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Corporate Bonds

Highlights The backdrop for global high-yield corporates remains positive, and a rebound in global GDP and earnings will help ease leverage and interest coverage concerns. With improving global growth taking over the reins from central bank liquidity as the primary driver of high-yield returns, we have decided to reassess the sources of value using some of our key indicators for junk bonds in the US and Europe. The US and euro area appear fairly evenly matched on our valuation metrics but euro area high-yield still offers good value on an absolute basis. We are therefore increasing our recommended allocation to overweight, matching our similar stance for US high-yield. Within the euro area, stay up in quality, favoring Ba-rated credit. Retail and consumer products are attractive bounce-back sectors as Europe emerges from lockdowns later this year. Feature Chart of the WeekCentral Bank Liquidity Has Driven High Yield Outperformance Central Bank Liquidity Has Driven High Yield Outperformance Central Bank Liquidity Has Driven High Yield Outperformance The past year has been excellent for global high-yield corporate bonds. Unprecedented monetary and fiscal stimulus in response to the COVID-19 economic shock and market rout helped rapidly lower credit spreads in the final three quarters of 2020. As the vaccine rollout picked up pace and the reopening trade began to dominate earlier this year, high-yield corporates continued to perform well despite defaults hitting a post-2008 high (Chart of the Week). An improving outlook for the global economy is highly supportive for lower-rated corporate debt from a fundamental perspective, even if that same pickup in growth will put pressure on policymakers to dial back monetary accommodation. Already, growth in major central bank balance sheets – a reliable leading indicator of high yield outperformance – is slowing, with corporate spreads approaching historically tight levels. Thus, we feel it is timely to assess valuation metrics in the largest high-yield markets of the US and Europe – and the implications for regional high-yield allocations - as economic growth takes over the reins from central bank liquidity as the primary driver of spread product performance. A Cyclical Reduction In Corporate Credit Risk In its recently published Global Financial Stability Report,1 the IMF noted that the COVID-19 shock has pushed up global nonfinancial corporate leverage, measured as debt relative to GDP, to historical highs (Chart 2). Some of that rise is due to companies ramping up debt issuance over the past year in response to supportive monetary policy and favorable financial market conditions. Yet according to the IMF, about half of the rise in global corporate debt-to-GDP ratios from Q4/2019 to Q3/2020 was attributable to sharply lower output. Now, with economic growth set to stage a strong rebound this year – the IMF is forecasting global real GDP growth of 6.0% in 2021 and 4.4% in 2022 - a rising denominator should result in corporate debt-to-GDP ratios stabilizing or even falling over the next couple of years. This will help maintain a positive backdrop for corporate spread product, even if central banks like the Fed turn less dovish later this year, as we expect Corporate interest coverage, using the Refinitiv Datastream bottom-up aggregates of individual company data, paints a similar cyclical picture (Chart 3). The absolute level of coverage ratios fell sharply in 2020, accelerating pre-pandemic downtrends that had already been in place in both the US and Europe. Since Q4/2019, however, interest expense actually fell very slightly in the US, meaning that of the 1.5 point fall in the interest coverage ratio, 1.3 points can be attributed to declining corporate earnings over that period. The picture was also lopsided in the euro area, with 2.5 points of the 2.8 point decline in interest coverage over that same period attributable to falling profits. Chart 2Rising Leverage Is Not Just A Debt Story Rising Leverage Is Not Just A Debt Story Rising Leverage Is Not Just A Debt Story Chart 3Falling Earnings Are Responsible For The Decline In Interest Coverage Falling Earnings Are Responsible For The Decline In Interest Coverage Falling Earnings Are Responsible For The Decline In Interest Coverage Rapid improvements in economic growth momentum, fueled by reopening economies and increased fiscal stimulus (especially in the US), should lead to a cyclical rebound interest coverage ratios in both the US and Europe in 2021 and 2022. Bottom Line: The backdrop for global high yield corporates remains positive, and a rebound in global GDP and earnings will help ease leverage and interest coverage concerns. A Trans-Atlantic Comparison Of High-Yield Bond Valuations Chart 4Our Relative Overweight On US HY Has Been A Success Our Relative Overweight On US HY Has Been A Success Our Relative Overweight On US HY Has Been A Success Since March of last year, we have maintained a recommended overweight stance on US high-yield versus European equivalents (Chart 4). That was originally a relative central bank play with the Fed including US high-yield in its corporate bond buying program, in contrast to the ECB that was only buying investment grade debt. Our relative regional allocation on high-yield corporates has worked out well, with the US outperforming the euro area by 3.9 percentage points (in excess return terms versus duration-matched government debt) since the pandemic peak in credit spreads last March. Today, with high-yield spreads back near historical tight levels and the momentum of excess returns starting to peak, a forward-looking reevaluation of our US versus Europe high-yield recommendation along value grounds is in order. To conduct our reassessment of value, we look at five key areas: default-adjusted spreads; 12-month breakeven spreads; volatility-adjusted spreads; credit quality curves; and, lastly, the relative carry offered by high-yield corporates in currency-hedged and unhedged terms. Default-Adjusted Spreads As discussed earlier in the report, fiscal and monetary support have helped stave off the worst for high-yield corporates on both sides of the Atlantic, with default rates spiking far less than the amount implied by the collapse in year-over-year GDP growth (Chart 5). Forecasts for 2021 are sanguine—Moody’s expects the trailing 12-month high yield default rate to reach 4.2% in the US and 2.6% in the euro area in 2021, in line with the IMF’s sharp upward revision to growth forecasts for both regions. The outlook for default-adjusted spreads, which look at the index option-adjusted spread (OAS) net of realized default losses, is much more positive in the euro area however, given that they have a much more attractive “starting point”. The realized default-adjusted spread in the euro area was already inching into positive territory last year, as opposed to the deeply negative spread in the US (Chart 6). This alone makes it much more likely that euro area high-yield will deliver a positive return net of default losses. Chart 5The Default Picture Is Expected To Improve The Default Picture Is Expected To Improve The Default Picture Is Expected To Improve Chart 6Euro Area Spreads Are More Attractive On A Default-Adjusted Basis Euro Area Spreads Are More Attractive On A Default-Adjusted Basis Euro Area Spreads Are More Attractive On A Default-Adjusted Basis In addition, the potential range for default-adjusted spreads (combining default rates and recovery rates, see the shaded boxes in the chart) is much narrower in the euro area given the lower post-crisis volatility in default rates in that region, making outcomes in the euro area far less uncertain than in the US. Volatility-Adjusted Spreads Chart 7Falling US Spreads Have Overshot The Level Implied By Equity Volatility Falling US Spreads Have Overshot The Level Implied By Equity Volatility Falling US Spreads Have Overshot The Level Implied By Equity Volatility Another way to evaluate the attractiveness of the level of spreads, and how much further they could fall, is to compare them to standard macro volatility gauges like the US VIX and the European VSTOXX indices. Credit spreads and equity volatility are highly correlated, as both are measures of investor uncertainty that rise during risk-off episodes and vice versa. The ratio of corporate credit spreads to equity volatility, therefore, can signal if spreads appear stretched relative to the broader risk backdrop. The global rally in riskier credit has helped push down volatility-adjusted spreads for both regions, making them expensive relative to the historic mean (Chart 7). However, the divergence between volatility and high-yield spreads is much more pronounced in the US, where the volatility-adjusted spread, currently at all-time lows and 1.8 standard deviations below the mean, appears much less attractive. In contrast, while the euro area measure is still within one standard deviation of the mean and has room to fall further, as it did in 2007. 12-Month Breakeven Spreads To look at valuations in high yield corporates relative to history, we turn to our 12-month breakeven spread metrics. These measure how much spread widening is required over a one-year horizon to eliminate the yield advantage of owning corporate bonds versus a duration-matched position in government debt. We then show those breakeven spreads as a percentile ranking versus its own history, to allow comparisons over periods with differing underlying spread volatility. On this basis, there seems to be a bit more value in US high-yield spreads, with the 12-month breakeven at the 32nd percentile compared to the 18th percentile ranking for European high-yield. Both markets are not cheap on this metric, though, with the lion’s share of cyclical spread compression having already been realized (Chart 8). This additional value in the US is concentrated in the lower-quality tiers, with B-rated US HY looking most attractive (Chart 9). Chart 8US And Euro Area High-Yield Breakeven Spreads US And Euro Area High-Yield Breakeven Spreads US And Euro Area High-Yield Breakeven Spreads Chart 9All Credit Tier Breakeven Valuations Are In the Bottom Half Relative To History A Comparative Look At High-Yield Valuations In The US And Europe A Comparative Look At High-Yield Valuations In The US And Europe Credit Quality Curves To further inform our decision on value across credit tiers in the US and Europe, we look at credit quality curves, which measure the incremental spread pick-up earned from moving down to lower credit tiers. For example, we look at the spread differential between B-rated and Ba-rated high-yield bonds within the US or Europe. When making the comparisons, we adjust the spreads to account for duration differences between credit tier sub-indices and the overall regional high-yield index. This adjusts for slightly lower index durations as we move down in quality.2 Our colleagues at BCA Research US Bond Strategy have pointed out that the spread pickup earned from moving out of US Baa-rated bonds into Ba-rated bonds is elevated compared to typical historical levels.3 Credit quality curves in the euro area tell a similar story (Chart 10). The spread pickup from moving into Ba-rated credit is slightly higher in the euro area on a cross-country basis while there is a more attractive pickup in the US from moving further down in quality. Chart 10US & European HY Credit Quality Curves US & European HY Credit Quality Curves US & European HY Credit Quality Curves Chart 11Euro Area Caa-Rated Spreads Have Room To Fall To Pre-COVID Lows A Comparative Look At High-Yield Valuations In The US And Europe A Comparative Look At High-Yield Valuations In The US And Europe As quality curves have compressed across the board, we can also use the pre-COVID lows in these series as an anchor for how much more narrowing we could see (Chart 11). On that basis, there seems to be a bit more value left in the top two tiers of US high yield while there is more juice left in the euro area Caa-rated minus B-rated spread. The Caa-B spread differential is now quite expensive for the US, sitting -140bps below its pre-COVID low, a reflection of yield-chasing behavior by risk-seeking investors in an easy monetary policy environment. As the Fed begins to take its foot off the monetary accelerator within the next 6-12 months, as we expect, this credit tier is also most vulnerable to a repricing of default risk. Index Yield-To-Maturity Chart 12Junk Index Yields At All Time Lows Junk Index Yields At All Time Lows Junk Index Yields At All Time Lows The hunt for yield by fixed income investors has driven down the index yield on lower-quality credit to all-time lows in both the US and euro area (Chart 12). This dynamic has played out at a time when falling interest rate differentials between the two regions have cut down the cost of hedging US dollar (USD) exposures into euros (or, alternatively, reduced the gain from hedging euro exposures into USD). Importantly, this reduction in the gains/losses from currency hedging allows for a more honest assessment of the relative attractiveness of yields on lower-rated corporates in the US and Europe, reflecting compensation for taking credit risk rather than currency risk. With the backdrop for spread product looking positive, it is worth considering the simple carry over a twelve-month period for holding high-yield debt, in both USD-hedged and unhedged terms (Chart 13). For the overall index and the Ba-rated tier, the US dominates completely, with investors in the euro area better off holding US credit even after paying the currency hedging cost. This dynamic is flipped at the B- and Caa-rated tiers, with euro area credit appearing dominant. Chart 13US Ba-Rated Debt Is Dominant On A Carry Basis A Comparative Look At High-Yield Valuations In The US And Europe A Comparative Look At High-Yield Valuations In The US And Europe An Additional Point On High-Yield Sectors Sector composition will also be an important driver of high-yield returns going forward. In the April 2021 Global Financial Stability report, the IMF noted that global high-yield defaults in 2020 were concentrated in sectors most affected by the pandemic. On a relative basis, the US high-yield index appears more heavily weighted towards those sectors – a picture that becomes even more focused if Energy, which is the largest industry group in US high-yield, is considered as a pandemic-stricken industry (Chart 14). However, the euro area does have a slightly larger tilt towards the hard-hit Retail sector. Chart 14Oil And Gas Was Hardest-Hit In 2020 A Comparative Look At High-Yield Valuations In The US And Europe A Comparative Look At High-Yield Valuations In The US And Europe An important implication is that the sectors that suffered the most in 2020 are also the ones most poised for a snapback this year as economies reopen and growth recovers. One way to approach this from a relative valuation perspective is to look at the relative industry-level cross-country spreads between the US and Europe, compared to the change in global defaults by sector from 2019 to 2020 (Chart 15). Chart 15Sectors That Saw Rising Defaults In 2020 Are Poised For A Rebound A Comparative Look At High-Yield Valuations In The US And Europe A Comparative Look At High-Yield Valuations In The US And Europe Sectors that saw a moderate-to-high number of defaults last year, such as Retail and Consumer products, offer higher spreads in the euro area. These will also be the sectors to benefit the most from a consumption rebound as Europe exits lockdowns. On the other hand, US spreads are more attractive than European spreads for the Media and Transportation sectors that saw a big increase in defaults in 2020. Importantly, while the US Energy sector also looks more relatively attractive on that basis, much of a post-COVID recovery has already been priced in, with US high-yield energy spreads below pre-pandemic lows. Investment Conclusions Having looked at our suite of valuation metrics, euro area and US high-yield appear quite evenly matched. On a default and volatility-adjusted basis, spreads in the euro area appear to offer more value while US high-yield largely wins out on a breakeven spread and carry basis. Thus, the case for favoring US high-yield over European equivalents is no longer as compelling as it has been for much of the past twelve months. We are therefore taking profits on our long-held recommended overweight stance on US high-yield versus European high-yield. We are implementing this change by upgrading our strategic euro area high yield allocation to overweight (4 out of 5), which matches our similar overweight recommended tilt for US high-yield (see table on page 15). Within our model bond portfolio, we are “funding” that upgrade by reducing the size of our recommended overweight exposure to core European sovereign debt in Germany and France (see the model bond portfolio tables on pages 13-14). On the margin, this decision also positions us favorably with regards to the consumption driven H2/2021 recovery in euro area economies highlighted by our colleagues at BCA Research European Investment Strategy.4 Within European credit, we recommend staying up in quality, favoring the Ba-rated tier as lower quality tranches do not offer adequate compensation for the increased credit risk. Bottom Line: Rebounding global growth will help maintain a favorable backdrop for global high yield credit. The US and euro area look evenly matched on our valuation metrics, but there is still good value on offer in the euro area on an absolute basis. Increase allocations to euro area high-yield, favoring the Ba-rated credit tier and Retail and Consumer Products industries, in particular. Shakti Sharma Senior Analyst ShaktiS@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/GFSR/Issues/2021/04/06/global-financial-stability-report-april-2021 2 Please see BCA Research US Bond Strategy Report, "Ba- Rated Bonds Look Best", dated February 9, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 3 Note that this adjustment is made to facilitate more accurate comparisons within the credit tiers of the high-yield universe. No such adjustment is made to the Baa-rated credit spread, which is higher-quality investment grade and therefore not part of the high-yield universe. 4 Please see BCA Research European Investment Strategy Special Report, "A Temporary Decoupling", dated April 5, 2021, available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations A Comparative Look At High-Yield Valuations In The US And Europe A Comparative Look At High-Yield Valuations In The US And Europe Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
The BCA Research Global Asset Allocation (GAA) Forum will take place online on May 18th. We have put together a great lineup of speakers to discuss issues of importance to CIOs and asset allocators. These include the latest thinking on portfolio construction, factor investing, alternatives, and ESG. Our keynote speaker will be Keith Ambachtsheer, founder of KPA Advisory and author of many books on investment management including "The Future of Pension Management: Integrating Design, Governance and Investing" (2016). His presentation will be followed by a panel discussion of top CIOs including Maxime Aucoin of CDPQ, James Davis of OPTrust, and Catherine Ulozas of the Drexel University Endowment. The event is complimentary for all GAA subscribers, who can see a full agenda and register here. Others can sign up here. We hope you can join us on May 18th for what should be a stimulating and informative day of ideas and discussion. Highlights Investors’ hunt for yield over the past few years led them to view leveraged loans as an attractive investment. Characterized by low volatility and attractive risk-adjusted returns, leveraged loans can add value to a portfolio. Leveraged loans tend to outperform their fixed-rate counterparts (for example, high-yield bonds) in an environment of rising rates and an attractive valuation starting point. Only the former criterion is true currently. Risks do exist, however. The increasing share of covenant-lite issues, and rising leverage in the corporate sector are of particular concern. Over the next 6-to-12 months, we do not expect rates to rise substantially, making the asset class somewhat unappealing in the short term. The longer-term outlook is attractive nevertheless, since rates are likely to rise as inflation picks up over the coming years. Feature In today’s environment of ultra-accommodative monetary policy, including low interest rates, and unattractive valuations for fixed-income risk assets, investors have no option but to look beyond conventional fixed-income instruments and dial up their risk appetite. In this Special Report, we run through the mechanics of the leveraged loan market. We analyze historical risk-return characteristics and compare leveraged loans to other assets. We also assess their performance during periods of financial-market stress as well as periods of rising rates and inflation. Finally, we discuss the risks associated with owning leveraged loans. What Are Leveraged Loans? Leveraged loans are a type of syndicated loan made to sub-investment-grade companies. Generally, these firms are highly indebted, with low credit ratings. A syndicated loan is structured, arranged, and administered by one or several commercial or investment banks.1 The majority of these loans are senior secured loans and are based on a floating rate, mostly LIBOR plus a premium (more than 150-200 bps) to account for their riskiness as well as to attract non-bank institutional investors. The interest rates on these loans adjust at regular intervals to reflect changes in short-term interest rates; this constitutes a benefit for investors worried about rising rates. Definitions vary when it comes to categorizing leveraged loans. Some group them based on the borrower’s riskiness and their credit rating. Others consider leverage metrics such as debt-to-capital and debt-to-EBITDA. Other classifications look at the spread at issuance or the purpose of the fund raising, which can include funding mergers and acquisitions (M&A), leveraged buyouts (LBOs), refinancing existing debt, or general funding. Over the past five years, approximately 50% of US leveraged loans issued were for refinancing purposes (Chart 1, panel 1). Within the three categories, LBO financing is deemed the riskiest, and this is reflected in its higher spread (Chart 1, panel 2). The leveraged-loan market became particularly popular in the mid-1980s as M&A activity was soaring (Chart 2). Chart 1Uses Of Leveraged Loans Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? Chart 2The Boom In Corporate Activity In The 1980s Fueled Leveraged Loan Growth The Boom In Corporate Activity In The 1980s Fueled Leveraged Loan Growth The Boom In Corporate Activity In The 1980s Fueled Leveraged Loan Growth There are two common types of financing facilities:2 Term loans: An agreement to borrow a sum of money that is paid back over a certain payment schedule. These loans are mainly provided by non-bank entities. Revolving facilities: A type of loan that can be repeatedly drawn upon and repaid. These loans are mostly originated and held by banks. Estimates for the size of the leveraged-loan market vary depending on which criteria and definitions are used. The size of the leveraged-loan market, following rapid growth since the beginning of the past decade, is estimated to be over $1.2 trillion as of Q2 2020.3 While this represents only a small portion of overall corporate debt (it is only 15% the size of the corporate bond market), the interconnections between key market participants and the role of banks in the market has caught the attention of several regulators such as US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, debt investors such as Howard Marks, and international institutions such as the Bank For International Settlements (BIS). The focus of their concerns has been on the declining credit standards for leveraged loans – particularly, the increase in issuance of “covenant-lite” (cov-lite) loans, inconsistent definitions of EBITDA in loan agreements, the growth in use of “EBITDA add backs”,4 and the accuracy of leveraged-loan ratings.5 We discuss some of those concerns in the Risks section. Table 1Risky Loans Are Mainly Held By Non-Bank Entities… Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? Over the past several decades, the role of banks in providing capital to the leveraged loan market has shrunk and has been replaced by non-bank lenders such as mutual funds, hedge funds, insurance companies, and asset managers.6 Data by the Shared National Credit (SNC) program7 shows that non-bank entities in the US now hold close to 83% of all non-investment-grade term loans (Table 1). Moreover, estimates by the Bank of England8 (BoE) show that a quarter of the global stock of leveraged loans (which it estimates at close to $3.4 trillion) is held through collateralized loan obligations (CLOs)9 and approximately half is owned by non-bank institutions. In turn, those non-bank institutions hold a significant portion of CLOs – particularly the riskier tranches. This is not to say that banks are not exposed to leveraged loans. But banks predominantly invest in the highest, AAA, tranche of CLOs, and investment-grade loans.10 Riskier-rated loans are held by CLOs, mutual funds, and other lenders such as hedge funds (Chart 3).11 Chart 3…Particularly Those Rated Below BB Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? Historical Risk And Return Chart 4Leveraged Loans' Relative Performance Moves With Interest Rates Leveraged Loans' Relative Performance Moves With Interest Rates Leveraged Loans' Relative Performance Moves With Interest Rates Since 1997, leveraged loans12 have returned an annualized 4.9%, 25 basis points higher than US Treasurys and approximately 100 and 200 basis points less than US investment-grade and high-yield bonds, respectively. They have underperformed US equities by an annualized 400 basis points over the same period. Declining rates over the past two decades are the most likely reason leveraged loans have underperformed their fixed-rate counterparts. The relative performance of leveraged loans to investment-grade bonds has closely tracked the trajectory of Treasury yields (Chart 4). While the case is not as clear for relative performance against high-yield bonds, the trend is similar. However, on a risk-adjusted return basis, due to reduced volatility, leveraged loans did outperform both equities and high-yield corporate bonds (Table 2). We nevertheless think that volatility is likely understated given the elevated kurtosis. The larger negative skew and excess kurtosis could indicate higher probabilities of large negative returns (Chart 5).   