat crude oil view is a harbinger of even brighter days ahead for this high-beta energy sub sector (Chart 10). While we are exploring our capex upcycle theme via a high-conviction overweight in the broad S&P energy index, oil services companies are also a prime beneficiary of our synchronized global capital outlays upcycle theme. In fact, relative share price momentum does not yet fully reflect the rebound in industry investment (using national accounts) that remains in a V-shaped recovery since the Q1/2016 oil market trough (second panel, Chart 11). Importantly, OPEC 2.0 and $70/bbl oil prices have resulted in a semblance of normality in the E&P space (a key industry client) that has lifted spending budgets (bottom panel, Chart 11). The upshot is that energy services revenues will continue to expand (Chart 11). Energy related capital spending budgets are not only rising in the U.S. (primarily in shale oil), but also globally. The global rig count is breaking out, and declining OECD oil stocks suggest that drilling activity will remain robust (top and second panel, Chart 12). Chart 10Catch up Phase Catch up Phase Catch up Phase Chart 11Capex Upcycle... Capex Upcycle… Capex Upcycle… Chart 12...Beneficiary …Beneficiary …Beneficiary Taking the pulse of oil services industry slack is extremely important for profitability. Our global idle rig proxy is also making a breakout attempt following a massive two year plus retrenchment phase (top panel, Chart 13). Keep in mind that energy servicers have only recently exited deflation, that wreaked havoc in the sector's financial metrics. Now as a renormalization period is unfolding with higher underlying commodity prices breathing life into industry new order growth, even a modest pricing power rebound will go a long way in lifting depressed profits. In fact, new orders-to-inventories are in a reflex rebound. While such an exponential rise is unsustainable, firming oil services demand should continue to remove excess slack, a boon for industry selling prices and profits (middle and bottom panels, Chart 13). Sentiment toward this energy sub-index remains bombed out and there is widespread disbelief that this rebound is sustainable. Rather, the risk of a deflationary relapse has kept investors at bay pushing relative valuations deep into undervalued territory. Both our composite relative Valuation Indicator (VI) and relative price-to-book are hovering near all-time lows (bottom panel, Chart 12). Technicals are not as depressed as the VI reading, with the recent relative share price bounce lifting our relative Technical Indicator to the neutral zone (Chart 14). Chart 13Deflation Is Over Deflation Is Over Deflation Is Over Chart 14Unloved And Underowned Unloved And Underowned Unloved And Underowned In sum, there are more gains in store for the S&P energy services index. Firming industry demand at a time when global energy capital spending budgets are renormalizing, along with rising crude oil prices, signal that high-beta energy services equities have more running room. Bottom Line: Stay overweight the S&P energy service index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5ENRE -NOV, SLB, FTI, BHGE, HAL, HP. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 The freight transportation services index consists of: For-hire trucking (parcel services are not included); Freight railroad services (including rail-based intermodal shipments such as containers on flat cars); Inland waterway traffic; Pipeline movements (including principally petroleum and petroleum products and natural gas); and Air freight. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Later Cycle Dynamics," dated October 23, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Lifting SPX Target," dated April 30, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "High-Conviction Calls," dated November 27, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps
Highlights Despite recent softness in the data, Swedish growth will remain robust over the next 6-12 months, supported by loose monetary conditions and solid export demand. Inflation has climbed back to the Riksbank 2% target, and additional increases are likely over the next 6-12 months. Though debt levels are high, households are relatively healthy given strong wealth, solid disposable income and elevated saving rates. Swedish politics will not substantively impact the markets. If the Moderate Party comes to power, it is unlikely to make significant policy departures from the Social Democrats. Swedish banks' capital levels are elevated, particularly compared to their EU peers. Still, the massive exposure to domestic real estate suggests that banks could not withstand a meaningful decline in house prices. The uninterrupted, long-term surge in Swedish house prices suggests that a bubble has formed. A strong supply-side response has softened prices as of late, but a massive correction is not imminent given robust economic growth and very accommodative monetary policy. Negative interest rates are inconsistent with the robust growth Sweden is experiencing. Going forward, strong growth momentum, rising inflation and a tight labor market will force policymakers to raise rates earlier, and by more, than markets expect. Sweden government debt will underperform global developed market peers over the next 6-12 months. Feature Chart 1Watch What They Do,##BR##Not What They Say Watch What They Do, Not What They Say Watch What They Do, Not What They Say Sweden is a country that has been very frustrating to figure out for investors and analysts alike over the past few years. The economy has been performing very well, with real GDP growth averaging around 3% since 2013, well above the OECD's estimate of potential GDP growth of 2.2%. Over that same period, the unemployment rate has fallen from 8% to 6.5% while inflation has risen from 0% to 2%. These are the types of developments that would normally lead an inflation targeting central bank like the Riksbank to contemplate a tightening of monetary policy. Yet while the Riksbank has been projecting significant increases in policy rates and bond yields every year for the past few years, it has actually delivered additional interest rate cuts, bringing the benchmark repo rate down into negative territory in 2014 and keeping it there to this day (Chart 1). In this Special Report, we examine Sweden's economic backdrop, upcoming elections and the health of the financial system to determine the likely future