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Copper

Highlights The Biden Administration's $2.25 trillion infrastructure plan rolled out yesterday will, at the margin, boost global demand for energy and base metals more than expected later this year and next.  Global GDP growth estimates – and the boost supplied by US stimulus – once again will have to be adjusted higher (Chart of the Week). Energy and metals fundamentals continue to tighten. OPEC 2.0's so-far-successful production management strategy will keep the level of supply just below demand, which will keep Brent crude oil on either side of $60/bbl. Base-metals output will struggle to meet higher demand from the ongoing buildout of renewables infrastructure and growing electric-vehicle sales. Of late, concerns that speculative positioning suggests prices will head lower – or, at other times, higher – are entirely misplaced: Spec positioning conveys no information on price levels or direction.  Energy and metals prices, on the other hand, do convey useful information on spec positioning, demonstrating specs do not lead the news or prices, they follow them. Short-term headwinds caused by halting recoveries and renewed lockdowns – particularly in the EU – will fade in 2H21 as vaccines roll out, if the experience of the UK and US are any guide.  Continued USD strength, however, would remain a headwind. Feature If the Biden administration is successful in getting its $2.25 trillion infrastructure-spending bill through Congress, the US will join the rest of the world in the race to re-build – in some cases, build anew – its long-neglected bridges, roads, schools, communications and high-speed transportation networks, and, critically, its electric-power grid.  There's a lot of game left to play on this, but our Geopolitical Strategy group is giving this bill an 80% of passage later this year, after all the wrangling and log-rolling in Congress is done. In and of itself, the infrastructure-directed spending coming out of Biden's plan will be a catalyst for higher US industrial commodity demand – energy, metals and bulks.  In addition, it will support the lift in the demand boost coming out of higher GDP growth globally, which will be pushed higher by US fiscal spending, as the Chart of the Week shows.  Of note is the extremely robust growth expected in India, China and the US, which are among the largest consumers of industrial commodities globally.  Overall growth in the G20 and globally will be expansive in 2022 as well. Chart of the WeekBiden's $2.25 Trillion Infrastructure Bill Will Boost Global Commodity Demand Fundamentals Support Oil, Bulks, And Metals Fundamentals Support Oil, Bulks, And Metals Higher GDP growth translates directly into higher demand for commodities, all else equal, as can be seen in the relationship between EM and DM GDP, supply and inventories and Brent crude oil prices in Chart 2.  While we have reduced our Brent forecast for this year to $60/bbl on the back of renewed demand-side weakness in the EU due to problems in acquiring and distributing COVID-19 vaccines, we expect this to be reversed next year and into 2025, with prices trading between $60-$80/bbl (Chart 3).  OPEC 2.0, the oil-producer coalition led by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and Russia, has done an excellent job of keeping the level of oil supply below demand over the course of the pandemic, which we expect to continue to the end of 2025.1 Chart 2Higher GDP Growth Presages Higher Commodity Demand Higher GDP Growth Presages Higher Commodity Demand Higher GDP Growth Presages Higher Commodity Demand Chart 3Brent Crude Oil Prices Will Average - / bbl to 2025 Brent Crude Oil Prices Will Average $60 - $80 / bbl to 2025 Brent Crude Oil Prices Will Average $60 - $80 / bbl to 2025 As the Biden plan makes its way through Congress, markets will get a better idea of how much diesel fuel, copper, steel, iron ore, etc., will be required in the US alone.  What is important to note here that the US is just moving to the starting line, whereas other economies like China and the EU already have begun their investment cycles in renewables and EVs.  At present, key markets already are tight, particularly copper (Chart 4) and aluminum (Chart 5).  In both markets, we expect physical deficits this year and next, which inclines us to believe the metals leg of this renewables buildout is just beginning – higher prices will be required to incentivize the development of new supply.2  Chart 4Copper Will Post Physical Deficit... Copper Will Post Physical Deficit... Copper Will Post Physical Deficit... Chart 5...As Will Aluminum ...As Will Aluminum ...As Will Aluminum This is particularly important in copper, where growth in mining output of ore has been flat for the past two years.  Copper is the one metal that spans all renewables technologies, and is a bellwether commodity for global growth.  We expect copper to trade to $4.50/lb (up ~ $0.50/lb vs spot) on the COMEX in 4Q21 on the back of increasing demand and tight supplies – i.e., falling mining supply and refined copper output growth (Chart 6). Worth noting also is steel rebar and hot-rolled coil prices traded at record highs this week on Chinese futures markets.  Stronger steel markets continue to support iron ore prices, although the latter is trading off its recent highs and likely will move lower toward the end of the year as Brazilian supply returns to the market.3  We use steel prices as a leading indicator for copper prices – steel leads copper prices by ~ 9 months.  This makes sense when one considers steel is consumed early in infrastructure and construction projects, while copper consumption occurs later as airports and houses are fitted with copper for electric, plumbing and communications applications. Chart 6Copper Ore Output Flat Copper Ore Output Flat Copper Ore Output Flat   Does Speculative Positioning Matter? Of late, media pundits and analysts have cited an unwinding of speculative positions in oil and metals markets following sharp run-ups in net long positions as a harbinger of weaker prices in the near future (Chart 7).4  At other times, speculation has been invoked as a reason for price surges – e.g., when oil rocketed  toward $150/bbl in mid-2008, which was followed by a price collapse at the start of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC).5 Brunetti et al note, "The role of speculators in financial markets has been the source of considerable interest and controversy in recent years. Concern about speculative trading also finds support in theory where noise traders, speculative bubbles, and herding can drive prices away from fundamental values and destabilize markets." (p. 1545) Chart 7Speculative Positioning Lower In Brent Than WTI Speculatives Positioning Lower in Brent Than WTI Speculatives Positioning Lower in Brent Than WTI We recently re-tested earlier findings in our research, which found that knowledge of how specs are positioned – either on the long or the short side of the market – conveys no information on the level of prices or the change that should be expected given that knowledge.  However, knowledge of the price level does convey useful information on how speculators are positioned in futures markets.6 In cointegrating regressions of speculative positions in crude oil, natural gas and copper futures on price levels for these commodities, we find the level of prices to be a statistically significant determinant of spec positions. We find no such relationship using spec positions as an explanatory variable for prices.7 On the other hand, Chart 2 above is an example of statistically significant relationships for Brent and WTI price as a function of supply-demand fundamentals displaying coefficients of determination (r-squares) of close to 90% in the post-GFC period (2010 to now).  This supports our earlier findings regarding spec behavior: They follow prices, they don't lead them.8 We are not dismissive of speculation.  It plays a critical role in markets, by providing the liquidity that enables commodity producers and consumers to hedge their price exposures, and to investors seeking to diversify their portfolios with commodity exposures that are uncorrelated to their equity and bond holdings.  Short-Term Headwinds Likely Dissipate COVID-19 remains the largest risk to markets generally, commodities in particular.  The mishandling of vaccine rollouts in the EU has pushed back our assumption for demand recovery deeper into 2H21, but it has not derailed it.  We expect COVID-related deaths and hospitalizations to fall in the EU as they have in the UK and the US following the widespread distribution of vaccines, which should occur in the near future as Brussels organizes its pandemic response (Chart 8).  Making vaccines available for other states in dire straits will follow, which will allow the global re-opening to progress as lockdowns are lifted (Chart 9). Chart 8EU Vaccination Rollouts Will Boost Global Economic Recovery Fundamentals Support Oil, Bulks, And Metals Fundamentals Support Oil, Bulks, And Metals Chart 9Global Re-Opening Has Slowed, But Will Resume In 2H21 Fundamentals Support Oil, Bulks, And Metals Fundamentals Support Oil, Bulks, And Metals The other big risk we see to commodities is persistent USD strength (Chart 10).  The dollar has rallied for the better part of 2021, largely on the back of improving US economic prospects relative to other states, and success in its vaccination efforts.  The resumption of the USD's bear market may have to wait until the rest of the world catches up with America's public-health response to the pandemic, and the global economy ex-US and -China enters a stronger expansionary mode. Bottom Line: We remain bullish industrial commodities expecting demand to improve as the EU rolls out vaccines and begins to make progress in arresting the pandemic and removing lockdowns.  Global fiscal and monetary policy, which likely will be bolstered by a massive round of US infrastructure spending beginning in 4Q21 will catalyze demand growth for oil and base metals.  This will prompt another round of GDP revisions to the upside.  The dollar remains a headwind for now, but we expect it to return to a bear market in 2H21. Chart 10The USD's Evolution Remains Important The USD's Evolution Remains Important The USD's Evolution Remains Important   Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Ashwin Shyam Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com   Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish Going into the April 1 meeting of OPEC 2.0 today, we are not expecting any increase in production.  OPEC earlier this week noted demand had softened, mostly due to the slow recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic in the EU, which, based on their previous policy decisions, suggests the producer coalition will not be increasing production.  The coalition led by KSA and Russia will have to address Iran's return as a major exporter to China this year, which appears to have been importing ~ 1mm b/d of Iranian crude this month (Chart 11).  This puts Iran in direct competition with KSA as a major exporter to China, in defiance of the US re-imposition of sanctions against Iranian exports.  China and Iran over the weekend signed a 25-year trade pact that also could include military provisions, which could, over time, alter the balance of power in the Persian Gulf if Chinese military assets – naval and land warfare – deploy to Iran under their agreement.  Details of the deal are sparse, as The Guardian noted in its recent coverage.  Among other things, government officials in Tehran have come under withering criticism for entering the deal, which they contend was signed with a "politically bankrupt regime."  The Guardian also noted US President Joe Biden " is prepared to make a new offer to Iran this week whereby he will lift some sanctions in return for Iran taking specific limited steps to come back into compliance with the nuclear agreement, including reducing the level to which it enriches uranium," in the wake of the signing of this deal. Base Metals: Bullish Copper fell this week, initially on an inventory build, and has now settled right under the $4/lb mark, as investors await details on the US infrastructure bill unveiled in Pittsburgh, PA, on Wednesday.  According to mining.com, a major chunk of the proposed bill will be devoted to investments in infrastructure, which will be metals-intensive.  Precious Metals: Bullish Gold fell further this week, as US treasury yields rose, buoyed by the increased US vaccine efforts and President Biden’s proposed spending plans (Chart 12). USD strength also worked against the yellow metal, which has been steadily declining since the beginning of this year.  COMEX gold fell below the $1,700/oz mark for the third time this month and settled at $1,683.90/oz on Tuesday. Chart 11 Sporadic Producers Will Be Accomodated Sporadic Producers Will Be Accomodated Chart 12 Gold Trading Lower On The Back of A Strong Dollar Gold Trading Lower On The Back of A Strong Dollar     Footnotes 1     Please see Five-Year Brent Forecast Update: Expect Price Range of $60 - $80/bbl, which we published 25 March 2021.  It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 2     Please see Industrial Commodities Super-Cycle Or Bull Market?, which we published 4 March 2021 for additional discussion, particularly regarding the need for additional capex in energy and metals markets. 3    Please see UPDATE 1-Strong industrial activity, profit lift China steel futures, published by reuters.com 29 March 2021. 4    See, e.g., Column: Frothy oil market deflates as virus fears return published 23 March 2021. 5    Brunetti, Celso, Bahattin Büyüksahin, and Jeffrey H. Harris (2016), " Speculators, Prices, and Market Volatility," Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 51:5, pp. 1545-74, for further discussion. 6    Please see Specs Back Up The Truck For Oil, which we published 26 April 2018, and Feedback Loop: Spec Positioning & Oil Price Volatility published 10 May 2018.  Both are available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 7     We group money managers (registered commodity trading advisors, commodity pool operators and unregistered funds) and swap dealers (banks and trading companies providing liquidity to hedgers and speculators) together to test these relationships. 8    In our earlier research, we also noted our results generally were supported in the academic literature.  See, e.g., Fattouh, Bassam, Lutz Kilian and Lavan Mahadeva (2012), "The Role of Speculation in Oil Markets: What Have We Learned So Far?" published by The Oxford Institute For Energy Studies.   Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Summary of Closed Trades Higher Inflation On The Way Higher Inflation On The Way
Highlights Copper prices will continue to rally, following a surge this week to highs not seen since early 2013 on the back of falling inventories, particularly in China, where physical demand has taken stocks to their lowest levels in almost 10 years (Chart of the Week). Physical premiums for the copper cathodes delivered to off-exchange bonded warehouses in China this week are up almost 60% since November – to $73/MT – providing further evidence of market tightness. Mine output in Peru, the second largest producer behind Chile, was down 12.5% to 2.15mm MT last year in the wake of COVID-19 containment measures. Given this large decline in output, the multi-year flattening of supply growth will continue. Upside demand pressure is building, as COVID-19 vaccination rates rise. Funding for the build-out of renewable energy generation is ramping up, and now includes expected US fiscal stimulus focused on renewables. Recovering global GDP, and China’s metals-intensive Five-Year Plan also will contribute to demand growth. We continue to expect COMEX copper to trade above $4/lb this year, but the likelihood this occurs in 1H21 (vs 2H21 as we earlier forecast) is increasing. Forward curves will become more backwardated, as markets continue to tighten. Feature Copper prices will continue to surge on the back of unexpected strength in Chinese demand, which has taken inventory levels to near-decade lows. This is something of an anomaly going into a Lunar New Year – the year of the Metal Ox – when activity typically slows. The big draw from global stocks that went into China’s inventories last year means global stocks will remain tight as the rest of the world continues its recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic (Chart 2). Particularly noteworthy are the huge drops in copper inventories held in the Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE, panel 3), and the London Metal Exchange (LME, panel 5), which are driving global drawdowns. Away from the commodity-exchange inventories, premiums for delivery of copper cathodes from bonded warehouses into China surged close to 60% from November levels to $73/MT earlier this week, as demand for physical material surges, according to reuters.com. Cathodes are used to make wire, tubes, for melting stock and in copper alloys. Demand for cathodes is rising outside China, which indicates they will retain a physical premium, even with exports from Chile restored to normal following weather-related disruptions. Chart of the WeekCopper Prices Surge As Global Storage Draws Copper Prices Surge As Global Storage Draws Copper Prices Surge As Global Storage Draws   Chart 2Falling Global Inventories Support Copper Prices Falling Global Inventories Support Copper Prices Falling Global Inventories Support Copper Prices Chart 3Sources of Copper Demand Strength Sources of Copper Demand Strength Sources of Copper Demand Strength This year’s departure from a seasonal demand downturn in Chinese copper demand likely is due to government efforts to limit travel to contain COVID-19 contagion, which means workers remain available to meet stronger demand for manufactured goods domestically and abroad. In addition, domestic demand – from electrification and infrastructure to housing – is particularly robust, which has kept pressure on inventories (Chart 3). Longer-Term Copper Demand Strength Baseline industrial, construction and infrastructure demand for copper – what’s already in place and continues to grow in line with the expansion of global GDP – will be augmented by the global build-out of renewables-based electricity generation, as the world moves toward a low-carbon future (Chart 4). Chart 4Incremental Renewables Demand Requires Significant Capex Copper Surge Welcomes Metal Ox Year Copper Surge Welcomes Metal Ox Year While this will not tax existing resources to the extent other materials will – e.g., copper demand from renewables will require less than 20% of existing identified reserves to meet cumulative demand to 2050 vs. the more than 100% of reserves required to meet cobalt demand by 2050 – this is still significant in a market requiring large capex increases to battle declining ore quality (Chart 5).1 Chart 5Higher Prices Needed To Spur Mining CAPEX Higher Prices Needed To Spur Mining CAPEX Higher Prices Needed To Spur Mining CAPEX Copper Supply Side Remains Challenged Short- and long-term challenges to global copper supply abound. Peru’s mine output was down 12.5% last year – to 2.15mm MT – in the wake of COVID-19 containment measures (Chart 6). Given Peru’s unexpectedly large decline in output, the multi-year flattening of supply growth we highlighted last month will continue.2 Indeed, we expect mined and refined output to show little or no growth this year, as was the case last year. This can partly be blamed on a lethargic recovery in mining capex, which hit a 10-year low in 2017. Longer term, as the continued global inventory drawdowns illustrate, the rate of growth in mined and refined production is far below the rate of growth in consumption globally. This is occurring as the pace of China’s recovery from COVID-19 aggregate demand destruction can be expected to start winding down later this year and growth ex-China ramps up (Chart 7). Chart 6Peru Posts Sharply Lower Output Peru Posts Sharply Lower Output Peru Posts Sharply Lower Output Prices for ore and refined copper will have to move higher to incentivize new production over the near term just to meet existing demand, to say nothing of new demand coming on from the global buildout in renewable-energy generation.3 Chart 7Supply Growth Lags Demand Growth Supply Growth Lags Demand Growth Supply Growth Lags Demand Growth Investment Implications As the rates of COVID-19 infection, hospitalization and deaths continue to fall globally, markets will begin to see evidence of an organic recovery in aggregate demand globally taking hold (Chart 8). We also expect this will remove a significant amount of the embedded risk premium in the broad trade-weighted USD, which will be bullish for commodities generally. The combination of organic growth and a weaker USD will boost the level of copper demand globally, even if China is slowing in 2H21, as our China Investment Strategy expects. This will put the weak y/y production growth in mined and refined copper in sharp perspective vis-à-vis copper demand, and will push copper prices higher. These fundamentals also will deepen the backwardation in CME COMEX copper futures for high-grade refined metal, as inventories continue to draw, and markets continue to tighten. We remain long the PICK ETF, and December 2021 COMEX copper futures, which are up 8.42% and 21.7% respectively since their inception dates on December 10, 2020 and September 10, 2020. Chart 8As COVID-19 Receeds Copper Demand Will Increase As COVID-19 Receeds Copper Demand Will Increase As COVID-19 Receeds Copper Demand Will Increase   Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com   Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish The US EIA estimates December and January LNG exports will hover close to 10 BCF/d, continuing a trend noted at the end of last year (Chart 9). November and December LNG exports last year were at record levels – 9.4 BCF/d and 9.8 BCF/d. In January, LNG exports were 9.8 BCF/d, another record for that month. Below-normal temperatures in Asia have spurred demand for US LNG at a time when spot outages at other exporting states reduced global supplies. The EIA expects US LNG exports to average 8.5 BCF/d and 9.2 BCF/d this year and next. Working natural gas stocks at the end of January were 2.7 BCF, up 2% y/y and 8% over the rolling five-year average inventory level. Base Metals: Bullish The European Commission estimates EV nickel demand will be the “single-largest growth sector for nickel demand over the next twenty years.” In a study released by the Commission, global nickel demand is expected to increase by 2.6mm tons by 2040, versus 92k tons in 2020. Internal supply will be sufficient to meet demand for the 27 EU states to 2024/25, according to the study, and thereafter physical deficits will follow. The study notes that without an end-of-life recycling buildout, this deficit will persist, as mining.com noted in its report on the study. Precious Metals: Bullish After sustaining a triple bottom in at ~ $840/oz, platinum prices have rallied almost $400/oz since November (Chart 10). Lower supplies and investor demand drove the rally. Going forward, we expect increasing auto demand – first in China, and then, later, in the rest of the world as organic growth revives – will support demand for platinum-group metals, particularly for platinum and palladium. Platinum posted a 390k-ounce deficit in 2020, while palladium demand exceeded supply by just over 600k oz, according to Johnson Matthey, the PGM refiner. The world consumes ~ 10mm ounces of palladium and ~ 7mm ounces of platinum p.a. Ags/Softs: Neutral Corn, wheat and soybeans were trading 2 – 3% lower, following the USDA’s February 2021 World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE) released on Tuesday. Markets drastically overestimated the amount by which the USDA would cut ending stocks for the 2020/21 crop year, with the Department trimming corn stocks to 1.5mm bushels (vs a 1.4mm bushel estimate of analysts), according to farmprogress.com. Chart 9 Copper Surge Welcomes Metal Ox Year Copper Surge Welcomes Metal Ox Year Chart 10 Platinum Price Rally USD 400 Since November Platinum Price Rally USD 400 Since November     Footnotes 1     Please see Table 13, p. 27 in Dominish, E., Florin, N. and Teske, S., 2019, Responsible Minerals Sourcing for Renewable Energy. Report prepared for Earthworks by the Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney. 2     Please see Pandemic Uncertainty Will Fall, Weakening USD, Boosting Metals, published 28 January 2021. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 3    Please see Renewables, China's FYP Underpin Metals Demand, published 26 November 2020. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com.   Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Summary of  Closed Trades Higher Inflation On The Way Higher Inflation On The Way
Highlights Pandemic uncertainty is keeping the USD well bid by raising global economic policy uncertainty. When this breaks – i.e., as higher vaccination rates push contagion rates down – the USD will resume its bear market. Renewable-energy output surpassed fossil-fuel generation in Europe for the first time in 2020. With the Biden administration re-committing to renewables, and China and Europe continuing their build-outs, copper demand will rise to meet grid-expansion needs. Copper mine output fell 0.5% in Jan-Oct 2020. Treatment and refining charges – already at 10-year lows – will remain depressed as supplies tighten. Major exchanges’ refined copper inventories were down 17% y/y in December, suggesting weak mine output continued into end-2020. Stocks will continue to fall this year, backwardating the COMEX's copper forward curve (Chart of the Week). Based on the World Bank’s forecast for real global GDP growth of 4% this year, and our expectation for a weaker USD, COMEX copper prices will likely breach $4.00/lb by 2H21. COVID-19 uncertainty drives metals: If infection and hospitalization rates outpace vaccinations, additional lockdowns in the US and Europe will stymie the recovery. Success in expanding vaccinations will push economic activity higher. We expect the latter outcome. Feature Pandemic uncertainty is driving global economic policy uncertainty, which is keeping a safe-haven bid under the USD (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekPhysical Copper Deficit Signals Continued Inventory Draws Physical Copper Deficit Signals Continued Inventory Draws Physical Copper Deficit Signals Continued Inventory Draws This continues to stymie the recovery in industrial commodity prices, particularly oil and base metals.1 The uncertainty caused by the COVID-19 pandemic feeds directly into global economic policy uncertainty, which drives USD safe-haven demand. Chart 2USD Remains In The Thrall Of Pandemic Uncertainty USD Remains In The Thrall Of Pandemic Uncertainty USD Remains In The Thrall Of Pandemic Uncertainty Pandemic uncertainty will not abate until vaccination distribution is sufficient to put infection, hospitalization and death rates on a clear downward trajectory, and remove the threat of widespread lockdowns, which once again are required to deal with rampant contagion rates and the possible spread of vaccine-resistant COVID-19 mutations locally and globally. As markets see empirical evidence of falling COVID-19-related infection, hospitalization and mortality, safe-haven demand for USD will weaken. Massive fiscal and monetary support will continue to support GDP globally, until organic growth takes off after sufficient populations are vaccinated, per the World Bank’s assumptions (Chart 3).2 Fiscal stimulus in the US exceeds 25% of GDP, and will continue to expand as the Biden administration rolls out additional spending measures. With the Fed remaining willing and able to accommodate this massive fiscal profligacy in the US, the USD will face increasing pressure on the downside as normalcy returns. Chart 3Massive Fiscal Support Globally Will Be Replaced By Organic Growth Pandemic Uncertainty Will Fall, Weakening USD, Boosting Metals Pandemic Uncertainty Will Fall, Weakening USD, Boosting Metals A weaker USD and stronger economic growth would boost copper prices this year and the next. A 5% decline in the broad trade-weighted USD this year would push spot COMEX copper prices above $4.30/lb, all else equal, while a 4% boost in world GDP – in line with the World Bank’s forecast for real growth this year – would lift prices to just under $4.05/lb, based on our modeling (Chart 4).3 Chart 4Lower USD, Stronger GDP Bullish For Copper Prices Lower USD, Stronger GDP Bullish For Copper Prices Lower USD, Stronger GDP Bullish For Copper Prices Renewable Generation Will Boost Copper Demand In addition to these stronger fundamentals, base metals demand – particularly for copper – will continue to benefit from the build-out of renewable-energy electricity generation globally, particularly in Europe and China. The return of the US to the Paris Agreement to combat climate change, and a renewed effort by the Biden administration to fund expanded renewable-energy resources will add to the increase in base-metals demand accompanying this global build-out (Chart 5).4 Europe is moving out ahead of the US in its deployment of renewable electricity generation, which, for the first time ever, surpassed fossil-fuel generation in 2020.5 S&P Global Market Intelligence this week reported renewable energy sources accounted for 38% of electricity generation in the EU vs 37% for fossil fuels. Renewables also surpassed fossil-fuel generation in the UK last year. Wind, solar and hydro all saw strong gains. Chart 5Copper Is Indispensible For A Low-Carbon Future Pandemic Uncertainty Will Fall, Weakening USD, Boosting Metals Pandemic Uncertainty Will Fall, Weakening USD, Boosting Metals Copper Supply Continues To Tighten It is important to once again note that all of these, and other renewable technologies, will require higher base metals output, none moreso than copper, which spans all renewable technologies. With copper-mining capex still weak and ore qualities falling in the mines that are producing, the supply side remains challenged (Chart 6). Over the past two years, p.a. supply growth on the mining side has been close to flat. The International Copper Study Group (ICSG) this week reported copper mine output fell 0.5% in the first 10 months of 2020. Refined copper output was up 1.5% over the same interval. Treatment and refining charges – already at 10-year lows – will remain depressed as supplies tighten. We expect full-year mined and refined output to fall on either side of zero growth for 2020, and 2021 (Chart 7).6 Major exchanges’ refined copper inventories were down 17% y/y in December, according to the ICSG, suggesting weak mine output continued into end-2020. An apparent increase in refined copper consumption of 2% noted by the ICSG also contributed to lower inventories. The Group estimates global refined copper balances adjusted for changes in Chinese bonded stocks, which are believed to have increased 105k tons y/y in the Jan-Dec 2020 interval, posted a physical deficit of ~ 380k tons. Chart 6Weak Capex, Lower Copper Ore Quality Remain Chief Supply-Side Challenges Weak Capex, Lower Copper Ore Quality Remain Chief Supply-Side Challenges Weak Capex, Lower Copper Ore Quality Remain Chief Supply-Side Challenges Chart 7Mined, Refined Copper Supply Growth Remains Weak Mined, Refined Copper Supply Growth Remains Weak Mined, Refined Copper Supply Growth Remains Weak We expect inventories will continue to fall this year – as seen in the Chart of the Week – as demand strengthens and supply growth remains weak, which will backwardate the COMEX copper forward curve. Metal Ox Year Brings Short-Term Uncertainties The approach of the Chinese New Year beginning 12 February 2021 normally would herald massive travel and celebration, which, all else equal, would dampen economic growth until festivities ended. This year, however, reports of a re-emergence of COVID-19 infections is casting doubt on this year’s celebrations. In addition, winter industrial curtailments to reduce pollution also should reduce short-term demand for metals generally. These transitory factors should show up in lower levels of economic activity on the industrial side. For this reason, we expect seasonal weakness to show up in 1Q21 activity, to be followed in 2Q21 by higher growth y/y. Bottom Line: Copper fundamentals continue to paint a bullish price picture, particularly on the supply side. Although risks abound on both sides of the market, we expect the massive support being provided by fiscal and monetary policy globally to transition to organic growth in 2H21, in line with the World Bank’s expectations. The enormous fiscal stimulus being unleashed by the US – coupled with an ultra-accommodative Fed – will result in a weakening of the USD that will provide a tailwind to copper prices in 2H21 and next year. We remain long the PICK ETF, expecting copper miners and traders to benefit from this bullish backdrop, which we expect to persist for the next decade. The recommendation is up 6.4% since inception December 10, 2020. We also remain long December 2021 copper, which is up 19.6% since it was recommended on September 10, 2020.   Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com   Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish After falling 11% in 2020 due to COVID-19-induced demand destruction, US energy-related CO2 emissions will rebound this year and next, according to the Energy Information Administration (Chart 8).  The EIA forecasts US energy-related CO2 emissions this year and next will be 4.8 and 4.9 billion MT, which would amount to a 4.7% and 3.2% gains, respectively.  The EIA tracks emissions from coal, petroleum and natural gas usage in the US in its estimates.  Petroleum accounts for ~ 46% of total emissions in 2021 and 2022, while natgas contributes ~ 33% of all energy-related emissions in both years, on average.  Reflecting its market-share loss in the power-generation market, coal accounts for ~ 21% of total US energy-related CO2 emissions in 2021 and 2022. Base Metals: Bullish Globally, crude steel production was down 0.9% y/y at 1.864 billion MT, the World Steel Association reported this week.  China’s steel production was up 5.2% last year, to 1.053 billion MT, the country a market share of 56.5%, up from 2019’s level of 53.3%.  Output in all of Asia totalled 1.375 billion MT, up 1.5% y/y, with India’s production falling close to 11% to 99.6 billion MT.  China’s iron-ore imports set a record last year on the back of its strong steel-making performance, reaching 1.2 billion tonnes, a 9.5% increase y/y.  Higher infrastructure spending was the primary driver of increased steel demand last year.  Iron ore delivered to the Chinese port of Tianjin (62% Fe) closed just above $169/MT on Tuesday, up ~ 9% YTD. Precious Metals: Bullish Gold continues to trade ~ $1,850/oz, down more than $100/oz from its highs earlier this month on the back of persistent USD strength (Chart 9).  The pandemic uncertainty feeding into global economic policy uncertainty is the proximate cause of dollar strength.  COVID-19 vaccine rates are increasing, and governments remain committed to widespread distribution, which likely will be visible to markets during 1H21.  Once this occurs, we expect gold to rally along with other commodities, as the safe-have bid is priced out of the USD. Ags/Softs: Neutral US corn prices rallied on the back of stronger China purchases of the grain on Tuesday.  Farm Futures reported a 53.5mm-bushel order out of China on Tuesday was responsible for the gain earlier this week.  Farmers continue to expect Chinese buying to remain strong, given falling corn stocks in China. Chart 8 Pandemic Uncertainty Will Fall, Weakening USD, Boosting Metals Pandemic Uncertainty Will Fall, Weakening USD, Boosting Metals Chart 9 Gold Trading Lower On The Back of A Strong Dollar Gold Trading Lower On The Back of A Strong Dollar   Footnotes 1     At the margin, this increases the cost of purchasing commodities and lowers the cost of producing them ex-US in local-currency terms, both of which depress prices. Pandemic uncertainty and global economic policy uncertainty (GEPU) are cointegrated; the USD and GEPU also are cointegrated. We discussed the effects of pandemic uncertainty on the USD and its impact on oil prices in last week’s balances and price forecast update entitled Brent Forecast: $63 This Year, $71 Next Year. This report is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 2     Please see the Bank's Global Economic Prospects released 5 January 2021 entitled Subdued Global Economic Recovery. The IMF upgraded its global growth outlook to 5.5% this year and 4.2% next year, in its World Economic Outlook Update released this week. We continue to use the more conservative World Bank forecasts. The Israeli economy is providing something of a natural experiment vis-à-vis the rate of COVID-19 vaccination and economic growth. According to reuters.com, the country got an early start on vaccinations, and has one of the highest rates in the world. If maintained, this will result in GDP growth of 6.3% in 2021 and 5.8% next year. Without these early and intensive vaccination rates, 2021 growth likely would be 3.5%. 3    The models in Chart 4 use the broad trade-weighted USD and global copper stocks as common regressors, and estimate copper prices given the World Bank estimates for World, EM ex-China, China and DM real GDPs. In the discussion above, we use elasticities from the World GDP model to highlight the impact of changes in copper prices from the different variables. 4    Please see Renewables, China's FYP Underpin Metals Demand, which we published 26 November 2020. We discuss the implications of essentially rebuilding the global electric-generation grid to accommodate more renewable energy resources vis-à-vis base metals demand. Copper, in particular, spans all technologies that will be deployed to achieve a low-carbon generation pool globally, as Chart 5 illustrates. 5    Please see For 1st time, renewables surpass fossil fuels in EU power mix published by S&P Global Market Intelligence 25 January 2021. 6    Benchmark treatment and refining fees charged by smelters to refine raw ore fell to 5.9 cent/lb this year, down from 6.2 cent/lb last year, according to reuters.com. This 10-year low reflects an abundance of smelting capacity relative to concentrates on the supply side needing to be refined.   Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Summary of Closed Trades Higher Inflation On The Way Higher Inflation On The Way
Copper prices have rallied roughly 70% since late March, fueled by a weak dollar, generous global liquidity conditions, expectations of a robust economic recovery, and supply constraints.  Most of these fundamental tailwinds remain broadly in place,…
Highlights Rising commodity prices and a weaker dollar will lead to higher inflation at the consumer level beginning this year. In the real economy, tighter commodity fundamentals – restrained supply growth, increasing demand, and falling inventories in oil, metals and grain markets – will push prices higher, which will feed US CPI inflation and inflation expectations going forward. Stronger fiscal stimulus, and the expanding budget deficits that will accompany it – along with the Fed’s oft-affirmed willingness to accommodate them – will allow the USD to resume its bear market, and will also boost commodity prices. Policy support will be kicking into a higher gear as COVID-19 vaccines are more widely distributed, contributing to a revival in organic growth globally. This will keep the rate of growth in commodity demand above that of supply. Increasing inflation expectations will be evident in longer-dated CPI swaps markets used by traders, portfolio and pension-fund managers to manage longer-term inflation risks (Chart of the Week). Risks remain elevated to the upside and downside: Fundamentals and policy are supportive; public-health risks are acute, and political risk is elevated, particularly in the US, where tensions remain high following the assault on the Capitol in Washington. Feature In the real economy, industrial commodities – particularly oil and copper – are signaling prices will move higher. The real economy and financial markets are pointing to higher inflation going forward. This will become apparent in the longer-term US CPI swaps markets used by traders, portfolio and pension managers as commodity prices continue to rise and the USD resumes its bear market.1 In the real economy, industrial commodities – particularly oil and copper – are signaling prices will move higher. Production-management in the oil market is keeping the rate of growth in supply below that of demand, a trend we expect will continue this year. In the copper market, demand growth will outstrip supply growth this year and next (Chart 2). As a result, both markets will see physical supply deficits this year. Chart of the WeekReal And Financial Markets Point To Higher Inflation Real And Financial Markets Point To Higher Inflation Real And Financial Markets Point To Higher Inflation Chart 2Copper Supply-Demand Balances Point To Growing Deficits Physical Deficits in Oil, Copper Indicate Supplies Are Tightening Copper Supply-Demand Balances Point To Growing Deficits Physical Deficits in Oil, Copper Indicate Supplies Are Tightening Copper Supply-Demand Balances Point To Growing Deficits Physical Deficits in Oil, Copper Indicate Supplies Are Tightening Fiscal stimulus in the US will be accommodated by the Fed, which, despite some dissonant messaging, continues to signal its policy of targeting average inflation can be expected to result in lower real rates, as inflation overshoots its 2% target. Policy support is helping to maintain commodity demand globally. Fiscal policy worldwide continues to be supportive. In the US, it likely will become even more expansionary, following the electoral wins of Democrats in Senate run-off elections last week, which will bolster president-elect Joe Biden's position in stimulus-package negotiations after he takes office next week. This expansion of fiscal stimulus will dwarf the levels seen in the wake of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) in 2008-09 (Chart 3). This fiscal stimulus in the US will be accommodated by the Fed, which, despite some dissonant messaging, continues to signal its policy of targeting average inflation can be expected to result in lower real rates, as inflation overshoots its 2% target. This continued policy support will lead to a resumption of the USD bear market, following a brief dead-cat bounce over the past few days. This will support demand by lowering the local-currency costs of dollar-denominated commodities, and restrict supply growth at the margin by raising the local-currency cost of production. Chart 3Massive US Fiscal Stimulus Will Grow Higher Inflation On The Way Higher Inflation On The Way Real Economy Will Boost Inflation Expectations Global fiscal and monetary policy support will further energize the rebound in industrial activity and trade globally. This will keep the rate of growth in commodity demand generally above that of supply, and keep prices elevated. The top panel in the Chart of the Week shows the relationship between CPI 5-year/5-year (5y5y) swaps and crude oil and copper prices, price indexes like the DJ UBS commodity index and the S&P GSCI index, and EM trade volumes in the post-GFC period (2010 to now). The curve in the top panel shows the average of single-equation regressions that use these variables as to estimate CPI 5y5y swap rates; the average coefficient of determination for these equations is just below 0.81, meaning these real variables explain ~ 81% of the level of the CPI 5y5y swaps level post-GFC. This also illustrates how prices and activity in the real economy feed into inflation expectations, which we have demonstrated in the past.2 There also is a correspondence between our measures of real activity – i.e., BCA’s Global Industrial Activity index, Global Commodity Factor and EM Commodity-Demand Nowcast – and CPI 5y5y swaps can be seen in Chart 4. These gauges are more heavily weighted to industrial, manufacturing and trade activity than the commodity indexes, and have an average correlation of ~51% with the level of CPI 5y5y swaps. These series are not as highly correlated with CPI 5y5y swaps as the real and financial variables we used above, but they are, nonetheless, useful indicators to track. Chart 4Real Economic Activity Feeds Into Inflation Expectations Real Economic Activity Feeds Into Inflation Expectations Real Economic Activity Feeds Into Inflation Expectations Real Economic Activity Feeds Into Inflation Expectations Real Economic Activity Feeds Into Inflation Expectations Real Economic Activity Feeds Into Inflation Expectations Financial Markets Point To Higher CPI Swaps The Fed’s oft-affirmed willingness to accommodate expanding fiscal deficit strongly supports a weaker-dollar view. The bottom panel in the Chart of the Week shows the average of single-equation estimates that use dollar-related financial variables as regressors against CPI 5y5y swap rates – i.e., the USD broad trade-weighted index, the DXY index, and DM financial-conditions index; the average coefficient of determination for these equations is just below 0.83, meaning these financial variables explain ~ 83% of the CPI 5y5y swaps levels. The Fed’s oft-affirmed willingness to accommodate expanding fiscal deficits strongly supports a weaker-dollar view, which also will boost commodity prices and feed into the CPI swaps market. This fiscal and monetary support will be kicking into a higher gear as COVID-19 vaccines are more widely distributed, contributing to a revival in organic growth globally. This will keep the rate of growth in commodity demand above that of supply. As CPI swaps rates continue to move higher, longer-maturity TIPS breakevens will follow suit (Chart 5). We remain strategically long TIPS versus nominal US Treasuries. We remain strategically long TIPS. Chart 5Expect TIPS Breakevens To Stay Well Bid Expect TIPS Breakevens To Stay Well Bid Expect TIPS Breakevens To Stay Well Bid Risks Remain Elevated CPI 5y5y swap rates will move higher on the back of rising commodity prices, growth in real economic activity, and a weaker dollar. While fundamentals and policy continue to be supportive – and jibe with our longer-term view that industrial commodity prices will move higher – downside risks remain acute. On the health front, COVID-19 pandemic risks remain high, with public-health officials now warning the risk of a more contagious variant of the virus that emerged in the UK could become the dominant strain by March. Public health officials are considering expanded lockdowns to contain the spread of this strain, which reportedly is 50% to 74% more transmissible, according to the MIT Technology Review.3 Fed policy remains supportive of markets in general and commodities in particular. However, with officials offering conflicting views on the policy stance going forward – specifically re the need to taper sooner rather than later – uncertainty around monetary policy will remain a near-constant feature of the market. Lastly, short-term political risk is elevated, particularly in the US, where tensions are high going into the second impeachment of US President Donald J. Trump, following the assault on the US Capitol. This is an evolving story we will be following closely. Bottom Line: CPI 5y5y swap rates will move higher on the back of rising commodity prices, growth in real economic activity, and a weaker dollar. While risks remain elevated, we expect policy risks to be managed and for organic growth to pick up going into 2H21.   Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com   Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish Brent prices reached an 10-month high on Tuesday at close to $57/bbl. Saudi Arabia’s surprise cuts will offset the slowdown in demand growth caused by renewed lockdowns in most DM countries, which is expected to be most pronounced in 1Q21. Consequently, in its most recent forecast, the EIA revised its demand estimate for OECD demand by -450k b/d on average in 2021. Separately, cold weather in Asia, combined with supply and shipping constraints, pushed JKM LNG prices close to $20/MMBtu earlier this week (Chart 6). The cold wave will push storage in Europe lower ahead of the summer injection season, as LNG cargoes are redirected towards Asia to meet higher space-heating demand. Base Metals: Bullish Chinese imports of metallurgical coal from Australia fell to 447.5k MT in December, the lowest level since January 2015, when Refinitiv, a Reuters data and analytics service, started tracking them. Met coal imports peaked last year in June 2020 at 9.6mm MT, according to reuters.com. The proximate cause of this collapse is the Chinese retaliation to Australia’s call for an investigation into the source of the COVID-19 pandemic. China’s imports from Indonesia have surged, while India’s imports from Australia have picked up much of the loss in Chinese demand, Reuters notes. Precious Metals: Bullish Gold prices fell by $78/oz to $1,834/oz on Friday – a 2-week low – following Democrats win in run-off elections that gave them both of Georgia’s Senate seats last week. The decline in gold prices largely reflects the rise in US real rates, which rose following an increase in US nominal rates that was not accompanied by higher inflation reports in the short term (Chart 7). Going forward, we expect investors will increasingly focus on inflation risks as fiscal policy in the US expands. Democrats will be able to provide extra COVID relief – increasing monthly income-support payments to individuals to $2,000 from $600 – in a reconciliation bill in 2021. This will pressure real rates down as inflation expectations steadily move higher. Ags/Softs: Neutral In its global supply-demand estimates released earlier this week, the USDA lowered its global grain and soybean production and yields forecasts, which pushed prices sharply higher. CME spot corn prices held sharp price gains, which sent futures limit up Tuesday, on the back of lower production and yields. Soybean and wheat futures also responded to reduced supply estimates in the wake of the WASDE release. Chart 6DECLINE IN GOLD PRICES REFLECTS A RISE IN US REAL RATES DECLINE IN GOLD PRICES REFLECTS A RISE IN US REAL RATES DECLINE IN GOLD PRICES REFLECTS A RISE IN US REAL RATES Chart 7TIGHTENING MARKETS PUSH UP LNG PRICES TIGHTENING MARKETS PUSH UP LNG PRICES TIGHTENING MARKETS PUSH UP LNG PRICES   Footnotes 1 We focus on US CPI swaps because they are responsive to the perceived stance of US monetary policy, even if the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge is the PCE deflator and not the CPI. US monetary policy has a strong bearing on the trajectory of US interest rates and the USD, which impacts commodity prices directly. Please see Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS), posted by the US Treasury, which notes: TIPS “provide protection against inflation. The principal of a TIPS increases with inflation and decreases with deflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index. When a TIPS matures, you are paid the adjusted principal or original principal, whichever is greater.” A fixed interest payment, which changes as the CPI changes, is made twice a year. 2 See, e.g., Trade And Commodity Data Point To Higher Inflation, which we published 27 July 2017. Our approach – i.e., treating inflation expectations as a function of global real variables and financial variables – is consistent with that of the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), which is described in Has globalization changed the inflation process?, posted 4 July 2019. We treat the events of the GFC and central banks’ responses to them as a regime change. In our modeling we estimate dynamic OLS and ARDL equations, to ensure we are modeling cointegrated systems. The average of the coefficients of determination estimated using real variables in DOLS models is pulled lower by the model using COMEX copper futures as an explanatory variable. 3 Please see We may have only weeks to act before a variant coronavirus dominates the US published by the MIT Technology Review 13 January 2021.   Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Summary of Closed Trades Higher Inflation On The Way Higher Inflation On The Way
Copper has had an impressive run this year, rallying 60% since the beginning of April to its highest level since March 2013. However, long copper is among the most crowded macro trades amid rebounding economic activity and hope surrounding the vaccines’…
Highlights Prices of global major commodities such as copper and iron ore have rallied significantly this year. It seems that strong Chinese imports once again became the major driving force for both commodities. Is the rally in commodity prices sustainable in 2021? This is the first of three reports focusing on copper, iron ore, and energy. In this week’s report, our views on copper are highlighted below: Chinese imports of copper have substantially outpaced Chinese underlying copper consumption this year, resulting in considerable inventory accumulation. Destocking and underlying demand weakness in 2021 suggest that China’s copper imports are likely to decline next year.  In the meantime, the global refined copper supply will grow at 1.5-2.5% in 2021 from 2020. Copper prices are vulnerable to the downside next year. Short December 2021 LME copper futures.  Feature China’s total demand and imports have surged by 23% and 62% year on year, respectively, in the last six months (Charts 1A and 1B). Both growth rates were the fastest they have been since 2010 (Chart 2). Chart 1AWill Chinese Total Copper Demand Surge Into 2021? Will Chinese Total Copper Demand Surge Into 2021? Will Chinese Total Copper Demand Surge Into 2021? Chart 1BWill Chinese Copper Imports Surge Into 2021? Will Chinese Copper Imports Surge Into 2021? Will Chinese Copper Imports Surge Into 2021? Please note throughout of this report, total demand is defined as the formula below: Total demand = underlying consumption1 + change in inventories Solely due to the surging total demand from China, global copper demand rose by 5% year on year so far this year (Chart 3). China’s total copper demand accounted for 58.4% of global copper demand for the first nine months of this year, increasing from a 53.6% share last year. Chart 2Unusual Strong Growth In Chinese Total Copper Demand And Imports Unusual Strong Growth In Chinese Total Copper Demand And Imports Unusual Strong Growth In Chinese Total Copper Demand And Imports Chart 3China Alone Has Pushed Up Global Copper Demand This Year China Alone Has Pushed Up Global Copper Demand This Year China Alone Has Pushed Up Global Copper Demand This Year In the meantime, global copper ore and refined copper outputs were curbed by the pandemic. As a result, the global copper market balance2 swung from a small surplus in March to a record high deficit in September (Chart 4). However, based on our estimates, China’s total demand for copper this year has meaningfully outpaced its underlying consumption, implying there has been substantial inventory buildup in the country. As a result, China’s strong copper imports will not continue into 2021. Moreover, global copper output is set to increase in 2021, adding further downward pressure on copper prices next year. Chart 4Global Copper Market Balance Has Swung From A Small Surplus To A High Deficit Global Copper Market Balance Has Swung From A Small Surplus To A High Deficit Global Copper Market Balance Has Swung From A Small Surplus To A High Deficit Chart 5China's Total Copper Demand: A Big Deviation From Its Long-Term Underlying Consumption Growth China's Total Copper Demand: A Big Deviation From Its Long-Term Underlying Consumption Growth China's Total Copper Demand: A Big Deviation From Its Long-Term Underlying Consumption Growth Understanding Strong Chinese Copper Demand In 2020 For the past five years, the annual increase in China’s total copper demand grew at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of only 2.5%, reflecting the country’s long-term underlying copper usage growth (Chart 5). However, China’s total copper demand (consumption plus change in inventories) has increased by 18.4% year on year for the first nine months of this year. This surge in total demand has significantly outpaced its long-term underlying consumption growth. Our research shows that slightly more than half of China’s total copper demand growth so far this year can be attributable to a solid underlying consumption rebound boosted by the stimulus. The government’s strategic purchases and commercial restocking may have contributed to the other half of the country’s total copper demand growth. Copper Consumption By Real Economy Chart 6The Structure Of China’s Underlying Copper Consumption In 2019 Chinese Commodities Demand: An Unsustainable Boom? Part I: Copper Chinese Commodities Demand: An Unsustainable Boom? Part I: Copper The structure of China’s underlying copper consumption in 2019 stemmed from the following industries and sectors: power (about 49% of Chinese copper usage); refrigeration and air conditioning (15%); transportation (10%); electronic communication (9%); buildings and construction (8%); and others (Chart 6). Table 1 shows our rough estimations of the copper consumption growth in each sector in 2020, respectively. Based on this, we concluded that China’s underlying copper consumption might grow by approximately 10% this year. Table 1Chinese Underlying Copper Consumption Year-On-Year Growth Estimates For 2020 Chinese Commodities Demand: An Unsustainable Boom? Part I: Copper Chinese Commodities Demand: An Unsustainable Boom? Part I: Copper Chart 7Copper Consumption In The Power Industry Has Been Strong Copper Consumption In The Power Industry Has Been Strong Copper Consumption In The Power Industry Has Been Strong The power sector is the largest copper user as copper is among the best conductors of electricity and heat. The metal is used in high, medium and low voltage power networks. Following the pandemic, China significantly boosted investment in the power sector by 17% (year to date, January - October) from the same period last year (Chart 7). The power generation equipment output has surged by 28.7% year on year during the same period, while the electrical cable output increased only slightly. All together, we estimated that the copper consumption from the power sector grew by approximately 16% from last year. While air conditioner output declined moderately from 2019, freezer and refrigerator production has gone up significantly this year (Chart 8). The global “stay-at-home” economy due to the pandemic boosted Chinese exports of freezers and refrigerators.  Considering air conditioner copper usage per unit is generally higher than that in freezers/refrigerators, we assumed this year’s copper consumption in the home appliance sector to be up by 6% from the previous year. Despite a recent sharp rebound in transportation investment and automobile output, in the first ten months of this year the transportation investment grew by only 2% year on year while automobile output still contracted by 4% from the previous year (Chart 9). Hence, we assumed a 2% year-on-year contraction of copper usage in this sector this year.3 Chart 8Moderate Growth In Copper Usage In The Home Appliance Sector Moderate Growth In Copper Usage In The Home Appliance Sector Moderate Growth In Copper Usage In The Home Appliance Sector Chart 9Contracted Automobile Output May Have Reduced Copper Consumption In The Transportation Sector Contracted Automobile Output May Have Reduced Copper Consumption In The Transportation Sector Contracted Automobile Output May Have Reduced Copper Consumption In The Transportation Sector Copper or copper-base alloys are used in printed circuit boards, in electronic connectors, as well as in many semiconductor products. This year, China had set a strategic goal to develop the tech-related new infrastructure, which includes information transmission, software and information technology services, such as 5G networks, industrial internet, and data centers. The tech-related new infrastructure investment has increased by 20% year on year during January - October (Chart 10). We expect the year-on-year copper usage growth in this sector to be 20% this year as well.   The buildings and construction sector accounts for 8% of China’s copper usage. During the first nine months of this year, our broad measure of China’s building construction activity—specifically building area starts and completions—have contracted 3.2% and 9.6% year on year, respectively (Chart 11). Assuming half of this sector’s usage is in building area starts and the other half in completions, we expect the copper consumption in this sector to contract by 6% year on year this year. Chart 10Copper Usage Rising Due To Strong Tech-Related New Infrastructure Investment Copper Usage Rising Due To Strong Tech-Related New Infrastructure Investment Copper Usage Rising Due To Strong Tech-Related New Infrastructure Investment Chart 11Weak Property Market May Have Also Cut Copper Consumption In The Construction Sector Weak Property Market May Have Also Cut Copper Consumption In The Construction Sector Weak Property Market May Have Also Cut Copper Consumption In The Construction Sector Altogether, our calculation shows that the Chinese underlying copper consumption growth for the full 2020 year is likely to be up 10% from last year. Copper Restocking Although the most tracked official data does not show a significant pileup in copper inventories in China, our research indicates that the Chinese government’s strategic and enterprises’ speculative restocking might have accounted for nearly half of China’s total copper demand growth this year. Chinese total copper demand (consumption plus change in inventories) was approximately 9,120 thousand metric tons (kt) during last January - September.4 A 10% growth from this number will equal an increase of 912 kt, still 770 kt (or 46%) short of the total increased amount of 1,678 kt year on year in Chinese total copper demand. First, of the 770-kt gap between China’s total demand and our estimated underlying consumption, we believe that about 200-400 kt of copper—about 4%-8% of Chinese copper imports in the first nine months of this year—were purchased by the Chinese government.5 Many market analysts have been suspecting that China’s State Reserve Board (SRB) has been buying copper this year, as there was no way Chinese underlying consumption could grow as strong as what its total demand and imports suggested. Historically, the SRB bought copper whenever prices declined significantly, and stopped or reduced its purchases when prices had a significant rally. For example, many believe that the SRB bought 200-400 kt in 2008,6 200-500 kt in 2014,7 and 200 kt in 2015,8 when prices dropped considerably. Copper prices have been trading well below US$3 per pound for most of the year, and the Chinese currency has been strengthening. Thus, it is reasonable to assume that the SRB purchased at least a similar amount as in previous cycles to strategically stock up on cheap commodities. Second, Chinese enterprises may have bought 370-570 kt of copper this year.9 Easy money and abundant credit with lower borrowing costs have probably allowed some Chinese enterprises to accumulate copper inventories, representing financial speculative demand (with a motive of selling at higher prices) and/or inventories to be used in future. Chart 12The SHFE Copper Warehouse: No Inventory Accumulation Based On This Measure The SHFE Copper Warehouse: No Inventory Accumulation Based On This Measure The SHFE Copper Warehouse: No Inventory Accumulation Based On This Measure The most often tracked China copper inventory data by market analysts is the copper inventory at Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE), which has been highly volatile this year. Its current level is near its level at the end of last year (Chart 12). This means no inventory accumulation in the SHFE copper warehouse. This also implies that Chinese companies may have restocked their copper inventories in their own warehouses, for which no official data can be tracked.  Bottom Line: Chinese underlying consumption accounts for slightly more than half of the increase in the country’s total copper demand this year, whereas the government’s strategic purchases and commercial restocking have most likely contributed to the other half. China’s Copper Demand Boom Is Unsustainable This year’s surging total demand for copper in China was due to the stimulus as a result of the pandemic, as well as government and commercial copper restocking. Looking forward in 2021, these driving forces will either diminish or disappear. First, China’s copper restocking will be followed by destocking. With copper prices having risen by 57% from their trough in March, and now well above US$3 per pound, odds are that the SRB and commercial buyers that have been accumulating copper inventories will considerably reduce their copper purchases next year. Moreover, as China’s financial regulations have become stricter and the monetary stance more hawkish of late, we expect Chinese enterprises will largely refrain from speculative activities in the commodity market next year.  Second, the country’s underlying copper consumption growth will likely drop considerably to the range of -3% to zero next year (Table 2). Table 2Chinese Underlying Copper Consumption Year-on-Year Growth Estimates For 2021 Chinese Commodities Demand: An Unsustainable Boom? Part I: Copper Chinese Commodities Demand: An Unsustainable Boom? Part I: Copper As government stimulus will likely be scaled back substantially next year, infrastructure investment in the power sector will fall from the current level. In 2019, the year-on-year growth of power investment, power generation equipment, and electrical cable output was -0.2%, -15% and 3.3%, respectively. We expect the level of Chinese investment in the power sector to normalize to its long-term trend next year from this year’s substantial increase. Therefore, we estimate a 5%-8% contraction in this sector’s copper consumption next year. Next year’s government-targeted stimulus in the consumption segment may provide a boost in output of home appliances, albeit a modest one. In addition, global demand for freezers and refrigerators due to the pandemic may diminish, as global supply chains as well as production from pandemic-struck countries will likely recover next year. Hence, we expect the copper usage growth in the “refrigeration and air conditioning” sector will drop to a 0-2% year-on-year growth in 2021 from this year’s 6% growth. For copper usage in the transportation sector, we expect a 3%-5% growth next year as the automobile sector will likely continue to recover, and transportation infrastructure investment may also increase slightly due to the government’s effort to expand its electric car charging infrastructure. We expect the investment in the tech-related new infrastructure to increase by 12%-15%, which will be a drop from this year’s sharp growth of 20%.  The copper usage in the buildings and construction sector is likely to continue until the fall of next year. However, as property developers need to complete their existing projects, copper consumption in this sector may decline by 2%-4%, smaller than this year’s 6% contraction. All together, we conclude that the underlying Chinese copper consumption will likely contract by 0-3% next year from 2020. Bottom Line: China’s underlying copper consumption is likely to contract slightly next year, which will weigh on the country’s copper imports. Additionally, as China had accumulated considerable copper inventories this year, the country’s destocking will also depress its copper imports next year. More Global Copper Supply In 2021 Chart 13Global Copper Ore And Refined Copper Supply Are Set To Increase In 2021 Global Copper Ore And Refined Copper Supply Are Set To Increase In 2021 Global Copper Ore And Refined Copper Supply Are Set To Increase In 2021 Global supply of both copper ore and refined copper outside China will go up next year, by about 3-5% in 2021, a sharp contrast with the declines of 2.2% and 3.2% year on year, respectively, for the first nine months of this year (Chart 13). Table 3 shows the world’s top 10 copper producing companies’ capex this year and in 2021. Most of these companies slashed their capex this year due to the pandemic. However, the capex of all these companies will likely be much higher in 2021, which will facilitate copper output growth. The companies that will increase their capex in 2021 are largely outside China. The aggregate capex for the world’s top 10 copper producing companies will increase by nearly 20% year on year in 2021. Some mining giants such as BHP and Rio Tinto produce many other commodities rather than copper, so only part of their investment will go to copper-related assets/operations. For companies with a significant amount of revenue coming from copper, such as Codelco, Glencore, Southern Copper, KGHM, and Antofagasta, all will have more than 20% growth in their 2021 capex. Table 3The World’s Top 10 Copper Producing Companies’ Capex Investment In 2020 & 2021 Chinese Commodities Demand: An Unsustainable Boom? Part I: Copper Chinese Commodities Demand: An Unsustainable Boom? Part I: Copper As these companies account for about half of the global copper production, we believe the 20% increase in their aggregate capex will likely result in a 3%-5% increase in their copper ore and refined copper outputs. China’s copper production growth rate is expected to accelerate within the next few years, mainly driven by the construction of Tibet's Qulong copper mine, the second phase expansion of Duobaoshan, the second phase of the Jiama copper mine, and the Chifeng Fubo project. China is currently the world’s third-largest copper ore producer, accounting for 9% of the global copper ore supply. The country is also the world’s largest refined copper producer, contributing 43% of global refined copper production. After having managed to add a 430-kt smelting capacity and a 640-kt refining capacity this year, the country plans to increase its new smelting capacity of 525 kt and new refinery capacity of 110 kt in 2021, most of which will need copper ore and concentrates. If the 110-kt new refinery capacity is fully utilized, it will increase global refined copper output by about 0.5% next year. Chart 14China: Rising Imports Of Copper Ore Will Likely Reduce Its Refined Copper Imports China: Rising Imports Of Copper Ore Will Likely Reduce Its Refined Copper Imports China: Rising Imports Of Copper Ore Will Likely Reduce Its Refined Copper Imports This year, due to constrained copper ore supply outside China, Chinese copper ore imports only increased 2% year on year during January - September. This has also prompted Chinese refined copper imports. In 2021, rising imports of copper ore by China will likely boost the country’s domestic production of refined copper and reduce imports (Chart 14). In addition, the significant increase in Chinese refined copper imports this year was partially due to the substitution effect of the shortage in global copper scrap supply. This is likely to change. We expect global secondary copper production—refined copper produced from scrap copper—to rise next year from the current level. Global secondary copper output accounts for 17% of global total refined copper supply. The pandemic-triggered lockdowns disrupted the global scrap copper supply chains, including collection, processing, and transportation. According to the International Copper Study Group (ICSG), global secondary refined copper production is expected to decline by 5.5% year on year this year due to a shortage of scrap metal in many regions. This is likely to reverse next year, as fewer countries will force complete lockdowns. Chart 15China: Rising Imports Of Scrap Copper Will Also Likely Reduce Its Refined Copper Imports China: Rising Imports Of Scrap Copper Will Also Likely Reduce Its Refined Copper Imports China: Rising Imports Of Scrap Copper Will Also Likely Reduce Its Refined Copper Imports Also, in order to reduce domestic pollution, starting from the second half of 2019, China has moved the metal scraps10 from the non-restricted category to the restricted category. As a result, importing copper scrap into China requires approval, and the number of approvals is strictly controlled. This had resulted in a sharp drop in the amount of imported copper scrap (Chart 15). China’s imported volumes of copper scrap plunged 38% year on year in 2019 and will likely fall further this year.  Next year, the newly implemented "Solid Waste Pollution Prevention and Control Law" will allow China to import high-quality copper scrap. This will also reduce the country’s need to import refined copper from overseas. Bottom Line: Both rising global ore output and recovering global secondary copper supply will increase the global refined copper supply next year. China will likely boost its imports of ore and high-quality scrap copper while considerably reducing its imports of refined copper. This will be negative to global refined copper prices. Investment Implications Chart 16Net Speculative Positions Of Copper Are At A Multi-Year High Net Speculative Positions Of Copper Are At A Multi-Year High Net Speculative Positions Of Copper Are At A Multi-Year High Fundamentally, China’s contracting underlying copper consumption and destocking, as well as the rising global refined copper supply, are all set to create a bearish backdrop for copper prices in 2021. Meanwhile, net speculative positions of copper in the US as a share of total open interest have risen to a multi-year high (Chart 16). This is a bearish technical signal for copper prices. In addition, LME warehouse copper inventories rebounded recently, which may also be a sign of easing supply bottlenecks and slower market demand (Chart 17). To conclude, copper prices are vulnerable to the downside next year. Short December 2021 LME copper futures outright (Chart 18). We expect a 10%-15% downside in copper prices next year from the current level. Chart 17Rebounding LME Copper Inventories: A Sign Of Easing Supply Bottlenecks And Slower Demand? Rebounding LME Copper Inventories: A Sign Of Easing Supply Bottlenecks And Slower Demand? Rebounding LME Copper Inventories: A Sign Of Easing Supply Bottlenecks And Slower Demand? Chart 18Short December 2021 LME Copper Futures Outright Short December 2021 LME Copper Futures Outright Short December 2021 LME Copper Futures Outright   Ellen JingYuan He Associate Vice President ellenj@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1 Underlying consumption is defined as the usage of copper in the real economy and excludes changes in inventories. 2Market balance measured as refined copper total demand minus refined copper production. The market balance is in deficit if total demand exceeds production and it is in surplus if total demand falls short of production. 3Transportation investment is for the transportation infrastructure sector. Here we assumed the copper usage in the transportation sector is evenly divided between transportation infrastructure and automobile production in China. 4According to WBMS data, China’s total demand during last January - September 2019 was 9,120 kt. Since China’s total demand for copper last year was within the range of its long-term underlying consumption, our estimates for China’s real economy driven consumption in 2020 are based on this number. 5Precise numbers are not available, and these data represent our estimates. 6Please refer https://news.smm.cn/news/66571 7Please refer https://www.reuters.com/article/copper-reserve-source-buy-idCNCNEA3N02F20140424 8Please refer https://news.cnpowder.com.cn/31981.html 9We derived this estimate by deducting SRB’s 200-400 kt from the 770-kt gap. 10In early 2019, China announced plans to restrict imports of eight different scrap categories – including aluminum, steel and copper – starting July 1, 2019. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy service's Copper Prices model indicates that the rebound in copper prices this year has been justified. Copper has rebounded particularly strongly from the recession, and that was thanks to China: earlier this…
Your feedback is important to us. Please take our client survey today. Highlights Mounting populism has created a structural tailwind behind inflation. The risk that inflation accelerates quickly is greater than the market appreciates. Monetary dynamics strongly influence consumer prices when inflation is stationary. The Federal Reserve’s back-door monetization of debt is inflationary. Financial assets do not embed a sufficiently large risk premium against higher inflation. The long-term, real returns of equities are likely to be poor. Small cap stocks and commodities offer cheap protection against higher inflation. Feature The equity market is extremely vulnerable to positive inflation surprises. The expectation of an extended period of low interest rates and extraordinarily easy monetary policy is the crucial justification for the S&P 500’s exceptionally elevated multiples. Anything that could threaten this policy set up would create a danger for stocks. Whether the mean of inflation in a given period is stationary will determine the influence that money has on inflation. The problem for the S&P 500 is that investors assign a much-too-small probability to the inflation risk, especially as structural and political forces point to an elevated chance that inflation will reach 3% to 5% within the next 10 years. There is also a non-trivial probability that inflation begins rising significantly faster than the market anticipates, even if it is not BCA Research’s base case. The dichotomy between the low odds of a quick turnaround in inflation embedded in financial asset prices and the inflationary threat created by monetary and fiscal choices is too large. It will force market participants to assign a greater inflation risk premium in bonds and stocks to protect against this eventuality. This process could precipitate painful corrections in both bond and equity prices. The good news is that inflation protection remains cheap. Three Stages Of Inflation The staggering recent increase in money supply and the extraordinary fiscal stimulus rolled out this year raise two questions: Are we exiting the recent period of low and stable inflation that has prevailed? Is inflation becoming a threat to financial asset prices? Major turning points in inflation provide context to assess the risk of an impending threat of increased inflation. From a statistical perspective, three phases in inflation dynamics have defined the past 100 years (Chart I-1): Chart I-1Three Stages Of Inflation Three Stages Of Inflation Three Stages Of Inflation 1922 to 1965: Inflation gyrated violently from as low as -12.1% to as high as 11.9% in response to various shocks such as the Great Depression or World War II. Nonetheless, inflation’s mean was stationary or trendless. 1965 to 1998: A period of great upheaval when inflation trended strongly, moving up until 1980 and then down until 1998. 1998 to present: Inflation has been stable, flatlining between 0.6% and 2.9%. Chart I-2More Often Than Not, Money Matters More Often Than Not, Money Matters More Often Than Not, Money Matters Empirically speaking, whether the mean of inflation in a given period is stationary will determine the influence that money has on inflation. The era of stationary inflation from 1922 to 1965 saw M2 closely correlated with changes in US consumer prices, but the link was severed from 1965 to 1998 when inflation trended strongly (Chart I-2, top and bottom panel). When inflation stabilized again from 1998 to 2020, M2 growth again explained gyrations in consumer prices (Chart I-2, bottom panel). Why did inflation behave differently from 1965 to 1998 compared with other episodes in the past 100 years? The defining factor of the pre-1965 era was an adherence to the gold standard. The gold standard created a hard anchor on prices because its rigidity made monetary policy credible, which produced stable inflation expectations. The velocity of money was also steady. Consequently, using the Fisher formulation of the equation of exchange (Price*Output = Money*Velocity or PY=MV), inflation became a direct derivative of the money supply. Various shocks such as a war or a depression would impact the rate of expansion of money, leading to a nearly linear effect on prices. When we examine unstable inflation from 1965 to 1998, it helps if we split the period into two subsamples: 1965 to 1977 and 1977 to 1998. The first interval generated accelerating inflation due to a multitude of factors. In the mid-1960s, slack in the US economy disappeared while demand became excessive as a result of the federal government’s increased spending from The Great Society programs and the Vietnam War. Additionally, by 1965, the gold standard was under attack. The US current account disappeared between 1965 and 1969. Worried by the deteriorating US balance of payment dynamics, French President De Gaulle sent his navy to repatriate France’s gold at the New York Fed. Other countries followed suit. The continued pressure on the US balance of payments, along with the need for easier monetary policy following the 1970 recession, lead to the 1971 Smithsonian Agreement whereby President Nixon unpegged the dollar from gold, effectively killing the gold standard. Any semblance of monetary rectitude disappeared and inflation expectations began to drift up. The oil shock of 1973 fueled the inflationary dynamics and pushed inflation higher through the rest of the decade. The developments outside of monetary policy reinforced downward pressure on inflation expectations created by the Fed’s orthodoxy. The second interval began in 1977, three years before inflation peaked. This date marks the implementation of the Federal Reserve Reform Act, which modified the Fed’s mandate from only targeting full employment to full employment and stable inflation. At first, the Act had little practical impact until Paul Volker became Fed chair in 1979 and began to combat inflation. Prior to 1977, the unemployment rate was below NAIRU (the unemployment rate consistent with full employment) most of the time, the economy overheated and ultimately, inflation trended up (Chart I-3). However, since 1977, the unemployment rate has mostly been above NAIRU and the labor market has predominantly experienced excess slack. Consequently, inflation expectations re-anchored to the downside and realized inflation collapsed. Chart I-3The Effect Of The Federal Reserve Reform Act Of 1977 The Effect Of The Federal Reserve Reform Act Of 1977 The Effect Of The Federal Reserve Reform Act Of 1977 Chart I-4The Monetarist Fed: 1977 to 1998 The Monetarist Fed: 1977 to 1998 The Monetarist Fed: 1977 to 1998 The relationship between short rates and money supply provides another way to appreciate the change in monetary policy after 1977. The Fed opted for a monetarist approach (officially and unofficially) when it had to combat high realized and expected inflation. During most of the past 100 years, money supply changes and short rates were either negatively correlated or not linked at all (Chart I-4, top and second panel); however, they began to move together from 1979 to 1998 (Chart I-4, bottom panel). The Fed boosted rates to preempt the inflationary impact of faster money supply expansion, which curtailed the link between prices and M2. Between 1977 and 1998, major structural forces also pushed down inflation and severed the bond between money supply and CPI. Starting with President Reagan, a period of aggressive deregulation and union-busting increased competition and removed some pricing power from labor.1 Most importantly, the rapid widening in globalization resulted in international trade representing an ever-climbing portion of global GDP. By adding more people to the global network of supply chains, globalization further entrenched the loss of workers’ pricing power, which caused wages to lag productivity and decline as a share of national income (Chart I-5). The developments outside of monetary policy reinforced downward pressure on inflation expectations created by the Fed’s orthodoxy. In the final phase from 1998 to 2020, the stabilization of inflation reunited prices and money supply. Inflation flattened due to several factors. By 1998, 70% of the global population lived in a capitalist system (compared to market shares only 28% in 1977). Thus, most of the expansion of the global labor supply was completed. China entered the WTO only in 2001, but it had been exerting its deflationary influence for many years by stealing market share away from newly industrialized Asian economies. Additionally, following the Asian Crisis of 1997, many Asian economies (including China and Japan) elected to build large dollar FX reserves to contain their currencies versus the USD, and subsidize economic activity. This process created some stability in global goods prices and slowed the USD’s depreciation started in 2002. In response to these influences, inflation expectations stabilized in the late 1990s, creating an anchor for realized inflation (Chart I-6). Thanks to this steadiness in inflation expectations, the Phillips curve (the inverse link between wages and the unemployment rate) flattened. The economy entered a feedback loop where consistent inflation rates begat stable wages, which in turn created more stability in aggregate prices. Fluctuations in the rate of inflation became directly linked to changes in the output gap and thus, variations in demand. Importantly, the flat Phillips curve and the well-anchored inflation expectations freed the Fed to maintain easier policy during expansions and allow money supply to expand in line with money demand. Chart I-5Expanding Globalization Robbed Labor Of Its Bargaining Power Expanding Globalization Robbed Labor Of Its Bargaining Power Expanding Globalization Robbed Labor Of Its Bargaining Power Chart I-6The Anchoring Of Inflation Expectations The Anchoring Of Inflation Expectations The Anchoring Of Inflation Expectations   Bottom Line: The correlation between inflation and M2 growth since 1998 is as relevant as it was from 1922 to 1965. What The Future Holds Structurally, inflation will likely trend higher. The Median Voter Theory (MVT), developed by Anthony Downs and upheld by our Geopolitical Strategy service as the key constraint on global and US policymakers, is at the heart of our position. Over the past 40 years, income and wealth inequalities have soared worldwide, especially in the US and the UK, which have both embraced ‘laissez-faire’ capitalism enthusiastically. Moreover, these countries also suffer from pronounced levels of intergenerational social immobility.2 The effect of these aforementioned trends has become so pervasive that life expectancy for a large swath of the US population is decreasing (Chart I-7). The shift by median voters to the left on economic matters will force greater fiscal profligacy and regulatory rigidity. This policy mix will add a secular drift to inflation. In response to widening inequalities, voter preferences have shifted to the left on economic matters and toward populism. Brexit and the election of President Trump both fit this pattern because they represent the repudiation of the prevalent neoliberal discourse that pushed toward more globalization, more immigration and more deregulation. Moreover, voters in the UK and the US increasingly doubt the benefits of free trade (Chart I-8). Chart I-7Inequalities Are Physically Hurting Many US Voters November 2020 November 2020 Chart I-8Free Trade Is Out… November 2020 November 2020   Attitudes toward the government’s role in the economy have also changed. Voters in the US are much more open than they were 10 or 20 years ago to a greater involvement of the public sector in the economy. Additionally, support toward socialism has become more widespread among various demographic groups (Chart I-9). The MVT posits that politicians who want to access or remain in power must cater to voter preferences. Hence, when compared with the Great Financial Crisis, the swift fiscal policy easing that accompanied the COVID-19 recession illustrates the understanding by politicians that spending is popular, especially in times of crisis (Chart I-10). Chart I-9…But State Intervention Is In November 2020 November 2020 Chart I-10Politicians Deliver What Voters Want November 2020 November 2020   Greater government spending and larger fiscal deficits are used to achieve faster nominal growth. When the output gap is negative, public spending helps the economy and may even increase national savings. However, if profligacy continues after the economy has reached full employment, it generates excess demand relative to aggregate supply and puts downward pressure on the national savings rate. This is inflationary. To redistribute income toward the middle class, populists aim to diminish competition in the economy. They reregulate the economy, which indirectly protects workers. They also limit global trade flows as much as possible. Free trade is good for the economy, but it puts downward pressure on the price of goods relative to services. Therefore, to remain competitive domestic goods producers must compress their labor costs, which either hurts wages for middle-class workers or destroys the number of manufacturing jobs with high wages. Undoing this process raises labor costs and undermines a major deflationary influence on the economy. Tax policy is another tool to force a redistribution of income and wealth toward the middle class. We should expect increased taxes on higher-income households. This process puts more money in the pockets of a middle class whose marginal propensity to consume is around 95% to 99% compared with 50% to 60% for households at the top of the income distribution. Re-shuffling the composition of national income toward the middle class will boost demand and puts upward pressure on consumer prices. Central banks are not immune to the preference of the median voter. As we showed earlier, the Fed Reform Act of 1977 had a meaningful impact on inflation, but only after Volcker took the helm of the FOMC. Given the damages wrought by high inflation in the 1970s, the median voter wanted to see less inflation, which enabled Volcker’s hawkish shift. As Marko Papic argued in a recent BCA Research webcast,3 a minority of voters (and policymakers) remember the pain created by inflation, but everyone is aware of the difficulties created by low nominal growth. Moreover, the Fed is still a creature of Congress and the median voter’s preferences greatly affect the legislative body’s decisions. Consequently, the Fed’s policy stance will likely become structurally looser in response to indirect voter pressure. Inflation accelerates when the Fed expands money supply faster than the federal government sucks in liquidity via its deficit. The Fed’s recent adoption of an average inflation mandate fits within this paradigm. According to its new strategy, the Fed will start tightening policy after the unemployment gap has closed and inflation is above 2%. This is reminiscent of the model prior to 1977 (when full employment conditions were paramount), which generated a significant inflation upside. Bottom Line: The shift by median voters to the left on economic matters will force greater fiscal profligacy and regulatory rigidity. It will also contribute to a more dovish bias by central banks. This policy mix will add a secular drift to inflation. What About Now? Markets may be failing to recognize the risk that inflation will rise sooner rather than later. Low yields, subpar inflation expectations, dovish central bank pricing and the valuation premium of growth relative to value stocks already reflect the strong deflationary force created by a deeply negative output gap. Thus, a quicker-than-expected recovery in inflation threatens the financial markets. Our structural inflation view is not the source of this danger. The hidden, near-term inflationary risk arises because we are still in an environment where broad money matters because inflation remains stationary. M2 is expanding at 23.7%, its fastest rate on record. If relationships of the past 20-plus years hold, then this is a warning sign for inflation. The catalyst to crystalize the structural inflationary pressures created by economic populism may be the loose monetary and fiscal conditions caused by the COVID-19 recession. Chart I-11The Real Near-term Inflation Risk The Real Near-term Inflation Risk The Real Near-term Inflation Risk This view may seem simplistic in light of the current large output gap, but when fiscal policy is included in the assessment, the picture becomes clearer. Since 1998, the gap between the expansion of M2 and the issuance of debt to the public by the federal government has explained inflation better than broad money alone (Chart I-11). Inflation accelerates when the Fed expands money supply faster than the federal government sucks in liquidity via its deficit. However, inflation decelerates when the Fed expands the money supply slower than the public sector pulls in private funds. In other words, if the Fed eases monetary conditions enough to finance the deficit, then debt monetization occurs, the private sector is not crowded out and demand gets a massive boost. This point is crucial and feeds the stronger economic recovery compared with the one post-GFC. In 2009 and 2010, the private sector was deleveraging and commercial banks were retrenching their lending. Neither the demand for nor the supply of credit was ample. Therefore, the Fed’s rapid balance sheet expansion had a limited impact on broad money. Instead, it skewed the composition of M2 toward commercial bank excess reserves at the Fed and away from private-sector deposits. Broad money was not rising quickly enough to fully finance the government and real interest rates did not fall as far as they should have. The economy suffered. A virtuous cycle has emerged, one which creates more inflation risks than are priced in. Nowadays, broad money responds much better to the Fed’s intervention because the balance sheets of the nonfinancial private sector are much healthier than in 2008 and deleveraging is absent. This mitigates the tightening credit standards of commercial banks. As Chart I-12 illustrates, household net worth is more robust than it was 12 years ago, debt-servicing costs account for a much narrower slice of disposable income and the government’s aggressive actions have bolstered household finances. Moreover, the majority of job losses have been concentrated in low-income jobs, thus, above-average earners have kept their incomes. Under these conditions, households have taken advantage of record low mortgage rates to purchase real estate, which is contributing to growth in the residential sector (Chart I-13, top two panels). Meanwhile, the rapid rebound in businesses’ capex intentions (which even small firms exhibit) and in core capital goods orders indicates that animal spirits are much more vigorous than anyone expected this past spring (Chart I-13, bottom two panels). At that time, the dominant narrative posited that firms were tapping their credit lines to set aside cash. Chart I-12Robust Household Balance Sheets = No Liquidity Trap Robust Household Balance Sheets = No Liquidity Trap Robust Household Balance Sheets = No Liquidity Trap Chart I-13Housing And Capex Are In The Driver's Seat Housing And Capex Are In The Driver's Seat Housing And Capex Are In The Driver's Seat   Chart I-14Unlike In 2008/09, Real Rates Have Collapsed Unlike In 2008/09, Real Rates Have Collapsed Unlike In 2008/09, Real Rates Have Collapsed Thanks to these more favorable balance sheet dynamics, the Fed’s injection of liquidity is boosting M2 enough to finance the Treasury’s issuance. Hence, real interest rates are much lower than in 2009/10 even if the economy is recovering much more quickly (Chart I-14). Policymakers are not crowding out the private sector. A virtuous cycle has emerged, one which creates more inflation risks than are priced in. A counterargument is that technology is too deflationary for the above dynamics to matter. The reality is that technology is always a deflationary force. The expansion of the capital stock has always been about providing each worker with access to newer and better technology to boost productivity. The current low level of productivity gains suggests that the dominant discourse exaggerates the economic advances from new technologies. Thus, inflation stationarity and the interplay between monetary and fiscal policy still matters to CPI. Investors should monitor factors that would indicate if the upside risk to near-term inflation described above is morphing into reality. Doing so would seriously damage financial asset prices made vulnerable to higher inflation by prohibitive valuations. We propose tracking the following variables: The household savings rate. If savings normalize faster because consumer confidence firms, then spending will accelerate, profits will rise more quickly and money will expand further, all of which will bring back inflation sooner. A Blue Sweep in the US presidential election. If the Democrats take control of both the executive and legislative branches, then they will expand stimulating policies that will bolster demand. This, too, would boost profits and broad money supply, which would be inflationary. The velocity of money. An increase in money velocity, which remains depressed, would accentuate the impact of rapid money growth. It would also suggest that animal spirits are strengthening, which will further encourage economic transactions. A weak dollar. The dollar is set to weaken because of savings dynamics and the global recovery. A runaway decline in the USD would indicate that the interplay between monetary and fiscal policy is debasing money, unleashing an inflationary spiral.  Bottom Line: The probability that inflation returns quickly is much more meaningful than financial markets appreciate because of the interplay between money growth, fiscal deficits and robust private-sector balance sheets. This dissonance will create a substantial risk for asset prices next year. Investment Implications The most important implication of the analysis above is that investors should consider inflation protection in all asset classes. However, this protection is cheap to acquire because investors are focusing on deflation, not inflation. Chart I-15Inflation Protection Remains Cheap Inflation Protection Remains Cheap Inflation Protection Remains Cheap Bonds Our bond strategists recently moved to a below-benchmark duration in fixed-income portfolios in light of the economic recovery and the increasing probability of a Blue Wave on November 3, an argument highlighted in the Section II Special Report written by our colleagues Rob Robis and Ryan Swift. The Fed’s new average-inflation target, coupled with the global economic recovery, should put upward pressure on inflation breakeven rates, which are still well below 2.3%-2.5% normally associated with stable inflation near 2% (Chart I-15). The underestimated upward risk to inflation further favors climbing yields. Beyond lifting inflation breakeven rates, this risk would also raise inflation uncertainty, which warrants a greater term premium and a steeper yield curve (Chart I-16). Additionally, higher inflation would occur lockstep with declining savings. The recent surge in excess savings was a primary driver of the collapse in yields; its reversal would push up long-term interest rates (Chart I-17). Chart I-16Rising Inflation Uncertainty Will Steepen The Yield Curve Rising Inflation Uncertainty Will Steepen The Yield Curve Rising Inflation Uncertainty Will Steepen The Yield Curve Chart I-17Excess Savings Will Fall And Yields Will Rise Excess Savings Will Fall And Yields Will Rise Excess Savings Will Fall And Yields Will Rise   The Dollar The US dollar is the major currency most exposed to growing populism because of the extraordinary income inequalities observed in the US. Moreover, a generous combined monetary and fiscal policy setting in the US has eroded the dollar’s appeal as the country’s trade deficit widens (it normally narrows during a recession) in response to pronounced national dissaving (Chart I-18, left panel). Furthermore, US broad money growth stands far above that of other major economies (Chart I-18, right panel). Compared with other major central banks, the Fed is more guilty of financing the public-sector’s debt binge. Debt monetization creates a real risk to a stable USD. Chart I-18AFalling Savings And The Fed's Generosity Will Tank The Greenback November 2020 November 2020 Chart I-18BFalling Savings And The Fed’s Generosity Will Tank The Greenback November 2020 November 2020   The expanding global recovery creates an additional problem for the countercyclical dollar. China’s role is particularly important in this regard as the nation’s domestic economic activity will improve further in response to the lagged impact of a rapid climb in total social financing (Chart I-19, top panel). Sturdy Chinese demand results in climbing global industrial production, which will hurt the greenback. Likewise, China’s healthy recovery has lifted interest rate differentials in favor of the yuan (Chart I-19, bottom panel). A strong CNY flatters China’s purchasing power abroad and diminishes deflationary pressures around the world. This combination should stimulate the global manufacturing sector, which benefits foreign economies more than it does the US.  Investors should consider inflation protection in all asset classes. Equities BCA Research still prefers global equities to bonds on a cyclical basis. The early innings of a pickup in inflation would solidify this bias. Our Adjusted Equity Risk Premium, which accounts for the expected growth rate of earnings and the non-stationarity of the traditional ERP, shows a solid valuation cushion in favor of stocks (Chart I-20). Moreover, forward earnings for the S&P 500 have upside, judging by the gap between the Backlog of Orders and the Customer Inventories components of the ISM Manufacturing survey (Chart I-21). Chart I-19China's Robust Growth Hurts The Dollar China's Robust Growth Hurts The Dollar China's Robust Growth Hurts The Dollar Chart I-20The Adjusted ERP Still Favors Stocks The Adjusted ERP Still Favors Stocks The Adjusted ERP Still Favors Stocks   We also continue to overweight cyclical sectors over defensive ones. The existence of greater inflation risk than the market believes confirms this view. Cyclicals would outperform if investors priced in quicker inflation because they would also bid down the dollar and push up inflation breakeven rates (Chart I-22). These relationships exist because industrials and materials enjoy greater pricing power in an inflationary environment and financials would benefit from a steeper yield curve. An outperformance of deep cyclicals relative to defensive equities should result in an underperformance of US shares relative to the rest of the world. Chart I-21Earnings Revisions Have Upside Earnings Revisions Have Upside Earnings Revisions Have Upside Chart I-22Deep Cyclicals Will Like The Brand New World Deep Cyclicals Will Like The Brand New World Deep Cyclicals Will Like The Brand New World   The long-term outlook for real stock returns is poor, despite a positive six- to nine-month view. Higher inflation will force a greater upside in yields. However, the current extraordinary market multiples can only be justified if one believes that yields will stay depressed for many more years. Thus, inflation would likely prompt a de-rating of equities. Furthermore, our structural inflation view rests on the imposition of populist economic policies. A move backward in globalization and redistributionist policies would lift the share of wages in national income, which would compress extraordinarily wide profit margins (Chart I-23). Therefore, real long-term profits will probably suffer. Paradoxically, nominal stock prices may still eke out positive nominal gains, but that will be a consequence of the money illusion created by higher inflation. Chart I-23Populism Threatens Profit Margins Populism Threatens Profit Margins Populism Threatens Profit Margins BCA Research still prefers global equities to bonds on a cyclical basis. Investors should continue to overweight equities versus bonds, despite pronounced hurdles to long-term, real returns in stocks. Historically, periods of transition from low inflation to higher inflation have allowed stocks to outperform bonds, even if equities generate negative real returns (Table I-1). The exceptionally low real yields and thin inflation protection offered by government bonds increases the likelihood that history will be repeated. Table I-1Rising Inflation: Equities Beat Bonds November 2020 November 2020 A size bias may offer some protection against higher inflation both in the near and long term. We have been positive on small cap equities since September and our US Equity Strategy service upgraded the Russell 2000 to overweight this week.4 A bump in railroad freight volumes augurs well for the domestic economy to which small caps are very sensitive. Additionally, stronger railroad freight volumes also indicate net rating upgrades for junk bonds, which decreases the riskiness of a highly levered small cap sector (Chart I-24). Moreover, small cap stocks are positively linked to major trends produced by higher inflation, such as a weaker dollar and higher commodity prices (Chart I-25). Small firms also enjoy rising consumer confidence, a variable targeted by populist politicians (Chart I-26). Therefore, the potential for a re-rating of the Russell 2000 relative to the S&P 500 is elevated, especially if investors reassess the likelihood of higher inflation.  Chart I-24Small-Cap Stocks Are Set To Shine Small-Cap Stocks Are Set To Shine Small-Cap Stocks Are Set To Shine Chart I-25Small-Cap Will Enjoy Higher Inflation... Small-Cap Will Enjoy Higher Inflation... Small-Cap Will Enjoy Higher Inflation... Chart I-26...And Populists ...And Populists ...And Populists Commodities BCA Research remains positive on the prices of natural resources on a cyclical basis even if there is more risk of a near-term correction for this asset class. Commodities are highly sensitive to a global industrial cycle that offers significant upside and to China in particular. Moreover, commodities are high-beta plays on a weaker dollar and higher inflation expectations (Chart I-27). Natural resources will benefit from economic populism because it lifts demand for cyclical spending. Moreover, commodities are natural hedges against the risk of higher inflation. In this context, it makes sense to allocate more funds to resource stocks to protect an equity portfolio against inflation. Investors worried about the near-term outlook for commodities should rotate out of copper into crude. Copper has withstood the COVID-19 shock much better than Brent despite the strong cyclicality of both natural resources. Following this move, net speculative positions and sentiment measures for copper are toward the top of their ranges of the past 15 years. Meanwhile, the opposite is true for oil. Since 2005, increases in the Brent-to-copper ratio have followed declines to the current levels in the relative Composite Sentiment Indicator (Chart I-28), which includes sentiment and positioning measures for both commodities. Chart I-27Commodities Remain Efficient Inflation Hedges Commodities Remain Efficient Inflation Hedges Commodities Remain Efficient Inflation Hedges Chart I-28A Contrarian Tactical Trade: Buy Brent / Sell Copper A Contrarian Tactical Trade: Buy Brent / Sell Copper A Contrarian Tactical Trade: Buy Brent / Sell Copper   Fundamentals also point in that direction. After collapsing in recent months, global inventories of copper are beginning to climb relative to Brent. Moreover, oil production has dropped significantly relative to copper. Oil demand fell even more dramatically than that of copper, but the gap between production and demand growth is moving in favor of crude. Real long-term profits will probably suffer. This trade is agnostic to the direction of the business cycle. Copper prices embed a much more optimistic take toward global economic activity than Brent. Therefore, copper is more vulnerable to a negative economic upset than oil and less likely to benefit from a positive economic surprise. Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst October 29, 2020 Next Report: November 30, 2020   II. Beware The Bond-Bearish Blue Sweep US Election & Duration: We estimate that there is an 72% probability of a US election result that will give a lift to US Treasury yields via increased fiscal stimulus. Those are strong enough odds to justify a move to a below-benchmark cyclical US duration stance on a 6-12 month horizon. US Treasuries: We anticipate a moderate bear market in US Treasuries to unfold during the next 6-12 months. In addition to below-benchmark portfolio duration, investors should overweight TIPS versus nominal Treasuries, hold nominal and real yield curve steepeners, and hold inflation curve flatteners. Non-US Country Allocation: Within global government bond portfolios, downgrade the US to underweight. Favor countries that have lower sensitivity to rising US Treasury yields with central banks that are likely to be more dovish than the Fed in the next few years. That means increasing allocations to core Europe and Japan, while reducing exposure to Canada and Australia. Stay neutral on the UK given the near-term uncertainties over the final Brexit outcome. With the US presidential election just two weeks away, public opinion polls continue to show that Joe Biden is the favorite to win the White House. However, the odds of a “Blue Sweep” - combining a Biden victory with the Democratic Party winning control of both the US Senate and House of Representatives - have increased since the end of September according to online prediction markets. US Treasury yields have also moved higher over that same period (Chart II-1), which we interpret as the bond market becoming more sensitive to the likelihood of a major increase in US government spending under single-party Democratic control. Chart II-1A Blue Sweep Is Bond Bearish A Blue Sweep Is Bond Bearish A Blue Sweep Is Bond Bearish Table II-1A Comparison Of The Candidates' Budget Proposals November 2020 November 2020 According to a recent analysis done by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, President Trump’s formal policy proposals would increase US federal debt by $4.95 trillion between 2021 and 2030, while Biden’s plan would increase the debt by $5.60 trillion (Table II-1).5 While those are both massive fiscal stimulus plans, there is a stark difference in the policy mix of their proposals that matters for the future path of US bond yields. Under Biden, spending is projected to increase by a cumulative $11.1 trillion, partially offset by $5.8 trillion in revenue increases and savings with the former vice-president calling for tax hikes on corporations and high-income earners. On the other hand, Trump’s plan includes $5.45 trillion of spending increases and tax cuts over the next decade, offset by $0.75 trillion in savings. Conclusion: Biden would increase spending by over twice that of a re-elected Trump, with much of that spending expected to be front-loaded in the early part of his first term. Outright spending is more reflationary than tax cuts because it puts more money in the pockets of consumers (spenders) relative to producers (savers). The Biden plan would be more stimulating for overall activity even if the increase in debt is about the same. Chart II-2The Biden Platform Is Highly Stimulative The Biden Platform Is Highly Stimulative The Biden Platform Is Highly Stimulative Another analysis of the Biden and Trump platforms was conducted by Moody’s in September, based on estimates of how much of each candidate’s promises could be successfully implemented under different combinations of White House and Congressional control.6 The stimulus figures were run through the Moody’s US economic model, which is similar to the budget scoring model of the US Congressional Budget Office, to produce a year-by-year path for the US economy over the next decade (Chart II-2). Moody’s concluded that the US economy would return to full employment in the second half of 2022 under a President Biden – especially if the Democrats win the Senate - compared to the first half of 2024 under a re-elected President Trump. Such a rapid closing of the deep US output gap that opened up because of the COVID-19 recession would likely trigger a reassessment of the Fed’s current highly dovish policy stance. At the moment, the US overnight index swap (OIS) curve discounts one full 25bp Fed hike by late 2023/early 2024, and two full hikes by late 2024/early 2025 (Chart II-3). This pricing of the future path of interest rates has occurred even with the Fed promising to keep the funds rate anchored near 0% until at least the end of 2023. The likelihood of some form of increased fiscal spending after the election will cause the bond market to challenge the Fed’s current forward guidance even more, putting upward pressure on Treasury yields. Chart II-3US Fiscal Stimulus Will Pull Forward Fed Liftoff US Fiscal Stimulus Will Pull Forward Fed Liftoff US Fiscal Stimulus Will Pull Forward Fed Liftoff Our colleagues at BCA Geopolitical Strategy see a Blue Sweep as the most likely outcome of the US election, although their forecasting models suggest that the race for control of the Senate will be much closer than the Biden vs Trump battle (there is little chance that control of the House of Representatives would switch back to the Republicans).7 Their scenarios for each of the White House/Senate combinations, along with their own estimated probability for each, are the following: Biden wins in a Democratic sweep: BCA probability = 27%. The US economy will benefit from higher odds of unfettered fiscal stimulus in 2021, although financial markets will simultaneously have to adjust for the negative shock to US corporate earnings from higher taxes and regulation. Government bond yields should rise on the generally reflationary agenda. Trump wins with a Republican Senate: BCA probability = 23%. In this status quo scenario, a re-elected President Trump would still face opposition from House Democrats on most domestic economic issues, forcing him to tilt towards more protectionist foreign and trade policies in his second term. Fiscal stimulus would be easy to agree, though not as large as under a Democratic sweep. US Treasury yields would rise, but would later prove volatile due to the risk to the cyclical recovery from a global trade war, as Trump’s tariffs will not be limited to China and could even affect the European Union. Biden wins with the Senate staying Republican: BCA probability = 28%. This is ultimately the most positive outcome for financial markets - reduced odds of a full-blown trade war with China, combined with no new tax hikes. Bond yields would drift upward over time, but not during the occasional fiscal battles that would ensue between the Democratic president and Republican senators. The first such battle would start right after the election. Treasuries would remain well bid until financial market pressures forced a Senate compromise with the new president sometime in H1 2021. Trump wins with a Democratic Senate: BCA probability = 22%. This is the least likely scenario but one that could produce a big positive fiscal impulse. Trump is a big spender and will veto tax hikes, but will approve populist spending on areas where he agrees. The Democratic Senate would not resist Trump’s tough stance on China, however, thus keeping the risk of US-China trade skirmishes elevated. This is neutral-to-bearish for US Treasuries, depending on the size of any bipartisan stimulus measures and Trump’s trade actions. The key takeaway is that the combined probability of scenarios that will put upward pressure on US Treasury yields is 72%, versus a 28% probability of a more bond-neutral outcome. That is a bond-bearish skew worth positioning for by reducing US duration exposure now, ahead of the November 3 election. Of this 72%, 45 percentage points come from scenarios in which President Trump would remain in power. Hence his trade wars would eventually undercut his reflationary fiscal policy. This would become the key risk to the short duration view after the initial market response. Bottom Line: The most likely scenarios for the US election will give a cyclical lift to US Treasury yields via increased fiscal stimulus. This justifies a move to a below-benchmark US duration stance on a 6-12 month horizon. If Trump is re-elected, the timing of Trump’s likely return to using broad-based tariffs will have to be monitored closely. A Moderate Bear Market While our anticipated Blue Sweep election outcome will lead to a large amount of fiscal spending in 2021 and beyond, we anticipate only a modest increase in bond yields during the next 6-12 months. In terms of strategy, our recommended reduction in portfolio duration reflects the fact that fiscal largesse meaningfully reduces the risk of another significant downleg in bond yields and strengthens our conviction in a moderate bear market scenario for bonds. This does raise the question of how large an increase in US Treasury yields we expect during the next 6-12 months. We turn to this question now. Chart II-4Less Election-Day Upside Than In 2016 Less Election-Day Upside Than In 2016 Less Election-Day Upside Than In 2016 Not Like 2016 First, we do not expect a massive election night bond rout like we saw in 2016 (Chart II-4). For one thing, the Fed was much more eager to tighten policy in 2016 than it is today, and it did deliver a rate hike one month after the Republicans won the House, Senate and White House (Chart II-4, bottom panel). This time around, the Fed has made it clear that it will wait until inflation is running above its 2% target before lifting rates off the zero bound and will not respond directly to expectations for greater fiscal stimulus. Second, 2016’s election result was mostly unanticipated. This led to a dramatic adjustment in market prices once the results came in. The PredictIt betting market odds of a “Red Sweep” by the Republicans in 2016 were only 16% the night before the election. As of today, the betting markets are priced for a 58% chance of a Blue Sweep in 2020. Unlike in 2016, bonds are presumably already partially priced for the most bond-bearish election outcome. A Slow Return To Equilibrium To more directly answer the question of how high bond yields can rise, survey estimates of the long-run (or equilibrium) federal funds rate provide a useful starting point. In a world where the economy is growing at an above-trend pace and inflation is expected to move towards the Fed’s target, it is logical for long-maturity Treasury yields to settle near estimates of the long-run fed funds rate. Indeed, this theory is borne out empirically. During the last two periods of robust global economic growth (2017/18 & 2013/14), the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield peaked around levels consistent with long-run fed funds rate estimates (Chart II-5). As of today, the median estimates of the long-run fed funds rate from the New York Fed’s Survey of Market Participants and Survey of Primary Dealers are 2% and 2.25%, respectively. In other words, a complete re-convergence to these equilibrium levels would impart 80 – 100 bps of upward pressure to the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield. We expect this re-convergence to play out eventually, but probably not within the next 6-12 months. In both prior periods when the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield reached these equilibrium levels, the Fed’s reaction function was much more hawkish. The Fed was hiking rates throughout 2017 & 2018 (Chart II-5, panel 4), and the market moved quickly to price in rate hikes in 2013 (Chart II-5, bottom panel). The Fed’s new dovish messaging will ensure that the market reacts less quickly this time around. Also, continued curve steepening will mean that the 5-year/5-year forward yield’s 80 – 100 bps of upside will translate into significantly less upside for the benchmark 10-year yield. The 10-year yield and 5-year/5-year forward yield peaked at similar levels in 2017/18 when the Fed was lifting rates and the yield curve was flat (Chart II-6). But, the 10-year peaked far below the 5-year/5-year yield in 2013/14 when the Fed stayed on hold and the curve steepened. Chart II-5How High For Treasury Yields? How High For Treasury Yields? How High For Treasury Yields? Chart II-6Less Upside In 10yr Than In 5y5y Less Upside In 10yr Than In 5y5y Less Upside In 10yr Than In 5y5y   The next bear move in bonds will look much more like 2013/14. The Fed will keep a firm grip over the front-end of the curve, leading to curve steepening and less upside in the 10-year Treasury yield than in the 5-year/5-year forward. In addition to shifting to a below-benchmark duration stance, investors should maintain exposure to nominal yield curve steepeners. Specifically, we recommend buying the 5-year note versus a duration-matched barbell consisting of the 2-year and 10-year notes (Chart II-6, bottom panel).8 TIPS Versus Nominals We have seen that a full re-convergence to “equilibrium” implies 80 – 100 bps of upside in the 5-year/5-year forward nominal Treasury yield. Bringing TIPS into the equation, we have also observed that long-maturity (5-year/5-year forward and 10-year) TIPS breakeven inflation rates tend to settle into a range of 2.3 – 2.5 percent when inflation is well-anchored and close to the Fed’s target (Chart II-7). The additional fiscal stimulus that will follow a Blue Sweep election makes it much more likely that the economic recovery will stay on course, leading to an eventual return of inflation to target and of long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates to a 2.3 – 2.5 percent range. However, as with nominal yields, this re-convergence will be a long process whose pace will be dictated by the actual inflation data. To underscore that point, consider that our Adaptive Expectations Model of the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate – a model that is driven by trends in the actual inflation data – has the 10-year breakeven rate as close to fair value (Chart II-8).9 This fair value will rise only slowly over time, alongside increases in actual inflation. Chart II-7Overweight TIPS Versus Nominals Overweight TIPS Versus Nominals Overweight TIPS Versus Nominals Chart II-8Real Yields Have Likely Bottomed Real Yields Have Likely Bottomed Real Yields Have Likely Bottomed   All in all, we continue to recommend an overweight allocation to TIPS versus nominal Treasuries. TIPS breakeven inflation rates will move higher during the next 6-12 months, but are unlikely to reach our 2.3 – 2.5 percent target range within that timeframe. TIPS In Absolute Terms As stated above, we expect nominal yields to increase more than real yields during the next 6-12 months, but what about the absolute direction of real (aka TIPS) yields? Here, our sense is that real yields have also bottomed. If we consider the extreme scenario where the 5-year/5-year forward nominal yield returns to its equilibrium level and where long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates return to our target range, it implies about 80 bps of upside in the nominal yield and 40 bps of upside in the breakeven. This means that the 5-year/5-year real yield has about 40 bps of upside in a complete “return to equilibrium” scenario. While we don’t expect this “return to equilibrium” to be completed within the next 6-12 months, the process is probably underway. The only way for real yields to keep falling in this reflationary world is for the Fed to become increasingly dovish, even as growth improves and inflation rises. After its recent shift to an average inflation target, our best guess is that Fed rate guidance won’t get any more dovish from here. Real yields fell sharply this year as the market priced in this change in the Fed’s reaction function, but the late-August announcement of the Fed’s new framework will probably mark the bottom in real yields (Chart II-8, bottom panel).10 Chart II-9Own Inflation Curve Flatteners And Real Curve Steepeners Own Inflation Curve Flatteners And Real Curve Steepeners Own Inflation Curve Flatteners And Real Curve Steepeners Two More Curve Trades In addition to moving to below-benchmark duration, maintaining nominal yield curve steepeners and staying overweight TIPS versus nominal Treasuries, there are two additional trades that investors should consider in order to profit from the reflationary economic environment. The first is inflation curve flatteners. The cost of short-maturity inflation protection is below the cost of long-maturity inflation protection, meaning that it has further to run as inflation returns to the Fed’s target (Chart II-9). In addition, if the Fed eventually succeeds in achieving a temporary overshoot of its inflation target, then we should expect the inflation curve to invert. Real yield curve steepeners are in some ways the mirror image of inflation curve flatteners. Assuming no change in nominal yields, the real yield curve will steepen as the inflation curve flattens. But what makes real yield curve steepeners look even more attractive is that increases in nominal yields during the next 6-12 months will be concentrated in long-maturities. This will impart even more steepening pressure to the real yield curve. Investors should continue to hold inflation curve flatteners and real yield curve steepeners. Bottom Line: We anticipate a moderate bear market in US Treasuries to unfold during the next 6-12 months. In addition to below-benchmark portfolio duration, investors should overweight TIPS versus nominal Treasuries, hold nominal and real yield curve steepeners, and hold inflation curve flatteners. Non-US Government Bonds: Reduce Exposure To US Treasuries The mildly bearish case for US Treasuries that we have laid out above not only matters for our recommended duration stance, but also for our suggested country allocation within global government bond portfolios. Simply put, the risk of rising bond yields is much higher in the US than elsewhere, both for the immediate post-election period but also over the medium-term. Thus, the immediate obvious portfolio decision is to downgrade US Treasuries to underweight. The move higher in US Treasury yields that we expect is strictly related to spillovers from likely US fiscal stimulus. While other countries in the developed world are contemplating the need for additional fiscal measures, particularly in Europe where there is a renewed surge in coronavirus infections and growing economic restrictions, no country is facing as sharp a policy choice as the US with its upcoming election. We can say with a fair degree of certainty that the US will have a relatively more stimulative fiscal policy stance than other developed economies over at least the next couple of years. This implies a higher relative growth trajectory for the US that hurts Treasuries more on the margin than non-US government debt. In addition, the likely path of relative monetary policy responses are more bearish for US Treasuries. As described above, the scope of the US stimulus will cause bond investors to further question the Fed’s commitment to keeping the funds rate unchanged for the next few years. That also applies to the Fed’s other policy tools, like asset purchases. The Fed is far less likely to continue buying US Treasuries at the same aggressive pace it has for the past eight months if there is less need for monetary stimulus because of more fiscal stimulus. Chart II-10The Fed Will Gladly Trade Less QE For More Fiscal Stimulus November 2020 November 2020 According to the IMF, the Fed has purchased 57% of all US Treasuries issued since late February of this year, in sharp contrast to the ECB and Bank of Japan that have purchased over 70% of euro area government bonds and JGBs issued (Chart II-10). If US Treasury yields are rising because of improving US growth expectations, fueled by fiscal stimulus, the Fed will likely tolerate such a move and buy an even lower share of Treasuries issued – particularly if the higher bond yields do not cause a selloff in US equity markets that can tighten financial conditions and threaten the growth outlook. The fact that US equities have ignored the rise in Treasury yields seen since the end of September may be a sign that both bond and stock investors are starting to focus on a faster trajectory for US growth. In terms of country allocation, beyond downgrading US Treasuries to underweight, we recommend upgrading exposure to countries that are less sensitive to changes in US Treasury yields (i.e. countries with a lower yield beta to changes in US yields). In Chart II-11, we show the rolling beta of changes in 10-year government bond yields outside the US to changes in 10-year US Treasury yields. This is a variation of the “global yield beta” concept that we have discussed in the BCA Research bond publications in recent years. Here, we modify the idea to look at which countries are more or less correlated to US yields, specifically. A few points stand out from the chart: Chart II-11Reduce Exposure To Bond Markets More Correlated To UST Yields Reduce Exposure To Bond Markets More Correlated To UST Yields Reduce Exposure To Bond Markets More Correlated To UST Yields All countries have a “US yield beta” of less than 1, suggesting that Treasuries are a consistent outperformer when US yields fall and vice versa. This suggests moving to underweight the US when US yields are rising is typically a winning strategy in a portfolio context. The list of higher beta countries includes Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the UK and Germany; although Canada stands out as having the highest yield beta in this group. The list of lower beta countries includes France, Italy, Spain, and Japan. In Chart II-12, we show what we call the “upside yield beta” that is estimated only using data for periods when Treasury yields are rising. This gives a sense of which countries are more likely to outperform or underperform during a period of rising Treasury yields, as we expect to unfold after the election. From this perspective, the “safer” lower US upside yield beta group includes the UK, France, Germany and Japan. The riskier higher US upside yield beta group includes Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Italy and Spain. Chart II-12Favor Bond Markets Less Correlated to RISING UST Yields Favor Bond Markets Less Correlated to RISING UST Yields Favor Bond Markets Less Correlated to RISING UST Yields Spain and Italy are less likely to behave like typical high-beta countries as US yields rise, however, because the ECB is likely to remain an aggressive buyer of their government bonds as part of their asset purchase programs over the next 6-12 months. We also do not recommend trading UK Gilts off their yield beta to US Treasuries in the immediate future, given the uncertainties over the negotiations over a final Brexit deal. Both sets of US yield betas suggest higher-beta Canada, Australia and New Zealand are more at risk of relative underperformance versus lower-beta France, Germany and Japan. In terms of government bond country allocation, we recommend reducing exposure to the former group and increasing allocations to the latter group. Bottom Line: Within global government bond portfolios, downgrade the US to underweight. Favor countries that have lower sensitivity to rising US Treasury yields, especially those with central banks that are likely to be more dovish than the Fed in the next few years. That means increasing allocations to core Europe and Japan, while reducing exposure to “higher-beta” Canada and Australia.   Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com III. Indicators And Reference Charts The S&P 500 is experiencing its second correction in the past two months. The market looks even more fragile than it did in September. COVID-19 is heating up fast enough that lockdowns are re-emerging globally, the odds of an imminent fiscal deal have cratered to a near-zero chance, and investors are paying more attention to the growing risk of gridlock in Washington where a Biden Presidency and a Republican Senate majority would result in temporary fiscal paralysis. In this context, the decline in the momentum of the BCA Monetary Indicator, the elevated reading of our Speculation Indicator and the overvaluation of the stock market create the perfect cocktail for a dangerous few weeks. The longer we live in uncertainty regarding the elections’ result, the worse the market will fare. Short-term indicators confirm that equities are likely to remain under downward pressure in the coming weeks. Both the proportion of NYSE stocks above their 30-week and 10-week moving averages are still deteriorating after forming negative divergences with the S&P 500. They are also nowhere near levels consistent with a solid floor under the market. Moreover, our Intermediate Equity Indicator and the S&P 500 as a deviation from its 200-day moving average have rolled-over after reaching extremely overbought levels. Finally, both the poor performance of EM stocks as well as the underperformance of the Baltic Dry index and global chemical stocks relative to bond prices and the VIX indicate that cyclical assets could suffer from a wave of growth disappointment. Despite these short-term headwinds, the main pillar supporting the rally remains intact: global monetary conditions are highly accommodative. Moreover, the economic and financial risks created by the tepidity of fiscal support in recent months is self-limiting. As the economy progressively teeters toward a second leg of the recession, the pressure will rise for policymakers to spend generously once again to support their nations. Our cyclical indicators confirm the positive backdrop for stocks. Our Monetary Indicator remains at the top of its pre-COVID-19 distribution, which will put a natural floor under stocks, even if its recent deterioration is consistent with a market correction. Moreover, our Revealed Preference Indicator continues to flash a buy signal for stocks. Additionally, the BCA Composite Sentiment Indicator stands toward the middle of its historical distribution and the VIX has not hit the extremely compressed levels that normally precede major cyclical tops in the S&P 500. When weighing the short-term negative forces against the cyclical positives, we expect the S&P 500 to find a floor between 3000 and 3100. At this level, the froth highlighted by our Speculation Indicator will have dissipated.  The bond market’s dynamics are interesting. Despite the violent sell-off in equities, Treasury yields are not declining much. Bonds are too expensive and with short-term rates near their lower bound, Treasurys are losing their ability to hedge equity risk in portfolios. Moreover, the bond market seems to understand that any recession will encourage additional fiscal profligacy, which puts a floor under yields. These dynamics suggest that once equities stabilize, yields could start rising meaningfully. Finally, the dollar continues its sideways correction. However, as risk aversion rises and global growth deteriorates, the dollar is likely to catch further upside in the near term, especially as it has not fully worked out this summer’s oversold conditions. Moreover, the dollar is a momentum currency. Thus, once its start to turn around, its rally is likely to be more powerful than most expect, which will put additional downward pressures on commodity prices. Consequently, it is too early to start selling the USD again or to bottom fish natural resources. EQUITIES: Chart III-1US Equity Indicators US Equity Indicators US Equity Indicators Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk Willingness To Pay For Risk Willingness To Pay For Risk Chart III-3US Equity Sentiment Indicators US Equity Sentiment Indicators US Equity Sentiment Indicators   Chart III-4Revealed Preference Indicator Revealed Preference Indicator Revealed Preference Indicator Chart III-5US Stock Market Valuation US Stock Market Valuation US Stock Market Valuation Chart III-6US Earnings US Earnings US Earnings Chart III-7Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Chart III-8Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance   FIXED INCOME: Chart III-9US Treasurys And Valuations US Treasurys And Valuations US Treasurys And Valuations Chart III-10Yield Curve Slopes Yield Curve Slopes Yield Curve Slopes Chart III-11Selected US Bond Yields Selected US Bond Yields Selected US Bond Yields Chart III-1210-Year Treasury Yield Components 10-Year Treasury Yield Components 10-Year Treasury Yield Components Chart III-13US Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor US Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor US Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor Chart III-14Global Bonds: Developed Markets Global Bonds: Developed Markets Global Bonds: Developed Markets Chart III-15Global Bonds: Emerging Markets Global Bonds: Emerging Markets Global Bonds: Emerging Markets   CURRENCIES: Chart III-16US Dollar And PPP US Dollar And PPP US Dollar And PPP Chart III-17US Dollar And Indicator US Dollar And Indicator US Dollar And Indicator Chart III-18US Dollar Fundamentals US Dollar Fundamentals US Dollar Fundamentals Chart III-19Japanese Yen Technicals Japanese Yen Technicals Japanese Yen Technicals Chart III-20Euro Technicals Euro Technicals Euro Technicals Chart III-21Euro/Yen Technicals Euro/Yen Technicals Euro/Yen Technicals Chart III-22Euro/Pound Technicals Euro/Pound Technicals Euro/Pound Technicals   COMMODITIES: Chart III-23Broad Commodity Indicators Broad Commodity Indicators Broad Commodity Indicators Chart III-24Commodity Prices Commodity Prices Commodity Prices Chart III-25Commodity Prices Commodity Prices Commodity Prices Chart III-26Commodity Sentiment Commodity Sentiment Commodity Sentiment Chart III-27Speculative Positioning Speculative Positioning Speculative Positioning   ECONOMY: Chart III-28US And Global Macro Backdrop US And Global Macro Backdrop US And Global Macro Backdrop Chart III-29US Macro Snapshot US Macro Snapshot US Macro Snapshot Chart III-30US Growth Outlook US Growth Outlook US Growth Outlook Chart III-31US Cyclical Spending US Cyclical Spending US Cyclical Spending Chart III-32US Labor Market US Labor Market US Labor Market Chart III-33US Consumption US Consumption US Consumption Chart III-34US Housing US Housing US Housing Chart III-35US Debt And Deleveraging US Debt And Deleveraging US Debt And Deleveraging   Chart III-36US Financial Conditions US Financial Conditions US Financial Conditions Chart III-37Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Chart III-38Global Economic Snapshot: China Global Economic Snapshot: China Global Economic Snapshot: China   Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst   Footnotes 1 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Special Report "Labor Strikes Back," dated February 27, 2020, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 2 High odds of staying in the income decile of your parents. 3 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Webcast "Geopolitical Alpha In 2020-21," dated October 21, 2020. Marko also recently published a book "Geopolitical Alpha." 4 Please see US Equity Strategy Weekly Report "Vigilantes Gone Missing?" dated October 26, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com 5 http://www.crfb.org/papers/cost-trump-and-biden-campaign-plans 6 https://www.moodysanalytics.com/-/media/article/2020/the-macroeconomic-consequences-trump-vs-biden.pdf 7 Please see BCA Research Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, “Introducing Our Quantitative US Senate Election Model”, dated October 16, 2020, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 8 For more details on this recommended steepener trade please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Positioning For Reflation And Avoiding Deflation”, dated August 11, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 9 For more details on our Adaptive Expectations Model please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “How Are Inflation Expectations Adapting?”, dated February 11, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 10 For a detailed look at the implications of the Fed’s policy shift please see US Bond Strategy / Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, “A New Dawn For US Monetary Policy”, dated September 1, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com
Copper has withstood the COVID-19 shock much better than Brent despite the strong cyclicality of both natural resources. The long-term outlook is likely to favor copper: a move away from carbon-intensive energy production will permanently hurt the appetite…