Table 2Historical Risk-Return Characteristics Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? Chart 5Leveraged Loans' Returns Exhibit High Kurtosis And Negative Skewness Leveraged Loans' Returns Exhibit High Kurtosis And Negative Skewness Leveraged Loans' Returns Exhibit High Kurtosis And Negative Skewness Why Should Investors Consider Leveraged Loans? Chart 6Rising Rates Support Higher Return From Leveraged Loans... Rising Rates Support Higher Return From Leveraged Loans... Rising Rates Support Higher Return From Leveraged Loans... Our US bond strategists have showed that the odds of leveraged loans outperforming fixed-rate high-yield bonds increase when certain criteria are in place – particularly when valuations are tilted in loans’ favor, and Treasury yields are rising.13 Only the latter criterion is true currently. Year-to-date, leveraged loans have returned 2.2%, higher than the -3.2%, -3.4%, 1.6%, and -3.4% from US Treasurys, investment-grade bonds, high-yield bonds, and emerging markets sovereign debt, respectively (Chart 6). During the same period, Treasury yields rose by 65 basis points. We find that periods of rising Treasury yields are associated with increased flows into the asset class (Chart 7). More interestingly, leveraged loans outperform junk bonds when Treasury yields rise faster than what is discounted in the forwards curve over the following 12 months (Chart 8). Chart 7...As Well As Increased Fund Flows ...As Well As Increased Fund Flows ...As Well As Increased Fund Flows Chart 8Leveraged Loans Will Benefit If Interest Rates Rise By More Than What Is Discounted In The Forward Curve Leveraged Loans Will Benefit If Interest Rates Rise By More Than What Is Discounted In The Forward Curve Leveraged Loans Will Benefit If Interest Rates Rise By More Than What Is Discounted In The Forward Curve     This does not seem to be the case today, however, with the 5-year, 1-year forward about 40 basis points higher than the current 5-year Treasury yield. This is in line with our view that rates are unlikely to rise substantially over the next 6-to-12 months. Inflation, beyond a temporary spike over the next few months, should remain subdued, at least until employment is back to a level which would put upward pressure on wages. This is unlikely before 2023. It is also important to consider the potential trajectory of monetary policy as well as changes in long-term yields. The Fed, through its dot plot, is signaling no increase in the Fed Funds Rate before 2024, but the market is becoming worried about inflationary pressures and pricing in an earlier Fed hike. We believe it unlikely that the Fed will raise rates ahead of what the market expects, unless the labor market returns to “maximum employment” over the next 12 months. The yield on leveraged loans has been lower than on high-yield bonds for most of the period we have data for, except early 2020. Given leveraged loans’ senior position in a firm’s capital structure, it makes sense that their yields are lower. Additionally, the sector composition of the two markets plays a role: Leveraged loans are more exposed to the Technology and Communications sectors and have a limited allocation (averaging 1% over the past seven years) to the Energy sector, unlike high-yield, fixed-rate bonds (where the weight of Energy has averaged 13%) (Chart 9). This was mostly evident when the yield differential collapsed to below -3% during the 2014/2015 oil crash (Chart 10). Chart 9Leveraged Loans’ Sector Weightings Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? Chart 10Loan Spreads Are Not Looking Attractive Loan Spreads Are Not Looking Attractive Loan Spreads Are Not Looking Attractive Chart 11Recent Investor Demand Pushed Up Leveraged Loan Prices Recent Investor Demand Pushed Up Leveraged Loan Prices Recent Investor Demand Pushed Up Leveraged Loan Prices The yield differential has, however, been trending upwards since then, and at current prices, upside may be limited. The recent surge in investor demand has pushed down yields on newly issued leveraged loans, moving the average bid price of leveraged loans above its pre-pandemic high (Chart 11). In the next section, we analyze how leveraged loans have behaved during recessions and other periods of financial market stress.   Financial Market Stress Performance In Crises Given the index’s short history, we are able to cover only the past three recessions (the dot-com bubble bust, the Global Financial Crisis (GFC), and the COVID-19 recession). We also look at the 2013 Taper Tantrum and the 2014/2015 oil price shock. In all cases, leveraged loans fell and subsequently recovered along with other fixed-income asset classes. The Taper Tantrum was the most favorable for leveraged loans: 10-year Treasury yields rose by 100 basis points over four months (Chart 12). Table 3 shows that periods of rising rates are a better environment for leveraged loans than those of declining rates. We also looked at a period of Fed tightening and easing cycles – although the timing of easing cycles overlaps with, recessions, dragging down the performance of leveraged loans. We also assess the impact of inflation on leveraged loans using the framework from our Special Report on inflation hedging,14 which decomposed inflation into four quartiles/regimes: Inflation levels below 2.3%, between 2.3% and 3.3%, between 3.3% and 4.9%, and above 4.9%. We add periods of decreasing inflation to our analysis. We note, however, that there was only one period where inflation was over the 4.9% threshold. Chart 12Leveraged Loans Fared Well In Periods Of Credit- And Sector-Specific Distress Leveraged Loans Fared Well In Periods Of Credit- And Sector-Specific Distress Leveraged Loans Fared Well In Periods Of Credit- And Sector-Specific Distress   Table 3Leveraged Loans’ Performance During Different Rate Cycles… Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? Table 4…And Inflation Regimes Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? During periods in the first and second inflation quartiles, leveraged loans, in absolute terms, had the highest average annualized returns, 8.1% and 10% respectively. This makes sense since in those regimes, policy rates are low and bond yields begin to rise given robust growth. Leveraged loans, however, underperformed fixed-rate bonds during those periods. Inflation above 3.3% represents an environment in which the economy begins to overheat and growth to falter. This regime saw leveraged loans outperform high-yield bonds by an annualized 1.5%. Periods of declining inflation also showed moderately positive annualized returns for leveraged loans (Table 4).   Risks Chart 13Corporate Health Has Worsened... Corporate Health Has Worsened... Corporate Health Has Worsened... The growth of the leveraged loans market reflects multiple trends but, most importantly, a broad increase in corporate leverage, driven by a decline in interest rates and increasing availability of cheap financing. The debt-to-asset ratio of nonfinancial businesses, a gauge of corporate leverage, is at a 20-year high (Chart 13, panel 1). This raises concerns about the overall health of the corporate sector – particularly firms’ ability to service their debt – since the median interest coverage ratio is near a level last seen during the GFC. This measure is even negative for companies within the 25th percentile, meaning companies in that bucket lack funds to maintain their interest payments (Chart 13, panel 2). Trends in the leveraged loan market paint a similar picture. The share of newly issued loans by the most highly levered firms – those with a debt-to-EBITDA ratio of 6x or higher – has reached new highs, hitting 37% of new loans in Q3 2020 (Chart 14). Chart 14…Even For Leveraged Lending Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? Chart 15Cov-Lite Issuances Make Up Almost 80% Of New Issuances Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? The providers of capital are partly to blame. Even with credit standards deteriorating, firms looking for capital were mostly able to find it. The share of cov-lite structures – loans that lack the protective covenants found in traditional loans – continues to grow and now comprises almost 80% of new issuance (Chart 15). Cov-lite loans typically do not have any maintenance covenants, requirements to maintain certain ratios such as leverage or interest-coverage ratios.15 Instead, they feature incurrence covenants which have to be met only if the issuer wants to take particular actions, such as taking on more debt.16 This loosening of credit terms is mostly a function of increased demand, particularly by CLO buyers and other non-bank institutional investors, in an environment of low yields. Some have even warned that vulnerabilities in the leveraged-loan market could cause disturbance to the overall financial system. Particularly, memories of the GFC and worries about the “originate-to-distribute” model – whereby banks originate loans but retain only a fraction on their balance sheets – have led some observers to suggest this could all lead to a risky expansion of credit, and trigger a new financial crisis. Chart 16Leveraged Loans Have Higher Average Credit Ratings… Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? Is It The Right Time For Leveraged Loans? We do not share this skepticism. Banks’ exposure to leveraged loans is mainly via the highest tranches of CLOs. Banks’ liquidity requirements have increased since the GFC, and therefore contagion should be minimal in the event of problems in the loan market. A recent report by the US Government Accountability Office (GAO) did not find evidence that leveraged lending presented a significant threat to financial stability.17 Additionally, almost all leveraged loans are first lien, they have a senior secured position in the capital structure, higher average credit ratings than high-yield bonds (Chart 16), and lower default rates (Chart 17). Moreover, their five-year average recovery rate of 63% tops the 40% of senior unsecured bonds (Chart 18). Chart 17...Lower Default Rates... ...Lower Default Rates,... ...Lower Default Rates,... Chart 18...And Higher Recovery Rates Than High-Yield Bonds ...And Higher Recovery Rates Than High-Yield Bonds ...And Higher Recovery Rates Than High-Yield Bonds   Conclusion In a period of ultra-low interest rates and stretched valuations for risk assets, leveraged loans have emerged as an interesting asset class for investors. Due to lower volatility, leveraged loans have historically produced higher risk-adjusted returns than fixed-rate high-yield bonds. However, volatility is likely understated given elevated levels of kurtosis. Historically, rising Treasury yields and an attractive valuation starting-point provided a signal for leveraged loans’ outperformance. Only one of those two criteria are currently in place. In the next 6-to-12 months, we do not believe rates will rise substantially, making this asset class somewhat unattractive in the short term. The longer-run outlook for leveraged loans, however, is attractive. As inflation, and therefore rates, rise over the next two-to-three years, a moderate allocation to leveraged loans might be a useful hedge for investors.   Amr Hanafy Senior Analyst amrh@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1 Please see “LCD Loan Primer – Syndicated Loans: The Market and the Mechanics,” S&P Global Market Intelligence. 2 Please see “Leverage Lending FAQ & Fact Sheet,” SIFMA, February 2019. 3 Please see “Federal Reserve Financial Stability Report,” November 2020. 4 “EBITDA add backs” add back expenses and cost savings to earnings and could inflate the projected capacity of the borrowers to repay their loans. 5 Please see Todd Vermilyea, “Perspectives On Leveraged Lending,” The Loan Syndications and Trading Association 23rd Annual Conference, New York, October 24, 2018. 6 Please see “Global Financial Stability Report: Vulnerabilities in a Maturing Credit Cycle, Chapter 1,” IMF, April 2019. 7 The SNC Program is an interagency program designed to review and assess risk in the largest and most complex credits shared by multiple financial institutions. The SNC Program is governed by an interagency agreement among the three federal bank regulatory agencies - the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (FRB), the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and the Office Of the Comptroller Of The Currency (OCC). 8 Please see “Financial Stability Report,” Bank of England, August 2020. 9 CLOs are asset-backed securities issued by a special purpose vehicle which acquire a portfolio of leveraged loans. 10 Please see “Turns Out Leveraged Loans Aren’t a Systemic Risk After All,” Bank Policy Institute, February 8, 2020. 11 Please see Seung Jung Lee, Dan Li, Ralf R. Meisenzahl, and Martin J. Sicilian, “The U.S. Syndicated Term Loan Market: Who holds what and when?”, November 25, 2019. 12 For the purpose of this report, we use the S&P/LSTA Leveraged Loan Index, which tracks the market-weighted performance of US dollar-denominated institutional leveraged loan portfolios. 13 Please see US Bond Strategy Report, “The Price Of Safety,” dated January 27, 2015. 14 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report, “Investors’ Guide To Inflation Hedging: How To Invest When Inflation Rises,” dated May 22, 2019. 15 Please see Eric Goodison And Margot Wagner, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison Llp, “Covenant-Lite Loans: Overview,” August 2019. 16 Please see Scott Essexx, Alexander Ott, Partners Group, “The Current State Of The Leveraged Loan Market: Are There Echoes Of The 2008 Subprime Market?”, March 2019. 17 Please see “Financial Stability: Agencies Have Not Found Leveraged Lending To Significantly Threaten Stability But Remain Cautious Amid Pandemic,” United States Government Accountability Office, December 2020.
Highlights Duration: The pace of rate hikes currently priced into the market is reasonable. However, we see strong odds that market expectations will move higher in the coming months, the result of continued strong economic data and the Fed starting to talk about tapering its asset purchases. Investors should maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration. MBS: MBS remain unattractive compared to other US spread products. But within an underweight allocation to MBS, an up-in-coupon bias makes sense. Inflation: Year-over-year CPI inflation was pushed higher by base effects in March, but the report also showed evidence of mounting inflationary pressures beyond simple base effects. Feature After a sizeable drop last Thursday, Treasury yields are now significantly off their recent highs. The 10-year Treasury yield peaked at 1.74% on March 31st but ended last week at only 1.59%. What makes the drop puzzling is that yields are down despite a string of very strong US economic data (Chart 1). This recent development bears a resemblance to the famous 2004/05 bond conundrum when Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan struggled to understand why long-maturity Treasury yields were falling even as the Fed lifted short rates.1 Today, investors are also struggling to understand why long-maturity Treasury yields are falling, only this time the “conundrum” is that they are falling in the face of strong economic data. From our perch, both conundrums have the same answer: The market has already discounted a lot of the news. On June 29th, 2004 – the day before the first rate hike of that cycle – the overnight index swap (OIS) curve was priced for 243 bps of Fed rate hikes for the following 12 months. The Fed went on to deliver 200 bps of rate hikes during that timeframe, slightly less than the market expected. In that environment it is entirely consistent that bond yields should fall (Chart 2). Chart 1Yields Down On Strong Data Yields Down On Strong Data Yields Down On Strong Data Chart 2The 2004/05 Bond Conundrum The 2004/05 Bond Conundrum The 2004/05 Bond Conundrum Today, the OIS curve is priced for the Fed to lift rates off the zero bound in December 2022 and for a total of 86 bps of rate hikes by the end of 2023 (Chart 3). Given the Fed’s new Average Inflation Targeting regime, this sort of rate hike cycle will only be achieved if there is a very strong US economic recovery. The incoming US data are so far confirming that narrative but haven’t been strong enough to move rate expectations even higher. Chart 3Market Priced For December 2022 Liftoff Market Priced For December 2022 Liftoff Market Priced For December 2022 Liftoff As we wrote in last week’s report, we think that the market’s current rate hike expectations look reasonable.2 However, we see a meaningful risk that they could move higher in the coming months as the rapid US economic recovery continues and the Fed starts to back away from its extremely dovish messaging. Chart 4US Will Hit 75% Vaccination Well Before September US Will Hit 75% Vaccination Well Before September US Will Hit 75% Vaccination Well Before September For example, Fed Chair Jay Powell has said repeatedly that it is too soon to talk about tapering the Fed’s asset purchases. We worry, however, that this tone might be giving investors a false sense of security. If the economic recovery continues at its current pace, we fully expect the Fed to start talking about tapering this year and to begin the process either by the end of 2021 or in early 2022. Last week, St. Louis Fed President Jim Bullard said he would be comfortable starting discussions about tapering when 75%-80% of the US population has been vaccinated. We estimate that if vaccinations continue at a linear pace, we will hit 75% vaccination by September (Chart 4). Given the exponential trend in vaccinations so far, we are likely to reach 75% well before September. The bottom line is that we see the pace of rate hikes currently priced into the market as reasonable. However, we also see strong odds that market expectations will move higher in the coming months, the result of continued strong economic data and the Fed starting to talk about tapering its asset purchases. Investors should maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration. MBS: Stay Up In Coupon Unsurprisingly, the reflation trade has been beneficial for risk assets. Within US fixed income, spread products have generally outperformed Treasuries since bond yields bottomed last August. However, certain spread sectors have fared better than others. Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities, for example, have not done that well. Conventional 30-year Agency MBS have only outperformed a duration-matched position in Treasury securities by 73 bps since bond yields bottomed on August 4th, 2020 (Chart 5). This compares to 446 bps of outperformance for Aaa-rated corporates, 342 bps of outperformance for Aa-rated corporates (Chart 5, panel 2) and 232 bps of outperformance for Agency CMBS (Chart 5, panel 3). Only notoriously low-risk Aaa-rated consumer ABS have delivered less outperformance than Agency MBS (Chart 5, bottom panel). While Agency MBS have not performed well overall, certain segments of the coupon stack have delivered decent excess returns. Specifically, higher coupon MBS have performed much better than low coupon MBS during the recent back-up in yields. Since last August, 4% coupon MBS have outperformed duration-matched Treasuries by 176 bps and 4.5% coupons have outperformed by 257 bps. Meanwhile, 2.5% coupons have underperformed by 10 bps and 3% coupons have underperformed by 15 bps (Chart 6). Chart 5Spread Product Performance Since Trough In Bond Yields Spread Product Performance Since Trough In Bond Yields Spread Product Performance Since Trough In Bond Yields Chart 6Favor Premium Coupons In Rising Rate Environment Favor Premium Coupons In Rising Rate Environment Favor Premium Coupons In Rising Rate Environment The divergent performance between high and low coupons is easily explained by the risk characteristics of those bonds. Looking at the difference between the 2.5% and 4% coupons, for example, we see that the 2.5% coupons have significantly higher duration and significantly lower convexity (Chart 6, bottom 2 panels). The higher duration means that rising yields hurt 2.5% coupons more and the lower convexity means that rising yields will cause the gap between 2.5% coupon duration and 4% coupon duration to widen further. In short, a rising yield environment is terrible for low-coupon MBS. Conversely, high duration and low convexity are desirable attributes in a falling yield environment. If bond yields fall meaningfully going forward, then low-coupon MBS will outperform the high coupons. Chart 7A shows how option-adjusted spread (OAS) varies with duration across the conventional 30-year Agency MBS coupon stack. We see that the lowest coupons have the highest durations and the lowest OAS. Premium coupons have low durations and high OAS. Chart 7AAgency MBS 30-Year Conventional Coupon Stack: OAS vs. Duration A New Conundrum A New Conundrum Chart 7B shows how OAS varies with convexity across the coupon stack. Here we see that the 2%, 2.5% and 3% coupons have the most negative convexities. This makes sense as those coupons are closest to the current mortgage rate of 3.04%. A further increase in the mortgage rate would make those coupons less likely to refinance, causing durations to extend meaningfully. Conversely, a drop in the mortgage rate would lead to greater refinancings for those coupons, causing durations to shorten. Notice that 1.5% coupon MBS have relatively high convexity. This is because refinancing is already unattractive for those bonds, and the duration of the 1.5% index has already extended. Chart 7BAgency MBS 30-Year Conventional Coupon Stack: OAS vs. Convexity A New Conundrum A New Conundrum Given our view that US Treasury yields will be flat-to-higher for the next 6-12 months, we recommend an up-in-coupon bias within Agency MBS. Specifically, the 2%, 2.5% and 3% coupons have the most scope for duration extension in a rising yield environment and should be avoided. The 4% and 4.5% coupons, on the other hand, are less negatively convex and are better able to weather the storm of rising bond yields. In a flat bond yield environment, the best performing coupons are likely to be those with the widest OAS. This makes the 4% and 4.5% coupons look much more attractive than the 1.5% coupons, even though they have similar convexities. Overall, we recommend owning the 4% and 4.5% coupons within the conventional 30-year Agency MBS coupon stack and avoiding the 2%, 2.5% and 3% coupons. One final point worth making is that we also continue to recommend an underweight allocation to MBS within a US bond portfolio. That is, though higher coupon MBS look better than the low coupons, the entire sector looks unattractive compared to alternatives like consumer ABS, Agency CMBS and even investment grade corporate bonds. Chart 8 shows a version of our Excess Return Bond Map, a visual guide that is useful for quickly assessing the risk/reward trade-off between different US spread products.3 The Map shows OAS as a measure of expected return on the Y-axis, and a proprietary risk measure called the “Risk Of Losing 100 Bps” on the X-axis. A higher number on the X-axis indicates less risk of losing 100 bps and vice-versa. Chart 8Excess Return Bond Map A New Conundrum A New Conundrum Our Bond Map makes it clear that only 4% and 4.5% coupon MBS come close to offering a risk/reward balance that is comparable to other spread sectors. MBS coupons below 4% offer far too little expected return given the amount of risk. Bottom Line: Remain underweight MBS within a US bond portfolio, but favor 4% and 4.5% coupons over 2%, 2.5% and 3% coupons within the Agency MBS coupon stack. March CPI More Than A Base Effect It was well known heading into last week’s March CPI release that the year-over-year inflation number was going to be very strong. This is due to base effects that will persist through to the end of May. That is, 12-month inflation is bound to rise as the negative monthly inflation prints from March, April and May 2020 fall out of the 12-month rolling sample. Year-over-year inflation numbers did indeed rise sharply in March (Chart 9). 