path of Swedish interest rates. We conclude that investors should not fear an imminent collapse of the Swedish housing bubble or a shock outcome in the September general election. A shift in direction for monetary policy, however, is likely later this year, with the Riksbank set to become more hawkish in response to an economy that no longer requires ultra-loose monetary conditions. This has bearish strategic implications for Swedish fixed income, and could finally place a floor under the beleaguered krona. Economy: Sustained Growth Outweighs Potential Risks After experiencing slowing growth momentum in 2016, Sweden's economy made a solid recovery in 2017. Real GDP growth came in at 3.3% on a year-over-year basis in Q4/2017, following on the strong prints earlier in the year. The Riksbank believes that GDP growth will slow slightly in 2018 due to some softening in consumer spending and business investment. However, real consumption has remained resilient and should be supported by the continued recovery in wages. Capital spending has also been robust and industrial confidence remains in an uptrend. While both the OECD leading economic indicator and manufacturing PMI have pulled back in recent months, both are coming off elevated levels. The PMI remains well above the 50 line, suggesting that strong growth momentum remains intact (Chart 2). The National Institute of Economic Research's economic tendency survey bounced back in April on the back of manufacturing and construction strength, with readings for the survey having been above 100 (signifying growth stronger than normal) every month since April 2015. One important factor helping support above-trend growth is fiscal policy, which has become modestly stimulative after two years of major fiscal drag in 2015 and 2016. As an export-oriented country, Sweden is highly levered to the state of the global economy. Export growth remains supported by continued strong global activity, low unit labor costs and recent krona weakness. Real exports expanded at a 4.7% rate (year-over-year) at the end of 2017 and the outlook is bright given firming growth in Sweden's largest export partners and the considerable depreciation of the krona. This is confirmed by our export model, which is signaling a pickup in export growth through the rest of the year before moderating slightly in 2019 (Chart 3). Chart 2Swedish Growth Cooling Off A Bit,##BR##But Remains Strong Swedish Growth Cooling Off A Bit, But Remains Strong Swedish Growth Cooling Off A Bit, But Remains Strong Chart 3Export Growth##BR##Will Remain Solid Export Growth Will Remain Solid Export Growth Will Remain Solid Healthy employment growth has driven Sweden's unemployment rate to 6.5%, more than one full percentage point below the OECD's estimate of the full-employment NAIRU1 rate (Chart 4). The spread between the two (the unemployment gap) has not been this low in nearly two decades. During the last period when unemployment was below NAIRU in 2007-08, wage growth surged to over 4%. However, Swedish wage growth has been subdued following the 2008 financial crisis, has been the case in most developed countries, even as unemployment continues to fall. Currently, annual growth in average hourly earnings is now displaying positive upward momentum, both in nominal terms (+2.5%) and, even more importantly for consumer spending, in real terms (+0.9%). A tightening labor market will support additional wage increases in the coming months. Importantly, Swedish wages are also influenced by wages in countries that are export competitors. For example, they have closely tracked German wages in recent years. The strong wage increases coming out of the latest round of German labor union negotiations is therefore a positive sign for Swedish wage growth.2 In addition, there is scope for more improvement as the unemployment rate is still above its pre-crisis level. Sweden has experienced a large inflow of immigration over the last decade and the unemployment rate for non-EU-born residents is approximately four times higher than the national figure. The government is stressing education and skill-building programs to address this issue and speed up the integration process. To the extent that these programs are successful, there is scope for a decline in the immigrant unemployment rate that can pull the overall national unemployment rate even lower - as long as the economy continues to expand and the demand for labor remains robust. A rising trend in domestic price pressures from the labor market can extend the recent uptrend in Swedish inflation. Inflation has been steadily rising since the deflation scare at the end of 2013, driven by consistent above-trend economic growth which has soaked up all spare capacity in the Swedish economy (Chart 5). The latest print on headline CPI inflation was 1.9%, while CPIF inflation (the Riksbank's preferred measure that is measured with fixed interest rates) sits right at the central bank's 2% target. Market-based inflation expectations have eased a bit on the year, though most survey-based measures have remained firm. Chart 4Wage Pressures Intensifying Wage Pressures Intensifying Wage Pressures Intensifying Chart 5Inflation Back To Target, May Not Stop There Inflation Back To Target, May Not Stop There Inflation Back To Target, May Not Stop There Rising oil prices have lifted inflation and BCA's commodity strategists believe that there is some additional upside given high demand and declining inventories, suggesting additional inflationary pressure ahead. In addition, even though core prices have historically been weak in the summer months, our Swedish core CPI model suggests that inflationary pressures will continue to build over the next six months, primarily due to booming resource utilization (bottom panel). Additionally, inflation should remain supported by a weaker krona, which has declined 8.5% year-to-date despite robust domestic fundamentals. The real trade-weighted index (TWI) peaked in 2017 and is now at a post-crisis low. These depressed levels suggest the currency can rise without derailing export growth. Going forward, the Riksbank expects the krona to gradually appreciate, based on projections from the April 2018 Monetary Policy Report (MPR).3 However, the currency has closely tracked the real policy rate (Chart 6) and thus could continue to fall below the Riksbank's projected path if our base case scenario of inflation rising further before the Riksbank starts hiking rates plays out - providing an additional boost to inflation from an even weaker krona. While the cyclical economic story in Sweden still looks solid, there remains a significant potential structural headwind in the form of high household debt. Mortgage borrowing has propelled the debt-to-income ratio to over 180% and the debt-to-GDP ratio to over 80%, making Swedish households some of the most indebted in the developed world (Chart 7). The Riksbank projects that debt-to-income will reach 190% by 2021 and its financial vulnerability indicator is at a post-crisis high. While we are certainly not understating the risks associated with such a massive debt load, we do not view this as an imminent threat to the economy. Chart 6VERY Loose Monetary Conditions##BR##In Sweden VERY Loose Monetary Conditions In Sweden VERY Loose Monetary Conditions In Sweden Chart 7Swedish Households Can##BR##Manage High Debt Swedish Households Can Manage High Debt Swedish Households Can Manage High Debt Swedish households' financial situation is better than it appears, with wealth three times larger than liabilities. Additionally, disposable income, which suffers under Sweden's high tax rates, should receive a boost this year from the increase in child allowance and lower taxes on pensioners. Importantly, the Swedish personal saving rate has been trending upward since the financial crisis and currently is one of the highest in the developed world at 9.6%. In addition, while about 70% of Swedish mortgages are variable rate, consumers are prepared for higher interest rates. Survey data shows household expectations on rates are in line with the National Institute of Economic Research's forecast. Outside of a negative growth shock or a substantial and rapid rise in interest rates, which is not our base case, Swedish high household debt levels should not pose a risk to the current economic expansion. Bottom Line: Despite recent softness in the data, Swedish growth will remain robust over the next 6-12 months, supported by loose monetary conditions and solid export demand. Inflation has climbed back to the Riksbank 2% target, and additional increases are likely over the next 6-12 months. Though debt levels are high, households are relatively healthy given strong wealth and elevated saving rates. Politics: Moderating On All Fronts Sweden has become something of a poster child for a country where immigration policy has become unhinged. In the U.S., Sweden's struggle to integrate recent arrivals, particularly its large asylum population, is a frequent feature on right-wing news channels and websites. The narrative is that Sweden is overrun with migrants and that, as a result, anti-establishment and populist parties will be successful in the upcoming elections on September 9th. This view is based on some objective truths. First, Sweden genuinely does struggle to integrate migrants. As BCA's Chief Global Strategist, Peter Berezin, has showed, Sweden is one of the worst performers when it comes to integrating immigrants into its labor force (Chart 8) and in educational attainment (Chart 9).4 Peter posits that the likely culprit is the country's generous welfare state, which discourages migrants from participating in the labor force and perhaps creates a self-selection process where migrants and asylum seekers looking to enter Sweden are those most likely to abuse its generous public support system.5 Chart 8Immigrants Have Trouble##BR##Integrating Into The Labor Force Sweden: The Riksbank Cannot Kick The Can Down The Road Anymore Sweden: The Riksbank Cannot Kick The Can Down The Road Anymore Chart 9Immigrants Have Trouble##BR##In Swedish Education Sweden: The Riksbank Cannot Kick The Can Down The Road Anymore Sweden: The Riksbank Cannot Kick The Can Down The Road Anymore Second, the country's premier populist party - the Sweden Democrats - is relatively successful in the European context. Its ardently anti-immigrant policy has helped the party go from just 2.9% of the vote in 2006, to 12.9% in 2014. For much of 2017, Sweden Democrats have polled as the second most popular party in the country, behind the ruling Social Democrats (Chart 10). Chart 10Anti-Establishment Party Polling Well Anti-Establishment Party Polling Well Anti-Establishment Party Polling Well At the same time, the pessimistic narrative is old news and misses the big picture. In Europe, the anti-establishment parties are moving to the center on investment-relevant matters - such as EU integration - while the establishment parties are adopting the populist narratives on immigration. BCA's Geopolitical Strategy described this process in a recent Special Report that outlined how political pluralism - as opposed to the party duopoly present in the U.S. - encourages such a political migration to the center.6 Sweden is a dramatic case of increasing political pluralism. As such, its political evolution is relevant to the thesis that investors should not fear pluralism because the anti-establishment will migrate to the center while the establishment adopts anti-immigrant rhetoric. This is precisely what has been happening in Sweden for the past six months. First, the ruling Social Democrats - traditionally proponents of migration in the country - have called for tougher rules on labor migration, a major departure from party orthodoxy. Second, Sweden Democrats have seen an exodus of right-wing members, including the former leader, as the party moves to the middle ground on all non-immigration-related issues. This opens up the possibility for Sweden Democrats to join the pro-business Moderate Party in a coalition deal after the election. Should investors fear the upcoming election? Our high conviction view is no. There are three general conclusions we would make regarding the election: Anti-asylum policies will accelerate. All parties are becoming more anti-immigrant in Sweden as the public turns against the country's liberal asylum policies. This is somewhat irrelevant, however, as the influx of asylum seekers into Europe has already dramatically slowed due to better border enforcement policies by the EU (Chart 11). Meanwhile, the pace of migration to Sweden from other EU countries will not moderate, given that the country is part of the continental Labor Market. This is important as EU migrants make up 32% of total migrants into Sweden and tend to be more highly educated and much better at participating in the labor market. Euroskepticism is irrelevant: There is absolutely no support for exiting the EU, with Swedes among the most ardent supporters of remaining in the bloc. Less than a third of Swedes are optimistic about a life outside the EU, for example (Chart 12). As such, the pace of migration will only moderate in so far as the country accepts less refugees going forward. There will be no break with the EU Labor Market and no "Swexit" referendum on the investable time horizon. Chart 11Asylum Flows Are Slowing Asylum Flows Are Slowing Asylum Flows Are Slowing Chart 12Swedes Are Europhiles Swedes Are Europhiles Swedes Are Europhiles The Moderate Party is not a panacea: The pro-business, center-right, Moderate Party is often seen as a panacea for investors. It is true that the party's rise to power, in 1991, coincided with a severe financial crisis and that it was under its leadership that reform efforts began in earnest. However, the Social Democrats already initiated reforms ahead of their 1991 loss and accelerated structural changes well past Moderate Party rule, which ended in 1994. Some of the deepest cuts to the country's social welfare programs were in fact undertaken under Prime Minister Göran Persson, who was either the finance or prime minister between 1994 and 2006. Bottom Line: Swedish politics will not substantively impact the markets. Sweden Democrats are shifting to the center on non-immigration issues. Meanwhile, moderate parties are becoming more anti-immigrant. While there are no risks, we would also not expect major tailwinds. If the Moderate Party comes to power, it is unlikely to make significant policy departures from the Social Democrats. Banks: In Good Shape... For Now Chart 13Sweden's Banks Are In Excellent Shape Sweden's Banks Are In Excellent Shape Sweden's Banks Are In Excellent Shape Swedish banks have been generating solid earnings growth, far outpacing their EU peers, as net interest margins are at multi-year highs and funding costs are low (Chart 13). Solid domestic economic growth has helped boost lending volumes. Non-performing loans have been in a downtrend since 2010 and have stabilized at very low levels. While we expect lending volumes to stay strong and defaults to remain low over the medium term given robust economic growth, we are more cautious on the earnings front. Our base case is that the Riksbank will finally embark on the beginning of a monetary tightening cycle at the end of 2018, and banks will likely struggle to maintain the current solid pace of earnings growth with a policy-driven flattening of the Swedish yield curve. Sweden has stricter capital requirements than their EU peers and, as such, the banks are far better capitalized. Both the aggregate Liquidity Coverage Ratio, a measure of short-term liquidity resilience, and the Net Stable Funding ratio are above Basel Committee requirements and have steadily increased over the past few quarters. The ratio of bank equity to risk-weighted assets paints an overly sanguine picture given that banks use internal models to calculate risk weights and are likely underestimating the risk associated with their massive mortgage exposure. Still, our preferred metric, the ratio of tangible equity to tangible assets, has remained firmly at elevated levels. Sweden's banking system has long been dominated by four major banks (Nordea, SEB, Svenska Handelsbanken and Swedbank). However, Nordea, Sweden's only global systemically important bank, is planning to move its headquarters to Finland later this year. The move will drastically reduce the size of Sweden's national bank assets from 400% of GDP to just under 300%. Nordea has clashed with Sweden's government over higher taxes and increased regulation and the relocation is projected to save €1.1 billion over the long run. Importantly, Nordea will be overseen by the European Banking Union. Overall, we believe this lowers the risk to the Swedish banking system given the reduction in banking assets. More importantly, Swedish authorities will no longer be financially responsible for future problems that could develop at Nordea. Bottom Line: Swedish bank earnings growth has been solid, but will come under pressure once the Riksbank begins to raise rates this year. Capital levels are elevated, particularly compared to their EU peers. Still, the massive exposure to domestic real estate suggests that banks could not withstand a sharp or prolonged decline in house prices. Housing: The Beginning Of The End? House prices in Sweden have been in an uninterrupted, secular uptrend due to low interest rates, robust demand, a structural supply shortage and considerable tax incentives for home ownership. While many of its EU counterparts had significant housing corrections over the last decade, the Swedish market escaped relatively unscathed. In fact, the last meaningful decline was during the 1990s crisis, when house prices fell close to -20%. Chart 14The Overheated Housing Market##BR##Has Cooled Off The Overheated Housing Market Has Cooled Off The Overheated Housing Market Has Cooled Off Swedish authorities believe that the bubbling housing market poses the greatest risk to the Swedish economy, given the sheer magnitude of the uptrend and the Swedish banking sector's massive exposure (Chart 14). Valuation metrics indicate that housing is overvalued and, as such, the current five-month decline has prompted concerns that a meaningful correction may be underway. However, the recent pullback was a result of a strong supply-side response that began in 2013, specifically the construction of tenant-owned apartments. Last year had the most housing starts since 1990. That new supply is still insufficient to meet expected demand, however, and Swedish policymakers are implementing a 22-point plan to both increase and speed up residential construction. Swedish regulators have introduced multiple macroprudential measures over the past few years in order to both cool demand and boost household resilience. These include placing a cap on the size of mortgages (85% of the value of a home), raising banks' risk weight floors7 and multiple adjustments to amortization requirements. Data suggests that these policies have affected consumer behavior by both decreasing the amount of borrowing and causing buyers to purchase less expensive homes. Additionally, the government has recently approved legislation that will boost the ability of the financial regulator (Finansinspektionen) to act in the event of a potential downtown. The policy measures to cool the housing market have been fairly effective, with house prices now down -4.4% on a year-over-year basis (middle panel). However, economic history teaches us that asset bubbles never deflate peacefully. We are concerned over a structural horizon, but we believe that a massive correction is unlikely over the next year. Economic growth will like remain robust and monetary policy is very accommodative. It will take multiple rate hikes before monetary conditions are restrictive, thereby drastically weakening demand and prompting a sustained reversal in the house price uptrend. Bottom Line: The uninterrupted, long-term surge in Swedish house prices suggests that a bubble has formed. A strong supply side response has softened prices as of late, but a massive correction is not imminent given robust economic growth and very accommodative monetary policy. Monetary Policy: Riksbank On Hold, But Not For Long At the most recent monetary policy meeting in late-April, the Riksbank decided to keep the benchmark repo rate at -0.5%, further exercising caution after prematurely raising rates in 2010-2011. The Riksbank acknowledged that economic growth was "strong", but also maintained that inflation was "subdued" and monetary conditions needed to remain stimulative to ensure that inflation would sustainably stay at the 2% target. They revised their projected path for the repo rate downward, with the first hike now only coming at the end of this year. Even after that liftoff, however, the Riksbank plans to continue reinvesting redemptions and coupon payments from its government bond portfolio, accumulated during its quantitative easing program that ended last December, for "some time". Chart 15Our New Riksbank Monitor##BR##Is Calling For Rate Hikes Our New Riksbank Monitor Is Calling For Rate Hikes Our New Riksbank Monitor Is Calling For Rate Hikes In recent years, the Riksbank has moved the repo rate alongside the ECB's policy rate, in order to protect export competitiveness by preventing an unwanted appreciation of the krona. However, the fundamentals do not justify this. Inflation is in a clear uptrend and has recovered to the Riksbank's target, while euro area inflation is still well below the ECB's target. Additionally, Swedish growth has been outpacing that of the euro area, and relative leading indicators suggest this will continue. While the ECB continues to emphasize that it has no plans to raise interest rates anytime soon, it is now far more difficult for the Riksbank to justify keeping its policy rates below zero as the ECB is doing. It is one thing to have negative interest rates and a cheap currency when there is plenty of economic slack and inflation is well below target. It is quite another to have those same loose policy settings when the output gap is closed, labor markets are at full employment and inflation is at target. This can be seen by the reading from our new Riksbank Central Bank Monitor (Chart 15). The BCA Central Bank Monitors are composite indicators designed to measure cyclical growth and inflation pressures that can influence future monetary policy decisions. A reading above zero indicates that policymakers are facing pressures to raise interest rates. We have Monitors for most developed markets, but we had not yet built the indicator for Sweden. Currently, the Riksbank Monitor is in "tight money required" territory, as it has been since late-2015. Though the Monitor has been primarily being driven upward by the growth component, the inflation component is also above the zero line. Forward interest rate pricing in the Swedish Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve indicates that markets are not expecting the Riksbank to begin hiking rates until July 2019. Only 95bps of hikes are priced by March 2020, suggesting that the market expects a very moderate start to the tightening cycle once it begins. Given the still-positive growth and inflation backdrop, we expect that the Riksbank will begin to hike earlier - likely by year-end as currently projected by the central bank - and by more than currently discounted by markets. Bottom Line: Negative interest rates are inconsistent with a robust Swedish economy that is operating with no spare capacity. Going forward, strong growth momentum, rising inflation and a tight labor market will force policymakers to raise rates earlier, and by more, than markets expect. Investment Implications With the market not priced for the move in Riksbank monetary policy that we expect, investors can position for that shift through the following recommended positions (Chart 16): Chart 16How To Position For##BR##Higher Swedish Interest Rates How To Position For Higher Swedish Interest Rates How To Position For Higher Swedish Interest Rates Underweight Swedish bonds within a global hedged fixed income portfolio. Swedish government debt has been a star performer since the beginning of 2017, outperforming the Barclays Global Treasury Index by 101bps (currency-hedged into U.S. dollars). Global yields have risen over that period while Swedish yields have remained fairly flat. This trend is unlikely to continue, moving forward. The Riksbank ended the net new bond purchases in its quantitative easing program last December, removing a powerful tailwind for Swedish debt performance. If the Riksbank begins to hike rates by year-end, as it is projecting and we expect, then interest rate convergence will begin to undermine the ability for Sweden to continue its impressive run of fixed income outperformance. Enter a Sweden 2-year/10-year government bond yield curve flattener. As the Riksbank begins to shift to a more hawkish tone over the coming months, markets will begin to reprice not only the level of Swedish interest rates but the shape of the Swedish yield curve. That means not only higher bond yields but a flatter curve, as too few rate hikes are currently priced at the short-end. Growth is robust, inflation is at target and the unemployment rate is well below NAIRU. With their mandates met, the Riksbank will be forced to act more aggressively. Importantly, there is no flattening currently priced into the Swedish bond forward curve, thus there is no negative carry associated with putting on a flattener now. Short 2-year Sweden government bonds vs. 2-year German government bonds. The yield spread between the Swedish and German 2-year yield is only 5bps, well below its long-run average of 27bps. Relative fundamentals suggest that the Riksbank will no longer be able to shadow the actions of the ECB (negative policy rates) as it has over the past few years. Growth in Sweden is likely to outpace that of the euro area once again in 2018. Swedish inflation is already at the Riksbank target while euro area inflation continues to undershoot the ECB benchmark. Also, the currencies have moved in opposite directions since 2017, with the Euro Area trade-weighted index (TWI) rising by 7% and Sweden TWI falling by 6%, suggesting that Sweden can better handle tighter monetary policy. With the ECB signaling that it is in no hurry to begin raising interest rates (even after it ends its asset purchase program at the end of the year, as we expect), policy rate differentials will drive the 2-year Sweden-Germany spread wider over the next 12-18 months, with no spread move currently priced into the forwards. Patrick Trinh, Associate Editor patrick@bcaresearch.com Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com 1 Non-Accelerating Inflation Rate Of Unemployment 2 https://www.reuters.com/article/us-germany-wages/german-pay-deal-heralds-end-of-wage-restraint-in-europes-largest-economy-idUSKBN1FP0PD 3 https://www.riksbank.se/globalassets/media/rapporter/ppr/engelska/2018/180426/monetary-policy-report-april-2018 4 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "The Future Of Western Democracy: Back To Blood," dated November 18, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "The End Of Europe's Welfare State," dated June 26, 2015, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Should Investors Fear Political Plurality," dated November 29, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 7 25% of the value of a mortgage loan must be included when banks calculate their required regulatory risk-weighted capital levels.
Highlights Stay overweight Chinese ex-tech stocks for now, despite the recent spell of poor relative performance. Our downgrade watch for Q2 remains in effect, however, as the risks to this position are clearly to the downside. Recent data suggests that China's industrial sector continues to slow. We also see more downside risk from monetary policy and the pace of structural reform than the market, underscoring that our stance towards China is a low-conviction overweight. Taiwan's recent outperformance has largely been passive, in that it has been driven by the movement in stock prices outside of Taiwan. The factors boosting the relative performance of technology and bank stocks are unlikely to be sustained, suggesting that investors should remain underweight Taiwan within Greater China bourses. Feature Chart 1Ex-Tech Stocks Edging Closer##BR##To A Breakdown Vs Global Ex-Tech Stocks Edging Closer To A Breakdown Vs Global Ex-Tech Stocks Edging Closer To A Breakdown Vs Global Chinese ex-technology stock prices edged closer to a technical breakdown in April (Chart 1), as ongoing concerns about the impact of a trade war with the U.S. weighed further on investor sentiment. Consumer discretionary stocks have fared particularly poorly, as President Xi's pledge to open up the auto sector (which is negative for the market share of domestic firms) underscores that car producers are facing a losing scenario even if a further escalation in trade tension with the U.S. is avoided. Panel 2 of Chart 1 shows that recent decline has brought consumer discretionary stocks back to early-2017 levels relative to the broad market. The selloff in the consumer discretionary sector has significantly benefitted one of China Investment Strategy's open trades: long investable consumer staples / short investable consumer discretionary, initiated on November 16. The trade had already been outperforming prior to Xi's pledge in response to the original basis that we articulated (negative impact on autos from environmental reforms), but the news of a likely deterioration in market share has helped the trade earn a whopping 20% in less than 6 months. We recommend that investors stick with the call for now, until greater clarity emerges about the ultimate impact of trade negotiations with the U.S. But we have also recommended that investors place Chinese ex-tech stocks on downgrade watch for Q2 (while maintaining an overweight stance versus global equities), and that technical measures should be watched closely to determine whether a downgrade is indeed warranted. Within this framework, the recent deterioration in performance is worrying, raising the question of whether it is time for investors to reduce their exposure to ex-tech shares. Stay Overweight, For Now... Three factors point to "no" as the answer: Chart 2A Pro-Cyclical Allocation Is Consistent##BR##With A China Overweight A Pro-Cyclical Allocation Is Consistent With A China Overweight A Pro-Cyclical Allocation Is Consistent With A China Overweight Despite the weakness of Chinese stock prices over the past few weeks, they have not yet broken down technically: Chart 1 highlighted that their relative performance versus global stocks remains above its 200-day moving average. For now, this is consistent with a worsening in sentiment rather than full-fledged expectations of a sharp deterioration in equity fundamentals. Investors are clearly reacting to the negative potential effect of trade protectionism on ex-tech earnings, the ultimate impact of which remains subject to negotiation. We singled out consumer discretionary stocks as being likely to fare poorly under any realistic trade outcome, but the decline in Chinese relative performance since mid-April has occurred across all sectors, suggesting that a reversal may occur outside of the discretionary sector if a trade deal is struck with the U.S. Talks in China between high level U.S. and Chinese officials tomorrow and Friday are a hopeful sign that a relatively beneficial deal for both sides may be possible, suggesting that it is too early to cut exposure. Over a 1-year time horizon, BCA continues to recommend that investors remain overweight global equities within an overall balanced portfolio. We have highlighted in previous reports that the Chinese investable stock market is now a decidedly high-beta equity market versus the global benchmark (even in ex-tech terms),1 meaning that an overweight stance is justified barring a significantly negative alpha. Since Chart 2 illustrates that Chinese ex-tech stocks have in fact generated a modestly positive alpha over the past year, a pro-cyclical asset allocation stance continues to favor an above-benchmark weight to Chinese equities ex-technology. For now, our investment recommendations remain unchanged: investors should stay overweight Chinese stocks excluding the technology sector over the coming 6-12 months. But as highlighted below, the risks to China are clearly to the downside, which supports our decision to place Chinese stocks on downgrade watch for Q2. This watch remains in effect for the coming two months, a period during which we hope fuller clarity on the U.S./China trade dispute as well as the pace of decline in China's industrial sector will emerge. Bottom Line: Stay overweight Chinese ex-tech stocks for now, despite the recent spell of poor relative performance. Our downgrade watch for Q2 remains in effect, however, as the risks to this position are clearly to the downside. ...But The Risks Are To The Downside Table 1 updates our macro data monitor that we have published in a few previous reports. The monitor tracks the data series that we found to have the most reliable leading properties when predicting the Li Keqiang index (LKI),2 which we have defined as the most relevant proxy of China's business cycle. Table 1No Convincing Signs Of An##BR##Impending Upturn In China's Economy China: A Low-Conviction Overweight China: A Low-Conviction Overweight Chart 3Lower Inventories =##BR##A Rise In Housing Construction? Lower Inventories = A Rise In Housing Construction? Lower Inventories = A Rise In Housing Construction? The table now shows a March datapoint for all of the series that we track, and continues to argue that the trend in Chinese industrial activity is down. In particular, it appears to confirm that the elevated January/February levels in Bloomberg's calculation of the LKI were likely noise, and not a signal of an impending uptrend. The table highlights that none of the components of our leading indicator for the LKI are above their 12-month moving average, and 5 out of the 6 components fell in March. While the April update of the Caixin manufacturing PMI is being released as we go to press, the official manufacturing PMI also fell in April. On the housing front, floor space sold, one of the most important leading indicators for residential construction activity in China, has also decelerated over the past two months. In last week's joint Special Report with our Emerging Markets Strategy service, my colleague Ellen JingYuan He noted that steel prices are at risk not only because of a likely increase in supply, but from weaker demand due to a potential slowdown in the property market. BCA's China Investment Strategy service has actually taken a cautiously optimistic stance towards the housing market, and noted in an early-February report that there were a few signs of a pickup in activity.3 Chart 3 presents the most hopeful case, which is that the multi-year downtrend in residential construction relative to sales may be over given the significant reduction in housing inventories that has occurred over the past two years. Still, the level of inventories remains quite elevated by conventional standards, and it is difficult to see growth in residential construction sustainably rise if floor space sold remains weak, as it has been for the past two months. Given the recent evolution of the important macro data from China, our view is that the downside risk to the industrial sector should be clear to most investors. However, the potential for monetary policy easing and the extent of the tailwind for China from global growth remain two areas where we see more downside risk than some in the market. On the policy front, China's recent cut in the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) was greeted by some analysts as a sign of easing monetary policy, with others pointing to the recent decline in government bond yields as a clear sign that China's monetary policy is about to become less restrictive. However, we explained in a recent Special Report why the 3-month repo rate is currently the de-facto policy rate,4 and Chart 4 highlights that it appears to lead yields at the short-end. The recent tick down in the latter appears to be a delayed response to the sharp decline in the former, which preceded the RRR cut. Specifically, the repo rate slide was triggered by news reports in late-March that the deadline for new rules to be imposed on China's asset management industry would be extended, which is consistent with our argument that roughly 3/4ths of the tightening in monetary policy that has occurred since late-2016 has actually been regulatory/macro-prudential in nature. Given that the 3-month repo rate has since rebounded back to its post-2017 average following the announcement, we see no indication of any intension by the PBOC to ease monetary policy. Concerning trade, while the threat to China's export growth from U.S. protectionism is obvious, some investors have argued that global demand may be strong enough to overwhelm this negative effect and that it will buoy Chinese export growth (and, by extension, imports). This line of reasoning has a strong basis; Chart 5 shows that our BCA Global LEI is forecasting solid industrial production (IP) growth over the coming few months, and we have noted in past reports that there is a strong link between global IP and Chinese export growth. Chart 4No Convincing Signs Of Monetary Easing No Convincing Signs Of Monetary Easing No Convincing Signs Of Monetary Easing Chart 5Global Demand Likely To Remain Solid Global Demand Likely To Remain Solid Global Demand Likely To Remain Solid But Chart 6 presents a problem with this argument, which is that China's reform pain threshold is very likely positively correlated with global growth. In short, BCA has written extensively about how China has embarked on a multi-year reform effort that will likely weigh on growth in its early stages. We have made it clear that the pace of these reform efforts is likely to be responsive to the pace of economic growth (i.e. policymakers will set the pace to avoid a major growth slowdown), but the other side of this coin is that policymakers are likely to take advantage of a stronger export sector by increasing the pace of reforms. So while some investors view the external sector of China's economy as having some potential to counter weakness in the industrial sector if major protectionist action can be avoided, our sense is that ramped up reform efforts will offset and possibly overwhelm this positive factor, were it to occur. As a final point, in the context of Chart 6, material easing in either policy rates or the pace of reform efforts may occur over the coming 6-12 months, but it would likely be in response to a more serious slowdown in the economy than we are currently observing. As we noted in our April 18 Weekly Report,5 the possibility that Chinese authorities will need to stimulate the economy over the coming year is interesting because it raises the prospect of another economic mini-cycle in China, potentially leading to another meaningful acceleration. But the economic and financial market circumstances that would precede such an event are unlikely to be happy ones for investors, raising the risk of a serious selloff in China-related assets before policy eases sufficiently to return to an overweight stance. Chart 6If Demand For Chinese Exports Stays Strong,##BR##Reform Efforts Will Intensify China: A Low-Conviction Overweight China: A Low-Conviction Overweight Bottom Line: Recent data suggests that China's industrial sector continues to slow. We also see more downside risk than many investors from monetary policy and the pace of structural reform, underscoring that our stance towards China is a low-conviction overweight. An Update On Taiwanese Equities We last wrote about Taiwanese stocks in our December 14 Weekly Report,6 and argued that investors stick with our short MSCI Taiwan / long MSCI China trade and our underweight stance towards Taiwan vs Greater China bourses, despite extended technical conditions. Our recommendation was based on the argument that Taiwanese tech sector underperformance had been driven by material strength in the trade-weighted Taiwanese dollar (TWD), and that a lasting depreciation in the currency would be the most likely catalyst for a re-rating. Since our report in December, the relative performance of Taiwanese stocks has been volatile. After a period of underperformance versus Greater China stock prices, Taiwanese stocks then rose sharply in relative terms from late-February to early-April. The magnitude of the rise was sufficiently large to cause the relative price index to break above its 200-day moving average (Chart 7). However, Taiwanese relative performance has reversed course over the past month, retracing over half of the February to April surge. Chart 8 highlights that these confusing moves in Taiwanese stock prices versus Greater China have largely reflected passive outperformance in two sectors: tech sector outperformance versus China, and banking industry group outperformance versus global banks. On the tech front, Chinese tech stocks have been under pressure over the past month due to the tech-focused nature of U.S. import tariffs, and global investors appear to believe that Taiwanese tech stocks would not be as impacted by these tariffs as their Chinese peers. We disagree, as the export intensity of Taiwan's tech sector to China is quite high: exports to China account for 15% of Taiwan's GDP, and electronic components (i.e. semiconductors) account for nearly half of exports to China. This suggests that the tariff impact on Taiwan's tech sector will be sizeable even if it is indirect. Chart 7A Volatile Relative##BR##Performance Trend A Volatile Relative Performance Trend A Volatile Relative Performance Trend Chart 8Tech And Banks Have Driven Recent##BR##Developments In Relative Performance Tech And Banks Have Driven Recent Developments In Relative Performance Tech And Banks Have Driven Recent Developments In Relative Performance On the banking front, Chart 9 highlights that the outperformance of Taiwanese banks versus their global peers has occurred due to a failure of the former to selloff with the latter over the past few months. Global banks appear to be reacting to the recent flattening in the global yield curve caused by a rise at the short-end, whereas there is no sign of upcoming monetary policy tightening in Taiwan and Taiwanese banks have historically been low-beta versus their global peers (Chart 10). Chart 9Taiwanese Banks Have Passively##BR##Outperformed Global Banks Taiwanese Banks Have Passively Outperformed Global Banks Taiwanese Banks Have Passively Outperformed Global Banks Chart 10Continued Bank Outperformance Not##BR##Likely Barring A Decline In Global Equities Continued Bank Outperformance Not Likely Barring A Decline In Global Equities Continued Bank Outperformance Not Likely Barring A Decline In Global Equities We doubt that Taiwan's banks will continue to outperform global banks over the coming 6-12 months without a generalized selloff in global stock prices. As we noted earlier, BCA's house view is overweight global equities (and financials) over the cyclical horizon on the basis of still-strong global growth, stimulative U.S. fiscal policy, and the view that global monetary policy will not reach restrictive territory over the coming year. As such, we are inclined to lean against the recent outperformance of Taiwanese banks and, by extension, the trend in ex-tech relative performance. Bottom Line: Taiwan's recent outperformance has largely been passive, in that it has been driven by the movement in stock prices outside of Taiwan. The factors boosting the relative performance of technology and bank stocks are unlikely to be sustained, suggesting that investors should remain underweight within Greater China bourses. Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Research's China Investment Strategy Special Report "China: No Longer A Low-Beta Market," published January 11, 2018. Available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research's China Investment Strategy Special Report "The Data Lab: Testing The Predictability Of China's Business Cycle," published November 30, 2017. Available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Research's China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Is China's Housing Market Stabilizing?," published February 8, 2018. Available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Research's China Investment Strategy Special Report "Seven Questions About Chinese Monetary Policy," published February 22, 2018. Available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Research's China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "The Question That Won't Go Away," published April 18, 2018. Available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Research's China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Taiwan: Awaiting A Re-Rating Catalyst," published December 14, 2017. Available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations