China
This week’s <i>Global Investment Strategy</i> report titled Fourth Quarter 2022 Strategy Outlook: A Three-Act Play discusses the outlook for the global economy and financial markets for the rest of 2022 and beyond.
Executive Summary EU Metal Industry Under Threat
EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry
EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry
Russia’s threat to cut off all remaining exports of natural gas to the EU via Ukraine will further imperil the bloc’s struggling metals industry, particularly aluminum smelting – where half of its capacity already has been shut – and zinc refining. The EU will have to prioritize energy security over its renewable-energy goals, given the challenges its manufacturing industries will confront for the next 3-5 years. Surging imports of raw copper concentrates and unwrought metal will consolidate the global dominance of China’s copper refiners, which sharply increased their treatment and refining charges this week. The US likely will see more investment in metals mining and refining on the back of the EU distress, which realistically cannot be addressed until gas and power prices fall to levels that allow them to sustain their operations. Bottom Line: Ongoing supply shocks to the EU’s base-metals industry will force the bloc to prioritize energy security over its renewable-energy goals. This will drive the bloc’s demand for liquified natural gas (LNG) and oil higher, even after short-term measures to increase LNG intake and distribution capacity are completed over the next 2-3 years. We expect the equities of oil and gas producers to outperform metals miners over this period. After being stopped out, we will be re-instating our long XOP ETF position at tonight’s close. Feature Earlier this month, Eurometaux, the EU metals lobbying group, published a memo to the European Commission drawing attention to “Europe’s worsening energy crisis and its existential threat to our future.”1 This is not hyperbole. At the heart of the industry’s woes is a chronic shortage of energy – in any form – for industrial use. Utilities are signing long-term LNG supply contracts to address this shortage, but they can expect to wait 3-4 years or more before gas arrives on Europe’s shores.2 Spot and one-off cargoes will become available over that time, but most of the existing LNG production is under long-term contract. Oil, coal, and nuclear energy are available for power generation, industrial applications and space-heating, and they increasingly are being used in the bloc, but these too are constrained.3 Measures to address the chronic energy shortage hammering the EU base-metals industry will take years to effect, and could come too late to meaningfully preserve existing refining capacity, which has been contracting for years (Chart 1).4 Most of the EU’s metals production is accounted for by aluminum, copper and zinc, which are extremely energy intensive, copper only less so (Chart 2). The surge in LNG prices following Russia's invasion of Ukraine propelled electricity prices higher, given gas is the marginal fuel for EU power generation (Chart 3). This crushed zinc and aluminum refining. Half of the EU’s aluminum smelter capacity – ~ 1mm MT – will be curtailed or shuttered this year, according to European Aluminum.5 Chart 1EU Metal Industry Under Threat
EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry
EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry
Chart 2EU Metals Are Extremely Energy Intensive
EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry
EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry
Chart 3EU Power Price Surge Crushes Metals Refining
EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry
EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry
The surge in European electricity prices and the resulting curtailment or shuttering of zinc refining paced the 2.6% y/y decline in global output in 1H22, which took global production down to 6.77mm MT, according to the International Lead and Zinc Study group. Europe accounts for ~ 15% of global zinc refining.6 Refined zinc consumption fell 3% y/y in 1H22 to 6.74mm MT. China Bingeing On Copper Global refined copper output in the January – July 2022 period slightly outpaced usage – with 3% growth in the former and 2.6% growth in the latter, according to the International Copper Study Group (ICSG). On the back of this report, we lowered our expected supply growth estimate to 3% this year, (Chart 4). This brings our estimate for total supply down by ~400k MT vs. our previous iteration to 25.3mm MT. We are keeping our estimate of 2023 supply growth rate at ~ 4.5%. Our copper demand estimate is a function of real GDP estimated by the World Bank, and remains at just under 26mm MT and 27.2 mm MT for 2022 and 2023 respectively. As a result of the lower 2022 production growth rate, our forecasted copper deficit has widened to ~ 605k tons in 2022 and 480k tons in 2023. The mismatch in supply and demand levels will keep inventories in China and the West under pressure (Charts 5A and 5B). Chart 4Copper Supply Estimate Lowered
Copper Supply Estimate Lowered
Copper Supply Estimate Lowered
Chart 5AChinese Copper Inventories Continue To Draw
Chinese Copper Inventories Continue to Draw
Chinese Copper Inventories Continue to Draw
Chart 5BAs Do Stocks In The West
As Do Stocks In The West
As Do Stocks In The West
China’s imports of copper condensates – the raw material used to make refined copper – surged to 16.65mm tons over January – August 2022, up 9% y/y. Imports of unwrought and semi-fabricated copper were up 8% over the same period at 3.9mm MT, according to Mysteel.com. As is to be expected, treatment and refining charges at Chinese smelters also moved higher: for 3Q22, refiners were charging $93/MT, up $13 from 2Q22 levels and $23/MT from 4Q21, according to Reuters. These charges increase when raw-material supplies increase, and vice versa. This is meant to be a floor charged for refining concentrates to produce refined copper. Real USD Matches US PPI After Re-Opening In an unusual turn of events, the USD Real Effective Exchange Rate (REER) has been moving higher along with the US Producer Price Index for all commodities. This trend started as the global economy accelerated its re-opening in 2021 (Chart 6). The USD has a profound affect on commodity prices: Most globally traded commodities are denominated in USD, funded in USD and invoiced in USD. This is the channel through which the Fed’s monetary policy impacts commodity buyers ex-US. A stronger dollar means commodities in local-currency terms are more expensive, and vice versa. It also means production costs in states that do not peg their currencies to the USD go down, and vice versa. Chart 6Real USD Gains With US PPI During Reopening
Real USD Gains With US PPI During Reopening
Real USD Gains With US PPI During Reopening
Given the USD’s elevated level, copper prices in local-currency terms will continue to face a massive headwind on the demand side, and a massive tailwind on the production side. For households and firms buying commodities, or durable goods with a lot of metals in them (copper, stainless steel, etc.), Fed policy has a direct effect on how their budgets get allocated.7 In the short and long run macroeconomic variables such as the USD influence copper prices by increasing the cost of copper ex-US when the dollar rallies, and vice versa. Fundamental variables like tight inventories, which arise when demand is consistently above supply, impart an upward price bias to the copper forward curve (backwardation increases as inventories decrease). Domestic economic factors matter, too. Copper prices have been pummeled by the meltdown of China’s property sector, which has been the growth engine for the country’s economy, accounting for ~ 30% of its copper demand. The USD has remained well bid following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, presenting a powerful headwind to commodity prices in general. This is particularly true for refined copper, given China accounts for more than 50% of total global consumption. China’s RMB dropped 11.4% vs. the USD from the start of the year to now. This has not stood in the way of a sharp increase in imports of the copper ore and refined metal this year, despite the country’s weak economic performance. Given China’s property-market slowdown and its zero-tolerance COVID-19 policy and its attendant lockdowns, it is difficult to pinpoint a cause for its increased copper demand. It may be opportunistic purchasing – buying the metal when prices are far lower than their peak earlier this year – or it could signal a post-Communist Party Congress increase in economic activity (e.g., more fiscal stimulus hitting the system) officials are preparing for. Investment Implications The EU’s metals-refining sector faces existential challenges as a result of the bloc’s energy crisis. Significant employers – not just the metal refiners – will be confronting limited energy supply and higher costs for years, given the tightness in conventional energy markets – oil, gas and coal. The renewable-energy sector also faces daunting challenges, as a result of difficulties faced by metals refiners and the energy crisis they presently confront. It is worthwhile noting that none of the renewables technology is possible without metals. Given the abundant lessons re reliance on a single supply source Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has provided, we expect investment in US metals mining and refining to increase, as consumers of copper, aluminum and zinc seek to diversify away from Chinese dominance of this sector. This will take time to build out, just as the increase in LNG supplies will take time. This likely will keep a bid under the USD, as manufacturing, mining and refining capex investment shifts to the US. We expect the EU’s drive to secure conventional energy will drive the bloc’s demand for liquified natural gas (LNG) and oil higher, even after currently planned short-term measures to increase LNG intake and distribution capacity are completed over the next 2-3 years. After being stopped out this past week, we will be re-instating our long XOP ETF position on tonight’s close, consistent with our view. Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Ashwin Shyam Research Analyst Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen proposed additional economic sanctions against Russia yesterday including extending price caps on oil to third countries, following the call-up of reserves in Russia last week, and a veiled threat to use nuclear weapons against Ukraine. In a related matter, Gazprom, the state-owned gas producer and trading company, threatened to cut off the remaining gas sales to Europe via Ukraine – close to half the ~ 80mm cm /d still being sold via pipeline to the continent (Chart 7). It is apparent the EU has been anticipating a full shut-off of Russian pipeline gas shipments, which likely motivates von der Leyen’s proposal. Any proposal to increase sanctions on Russia would have to be unanimously approved. Base Metals: Bullish. In a boost to prospective Chile copper production, a BHP executive indicated he expects regulatory uncertainties in the largest copper producing state to ease. BHP mentioned earlier this year that legal certainty in Chile would be key to investing over USD 10 billion in the state. Earlier this month, Chilean voters rejected a constitution, which, among other things, could have curtailed mining operation by including new taxes and environmental regulations. Precious Metals: Neutral. In their Q2 platinum balances report, the World Platinum Investment Council (WPIC) expects FY 2022 surplus to rise more than 50% vs. its Q1 estimates to 974k oz. Weak platinum ETF demand resulting from a strong USD and rising interest rates is expected to outweigh operational constraints in South African and North American mining operations. Bolstering supply is the fact that Russian platinum – which constitutes ~11% of global supply – has been reaching buyers. However, this security of supply may not last. Once buyers’ long-term contracts for Russian platinum end, as in the case with aluminum, companies may self-sanction, turning to the spot market and other producing states instead. For palladium, SFA Oxford sees the metal's surplus dropping to ~92% y/y, as demand is expected to increase and production is forecast to fall (Chart 8). Chart 7
EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry
EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry
Chart 8
Palladium Balances Expected To Drop
Palladium Balances Expected To Drop
Footnotes 1 Please see Europe’s non-ferrous metals producers call for emergency EU action to prevent permanent deindustrialisation from spiralling electricity and gas prices, posted by Eurometaux 6 September 2022. 2 See, e.g., Exclusive: German utilities close to long-term LNG deals with Qatar, sources say published by reuters.com 20 September 2022. 3 For additional discussion, please see Energy Security Rolls Over EU's ESG Agenda, which we published 28 July 2022. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see Agenda for a resilient European metals supply for the green and digital transitions, posted by Eurometaux in mid-2020. 5 Please see Reconciling growth and decarbonisation amidst the energy crisis, posted by European Aluminium May 2022. 6 Please see Column: European smelter hits mean another year of zinc shortfall published by reuters.com 17 May 2022. 7 Please see "Global Dimensions of U.S. Monetary Policy" by Maurice Obstfeld, which appeared in the February 2020 issue of International Journal of Central Banking for an in-depth discussion and analysis. Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Trades Closed in 2022
Please note I will be hosting a live webcast on September 29, 2022 at 9:00 AM HKT for the APAC region. I will discuss the global/China/EM macro outlooks and financial market implications. For clients in the Americas and EMEA, we had a webcast on September 28, 2022. You can access the replay via this link. Arthur Budaghyan Executive Summary Global Semi Stock Prices: Further Downside Ahead
Global Semi Stock Prices: Further Downside Ahead
Global Semi Stock Prices: Further Downside Ahead
Global semiconductor stock prices are still vulnerable to meaningful downside over the next three months. Global semi consumption will contract due to the corresponding waning demand of smartphones, personal computers, and other consumer electronics. Global semi demand in sectors of automobiles and datacenters will continue growing. However, such an increase in demand cannot offset the demand reduction in other sectors. Semiconductor consumption in China has entered a contraction phase. Semiconductor inventories have swelled. Alongside a sharp upsurge in chip production capacity, this increase in inventories will lead to chip price deflation in the next nine months. Nevertheless, the structural outlook for global semiconductor demand remains constructive. We are waiting for a better entry point for semi stocks. Bottom Line: There is more downside in global semiconductor share prices as well as Taiwanese and Korean tech stocks. We will seek to recommend buying semiconductor stocks when a more material decline in semi companies’ profits is priced in their share prices. At the moment, we are downgrading Taiwanese stocks from neutral to underweight relative to the EM equity benchmark but are maintaining an overweight stance on the Korean bourse within an EM equity portfolio. The global semiconductor equity index is breaking below its technical support (Chart 1). The implication is that these share prices are in an air pocket and investors should not chase a declining market. Based on previous cycles, we expect global semiconductor stocks to bottom late this year or early next year and semi sales to trough in 2023Q2. In the previous five cycles, global semi stocks always bottomed before global semi sales and lead times varied from three-to-six months. Chart 2 shows that Taiwan’s semiconductor new export orders lead global semi sales by about three months, and they continue to point to considerable downside in the global semi-industry. Chart 1Global Semi Stocks: Breaking Down
Global Semi Stocks: Breaking Down
Global Semi Stocks: Breaking Down
Chart 2Global Semi Sales: More Downside Ahead
Global Semi Sales: More Downside Ahead
Global Semi Sales: More Downside Ahead
The semiconductor industry has a history of cyclicality. Shortages have been followed by oversupply, which has led to declining prices, revenues, and profits for semi producers. This time is no exception Global Semi Sales: A Cyclical Slump Underway Global semiconductor demand began its downward trajectory in May of this year and will continue to slide in the next three-to-six months. Both the volume and value of China’s semiconductor imports are in a deep contraction and China’s imports from Taiwan have also plummeted (Chart 3). China is the world’s largest consumer of semiconductors, accounting for 35% of global demand. We expect semi sales to remain in contraction in China and to shrink in regions outside China in the next six-to-nine months (Chart 4). Chart 3China's Semi Imports Plummeted
China's Semi Imports Plummeted
China's Semi Imports Plummeted
Chart 4Semi Sales Will Contract Across Regions
Semi Sales Will Contract Across Regions
Semi Sales Will Contract Across Regions
There are several important reasons for the retrenchment worldwide. First, the lockdowns around the world in 2020 and 2021 generated an unprecedented increase in online activities and a corresponding surge in demand for smartphones/PCs/tablets/game consoles/electronic gadgets. This was the main driving force for the boom in global semiconductor sales from 2020Q3 to 2022Q1. The excessive demand for consumer goods and electronics has run its course and global demand will sag in the next six months. As we have been contending since early this year, global exports are set to contract. Households that bought these goods in the past two years probably will not make new purchases in the near term. In addition, declining real disposable income and rising interest rates will constrain consumer spending. Smartphones, PCs, tablets, home appliances, and other household electronic goods consume about half of global semi output. In addition, rising job uncertainties resulting from China’s dynamic zero-COVID policy and slowing household income growth will curb consumption within China. Here are our takeaways for each segment: Chart 5China's Output Of Mobile Phones And PCs Has Been Shrinking
China's Output Of Mobile Phones And PCs Has Been Shrinking
China's Output Of Mobile Phones And PCs Has Been Shrinking
Mobile phones: Mobile phones are the largest contributor to global semi sales, with a share of 31% as of 2021, based on the data from World Semiconductor Trade Statistics (WSTS). According to the International Data Corporation (IDC), global smartphone shipments are set to decline by 6.5% year-over-year in volume terms in 2022. Smartphone OEMs cut their orders drastically in 2022 because of high inventories and low demand, with no signs of an immediate recovery. China accounts for 67% of global mobile phone production and its mobile phone production has been contracting (Chart 5, top panel). Traditional PCs and tablets: Based on data from the IDC, global traditional PC1 and tablet shipments are set to decline by 12.8% year-over-year in 2022 and by an additional 2.6% next year in volume terms. Computer production in China, which is the world’s largest computer producer and exporter, also shows massive downsizing (Chart 5, bottom panel). Home appliances: China is also the largest producer and exporter of air conditioners (ACs), washing machines, refrigerators, and freezers. Except for a slight growth in AC output in response to heatwaves in China and Europe, China’s output of other home appliances will shrink. Globally, these industries accounted for about half of all semiconductor sales in 2021. Given the overconsumption of these goods worldwide over the past two years, we expect a material decline in these sectors in the next six-to-nine months. Second, automobiles, servers, and industrial electronics, which together account for about 30% of global semi sales, will have positive single-digit growth going forward. Yet, such an increase will not be enough to offset the lost demand from the consumer electronic goods sector in the next six-to-nine months. Chart 6Global Auto Production Will Rise
Global Auto Production Will Rise
Global Auto Production Will Rise
Automotive (accounts for 11% of world chip demand): The chip shortage in this sector has eased only moderately. Auto output levels in major producing countries remain well below their pre-pandemic levels (Chart 6). In light of improved foundry capacity, semiconductor producers will be able to produce automotive chips and reduce lingering shortages. However, for most chips to automakers, there are no supply shortages. Only a small number of categories of automotive chips, such as microcontrollers (MCU) and insulated-gate bipolar transistors (IGBT), are still in tight supply. Given that the total automotive sector only accounted for about 5% of total global semi sales last year, the recovery in global automobile output will contribute only limited growth to global semi sales. Servers (account for 10% of world chip demand): The surge in online activities resulted in greater demand for cloud services and remote work applications, both of which require computer servers. Total server demand is comprised of data servers for cloud providers and private enterprises, with the former as the main driving force in recent years. Data center expansion among cloud service providers will be driven by 5G, automotive, cloud gaming, and high-performance computing. After expanding by 10% last year, the pace of annual growth in global server shipments will likely be more moderate, to about 5%-6% in the next couple of quarters. Chart 7Global Industrial Demand For Chips Is Set to Decelerate
Global Industrial Demand For Chips Is Set to Decelerate
Global Industrial Demand For Chips Is Set to Decelerate
Industrial electronics (account for 9% of world chip demand): The growth rate in semi demand for this sector is falling. The global manufacturing new order-to-inventory ratio has plunged, and global manufacturing production is set to decline for the rest of this year and through to 2023H1 (Chart 7). Nevertheless, given structural tailwinds for industrial electronics, we expect semi demand in this sector to dip to single-digit growth in the near term rather than to contract. Third, with semiconductor inventories having surged, new orders for chips, and hence their production, will plummet. The length and intensity of the chip shortage, which started in 2020H2, triggered stockpiling among a broad range of customers, including manufacturers of smartphones and other consumer electronics. Moreover, the recent slowdown in smartphone/PC demand increased the inventory of silicon chips. Chart 8Semiconductor Inventory Overhang
Semiconductor Inventory Overhang
Semiconductor Inventory Overhang
China had also stockpiled semiconductors from 2020Q2 to 2021Q4. With faltering demand, the country will continue its destocking process in the next couple of quarters. Semiconductor inventories in Taiwan and Korea have surged, corroborating the fact that the current cyclical downturn in the global semi sector will be a severe one (Chart 8). Hence, businesses in the semi supply chain will continue to draw upon their inventories rather than increase their semiconductors orders. This will reduce semiconductor demand meaningfully in the coming months. Bottom Line: The cyclical slump in worldwide semiconductor sales has further to go, with the sector’s sale volumes and prices projected to contract in the next six months. Semi producers will experience a substantial decline in their profits. Comparing Cycles Previous cycles may provide insight in the downside of the cyclical slump in global semi sales. In the previous five cycles, global semi sales experienced a contraction, ranging from 7% to 45% (Table 1). In the current cycle, global semi sales still had 7% year-over-year growth in 2022Q2 (Chart 9). Table 1Six Cyclical Downturns In Global Semiconductor Market
Have Global Semi Stocks Hit Bottom?
Have Global Semi Stocks Hit Bottom?
Chart 9Global Semi Stocks And Global Semi Sales Global Semiconductor Market: Sales & Share Prices
Global Semi Stocks And Global Semi Sales Global Semiconductor Market: Sales & Share Prices
Global Semi Stocks And Global Semi Sales Global Semiconductor Market: Sales & Share Prices
In fact, the current downturn could be deeper than the one between 2018 and 2019 (when sales contracted by 16%) for the following reasons: Sales of both cell phones and PCs will likely dwindle further this time than they did in 2018 to 2019. The pandemic boosted demand for consumer electronics, but this also brought forward future demand. In comparison with 2018, the current cycle might have a longer replacement cycle for mobile phones and PCs. Unlike 2019, global demand for consumer goods will likely contract rather than decelerate. This has ramifications for the duration and magnitude of the semi downturn. Economic growth, and job and income uncertainties in China are much worse now than they were between 2018 and 2019. These factors will likely lead to a bigger cut in IT spending by both consumers and businesses, resulting in a larger downturn in global semi demand in this cycle. The tech battle between the US and China is more intense than in it was from 2018 to 2019. In mid-2018, the U.S. imposed a 25% tariff on Chinese imports of semiconductor goods, including machines and flat panel displays. China retaliated by imposing its own 25% tariff on U.S. exports of semiconductor goods, such as test equipment. This month, the US imposed new restrictions on NVIDIA and AMD in relation to selling artificial intelligence chips to Chinese customers. The US also plans to curb further its shipments of chipmaking tools to China. These plans will cut China’s imports of high-end semi products, for which producers enjoy high profit margins. In addition, the shortage of these chips will stall the development and sales of many consumer products within China, which will thereby reduce demand for other types of chips needed for consumer products. Chart 10Rapid Semi Capacity Expansion Worldwide
Rapid Semi Capacity Expansion Worldwide
Rapid Semi Capacity Expansion Worldwide
Global semi capacity expansion has recently been much stronger in current cycle than it was in the 2016-2018 cycle. This may lead to a bigger supply surplus in this cycle than in the last one. It takes about 18-24 months, on average, to build a new semiconductor fabrication plant. Thus, large capital expenditures by semi producers in 2021-22 entail considerable new supply in 2023-24. According to IC Insights, the annual wafer capacity growth rates were 6.5% in 2020, 8.5% in 2021 and 8.7% in 2022. This compares with 4%-6.5% between 2016 and 2018 (Chart 10). Rapid capacity expansion typically leads to price deflation for chips and is therefore negative for the semi producers’ profitability and their share prices. Are global semi stock prices already pricing bad news? We do not think so. Nearly all major players saw a drop in revenues in the past cycle. In sharp contrast, only Intel’s revenues have dropped so far in the current cycle (Chart 11). Global semi stock prices will continue falling as companies report shrinking sales and earnings in the next couple of quarters. In former cycles when global semi stocks bottomed, investor sentiment – as measured by the net EPS revisions – was more downbeat than it is currently (Chart 12). Chart 11More Semi Companies' Sales Are Likely To Contract
More Semi Companies' Sales Are Likely To Contract
More Semi Companies' Sales Are Likely To Contract
Chart 12Global Semi Stock Prices: Net EPS To Drop More
Global Semi Stock Prices: Net EPS To Drop More
Global Semi Stock Prices: Net EPS To Drop More
Bottom Line: The global semiconductor sector’s cyclical slump could be deeper than it was in the 2018-2019 cycle. Hence, shares prices will fall considerably more than they did in late 2018. Ramifications For Taiwanese And Korean Markets Taiwanese and Korean semiconductor stock prices will probably continue to fall in absolute terms. The former recently broke its three-year moving average and the latter its six-year moving average (Chart 13). Chart 13Taiwanese And Korean Semi Stock Prices Will Fall Further
Taiwanese And Korean Semi Stock Prices Will Fall Further
Taiwanese And Korean Semi Stock Prices Will Fall Further
Chart 14TSMC: Smartphone And HPC Make 81% Of Revenue
Have Global Semi Stocks Hit Bottom?
Have Global Semi Stocks Hit Bottom?
For TSMC, the smartphone sector still accounts for 38% of revenues (Chart 14). Hence, a contraction in global smartphone sales in the next six-to-nine months could hurt the company’s top and bottom lines considerably. Meanwhile, the high-performance computing (HPC) sector became the largest contributor of TSMC revenues with a 43% share. A slowdown in data center investment and a decrease in GPU demand due to falling bitcoin prices will also materially affect the company’s profitability. In addition, the US government’s AI chips export restriction policy will decrease NVIDIA and AMD AI sales to China. According to NVIDIA’s news release, approximately US$400 million in potential chip sales to China (including Hong Kong) will likely be subject to this new restriction. AI chips are manufactured by TSMC with its advanced node technology and have a high-profit margin. Hence, the new policy will negatively impact TSMC’s revenues and profits. For Samsung, the memory market is in a free-fall due to plummeting demand (Chart 15). TrendForce expects the average overall DRAM price to drop by 13-18% in 2022Q4 because of high inventories in the supply chain and stagnant demand. The semi shipment-to-inventories ratios for both Taiwan and South Korea nosedived, pointing to lower semi stock prices in these two markets (Chart 16). Chart 15Samsung: Vulnerable To Sinking Prices Of Memory Chips
Samsung: Vulnerable To Sinking Prices Of Memory Chips
Samsung: Vulnerable To Sinking Prices Of Memory Chips
Chart 16Semi Shipments-to-Inventory Ratios Plunged In Taiwan And Korea
Semi Shipments-to-Inventory Ratios Plunged In Taiwan And Korea
Semi Shipments-to-Inventory Ratios Plunged In Taiwan And Korea
Bottom Line: Both TSMC and Samsung stock prices have more downside over the next three months. Equity Valuations And Investment Conclusions The global semiconductor stock index in USD terms has tumbled by 45% from its recent peak. Multiples of semiconductor stocks are near their long-term average levels (Chart 17 and 18). These multiples could undershoot as they did in 2018-2019, which means even more downside is ahead. Chart 17Multiples Of Semi Stocks Could Undershoot
Multiples Of Semi Stocks Could Undershoot
Multiples Of Semi Stocks Could Undershoot
Chart 18Multiples Of Semi Stocks Could Undershoot
Multiples Of Semi Stocks Could Undershoot
Multiples Of Semi Stocks Could Undershoot
Aside from the profit outlook, higher US bond yields are also causing multiple compression for global semiconductor stocks (Chart 19). As to the allocation to semi stocks within an EM equity portfolio, we recommend downgrading Taiwan from a neutral allocation to underweight and reiterate an overweight stance on the KOSPI. The US-China geopolitical confrontation will escalate in the coming years and Taiwan is at the epicenter of this. These are relative calls, that is against the EM benchmark (Chart 20). We remain negative on their absolute performance. Chart 19Higher US Bond Yields = Multiple Compression In Global Semi Stocks
Higher US Bond Yields = Multiple Compression In Global Semi Stocks
Higher US Bond Yields = Multiple Compression In Global Semi Stocks
Chart 20Downgrade Taiwan To Underweight Relative To The EM Benchmark
Downgrade Taiwan To Underweight Relative To The EM Benchmark
Downgrade Taiwan To Underweight Relative To The EM Benchmark
Finally, the structural outlook for global semiconductor demand remains constructive. We are waiting for a better entry point. We would recommend buying semiconductor stocks after pricing in a more material contraction in semi companies’ revenues and profits. Ellen JingYuan He Associate Vice President ellenj@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Traditional PCs are comprised of desktops, notebooks and workstations.
Chinese industrial profit growth contracted for the second consecutive month on a year-to-date year-on-year basis in August, falling 2.1% y/y in the first eight months of the year. The deterioration is broad-based across industries. However, the weakness…
Executive Summary The Chinese Economy Is Facing Deflationary Pressures
The Chinese Economy Is Facing A Risk of Deflation
The Chinese Economy Is Facing A Risk of Deflation
China’s economy is facing a deflationary threat. Core consumer price inflation is below 1%, and producer (ex-factory) price inflation has decelerated rapidly and will soon deflate. Bank loan growth remains subdued due to the deepening property market slump and lackluster credit demand in the private sector. In view of the reluctance of households and enterprises to spend, invest and hire, the multiplier of stimulus in this cycle will be lower than in previous ones. China’s property market woes continued in August and a turnaround is not likely in the near term. China’s overseas shipments are set to contract in the months ahead. China needs to reduce interest rates and weaken its exchange rate to battle deflationary pressures and reflate the system. Thus, Chinese authorities will not prevent a further depreciation in the yuan versus the US dollar - as long as the decline is orderly and gradual. Bottom Line: The risk-reward profile remains unattractive for Chinese stocks in absolute terms. For global equity portfolios, we recommend a neutral allocation to Chinese onshore stocks and an underweight stance in investable stocks. Escalating deflationary pressures mean that onshore asset allocators should continue to favor government bonds over stocks. Recovery prospects for China’s economy remain dim. Despite August’s better-than-expected growth in industrial output and retail sales, economic activity in the months ahead will be weighed down by a lingering real estate slump, recurring disruptions linked to Covid and a budding contraction in exports. Related Report China Investment StrategyThe Party Congress And Beyond As discussed in our previous report, China’s transition from zero Covid tolerance to a managed approach to living with the virus will be a measured but protracted process. The conditions are not yet in place for a pivotal change in the country’s dynamic zero-Covid strategy. Thus, the risk of outbreaks and ensuing lockdowns still constitute a major hurdle for private domestic demand in the near term. China’s exports are set to shrink in the coming months due to a relapse in global demand for consumer goods (ex-autos). Domestic and external headwinds confronted by China underscore that the primary economic risk is deflation. Chinese policymakers need to lower interest rates and allow the currency to depreciate to battle deflationary pressures. Odds are high that the PBoC will cut rates further. However, the efficacy of reflationary efforts is doubtful due to three factors: uncertainty over the dynamic zero-Covid policy and the outlook for Omicron; persistent real estate woes; and the downbeat sentiment among corporates and households. Chart 1Upsides In Chinese Equity Prices Are Capped Without Aggressive Stimulus
Upsides In Chinese Equity Prices Are Capped Without Aggressive Stimulus
Upsides In Chinese Equity Prices Are Capped Without Aggressive Stimulus
Therefore, our outlook for China’s business cycle remains a U-shaped recovery with risks skewed to the downside in the next few months. Consistently, the risk-reward of Chinese stocks remains poor. Their absolute performance is also at risk from a further selloff in US/global equities as discussed in the latest Emerging Markets Strategy report. We continue to recommend a neutral stance on Chinese onshore stocks and underweight allocation for Chinese offshore stocks within a global equity portfolio (Chart 1). Depressed Credit Demand And Low Stimulus Multiplier Demand for credit from China’s private sector remains depressed, reflected by a very muted credit impulse when local government bond issuance is excluded (Chart 2). Critically, banks have been unable to accelerate the pace of lending even after the PBoC cut rates and urged them to boost lending (Chart 3). Chart 2The Credit Impulse Remains Muted
The Credit Impulse Remains Muted
The Credit Impulse Remains Muted
Chart 3Subdued Loan Growth Despite Lower Interest Rates
Subdued Loan Growth Despite Lower Interest Rates
Subdued Loan Growth Despite Lower Interest Rates
The growth rate of medium-to-long-term consumer loans, which are primarily composed of residential mortgages, continues to plunge (Chart 4, top panel). New household loan origination is contracting (Chart 4, bottom panel). Our proprietary measure of marginal propensity to spend for households dropped to an all-time low, mirroring consumers’ downbeat sentiment (Chart 5). Chart 4Household Loan Demand Is Depressed...
Household Loan Demand Is Depressed...
Household Loan Demand Is Depressed...
Chart 5...And Sentiment Remains in The Doldrums
...And Sentiment Remains in The Doldrums
...And Sentiment Remains in The Doldrums
Corporate credit flow improved slightly with medium-to-long-term corporate loan growth ticked up in August (Chart 6). While it is difficult to quantify, it is likely that the recent modest improvement in corporate loan growth was mainly due to state-owned banks’ lending to local government financing vehicles (LGFV) to purchase land. The latter is de-facto bailing out local governments that heavily depend on land sales. Land transfer revenues made up 23% of local government aggregate expenditure in the past 12 months (Chart 7). Chart 6Corporate Loan Growth Slightly Improved In August
Corporate Loan Growth Slightly Improved In August
Corporate Loan Growth Slightly Improved In August
Chart 7Land Sales Are Critical For Local Government Financing
Land Sales Are Critical For Local Government Financing
Land Sales Are Critical For Local Government Financing
Chart 8Corporates' Investment Sentiment Is Worsening
Corporates' Investment Sentiment Is Worsening
Corporates' Investment Sentiment Is Worsening
Consistent with poor business sentiment, enterprises’ investment expectation deteriorated in August (Chart 8). Given private-sector’s reluctance to borrow, the multiplier of stimulus will be lower than that in previous cycles. Consequently, China’s policymakers have no choice but to bump up fiscal stimulus and cut interest rates even more. Property Market: No Turnaround In Sight Yet China’s property market woes continued in August with a further weakening in housing market indicators (Chart 9). Home sales tumbled by 25% in August from a year ago. Real estate investment shrinkage deepened and home price deflation accelerated. Property market indicators probably will begin to show a rate-of-change improvement in the coming months due to a more favorable base effect. However, their annual growth rates will remain deeply negative, probably posting a double-digit retrenchment from a year ago. In brief, the level of housing sales will continue withering (Chart 10, top panel). Chart 9Housing Market Activity And Prices
Housing Market Activity And Prices
Housing Market Activity And Prices
Chart 10Shrinking Sales = Less Funding
Shrinking Sales = Less Funding
Shrinking Sales = Less Funding
Shrinking home sales mean a scarcity of funding for real estate developers who heavily rely on advance payments from homebuyers to finance their projects (Chart 10, middle and bottom panels). Hence, a contraction in property investment will remain intact for the next three to six months and housing construction activities will stay depressed (Chart 11). Chart 11Less Funding = Reduced Completions And Investments
Less Funding = Reduced Completions And Investments
Less Funding = Reduced Completions And Investments
Chart 12Households Are Reluctant To Buy When House Prices Are Falling
Households Are Reluctant To Buy When House Prices Are Falling
Households Are Reluctant To Buy When House Prices Are Falling
Interestingly, to revive housing sales, Guangzhou (a southern Chinese metropolis) plans to loosen price controls to allow new house prices to drop up to 20%. Other provinces might follow suit. This would eventually make housing more affordable, but homebuyers might be reluctant to buy until house prices bottom (Chart 12). Therefore, an imminent rebound in home sales is unlikely. Overseas Shipments Are Set To Shrink China’s export growth, in both value and volume terms, slowed noticeably in August. The global demand for goods continues to dwindle, which does not bode well for Chinese overseas shipments. Imports for processing trade,1 which historically led China’s exports growth by three months, sank in August (Chart 13). In addition, Shanghai’s export container freight index has plummeted sharply (Chart 14). Both signal an impending shrinkage in the country’s exports volume. Chart 13Plummeted Processing Imports Herald A Downtrend In Exports
Plummeted Processing Imports Herald A Downtrend In Exports
Plummeted Processing Imports Herald A Downtrend In Exports
Chart 14A Sign Of Exports Relapse
A Sign Of Exports Relapse
A Sign Of Exports Relapse
Notably, the country’s exports to the US began to wither in August and this trend will only accelerate in the months ahead. We elaborated on the reasons for the global trade contraction in a previous report. Consistently, the continued underperformance of global cyclical stocks versus defensives, which historically has been a good leading indicator of global manufacturing cycles, points to a worldwide manufacturing downturn (Chart 15). This will be bad news for China, which is the largest manufacturing hub in the world. Deflationary Pressures Will Intensify The Chinese economy is facing a deflationary threat with core consumer inflation below 1% and producer (ex-factory) price inflation falling sharply (Chart 16). Chart 15Global Manufacturing Is Heading Into A Contraction
Global Manufacturing Is Heading Into A Contraction
Global Manufacturing Is Heading Into A Contraction
Chart 16The Chinese Economy Is Facing A Risk of Deflation
The Chinese Economy Is Facing A Risk of Deflation
The Chinese Economy Is Facing A Risk of Deflation
As weaknesses in domestic demand, real estate price and exports deepen, deflationary pressures in the mainland economy will likely intensify. Producer prices will begin deflating in the coming months. Manufactured goods prices have already deflated modestly, which will dampen investment in the industrial sector (Chart 17). Deflationary pressures are set to proliferate given that manufacturing output accounts for one-third of China’s GDP and manufacturing investment accounts for 32% of the nation’s overall fixed-asset investment. Investment in the real estate sector deteriorated severely in August. The downtrend in manufacturing and property investments will cap China’s overall capital spending growth through the end of this year, despite the ongoing rebound in infrastructure investment (Chart 18). Chart 17Manufacturing Prices Are Deflating
Manufacturing Prices Are Deflating
Manufacturing Prices Are Deflating
Chart 18Weakness In Property And Manufacturing Investments Will Cap Overall Capital Spending
Weakness In Property And Manufacturing Investments Will Cap Overall Capital Spending
Weakness In Property And Manufacturing Investments Will Cap Overall Capital Spending
Chart 19Sluggish Household Consumption
Sluggish Household Consumption
Sluggish Household Consumption
Weak income growth and an unwillingness by consumers to spend have taken a heavy toll on retail sales and the service sector since early this year. The growth in goods sales volume edged up in August but remains lackluster and well below pre-pandemic levels (Chart 19). In addition, online retail sales of services continued to shrink (Chart 19, bottom panel). More Downside In The RMB China needs to reduce its interest rates and weaken its exchange rate to battle deflationary pressures. Therefore, Chinese authorities will not mind more deterioration in the yuan versus the US dollar as long as it is gradual. The PBoC lowered the banks’ foreign exchange (FX) deposit reserve requirement ratio (RRR) from 8% to 6%, effective September 15. However, this will have little impact on altering the current weakening trend of the RMB. The balance of FX deposits at commercial banks was US$910 billion at the end of August. A 2% decrease in the FX deposit reserve ratio will only free about US$18 billion in FX liquidity, which is not large compared with US$80 billion in China’s net portfolio outflows through bond and stock connects so far this year. Capital outflows from China will likely persist for the next few months due to the disappointing economic recovery and widening interest rate differential relative to the US (Chart 20). Moreover, slumping exports will heighten selling pressures on the yuan and increase the government’s tolerance for a weaker currency. The FX settlement rate by banks on behalf of clients has continued to drop, which reflects the reluctance of exporters to sell their foreign currency receipts to banks on the expectation that the RMB will weaken even more (Chart 21). Chart 20China-US Rate Differentials Indicate RMB Depreciation
China-US Rate Differentials Indicate RMB Depreciation
China-US Rate Differentials Indicate RMB Depreciation
Chart 21Contracting Exports Will Weigh On The RMB
Contracting Exports Will Weigh On The RMB
Contracting Exports Will Weigh On The RMB
Furthermore, despite a 12% depreciation against the US dollar since this March, the RMB remains strong in trade-weighted terms (Chart 22). Finally, the RMB is modestly cheap, which does not constitute sufficient conditions for the exchange rate reversal, especially when macro fundamentals warrant a weaker currency (Chart 23). In short, we expect that the RMB has another 5% to fall versus the US dollar. Chart 22RMB Is Strong In Trade-Weighted Terms
RMB Is Strong In Trade-Weighted Terms
RMB Is Strong In Trade-Weighted Terms
Chart 23The RMB Is Modestly Cheap But Might Undershoot
The RMB Is Modestly Cheap But Might Undershoot
The RMB Is Modestly Cheap But Might Undershoot
Stay Cautious On Chinese Equities Deflationary pressures confronted by the Chinese economy suggest that onshore asset allocators should continue to favor government bonds over stocks (Chart 24). Chart 24China's Onshore Stock-To-Bond Ratio Will Continue Relapsing
China's Onshore Stock-To-Bond Ratio Will Continue Relapsing
China's Onshore Stock-To-Bond Ratio Will Continue Relapsing
Chart 25A-Shares Have Broken Below Their 6-Year Moving Average
A-Shares Have Broken Below Their 6-Year Moving Average
A-Shares Have Broken Below Their 6-Year Moving Average
The onshore CSI 300 stock index had broken through its 6-year moving average technical support, which will become new resistance for the index (Chart 25). The Hang Seng Tech index, which tracks Chinese offshore tech stocks/platform companies, has failed to break above its 200-day moving average (Chart 26). The above tell-tale signs raise the odds of cyclical new lows in these indexes. Within Chinese equities, we continue to recommend overweighting interest rate sensitive sectors, such as consumer staples, utilities and autos (Chart 27). Chart 26Chinese Tech Stocks Still Appear Brittle
Chinese Tech Stocks Still Appear Brittle
Chinese Tech Stocks Still Appear Brittle
Chart 27Interest Rate Sensitive Sectors Benefit From Loosening Monetary Conditions
Interest Rate Sensitive Sectors Benefit From Loosening Monetary Conditions
Interest Rate Sensitive Sectors Benefit From Loosening Monetary Conditions
Finally, we reiterate our long A-share index / short MSCI Investable stock index recommendation, a position we initiated in March 2021. Qingyun Xu, CFA Associate Editor qingyunx@bcaresearch.com Table 1China Macro Data Summary
China: Battling Deflationary Pressures
China: Battling Deflationary Pressures
Table 2China Financial Market Performance Summary
China: Battling Deflationary Pressures
China: Battling Deflationary Pressures
Footnotes 1 Processing trade refers to the business activities of importing raw materials, components and accessories, and then re exporting the finished products after processing or assembly. Strategic Themes Cyclical Recommendations
On the surface, Chinese industrial production, retail sales and fixed asset investments appeared to improve in August. Industrial production rose by 4.2% y/y following 3.8% y/y in July, retail sales growth accelerated to 5.4% y/y from 2.7% y/y, and fixed…
Executive Summary The US inflation surprise increases the odds of both congressional gridlock and recession, which increases uncertainty over US leadership past 2024 and reduces the US’s ability to lower tensions with China and Iran. Despite the mainstream media narrative, the Xi-Putin summit reinforces our view that China cannot reject Russia’s strategic partnership. The potential for conflict in Taiwan forces China to accept Russia’s overture. For the same reason the US and China cannot re-engage their economies sustainably, even if Biden and Xi somehow manage to reduce tensions after the midterm elections and twentieth national party congress. Russia could reduce oil exports as well as natural gas, intensifying the global energy shock. Ukraine’s counter-offensive and Europe’s energy diversification increase the risk of Russian military and economic failure. The Middle East will destabilize anew and create a new source of global energy supply disruptions. US-Iran talks are faltering as expected. Russian Oil Embargo Could Deliver Global Shock
Xi-Putin Summit, Ukraine Offensive, Iran Tensions
Xi-Putin Summit, Ukraine Offensive, Iran Tensions
Asset Initiation Date Return LONG GLOBAL DEFENSIVES / CYCLICALS EQUITIES 2022-01-20 19.1% Bottom Line: Stay long US stocks, defensive sectors, and large caps. Avoid China, Taiwan, eastern Europe, and the Middle East. Feature Several notable geopolitical developments occurred over the past week while we met with clients at the annual BCA Research Investment Conference in New York. In this report we analyze these developments using our geopolitical method, which emphasizes constraints over preferences, capabilities over intentions, reality over narrative. We also draw freely from the many valuable insights gleaned from our guest speakers at the conference. China Cannot Reject Russia: The Xi-Putin Summit In Uzbekistan Presidents Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin are meeting in Uzbekistan as we go to press and Putin has acknowledged China’s “questions and concern” about the war in Ukraine.1 They last met on February 4 when Xi gave Putin his blessing for the Ukraine invasion, promising to buy more Russian natural gas and to pursue a “no limits” strategic partnership (meaning one that includes extensive military cooperation). The meeting’s importance is clear from both leaders’ efforts to make it happen. Putin is leaving Russia despite rising domestic criticism over his handling of the Ukraine war and European energy war. Ukraine is making surprising gains in the battlefield, particularly around Kharkiv, threatening Russia’s ability to complete the conquest of Donetsk and the Donbas region. Meanwhile Xi is leaving China for the first time since the Covid-19 outbreak, despite the fact that he is only one month away from the most important political event of his life: the October 16 twentieth national party congress, where he hopes to clinch another five, ten, or fifteen years in power, expand his faction’s grip over the political system, and take over Mao Zedong’s unique title as chairman of the Communist Party. We do not yet know the full outcome of the Uzbek summit but we do not see it as a turning point in which China turns on Russia. Instead the summit reinforces our key point to investors all year: China cannot reject Russia. Russia broke energy ties with Europe and is fighting a proxy war with NATO. The Putin regime has lashed Russia to China’s side for the foreseeable future. China may not have wanted to move so quickly toward an exclusive relationship but it is not in a position to reject Russia’s diplomatic overture and leave Putin out to dry. The reason is that China is constrained by the US-led world order and like Russia is attempting to change that order and carve a sphere of influence to improve its national security. Beijing’s immediate goal is to consolidate power across the critical buffer territories susceptible to foreign interests. It has already consolidated Tibet, Xinjiang, Hong Kong, and to some extent the South China Sea, the critical approach to Taiwan. Taiwan is the outstanding buffer space that needs to be subjugated. Xi Jinping has taken it upon himself to unify China and Taiwan within his extended rule. But Taiwanese public opinion has decisively shifted in favor of either an indefinite status quo or independence. Hence China and Taiwan are on a collision course. Regardless of one’s view on the likelihood of war, it is a high enough chance that China, Taiwan, the US, and others will be preparing for it in the coming years. Chart 1US Arms Sales To Taiwan
Xi-Putin Summit, Ukraine Offensive, Iran Tensions
Xi-Putin Summit, Ukraine Offensive, Iran Tensions
The US is attempting to increase its ability to deter China from attacking Taiwan. It believes it failed to deter Russia from invading Ukraine – and Taiwan is far more important to US economy and security than Ukraine. The US is already entering discussions with Taiwan and other allies about a package of severe economic sanctions in the event that China attacks – sanctions comparable to those imposed on Russia. The US Congress is also moving forward with the Taiwan Policy Act of 2022, which will solidify US support for the island as well as increase arms sales (Chart 1).2 Aside from China's military preparation – which needs to be carefully reviewed in light of Russia’s troubles in Ukraine and the much greater difficulty of invading Taiwan – China must prepare to deal with the following three factors in the event of war: 1. Energy: China is overly exposed to sea lines of communication that can be disrupted by the United States Navy. Beijing will have to partner with Russia to import Russian and Central Asian resources and attempt to forge an overland path to the Middle East (Chart 2). Unlike Russia, China cannot supply its own energy during a war and its warfighting capacity will suffer if shortages occur or prices spike. 2. Computer Chips: China has committed at least $200 billion on a crash course to build its own semiconductors since 2013 due to the need to modernize its military and economy and compete with the US on the global stage. But China is still dependent on imports, especially for the most advanced chips, and its dependency is rising not falling despite domestic investments (Chart 3). The US is imposing export controls on advanced microchips and starting to enforce these controls on third parties. The US and its allies have cut off Russia’s access to computer chips, leading to Russian shortages that are impeding their war effort. Chart 2China’s Commodity Import Vulnerability
Xi-Putin Summit, Ukraine Offensive, Iran Tensions
Xi-Putin Summit, Ukraine Offensive, Iran Tensions
Chart 3China's Imports Of Semiconductors
China's Imports Of Semiconductors
China's Imports Of Semiconductors
3. US Dollar Reserves: China is still heavily exposed to US dollar assets but its access will be cut off in the event of war, just as the US has frozen Russian, Iranian, Venezuelan, and Cuban assets over the years. China is already diversifying away from the dollar but will have to move more quickly given that Russia had dramatically reduced its exposure and still suffered severely when its access to dollar reserves was frozen this year (Chart 4). Where will China reallocate its reserves? To developing and importing natural resources from Russia, Central Asia, and other overland routes. Chart 4China's US Dollar Exposure
China's US Dollar Exposure
China's US Dollar Exposure
Russia may be the junior partner in a new Russo-Chinese alliance but it will not be a vassal. Russia has resources, military power, and regional control in Central Asia that China needs. Of course, China will maintain a certain diplomatic distance from Russia because it needs to maintain economic relations with Europe and other democracies as it breaks up with the United States. Europe is far more important to Chinese exports than Russia. China will play both sides and its companies will develop parallel supply chains. China will also make gestures to countries that feel threatened by Russia, including the Central Asian members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO). But the crucial point is that China cannot reject Russia. If the Putin regime fails, China will be diplomatically isolated, it will lose an ally in any Taiwan war, and the US will have a much greater advantage in attempting to contain China in the coming years and decades. Russo-Chinese Alliance And The US Dollar Many investors speculate that China’s diversification away from the US dollar will mark a severe downturn for the currency. This is of course possible, given that Russia and China will form a substantial anti-dollar bloc. Certainly there can be a cyclical downturn in the greenback, especially after the looming recession troughs. But it is harder to see a structural collapse of the dollar as the leading global reserve currency. The past 14 years have shown how global investors react to US dysfunction, Russian aggression, and Chinese slowdown: they buy the dollar! The implication is that a US wage-price spiral, a Russian détente with Europe, and a Chinese economic recovery would be negative for the dollar – but those stars have not yet aligned. Related Report Geopolitical StrategyThe Geopolitical Consequences Of The Ukraine War The reason China needs to diversify is because it fears US sanctions when it invades Taiwan. Hence reducing its holdings of US treasuries and the dollar signals that it expects war in future. But will other countries rush into the yuan and yuan-denominated bonds if Xi is following in Putin’s footsteps and launching a war of choice, with damaging consequences for the economy? A war over Taiwan would be a global catastrophe and would send other countries plunging into the safe-haven assets, including US assets. Nevertheless China will diversify and other countries will probably increase their yuan trade over time, just as Russia has done. This will be a cyclical headwind for the dollar at some point. But it will not knock the US off the premier position. That would require a historic downgrade in the US’s economic and strategic capability, as was the case with the United Kingdom after the world wars. China will continue to stimulate the economy after the party congress. A successful Chinese and global economic rebound next year – and a decision to pursue “jaw jaw” with the US and Taiwan rather than “war war” – would be negative for the dollar. Hence we may downgrade our bullish dollar view to neutral on a cyclical basis before long … but not yet and not on a structural basis. Bottom Line: Favor the US dollar and the euro over the Chinese renminbi and Taiwanese dollar. Underweight Chinese and Taiwanese assets on a structural basis. Ukraine’s Counter-Offensive And A Russian Oil Embargo Ukraine launched a counter-offensive against Russia in September and achieved significant early victories. Russians fell back away from Kharkiv, putting Izyum in Ukrainian hands and jeopardizing Russia’s ability to achieve its war aim of conquering the remaining half of Donetsk province and thus controlling the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. Russian positions also crumbled west of the Dnieper river, which was always an important limit on Russian capabilities (Map 1). Map 1Status Of Russia-Ukraine War: The Ukrainian Counter-Offensive (September 15, 2022)
Xi-Putin Summit, Ukraine Offensive, Iran Tensions
Xi-Putin Summit, Ukraine Offensive, Iran Tensions
Some commentators, such as Francis Fukuyama in the Washington Post, have taken the Ukrainian counter-offensive as a sign that the Ukrainians will reconquer lost territory and Russia will suffer an outright defeat in this war.3 If Russia cannot conquer the Donbas, its control of the “land bridge” to Crimea will be unsustainable, and it may have to admit defeat. But we are very skeptical. It will be extremely difficult for Ukrainians to drive the Russians out of all of their entrenched positions. US military officials applauded Ukraine’s counter-offensive but sounded a cautious note. The chief problem is that neither President Putin nor the Russian military can afford such a defeat. They will have to double down on the Donbas and land bridge. The war will be prolonged. Ultimately we expect stalemate, which will be a prelude to ceasefire negotiations. But first the fighting will intensify and the repercussions for global economy and markets will get worse. Russia’s war effort is also flagging because Europe is making headway in finding alternatives for Russian natural gas. Russia has cut off flows through the Nord Stream pipeline to Germany, the Yamal pipeline to Poland, and partially to the Ukraine pipeline system, leaving only Turkstream operating normally. Yet EU gas storage is in the middle of its normal range and trending higher (Chart 5). Chart 5Europe Handling Natural Gas Crisis Well … So Far
Xi-Putin Summit, Ukraine Offensive, Iran Tensions
Xi-Putin Summit, Ukraine Offensive, Iran Tensions
Of course, Europe’s energy supply is still not secure. Cold weather could require more heating than expected. Russia has an incentive to tighten the gas flow further. Flows from Algeria or Azerbaijan could be sabotaged or disrupted (Chart 6). Chart 6Europe’s NatGas Supply Still Not Secure
Xi-Putin Summit, Ukraine Offensive, Iran Tensions
Xi-Putin Summit, Ukraine Offensive, Iran Tensions
Chart 7Europe Tipping Into Recession Anyway
Europe Tipping Into Recession Anyway
Europe Tipping Into Recession Anyway
Russia’s intention is to inflict a recession on Europe so that it begins to rethink its willingness to maintain a long-term proxy war. Recession will force European households to pay the full cost of the energy breakup with Russia all at once. Popular support for war will moderate and politicians will adopt more pragmatic diplomacy. After all they do not have an interest in prolonging the war to the point that it spirals out of control. Clearly the economic pain is being felt, as manufacturing expectations and consumer confidence weaken (Chart 7). Europe’s resolve will not collapse overnight. But the energy crisis can get worse from here. The deeper the recession, the more likely European capitals will try to convince Ukraine to negotiate a ceasefire. However, given Ukraine’s successes in the field and Europe’s successes in diversification, it is entirely possible that Russia faces further humiliating setbacks. While this outcome may be good for liberal democracies, it is not good for global financial markets, at least not in the short run. If Russia is backed into a corner on both the military and economic fronts, then Putin’s personal security and regime security will be threatened. Russia could attempt to turn the tables or lash out even more aggressively. Already Moscow has declared a new “red line” if the US provides longer-range missiles to Ukraine. A US-Russia showdown, complete with nuclear threats, is not out of the realm of possibility. Russia could also start halting oil exports, as it has threatened to do, to inflict a major oil shock on the European economy. Investors will need to be prepared for that outcome. Bottom Line: Petro-states have geopolitical leverage as long as global commodity supplies remain tight. Investors should be prepared for the European embargo of Russian oil to provoke a Russian reaction. A larger than expected oil shock is possible given the risk of defeat that Russia faces (Chart 8). Chart 8Russian Oil Embargo Could Deliver Global Shock
Xi-Putin Summit, Ukraine Offensive, Iran Tensions
Xi-Putin Summit, Ukraine Offensive, Iran Tensions
US-Iran Talks Falter Again This trend of petro-state geopolitical leverage was one of our three key views for 2022 and it also extends to the US-Iran nuclear negotiations, which are faltering as expected. Tit-for-tat military action between Iran and its enemies in the Persian Gulf will pick up immediately – i.e. a new source of oil disruption will emerge. If global demand is collapsing then this trend may only create additional volatility for oil markets at first, but it further constrains the supply side for the foreseeable future. It is not yet certain that the talks are dead but a deal before the US midterm looks unlikely. Biden could continue working on a deal in 2023-24. The Democratic Party is likely to lose at least the House of Representatives, leaving him unable to pass legislation and more likely to pursue foreign policy objectives. The Biden administration wants the Iran deal to tamp down inflation and avoid a third foreign policy crisis at a time when it is already juggling Russia and China. The overriding constraints in this situation are that Iran needs a nuclear weapon for regime survival, while Israel will attack Iran as a last resort before it obtains a nuclear weapon. Yes, the US is reluctant to initiate another war in the Middle East. But public war-weariness is probably overrated today (unlike in 2008 or even 2016) and the US has drawn a hard red line against nuclear weaponization. Iran will retaliate to any US-Israeli aggression ferociously. But conflict and oil disruptions will emerge even before the US or Israel decide to launch air strikes, as Iran will face sabotage and cyber-attacks and will need to deter the US and Israel by signaling that it can trigger a region-wide war. Chart 9If US-Iran Talks Fail, Iraq Will Destabilize Further
If US-Iran Talks Fail, Iraq Will Destabilize Further
If US-Iran Talks Fail, Iraq Will Destabilize Further
Recent social unrest in Iraq, where the nationalist coalition of Muqtada al-Sadr is pushing back against Iranian influence, is only an inkling of what can occur if the US-Iran talks are truly dead, Iran pushes forward with its nuclear program, and Israel and the US begin openly entertaining military options. The potential oil disruption from Iraq presents a much larger supply constraint than the failure to remove sanctions on Iran (Chart 9). A new wave of Middle Eastern instability would push up oil prices and strengthen Russia’s hand, distracting the US and imposing further pain on Europe. It would not strengthen China’s hand, but the risk itself would reinforce China’s Eurasian strategy, as Beijing would need to prepare for oil cutoffs in the Persian Gulf. Iran’s attempts to join the Shanghai Cooperation Organization should be seen in this context. Ultimately the only factor that could still possibly convince Iran not to make a dash for the bomb – the military might of the US and its allies – is the same factor that forces China and Russia to strengthen their strategic bond. The emerging Russo-Chinese behemoth, in turn, acts as a hard constraint on any substantial reengagement of the US and Chinese economies. The US cannot afford to feed another decade of Chinese economic growth and modernization if China is allied with Russia and Central Asia. Of course, we cannot rule out the possibility that the Xi and Biden administrations will try to prevent a total collapse of US-China relations in 2023. If China is not yet ready to invade Taiwan then there is a brief space for diplomacy to try to work. But there is no room for long-lasting reengagement – because the US cannot simply cede Taiwan to China, and hence China cannot reject Russia, and Russia no longer has any options. Bottom Line: Expect further oil volatility and price shocks. Sell Middle Eastern equities. Favor North American, Latin American, and Australian energy producers. Investment Takeaways Recession Risks Rising: The inflation surprise in the US in August necessitates more aggressive Fed rate hikes in the near term, which increases the odds of rising unemployment and recession. US Policy Uncertainty Rising: A recession will greatly increase the odds of US political instability over the 2022-24 cycle and reduce the incentive for foreign powers like Iran or China to make concessions or agreements with the US. European Policy Uncertainty Rising: We already expected a European recession. Russia’s setbacks make it more likely that it will adopt more aggressive military tactics and economic warfare. Chinese Policy Uncertainty Rising: China will continue stimulating next year but its economy will suffer from energy shocks and its stimulus is less effective than in the past. It will likely increase economic and military pressure on Taiwan, while the US will increase punitive measures against China. It is not clear that it will launch a full scale invasion of Taiwan – that is not our base case – but it is possible so investors need to be prepared. Long US and Defensives: Stay long US stocks over global stocks, defensive sectors over cyclicals, and large caps over small caps. Buy safe-havens like the oversold Japanese yen. Long Arms Manufacturers: Buy defense stocks and cyber-security firms. Short China and Taiwan: Favor the USD and EUR over the CNY. Favor US semiconductor stocks over Taiwanese equities. Favor Korean over Taiwanese equities. Favor Indian tech over Chinese tech. Favor Singaporean over Hong Kong stocks. Matt Gertken Chief Geopolitical Strategist mattg@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Tessa Wong and Simon Fraser, “Putin-Xi talks: Russian leader reveals China's 'concern' over Ukraine,” BBC, September 15, 2022, bbc.com. 2 US Senate Foreign Relations Committee, “The Taiwan Policy Act of 2022,” foreign.senate.gov. 3 Greg Sargent, “Is Putin facing defeat? The ‘End of History’ author remains confident,” Washington Post, September 12, 2022, washingtonpost.com. Strategic Themes Open Tactical Positions (0-6 Months) Open Cyclical Recommendations (6-18 Months) Regional Geopolitical Risk Matrix
Executive Summary Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong
Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong
Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong
The HKD is facing its most critical test in several decades. While the peg is likely to survive (Feature Chart), the economic costs for Hong Kong SAR will be far reaching. Critically, monetary policy in Hong Kong SAR is being tailored behind a hawkish Fed, while economic ties with China increasingly warrant easier policy settings. This tug of war will be resolved via a reset in domestic spending and asset prices. Equity shares have been the first shoe to drop. Real estate values and consumer spending will be next. A hypothetical delinking of the peg will see the HKD depreciate since it is expensive on a real effective exchange rate basis. Longer term, the rising use of the RMB in Hong Kong SAR will render the peg a relic. It will also fit with China’s aims to internationalize the RMB. Bottom Line: The HKD peg is likely to survive in the near term, but the economic repercussions from maintaining the linked exchange-rate system will trigger a rethinking by the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) and mainland authorities. Eventually, HKD could be replaced by the CNY. For now, HKD interest rates are slated to rise further, which will have ramifications for domestic spending and asset prices. Feature Chart 1HKD Has Been Tracking Interest Rates
HKD Has Been Tracking Interest Rates
HKD Has Been Tracking Interest Rates
The Hong Kong dollar (HKD) has been trading on the weak side of its convertibility band since May. In theory, this suggests there is intense pressure for the peg to be delinked, which should lead to a much weaker exchange rate. In practice, interest rates in Hong Kong have failed to keep up with the surge in US rates, which has led to widening interest rate differentials between Hong Kong and the US. As a result, investors have embarked on a massive carry trade, funding USD purchases with HKDs (Chart 1). HKD’s weakness has raised questions about whether the exchange rate could face a crisis of confidence. This will be a severe blow to the HKMA whose sole role is currency stability, with the HKD being the underlying bedrock of Hong Kong’s financial system. In this report, we suggest that the HKD will survive this crisis, just as it has navigated previous shocks since 1983. The brunt of the adjustment will be domestic, first from Hong Kong equities, but spreading to real estate and consumer spending. Longer term, the HKD might become a relic as transactions in Hong Kong are increasingly conducted in RMB. Will The Peg Be Sustained? Historically, currency pegs more often than not fail. Specific to the HKD, the peg is facing its most critical test in decades but is likely to survive for a few reasons. First, every HKD that the region of Hong Kong has ever printed is backed by USD reserves, to the tune of 1.8 times. Quite simply, FX reserves are much higher than the Hong Kong monetary base (Chart 2). This suggests the HKMA’s “convertibility promise” remains credible. Second, Hong Kong also ranks favorably when looking at the ratio of broad money supply to FX reserves. Every 42.3 cents of broad money creation can be backed by foreign currency, a ratio much higher than China and on par with Singapore (Chart 3). With a monetary base fully backed by FX reserves and a broad money-to-FX reserve ratio largely in line with other linked exchange rate systems, our bias is that the peg will remain in place at least over a cyclical horizon (12-18 months). Chart 2In Theory, The HKMA Can Defend The Peg
In Theory, The HKMA Can Defend The Peg
In Theory, The HKMA Can Defend The Peg
Chart 3The HKMA Ranks Favorably To The PBoC
The HKMA Ranks Favorably To The PBoC
The HKMA Ranks Favorably To The PBoC
This credibility will come at a huge cost to the domestic economy, however. By having a fixed exchange rate system and an open capital account, Hong Kong has given up control over domestic monetary policy. Consequently, it must import monetary policy from the US. As interest rates rise in the US, demand for US dollar deposits from Hong Kong concerns goes up, putting downward pressure on the exchange rate. To maintain the convertibility ratio, the HKMA must drain the system of Hong Kong dollars to lift domestic interest rates. This is quite visible not only from the drop in foreign exchange reserves, but also the drawdown in the aggregate balance of domestic banks parked at the HKMA (Chart 4). From May 11 through August, the HKMA has absorbed a total of HKD 213 billion, shrinking the aggregate balance in the banking system by more than 60%. Chart 4Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong
Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong
Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong
Historically, the aggregate balance has had to drop much more to restore an equilibrium between interest rates in the US and Hong Kong SAR. The implication is that liquidity will continue to be drained from the system to ultimately defend the peg, and local interest rates will rise. There is one important caveat: Hong Kong SAR’s net international investment position stands at 580% of GDP, much higher than broad money supply. As such, the Hong Kong SAR does not have a solvency problem. What it faces is too much domestic liquidity, which is pushing HKD interest rates lower (Chart 5). Chart 5The HKD Is Facing A Liquidity, Rather Than A Solvency Crisis
The Future Of The Hong Kong Dollar Peg
The Future Of The Hong Kong Dollar Peg
Ramifications Of The USD Peg When the HKD was tied to the US dollar in 1983, it made economic sense. Hong Kong SAR’s economy was more linked via trade to the US, compared to China (Chart 6). As such, stability vis-à-vis the US dollar was a vital appeal for traders, financiers, and all industries tied to the Hong Kong hub. Since then, there has been a tectonic shift in economic dependence. Exports to China now account for almost 60% of the total, while those to the US have fallen well below 8%. Quite simply, Hong Kong SAR still imports monetary policy from the US, while it is increasingly dependent on the Chinese economy. Nonetheless, there have been a few adjustments. The use of the RMB in Hong Kong SAR has been gradually gaining momentum. RMB deposits have risen to over HKD 800bn. As a share of narrow money supply (M1), it is almost 50% (Chart 7). There are also over 140 licensed banks in Hong Kong allowed to engage in RMB-based business. Chart 6Hong Kong And China Are Tied To The Hip
Hong Kong And China Are Tied To The Hip
Hong Kong And China Are Tied To The Hip
Chart 7Hong Kong Is Transitioning Into A Defacto RMB System
Hong Kong Is Transitioning Into A Defacto RMB System
Hong Kong Is Transitioning Into A Defacto RMB System
These links extend beyond just banking turnover. First introduced in 2014, the southbound trading links between China and Hong Kong SAR have become a major conduit for mainland investors to gain exposure to foreign firms. The China-Hong Kong stock connect has now handled over 2.6tn RMB in cumulative flows. This represented as high as 40% of the equity turnover in Hong Kong SAR (Chart 8). Capital account transactions have also been progressively relaxed, and the issuance of RMB bonds has been rising rapidly since 2008. Chart 8Lots Of Financial Links Between The HKD and RMB
Lots Of Financial Links Between The HKD and RMB
Lots Of Financial Links Between The HKD and RMB
Hong Kong SAR’s strengthening ties with China comes with some good news. The increase in Chinese domestic liquidity is lowering the cost of capital for local enterprises. At the same time, it might also be fuelling very low domestic interest rates, forcing locals to chase higher rates elsewhere. This does not affect the peg if people sell the RMB to buy other currencies, including the dollar or maybe even the HKD. The bad news is that Hong Kong has now become a high-beta play on China as both economies are inexorably interlinked. Chart 9 shows that consumers in Hong Kong SAR tend to have much more volatile spending patterns compared to China, especially when economic growth is about to slow. One reason is that Hong Kong concerns are highly levered notably to the property market (Chart 10). For example, the debt service ratio in Hong Kong SAR sits at 32% of disposable income, much higher than China or other indebted economies (Chart 11). This makes the economy very vulnerable to rising interest rates. Chart 9Hong Kong Is Economically More Volatile Than China
Hong Kong Is Economically More Volatile Than China
Hong Kong Is Economically More Volatile Than China
Chart 10Hong Kong Cannot Escape A Hard Landing (Part 1)
Property Prices In Hong Kong Will Drop
Property Prices In Hong Kong Will Drop
Chart 11Hong Kong Cannot Escape A Hard Landing (Part 2)
Hong Kong Cannot Escape A Hard Landing (Part 2)
Hong Kong Cannot Escape A Hard Landing (Part 2)
The bottom line is that as the HKMA withdraws domestic liquidity, this will reassert downward pressure on business activity and asset prices, particularly real estate. With private consumption a whopping 65% of GDP, household deleveraging will also prove to be a formidable headwind for domestic spending. Outside interest rates, Hong Kong SAR remains a trade hub. If global trade slows down meaningfully, this will lead to a deterioration in the current account. This triple whammy from slowing global trade, rising interest rates and consumer deleveraging could prove indigestible for Hong Kong assets. Policy Options Chart 12The Government Could Bail Out Hong Kong
The Government Could Bail Out Hong Kong
The Government Could Bail Out Hong Kong
As highlighted above, the HKD peg will remain in place for the foreseeable future, but this will come at a huge cost. The advantage of the HKD peg is that the choice of the nominal anchor, the US dollar, renders it credible. As a financial hub, this is crucial for Hong Kong. Meanwhile, such an anchor also imposes fiscal discipline since government deficits cannot be monetized by money printing. In the case where the government tries to be profligate, the rise in inflation will lower real rates and lead to capital outflows. This will force the HKMA to sell US dollars and absorb local currency. Indeed, over the past several years, government debt in Hong Kong has been close to nil (Chart 12). The drawback of a fixed exchange-rate regime is that Hong Kong SAR has relinquished control over independent monetary policy. Such a union was justified when the economic cycles between the US and Hong Kong SAR were in sync, but now the region needs easier policy settings. The roadmap of the late 1990s could be what is in store for Hong Kong SAR. In short, the peg survived but the region went through a severe internal devaluation. During the Asian crisis, property prices fell by more than 60%. If that were to occur today, it would herald a prolonged period of high unemployment and stagnant wages to realign the region’s competitiveness with its trading partners. Hong Kong SAR stocks have already borne the brunt of an internal adjustment and are trading at very cheap multiples (Chart 13). The MSCI Hong Kong stock index is composed of mostly financials (47% of market cap) and property stocks (21% of market cap). As HKD rates are rising, loan growth in Hong Kong SAR is contracting and net interest margins have collapsed (Chart 14). This does not bode well for the near-term performance of financials. Chart 13Markets Have Already Discounted A Pessimistic Scenario For Hong Kong Shares
Markets Have Already Discounted A Pessimistic Scenario For Hong Kong Shares
Markets Have Already Discounted A Pessimistic Scenario For Hong Kong Shares
Chart 14Banks In Hong Kong Are Facing A Tough ##br##Reckoning
Banks In Hong Kong Are Facing A Tough Reckoning
Banks In Hong Kong Are Facing A Tough Reckoning
The good news is that similar to the late 1990s, banks are unlikely to go bust. Hong Kong SAR banks are well capitalized and delinquency rates are quite low, suggesting a banking crisis is unlikely to be a source of pain for the HKD peg (Chart 15). In fact, Hong Kong SAR banks rank favorably among their global peers in terms of capital adequacy (Chart 16). Chart 15Banks In Hong Kong Are Well Capitalized (Part 1)
Banks In Hong Kong Are Well Capitalized (Part 1)
Banks In Hong Kong Are Well Capitalized (Part 1)
Chart 16Banks In Hong Kong Are Well Capitalized (Part 2)
The Future Of The Hong Kong Dollar Peg
The Future Of The Hong Kong Dollar Peg
Specific to the currency, Hong Kong is also running recurring current account surpluses. This is boosting its FX reserves (Chart 17). That lends credibility to the peg in the near term. The bad news is that as the domestic economy slows down, and global trade comes close to a standstill, these surpluses could evaporate. One cost to Hong Kong is that the peg to the US dollar has made HKD incrementally expensive. Our model shows that the real effective exchange for HKD is about 2.5 standard deviations above fair value (Chart 18). Our view on the US dollar is that we could see depreciation over a 12-to-18-month horizon, but an overshoot in the near term is quite likely. A drop in the US dollar will help realign competitiveness in the HKD. Meantime, the market has also been pushing the currency towards the weaker side of its convertibility band. Chart 17Balance Of Payments Remain Favorable For The HKD
Balance Of Payments Remain Favorable For The HKD
Balance Of Payments Remain Favorable For The HKD
Chart 18The HKD Is Expensive
The HKD Is Expensive
The HKD Is Expensive
Longer term, as Hong Kong SAR continues to become more entwined with China, a peg to the CNY will make sense. This process will be the initial step in the region’s official embrace of the RMB system. That said, the process will be gradual since the US dollar remains very much a reserve currency, and the relevance of Hong Kong SAR as a financial center hinges upon easy access to the USD. What is more likely is that any re-pegging to the RMB will come many years down the road, when the yuan has become a fully convertible currency. The de-pegging of the HKD from the USD or adjusting the peg is as much a political discussion as an economic one. Political conditions for this change are not yet present given such a change will have major ramifications for the economy of Hong Kong SAR and will likely also reverberate through financial asset prices. One can imagine a scenario where HKD yields are forced to adjust to a new nominal anchor. Investors have been convinced through almost 30 years of history to treat the HKD as a proxy for the US dollar. That said, the economic pain associated with maintaining the HKD-USD peg will ensure authorities accelerate the use of RMBs in Hong Kong, with a goal of eventually adopting the yuan as the de facto currency. Adopting a currency board akin to Singapore is another option that makes sense, especially since this would give the HKMA scope to link to cheaper currencies, such as the yen and euro. That said, this is unlikely to be politically palatable, especially for Beijing. A link to the yuan that already does this job makes sense. Finally, there is always the option to fully float the peg, but this would probably increase currency volatility. This is unlikely in the near term. The Goldilocks scenario for policymakers is when the US dollar eventually depreciates against major currencies, easing financial conditions for Hong Kong SAR concerns. This will dovetail nicely with the goals of the monetary authorities, maintain credibility while easing financial concerns for a very levered economy. Investment Conclusions The HKD peg will remain in place, but the financial dislocations will lead to significant internal devaluation in Hong Kong SAR. As US interest rates rise, the HKD will be under considerable pressure. The HKMA will have no choice but to allow HKD interest rates to rise. This will tip the property market and thrust the economy into deflation and a recession. Chinese bonds are the best hedge against this risk. Avoid property and financial shares for the time being. Were the peg to break today, the HKD will depreciate according to our valuation models. This suggests markets are right to push the HKD-linked rate towards the weaker end of the convertibility band. Despite the economic and financial pain, the HKMA will not abandon the peg. That means carry trades will continue to make money. Using the HKD as a funding currency still makes sense in the near term. In long run, the economic pain associated with maintaining the HKD-USD peg will make authorities in Beijing accelerate the use of the RMB in Hong Kong’s special administrative region. The eventual goal will be for Hong Kong SAR to adopt the yuan as its currency. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Qingyun Xu, CFA Associate Editor qingyunx@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Cyclical Holdings (6-18 months) Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
Executive Summary Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong
Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong
Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong
The HKD is facing its most critical test in several decades. While the peg is likely to survive (Feature Chart), the economic costs for Hong Kong SAR will be far reaching. Critically, monetary policy in Hong Kong SAR is being tailored behind a hawkish Fed, while economic ties with China increasingly warrant easier policy settings. This tug of war will be resolved via a reset in domestic spending and asset prices. Equity shares have been the first shoe to drop. Real estate values and consumer spending will be next. A hypothetical delinking of the peg will see the HKD depreciate since it is expensive on a real effective exchange rate basis. Longer term, the rising use of the RMB in Hong Kong SAR will render the peg a relic. It will also fit with China’s aims to internationalize the RMB.. Bottom Line: The HKD peg is likely to survive in the near term, but the economic repercussions from maintaining the linked exchange-rate system will trigger a rethinking by the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) and mainland authorities. Eventually, HKD could be replaced by the CNY. For now, HKD interest rates are slated to rise further, which will have ramifications for domestic spending and asset prices. Feature Chart 1HKD Has Been Tracking Interest Rates
HKD Has Been Tracking Interest Rates
HKD Has Been Tracking Interest Rates
The Hong Kong dollar (HKD) has been trading on the weak side of its convertibility band since May. In theory, this suggests there is intense pressure for the peg to be delinked, which should lead to a much weaker exchange rate. In practice, interest rates in Hong Kong have failed to keep up with the surge in US rates, which has led to widening interest rate differentials between Hong Kong and the US. As a result, investors have embarked on a massive carry trade, funding USD purchases with HKDs (Chart 1). HKD’s weakness has raised questions about whether the exchange rate could face a crisis of confidence. This will be a severe blow to the HKMA whose sole role is currency stability, with the HKD being the underlying bedrock of Hong Kong’s financial system. In this report, we suggest that the HKD will survive this crisis, just as it has navigated previous shocks since 1983. The brunt of the adjustment will be domestic, first from Hong Kong equities, but spreading to real estate and consumer spending. Longer term, the HKD might become a relic as transactions in Hong Kong are increasingly conducted in RMB. Will The Peg Be Sustained? Historically, currency pegs more often than not fail. Specific to the HKD, the peg is facing its most critical test in decades but is likely to survive for a few reasons. First, every HKD that the region of Hong Kong has ever printed is backed by USD reserves, to the tune of 1.8 times. Quite simply, FX reserves are much higher than the Hong Kong monetary base (Chart 2). This suggests the HKMA’s “convertibility promise” remains credible. Second, Hong Kong also ranks favorably when looking at the ratio of broad money supply to FX reserves. Every 42.3 cents of broad money creation can be backed by foreign currency, a ratio much higher than China and on par with Singapore (Chart 3). With a monetary base fully backed by FX reserves and a broad money-to-FX reserve ratio largely in line with other linked exchange rate systems, our bias is that the peg will remain in place at least over a cyclical horizon (12-18 months). Chart 2In Theory, The HKMA Can Defend The Peg
In Theory, The HKMA Can Defend The Peg
In Theory, The HKMA Can Defend The Peg
Chart 3The HKMA Ranks Favorably To The PBoC
The HKMA Ranks Favorably To The PBoC
The HKMA Ranks Favorably To The PBoC
This credibility will come at a huge cost to the domestic economy, however. By having a fixed exchange rate system and an open capital account, Hong Kong has given up control over domestic monetary policy. Consequently, it must import monetary policy from the US. As interest rates rise in the US, demand for US dollar deposits from Hong Kong concerns goes up, putting downward pressure on the exchange rate. To maintain the convertibility ratio, the HKMA must drain the system of Hong Kong dollars to lift domestic interest rates. This is quite visible not only from the drop in foreign exchange reserves, but also the drawdown in the aggregate balance of domestic banks parked at the HKMA (Chart 4). From May 11 through August, the HKMA has absorbed a total of HKD 213 billion, shrinking the aggregate balance in the banking system by more than 60%. Chart 4Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong
Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong
Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong
Historically, the aggregate balance has had to drop much more to restore an equilibrium between interest rates in the US and Hong Kong SAR. The implication is that liquidity will continue to be drained from the system to ultimately defend the peg, and local interest rates will rise. There is one important caveat: Hong Kong SAR’s net international investment position stands at 580% of GDP, much higher than broad money supply. As such, the Hong Kong SAR does not have a solvency problem. What it faces is too much domestic liquidity, which is pushing HKD interest rates lower (Chart 5). Chart 5The HKD Is Facing A Liquidity, Rather Than A Solvency Crisis
The Future Of The Hong Kong Dollar Peg
The Future Of The Hong Kong Dollar Peg
Ramifications Of The USD Peg When the HKD was tied to the US dollar in 1983, it made economic sense. Hong Kong SAR’s economy was more linked via trade to the US, compared to China (Chart 6). As such, stability vis-à-vis the US dollar was a vital appeal for traders, financiers, and all industries tied to the Hong Kong hub. Since then, there has been a tectonic shift in economic dependence. Exports to China now account for almost 60% of the total, while those to the US have fallen well below 8%. Quite simply, Hong Kong SAR still imports monetary policy from the US, while it is increasingly dependent on the Chinese economy. Nonetheless, there have been a few adjustments. The use of the RMB in Hong Kong SAR has been gradually gaining momentum. RMB deposits have risen to over HKD 800bn. As a share of narrow money supply (M1), it is almost 50% (Chart 7). There are also over 140 licensed banks in Hong Kong allowed to engage in RMB-based business. Chart 6Hong Kong And China Are Tied To The Hip
Hong Kong And China Are Tied To The Hip
Hong Kong And China Are Tied To The Hip
Chart 7Hong Kong Is Transitioning Into A Defacto RMB System
Hong Kong Is Transitioning Into A Defacto RMB System
Hong Kong Is Transitioning Into A Defacto RMB System
These links extend beyond just banking turnover. First introduced in 2014, the southbound trading links between China and Hong Kong SAR have become a major conduit for mainland investors to gain exposure to foreign firms. The China-Hong Kong stock connect has now handled over 2.6tn RMB in cumulative flows. This represented as high as 40% of the equity turnover in Hong Kong SAR (Chart 8). Capital account transactions have also been progressively relaxed, and the issuance of RMB bonds has been rising rapidly since 2008. Chart 8Lots Of Financial Links Between The HKD and RMB
Lots Of Financial Links Between The HKD and RMB
Lots Of Financial Links Between The HKD and RMB
Hong Kong SAR’s strengthening ties with China comes with some good news. The increase in Chinese domestic liquidity is lowering the cost of capital for local enterprises. At the same time, it might also be fuelling very low domestic interest rates, forcing locals to chase higher rates elsewhere. This does not affect the peg if people sell the RMB to buy other currencies, including the dollar or maybe even the HKD. The bad news is that Hong Kong has now become a high-beta play on China as both economies are inexorably interlinked. Chart 9 shows that consumers in Hong Kong SAR tend to have much more volatile spending patterns compared to China, especially when economic growth is about to slow. One reason is that Hong Kong concerns are highly levered notably to the property market (Chart 10). For example, the debt service ratio in Hong Kong SAR sits at 32% of disposable income, much higher than China or other indebted economies (Chart 11). This makes the economy very vulnerable to rising interest rates. Chart 9Hong Kong Is Economically More Volatile Than China
Hong Kong Is Economically More Volatile Than China
Hong Kong Is Economically More Volatile Than China
Chart 10Hong Kong Cannot Escape A Hard Landing (Part 1)
Property Prices In Hong Kong Will Drop
Property Prices In Hong Kong Will Drop
Chart 11Hong Kong Cannot Escape A Hard Landing (Part 2)
Hong Kong Cannot Escape A Hard Landing (Part 2)
Hong Kong Cannot Escape A Hard Landing (Part 2)
The bottom line is that as the HKMA withdraws domestic liquidity, this will reassert downward pressure on business activity and asset prices, particularly real estate. With private consumption a whopping 65% of GDP, household deleveraging will also prove to be a formidable headwind for domestic spending. Outside interest rates, Hong Kong SAR remains a trade hub. If global trade slows down meaningfully, this will lead to a deterioration in the current account. This triple whammy from slowing global trade, rising interest rates and consumer deleveraging could prove indigestible for Hong Kong assets. Policy Options Chart 12The Government Could Bail Out Hong Kong
The Government Could Bail Out Hong Kong
The Government Could Bail Out Hong Kong
As highlighted above, the HKD peg will remain in place for the foreseeable future, but this will come at a huge cost. The advantage of the HKD peg is that the choice of the nominal anchor, the US dollar, renders it credible. As a financial hub, this is crucial for Hong Kong. Meanwhile, such an anchor also imposes fiscal discipline since government deficits cannot be monetized by money printing. In the case where the government tries to be profligate, the rise in inflation will lower real rates and lead to capital outflows. This will force the HKMA to sell US dollars and absorb local currency. Indeed, over the past several years, government debt in Hong Kong has been close to nil (Chart 12). The drawback of a fixed exchange-rate regime is that Hong Kong SAR has relinquished control over independent monetary policy. Such a union was justified when the economic cycles between the US and Hong Kong SAR were in sync, but now the region needs easier policy settings. The roadmap of the late 1990s could be what is in store for Hong Kong SAR. In short, the peg survived but the region went through a severe internal devaluation. During the Asian crisis, property prices fell by more than 60%. If that were to occur today, it would herald a prolonged period of high unemployment and stagnant wages to realign the region’s competitiveness with its trading partners. Hong Kong SAR stocks have already borne the brunt of an internal adjustment and are trading at very cheap multiples (Chart 13). The MSCI Hong Kong stock index is composed of mostly financials (47% of market cap) and property stocks (21% of market cap). As HKD rates are rising, loan growth in Hong Kong SAR is contracting and net interest margins have collapsed (Chart 14). This does not bode well for the near-term performance of financials. Chart 13Markets Have Already Discounted A Pessimistic Scenario For Hong Kong Shares
Markets Have Already Discounted A Pessimistic Scenario For Hong Kong Shares
Markets Have Already Discounted A Pessimistic Scenario For Hong Kong Shares
Chart 14Banks In Hong Kong Are Facing A Tough ##br##Reckoning
Banks In Hong Kong Are Facing A Tough Reckoning
Banks In Hong Kong Are Facing A Tough Reckoning
The good news is that similar to the late 1990s, banks are unlikely to go bust. Hong Kong SAR banks are well capitalized and delinquency rates are quite low, suggesting a banking crisis is unlikely to be a source of pain for the HKD peg (Chart 15). In fact, Hong Kong SAR banks rank favorably among their global peers in terms of capital adequacy (Chart 16). Chart 15Banks In Hong Kong Are Well Capitalized (Part 1)
Banks In Hong Kong Are Well Capitalized (Part 1)
Banks In Hong Kong Are Well Capitalized (Part 1)
Chart 16Banks In Hong Kong Are Well Capitalized (Part 2)
The Future Of The Hong Kong Dollar Peg
The Future Of The Hong Kong Dollar Peg
Specific to the currency, Hong Kong is also running recurring current account surpluses. This is boosting its FX reserves (Chart 17). That lends credibility to the peg in the near term. The bad news is that as the domestic economy slows down, and global trade comes close to a standstill, these surpluses could evaporate. One cost to Hong Kong is that the peg to the US dollar has made HKD incrementally expensive. Our model shows that the real effective exchange for HKD is about 2.5 standard deviations above fair value (Chart 18). Our view on the US dollar is that we could see depreciation over a 12-to-18-month horizon, but an overshoot in the near term is quite likely. A drop in the US dollar will help realign competitiveness in the HKD. Meantime, the market has also been pushing the currency towards the weaker side of its convertibility band. Chart 17Balance Of Payments Remain Favorable For The HKD
Balance Of Payments Remain Favorable For The HKD
Balance Of Payments Remain Favorable For The HKD
Chart 18The HKD Is Expensive
The HKD Is Expensive
The HKD Is Expensive
Longer term, as Hong Kong SAR continues to become more entwined with China, a peg to the CNY will make sense. This process will be the initial step in the region’s official embrace of the RMB system. That said, the process will be gradual since the US dollar remains very much a reserve currency, and the relevance of Hong Kong SAR as a financial center hinges upon easy access to the USD. What is more likely is that any re-pegging to the RMB will come many years down the road, when the yuan has become a fully convertible currency. The de-pegging of the HKD from the USD or adjusting the peg is as much a political discussion as an economic one. Political conditions for this change are not yet present given such a change will have major ramifications for the economy of Hong Kong SAR and will likely also reverberate through financial asset prices. One can imagine a scenario where HKD yields are forced to adjust to a new nominal anchor. Investors have been convinced through almost 30 years of history to treat the HKD as a proxy for the US dollar. That said, the economic pain associated with maintaining the HKD-USD peg will ensure authorities accelerate the use of RMBs in Hong Kong, with a goal of eventually adopting the yuan as the de facto currency. Adopting a currency board akin to Singapore is another option that makes sense, especially since this would give the HKMA scope to link to cheaper currencies, such as the yen and euro. That said, this is unlikely to be politically palatable, especially for Beijing. A link to the yuan that already does this job makes sense. Finally, there is always the option to fully float the peg, but this would probably increase currency volatility. This is unlikely in the near term. The Goldilocks scenario for policymakers is when the US dollar eventually depreciates against major currencies, easing financial conditions for Hong Kong SAR concerns. This will dovetail nicely with the goals of the monetary authorities, maintain credibility while easing financial concerns for a very levered economy. Investment Conclusions The HKD peg will remain in place, but the financial dislocations will lead to significant internal devaluation in Hong Kong SAR. As US interest rates rise, the HKD will be under considerable pressure. The HKMA will have no choice but to allow HKD interest rates to rise. This will tip the property market and thrust the economy into deflation and a recession. Chinese bonds are the best hedge against this risk. Avoid property and financial shares for the time being. Were the peg to break today, the HKD will depreciate according to our valuation models. This suggests markets are right to push the HKD-linked rate towards the weaker end of the convertibility band. Despite the economic and financial pain, the HKMA will not abandon the peg. That means carry trades will continue to make money. Using the HKD as a funding currency still makes sense in the near term. In long run, the economic pain associated with maintaining the HKD-USD peg will make authorities in Beijing accelerate the use of the RMB in Hong Kong’s special administrative region. The eventual goal will be for Hong Kong SAR to adopt the yuan as its currency. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Qingyun Xu, CFA Associate Editor qingyunx@bcaresearch.com
Listen to a short summary of this report Executive Summary GIS Projection For The EUR/USD
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
We went long the euro early last week, as EUR/USD hit our buy limit price of $0.99. Despite a near cut-off of Russian gas imports, European gas inventories have reached 84% of capacity – above the 80% target that the EU set for November 1st. The latest meteorological forecasts suggest that Europe will experience a warmer-than-normal winter. This will cut heating usage, likely making gas rationing unnecessary. Currencies fare best in loose fiscal/tight monetary environments. This is what Europe faces over the coming months, as governments boost income support for households and businesses, while ramping up spending on energy infrastructure and defense. For its part, the ECB has started hiking rates. Since mid-August, interest rate differentials have moved in favor of the euro at both the short and long end. Rising inflation expectations make it less likely that the ECB will be able to back off from its tightening campaign as it did in past cycles. A hawkish Fed is the biggest risk to our bullish EUR/USD view. We expect US inflation to trend lower over the coming months, before reaccelerating in the second half of 2023. However, as the August CPI report highlights, the danger is that any dip in inflation proves to be shallower and shorter-lived than previously anticipated. Bottom Line: Although significant uncertainty remains, the risk-reward trade-off favors being long EUR/USD. Our end-2022 target is $1.06. Dear Client, I will be meeting clients in Asia next week while also working on our Fourth Quarter Strategy Outlook, which will be published at the end of the month. In lieu of our regular report next Friday, you will receive a Special Report from my colleague, Ritika Mankar, discussing the sources of US equity outperformance over the past 14 years and the likely path ahead. Best Regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist It’s Just a Clown Chart 1Investors Are Bullish The Dollar, Not The Euro
Investors Are Bullish The Dollar, Not The Euro
Investors Are Bullish The Dollar, Not The Euro
The scariest part of a horror movie is usually the one before the monster is revealed. No matter how good the special effects, the human brain can always conjure up something more frightening than anything Hollywood can dream up. Investors have been conjuring up all sorts of cataclysmic scenarios for the upcoming European winter. In financial markets, the impact has been most visible in the value of the euro, which has tumbled to parity against the US dollar. Only 23% of investors are bullish the euro at present, down from a peak of 78% in January 2021 (Chart 1). Conversely, 75% of investors are bullish the US dollar. More than half of fund managers cited “long US dollar” as the most crowded trade in the latest BofA Global Fund Manager Survey (“long commodities” was a distant second at 10%). As we discuss below, the outlook for the euro may be a lot better than most investors realize. While my colleagues, Chester Ntonifor, BCA’s chief FX strategist, and Mathieu Savary, BCA’s chief European strategist, are not quite ready to buy the euro just yet, we all agree that EUR/USD will rise over the long haul. Cutting Putin Loose Natural gas accounts for about a quarter of Europe’s energy supply. Prior to the Ukraine war, about 40% of that gas came from Russia (Chart 2). With the closure of the NordStream 1 pipeline, that number has fallen to 9% (some Russian gas continues to enter Europe via Ukraine and the TurkStream supply route). Yet, despite the deep drop in Russian natural gas imports, European natural gas inventories are up to 84% of capacity – roughly in line with past years and above the EU’s November 1st target of 80% (Chart 3). Chart 2Despite A Sharp Drop In Imports Of Russian Natural Gas…
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
Chart 3...Europeans Managed To Stock Up On Natural Gas For The Winter Season
...Europeans Managed To Stock Up On Natural Gas For The Winter Season
...Europeans Managed To Stock Up On Natural Gas For The Winter Season
Europe has been able to achieve this feat by aggressively buying natural gas on the open market. While this has caused gas prices to soar, it sets the stage for a retreat in prices in the months ahead. European spot natural gas prices have already fallen from over €300/Mwh in late August to €214/Mwh, and the futures market is discounting a further decline in prices over the next two years (Chart 4). Chart 4The Futures Market Is Discounting A Further Decline In Natural Gas Prices
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
Chart 5Futures Prices Of Energy Commodities Provide Some Limited Information On Where Spot Prices Are Heading
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
Follow the Futures? Futures prices are not a foolproof guide to where spot prices are heading. As Chart 5 illustrates, the correlation between the slope of the futures curve and subsequent changes in spot prices in energy markets is quite low. Nevertheless, future spot returns do tend to be negative when the curve is backwardated, as it is now, especially when assessed over horizons of around 12-to-18 months (Table 1). Table 1Energy Commodity Spot Price Returns Tend To Be Negative When The Futures Curve Is Backwardated
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
Our guess is that European natural gas prices will indeed fall further from current levels. The latest meteorological forecasts suggest that Europe will experience a milder-than-normal winter (Chart 6). This is critical considering that natural gas accounts for over 40% of EU residential heating use once electricity and heat generated in gas-fired plants are included (Chart 7). Chart 6Meteorological Models Suggest Above-Normal Temperatures In Europe This Winter
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
Chart 7Natural Gas Is An Important Source Of Energy For Heating Homes In The EU
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
A warm winter would bolster the euro area’s trade balance, which has fallen into deficit this year as the energy import bill has soared (Chart 8). An improving balance of payments would help the euro. Europe is moving quickly to secure new sources of energy supply. In less than one year, Europe has become America’s biggest overseas market for LNG (Chart 9). A new gas pipeline linking Spain with the rest of Europe should be operational by next spring. Chart 8Soaring Energy Costs Have Pushed The Euro Area Trade Balance Into Deficit
Soaring Energy Costs Have Pushed The Euro Area Trade Balance Into Deficit
Soaring Energy Costs Have Pushed The Euro Area Trade Balance Into Deficit
Chart 9Europe Is America's Largest LNG Customer
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
In the meantime, Germany is building two “floating” LNG terminals. It has also postponed plans to mothball its nuclear power plants and has restarted its coal-fired power plants, a decision that even the German Green Party has supported. France is aiming to boost nuclear capacity, which had fallen below 50% earlier this summer. Électricité de France has pledged to nearly double daily production by December. For its part, the Dutch government has indicated it will raise output from the massive Groningen natural gas field if the energy crisis intensifies. Fiscal Policy to the Rescue On the policy front, European governments are taking steps to buttress household balance sheets during the energy crisis, with nearly €400 billion in support measures announced so far (and surely more to come). Although these support measures will be offset with roughly €140 billion of windfall profit taxes on the energy sector, the net effect will be to raise budget deficits across the region. However, following the old adage that one should “finance temporary shocks but adjust to permanent ones,” a temporary spike in fiscal support may be just what the doctor ordered. The last thing Europe needs is a situation where energy prices fall next year, but the region remains mired in recession as households seek to rebuild their savings. Such an outcome would depress tax revenues, likely leading to higher government debt-to-GDP ratios. Get Ready For a V-Shaped Recovery Stronger growth in the rest of the world should give the euro area a helping hand. That would be good news for the euro, given its cyclical characteristics (Chart 10). The European economy is especially leveraged to Chinese growth. It is likely that the authorities will loosen the zero-Covid policy once the Twentieth Party Congress concludes next month, and new anti-viral drugs and possibly an Omicron-specific booster shot become widely available later this year. That should help jumpstart China’s economy. More stimulus will also help. Chart 11 shows that EUR/USD is highly correlated with the Chinese credit/fiscal impulse. Chart 10The Euro Is A Cyclical Currency
The Euro Is A Cyclical Currency
The Euro Is A Cyclical Currency
Chart 11EUR/USD Is Highly Correlated With The Chinese Credit & Fiscal Impulse
EUR/USD Is Highly Correlated With The Chinese Credit & Fiscal Impulse
EUR/USD Is Highly Correlated With The Chinese Credit & Fiscal Impulse
All this suggests that the prevailing view on European growth is too pessimistic. Even if Europe does succumb to a technical recession in the months ahead, it is likely to experience a V-shaped recovery. That will provide a nice tailwind for the euro. Loose Fiscal/Tight Monetary Policies: The Winning Combo for Currencies Chart 12Fiscal Policy Has Eased Structurally In The Euro Area More Than In Other Advanced Economies
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
A tight monetary and loose fiscal policy has historically been the most bullish combination for currencies. Recall that the US dollar soared in the early 1980s on the back of Paul Volcker’s restrictive monetary policy and Ronald Reagan’s expansionary fiscal policy, the latter consisting of huge tax cuts and increased military spending. While not nearly on the same scale, the euro area’s current configuration of loose fiscal/tight monetary policies bears some resemblance to the US in the early 1980s. Even before the war in Ukraine began, the IMF was forecasting a much bigger swing towards expansionary fiscal policy in the euro area than in the rest of the world (Chart 12). The war has only intensified this trend, triggering a flurry of spending on energy and defense – spending that is likely to persist for most of this decade. The ECB’s Reaction Function After biding its time, the ECB has joined the growing list of central banks that are hiking rates. On September 8th, the ECB jacked up the deposit rate by 75 bps. Investors expect a further 185 bps in hikes through to September 2023. While US rate expectations have widened relative to euro area expectations since the August US CPI report (more on that later), the gap is still narrower than it was on August 15th. Back then, investors expected euro area 3-month rates to be 233 bps below comparable US rates in June 2023. Today, they expect the gap to be only 177 bps (Chart 13). Real long-term bond spreads, which conceptually at least should be the more important driver of currency movements, have also moved in the euro’s favor. In the past, ECB rate hikes were swiftly followed by cuts as the region was unable to tolerate even moderately higher rates. While this very well could happen again, the odds are lower than they once were, at least over the next 12 months. Chart 13Interest Rate Differentials Have Moved In Favor Of The Euro Since Mid-August
Interest Rate Differentials Have Moved In Favor Of The Euro Since Mid-August
Interest Rate Differentials Have Moved In Favor Of The Euro Since Mid-August
Chart 14Euro Area: Inflation Expectations Have Risen Briskly
Euro Area: Inflation Expectations Have Risen Briskly
Euro Area: Inflation Expectations Have Risen Briskly
For one thing, median inflation expectations three years ahead in the ECB’s monthly survey have risen briskly (Chart 14). The Bundesbank’s own survey paints an even more alarming picture, with median expected inflation over the next five years having risen to 5% from 3% in mid-2021 (Chart 15). Expected German inflation over the next ten years stands at a still-elevated 4%. Whether this reflects Germans’ heightened historical sensitivity to inflation risks is unclear, but it is something the ECB cannot ignore. Structurally looser fiscal policy has raised the neutral rate of interest in the euro area, giving the ECB more leeway to lift rates. A narrowing in competitiveness gaps across the currency bloc has also mitigated the need for the ECB to set rates based on the needs of the weakest economies in the region. Chart 16 shows that collectively, unit labor costs among the countries most afflicted by the sovereign debt crisis a decade ago have completely converged with Germany. Chart 15German Inflation Expectations Are Elevated
German Inflation Expectations Are Elevated
German Inflation Expectations Are Elevated
Chart 16Europe's Periphery Has Closed The Competitiveness Gap With Germany
Europe's Periphery Has Closed The Competitiveness Gap With Germany
Europe's Periphery Has Closed The Competitiveness Gap With Germany
While Italy is still a laggard in the competitiveness rankings, the ECB’s new Transmission Protection Instrument (TPI) – which allows the central bank to buy sovereign debt with less stringent conditionality than under the Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT) program – should keep a lid on sovereign spreads. This, in turn, will allow the ECB to raise rates more than it otherwise could. Hawkish Fed is the Biggest Risk to Our Bullish EUR/USD View Chart 17Supplier Delivery Times Have Fallen Sharply
Supplier Delivery Times Have Fallen Sharply
Supplier Delivery Times Have Fallen Sharply
Tuesday’s hotter-than-expected August US CPI report pulled the rug from under the euro’s incipient rally, pushing EUR/USD back to parity. We have been flagging the risks of high inflation for several years (see, for example, our February 19, 2021 report, 1970s-Style Inflation: Yes, It Could Happen Again). Our thesis is that inflation will follow a “two steps up, one step down” pattern. We are probably near the top of those two steps now, with the next leg for inflation likely to be to the downside, driven by ebbing pandemic-related supply side-dislocations. Perhaps most notably, supplier delivery times have fallen sharply in recent months (Chart 17). These pandemic-related dislocations extend to the housing rental market. Rent inflation dropped after rent moratoriums were put in place, only to rebound forcefully once the moratoriums were lifted and the labor market tightened. Although official measures of rent inflation will remain elevated for some time, owing to lags in how they are constructed, timelier data on new rental units coming to market already point to a sharp decline in rent inflation (Chart 18). This is something that the Fed is sure to notice. Ironically, falling inflation could sow the seeds of its own demise. Nominal wage growth is currently very elevated, yet because of high inflation, real wages are still shrinking. As inflation comes down, real wage growth will turn positive. This will lift consumer sentiment, helping to buoy consumption (Chart 19). A pickup in consumer spending will cause the economy to overheat again, leading to a second wave of inflation in the back half of 2023. Chart 18Timelier Measures Of Rent Inflation Have Rolled Over
Timelier Measures Of Rent Inflation Have Rolled Over
Timelier Measures Of Rent Inflation Have Rolled Over
Chart 19Falling Inflation Will Boost Real Wages And Consumer Confidence
Falling Inflation Will Boost Real Wages And Consumer Confidence
Falling Inflation Will Boost Real Wages And Consumer Confidence
As we discussed in our August 18th Special Report Dispatches From The Future: From Goldilocks To President DeSantis, the Fed will respond to this second inflationary wave by hiking the Fed funds rate to 5%. This will temporarily push up the value of the dollar, a process that will only stop once the US falls into recession in 2024 and the Fed is forced to cut rates again. Our projected rollercoaster ride for EUR/USD is depicted in Chart 20. We see the euro rising to $1.06 by year-end, peaking at $1.11 in the spring of 2023, falling back to $1.05 by late 2023, and then beginning a prolonged rally in 2024. Chart 20GIS Projection For The EUR/USD
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
Chart 21The Dollar Is Very Overvalued Against The Euro Based On PPP
The Dollar Is Very Overvalued Against The Euro Based On PPP
The Dollar Is Very Overvalued Against The Euro Based On PPP
Chart 21 shows that the dollar is 30% overvalued against the euro based on its Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) exchange rate. Thus, there is significant long-term upside to EUR/USD. Implications for Other Currencies and Regional Equity Allocation Chart 22Stock Markets Outside The US Tend To Fare Best When The Dollar Is Weakening
Stock Markets Outside The US Tend To Fare Best When The Dollar Is Weakening
Stock Markets Outside The US Tend To Fare Best When The Dollar Is Weakening
The strengthening in the euro that we envision over the next six months or so will be part of a broad-based dollar decline. While BCA’s Foreign Exchange Strategy service sees more upside for the euro than the pound, GBP/USD will likely follow the same trajectory as EUR/USD. The yen is one of the cheapest currencies in the world and should finally gain some traction. If China abandons its zero-Covid policy and increases fiscal support for its economy, the RMB and other EM currencies should strengthen. Stock markets outside the US tend to fare best when the dollar is weakening. This includes Europe. As Chart 22 illustrates, there is a close correlation between EUR/USD and the relative performance of European versus US stocks. Thus, an above-benchmark exposure to international markets is appropriate during the coming months. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Follow me on LinkedIn & Twitter Global Investment Strategy View Matrix
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
It’s Time To Buy The Euro
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It’s Time To Buy The Euro
It’s Time To Buy The Euro