12-month headline CPI jumped from 1.68% to 2.64% and 12-month core CPI increased from 1.28% to 1.65%. Base effects exert less influence over the trimmed mean CPI, and that index rose only from 2.04% to 2.12%. The gap between 12-month core CPI and 12-month trimmed mean CPI remains wide, but it should close by May when the impact from last year’s base effects is exhausted (Chart 9, bottom panel). Chart 9Annual Inflation Annual Inflation Annual Inflation Chart 10Monthly Inflation Monthly Inflation Monthly Inflation But base effects were only part of the story last week. Month-over-month inflation also came in very strong for the headline, core and trimmed mean measures. Headline CPI rose 0.62% in March, core CPI rose 0.34% and the trimmed mean rose 0.24% (Chart 10). To put those numbers in context, if those monthly prints are repeated in April and May, 12-month headline CPI will rise to 4.75% by May and 12-month core CPI will rise to 2.79%. Even if we assume more typical 0.15% inflation rates for April and May, we would still expect 12-month headline CPI to reach 3.77% by May and 12-month core CPI to reach 2.41%. Overall, the message from March’s CPI report is that the economy is showing signs of mounting inflationary pressures beyond simple base effects. We have previously written about the ample evidence of bottlenecks in both the goods and service sectors, and we now appear to be seeing those bottlenecks show up in the price data.4 There’s little doubt that 12-month inflation will fall somewhat between May and the end of the year. However, we anticipate that inflation will still be close to the Fed’s target by the end of 2021. This will certainly be the case if the monthly inflation figures remain consistent with March’s print. The main investment implication from this view is that low inflation will not prevent the Fed from tapering its asset purchases either late this year or early next year, and it also won’t prevent the Fed from lifting rates in 2022. Footnotes 1 Greenspan’s remarks: https://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/hh/2005/february/testimony.htm 2 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Overshoot Territory”, dated April 13, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 For more details on the Bond Map please see page 16 of US Bond Strategy Portfolio Allocation Summary, “It’s A Boom!”, dated April 6, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Limit Rate Risk, Load Up On Credit”, dated March 16, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com   Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Structural headwinds are still too strong to hold a long-term bullish view on Eurozone equities relative to the US. However, the coming two years should be kind to euro area stocks. The relative performance of European stocks compared to that of the US is predominantly a function of yields. BCA foresees higher yields over a 24-month period. Moreover, European equities are exceptionally cheap, which accentuates their appeal as a yield play. Tactical considerations indicate that a modest overweight in European stocks, not an aggressive one, is most appropriate for cyclical investors. European investment grade bonds are appealing in a European fixed-income portfolio. Feature Chart 1Europe's Underperformance Explained Europe's Underperformance Explained Europe's Underperformance Explained Over the past decade, Eurozone equities have massively underperformed US ones. The poor outcome generated by European bourses mimicked the fall in European profits against the US (Chart 1). Considering that the relative performance of euro area stocks stands at an all-time low, should investors begin to bet on Europe? The outlook for yields favors European stocks on a cyclical basis. However, the structural picture suggests that both Europe and the US must experience fundamental changes before European stocks can surpass their US counterparts on a long-term basis.  Structural Challenges Remain The case for overweighting European equities on a structural investment horizon (5 to 10 years) remains weak. Only some major changes in the European and US economies can alter the long-term headwinds facing Eurozone stocks. Table 1US Possesses The Favored Sectors Time And Attraction Time And Attraction Sectoral biases partly explain Europe’s inability to match the US’s profit potential. The US market over-represents high-margin and high return-on-equity businesses, such as technology and healthcare, while most Eurozone bourses have significant weightings in the structurally challenged financial, materials, and energy sectors (Table 1). This difference in sector representation also explains the larger buybacks witnessed in US markets compared to euro area ones, which further boosted the US’s relative EPS. Chart 2Japan Never Recovered Japan Never Recovered Japan Never Recovered The performance of Japanese equities over the past three decades provides another cautionary tale for European stocks. Despite a substantial underperformance in the 1990s, Japanese equities never meaningfully recovered in the 2000s and ended up falling further behind the US over the past 12 years (Chart 2). A powerful liquidity trap and a 23% decline in the Japanese population compared to that of the US seriously hampered the ability of Japanese firms to generate stronger relative cash flows. This challenging profit picture meant that no matter how low JGB rates fell in comparison to the US, Japanese multiples never benefited from a significant re-rerating.  The Eurozone suffers from similar ills to that of Japan, which warns that the latter constitutes a valid template for European assets. Europe’s population is expected to decline by 16% relative to that of the US over the coming three decades, which will hurt sales and capex in Europe. Moreover, despite low interest rates, private credit demand is weak, which limits the region’s economic vigor. Most concerning, Europe’s capital stock as a share of GDP is substantial, especially in the periphery (Chart 3). Such an observation indicates that there is a high probability that previously misallocated capital is burdening the euro area. This misallocation will continue to hurt economic activity, because it encumbers demand via weak capex and also harms productivity. A DuPont decomposition of RoE reveals how Europe’s economic malaise affects corporate profitability (Chart 4). The Eurozone’s excessively large capital stocks means that its asset turnover is inferior to that of the US, which corroborates the notion that capital is misallocated. Moreover, the euro area’s low profit margins reflect more than its sectoral composition. Greater economic rigidities as well as lower market power and concentration in Europe hurt profitability (even if it limits inequalities compared to the US). Finally, the corporate sector is deleveraging, which is a consequence of a liquidity trap and poor trend growth, causing the ratio of RoE to RoA to decline relative to the US. Chart 3Too Much Capital Too Much Capital Too Much Capital Chart 4DuPont De No Good DuPont De No Good DuPont De No Good To reverse the structural outperformance of US equities relative to the Eurozone, Europe’s secular profitability underperformance must end. We will look for the following factors to stop this decline, which we will explore in further detail over time: European reforms. Europe will remain disadvantaged until its excess capital stock is written off. This process is complex and it will require greater fiscal integration as well as greater reforms to promote competition and to decrease labor market as well as service sector rigidities. More Innovation. Despite a strong patent record in economies such as Germany, Europe lags behind the US in the creation of leading innovative companies. Europe’s industrial and consumer discretionary sectors could prove beneficiaries of the green revolution taking place around the world, but it is still too early to tell. Chart 5Market Power Helps The US Market Power Helps The US Market Power Helps The US An ossification of the US economy. Europe could also begin to outperform, because the US might lose its edge. Economic populism is rife in the US, fueled by growing discontent with economic inequalities. As a result, government involvement in the economy as well as regulatory efforts could increase significantly. While a push to redistribute income toward the middle class would alleviate inequalities, it would hurt profitability and cause US RoE to decline toward European levels (Chart 5). Bottom Line: The secular underperformance of Eurozone equities reflects their inability to generate as much profits as US ones. Beyond sector biases, Europe’s demographic hurdles and its deeper problem with secular stagnation remain its key handicaps. For now, there is no solid case to bet on a major change in these trends, which only European reforms or problems in the US can undo. But A Cyclical Opportunity Exists Despite the challenging structural environment for European equities, the cyclical outlook (24 months) is attractive. Even in Japan, multi-year episodes of outperformance punctuated a decades-long underperformance relative to the US or the MSCI all-country world index. In the case of the Eurozone, this upbeat view rests on BCA Research expectations of higher global yields. The performance of Europe’s equities relative to the US correlates closely with the level of US yields (Chart 6). The sectoral footprint of both bourses is an important driver of this correlation. The US overweighs growth and defensive stocks, which account for 49% and 23% of its capitalization, respectively. Meanwhile, the euro area over-represents value stocks and deep cyclicals, which account for 55% and 26% of its market, respectively. Historically, global value stocks beat growth equities when yields are rising (Chart 7).  Chart 6A Yield Story A Yield Story A Yield Story Chart 7What Value Likes What Value Likes What Value Likes The outperformance of value stocks when yields rise is multifaceted. Deep cyclicals, such as industrials, materials, financials and energy, constitute a larger share of value benchmark than growth ones. Consequently, when yields increase because the global business cycle experiences an upswing, the earnings of value stocks accelerate compared to those of growth stocks (Chart 7, bottom panel). The positive impact of yields on the value versus growth split is also more direct. Higher yields, especially if they accompany a steeper yield curve, boost the profitability of financials. Meanwhile, mounting yields increase the discount factor applied to the long-term deferred cash flows that contribute a large proportion of the intrinsic value of growth stocks. Higher yields also support the relative performance of Eurozone stocks via the evolution of the expected growth rates of their long-term earnings. As Chart 8 illustrates, upgrades to sell-side estimates of the long-term growth rate of European EPS relative to the US coincide with a steeper US yield curve slope and rising 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yields. These relationships exist because European economic activity and sectoral representation are more cyclical than that of the US.  Eurozone equities look like a particularly cheap bet on higher yields over the coming 18 to 24 months. Sentiment toward European assets remains depressed compared to the US. Even on an equal-weighted basis, the discount of the expected long-term growth rate of euro area EPS relative to the US is exceptionally wide (Chart 9, top panel). True, the sustainable growth rate (SGR) of earnings is a function of the return on equity and the dividend payout ratio. Nonetheless, despite the fact that the euro area low RoE forces the European SGR down, Eurozone stocks embed a long-term growth rate that is 47% too low vis-à-vis the US. Other metrics underscore the cheapness of European equities relative to the US. Our Mechanical Valuation Indicator, which is sector neutral, stands at a 1-sigma discount in favor of the Eurozone (Chart 9, bottom panel). Chart 8EPS Growth and The Yield Structure EPS Growth and The Yield Structure EPS Growth and The Yield Structure Chart 9Europe Is Cheap Europe Is Cheap Europe Is Cheap Ultimately, Europe’s relative expected growth and valuations are particularly depressed, because domestic activity lags behind that of the US by a significant margin. As the vaccination campaign advances and the economy reopens later in the quarter, the Eurozone’s service sector will catch up and the earnings growth discount will dissipate (Chart 10). Moreover, regardless of its recent dynamism, even the European industrial sector has room to catch up to the US. Our Swedish Economic Diffusion Index captures the general strength in Swedish economic activity, which foretells a further increase in both the euro area Manufacturing PMI and equities relative to the US (Chart 11). Chart 10Stronger Services Will Help Stronger Services Will Help Stronger Services Will Help Chart 11Listen To Sweden Listen To Sweden Listen To Sweden Bottom Line: BCA’s expectations that global yields will rise over the coming 24 months are consistent with Eurozone equities outperforming US ones over this period, even if the long-term outlook remains challenging for Europe. European equities are much more pro-cyclical than US ones, which is reified by their sector and value biases. Moreover, euro area equities currently embed a particularly large discount to their US counterpart, which increases their attractiveness as a play on rising bond yields. The Right Entry Point? Strategy and forecasts are two different things. BCA strongly believes that yields will rise over the coming two years; however, a large overweight in Eurozone equities is a risky bet at the current juncture. Instead, we recommend investors opt for a modest overweight. Short-term traders should stay clear of this market for now. The reason for this cautiousness is that yields are very vulnerable to a temporary near-term pullback because: Chart 12A Countertrend Bond Rally? A Countertrend Bond Rally? A Countertrend Bond Rally? Technicals point to a counter-trend bounce in bond prices. Our BCA Composite Technical Indicator is massively oversold, our Composite Sentiment Indicator is extremely depressed, and speculators are aggressively shorting T-Bonds (Chart 12). The recent bond market behavior is puzzling. Despite March’s blockbuster non-farm payroll data and Manufacturing, as well as Services ISM surveys, yields are softening. Not even the announcement of the Biden administration’s $2.3 trillion American Jobs Plan could increase yields in recent weeks. This price action confirms that bonds are oversold and that, until the recent price decline is digested, the threshold to push yields higher has risen meaningfully. Equities are at risk of a pullback. Euphoria is prevalent, which increases the odds of corrective action in equities. Our BCA Equity Capitulation Index stands at a 45-year high (Chart 13) and our US Equity Strategy team’s Risk Appetite Index is at its highest levels since 2007, both of which suggest that complacency is rife. Moreover, the put/call ratio has collapsed to 0.45, which shows the carefree attitude of traders. Yields will decline if stock prices correct. EM equities are underperforming US stocks. EM benchmarks are more sensitive to marginal changes in the global growth outlook. For now, the risk is that growth disappoints lofty expectations. Since 2014, periods of relative weakness in EM bourses precede declines in Treasury yields (Chart 14). Authorities are trying to limit credit growth in China. As we argued two weeks ago, Beijing is aiming to slow credit growth to prevent systemic vulnerabilities from developing. This process is fraught with risks and is likely to result in a deceleration in China’s economy. While Europe and most emerging markets remained mired in a health crisis, China will be a source of temporary downside for global economic activity. The recent announcement that the PBoC asked Chinese banks to limit new loans confirms this assessment. Chart 13Euphoria! Euphoria! Euphoria! Chart 14EM Stocks Are Telling Us Something EM Stocks Are Telling Us Something EM Stocks Are Telling Us Something Bottom Line: For now, investors with a cyclical horizon (two years) should only keep a modest overweight position in Eurozone equities because the near-term outlook for yields points to some temporary downside. Not allocating the full allowable capital budget to Europe will allow investors to upgrade their overweight after the near-term downside in yields has passed. Investors may also consider implementing some hedges. Our foreign exchange strategist recommends a short EUR/JPY position as a form of portfolio protection. Keeping some cash in yen to deploy later in Europe mimics this advice. Short-term traders should stay clear of Europe as long as bond markets have not digested their oversold condition. Market Focus: Investment Grade Corporates and the ECB The ECB’s minutes highlight that investment grade corporate bonds are attractive within European fixed-income portfolios. The recently released ECB minutes revealed that higher real rates do not overly concern the Governing Council, because they reflect an improving global economic outlook and not an eventual policy tightening. Moreover, the GC does not want to give the impression it will engage in yield control, yet the pace of purchases under the Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme (PEPP) will remain accelerated and flexible until June, at a minimum. The ECB will not derail the supportive environment for economic activity anytime soon. Meanwhile, as we have argued in past reports, fiscal policy in Europe will also stay relaxed for the time being. Thus, the Eurozone’s policy environment remains supportive for credit spreads, especially since the default cycle has been muted. However, do corporate bonds already fully price in this positive backdrop? According to the 12-month breakeven spread, European credit spreads can compress further. The breakeven spread is the amount of spread widening required for corporate bond returns to break even with a duration-matched position in government bond securities over a 12-month horizon. It is approximated by dividing the OAS of a bond (or an index) by its duration. The breakeven spread is then compared to its own history, by observing the percentage of time that it has been lower in the past.1  Chart 15Some Value Left Some Value Left Some Value Left European credit spreads have tightened 160 bps since March last year and are already below their pre-Covid level (Chart 15). However, the 12-month breakeven spread has been tighter 18% of the time since 1999. In other words, higher quality corporate bonds in Europe have room to see further spread compression, since policy will remain relaxed for a long time. This is especially true in the Aa-rated credit tier, where the breakeven spread has been more expensive 35% of the time (not shown). Meanwhile, US breakeven spreads for IG corporate bonds are in their 2nd percentile and policy will tighten sooner than in Europe. Therefore, bond investors with a European-only mandate are not forced to step down the quality ladder as aggressively as those in the US do. Table 2Norway, France And Italy Stand Out Time And Attraction Time And Attraction Table 2 provides the same analysis at the country level. Taking into consideration the average credit rating of each countries’ investment grade bonds, we find that Norwegian, French, and Italian spreads have the most value left. Interestingly, the ECB’s purchases of Italian and French paper is currently deviating widely from its capital keys, which should place downward pressure on credit spreads in these jurisdictions. Bottom Line: There is still value left in European investment grade corporate bonds, unlike in the US, where valuations are extremely expensive and a decrease in quality is warranted. For now, such a move is uncalled for in Europe, especially since the value in its high-yield index is concentrated in its riskiest credit tiers. At the country level, investors should favor Norwegian, French, and Italian investment grade corporate bonds.   Mathieu Savary, Chief European Investment Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com   Jeremie Peloso, Senior Analyst JeremieP@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1We find this valuation tool superior to others for two main reasons: (i) using the breakeven spread rather than the average index OAS allows us to control for the changing average duration of the benchmark bond indices; and (ii) the percentile rank is often a better representation of credit spreads than the spread itself.   Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Trades Currency Performance Time And Attraction Time And Attraction Fixed Income Performance Government Bonds Time And Attraction Time And Attraction Corporate Bonds Time And Attraction Time And Attraction Equity Performance Major Stock Indices Time And Attraction Time And Attraction Geographic Performance Time And Attraction Time And Attraction Sector Performance Time And Attraction Time And Attraction Closed Trades
Highlights Q1/2021 Performance Breakdown: Our recommended model bond portfolio outperformed the custom benchmark index by +55bps during the first quarter of the year. Winners & Losers: The government bond side of the portfolio outperformed by +68bps, led overwhelmingly by our underweight to US Treasuries (+63bps). Spread product allocations underperformed by -11bps, primarily due to an overweight on UK corporates (-8bps). Portfolio Positioning For The Next Six Months: We are sticking with an overall below-benchmark portfolio duration stance, given accelerating global growth momentum, expanding vaccinations and a highly stimulative fiscal/monetary policy mix. We are maintaining a moderate overweight to global spread product versus government debt, concentrated on an overweight to US high-yield given more stretched valuations in other credit sectors. On the margin, we are making the following changes to the portfolio allocations: downgrading both UK Gilts and UK investment grade corporates to neutral, while cutting the overall allocation to EM USD credit to neutral. Feature The first quarter of 2021 saw a sharp sell-off in global bond markets on the back of rising growth expectations, fueled by US fiscal stimulus and vaccine optimism. The US was near the front of the pack, with 10-year Treasuries having their biggest first quarter sell-off since 1994. Accommodative financial conditions, fueled by a highly stimulative mix of monetary and fiscal policies and improving sentiment, have lit a fire under a global economy set to reopen from pandemic lockdowns. Going forward, we expect US growth to continue leading the way, with implications for the dollar, commodity prices, and the expected path of policy rates. With that in mind, this week we are reviewing the performance of the BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy (GFIS) model bond portfolio during the first quarter of 2021. We also present our recommended positioning for the portfolio for the next six months (Table 1), as well as portfolio return expectations for our base case and alternative investment scenarios. Table 1GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Recommended Positioning For The Next Six Months GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening As a reminder to existing readers (and to new clients), the model portfolio is a part of our service that complements the usual macro analysis of global fixed income markets. The portfolio is how we communicate our opinion on the relative attractiveness between government bond and spread product sectors. We do this by applying actual percentage weightings to each of our recommendations within a fully invested hypothetical bond portfolio. Q1/2021 Model Portfolio Performance Breakdown: Steering Clear Of Duration Chart 1Q1/2021 Performance: Bearish UST Bets Pay Off Q1/2021 Performance: Bearish UST Bets Pay Off Q1/2021 Performance: Bearish UST Bets Pay Off The total return for the GFIS model portfolio (hedged into US dollars) in the first quarter was -1.83%, dramatically outperforming the custom benchmark index by +55bps (Chart 1).1 This follows modest outperformance in 2020 which was driven largely by overweights on spread product initiated after the pandemic shock to markets. In terms of the specific breakdown between the government bond and spread product allocations in our model portfolio, the former generated +68bps of outperformance versus our custom benchmark index while the latter underperformed by -11bps. Our allocations to inflation-linked bonds in the US, Canada and Europe - which were a source of outperformance in 2020 - modestly underperformed this quarter (-2bps) as global real yields finally began to pick up. Our outperformance this quarter was driven overwhelmingly by our decision to go significantly underweight US Treasuries, and to position for a bearish steepening of the Treasury curve, ahead of last November’s US presidential election (Table 2). That resulted in the US Treasury allocation generating a massive +63bps of excess return in Q1/2022 as longer-term US yields surged higher. Table 2GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Overall Return Attribution GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening The size of the US underweight was unusually large as we maintained only a neutral exposure to the other “high beta” markets that are typically positively correlated to US yield moves, Canada and Australia. Although the returns for those two government bond markets were very similar to that of US Treasuries in Q1, so the choice to stay neutral even with a bearish directional view on US yields did not impact the overall portfolio performance. Overweights to the more defensive “low beta” markets of Germany, France and Japan contributed a combined +4bps. We did see some losses on nominal government bonds in peripheral Europe (Italy: -0.6bps; Spain: -1.9bps), however, with the narrowing in spreads thrown off by a botched vaccine rollout. In spread product, underperformance came from overweights to UK investment grade corporates (-8bps), US CMBS (-4bps), and EM USD-denominated corporates (-2bps). This was despite the fact that spreads for UK corporates remained flat while US CMBS spreads actually narrowed. These losses were slightly offset by the overweight to lower-rated US high-yield (+3bps) and underweight to US agency MBS (+2bps). Our spread product losses, in total return terms, highlight the importance of considering duration risk when making a call on spread product, especially at a time when sovereign yields are rising and spreads offer little “cushion”. Duration also played a big part in nominal government bond outperformance, with a whopping +43bps of our total +55bps outperformance concentrated in just US Treasuries with a maturity greater than 10 years. In other words, overweighting overall global spread product and underweighting government bonds still generated major portfolio outperformance, even if there was a more mixed bag of returns within that credit overweight. The bar charts showing the total and relative returns for each individual government bond market and spread product sector are presented in Charts 2 & 3. Chart 2GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Government Bond Performance Attribution GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening Chart 3GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Spread Product Performance Attribution By Sector GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening Biggest Outperformers: Underweight US Treasuries with a maturity greater than 10 years (+43bps), maturity between 7 and 10 years (+11bps), and with a maturity between 5 and 7 years (+7bps) Overweight US high-yield (+3bps) Underweight US agency MBS (+2bps) Overweight Italian inflation-indexed BTPs (+2bps) Biggest Underperformers: Overweight UK investment grade corporates (-8bps) Overweight US agency CMBS (-4bps) Overweight Spanish government bonds (-2bps) Chart 4 presents the ranked benchmark index returns of the individual countries and spread product sectors in the GFIS model bond portfolio for Q1/2021. Returns are hedged into US dollars (we do not take active currency risk in this portfolio) and adjusted to reflect duration differences between each country/sector and the overall custom benchmark index for the model portfolio. We have also color coded the bars in each chart to reflect our recommended investment stance for each market during Q1 (red for underweight, dark green for overweight, gray for neutral). Chart 4Ranking The Winners & Losers From The GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Universe In Q1/2021 GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening Ideally, we would look to see more green bars on the left side of the chart where market returns are highest, and more red bars on the right side of the chart were returns are lowest. On that front, our portfolio allocations performed exceptionally well in Q1. In total return terms, the global bond market sell-off was a disaster for both government bonds and spread product. US high-yield, one of our longer-standing overweights, was the only sector to emerge unscathed, delivering a positive return of +42bps. Within our government bond allocation, the “defensive” markets—Japan (-44bps), Germany, (-261bps) and France (-371bps)—were nevertheless shaken by rising yields. On the other hand, we limited our downside by maintaining a neutral stance on the higher beta markets such as Canada (-406bps), New Zealand (-415bps), and the UK (-1389bps). Gilts sold off especially sharply as the UK outperformed global peers on COVID-19 vaccinations while inflation expectations continued to pick up. Our two underweights, US Treasuries (-426bps) and European high-yield (-426bps), were prescient. The latter market was one we chose to underweight given that spreads didn’t offer nearly enough compensation on a default-adjusted and breakeven basis. Bottom Line: Our model bond portfolio outperformed its benchmark index in the first quarter of the year by +55bps – a positive result driven by our underweight allocation to the US Treasury market and overall below-benchmark global duration stance. Future Drivers Of Portfolio Returns & Scenario Analysis Chart 5More Growth-Driven Upside For Global Yields Ahead More Growth-Driven Upside For Global Yields Ahead More Growth-Driven Upside For Global Yields Ahead Looking ahead, the performance of the model bond portfolio will continue to be driven predominantly by the future moves of global government bond yields, most notably US Treasuries. Our most favored leading indicators for global bond yields continue to signal more upside over at least the next six months (Chart 5). Our Global Duration Indicator, comprised of measures of future economic sentiment and momentum, remains at an elevated level. The ongoing climb in the global manufacturing PMI, which typically leads global real bond yields by around six months, suggests that the recent uptick in real yields can continue into the second half of 2021. We are still maintaining a bias towards bearish yield curve steepening across all the countries in the model bond portfolio. It is still far too soon to see bearish flattening of yield curves given the dovish bias of global central banks, many of which are actively targeting an overshoot of their own inflation targets. The US will be the first central bank to see any bearish flattening pressure, as the market more aggressively pulls forward the liftoff date of the next Fed tightening cycle in response to strong US growth, but that is an outcome we do not expect until well into the second half of 2021. With regards to country allocations within the government bond segment of the model bond portfolio, we continue to focus our maximum underweight on the US, while limiting exposure to the markets that are more sensitive to changes in US interest rates (Chart 6). Those “lower yield beta” markets (Germany, France and Japan) will continue to outperform the higher beta markets (Canada, Australia) over the latter half of 2021. We currently have Canada on “downgrade watch”, as economic momentum is accelerating and the housing bubble looks to be reflating, both of which will make the Bank of Canada turn more hawkish shortly after the Fed does. We are more comfortable keeping Australia at neutral, as Australian inflation is likely to remain too underwhelming for the Reserve Bank of Australia to turn less dovish and risk a surge in the Australian dollar. UK Gilts are a more difficult case, atypically acting like a lower beta market over the past few years. As we discussed in a Special Report published last month, we attribute the declining Gilt yield beta to the rolling shocks the UK has suffered over the past thirteen years – the 2008 global financial crisis, the 2012 euro area debt crisis, Brexit and, now, COVID-19 – that have hamstrung the Bank of England’s ability to try even modest interest rate hikes.2 With the impact of those shocks on UK growth now diminishing, we see the central bank under greater pressure to begin normalizing UK monetary policy over the couple of years. We downgraded our cyclical stance on UK Gilts and UK investment grade corporates to neutral from overweight in that Special Report and, this week, we are making the same reduction in UK weightings in our model bond portfolio (see the portfolio tables on pages 20-21). After that change, the overall duration of the model bond portfolio remains below that of the custom benchmark index, now by -0.75 years (Chart 7). Chart 6Low-Beta Markets Will Continue To Outperform USTs Low-Beta Markets Will Continue To Outperform USTs Low-Beta Markets Will Continue To Outperform USTs Chart 7Overall Portfolio Duration: Stay Below Benchmark Overall Portfolio Duration: Stay Below Benchmark Overall Portfolio Duration: Stay Below Benchmark We continue to see the dovish bias of global central bankers as being conducive to the outperformance of inflation-linked bonds versus nominal government debt (Chart 8). Yes, the “easy money” has been made betting on a recovery of inflation expectations from the bombed-out levels seen after the COVID-19 recession in 2020. However, within the major developed economies with inflation-linked bond markets, 10-year breakevens have already climbed beyond the pre-pandemic levels of early 2020 (Chart 9). The next targets are the previous cyclical highs seen in 2018 (and 2019 for the UK). Chart 8Dovish Central Banks Still Positive For Inflation-Linked Bonds Dovish Central Banks Still Positive For Inflation-Linked Bonds Dovish Central Banks Still Positive For Inflation-Linked Bonds Chart 9Inflation Breakevens Returning To Past Cyclical Peaks Inflation Breakevens Returning To Past Cyclical Peaks Inflation Breakevens Returning To Past Cyclical Peaks Chart 10Still A Supportive Backdrop For Global Corporates Still A Supportive Backdrop For Global Corporates Still A Supportive Backdrop For Global Corporates The 10-year US TIPS breakeven is already past that 2018 peak of 2.18%, and with the Fed showing no sign of concern about US growth and inflation accelerating, the 10-year US breakeven should end up moving into the high end of our expected 2.3-2.5% target range before the Fed begins to turn less dovish. Thus, we are maintaining a core allocation to linkers in the portfolio, focused on US TIPS and inflation-linked bonds in Italy, France and Canada. The same aggressive easing of global monetary policy that has been good for relative inflation-linked bond performance continues to benefit global corporate bonds. The annual rate of growth of the combined balance sheets of the Fed, ECB, Bank of Japan and Bank of England remains an excellent leading indicator of the excess returns of both global investment grade and high-yield corporates over the past decade (Chart 10). With the combined balance sheet now expanding at a 55% pace, corporate bonds are still likely to continue to outperform government debt over the remainder of 2021. Much of that expected return outperformance of corporates will come via carry rather than spread compression, though. Our preferred measure of the attractiveness of credit spreads, the historical percentile ranking of 12-month breakeven spreads, shows that only US high-yield spreads are above the bottom quartile of their history among the credit sectors in our model portfolio (Chart 11). Given the absence of spread cushion in those other markets, we are maintaining an overweight stance on US high-yield in the model bond portfolio – especially versus euro area high-yield where we are underweight - while staying neutral investment grade credit in the US and Europe. Chart 11US High-Yield: The Last Bastion Of Attractive Spreads GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening Within the euro area, we continue to prefer owning Italian government bonds over investment grade corporates, given the European Central Bank’s more explicit support for the former through quantitative easing (Chart 12). We expect Italian yields and spreads to converge down to Spanish levels, likely within the next 6-12 months, while there is limited downside for euro area investment grade spreads given tight valuations. Chart 12Favor Italian BTPs Over Euro Area IG Favor Italian BTPs Over Euro Area IG Favor Italian BTPs Over Euro Area IG We are not only looking at relative valuation considerations in developed market credit. Emerging market (EM) USD-denominated credit has benefited from a bullish combination of global policy stimulus, a weakening US dollar and rising commodity prices. We have positioned for that in our model portfolio through an overall overweight stance on EM USD credit, but one that favors investment grade corporates over sovereigns. Now, with the Chinese credit impulse likely to slow in the latter half of 2021 as Chinese policymakers look to rein in stimulus, a slower pace of Chinese economic growth represents a risk to EM credit (Chart 13). The same can be said for the US dollar, which is no longer depreciating with US bond yields rising and the markets questioning the Fed’s dovish forward guidance on future rate hikes (Chart 14). A strong US dollar would also be a risk to the commodity price rally that has supported EM financial assets. Chart 13Global Policy Mix Becoming Less Supportive For EM Global Policy Mix Becoming Less Supportive For EM Global Policy Mix Becoming Less Supportive For EM Chart 14A Stronger USD Is A Risk For EM Corporates Vs Sovereigns A Stronger USD Is A Risk For EM Corporates Vs Sovereigns A Stronger USD Is A Risk For EM Corporates Vs Sovereigns Chart 15A Moderate Overweight To Spread Product Vs Government Debt GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening In response to these growing risks to the bullish EM backdrop, we are downgrading our overall EM USD credit exposure in the model bond portfolio to neutral from overweight. We are maintaining our relative preference for EM investment grade corporates over sovereigns, however, within that overall neutral allocation. Summing it all up, we are sticking with a moderately overweight stance on global spread product versus government debt in the model portfolio, equal to four percentage points (Chart 15). That overweight comes entirely from the US high-yield allocation. After the changes made to our UK and EM positions, the tracking error of the portfolio, or its expected volatility versus that of the benchmark index, is quite low at 41bps (Chart 16). This is an unsurprising outcome given that the current positioning is focused so heavily on the US (Treasury underweight, high-yield overweight), with much of the other positioning close to neutral. That will change as 2021 progresses but, for now, our highest conviction views are in US fixed income. One final point – the relatively concentrated positioning leaves the portfolio “flat carry”, with a yield roughly equal to that of the benchmark index (Chart 17). Chart 16Limited Use Of Portfolio 'Tracking Error' Limited Use Of Portfolio 'Tracking Error' Limited Use Of Portfolio 'Tracking Error' Chart 17Model Portfolio Yield Close To Benchmark Model Portfolio Yield Close To Benchmark Model Portfolio Yield Close To Benchmark Scenario Analysis & Return Forecasts After making the shifts to our model bond portfolio allocations in the UK and EM, we now turn to scenario analysis to determine the return expectations for the portfolio for the next six months. On the credit side of the portfolio, we use risk-factor-based regression models to forecast future yield changes for global spread product sectors as a function of four major factors - the VIX, oil prices, the US dollar and the fed funds rate (Table 2A). For the government bond side of the portfolio, we avoid using regression models and instead use a yield-beta driven framework, taking forecasts for changes in US Treasury yields and translating those in changes in non-US bond yields by applying a historical yield beta (Table 2B). For our scenario analysis over the next six months, we use a base case scenario plus two alternate “tail risk” scenarios, based on the following descriptions and inputs: Table 2AFactor Regressions Used To Estimate Spread Product Yield Changes GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening Table 2BEstimated Government Bond Yield Betas To US Treasuries GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening Base case: Ongoing global vaccinations lead to more of the global economy reopening over the summer, with excess savings built up during the pandemic – augmented by ongoing fiscal support – starting to be spent. US economic growth will be most robust out of the major economies, given the additional boost from fiscal stimulus, while China implements actions to slow credit growth and the euro area lags on vaccinations. The Fed stands its ground and maintains no rate hikes until at least 2023, and US TIPS breakevens climb to levels consistent with the Fed’s 2% inflation mandate (2.3-2.5%). The US Treasury curve continues to bear-steepen, with the 10-year US yield rising to 2%. The VIX falls to 15, the US dollar is flat, the Brent oil price rises +5%, and the fed funds rate is unchanged at 0%. Optimistic case: A rapid pace of global vaccinations leads to booming growth led by the US but including a reopening euro area. Chinese policymakers tighten credit by less than expected. Markets begin to pull forward the timing and pace of future central bank interest rate hikes, most notably in the US but also in the other countries like Canada and the UK. Real bond yields continue to climb globally, but inflation breakevens stay elevated. The steepening trend of the US Treasury curve ends, and mild bear flattening begins with the 10-year reaching 2.2% and the 2-year yield climbing to 0.4%. The VIX stays unchanged at 18, the US dollar rises +5%, the Brent oil price climbs +2.5% and the fed funds rate stays unchanged. Pessimistic case: Setbacks on the pandemic, either from struggles with vaccine distribution or a surge in variant cases, lead to a slower pace of global growth momentum. Europe cannot reopen, China tightens credit policy faster than expected, and US households hold onto to excess savings amid lingering virus uncertainty. Diminished economic optimism leads to a pullback in global equity values and wider global credit spreads. The US Treasury curve bull flattens as longer-maturity yields fall in a risk-off move, with the 10-year yield moving back down to 1.5%. The VIX rises to 25, the US dollar falls -2.5% and the fed funds rate stays at 0%. The inputs into the scenario analysis are shown in Chart 18 (for the USD, VIX, oil and the fed funds rate), while the US Treasury yield scenarios are in Chart 19. The excess return scenarios for the model bond portfolio, using the above inputs in our simple quantitative return forecast framework, are shown in Table 3A (the scenarios for the changes in US Treasury yields are shown in Table 3B). Chart 18Risk Factor Assumptions For The Scenario Analysis Risk Factor Assumptions For The Scenario Analysis Risk Factor Assumptions For The Scenario Analysis Chart 19US Treasury Yield Assumptions For The Scenario Analysis US Treasury Yield Assumptions For The Scenario Analysis US Treasury Yield Assumptions For The Scenario Analysis Table 3AGFIS Model Bond Portfolio Scenario Analysis For The Next Six Months GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening Table 3BUS Treasury Yield Assumptions For The 6-Month Forward Scenario Analysis GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening The model bond portfolio is expected to deliver an excess return over the next six months of +46bps in the base case and +54bps in the optimistic scenario, but is only projected to underperform by -27bps in the pessimistic scenario. Bottom Line: We are sticking with an overall below-benchmark portfolio duration stance, given accelerating global growth momentum, expanding vaccinations and a highly stimulative fiscal/monetary policy mix. We are maintaining a moderate overweight to global spread product versus government debt, concentrated on an overweight to US high-yield given more stretched valuations in other credit sectors. On the margin, we are making the following changes to the portfolio allocations: downgrading both UK Gilts and UK investment grade corporates to neutral, while cutting the overall allocation to EM USD credit to neutral.   Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com   Shakti Sharma Research Associate ShaktiS@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The GFIS model bond portfolio custom benchmark index is the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index, but with allocations to global high-yield corporate debt replacing very high quality spread product (i.e. AA-rated). We believe this to be more indicative of the typical internal benchmark used by global multi-sector fixed income managers. 2 Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy/Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "Why Are UK Interest Rates Still So Low?", dated March 10, 2021, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Chart 1How Long Until Full Employment? How Long Until Full Employment? How Long Until Full Employment? It’s official. The vaccination roll-out is successfully suppressing the spread of COVID-19 throughout the United States and the associated economic re-opening is leading to a surge in activity. Not only did March’s ISM Manufacturing PMI come in at 64.7, its highest reading since 1983, but the economy also added 916 thousand jobs during the month. Interestingly, the 10-year Treasury yield was relatively stable last week despite the eye-catching economic data. This is likely because the Treasury curve already discounted a significant rebound in economic activity and last week’s data merely confirmed the market’s expectations. At present, the Treasury curve is priced for Fed liftoff in September 2022 and a total of five rate hikes by the end of 2023. By our calculations, the Fed will be ready to lift rates by the end of 2022 if monthly employment growth averages at least 410k between now and then (Chart 1). If payroll growth can somehow stay above 701k per month, then the Fed will hit its “maximum employment” target by the end of this year. While a lot of good news is already priced in the Treasury curve, the greatest near-term risk is that the data continue to beat expectations. Maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration. Feature Table 1Recommended Portfolio Specification It’s A Boom! It’s A Boom! Table 2Fixed Income Sector Performance It’s A Boom! It’s A Boom! Investment Grade: Neutral Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview Investment Grade Market Overview Investment Grade Market Overview Investment grade corporate bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 29 basis points in March, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +98 bps. The combination of above-trend economic growth and accommodative monetary policy supports positive excess returns for spread product versus Treasuries. Though Treasury yields have risen, this does not yet pose a risk for credit spreads. The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate remains below the Fed’s target range of 2.3% to 2.5%. We won’t be concerned about restrictive monetary policy pushing spreads wider until inflation expectations are well-anchored around the Fed’s target. Despite the positive macro back-drop, investment grade corporate valuations are extremely tight. The investment grade corporate index’s 12-month breakeven spread is down to its 2nd percentile (Chart 2). This means that the breakeven spread has only been tighter 2% of the time since 1995. The same measure shows that Baa-rated bonds have also only been more expensive 2% of the time (panel 3). We don’t anticipate material underperformance versus Treasuries, but we see better value outside of the investment grade corporate space.1 Specifically, we advise investors to favor tax-exempt municipal bonds over investment grade corporates with the same credit rating and duration. We also prefer USD-denominated Emerging Market Sovereign bonds over investment grade corporates with the same credit rating and duration. Finally, the supportive macro environment means we are comfortable adding credit risk to a portfolio. With that in mind, we encourage investors to pick up the additional spread offered by high-yield corporates. Table 3ACorporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation* It’s A Boom! It’s A Boom! Table 3BCorporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward* It’s A Boom! It’s A Boom! High-Yield: Overweight Chart 3High-Yield Market Overview High-Yield Market Overview High-Yield Market Overview High-Yield outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 83 basis points in March, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +263 bps. In last week’s report we looked at the default expectations that are currently priced into the junk index and considered whether they are likely to be met.2 If we demand an excess spread of 100 bps and assume a 40% recovery rate on defaulted debt, then the High-Yield index embeds an expected default rate of 3.4% (Chart 3). Using a model of the speculative grade default rate that is based on gross corporate leverage (aka pre-tax profits over debt) and C&I lending standards, we can estimate a likely default rate for the next 12 months using assumptions for profit and debt growth.  The median FOMC forecast of 6.5% real GDP growth in 2021 is consistent with 31% corporate profit growth. We also assume that last year’s debt binge will be followed by relatively weak corporate debt growth in 2021. According to our model, 30% profit growth and 2% debt growth is consistent with a default rate of 3.4% for the next 12 months, exactly matching what is priced into junk spreads. Given that the Fed’s 6.5% real GDP growth forecast looks conservative given the large amount of fiscal stimulus coming down the pike, and the fact that the combination of strong economic growth and accommodative monetary policy could easily cause valuations to overshoot in the near-term, we are inclined to maintain an overweight allocation to High-Yield bonds. MBS: Underweight Chart 4MBS Market Overview MBS Market Overview MBS Market Overview Mortgage-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 17 basis points in March, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +15 bps. The nominal spread between conventional 30-year MBS and equivalent-duration Treasuries tightened 12 bps in March. This spread remains wide compared to levels seen during the past few years, but it is still tight compared to the recent pace of mortgage refinancings (Chart 4). The MBS option-adjusted spread (OAS) currently sits at 19 bps. This is considerably below the 52 bps offered by Aa-rated corporate bonds, the 38 bps offered by Agency CMBS and the 27 bps offered by Aaa-rated consumer ABS. All in all, the value in MBS is not appealing compared to other similarly risky sectors. The plummeting primary mortgage spread was a key reason for the elevated refi activity seen during the past year. However, the spread has now recovered back to more typical levels (bottom panel). The implication is that further increases in Treasury yields will likely be matched by higher mortgage rates, meaning that mortgage refinancings have probably peaked. The coming drop in refi activity will be positive for MBS returns, but we aren’t yet ready to turn bullish on the sector. First, as mentioned above, value is poor compared to other similarly risky sectors. Second, the gap between the nominal MBS spread and the MBA Refinance Index remains wide (panel 2) and we could still see spreads adjust higher. Government-Related: Neutral Chart 5Government-Related Market Overview Government-Related Market Overview Government-Related Market Overview The Government-Related index outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 45 basis points in March, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +66 bps (Chart 5). Sovereign debt outperformed duration-equivalent Treasuries by 157 bps in March, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +40 bps. Foreign Agencies outperformed the Treasury benchmark by 8 bps on the month, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +33 bps. Local Authority bonds outperformed by 81 bps in March, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +286 bps. Domestic Agency bonds underperformed by 2 bps, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +14 bps. Supranationals outperformed by 7 bps, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +13 bps. We recently took a detailed look at valuation for USD-denominated Emerging Market (EM) Sovereigns.3 We found that, on an equivalent-duration basis, EM Sovereigns offer a spread advantage over investment grade US corporates. Attractive countries include: Qatar, UAE, Mexico, Russia and Colombia We prefer US corporates over EM Sovereigns in the high-yield space. Ba-rated high-yield US corporates offer a spread advantage over Ba-rated EM Sovereigns and the lower EM credit tiers are dominated by distressed credits like Turkey and Argentina. Municipal Bonds: Overweight Chart 6Municipal Market Overview Municipal Market Overview Municipal Market Overview Municipal bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 187 basis points in March, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +291 bps (before adjusting for the tax advantage). Municipal bond spreads have tightened dramatically during the past few months and Aaa-rated Munis now look expensive compared to Treasuries, with the exception of the short-end of the curve (Chart 6). That said, if we match the duration and credit rating between the Bloomberg Barclays Municipal bond indexes and the US Credit index, we find that both General Obligation (GO) and Revenue Munis appear attractive compared to US investment grade Credit, with the possible exception of some short-maturity GO bonds. Revenue Munis offer a before-tax yield pick-up relative to US Credit for maturities above 12 years (bottom panel). Revenue bonds in the 8-12 year maturity bucket offer an after-tax yield pick-up versus Credit for investors with an effective tax rate above 13% (panel 3). Revenue bonds in the 6-8 year maturity bucket offer an after-tax yield pick-up versus Credit for investors with an effective tax rate above 24%. GO Munis with 17+ years to maturity offer an after-tax yield pick-up relative to Credit for investors with an effective tax rate above 1%. This breakeven effective tax rate rises to 6% for the 12-17 year maturity bucket, 23% for the 8-12 year maturity bucket (panel 3) and 32% for the 6-8 year maturity bucket. All in all, municipal bond value has deteriorated markedly in recent months and we downgraded our recommended allocation from “maximum overweight” to “overweight” in January. However, investors should still prefer municipal bonds over investment grade corporate bonds with the same credit rating and duration. Treasury Curve: Buy 5-Year Bullet Versus 2/10 Barbell Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview Treasury Yield Curve Overview Treasury Yield Curve Overview Treasury yields moved up dramatically in March, with the curve steepening out to the 10-year maturity point and flattening thereafter. The 2/10 Treasury slope steepened 28 bps to end the month at 158 bps. The 5/30 slope steepened 7 bps to end the month at 149 bps (Chart 7). As we showed in a recent report, the Treasury curve continues to trade directionally with yields out to the 10-year maturity point.4 Beyond 10 years, the curve has transitioned into a bear flattening/bull steepening regime where higher yields coincide with a flatter curve and vice-versa (bottom panel). For now, we are content to stick with our recommended steepener: long the 5-year bullet and short a duration-matched 2/10 barbell. However, we will eventually be close enough to an expected Fed liftoff date that the 5/10 slope will follow the 10/30 slope and transition into a bear-flattening/bull-steepening regime. When that happens, it will make more sense to either position for a steepener at the front-end of the curve (long 3-year bullet / short 2/5 barbell) or a flattener at the long-end of the curve (long 5/30 barbell / short 10-year bullet). We don’t yet see sufficient evidence of 5/10 bear-flattening to shift out of our current recommended position and into these new ones, and so we stay the course for now. TIPS: Overweight Chart 8TIPS Market Overview TIPS Market Overview TIPS Market Overview TIPS outperformed the duration-equivalent nominal Treasury index by 155 basis points in March, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +341 bps. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate rose 22 bps on the month and it currently sits at 2.38%. The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate rose 30 bps in March and it currently sits at 2.15%. Despite last month’s sharp move higher, the 5-year/5-year forward breakeven rate is still below the Fed’s target range of 2.3% to 2.5% (Chart 8). This means that the rising cost of inflation protection is not yet a concern for the Fed, and in fact, the Fed would like to encourage it to rise further still. Our recommended positions in inflation curve flatteners and real curve steepeners continued to perform well last month. The 5/10 TIPS breakeven inflation slope was relatively stable, but the 2/10 CPI swap slope flattened 8 bps (panel 4). The 2/10 real yield curve steepened 31 bps in March to reach 169 bps (bottom panel). An inverted inflation curve has been an unusual occurrence during the past few years, but we think it will be the normal state of affairs going forward. The Fed’s new strategy involves allowing inflation to rise above 2% so that it can attack its inflation target from above rather than from below. This new monetary environment is much more consistent with an inverted inflation curve than an upward sloping one, and we would resist the temptation to put on an inflation curve steepener. ABS: Overweight Chart 9ABS Market Overview ABS Market Overview ABS Market Overview Asset-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 4 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +16 bps. Aaa-rated ABS underperformed by 5 bps on the month, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +8 bps. Non-Aaa ABS underperformed by 2 bps, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +56 bps. The stimulus from last year’s CARES act led to a significant increase in household savings when individual checks were mailed last April. This excess savings has still not been spent and now another round of checks is poised to push the savings rate higher again (Chart 9). The large stock of household savings means that the collateral quality of consumer ABS is very high, with many households using their windfall to pay down debt (bottom panel). Investors should remain overweight consumer ABS and take advantage of strong collateral performance by moving down in credit quality. The Treasury department’s decision to let the Term Asset-Backed Loan Facility (TALF) expire at the end of 2020 does not alter our recommendation. Spreads are already well below the borrowing cost that was offered by TALF, and these tight spread levels are justified by strong household balance sheets. Non-Agency CMBS: Neutral Chart 10CMBS Market Overview CMBS Market Overview CMBS Market Overview Non-Agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 10 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +77 bps. Aaa Non-Agency CMBS underperformed Treasuries by 23 bps in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +14 bps. Meanwhile, non-Aaa Non-Agency CMBS outperformed by 30 bps, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +293 bps (Chart 10). We continue to recommend an overweight allocation to Aaa-rated Non-Agency CMBS and an underweight allocation to non-Aaa CMBS. Even with the expiry of TALF, Aaa CMBS spreads are already well below the cost of borrowing through TALF and thus won’t be negatively impacted. Meanwhile, the structurally challenging environment for commercial real estate could lead to problems for lower-rated CMBS (panels 3 & 4). Agency CMBS: Overweight Agency CMBS outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 10 basis points in March, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +49 bps. The average index option-adjusted spread tightened 5 bps on the month and it currently sits at 38 bps (bottom panel). Though Agency CMBS spreads have completely recovered back to their pre-COVID lows, they still look attractive compared to other similarly risky spread products. Stay overweight. Appendix A: Butterfly Strategy Valuations The following tables present the current read-outs from our butterfly spread models. We use these models to identify opportunities to take duration-neutral positions across the Treasury curve. The following two Special Reports explain the models in more detail: US Bond Strategy Special Report, “Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies”, dated July 25, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com US Bond Strategy Special Report, “More Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies”, dated May 15, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Table 4 shows the raw residuals from each model. A positive value indicates that the bullet is cheap relative to the duration-matched barbell. A negative value indicates that the barbell is cheap relative to the bullet. Table 4Butterfly Strategy Valuation: Raw Residuals In Basis Points (As Of March 31ST, 2021) It’s A Boom! It’s A Boom! Table 5 scales the raw residuals in Table 4 by their historical means and standard deviations. This facilitates comparison between the different butterfly spreads. Table 5Butterfly Strategy Valuation: Standardized Residuals (As Of March 31ST, 2021) It’s A Boom! It’s A Boom! Table 6 flips the models on their heads. It shows the change in the slope between the two barbell maturities that must be realized during the next six months to make returns between the bullet and barbell equal. For example, a reading of 43 bps in the 5 over 2/10 cell means that we would only expect the 5-year to outperform the 2/10 if the 2/10 slope steepens by more than 43 bps during the next six months. Otherwise, we would expect the 2/10 barbell to outperform the 5-year bullet. Table 6Discounted Slope Change During Next 6 Months (BPs) It’s A Boom! It’s A Boom! Appendix B: Excess Return Bond Map The Excess Return Bond Map is used to assess the relative risk/reward trade-off between different sectors of the US bond market. It is a purely computational exercise and does not impose any macroeconomic view. The Map’s vertical axis shows 12-month expected excess returns. These are proxied by each sector’s option-adjusted spread. Sectors plotting further toward the top of the Map have higher expected returns and vice-versa. Our novel risk measure called the “Risk Of Losing 100 bps” is shown on the Map’s horizontal axis. To calculate it, we first compute the spread widening required on a 12-month horizon for each sector to lose 100 bps or more relative to a duration-matched position in Treasury securities. Then, we divide that amount of spread widening by each sector’s historical spread volatility. The end result is the number of standard deviations of 12-month spread widening required for each sector to lose 100 bps or more versus a position in Treasuries. Lower risk sectors plot further to the right of the Map, and higher risk sectors plot further to the left. Chart 11Excess Return Bond Map (As Of March 31st, 2021) It’s A Boom! It’s A Boom! Footnotes 1 For a look at alternatives to investment grade corporates please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Searching For Value In Spread Product”, dated January 26, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “That Uneasy Feeling”, dated March 30, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Searching For Value In Spread Product”, dated January 26, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Fed Looks Backward While Markets Look Forward”, dated March 23, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com   Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance
  The BCA Research Global Asset Allocation (GAA) Forum will take place online on May 18th. We have put together a great lineup of speakers to discuss issues of importance to CIOs and asset allocators. These include the latest thinking on portfolio construction, factor investing, alternatives, and ESG. Our keynote speaker will be Keith Ambachtsheer, founder of KPA Advisory and author of many books on investment management including "The Future of Pension Management: Integrating Design, Governance and Investing" (2016). His presentation will be followed by a panel discussion of top CIOs including Maxime Aucoin of CDPQ, James Davis of OPTrust, and Catherine Ulozas of the Drexel University Endowment. The event is complimentary for all GAA subscribers, who can see a full agenda and register here. Others can sign up here. We hope you can join us on May 18th for what should be a stimulating and informative day of ideas and discussion. Highlights Recommended Allocation Quarterly Portfolio Outlook: What Higher Rates Mean For Asset Allocation Quarterly Portfolio Outlook: What Higher Rates Mean For Asset Allocation Global growth will rebound later this year, fueled by an end of lockdowns and generous fiscal stimulus. Despite that, central banks will not move towards tightening until 2023 at the earliest. This remains a very positive environment for risk assets like equities, though the upside is inevitably limited given stretched valuations. We continue to recommend a risk-on position, with overweights in equities and higher-risk corporate bonds. It is unlikely that long-term rates will rise much further over the coming months. But there is a risk that they could, and so we become more wary on interest-sensitive assets. Accordingly, we cut our overweight on the IT sector to neutral, and go overweight Financials. We continue to prefer cyclical sectors, and stay overweight Industrials and Energy. Chinese growth is slowing and so we cut our recommendation on Chinese equities to underweight. Some Emerging Markets will suffer from tighter US financial conditions, so we would be selective in our positions in both EM equity and debt. We stay firmly underweight government bonds, and recommend an underweight on duration, and favor linkers. Within alternatives, we raise Private Equity to overweight. The return to normality will give PE funds a wider range of opportunities, and allow them to pick up distressed assets at attractive valuations. Overview What Higher Rates Mean For Asset Allocation The past few months have seen a sharp rise in long-term interest rates everywhere (Chart 1). These have reflected better growth prospects, but also a greater appreciation of the risk of inflation over the next few years (Chart 2). Our main message in this Quarterly Portfolio Outlook is that we do not expect long-term rates to rise much further over the coming months, but that there is a risk that they could. This would be unlikely to undermine the positive case for risk assets overall, but it would affect asset allocation towards interest-rate sensitive assets such as growth stocks and Emerging Markets, and could have an impact on the US dollar. Chart 1Rates Are Rising Everywhere Rates Are Rising Everywhere Rates Are Rising Everywhere Chart 2...Because Of Both Growth And Inflation Expectations Quarterly Portfolio Outlook: What Higher Rates Mean For Asset Allocation Quarterly Portfolio Outlook: What Higher Rates Mean For Asset Allocation     We accordingly keep our recommendation for an overweight on equities and riskier corporate credit on the 12-month investment horizon, but are tweaking some of our other allocation recommendations. The macro environment for the rest of the year continues to look favorable. Pent-up consumer demand will be released once lockdowns end. In the US, this should be mid-July by when, at the current rate, the US will have vaccinated enough people to achieve herd immunity (Chart 3). Excess household savings in the major developed economies have reached almost $3 trillion (Chart 4). At least a part of that will be spent when consumers can go out for entertainment and travel again. Chart 3US On Track To Hit Herd Immunity By July US On Track To Hit Herd Immunity By July US On Track To Hit Herd Immunity By July Chart 4Global Excess Savings Total Trillion Global Excess Savings Total $3 Trillion Global Excess Savings Total $3 Trillion     Fiscal stimulus remains generous, especially in the US after the passing of the $1.9 trillion package in March (with another $2 trillion dedicated towards infrastructure spending likely to be approved within the next six months). The OECD estimates that the recent US stimulus alone will boost US GDP growth by almost 3 percentage points in the first full year and have a significant knock-on effect on other economies (Chart 5). Central banks, too, remain wary of the uneven and fragile nature of the recovery and so will not move towards tightening in the next 12 months. The Fed is not signalling a rate hike before 2024 – and it is likely to be the first major central bank to raise rates. In this environment, it is not surprising that long-term rates have risen. We showed in March’s Monthly Portfolio Update that, since 1990, equities have almost always performed strongly when rates are rising. This is likely to continue unless there is either (1) an inflation scare, or (2) the Fed turns more hawkish than the market believes is appropriate. Inflation could spike temporarily over the coming months, which might spook markets (see What Our Clients Are Asking on page 9 for more discussion of this). But sustained inflation is improbable until the labor market recovers to a level where significant wage increases come through (Chart 6). This is unlikely before 2023 at the earliest. Chart 5US Fiscal Stimulus Will Help Everyone Quarterly Portfolio Outlook: What Higher Rates Mean For Asset Allocation Quarterly Portfolio Outlook: What Higher Rates Mean For Asset Allocation Chart 6Labor Market Still Well Away From Full Employment Labor Market Still Well Away From Full Employment Labor Market Still Well Away From Full Employment   BCA Research’s fixed-income strategists do not see the US 10-year Treasury yield rising much above 1.8% this year.1 Inflation expectations should settle down around the current level (shown in Chart 2, panel 2) which is consistent with the Fed achieving its 2% PCE inflation target on average over the cycle. Treasury yields are largely driven by whether the Fed turns out to be more or less hawkish than the market expects (Chart 7). The market is already pricing in the first Fed rate hike in Q3 2022 (Chart 8). We think it unlikely that the market will start to price in an earlier hike than that. Chart 7The Fed Unlikely To Hike Ahead Of What Market Expects... The Fed Unlikely To Hike Ahead Of What Market Expects... The Fed Unlikely To Hike Ahead Of What Market Expects... Chart 8...Since This Is As Early As Q3 2022 ...Since This Is As Early As Q3 2021 ...Since This Is As Early As Q3 2021 How much would a further rise in rates hurt the economy and stock market? Rates are still well below a level that would trigger problems. First, long-term rates are considerably below trend nominal GDP growth, which is around 3.5% (Chart 9). Second, short-term real rates are well below r* – hard though that is to measure at the moment given the volatility of the economy in the past 12 months (Chart 10). Finally, one of the best indicators of economic pressure is a decline in cyclical sectors (consumer spending on durables, corporate capex, and residential investment) as a percentage of GDP (Chart 11). This is because these are the most interest-rate sensitive parts of the economy. But, at the moment, consumers are so cashed up they do not need to borrow to spend. The same is true of corporates, which raised huge amounts of cash last year. The only potential problem is real estate, buoyed last year by low rates which are now reversing (Chart 12). But mortgage rates are still very low and this is not a big enough sector to derail the broader economy. Chart 9Long-Term Rates Well Below Damaging Levels... Long-Term Rates Well Below Damaging Levels... Long-Term Rates Well Below Damaging Levels... Chart 10...Such As The R-Star Fed Still Below Neutral ...Such As The R-Star Fed Still Below Neutral ...Such As The R-Star   Chart 11Interest-Rate Sensitive Sectors Are Robust... Interest-Rate Sensitive Sectors Are Robust... Interest-Rate Sensitive Sectors Are Robust... Chart 12...With The Possible Exception Of Housing ...With The Possible Exception Of Housing ...With The Possible Exception Of Housing   Chart 13Debt Levels Are High In Emerging Markets... Debt Levels Are High In Emerging Markets... Debt Levels Are High In Emerging Markets... Chart 14...Which Makes Them Vulnerable To Tightening Financial Conditions ...Which Makes Them Vulnerable To Tightening Financial Conditions ...Which Makes Them Vulnerable To Tightening Financial Conditions         This sanguine view may not apply to Emerging Markets, however. Given the amount of foreign-currency debt they have built up in the past decade (Chart 13), they are very sensitive to US financial conditions, particularly a rise in rates and an appreciation of the US dollar (Chart 14). Accordingly, we have become more cautious on the outlook for both EM equity and debt over the next 6-12 months.   Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Chief Global Asset Allocation Strategist garry@bcaresearch.com   What Our Clients Are Asking What will happen to inflation? How can we tell if it is trending up? Chart 15Watch The Trimmed Mean Inflation Measure Watch The Trimmed Mean Inflation Measure Watch The Trimmed Mean Inflation Measure How much inflation rises will be a key driver of asset performance over the next 12-18 months. Too much inflation will push up long-term rates and undermine the case for risk assets. But the picture is likely to be complicated. US inflation will rise sharply in year-on-year terms in March and April because of the base effect (comparison with the worst period of the pandemic in 2020), pricier gasoline, rising import prices due to the weaker dollar, and supply-chain bottlenecks that are pushing up manufacturing costs. Core PCE inflation could get close to 2.5% year-on-year (Chart 15, panel 1). In the second half, too, an end to lockdowns could push up service-sector inflation – which has unsurprisingly been weak in the past nine months – as consumers rush out to restaurants and on vacation (panel 3). The Fed has signalled that it will view these as temporary effects. But they may spook the market for a while. Next year, however, it would be surprising to see strong underlying inflation unless employment makes a miraculous recovery. Payrolls would have to increase by 420,000 a month to get back to “maximum employment” by end-2022.2 Absent that, wage growth is likely to stay muted. Conventional inflation gauges may not be very useful at indicating underlying inflation pressures, in a world where consumers switch their spending depending on what is currently allowed under pandemic regulations. The Dallas Fed’s Trimmed Mean Inflation indicator (which excludes the 31% of the 178 items in the consumer basket with the highest price rises each month, and the 24% with the lowest) may be the best true measure. Research shows that historically it has been closer to trend headline PCE inflation in the long run than the core inflation measure, and predicts future inflation better (panel 4). Currently it is at 1.6% year-on-year and trending down. Investors should focus on this measure to see whether rising inflation is becoming a risk.   How can investors best protect against rising inflation? In May 2019 we released a report describing how to best to hedge against inflation.3 In that report, we analyzed every period of rising inflation dating back to the 1970s. Our conclusions were the following: The level of inflation will determine how rising inflation affects assets. When inflation goes from 1% to 2%, the macro environment is entirely different from when it goes from 5% to 6%. Thus, inflation hedging should not be thought of as a static exercise but a dynamic one (Table 1). Table 1Winners During Different Inflationary Regimes Quarterly Portfolio Outlook: What Higher Rates Mean For Asset Allocation Quarterly Portfolio Outlook: What Higher Rates Mean For Asset Allocation As long as the annual inflation rate is below about 3%, equities tend to be the best performing asset during high inflation periods, surpassing even commodities. This is because monetary policy tends to stay accommodative and cost pressures remain benign for most companies. However, as inflation passes this threshold, things start to change. Central banks start to become restrictive as they seek to curb inflation. This rise in policy rates starts to choke off the bull market. Meanwhile cost pressures become more significant and, as a result, equities begin to suffer. It is at this time when commodities – particularly oil and industrial metals – and US TIPS become a much better asset to hold. Finally, if the central bank fails to quash inflation, inflation expectations become unanchored, creating a toxic cocktail of rising prices and poor growth. During such periods, the best strategy is to hold the most defensive securities in each asset class, such as Health Care or Utilities within the equity market, or gold within commodities.   Can the shift to renewables drive a new commodities supercycle? Chart 16The Shift To Renewables Is Likely To Be A Tailwind For Metal Prices... The Shift To Renewables Is Likely To Be A Tailwind For Metal Prices... The Shift To Renewables Is Likely To Be A Tailwind For Metal Prices... The rise in commodity prices in H2 2020 has made investors ask whether we are on the verge of a new commodities “supercycle” (Chart 16). Our Commodity & Energy strategists argue that the fundamental drivers of each commodities segment differ. Here we focus on industrial metals – particularly those pertaining to renewable energy and transport electrification. Prices of metals used in electric vehicles (EVs) have risen by an average 53% since July 2020, reflecting strong demand that is outstripping supply (Chart 16). In the short-term, metals markets are likely to be in deficit, especially as demand recovers after the pandemic. Modelling longer-term demand is tricky since it relies on assumptions for the emergence of new technologies, metals’ efficiency, recycling rates, and the share of renewables. A study by the Institute for Sustainable Futures showed that, in the most positive scenarios, demand for some metals will exceed available resources and reserves (Table 2).4 The most pessimistic scenarios – which, for example, assume no major electrification of the transport system – show demand at approximately half of available resources. It is likely that demand will lay somewhere between those scenarios. Table 2...As Future Demand Exceeds Supply Quarterly Portfolio Outlook: What Higher Rates Mean For Asset Allocation Quarterly Portfolio Outlook: What Higher Rates Mean For Asset Allocation Supply is concentrated in a handful of countries: For example, the DR Congo is responsible for more than 65% of cobalt production and 50% of the world’s reserves;5 Australia supplies almost 50% of the world’s lithium and has 22% of its reserves.6 Production bottlenecks could therefore put significant upside pressures on prices. Factoring in supply/demand dynamics, as well as an assessment of future technological advancements, we conclude that industrial metals might be posed for a bull market over the upcoming years.   How can we add alpha in the bond bear market? Chart 17Government Bond Yield Sensitivities To USTs Government Bond Yield Sensitivities To USTs Government Bond Yield Sensitivities To USTs For a portfolio benchmarked to the global Treasury index, one way to add alpha is through country allocation. BCA’s Fixed Income Strategy recommends overweighting low yield-beta countries (Germany, France, and Japan) and underweighting high yield-beta countries (Canada, Australia, and the UK).7 The yield beta is defined as the sensitivity of a country’s yield change to changes in the US 10-year Treasury yield, as shown in Chart 17. BCA’s view is that the Fed will be the first major central bank to lift interest rate, therefore investors' underweights should be concentrated in the US Treasury index. It’s worth noting, however, that yield beta is influenced by many factors, and can change over time. When applying this approach, it’s important to pay attention to key factors in each country, especially those that are critical to central bank policy decisions (Table 3). Table 3A Watch List For Bond Investors Quarterly Portfolio Outlook: What Higher Rates Mean For Asset Allocation Quarterly Portfolio Outlook: What Higher Rates Mean For Asset Allocation Global Economy Chart 18US Growth Already Looks Strong... US Growth Already Looks Strong... US Growth Already Looks Strong... Overview: Growth continues to recover from the pandemic, although the pace varies. Manufacturing has rebounded strongly, as consumers spend their fiscal handouts on computer and household equipment, but services remain very weak, especially in Europe and Japan. Successful vaccination programs and the end of lockdowns in many countries should lead to strong growth in H2, as consumers spend their accumulated savings and companies increase capex to meet this demand. Perhaps the biggest risk to growth is premature tightening in China, but the authorities there are very aware of this risk and so it is unlikely to drag much on global growth. US: Although the big upside surprises to economic growth are over (Chart 18, panel 1), the US continues to expand more strongly than other major economies, due to its relatively limited lockdowns and large fiscal stimulus (which last year and this combined reached 25% of GDP, with another $2 trillion package in the works). Fed NowCasts suggest that Q1 GDP will come in at around 5-6% quarter-on-quarter annualized, with the OECD’s full-year GDP growth forecast as high as 6.5%. Nonetheless, there is still some way to go: Consumer expenditure and capex remain weak by historical standards, and new jobless claims in March still averaged 727,000 a week. Euro Area: More stringent pandemic regulations and slow vaccine rollout mean that the European service sector has been slow to recover. The services PMI in March was still only 48.4, though manufacturing has rebounded strongly to 64.2 (Chart 19, panel 1). Fiscal stimulus is also much smaller than in the US, with the EUR750 billion approved in December to be spent mostly on infrastructure over a period of years. Growth should rebound in H2 if lockdowns end and the vaccination program accelerates. But the OECD forecasts full-year GDP growth of only 3.9%. Chart 19...But Chinese Growth Has Probably Peaked ...But Chinese Growth Has Probably Peaked ...But Chinese Growth Has Probably Peaked Japan has seen the weakest rebound among the major economies, slightly puzzlingly so given its heavy weight in manufacturing and large exposure to the Chinese economy. Industrial production still shrank 3% year-on-year in February (Chart 19, panel 2), exports were down 4.5% YoY in February, and the manufacturing PMI is barely above 50. The main culprit remains domestic consumption, with confidence very weak and wages still declining, leading to a 2.4% YoY decline in retail sales in January. The OECD full-year GDP growth forecast is just 2.4%. Emerging Markets: The Chinese authorities have been moderately tightening policy for six months and this is starting to impact growth. Both the manufacturing and services PMIs have peaked, though they remain above 50 (panel 3). The policy tightening is likely to be only moderate and so growth this year should not slow drastically. Nonetheless, there remains the risk of a policy mistake. Elsewhere, many EM central banks are struggling with the dilemma of whether to cut rates to boost growth, or raise rates to defend a weakening currency. Real policy rates range from over 2% in Indonesia to below -2% in Brazil and the Philippines. This will add to volatility in the EM universe. Interest Rates: Policy rates in developed economies will not rise any time soon. The Fed is signalling no rise until 2024 (although the futures are now pricing in the first hike in Q3 2022). Other major central banks are likely to wait even longer. A crucial question is whether long-term rates will rise further, after the jump in the US 10-year Treasury yield to a high of 1.73%, from 0.92% at the start of the year. We see only limited upside in yields over the next nine months, as underlying inflation pressures should remain weak and central banks will remain highly reluctant to bring forward the pace of monetary policy normalization.   Global Equities Chart 20Has The Equity Market Priced In All The Earnings Growth? Has The Equity Market Priced In All The Earnings Growth? Has The Equity Market Priced In All The Earnings Growth? The global equities index eked out a 4% gain in Q1 2021, completely driven by a rebound in the profit outlook, since the forward PE multiple slightly contracted by 4%. Forward EPS has now recovered to the pre-pandemic level, while both the index level and PE multiple are 52% and 43% higher than at the end of March 2020 (Chart 20). While BCA’s global earnings model points to nearly 20% earnings growth over the next 12 months and analysts are still revising up earnings forecasts, the key question in our mind is whether the equity market has priced in all the earnings growth. Equity valuations are still not cheap by historical standards despite the small contraction in PEs in Q1. In addition, the VIX index has come down to 19.6, right at its historical average since January 1990, and profit margins in both EM and DM have come under pressure. As an asset class, however, stocks are still attractively valued compared to bonds (panel 5). Given our long-held approach of taking risk where risk will most likely be rewarded, we remain overweight equities versus bonds at the asset-class level, but we are taking some risk off the table in our country and sector allocations by downgrading China to underweight (from overweight) and upgrading the UK to overweight (from neutral), and by taking profits in our Tech overweight and upgrading Financials to overweight (see next two pages). To sum up, we are overweight the US and UK, underweight Japan, the euro area, and China, while neutral on Canada, Australia, and non-China EM. Sector-wise, we are overweight Industrials, Financials, Energy, and Health Care; underweight Consumer Staples, Utilities, and Real Estate; and neutral on Tech, Consumer Discretionary, Communication Services, and Materials.   Country Allocation: Downgrade China To Underweight From Overweight Chart 21China Is Risking Overtightening China Is Risking Overtightening China Is Risking Overtightening We started to separate the overall EM into China and Other EM in the January Monthly Portfolio Update this year. We initiated China with an Overweight and “Other EM” with a Neutral weighting in the global equity portfolio. The key rationale was that Chinese growth would remain strong in H1 2021 due to its earlier stimulus, while some EM countries would benefit from Chinese growth but others were still suffering from structural issues. In Q1, China underperformed the global benchmark by 4.5%, while the other EM markets underperformed slightly. China’s National People’s Congress (NPC) indicated that Chinese policymakers will gradually pull back policy support this year. BCA’s China Investment Strategists think that fiscal thrust will be neutral in 2021 while credit expansion will be at a lower rate compared to 2020. The Chinese economy should remain strong in H1 but will slow to a benign and managed growth rate afterwards. Therefore, the risk of policy overtightening is not trivial and could threaten China’s economic growth and corporate profit outlook. The outperformance of Chinese stocks since the end of 2019 has been largely driven by multiple expansion (Chart 21, panel 1), but the slowdown in the credit impulse implies that the recent underperformance of Chinese equities has not run its course because multiple contraction will likely have to catch up and will therefore put more downward pressure on price (panels 2 and 3). We remain neutral on the non-China EM countries, implying an underweight for the overall EM universe. We use the proceeds to fund an upgrade of the UK to Overweight from Neutral because the UK index is comprised largely of globally exposed companies and because we have upgraded GBP to overweight (see page 21).   Sector Allocation: Upgrade Financials To Overweight By Downgrading Tech To Neutral Chart 22Financials And Tech: Trading Places Financials And Tech: Trading Places Financials And Tech: Trading Places One year ago, we upgraded Tech to overweight and downgraded Financials to neutral given our views on the impact of the pandemic and interest rates.8 This position has netted out an alpha of 1123 basis points in one year. BCA Research’s House View now calls for somewhat higher global interest rates and steeper yield curves (especially in the US) over the next 9-12 months. Accordingly, we are downgrading Tech to neutral and upgrading Financials to overweight. Financials have outperformed the broad market by about 20% since September 2020 after global yields bottomed in July 2020. We do not expect yields to rise significantly from the current level, nor do we expect Tech earnings growth to slow significantly (Chart 22, panel 5). So why do we make such shift between Financials and Tech? There are three key reasons: First, the Tech sector is a long-duration asset with high sensitivity to changes in the discount rate. In contrast, Financials’ earnings benefit from steepening yield curves. If history is any guide, we should see more aggressive analyst earnings revisions going forward in favor of Financials (Chart 22, panel 3). Second, the performance of Financials relative to Tech has been on a long-term structural downtrend since the Global Financial Crisis. A countertrend rebound to the neutral zone from the currently very oversold level would imply further upside (Chart 22, panel 1). Last, Financials are trading at an extremely large discount to the Tech sector (Chart 22, panel 2). In an environment where overall equity valuations are stretched by historical standards, it is prudent to rotate into an extremely cheap sector from an extremely expensive sector.   Government Bonds Chart 23Policy Mix Is Bond-Bearish Policy Mix Is Bond-Bearish Policy Mix Is Bond-Bearish Maintain Below-Benchmark Duration. Global bond yields have climbed sharply in Q1, supported by strong economic growth, mostly smooth rollout of vaccination and the Biden Administration’s very stimulative fiscal package of USD1.9 trillion. The US stimulus package changes the trajectory of the 2021 US fiscal impulse from a $0.8 trillion contraction to a $0.3 trillion expansion, according to estimates from the US Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. Going forward, the path of least resistance for global yields is still up, though the upside will be limited given the resolve of central banks to maintain accommodative monetary policies (Chart 23). Chart 24Stay Long TIPS Stay Long TIPS Stay Long TIPS Still Favor Linkers Vs. Nominal Bonds. Our overweight position in inflation-linked bonds relative to nominal bonds has panned out well so far this year, as has our positioning for a flattening inflation-protection curve. Even though inflation expectations have run up quickly, the 5 year-5 year forward inflation breakeven rate is still below 2.3-2.5%, the range that is consistent with core PCE reaching the Fed’s 2% target in a sustainable fashion (Chart 24). The US TIPS 5/10-year curve is inverted already, but our fixed income strategists are still reluctant to exit the curve-flattening position for two key reasons: 1) The Fed has indicated that it will tolerate core PCE overshooting the 2% target because it will try to hit the target from above rather than from below; and 2) the short end of the inflation expectation curve is more sensitive to actual inflation than the long end. There are signs (core producer prices, prices paid in the ISM manufacturing survey, and NFIB reported prices are all rising) that core PCE will reach 2% in the next 12 months.   Corporate Bonds Chart 25High-Yield Offers Best Value In Fixed Income Quarterly Portfolio Outlook: What Higher Rates Mean For Asset Allocation Quarterly Portfolio Outlook: What Higher Rates Mean For Asset Allocation Since the beginning of the year, investment-grade bonds have outperformed duration-matched Treasurys by 62 basis points, while high-yield bonds have outperformed duration-marched Treasurys by 232 basis points. In the current reflationary environment, we believe that the best strategy within fixed-income portfolios is to overweight low-duration assets and maximize credit exposure where the spread makes a large portion of the yield. Thus, we remain overweight high-yield bonds. We believe that high yield offers much better value than higher quality credits. Currently spreads for high-yield bonds are in the middle of their historical distribution – a stark contrast from their investment-grade counterparts, which are trading at very expensive levels (Chart 25, panel 1). Moreover, the reopening of the economy should help the more cyclical sectors of the bond market, where the lower credit qualities are concentrated. But could a rise in yields start hurting sub-investment-grade companies and increase their borrowing costs? We do not think this is likely for now. Most of the bonds in the US high-yield index mature in more than three years, which means that high-risk corporates will not have to finance themselves with higher rates yet (Chart 25, panel 2). On the other hand, we remain underweight investment-grade credit. Not only are these bonds expensive, but they offer very little upside in any scenario. On the one hand, these bonds should underperform further if raise continue to rise – a result of their high duration. On the other hand, if a severe recession were to hit, spreads would most likely widen, which will also result in underperformance.   Commodities Chart 26Limited Upside For Oil From Here Limited Upside For Oil From Here Limited Upside For Oil From Here Energy (Overweight): Despite the recent mid-March selloff, which was most likely triggered by profit taking, oil prices are still up 25% since the beginning of the year. This happened on the back of the restoration of some economic activity, the OPEC 2.0 coalition maintaining production discipline and therefore keeping supply in check, and the recovery in crude demand drawing down inventory. However, earlier forecasts of the 2021 oil demand recovery were a bit too optimistic amid continuing pandemic uncertainty. There is now, therefore, only limited upside for the oil price, at least this year. Our Commodity & Energy strategists expect the Brent crude price to average $65/bbl this year (Chart 26, panels 1 & 2). Industrial Metals (Neutral): We have previously highlighted that Chinese restocking activity in 2020 was a big factor behind the rally in industrial metals prices. As this eases, and Chinese growth slows, commodity prices might correct somewhat in the short term. However, fundamental changes in demand for alternative energy makes us ask whether we are now entering a new commodities “supercycle” for certain metals (for more analysis of this, see What Our Clients Are Asking on page 11). If history is any guide, however, the commodities bear market may have a little longer to run. Historically, commodity bear cycles lasted 17 years on average and we are only 10 years into this one (panel 3). On balance, therefore, we remain neutral on industrial metals for now. Precious Metals (Neutral): After peaking last August, the gold price has continued to tumble, down almost 19% since and 11% since the beginning of the year. We have been wary of the metal’s lofty valuation – the real price of gold remains near a historical high. The recent rise in real rates put more downside pressure on gold. However, the pullback in prices should provide investors who see gold as a long-term inflation hedge and do not buy the metal with a view to strong absolute performance over the next 12 months, with an attractive entry point. We maintain a slight overweight position to hedge against inflation and unexpected tail risks (panel 4).   Currencies US Dollar Chart 27Vaccinations will help USD and GBP in 2021 Vaccinations will help USD and GBP in 2021 Vaccinations will help USD and GBP in 2021 While we still believe that the dollar is in a major bear market, the current environment could see a significant dollar countertrend. Thanks to its gargantuan fiscal stimulus as well as its relatively fast vaccination campaign, the US is likely to grow faster than the rest of the world during 2021 (Chart 27, panel 1). This dynamic should put further upward pressure on US real rates relative to the rest of the world, helping the dollar in the process. To hedge this risk, we are upgrading the US dollar from underweight to neutral in our currency portfolio. Euro The euro should experience a temporary pullback. Economic activity in Europe, particularly in the service sector is lagging the US – a consequence of Europe’s slow vaccination campaign. This sluggishness in economic activity will translate into a worse real rate differential vis-a-vis the US, dragging the euro lower in the process. Thus, we are downgrading the euro from overweight to neutral. British Pound One currency that might perform well in this environment is the British pound. Consumer spending in the UK was particularly hard hit during the pandemic, since such a high share of it is geared towards social activities like restaurants and hotels (Chart 27, panel 2). However, thanks to Britain’s successful vaccination campaign, UK consumption is likely to experience a sharp snapback. As growth expectations improve, real rates should grind higher vis-à-vis the rest of the world, pushing the pound higher. Moreover, valuations for this currency are attractive: The pound currently trades at a 10% discount to purchasing power parity fair value. As a result, we are upgrading the GBP from neutral to overweight.   Alternatives Chart 28Turning More Positive On Private Equity Turning More Positive On Private Equity Turning More Positive On Private Equity Return Enhancers: In last October’s Quarterly Outlook, we advised investors to prepare for new opportunities in Private Equity (PE) as fund managers look to deploy record high dry power. A gradual return to normality is likely to provide PE funds with a wider range of opportunities, while still allowing them to pick up distressed assets at attractive valuations. This is illustrated by the annualized quarterly returns of PE funds in Q2 and Q3 2020, which reached 43% and 56% respectively. PE funds raised in recession and early-cycle years tend to have a higher median net IRR than those raised in the latter stages of bull markets. This suggests that returns from the 2020 and 2021 vintages should be strong. In recent years, capital flows have increasingly gone to the longer established and larger funds, which tend to have better access to the most attractive deals and therefore record the strongest returns. This trend is likely to continue. Given the time it takes to shift allocations in private assets, we increase our recommended allocation in PE to overweight. Inflation Hedges: It is not clear that inflation will come roaring back in the next couple of years. But what is certain is that market participants are concerned about this risk, which should give a boost to inflation-hedge assets. Given this backdrop, we continue to favor commodity futures (Chart 28, panel 2). In other circumstances, real estate would also have been a beneficiary in this environment. But the slowdown in commercial real estate, as many corporate tenants review whether they need expensive city-center space, makes us remain cautious on real estate. Volatility Dampeners: We continue to favor farmland and timberland over structured products, particularly mortgage-backed securities (MBS). Farmland offers attractive yields and should continue to provide the best portfolio protection in the event of any market distress (Chart 28, panel 3).   Risks To Our View The main risks to our central view are to the downside. Because global equities have risen by 55% over the past 12 months, and with the forward PE of the MSCI ACWI index at 19.5x (Chart 29), the room for price appreciation over the next 12 months is inevitably limited. There are several things that could undermine the economic recovery and equity bull market. The COVID-19 pandemic remains the greatest unknown. The vaccination rollout has been very uneven (Chart 30). New strains, especially the one first identified in Brazil, are highly contagious and people who previously had COVID-19 do not seem to have immunity against them. Behavior once COVID cases decline is also hard to predict. Will people be happy again to fly, attend events in large stadiums, and socialize in crowded bars, or will many remain wary for years? This would undermine the case for a strong rebound in consumption. Chart 29Is Perfection Priced In? Is Perfection Priced In? Is Perfection Priced In? Chart 30Vaccination Has Been Spotty Vaccination Has Been Spotty Vaccination Has Been Spotty Vaccination Has Been Spotty Vaccination Has Been Spotty Vaccination Has Been Spotty   Chart 31China Slowing Again? China Slowing Again? China Slowing Again? As often, a slowdown in China is a risk. The authorities there have signalled a pullback in stimulus, and the credit impulse has begun to slow (Chart 31). Our China strategists think the authorities will be careful not to tighten too drastically (with the fiscal thrust expected to be neutral this year), and that growth will slow only to a benign and moderate rate in the second half.9 But there is a lot of room for policy error. Finally, inflation. As we argue elsewhere in this Quarterly, it will inevitably pick up for technical reasons in March and April, and then again in late 2021 as renewed consumer demand for services (especially travel and entertainment) pushes up prices. The Fed has emphasized that these phenomena are temporary and that underlying inflation will not emerge until the economy returns to full employment. But the market might get spooked for a while when inflation jumps, pushing up long-term interest rates and triggering an equity market correction. Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy Report, “The Fed Looks Backward While Markets Look Forward,” dated March 23, 2021. 2 Please see US Bond Strategy Report, “The Fed Looks Backward While Markets Look Forward,” dated March 23, 2021, 3 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report, “Investors’ Guide To Inflation Hedging: How To Invest When Inflation Rises,” dated May 22, 2019. 4 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. The optimistic scenario is referred to as “total metals demand” scenario, which assumed current materials intensity and market share continues into the future without recycling or efficiency improvements. This study is based on 2018 production levels and therefore expansion of future production may vary results. 5US Geological Survey, Mineral Commodity Summaries 2021. 6 Chile is estimated to have the largest reserve of lithium. 7 Please see Global Fixed Income Strategy Report, “Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger,” dated March 16, 2021. 8 Please see Global Asset Allocation, “Quarterly Portfolio Outlook: Playing The Optionality,” dated April 1, 2020. 9 Please see China Investment Strategy Report, “National People’s Congress Sets Tone For 2021 Growth,” dated March 17, 2021. GAA Asset Allocation  
Highlights Duration: The Treasury market has moved quickly to price-in expectations of a strong economic recovery, while the Fed has been more cautious about moving its own rate forecasts. We think that the market’s expectations are well founded and that the Fed will eventually move its dots higher. Stick with below-benchmark portfolio duration. Corporate Bonds: Junk spreads already embed a significant decline in the default rate during the next 12 months, but reasonable assumptions for corporate debt growth and profit growth suggest that this outcome will be achieved. Investors should continue to favor spread product over Treasuries and continue to hold a down-in-quality bias within corporate credit. Economy: Disposable personal income fell in February compared to January, but it has risen massively since last year’s passage of the CARES act. The large pool of accumulated household savings will help drive economic growth as the pandemic recedes. Feature There is widespread anticipation that the economic recovery is about to kick into high gear. To us, this anticipation seems rather well founded. The United States’ vaccination roll-out is proceeding quickly and the federal government is pitching in with a tsunami of fiscal support. But it’s important to acknowledge that this positive outlook is still a forecast, one that has not yet been validated by hard economic data. The risk for investors is obvious. Market prices have already moved to price-in a significant amount of economic optimism and they are vulnerable in a situation where that optimism doesn’t pan out. In this week’s report we look at how much economic optimism is already discounted in both the Treasury and corporate bond markets. We conclude that the most likely scenario is one where the economic data are strong enough to validate current pricing in both markets. Investors should keep portfolio duration below-benchmark and continue to favor spread product over Treasuries, with a down-in-quality bias. Optimism In The Treasury Market The most obvious way to illustrate the economic optimism currently embedded in Treasury securities is to look at the rate hike expectations priced into the yield curve relative to the Fed’s own projections (Chart 1). The market is currently looking for four 25 basis point rate hikes by the end of 2023 while only seven out of 18 FOMC participants expect any hikes at all by then. Chart 1Market More Hawkish Than Fed Market More Hawkish Than Fed Market More Hawkish Than Fed We addressed the wide divergence between market and FOMC expectations in last week’s report.1 We noted that the main reason for the divergence is that while the market is focused on expectations for rapid economic growth the Fed is making a concerted effort to rely only on hard economic data. This sentiment was echoed by Fed Governor Lael Brainard in a speech last week:2 The focus on achieved outcomes rather than the anticipated outlook is central to the Committee’s guidance regarding both asset purchases and the policy rate. The emphasis on outcomes rather than the outlook corresponds to the shift in our monetary policy approach that suggests policy should be patient rather than preemptive at this stage in the recovery. The upshot of the Fed’s excessively cautious approach is that its interest rate projections will move toward the market’s as the hard economic data strengthen during the next 6-12 months, keeping the bond bear market intact. As evidence for this view, consider that the US Economic Surprise Index remains at an extremely high level, consistent with a rising 10-year Treasury yield (Chart 2). Further, 12-month core inflation rates are poised to jump significantly during the next two months as the weak monthly prints from March and April 2020 fall out of the 12-month sample (Chart 3). Then, pipeline pressures in both the goods and service sectors will ensure that inflation remains relatively high for the balance of the year (Chart 3, bottom panel).3   Chart 2Data Surprises Remain Positive Data Surprises Remain Positive Data Surprises Remain Positive Chart 3Inflation About To Jump Inflation About To Jump Inflation About To Jump Finally, the hard economic data still do not reflect the truly massive amount of fiscal stimulus that is about to hit the US economy. Chart 4 illustrates how large last year’s fiscal stimulus was compared to what was seen during recent recessions, and this chart does not yet incorporate the recently passed $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan (~8.7% of GDP) or the second infrastructure focused reconciliation bill that is likely to pass this fall. Our political strategists expect 2021’s second budget bill to be similar in size to the American Rescue Plan though tax hikes will also be included and, due to the infrastructure-focused nature of the bill, the spending will be more spread out over a number of years.4  Chart 4The Era Of Big Government Is Back That Uneasy Feeling That Uneasy Feeling Bottom Line: The Treasury market has moved quickly to price-in expectations of a strong economic recovery, while the Fed has been more cautious about moving its own rate forecasts. We think that the market’s expectations are well founded and that the Fed will eventually move its dots higher. Stick with below-benchmark portfolio duration.  Optimism In The Corporate Bond Market Chart 5What's Priced In Junk Spreads? What's Priced In Junk Spreads? What's Priced In Junk Spreads? The way we assess the amount of economic optimism baked into the corporate bond market is to calculate the 12-month default rate that is implied by the current High-Yield Index spread (Chart 5). We need to make a few assumptions to do this. First, we assume that investors require an excess spread of at least 100 bps from the index after subtracting 12-month default losses. In past research, we’ve noted that High-Yield has a strong track record of outperforming duration-matched Treasuries when the realized excess spread is above 100 bps. High-Yield underperforms Treasuries more often than it outperforms when the realized excess spread is below 100 bps.5 Second, we must assume a recovery rate for defaulted bonds. The 12-month recovery rate tends to fluctuate between 20% and 60%, with higher levels seen when the default rate is low and lower levels when the default rate is high (Chart 5, bottom panel). For this week’s analysis, we assume a range of recovery rates, from 20% to 50%, though we expect the recovery rate to be closer to the top-end of that range during the next 12 months, given our expectations for a rapid economic recovery. With these assumptions in mind, we calculate that the High-Yield Index is fairly priced for a default rate between 2.8% and 4.5% for the next 12 months (Chart 5, panel 2). If the default rate falls into that range, or below, then we would expect High-Yield bonds (and corporate credit more generally) to outperform a duration-matched position in Treasuries. If the default rate comes in above 4.5%, then we would expect Treasuries to beat High-Yield. To figure out whether the default rate will meet the market’s expectations, we turn to a simple model of the 12-month speculative grade default rate that is based on nonfinancial corporate sector gross leverage (aka total debt over pre-tax profits) and C&I lending standards (Chart 6). If we make forecasts for nonfinancial corporate 12-month debt growth and pre-tax profit growth, we can let the model tell us what default rate to anticipate. Chart 6Default Rate Model Default Rate Model Default Rate Model Debt Growth Expectations We expect corporate debt growth to be quite weak during the next 12 months (Chart 7). This is mainly because firms raised a huge amount of debt last spring when the Fed and federal government made it very attractive to do so. Now, we are emerging from a recession and the nonfinancial corporate sector already holds an elevated cash balance (Chart 7, bottom panel). Debt growth was also essentially zero during the past six months, and very low (or even negative) debt growth is a common occurrence right after a peak in the default rate (Chart 7, top 2 panels). It is true that the nonfinancial corporate sector’s Financing Gap – the difference between capital expenditures and retained earnings – is no longer negative (Chart 7, panel 3). But it is also not high enough to suggest that firms need to significantly add debt. Chart 7Debt Growth Will Be Slow Debt Growth Will Be Slow Debt Growth Will Be Slow For our default rate calculations, we assume that corporate debt growth will be between 0% and 8% during the next 12 months. However, our sense is that it will be closer to 0% than to 8%. Profit Growth Expectations Chart 8Profit Growth Will Surge Profit Growth Will Surge Profit Growth Will Surge Our expectation is that profit growth will surge during the next 12 months, as is the typical pattern when the economy emerges from recession. Year-over-year profit growth peaked at 62% in 2002 following the 2001 recession, and it peaked at 51% in 2010 coming out of the Global Financial Crisis (Chart 8). More specifically, if we model nonfinancial corporate sector pre-tax profit growth on real GDP and then assume 6.5% real GDP growth in 2021, in line with the Fed’s median forecast, then we get a forecast for 31% profit growth in 2021. If we use a higher real GDP growth forecast of 10%, in line with our US Political Strategy service's "maximum impact" scenario, then our model forecasts pre-tax profit growth of 40% for 2021.6 Default Rate Expectations Table 1 puts together different estimates for profit growth and debt growth and maps them to a range of 12-month default rate outcomes, as implied by our Default Rate Model. For example, profit growth of 30% and debt growth between 0% and 8% in 2021 maps to a 12-month default rate of between 3.2% and 3.8%. This falls comfortably within the range of 2.8% to 4.5% that is consistent with current market pricing. Table 1Default Rate Scenarios That Uneasy Feeling That Uneasy Feeling In fact, for our model to output a default rate range that is higher than what is priced into junk spreads, we need to assume 2021 profit growth of 20% or less. This is quite far below the estimates we made above based on reasonable forecasts for real GDP. Bottom Line: Junk spreads already embed a significant decline in the default rate during the next 12 months, but reasonable assumptions for corporate debt growth and profit growth suggest that this outcome will be achieved. Investors should continue to favor spread product over Treasuries and continue to hold a down-in-quality bias within corporate credit. Economy: Household Income Update Last week’s personal income and spending report showed that disposable household income was lower in February than in January, a decline that is entirely attributable to the fact that the $600 checks to individuals that were part of the December stimulus bill were mostly delivered in January. These “Economic Impact Payments” totaled $138 billion in January and only $8 billion in February. This drop-off of $130 billion almost exactly matches the $128 billion monthly decline seen in disposable personal income. Consumer spending also fell in February compared to January, a result that likely owes a lot to February’s bad weather conditions, particularly the winter storm that caused much of Texas to lose power. Though spending has recovered a lot from last year’s lows, it remains significantly below its pre-COVID trend (Chart 9). In contrast to spending, disposable income has skyrocketed since the pandemic started last March. Chart 10 shows that disposable personal income has increased 8% in the 12 months since COVID struck compared to the 12 months prior. Moreover, it shows that the increase is entirely attributable to fiscal relief. Chart 9Households Have Excess ##br##Savings Households Have Excess Savings Households Have Excess Savings Chart 10Disposable Personal Income Growth And Its Drivers That Uneasy Feeling That Uneasy Feeling The result of below-trend spending and a surge in income is a big jump in the savings rate. The personal savings rate was 13.6% in February, well above its average pre-COVID level (Chart 9, panel 3), as it has been since the pandemic began. This consistently elevated savings rate has led to US households building up a $1.9 trillion buffer of excess savings compared to a pre-pandemic baseline (Chart 9, bottom panel). Perhaps the biggest question for economic growth is whether households will deploy this large pool of savings as the economy re-opens or whether they will continue to hoard it. In this regard, the individual checks that were part of last year’s CARES act are the most likely to be hoarded, as these checks were distributed to all Americans making less than $99,000. The income support provisions in this month’s American Rescue Plan are much more targeted. Only individuals making below $75,000 will receive a $1,400 check and the bill also includes expanded unemployment benefits and a large amount of aid for state & local governments. All in all, we anticipate that a substantial amount of household excess savings will be spent once the vaccination effort has made enough progress that people feel safe venturing out. This will lead to strong economic growth and higher inflation in the second half of 2021.   Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Fed Looks Backward While Markets Look Forward”, dated March 23, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/brainard20210323b.htm 3 For more details on our outlook for core inflation in 2021 please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Limit Rate Risk, Load Up On Credit”, dated March 16, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see US Political Strategy Second Quarter Outlook 2021, “From Stimulus To Structural Reform”, dated March 24, 2021, available at usps.bcaresearch.com 5 For more details on this excess spread analysis please see US Bond Strategy / Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, “Trading The US Corporate Bond Market In A Time Of Crisis”, dated March 31, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 The "maximum impact" scenario assumes that the full amount of authorized outlays from the American Rescue Plan will be spent, with 60% of the outlays spent in FY2021. For more details see US Political Strategy Second Quarter Outlook 2021, “From Stimulus To Structural Reform”, dated March 24, 2021, available at usps.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Dear client, Next week, in lieu of our weekly report, I will be hosting a webcast on Thursday, March 25 at 10:00 am EDT and Friday March 26 at 9:00 am HKT. I look forward to your comments and questions during the webcast. Best regards, Chester Highlights During bear markets, counter-trend rallies in the dollar are capped around 4%. This time should be no different. Meanwhile, unless the Fed tightens policy to stem the increase in aggregate demand, inflation will rise and real short rates will drop. The relative equity performance of the US is critical for the dollar. Reserve diversification out of dollars has also started to place a natural ceiling against other developed market currencies. An attractive opportunity is emerging to short the AUD/CAD cross. Feature The 1.7% rise in the US dollar this year is reinvigorating the bull case. When presenting our key views last year, we highlighted that the DXY index was at risk of a 2-4% bounce.1 We reaffirmed this view in our January report: Sizing A Potential Dollar Bounce. At the time, the DXY index was at the 90 level, suggesting the rally should fizzle around 94. Therefore, the key question is whether the nascent rise in the DXY will punch through this level, or fade as we originally expected. The short-term case for the dollar remains bullish. The currency is much oversold. Meanwhile, real interest rates are moving in favor of the US, vis-à-vis a few countries. Third and interrelated, economic momentum in the US is quite strong, compared to other G10 countries. With the rising specter of a market correction, the dollar could also benefit from safe haven flows towards the US. The Federal Reserve’s meeting yesterday certainly reaffirmed that short-term rates will remain anchored near zero, at least until 2023. The Fed does not see inflation much above 2% a couple of years out. Nevertheless, a lot can change in the coming months. Cycles, Positioning And Interest Rates The dollar tends to move in long cycles, with the latest bull and bear markets lasting about a decade or so. In other words, the dollar is a momentum currency. As such, determining which regime you are in is critical to assessing the magnitude of any rally. This is certainly the case when sentiment remains overly dollar bearish, as now. During bear markets, counter-trend rallies in the dollar are capped around 4-6%. This was what happened in the early 2000s. In bull markets, such as after the financial crisis, the dollar achieves escape velocity, with more durable rallies well into the teens (Chart I-1). So far, the current rise still fits within the narrative of a healthy reset in a longer-term bear market. Chart I-1The Dollar Rally Is Still Benign The Dollar Rally Is Still Benign The Dollar Rally Is Still Benign Long interest rates have also been moving in favor of the dollar, especially relative to the euro area, Japan, and even Sweden. Currencies are driven by real interest rate differentials, and higher US yields are bullish. With the Fed giving no indication it will prevent the curve from steepening further, US interest rates could keep gaping higher. However, currencies are about relative rate differentials, and the rise in US interest rates has not been in isolation. Rates in the UK, Australia and New Zealand, countries that have managed the COVID-19 crisis pretty well, are beginning to rise faster than in the US (Chart I-2). Chart I-2A Synchronized Rise In Global Yields A Synchronized Rise In Global Yields A Synchronized Rise In Global Yields US Versus World Growth The rise in US interest rates has been justified by better economic performance. Whether looking at purchasing managers’ indices, economic surprise indices, or even GDP growth expectations, the US has had the upper hand (Chart I-3). The Fed expects US growth to hit 6.5% this year. This is well above what other central banks expect for their domestic economies. The ECB expects 4%, the BoJ expects 3.9%, and the BoC expects 4.6% (Table I-1). Chart I-3AThe US Leads In Growth This Year The US Leads In Growth This Year The US Leads In Growth This Year Chart I-3BThe US Leads In Growth This Year The US Leads In Growth This Year The US Leads In Growth This Year Table I-1The US Leads In Growth And Inflation This Year Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears However, economic dominance can be transient, especially in a world of flexible exchange rates.  For one, a higher dollar will sap US growth via the export channel. This is especially the case since the starting point is an expensive currency. On a real effective exchange rate basis, the dollar is above its long-term mean (Chart I-4). Meanwhile, we expect the rest of the world to perform better as economies reopen. The services PMI in the US is already close to a cyclical high, similar to Sweden (Chart I-5). These are among the countries with the least stringent COVID-19 measures in the western hemisphere. This suggests that other economies, even manufacturing-centric ones, could see a coiled-spring rebound in growth as we put this pandemic behind us. Chart I-4The Dollar Is Expensive The Dollar Is Expensive The Dollar Is Expensive Chart I-5The US Service PMI Is At A Cyclical High The US Service PMI Is At A Cyclical High The US Service PMI Is At A Cyclical High The sweet spot for most economies is when growth is rising but inflation is low, allowing the resident central bank to keep policy dovish. However, it is an open question if the US can continue to boost spending, without a commensurate rise in inflation. The OECD estimates that the US output gap will close by 2022, with the $1.9-trillion fiscal package. This will put the US well ahead of any G10 country (Chart I-6). Unless the Fed tightens policy to stem the increase in aggregate demand, inflation will rise and real rates will drop (Chart I-7). Rising nominal rates and falling real yields will be anathema to the dollar. Chart I-6The US Output Gap Will Soon Close The US Output Gap Will Soon Close The US Output Gap Will Soon Close Chart I-7Wages And Inflation Should Inch Higher Wages And Inflation Should Inch Higher Wages And Inflation Should Inch Higher Equity Rotation And The Dollar A currency manager once noted that the most important variable to pay attention to when making FX allocations is relative equity performance. This might seem bizarre at first blush, but stands at the center of what an exchange rate is – a mechanism that equalizes rates of return across countries. As such while bond flows are important for exchange rates, equity flows matter as well. The relative equity performance of the US is critical for two reasons. First, the US equity market tends to do relatively better during bear markets. This was the case last year and during the 2008 crisis. Second, the outperformance of the US over the last decade has dovetailed with a dollar bull market (Chart I-8). It is rare to find a currency that has performed well both during equity bull and bear markets. If past is prologue, the near-term risks for the dollar are to the upside, especially if the market rally encounters turbulence as yields rise. The put/call ratio in the US is at a 5-year nadir. A move towards parity could violently pull up the DXY index (Chart I-9). However, a garden-variety 5-10% correction in the SPX should correspond to a shallow bounce in the DXY. This will also fit the pattern of bear market USD rallies, as we already highlighted in Chart I-1. Chart I-8US Equity Relative Performance And The Dollar US Equity Relative Performance And The Dollar US Equity Relative Performance And The Dollar Chart I-9The Dollar Could Rise In ##br##A Market Reset The Dollar Could Rise In A Market Reset The Dollar Could Rise In A Market Reset At the same time, any correction could usher in a violent rotation from cyclicals to defensives, especially if underpinned by higher interest rates. The performance of energy and financials are a leap ahead of other sectors in the S&P 500 this year. Importantly, they also massively outperformed during the February drawdown. Meanwhile, valuations are heavily elevated in the US compared to the rest of the world. This is true for growth sectors compared to value, and cyclicals compared to defensives. Throughout history, both exchange rates and valuations have tended to mean revert. Long-Term Dollar Outlook The 2020 pandemic was a one-in-a-hundred-year event. Coordinated fiscal and monetary stimuli have ushered in a new economic cycle. As a counter-cyclical currency, the dollar tends to do poorly (Chart I-10). This is because monetary stimulus provides more torque to economies levered to the global cycle. Once growth achieves escape velocity, the currencies of these more pro-cyclical economies benefit. The IMF projects that non-US growth should outpace US growth after 2021. Meanwhile, it is an open question that any rally in the dollar will be durable. The key driver behind the dollar increase in 2020 was a global shortage. Not only has the Fed extended its liquidity provisions to foreign central banks until September this year, the share of offshore US dollar debt issuance has fallen by a full 9 percentage points (Chart I-11). Simply put, the Fed is flooding the system with dollar liquidity at the same time that foreign entities are weaning themselves off it Chart I-10The IMF Expects Faster Growth Outside The US After 2021 The IMF Expects Faster Growth Outside The US After 2021 The IMF Expects Faster Growth Outside The US After 2021 Chart I-11Share Of US Dollar Debt ##br##Rolling Over Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears The reason behind this is balance-of-payment dynamics. The market has realized that ballooning twin deficits in the US come at a cost. For foreign issuers, it is the prospect of rolling over US-denominated debt at a much higher coupon rate. For bond investors, it is currency depreciation, especially if fiscal largesse becomes too “sticky,” and stokes inflation. As such, bond investors continue to avoid the US, despite rising rates (Chart I-12). Finally, reserve diversification out of dollars has started to place a natural ceiling on the US dollar, especially against other developed market currencies. Ever since the trend began to accelerate in 2015, the DXY has been unable to sustainably punch through the 100 level (Chart I-13). This will place a durable floor under developed market currencies in general and gold in particular. The Chinese RMB has also been gaining traction in global FX reserves. Chart I-12Little Appetite For US ##br##Treasurys Little Appetite For US Treasurys Little Appetite For US Treasurys Chart I-13Reserve Diversification Has Been A Headwind For The Dollar Reserve Diversification Has Been A Headwind For The Dollar Reserve Diversification Has Been A Headwind For The Dollar More specifically, the role of the USD/CNY exchange rate as a key anchor for emerging market currencies will rise, especially if the RMB remains structurally strong.2 The People’s Bank of China has massive foreign exchange reserves, worth about US$3.2 trillion. This means it can provide swap agreements that will almost cover the totality of EM foreign dollar debt. Swap agreements entail no exchange of currency, but are about confidence. The PBoC can instill this confidence in countries that have low and/or falling foreign exchange reserves. The dollar will remain the global reserve currency for years to come. However, a slow pivot towards reserve diversification will act as a structural headwind for the dollar. Housekeeping Chart I-14AUD/CAD Is Correlated To The VIX Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears We were stopped out of our CAD/NOK trade for a profit of 3.1%. The resilience of the US economy is benefiting the CAD more than the NOK for now. However, the Norges Bank confirmed it might be one of the first central banks to lift rates, as early as this year. We are both short USD/NOK and EUR/NOK and recommend sticking with these positions. Second, the growing spat between the EU and the UK could lead to more volatility in our short EUR/GBP position. Our target remains 0.8, but we are tightening stops to 0.865 to protect profits. The BoE left interest rates unchanged, but struck a constructive tone. This will bode well for cable, beyond near-term volatility. Third, our short USD/JPY position was stopped out amid the dollar rally. We are standing aside for now, but will reopen this trade later. Finally, a rise in volatility will boost the dollar, but also benefit short AUD/CAD positions. We are already short the AUD/MXN, but short AUD/CAD could be more profitable should market turmoil persist (Chart I-14).   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see the Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, titled “2021 Key Views: Tradeable Themes,” dated December 4, 2020. 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Currency In-Depth Report, titled “Will The RMB Continue To Appreciate?,” dated February 26, 2021. Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 Most data out of the US has been robust: Both PPI, import and export prices were in line with expectations for February. The PPI ex food and energy came in at 2.5% year-on-year. Empire manufacturing was robust at 17.4 in March, versus 12.1 last month. Housing starts and building permits came in a nudge below expectations in February, at 1421K and 1682K. The one disappointment was retail sales, which fell 3.3% year-on-year in February. The DXY index rose slightly this week. The FOMC remained dovish, without any revision to its median path of interest rate hikes. The markets disliked its reticence on rising long-bond yields. As such, equities are rolling over as yields continue to creep higher. Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar? - February 19, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 Recent data from the euro area are mending: The ZEW expectations survey rose to 74 in March, from 69.6. For Germany, the improvement was better at 76.6 from 71.2. The trade balance remained at a healthy €24.2bn euro surplus in January. The euro fell by 0.6% amidst broad dollar strength. With the ECB committed to cap the rise in yields and rise in peripheral spreads, relative interest rates will move against the euro. Sentiment remains elevated, and so a healthy reset is necessary to wash out stale longs. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 The Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 Recent data from Japan has been mixed: Core machinery orders grew 1.5% year-on-year in January. Exports fell by 4.5% in January, while imports rose by 11.8%. This has shifted the adjusted trade balance to a deficit of ¥38.7bn yen. The Japanese yen fell by 0.4% against the US dollar this week, and remains the weakest G10 currency this year. Rising yields have seen Japanese investors stampede into overseas markets such as the UK, while pushing down the yen. We remain yen bulls, but will stand aside for now since it could still go lower in the short term. Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 Recent data out of the UK have been weak: Industrial production and construction output fell by 4.9% and 3% year-on-year in January. Monthly GDP growth fell by 2.9% in January. Rightmove house prices rose 2.7% year-on-year in March. The pound fell by 0.4% against the dollar this week. It however remains the best performing currency this year. The BoE kept monetary policy on hold, but struck a hawkish tone as vaccination progresses, giving way to higher mobility in the summer. We remain long sterling via the euro. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 Recent data in Australia was robust: Home prices rose by 3.6% in the fourth quarter. Modest home appreciation is welcome news by the RBA, given high-flying prices in its antipodean neighbor. The employment report was solid. There were 88.7K new jobs in February, all full-time. This pushed down the unemployment rate to 5.8% from 6.4%. The Aussie fell by 0.4% this week. The Australian recovery is fast approaching escape velocity, forcing the RBA to contain a more pronounced rise in long-bond yields. We remain long AUD/NZD. In the very near term, a market shakeout could pull the Aussie lower, favoring short AUD/CAD positions.  Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields & The Currency? - January 20, 2021 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 Recent data out of New Zealand was weak: Credit card spending fell by 10.6% year-on-year in January. Q4 GDP contracted by 1% both year-on-year and quarter-on-quarter. The current account remains in deficit at NZ$-2.7bn for Q4. The New Zealand dollar fell by 0.9% against the US dollar this week. The new rule to include house prices in setting monetary policy will be a logistical nightmare for the RBNZ. In trying to achieve financial stability, the RBNZ will have to forego some economic stability, especially if the country still requires accommodative settings. Confused messaging could also introduce currency volatility. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 There was a data dump in Canada this week: The economy added 259.2K jobs in February. This pushed down the unemployment rate from 9.4% to 8.2%. Wages also increased by 4.3% in February. The Nanos confidence index rose from 60.5 to 62.7 in the week of March 12. Housing starts rose by 246K in February, as expected. The BoC’s preferred measures of CPI came in close to the 2% target. Headline CPI was weaker at 1.1% in February. The Canadian dollar rose by 0.3% against the US dollar this week. The correction in oil prices could set the tone for the near-term performance of the loonie, despite robust domestic conditions. However, at the crosses, CAD should have upside. We took profits on our short CAD/NOK position this week. Report Links: Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? - February 12, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 CHF Technicals 1 CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 CHF Technicals 2 CHF Technicals 2 There was scant data out of Switzerland this week: Producer and import prices fell by 1.1% year-on-year in February. February CPI releases also suggest the economy remains in deflation. The Swiss franc fell by 0.4% against the US dollar this week. Safe-haven currencies continue to be sold as yields rise, making the Swiss franc the worst performing currency this year after the yen. This is welcome news for the SNB.  We have been long EUR/CHF on this expectation, and recommend investors to stick with this trade. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 There was scant data out of Norway this week: The trade balance remained in surplus of NOK 25.1bn in February. The Norges bank kept interest rates on hold at 0%. The NOK fell by 1.2% against the dollar this week. The trigger was the selloff in oil prices. However, with the Norges bank signaling a rate hike later this year, placing it ahead of its G10 peers, there is little scope for the NOK to fall durably. Inflation in Norway is above target, and higher mobility later this year will benefit oil-rich Norway. We are long the Norwegian krone as a high-conviction bet against both the dollar and the euro. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 Swedish data releases were a slight miss: Headline CPI came in at 1.4% in February. Core CPI came in at 1.2%. The unemployment rate remained at 8.9% in February. The Swedish krona fell by 0.8% against US dollar this week. Sweden is struggling to contain another wave of the pandemic and this has weighed on the currency this year. The saving grace for the economy has been a global manufacturing cycle that continues humming. Until Sweden is able to get past the pandemic, the currency will continue trading in a stop-and-go pattern. We remain long the SEK on cheap valuations and as a play on the global industrial cycle. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Highlights Duration: The Fed will revise up its interest rate forecasts at this week’s meeting, but the new forecasts will remain dovish compared to current market pricing. This could pressure bond yields down in the near-term. However, any downside in yields could prove temporary given that economic growth continues to beat expectations. Corporates: The macro environment of strong economic growth and accommodative monetary policy will persist for some time yet. In this environment, bond portfolio managers should minimize exposure to interest rate risk and maximize exposure to credit risk. In particular, a strategy of favoring high-yield corporate bonds over investment grade corporate bonds makes a lot of sense. Inflation & TIPS: Core inflation will be relatively strong during the remainder of 2021, with 12-month core PCE likely ending the year close to the Fed’s 2% target. Investors should remain overweight TIPS versus nominal Treasuries and continue to hold inflation curve flatteners and real yield curve steepeners. Expect Some Pushback From The Fed The continuing bond market selloff will be the top item on the agenda at this week’s FOMC meeting. Meeting participants will debate whether the sharp rise in long-maturity bond yields represents a threat to the economic recovery and Chair Powell will no doubt be peppered with questions on the topic at his post-meeting press conference, as he was when he sat down with a Wall Street Journal reporter two weeks ago.1 But for our part, we’ll be focused more on the front-end of the yield curve this week. Specifically, we’ll be looking to see whether the Fed revises up its funds rate forecasts by enough to justify current market pricing or whether it uses its forecasts to push back against the bond bears. The market’s fed funds rate expectations have moved a lot since the Fed last published its own forecasts in December (Chart 1on page 1). In December, the market was priced for fed funds liftoff in December 2023 and then only one more 25 basis point rate hike through the end of 2024. Now, the market is looking for liftoff in January 2023, followed by two more rate hikes before the end of that year. Chart 1Market Priced For 3 Rate Hikes Before The End Of 2023 Market Priced For 3 Rate Hikes Before The End Of 2023 Market Priced For 3 Rate Hikes Before The End Of 2023 As for the Fed, at last December’s meeting only 5 out of 17 FOMC participants anticipated raising rates before the end of 2023. It’s logical to expect the Fed to increase its rate expectations this week as the economic outlook is much brighter than it was at the time of the December FOMC meeting. Back in December, we still didn’t know whether the Democrats would win control of the Senate, enabling passage of President Biden’s $1.9 trillion stimulus bill. Doubts also remained about how quickly COVID vaccination would occur. Chart 2The Data Can't Disappoint The Data Can't Disappoint The Data Can't Disappoint The Fed will probably respond to these pro-growth developments by revising up its interest rate expectations, but we doubt that these revisions will bridge all of the gap with the market. Employment and inflation both remain far from where the Fed would like them to be, and the Fed will want to send the message that its policy stance remains highly accommodative. We could see the Fed’s median fed funds rate forecast shifting to call for one rate hike by the end of 2023, but not the three currently priced into the yield curve. In this scenario, the Fed’s pushback could prompt some near-term downside in bond yields. The question is how long the Fed’s messaging will impact the market in the current environment of surging economic growth. The Economic Surprise Index shows that the economic data can’t even manage to disappoint expectations, a development that usually coincides with rising yields (Chart 2). Bottom Line: The Fed will revise up its interest rate forecasts at this week’s meeting, but the new forecasts will remain dovish compared to current market pricing. This could pressure bond yields down in the near-term. However, any downside in yields could prove temporary given that economic growth continues to surpass expectations. We maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration and we will continue to use our Checklist (see last week’s report)2 to determine an appropriate time to increase duration.   The Spread Buffer In Corporate Credit Treasury yields troughed last August, and since then returns have been hard to come by in the US bond market. This is not too surprising. Fixed income is hardly the ideal asset class for a reflationary economic environment. However, there are steps a bond portfolio manager can take to maximize profits in an economic environment that is characterized by (i) rapid economic growth, (ii) rising inflation expectations and (iii) monetary policy that remains accommodative. Specifically, bond investors should minimize their exposure to interest rate risk (i.e. duration) and maximize exposure to credit risk. That is, shy away from long duration assets with little-to-no credit spread and favor shorter duration assets where the credit spread makes up a large proportion of the yield. This sort of strategy has worked well since the August trough in Treasury yields. The Investment Grade Corporate Bond Index – an index with relatively long duration and a small credit spread – is down 4.08% since August 4th (Chart 3). Notably the worst returns have come from the highest rated credit tiers where the credit spread makes up a smaller proportion of the yield. Notice that Aaa-rated Corporates have lost 9% while Baa-rated bonds are only down 2.52% (Table 1). In contrast, total returns from the High-Yield Index – an index with lower duration where the credit spread makes up a much larger proportion of the yield – have held up nicely. The overall index has returned 6.65% since August 4th with the lowest credit tiers once again performing best. Chart 3Move Down In ##br##Quality Move Down In Quality Move Down In Quality Table 1Corporate Bond Returns Since The Aug. 4 2020 Trough In Treasury Yields Limit Rate Risk, Load Up On Credit Limit Rate Risk, Load Up On Credit Performance for both the Investment Grade and High-Yield indexes improves if we look at excess returns relative to a duration-matched position in Treasury securities. That is, if we hedge out the interest rate risk and focus purely on spread movements. Though even here, we find that the lowest rated credits with the widest spreads deliver the best returns. If we assume that this reflationary economic environment persists for the next 12 months, can we expect the same low rate risk/high credit risk strategy to succeed? One way to investigate this question is to look at the 12-month breakeven yields and spreads for different segments of the corporate bond market (Table 2). The 12-month breakeven yield is the yield increase that the index can tolerate over the next 12 months before it delivers negative total returns. Similarly, the 12-month breakeven spread is the spread widening that an index can tolerate over the next 12 months before it delivers negative excess returns (where excess returns are measured versus a duration-matched position in Treasury securities). Table 2Corporate Bond 12-Month Breakeven Yields And Spreads Limit Rate Risk, Load Up On Credit Limit Rate Risk, Load Up On Credit The overall Investment Grade Corporate Index, for example, has an average maturity of 12 years and a 12-month breakeven yield of 27 bps. This means that, if we assume that the investment grade corporate bond spread holds steady, then the odds of the index delivering negative total returns over the next 12 months are the same as the odds of a 12-year Treasury yield rising by more than 27 bps. An assumption of flat investment grade corporate bond spreads seems reasonable given that spreads are already historically tight (Chart 4). Moving down in quality within investment grade helps a bit, the Baa credit tier has a 12-month breakeven yield of 30 bps compared to a 12-month breakeven yield of 21 bps for the Aa credit tier. A similar benefit is observed if we look at the 12-month breakeven spread: 14 bps for Baa and only 6 bps for Aa. However, the real improvement comes when we move out of investment grade entirely and into high-yield. To calculate fair breakeven yields and spreads for high-yield bonds we need to incorporate default loss expectations. The current macro environment of strong growth and accommodative monetary policy should lead to relatively low default losses. That being the case, we assume a base case of a 2.5% default rate and 40% recovery rate for the next 12 months. Using this assumption, we calculate a 12-month breakeven yield of 75 bps for the High-Yield Index and a 12-month breakeven spread of 46 bps. This represents a significant extra buffer compared to what is offered by even the lowest investment grade credit tier. Not only that, but the 75 bps 12-month breakeven yield from the High-Yield Index looks even better when we consider that high-yield spreads are not as overvalued relative to history as investment grade spreads, and have more room to tighten as the economic recovery progresses (Chart 5). Chart 4Investment Grade Valuation Investment Grade Valuation Investment Grade Valuation Chart 5High-Yield Valuation High-Yield Valuation High-Yield Valuation Table 2 also presents two other default loss scenarios, and it shows that we need fairly pessimistic default loss expectations to make high-yield breakeven yields and spreads comparable to what is offered by investment grade bonds. Even if we assume a 4.5% default rate and 30% recovery rate for the next 12 months, we still get a 32 bps breakeven yield from the High-Yield Index, comparable to what we get from the Baa credit tier. Bottom Line: The macro environment of strong economic growth and accommodative monetary policy will persist for some time yet. In this environment, bond portfolio managers should minimize exposure to interest rate risk and maximize exposure to credit risk. In particular, a strategy of favoring high-yield corporate bonds over investment grade corporate bonds makes a lot of sense.                           Inflation & The Inverted TIPS Curve Chart 6Inflation Will Peak In April Inflation Will Peak In April Inflation Will Peak In April February’s Consumer Price Index was released last week, and it showed that core CPI managed only a 0.1% increase on the month. This caught some off guard given that “rising inflation” has become a popular market narrative during the past few months. Our view is that core inflation will rise significantly between now and the end of the year, and that 12-month core PCE inflation will end the year close to the Fed’s 2% target. We arrive at this view for three reasons. First, base effects will lead to a large jump in 12-month inflation measures in March and April. Chart 6 illustrates the paths for both 12-month core PCE and core CPI assuming modest 0.15% monthly gains between now and the end of the year. Because the severely negative inflation prints from last March and April are about to fall out of the rolling 12-month sample, 12-month core inflation is on the cusp of rising to levels considerably above the Fed’s target. This means that after 12-month inflation peaks in April, the question will be how much it declines during the remainder of the year. One reason why we think it might not fall that dramatically is that bottlenecks are already emerging in both the goods and services sectors, and prices will come under upward pressure as the economy re-opens and consumers are encouraged to deploy some of the excess savings they’ve built up during the pandemic. Producer prices are currently surging, as are survey responses about price pressures from the NFIB Small Business Survey and the ISM Manufacturing and Non-Manufacturing Surveys (Chart 7). Finally, shelter is the largest component of core inflation (accounting for almost 40% of core CPI). It would be difficult for overall core inflation to rise significantly without at least some participation from shelter. With that in mind, we now see evidence that shelter inflation will soon put in a trough (Chart 8). Chart 7Price Pressures Are Building Price Pressures Are Building Price Pressures Are Building Chart 8Shelter Inflation About To Bottom Shelter Inflation About To Bottom Shelter Inflation About To Bottom The permanent unemployment rate and Apartment Market Tightness Index are both tightly correlated with shelter inflation. The permanent unemployment rate has stopped climbing and will move lower during the next few months as increased vaccination rates allow for more of the economy to re-open (Chart 8, panel 2). The Apartment Market Tightness Index is also well off its lows, and it will soon jump above the 50 line, joining the Sales Volume Index (Chart 8, panel 3). Consumers are also increasingly seeing signs of rental inflation. A question from the New York Fed’s Survey of Consumer Expectations showed a very sharp increase in expected rents in February (Chart 8, bottom panel). Chart 9Stay Long TIPS Stay Long TIPS Stay Long TIPS As for TIPS strategy, we are hesitant to back away from our overweight TIPS/underweight nominal Treasuries position with inflation on the cusp of a such a significant move higher, especially with the 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate still below where the Fed would like it to be (Chart 9). We are also not yet willing to exit the inflation curve flattening and real yield curve steepening positions that we have been recommending since last April, even though the 5/10 TIPS breakeven inflation slope has become inverted (Chart 9, bottom panel).3  With the Fed targeting an overshoot of its 2% inflation target, an inverted inflation curve is more natural than a positively sloped one. This is because the Fed will be trying to hit its inflation target from above, rather than from below. Further, the short-end of the inflation curve is more sensitive to the actual inflation data than the long-end. This means that the curve could flatten even more as inflation rises in the coming months. Bottom Line: Core inflation will be relatively strong during the remainder of 2021, with 12-month core PCE likely ending the year close to the Fed’s 2% target. Investors should remain overweight TIPS versus nominal Treasuries and continue to hold inflation curve flatteners and real yield curve steepeners.   Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 For more details on the implications of what Powell said in this interview please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “No Panic From Powell”, dated March 9, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “No Panic From Powell”, dated March 9, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Negative Oil, The Zero Lower Bound And The Fisher Equation”, dated April 28, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification