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Currencies In-Depth

Highlights The Norwegian economy will continue to grow above trend for the next two years or so. Norwegian inflation will firm up. Among Advanced Economies, the Norges Bank will lead the way in terms of policy tightening; however, money markets already embed this view. Nonetheless, the Norwegian krone remains an appealing value play, a result of its pronounced pro-cyclicality. USD/NOK and EUR/NOK will depreciate over the next 24 months. Norwegian equities face structural headwinds, but they should outperform their US and Euro Area counterparts. However, Norwegian stocks will lag behind Swedish equities. Buy Norwegian stocks / sell Dutch ones. Feature Norway remains an example of how to handle the pandemic successfully. Since the onset of the COVID-19 crisis, Norway has registered the lowest rate of infections per capita, in part aided by its early decision to close its borders. Fiscal stimulus was prompt and finely tailored to the sectors most in need of emergency funds. Moreover, the Norges Bank cut interest rates to zero for the first time since its founding in 1816. As nations across the world coordinated monetary and fiscal accommodation during the pandemic, Nordic economies had already mastered this paradigm. Thus, counter-cyclical buffers worked like a charm in Norway. For example, the contraction in Norwegian GDP was the most subdued within the G10, and the recovery is also impressive. Today, Norwegian GDP is 2% above pre-pandemic levels, inflation is near the target rate of 2%, and the central bank will be among the first to lift interest rates. In this Special Report, we explore whether or not conditions remain ripe for strong performances by both Norwegian equities and the NOK. In our view, the global environment and the continued economic strength of Norway will create potent tailwind for Norwegian assets over the coming two years or so. A Robust Economic Outlook The Norwegian economy is set to continue growing at a robust above-trend pace and inflation will remain above the Norges Bank’s target. The Pandemic Norway has moved largely beyond the COVID-19 pandemic. The number of cases per 100 is a mere 2, which compares favorably to the US at 10, Germany at 4, France at 8, or its neighbor Sweden at 10. Norway closed its borders on March 12, 2020, to limit the entry of the virus on its territory, as health authorities opted for rapid containment measures. As a direct result of these policies, Norwegian consumers and workers gained greater peace of mind in their day-to-day dealings, and economic activity recovered rapidly. This process led to Norway’s GDP contracting by only 4.6% in Q2 2020, which compares favorably to contractions of 19.5% in the UK, 9.7% in Germany and 7.8% in Sweden. Norway’s vaccination campaign is also gaining momentum. At first, the country’s inoculation performance lagged. However, Norwegian procurement of vaccines has improved, and the pace of inoculation is accelerating (Chart 1, top panel). The result is that the share of the population that is fully vaccinated is inching toward 20% and accelerating. Authorities expect greater relaxation of containment measures this summer, which will allow mobility to improve (Chart 2). The local service sector will therefore receive a welcome fillip. Chart 1Norway's Vaccination Progress Norway's Vaccination Progress Norway's Vaccination Progress Chart 2Mobility Will Pick Up Mobility Will Pick Up Mobility Will Pick Up   Fiscal Policy Fiscal policy remains an important complement to national health directives. During the crisis, the fiscal deficit reached 3.4% of GDP, which generated a fiscal thrust of 6% of GDP. Moreover, the drawdown from the Norwegian Oil Fund amounted to 12.5% of GDP. These provided targeted supports to industries, such as tourism and transport, while a furlough scheme protected household income. Thus, these programs effectively alleviated the pain on the sectors of the economy most affected by the pandemic. Going forward, Norway will also suffer from one of the smallest fiscal drag in the G10 for the remainder of 2021 and 2022 (Chart 3). Chart 3Norway's Advantageous Fiscal Backdrop Norway's Advantageous Fiscal Backdrop Norway's Advantageous Fiscal Backdrop The Banking System The credit channel in Norway remains open and fluid, as a resilient banking system withstood the economic fallout from the pandemic. According to the Norges Bank, credit losses have been limited; they peaked at 1% of lending and are already declining. Additionally, banks have restricted exposure to the sectors hardest hit by the pandemic, such as travel and tourism, personal services, and transport (Chart 4). Moreover, the profitability of the banking system decreased, as global yields fell last year, but RoE remains around 10% and net interest margins hover near 2.5% and 1.5% for non-financial corporate loans and households lending, respectively. Crucially, the Norwegian banking system sports a regulatory Tier-1 capital-to-risk weighted-assets ratio of 20%, well above Basel III criteria or that of the Eurozone banks (Chart 4, bottom panel). Chart 4Norwegian Banks Are Faring Well The Norwegian Method The Norwegian Method Household Consumption Household consumption will remain a source of strength over the coming quarters. Household net worth is growing robustly as a result of the rapid appreciation of house prices across the country (Chart 5, top panel). Moreover, the share of debt held by households with a high debt-to-income ratio or a low debt-servicing capacity remains low, which suggests household balance sheets are firming (Chart 5, middle panel). Employment is also recovering well. After peaking at 9.5% in March 2020, the headline unemployment rate fell to 3.3% last month (Chart 5, bottom panel). Meanwhile, the number of employed workers bottomed in July 2020 and has been steadily recovering ever since. The only blemish is that, as of Q4 2020, the rate of underemployment among the prime-age population remains at 3.5%, which is somewhat elevated by national standards. This balance sheet and employment backdrop confirms the Norges Bank’s projection: the household savings rate will decline significantly over the coming two years (Chart 6, top panel). Hence, the marked pick-up in consumer confidence should translate into a major recovery in real consumption growth (Chart 6, bottom panel). Nonetheless, the service sector will likely be the main beneficiary of this improvement, as real retail sales are already well above their historical trend Chart 5Positive Household Fundamentals Positive Household Fundamentals Positive Household Fundamentals Chart 6Consumption Will Improve Further Consumption Will Improve Further Consumption Will Improve Further   Net Exports Chart 7Years Of Underinvestment In Oil & Gas The Norwegian Method The Norwegian Method The external sector will create another tailwind for the Norwegian economy. Prior to the pandemic, 71% of Norway’s exports flowed to Europe. Moreover, oil and gas represented 53% of shipments, and cyclically sensitive exports amounted to 74% of total or 24% of GDP. Thus, even if China’s economy slows, Europe’s economic re-opening will raise the Norwegian trade balance, which sits near a multi-decade low.1 Moreover, greater mobility in Europe and around the world will elevate demand for petroleum. In light of the tepid pace of investment in global oil and gas extraction over the past five years, our commodity strategists forecast further oil and gas price appreciation2 (Chart 7), which will boost Norway’s terms of trade. The national income will therefore expand smartly, especially because oil and gas shipments will increase thanks to growing production from the new Johan Sverdrup field. Capital Spending This context suggests that capital spending, which accounts for 26% of Norway’s output (Chart 8), will constitute an important tailwind to domestic activity. Capex is even more important to the Norwegian economy than it is for other Nordic economies or even Germany (Chart 9). Chart 8Capital Spending Is Important For Norway Capital Spending Is Important For Norway Capital Spending Is Important For Norway Chart 9The Capex Share Of GDP Is Higher In Norway The Capex Share Of GDP Is Higher In Norway The Capex Share Of GDP Is Higher In Norway Norwegian capex is highly cyclical. Capital formation tracks our BCA Global Nowcast indicator (a combination of high-frequency economic and financial variables that proxy the global industrial cycle), as well as the domestic manufacturing PMI. These indicators suggest that capex should increase by 10-15% in the coming quarters (Chart 10). A Norges Bank survey of capex intentions, which are firming, corroborates this view. Chart 10Capex Will Recover Strongly Capex Will Recover Capex Will Recover Strongly Capex Will Recover Capex Will Recover Strongly Capex Will Recover On the energy front, the new Johan Sverdrup oil and gas discovery marks a major turnaround in capital spending for Norway. According to the Norges Bank, real petroleum investment will increase from approximately NOK 175bn in 2021 to NOK 198bn by 2024 (Chart 11). Moreover, years of global underinvestment in oil extraction suggests Norway will gain market share in exports as production accelerates. Total petroleum production is slated to increase by 10% over the next 4 years. More importantly, by 2025, over 50% of production from Norwegian oil fields will be natural gas and associated liquids (Chart 12). Demand for natural gas and NGLs will be more inelastic than demand for crude because the latter is threatened by the rising electrification of vehicles, while the former faces more sustainable demand as China, among others, moves to replace its coal polluting plants with cleaner alternatives. Chart 11Real Petroleum Investment Will Increase By 13% In 2024 The Norwegian Method The Norwegian Method Chart 12Gas Production Is Rising In Importance The Norwegian Method The Norwegian Method Inflation This positive economic outlook suggests that Norwegian inflation will remain above the central bank’s target of 2%. Already, headline CPI stands at 3%. Meanwhile, core inflation is at 2%, but it is decelerating. However, this slowdown should be temporary. According to a Norges Bank survey, both long-term and near-term inflation expectations among economists, business leaders, and households are rising, which indicates that a deflationary mentality has not taken root in Norway. Moreover, wage expectations have quickly normalized following the trauma of 2020 (Chart 13). Capacity constraints further reinforce the notion that inflation has upside. The Norges Bank Regional Network survey shows that capacity and labor supply constraints are tighter than they were in the 2014 to 2017 period, when inflation averaged 2.3% and the policy rate fell to 0.5% (Chart 14). Moreover, according to the same survey, selling prices are also stronger than they were during the 2016 oil collapse (Chart 14, bottom panel) Chart 13No Signs Of A Deflation Mentality No Signs Of A Deflation Mentality No Signs Of A Deflation Mentality Chart 14Capacity Doesn’t Point To Falling Inflation The Norwegian Method The Norwegian Method Bottom Line: The Norwegian economy will continue to grow above its trend rate of 1.5%, at least through to 2022. The acceleration in vaccination numbers will allow a reopening of the economy, while the fiscal drag will be limited and the banking system remains resilient. The outlook for households remains positive and employment is firming, which will lead to stronger consumption. Meanwhile, exports and capex have significant upside ahead. As a result, we anticipate Norwegian inflation will remain above target for the foreseeable future. The Norges Bank Will Lead The Pack The Norges Bank’s response to the pandemic was swift and all encompassing: It cut interest rates in the spring of 2020 from 1.5% to zero, the lowest level since the formation of the bank in 1816. It set up extraordinary F-loans at very generous interest rates, to provide ample liquidity to commercial banks. The longest maturity loan of 12 months had a prevailing interest rate of just 30 basis points. It also relaxed collateral requirements for these loans. It introduced swap lines with the Federal Reserve to provide US dollar funding to Norwegian firms. Since then, our Norges Bank monitor has rebounded powerfully from very depressed levels, which suggests that emergency policy settings have become unnecessary. Moreover, the Norwegian Central Bank Monitor towers above that of other G10 countries, which indicates that the Norges Bank should lead the pack in normalizing policy rates (Chart 15). Chart 15The Norges Bank Should Lead The Tightening Cycle The Norges Bank Should Lead The Tightening Cycle The Norges Bank Should Lead The Tightening Cycle Chart 16The Growth Component Of Our Monitor Has Exploded Higher The Growth Component Of Our Monitor Has Exploded Higher The Growth Component Of Our Monitor Has Exploded Higher The Growth Component Of Our Monitor Has Exploded Higher The Growth Component Of Our Monitor Has Exploded Higher The biggest improvement in our Norges Bank Monitor comes from its growth component, which has surged to its highest levels in over two decades. This improvement surpasses those that followed the global financial crisis and the burst of the dot-com bubble (Chart 16). In essence, the growth component of the Monitor signals that the Norwegian economy has achieved escape velocity. Norway’s robust economic turnover is increasing the velocity of money, which points to the need for higher interest rates. Money velocity can be regarded as the equilibrating mechanism between money supply and nominal output, from the classical Fisher equation MV=PQ (where M is the money supply, P is prices, Q is real output, and V is money velocity). Thus, rising money velocity (when PQ expands faster than M) signifies that the economy needs higher interest rates to encourage savings. In Norway’s case, the velocity of money is surging through 2021, which confirms that the Norges Bank may depart from its current emergency policy setting (Chart 17). Chart 17Money Velocity Is Rising In Norway Money Velocity Is Rising In Norway Money Velocity Is Rising In Norway The OIS curve already reflects this reality. At the last central bank meeting in March, Governor Øystein Olsen stated that interest rates would increase in the second half of this year. Already, the central bank’s balance sheet has been expanding more slowly than that of its peers (Chart 18). In response to this messaging, investors now expect the Norges Bank to lead the Fed, ECB, Riksbank, and BoE in lifting interest rates (Chart 19). Chart 18The Norges Bank's Balance Sheet Impulse Has Rolled Over The Norges Bank's Balance Sheet Impulse Has Rolled Over The Norges Bank's Balance Sheet Impulse Has Rolled Over Chart 19Money Markets Already Expect The Norges Bank To Tighten First Money Markets Already Expect The Norges Bank To Tighten First Money Markets Already Expect The Norges Bank To Tighten First The Norges Bank must nonetheless manage a tough balancing act. Lifting rates too soon or too fast could torpedo the recovery, if the currency and bond yields increase too rapidly and tighten financial conditions in a disruptive fashion. However, not removing accommodation fast enough could lead to economic overheating. Bottom Line: The Norges Bank will be the first DM central bank to increase interest rates, most likely as soon as this September. The OIS curve already reflects this outlook; it prices in over 6 hikes by the end of 2023, more than any other DM money market curve. This pricing seems appropriate; thus, Norwegian money markets offer no compelling investment opportunity.  Norway’s Problem: Sagging Productivity Both the OECD and the IMF view weak productivity growth as Norway’s biggest long-term hurdle. Despite the bright economic outlook for the next two years or so, we agree. Since 2004-2005, Norwegian productivity has sharply decelerated. At the turn of the millennium, the Norwegian’s mainland labor productivity was growing at 2.5%, or a percentage point above the average of the OECD. Today, labor productivity growth is a paltry 0.5%, placing Norway last among Nordic economies (Chart 20, left panel). Total factor productivity tells a similar story. After recording the fastest productivity expansion among G10 nation from 1990 to 2005, Norway’s TFP declined 11% and is now situated at the same level as it was in 1995. This deterioration is comparable to Italy’s TFP (Chart 20, left panel). Chart 20From Best To Last The Norwegian Method The Norwegian Method According to the most recent OECD country report, one of the roots of Norway’s productivity problem is an absence of low-hanging fruit. Norway sports one of the highest GDP per hours worked in the world. This nation essentially sits near the global productivity frontier. Its product market regulations are generally not onerous (Chart 21, top panel). Likewise, more than 60% of both the service sector and the manufacturing sector’s workforce use ICT tools, which is at the highest level among OECD countries. Additionally, the jobs at risk of a negative impact from automation or technological changes represent a significantly smaller share of total employment than in most OECD nations (Chart 21, bottom panel). Chart 21Doing Things Right The Norwegian Method The Norwegian Method The Dutch Disease, the hollowing out of the manufacturing sector due to a capital hungry resource sector, is the second root of Norway’s productivity problem. Historically and across countries, manufacturing is the sector that records the greatest productivity gains. However, since 1979, the oil and gas and the housing sectors have experienced the largest capital investments expansion in Norway. Meanwhile, the share of capex generated by the manufacturing sector has declined to a paltry 5% (Chart 22). Moreover, oil and gas represents a larger share of capex than the contribution of its gross value added to GDP. The same holds true for housing, whose share of capex doubled over the past 27 years. Meanwhile, manufacturing’s share of capex has consistently lagged its representation in GDP, which has steadily declined (Chart 23). These are the typical symptoms of the Dutch Disease; as long as oil prices remain in a secular decline, any cyclical improvement in productivity will prove to be transitory. Chart 22The Dutch Disease, Part I The Dutch Disease, Part I The Dutch Disease, Part I Chart 23The Dutch Disease, Part II The Dutch Disease, Part II The Dutch Disease, Part II Bottom Line: Despite an upbeat cyclical outlook, Norway’s deteriorating productivity trend constitutes a formidable structural headwind. There are no easy solutions, because Norway already sits near the global productivity frontier. Moreover, Norway suffers from a pronounced case of the Dutch Disease. For decades, the oil and gas sector has absorbed a share of capital that is greater than its role in the economy, starving the productivity-generating manufacturing sector from investments. With the oil sector entering a structural decline due to ESG concerns, this trend will not change without a significant change in the allocation of the Norwegian capital stock. Investment Implications The cyclical outlook (12 to 24 months) for the Norwegian currency and stock market remains appealing. The NOK’s Outlook Chart 24The Krone Is Undervalued On A PPP Basis The Krone Is Undervalued On A PPP Basis The Krone Is Undervalued On A PPP Basis While money markets do not offer any compelling opportunities to play the Norges Bank’s hiking cycle, the krone remains attractive from a cyclical perspective. Over the next 12-18 months, the NOK should appreciate compared to both the US dollar and the euro on the back of four key pillars. On a purchasing power parity basis, the Norwegian krone is undervalued by 14%. This compares favorably with both the euro, which is undervalued by 12%, and the US dollar, which is overvalued by 12% (Chart 24). More importantly, our PPP model adjusts the consumption basket across countries, allowing for a more apples-to-apples comparison. The Norwegian krone is highly procyclical and will benefit from any improvement in the global backdrop. The performance of NOK/USD, NOK/EUR, and NOK/JPY moves in lockstep with global equities (Chart 25). Norwegian equities have greatly underperformed global bourses over the last decade, but, as we argue below, there is some room for mean reversion. Inflows into the Norwegian equity market should benefit the krone (Chart 26). Chart 25NOK Is A Procyclical ##br##Currency NOK Is A Procyclical Currency NOK Is A Procyclical Currency Chart 26NOK Moves With A Rerating In Norwegian Shares NOK Moves With A Rerating In Norwegian Shares NOK Moves With A Rerating In Norwegian Shares From a more fundamental perspective, the krone will benefit from positive income flows, given Norway’s large net international investment position (NIIP). In fact, ever since the first Norwegian oil fields began producing light sweet crude in the North Sea in the 1970s, Norway has maintained a structural trade surplus with most of its trading partners. This has allowed the country to build one of the biggest NIIP in the world (Chart 27), trailing only behind Hong Kong and Singapore. This large NIIP generates large income receipts that skew heavily toward equity dividends. This characteristic of the Norwegian balance of payment strengthens the bond between the NOK and global equities. Over the next few years, Norway’s trade balance should also get a boost, not only from rising oil and gas production, but also from an improvement in terms of trade, as we argued above. The trade balance has historically been the biggest driver of cross-border inflows into Norway, and that should remain positive for the basic balance and the NOK (Chart 28) Chart 28Norway's Basic Balance Should Improve Norway Balance Of Payments Norway's Basic Balance Should Improve Norway Balance Of Payments Norway's Basic Balance Should Improve Norway Balance Of Payments Chart 27Norway Has A Large Net International Investment Position Norway Has A Large Net International Investment Position Norway Has A Large Net International Investment Position On a structural basis, however, the Norwegian krone faces challenges. Declining productivity suggests that economic growth in Norway will be more inflationary. This will lower the fair value of the real exchange rate. Therefore, while we are positive on the NOK over the next 18 to 24 months, we will be cognizant not to overstay our welcome. Finally, as for NOK/SEK, the pair should rise as both oil and gas prices remain firm in the near term, but any structural challenges to both oil and/or Norwegian productivity will favor the SEK over the longer term (Chart 29).    Chart 29NOK/SEK Will Track Crude Prices NOK/SEK Will Track Crude Prices NOK/SEK Will Track Crude Prices The Equity Market Outlook Norwegian equities remain challenged as long-term holdings, but they are attractive on a cyclical basis. The poor profitability of Norwegian equities is their main long-term problem. Unlike Swedish stocks, Norwegian shares sport a return on equity in line with that of the Eurozone, not that of the US. Norway’s profit margins are weak and its asset turnover rivals that of the Euro Area (Chart 30). Additionally, the country’s poor productivity performance argues against a sudden reversal in RoEs. Chart 30Norway Is More Like The Eurozone Than Swden Norway Is More Like The Eurozone Than Swden Norway Is More Like The Eurozone Than Swden Sectoral composition creates another structural handicap for the Norwegian market. Oslo overweighs Energy and Financials (Table 1). Energy stocks can experience periodic rallies, but their long-term outlook is bleak in a world moving away from carbon-based power. Meanwhile, financials are also likely to remain structural laggards. The regulatory legacy of the Great Financial Crisis has curtailed leverage, which is depressing the RoE of the banking sector. Greater competition and the emergence of the fintech industry are further undermining fee income. None of these factors will change anytime soon. Table 1Sectoral Breakdown The Norwegian Method The Norwegian Method That being said, Norwegian equities remain a compelling opportunity for the next two years or so, despite their long-term problems. Norwegian stocks have an extremely negative beta to the US dollar. The historical sensitivity of the NOK to the USD in part explains this attribute, the other part being their elevated cyclicality. The dollar is one of the most counter-cyclical currencies in the world; thus, its weakness correlates with strong Norwegian forward earnings, which are heavily influenced by commodity prices and the global industrial cycle. This process also lifts Norwegian stock prices (Chart 31). Hence, BCA’s positive outlook on the global business cycle, as well as our negative stance on the dollar, points to significantly stronger Norwegian share prices.3 The slowdown in China’s economy is one risk that could cause some near-term tremors in Norwegian assets, which investors should use to build positions. In response to Beijing’s efforts to limit systemic risk, the Chinese credit impulse has slowed from 1.1% of GDP to 0.3%, and could flirt with the zero line. The ensuing investment slowdown will weigh on the global industrial sector and cause a temporary pullback in commodity prices. As Chart 32 illustrates, this will be negative for Norwegian equities; historically, following declines in Chinese yields, Norwegian forward earnings and stock prices weaken. However, global energy demand will remain robust even as China slows; therefore, correcting Norwegian equities create a buying opportunity. Chart 31Norwegian Stocks Are A Dollar-Bearish Bet Norwegian Stocks Are A Dollar-Bearish Bet Norwegian Stocks Are A Dollar-Bearish Bet Chart 32A Chinese Slowdown Is A Risk A Chinese Slowdown Is A Risk A Chinese Slowdown Is A Risk Norwegian stocks should also outperform US and Eurozone equities. Nonetheless, Norwegian equities enjoy their greatest appeal against the US benchmark. Norwegian stocks trade at valuation discounts ranging from 38% to 54% compared to their US counterparts. Meanwhile, Norway’s net earnings revisions remain depressed compared to the US. Most importantly, Norwegian stocks are more pro-cyclical and sensitive to EM and global financial conditions than US shares are. Consequently, Oslo outperforms New York when the broad trade-weighted dollar depreciates, EM currencies appreciate, and the global yield curve slope steepens (Chart 33). We expect these trends to intensify over the remainder of the business cycle. Chart 33Oslo Beats New York Oslo Beats New York Oslo Beats New York Norwegian equities are also more responsive than Eurozone equities to global business-cycle oscillations. Norwegian equities outperform those of the Eurozone when the dollar depreciates (Chart 34). Additionally, a simple modelling exercise reveals that rising oil prices and global yields result in higher relative share prices in favor of Norway (Chart 35). Chart 34Norway Outperforms The Eurozone When The Dollar Weakens Norway Outperforms The Eurozone When The Dollar Weakens Norway Outperforms The Eurozone When The Dollar Weakens Chart 35Favor Norway Over ##br##The Euro Area Favor Norway Over The Euro Area Favor Norway Over The Euro Area Sweden is the one market that maintains a hedge over Norway.4 Swedish stocks not only sport a RoE nine percentage point above that of Norway, they are also sensitive to the global business cycle. However, the main advantage of Swedish equities is their sectoral breakdown. Sweden has an enormous overweight in industrials (38% of the benchmark), while Norway greatly overweighs materials. In an environment in which China is likely to decelerate, but global capex and infrastructure spending will remain firm, Sweden’s industrials’ weighting gives it a powerful advantage over its neighbor’s stock market. Finally, we recommend the following high-octane trade: Long Norwegian / short Dutch stocks. The Amsterdam bourse has a 47% allocation to tech stocks and a greater “growth” bias than the S&P 500. This means that the relative performance of Norwegian stocks compared to Dutch equities is even more sensitive to the global business cycle, oil prices, and bond yields. As a result, our simple model incorporating both Brent prices and yields currently sends a strong buy signal in favor of Norway (Chart 36). Chart 36Time To Buy Norway And Sell The Netherlands Time To Buy Norway And Sell The Netherlands Time To Buy Norway And Sell The Netherlands Bottom Line: The NOK will perform strongly against both the USD and the EUR over the coming 18 to 24 months. Norwegian equities are not an appealing long-term bet; however, they will experience significant upside over the coming two years, both in absolute terms and relative to the US and Euro Area stocks. While Oslo is unlikely to outperform Stockholm over this period, we recommend buying Norwegian stocks and selling the Dutch index. Mathieu Savary Chief European Investment Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see European Investment Strategy Report, "A Surprising Dance," dated May 10, 2021. 2 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Report, "OPEC’s 2.0 Production Strategy In Focus," dated May 20, 2021. 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Report, "Explaining Recent Weakness In The US Dollar," dated May 14, 2021. 4 Please see European Investment Strategy Report, "Take A Chance On Sweden," dated May 03, 2021. Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Highlights The kiwi will continue to benefit from a pandemic-free recovery and normalization in monetary policy from the RBNZ. However, the kiwi is becoming expensive according to most of our models. This will begin to impact growth via the trade channel. For the rest of the year, the NZD/USD could hit 75 cents, but will likely underperform other developed market currencies. Feature Chart I-1NZD And Relative Economic Growth NZD AND RELATIVE ECONOMIC GROWTH NZD AND RELATIVE ECONOMIC GROWTH New Zealand has been one of the few countries to get the COVID-19 pandemic under control in short order. Since June of last year, the number of new infections has been practically zero. The vaccination program is lagging most other developed countries, but the authorities expect most citizens will be inoculated by the end of this year. The travel bubble with Australia has opened up the service sector to a recovery that remains the envy of most other developed economies. The New Zealand dollar has responded in tandem with the improvement in domestic conditions (Chart I-1). While the USD is up this year, NZD has still appreciated by about 1% against the dollar. From the March lows last year, the kiwi is up 22%, only trailing the Australian dollar and Norwegian krone within the G10. In this report, we explore the outlook for the kiwi, looking at key drivers such as the pandemic, the commodities boom, and the prospect for monetary policy amidst a hot housing market. In our view, the NZD still faces upside, but less so than other developed market currencies. A Robust Recovery Together with Singapore and Australia, Bloomberg ranks New Zealand as one of the safest places to be during the pandemic. This has allowed the manufacturing PMI in New Zealand to hit fresh highs, easily surpassing very robust activity in the US. Relative economic performance between New Zealand and its trading partners has tended to define the trend in the currency. The services sector is still trailing behind, as most of the world remains under lockdown (Chart I-2). However, a travel bubble has opened up with Australia, and it is fair to assume that service-sector activity is a coiled spring ready to rebound, especially as tourism constitutes a non-negligible share of New Zealand GDP (Chart I-3). Chart I-2A Recovery In Services Underway A RECOVERY IN SERVICES UNDERWAY A RECOVERY IN SERVICES UNDERWAY Chart I-3Tourism Will Boost NZ GDP TOURISM WILL BOOST NZ GDP TOURISM WILL BOOST NZ GDP Employment in New Zealand has already seen a sizeable recovery. The unemployment rate hit 4.9% in December, very close to the Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s (RBNZ) own estimate of NAIRU. Next week’s release should show an even more robust rebound. Inflation remains well contained at 1.5%, but as the economy begins to bump against supply-side constraints, this should change. The quarterly employment survey showed that wages are rising at a 4% clip. Eventually, a labour market that has fully recovered, burgeoning inflationary pressures and an economy open for business will mean the need for the RBNZ to maintain emergency monetary policy settings will be eliminated. A Terms-Of-Trade Boom While the domestic economy has benefited from strong government support, and very accommodative monetary policy settings, the external environment has also provided a gentle tailwind for the New Zealand economy. Over the last few decades, one of the key primary drivers of the NZD exchange rate has been terms of trade. New Zealand’s top exports are predominantly in agricultural commodities. Strong export growth has boosted the trade balance, both in volume and price terms (Chart I-4). An increasing trade balance naturally means that NZDs are being buffeted with demand. China has led the pack in imports from New Zealand vis-à-vis other countries by simple virtue of the fact that the authorities started injecting stimulus much earlier on, which helped ease domestic financing conditions. China is also New Zealand’s biggest export market. While the credit impulse in China is set to slow this year, demand for foodstuffs is less sensitive compared to demand for other higher-beta commodities. This will support New Zealand exports. At the same time, there has been a supply component to the boom in agricultural commodity prices. Adverse weather has impacted the planting season for many agricultural goods. As a result, stock-to-use ratios have begun to roll over, particularly in some of the goods that New Zealand exports (Chart I-5). This is likely to reverse, as farmers take advantage of higher prices and increase productivity. Chart I-4A Terms Of Trade ##br##Boom A TERMS OF TRADE BOOM A TERMS OF TRADE BOOM Chart I-5Falling Stocks Have Boosted Agricultural Prices FALLING STOCKS HAVE BOOSTED AGRICULTURAL PRICES FALLING STOCKS HAVE BOOSTED AGRICULTURAL PRICES In a nutshell, the outperformance of the kiwi has been a combination of supply shocks in the agricultural market, and an economy that has had an impressive rebound. Going forward, the kiwi should continue to do well versus the dollar as economic momentum picks up. The Housing Mandate Housing prices in New Zealand have been on a tear (Chart I-6). As a result, the government has mandated that house price considerations be tied into monetary policy decisions. The direct implication of this is that interest rates in New Zealand are set to increase. In the coming months, the labor market mandate for the RBNZ is about to become a lot tougher, because of the opposing forces between financial and economic stability. Tightening monetary policy too fast and too soon will expose the economy to a potential relapse in growth. But allowing housing prices to continue to become unaffordable for most residents is both politically untenable and economically unsustainable. The end game is likely to be as follows: The RBNZ will be quick to tighten monetary policy on domestic grounds and housing market concerns. This will provide a further boost to the kiwi. Yields in New Zealand are already among the highest in the G10, which will only accelerate with tighter monetary conditions. By the same token, the Chinese economy will likely slow as the credit impulse is peaking. This means New Zealand domestic growth will become more important for the NZD than external conditions. Countries with relatively easier monetary policy will see some benefit. Particularly, the Reserve Bank of Australia might lag the RBNZ. If this eventually benefits the Aussie economy, it might hurt the AUD/NZD cross now, but might make way for fresh long positions later (Chart I-7). Chart I-6A Housing Market Boom A HOUSING MARKET BOOM A HOUSING MARKET BOOM Chart I-7Where Next For AUD/NZD? WHERE NEXT FOR AUD/NZD WHERE NEXT FOR AUD/NZD Historically, housing prices in New Zealand have correlated quite strongly with the exchange rate. If the RBNZ is successful in engineering lower housing prices, it will also succeed in weakening the NZD (Chart I-8). Chart I-8House Prices And The Kiwi HOUSE PRICES AND THE KIWI HOUSE PRICES AND THE KIWI We were stopped out of our long AUD/NZD trade last week for a modest profit of 2.3%. We are standing aside for the time being, but will be buyers of the cross at 1.05. This will likely be realized towards the end of this year when optimism on the kiwi is likely to peak. How High Can The NZD Bounce? Another reason why the rise in the NZD might soon face strong upside resistance is valuation. Usually, a rise in the NZD over a cycle goes uninterrupted until the cross becomes expensive. On this basis, the kiwi might soon peak. Our purchasing power parity (PPP) models point to a 10% overvaluation in the New Zealand dollar (Chart I-9) versus the USD. Chart I-9The NZD Is Expensive THE NZD IS EXPENSIVE THE NZD IS EXPENSIVE One of our favorite metrics for the kiwi’s fair value is its real effective exchange rate relative to its terms of trade. On this basis, the New Zealand dollar is around fair value. On a longer-term real effective exchange rate basis (REER), the kiwi is 7.4% expensive, or 0.7 standard deviation above the mean (Chart I-10). Chart I-10The NZD Is Expensive THE NZD IS EXPENSIVE THE NZD IS EXPENSIVE The equity market in New Zealand looks particularly vulnerable. Heavily weighted in defensive sectors, this bourse will be particularly vulnerable to a rise in yields that will derail potential equity inflows (Chart I-11). Chart I-11Kiwi Stocks Are Expensive KIWI STOCKS ARE EXPENSIVE KIWI STOCKS ARE EXPENSIVE Chart I-12CHF/NZD Could Rise With Volatility CHF/NZD COULD RISE WITH VOLATILITY CHF/NZD COULD RISE WITH VOLATILITY Another opportunity is to buy the CHF/NZD cross, which looks attractive at current levels (Chart I-12). Should markets experience some form of turbulence, the cross will benefit. Meanwhile, CHF/NZD just dipped to the upward sloping trend line that has dictated support levels for this cross since 2007. Thus, we recommend investors initiate a long position in CHF/NZD.   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 The data out of the US were mildly positive this week. Quarter-on-quarter annualized GDP growth came in at 6.4% in Q1, rising from 4.3% in the previous quarter. Initial jobless claims fell to 553K in the week ended April 23, from 566K the previous week. Consumer Confidence for April came in at 121.7 beating the expected 113. The S&P/Case-Shiller House Price Index rose 11.9% year-on-year in February. Fed maintained the target range for the Fed Funds rate at 0 to 0.25%. The US dollar DXY index was flat this week. Although the dollar advanced earlier in the week with treasury yields posting small gains, it weakened on Wednesday ahead of the Fed meeting. Compared to the record-breaking preliminary PMIs of last Friday, milder data this week and the dovish tone of the Fed aren’t helping the downward trend of the dollar. Report Links: Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears - March 19, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar? - February 19, 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 euro area data have been soft. The IFO Business Climate Index inched up only 0.2 points to 96.8 and disappointed expectations of a much more significant increase to 97.8.  The BNB Business Barometer of Belgium surprised to the upside and jumped to a decade high of 4.4 from a revised 1.04. The German GfK Consumer Confidence contracted to -8.8 for May and the French Consumer Confidence stayed the same in April. The euro strengthened by 0.5% against the US dollar this week. The uneven data out of Europe reflects differences in COVID restrictions throughout the region. Tighter measures were announced in some German regions and Belgium is easing restrictions. However, overall, we remain optimistic on the outlook for the entire region as the accelerating vaccination effort should support the economy reopening this summer. We are long EUR/CHF. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 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 The data out of Japan was scant this week. Bank of Japan maintained interest rates at -0.1%. Retail Sales in March grew 5.2% year-on-year, beating forecasts of 4.7%. The Japanese yen weakened by 0.5% this week. Due to the current state of emergency throughout the country, the Bank of Japan is ready to further ease monetary policy as needed and warned of the likelihood for consumption to stay depressed. That said, our intermediate term indicator is hinting at a rebound in the currency. 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 The data out of the UK this week was positive. The Confederation of British Industry (CBI) retail sales volume balance rose to 20 in April from -45 in March, recording the sharpest growth since 2018. The British pound rose by 0.7% against the US dollar this week. The strong retail sales numbers came amidst lockdowns being lifted. While May will continue to see further restrictions eased, cable faces threats from its own success so far this year as well as UK’s recent political turmoil. Also, both the speculative positioning and our intermediate-term indicator are at elevated levels.  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 The data out of Australia have been soft lately. CPI in Q1 rose 0.6% versus Q4 last year, below the expected 0.9%. The year-on-year growth of 1.1% also undershot the 1.4% forecast. Trimmed mean CPI grew 0.3% on the prior quarter and 1.1% versus a year ago, both failing to beat expectations.  The Q1 export price index rose 11.2% over the prior quarter, compared to the 5.5% rise in Q4. The Australian dollar rose by 1% against the US dollar this week. In addition to both CPI measures disappointing to the downside, a foreseeable peak in the commodity market driven by the slowdown in China can also be a downward drag on the currency especially when the sentiment on the Aussie is elevated. We are short AUD/MXN and were stopped out of our long AUD/NZD trade. 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 The data out of New Zealand have been neutral. Trade Balance in March improved by NZD 33M over a month ago and NZD 1690M a year ago.  ANZ business confidence came in at -2 in April, higher than the -4.1 the prior month. The New Zealand dollar strengthened by 1% against the US dollar this week. We discuss the kiwi at length in the front section of this week’s report. The conclusion is that NZD faces near-term upside, but will lag other procyclical currencies over the longer term. 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 The data out of Canada this week continue to be positive. Both Retail Sales and Core Retail Sales in February grew 4.8% over the prior month, comfortably exceeding the expectations of 3.7% and 4% growth, respectively. The Canadian dollar rose 0.8% against the US dollar this week. The loonie reacted positively to the strong retail numbers as it continues its path upward on strong inflation data of recent months and a hawkish Bank of Canada. However, even as the COVID case count appears to have peaked, there remains downside risks of very elevated commodity prices and our intermediate-term indicator still just off a recent peak. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? - February 12, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 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. ZEW expectations for April came in at 68.3, slightly higher than the 66.7 from the prior month. The Swiss franc rose 0.4% against the US dollar this week. While the waning of investors’ sentiment and net speculative positioning may point to some softening in the near term, the recent COVID crisis in India can provide support to this risk-off currency. We are long EUR/CHF. 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 The data out of Norway this week was positive. Core Retail Sales came in unchanged in March versus the prior month, but beat expectations of a 0.9% decline. The Norwegian krone was 0.8% higher against the USD this week. Norway fits the bill in terms of a post-pandemic boom. New COVID-19 cases are under control, the economy is rebounding, oil prices are strong and the central bank is on a path the raise interest rates this year. Being long the NOK is one of our strongest convictions calls in FX. We are long NOK/USD and NOK/EUR. 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 Data out of Sweden this week have been mixed.  The Riksbank maintained the policy rate at 0%. Trade Balance in March came in at SEK4.1B versus SEK6B in the prior month. Retail sales in March grew by 2.6% month-on-month and 9.1% year-on-year, both an improvement versus the prior period. The unemployment rate in March rose to 10% versus 9.7% the prior month. The Swedish Krona strengthened 0.5% against the US dollar this week, continuing its upward momentum throughout April. The recent accommodative signals from the Riksbank meeting were within expectations amidst elevated COVID case counts and restrictions. Despite its commendable gains so far this month, we remain optimistic on this high beta currency as the eurozone recovery and global reflation are in sight. 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 There are tentative signs that US growth outperformance is ebbing. The recovery in the manufacturing sector abroad is already taking leadership from the US. This trend will soon rotate to the service sector. As such, long-term investors should begin to accumulate the euro on weakness. The Canadian economy is improving faster than our February assessment. This suggests the CAD could outperform sooner rather than later. Feature Chart I-1The Euro Drives The DXY Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie The US economy has been the growth outperformer this year. As such, yields have been rising faster in the US and the dollar has caught a bid. Since the start of the year, the DXY index has retraced 2.5% of its yearly losses against developed market currencies. Meanwhile, the rally has been a broad-based one with the euro, yen and Swedish krona taking the brunt of the decline (Chart I-1). Our bias is that growth outperformance will rotate from the US to the rest of the world later this year. This should hurt the dollar and benefit procyclical currencies. This week, we look at the euro and loonie, two currencies that should benefit from this shift. EUR/USD And The Manufacturing Cycle The relationship between bond yields and the economy is circular. Long bond yields can be regarded as a key signaling mechanism about the growth prospects of an economy. At the same time, bond yields directly affect financial conditions, especially when they rise too far too fast. From the point of view of short-term currency forecasting, determining the tipping point at which rising yields become restrictive could be extremely beneficial in forecasting relative economic growth. Chart I-2 shows that whenever the relative bond yield between the US and the euro area rises by 1%, near-term relative growth subsequently tips in favor of the latter, with a lag of about 12 months. This is important since the correlation between EUR/USD and relative growth is quite strong in the short term (Chart I-3). As such, while the rise in yields between the US and the euro area can hurt EUR/USD in the short term, it will begin to benefit relative euro/US growth in the longer term. Chart I-2Relative Bond Yields And The Manufacturing Cycle Relative Bond Yields And The Manufacturing Cycle Relative Bond Yields And The Manufacturing Cycle Chart I-3Economic Data Is Surprising To The Upside In The Euro Area Economic Data Is Surprising To The Upside In The Euro Area Economic Data Is Surprising To The Upside In The Euro Area Bond Flows And Other Market Signals Despite the increase in US Treasury yields, we have not seen higher European purchases of US bonds this year (Chart I-4). During the dollar bull market from 2011 to 2020, there was a direct correlation between rising US yields and higher Treasury purchases. One difference this time around is that other safe-haven bond markets like Canada, Australia, New Zealand and even the UK, are sporting attractive yields today. US yields have not risen much against other G10 countries in aggregate. This will continue to dent the extent to which the euro can fall. On the flipside, the upside to the euro could be quite substantial. From a purchasing parity perspective, the euro can rise 15% just to reset its discount relative to the US. PPP adjustments tend to take several years, but if the US continues to pursue inflationary policies, then by definition, the fair value of the euro will also rise (Chart I-5). Chart I-4Europeans Have Not Been Increasing Treasury Holdings Europeans Have Not Been Increasing Treasury Holdings Europeans Have Not Been Increasing Treasury Holdings Chart I-5The Euro Remains Slightly ##br##Undervalued The Euro Remains Slightly Undervalued The Euro Remains Slightly Undervalued Other cyclical factors also suggest that the euro could experience a coiled-spring rebound. Copper prices have surged this year and the traditional relationship with the euro has been offside (Chart I-6). While copper is benefiting from a move away from carbon towards cleaner electricity, the euro can benefit as well. European economies have decades of experience in renewable technology and could begin to see meaningful inflows into these sectors once investment capital is deployed. This makes the Bloomberg forecast of EUR/USD at 1.23 at the end of 2022 too pessimistic (Chart I-7). Chart I-6The Euro Could Have A Coiled-Spring Rebound Soon The Euro Could Have A Coiled-Spring Rebound Soon The Euro Could Have A Coiled-Spring Rebound Soon Chart I-7Sentiment On The Euro Has Been Slightly Reset Sentiment On The Euro Has Been Slightly Reset Sentiment On The Euro Has Been Slightly Reset Finally, we are short EUR/JPY as a tactical hedge with tight stops at 131. We are also lifting our limit-buy on the EUR/USD from 1.15 to 1.16. The Canadian Recovery Is Accelerating Chart I-8The Canadian Business Survey Outlook Was Encouraging The Canadian Business Survey Outlook Was Encouraging The Canadian Business Survey Outlook Was Encouraging The Canadian recovery is taking shape faster than our February assessment, which the latest Business Outlook Survey corroborated. Both investment intentions and future sales growth were quite strong, with the former hitting a multi-decade high (Chart I-8). Notably: Two-thirds of firms see sales exceeding pre-pandemic levels; most firms stated that the second wave is having less or no impact to sales, compared to the first; and capacity constraints remain high in certain industries, but overall inflationary concerns remain relatively subdued. The robustness of the survey took us by surprise, given that a second wave of infections is raging, and most of the country is under lockdown. That said, the strength in investment spending is becoming a key theme in a global context, suggesting Canada could see significant FDI flows in the coming years. Markets have started pricing in a faster pace of rate hikes in Canada (Chart I-9). This has been a rare occurrence over the last decade and, together with our Global Fixed Income Strategy colleagues, we still believe there is less of a chance that Canada leads the hiking cycle. However, this could change if momentum in the economy allows it to surpass US growth. Chart I-9Markets Are Pricing In Faster Hikes In Canada Markets Are Pricing In Faster Hikes In Canada Markets Are Pricing In Faster Hikes In Canada The IMF estimates that Canadian real GDP growth will be 5% this year and 4.7% next year. Growth could be much stronger than these levels, according to the Bloomberg Nanos Confidence Index (Chart I-10). Chart I-10Canadian GDP On The Mend Canadian GDP On The Mend Canadian GDP On The Mend The employment report has improved tremendously since our February assessment (Chart I-11). Looking at the sub-components of the BoC Monitor, the weakness was centered on economic variables. This is changing, as the Canadian unemployment rate is falling faster than the US unemployment rate (Chart I-12). That is a bullish development for the CAD. Chart I-11The Canadian Jobs Recovery Is Robust The Canadian Jobs Recovery Is Robust The Canadian Jobs Recovery Is Robust Chart I-12Canadian Employment Catching Up To The US Canadian Employment Catching Up To The US Canadian Employment Catching Up To The US The Canadian housing market is heating up. Overall, house prices are up 10% with many cities well exceeding these levels (Chart I-13). The path for Canadian housing prices has been as follows: government support and macro prudential measures leading to a convergence in prices between low- and high-priced cities. Specifically, Vancouver (and to a certain extent, Toronto) are seeing softer pricing growth, while other cities recover. However, as prices start to deviate away from nominal incomes in lower-priced cities, the risk of wider macro prudential measures greatly increases. The second point is crucial, since the rise in Canadian home prices has been more pronounced than in other countries, such as Australia or the US. This means that both rising indebtedness and falling affordability are likely to present a key macro risk to the Canadian economy. Residential construction is a non-negligible part of the Canadian economy (Chart I-14). Chart I-13The Canadian Housing Market Has Heated Up The Canadian Housing Market Has Heated Up The Canadian Housing Market Has Heated Up Chart I-14Residential Construction Is Booming Residential Construction Is Booming Residential Construction Is Booming Bottom Line: Recent developments are increasing the odds that the Bank of Canada hikes rates sooner rather than later. This will allow further gains in the CAD. The CAD And Oil Crude oil prices are another hugely important driver for the CAD. In fact, for most of this year, interest rates have not been an important factor as the BoC faded any near-term improvement in the Canadian outlook. The Covid-19 crisis together with slow vaccination progress also hurt the recovery, putting the brakes on an appreciating loonie (Chart I-15). Our commodity strategists predict that Brent crude will hit $75 in 2023. This is higher than the forward markets are discounting. Rising forward prices will be synonymous with a higher CAD. However, Canada sells the Western Canadian Select (WCS) blend, which has historically traded at a significant discount to Brent or WTI (Chart I-16). Rising environmental standards hurt Canada, since WCS has a higher sulphur content. Pipeline capacity also remains a major bottleneck to getting Canadian crude to US refineries. Chart I-15The Loonie Has Lagged The Loonie Has Lagged The Loonie Has Lagged Chart I-16Canadian Oil Prices Could Lag The Recovery Canadian Oil Prices Could Lag The Recovery Canadian Oil Prices Could Lag The Recovery The redeeming feature this time around is that the correlation between the CAD/USD and crude oil prices is rising faster than for other currencies, as the US begins to embark on significant infrastructure projects (Chart I-17). Around 50% of US oil imports come from Canada. The Covid-19 crisis also slowed US oil production relative to Canada, which has helped increase the correlation between oil prices and the currency. Portfolio flows into Canada have been accelerating this year, benefitting oil stocks and the loonie. Chart I-17Sensitivity Of USD/CAD To Oil Has Increased Sensitivity Of USD/CAD To Oil Has Increased Sensitivity Of USD/CAD To Oil Has Increased Investment Conclusions Chart I-18The CAD Is Cheap The CAD Is Cheap The CAD Is Cheap The CAD remains cheap. It is trading at one standard deviation below its long-term mean, on a real effective exchange rate basis (Chart I-18). A return to the mean would generate about 10% upside. Our PPP model is less bullish, suggesting the loonie is cheap by about 5%. This still puts 84-85 cents within striking distance. Should the nascent Canadian recovery morph into a genuine acceleration, the CAD could rally even higher.   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com   Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 US economic data has been robust this week:         CPI in March rose 2.6% year-on-year and 0.6% month-on-month, both exceeding expectations. PPI in March came in at 4.2% year-on-year and 1% month-on-month, beating expectations. The Empire Manufacturing survey staged a meaningful rebound from 17.4 to 26.3 in April. Retail sales were particularly strong, coming in at 9.8% month-on-month in March. The NAHB housing market index remained strong at 83 in April.  The DXY Index fell by 0.5% this week. The drop in bond yields was surprising, given robust data. This is likely a signal that bond short positions are becoming a crowded trade. The DXY index is rolling over in April; a trend that supports its seasonal pattern. Report Links: Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears - March 19, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar? - February 19, 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 have been mildly positive: Retail sales grew by 3% month-on-month in February versus the expected 1.7%. ZEW Economic Sentiment for both Germany and the EU in April came in lower than forecast. Industrial production fell by 1% in February over the prior month. German CPI came in at 0.5% month-on-month, in line with forecasts. The euro rose by 0.5% against the dollar this week, making this a second week of appreciation. The new Covid-19 wave may be a drag on EUR/USD in the near term, but this has also reset sentiment and positioning indicators. Our intermediate-term indicator has rolled over substantially, which is bullish from a contrarian perspective. 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 JapaneseYen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 Data out of Japan have been mixed: Machinery orders recorded another month of decline, falling by 8.5% month-on-month in February versus an expected 2.8% increase. However, more positively, machine tool orders grew by 65% year-on-year in March. PPI in February came in at 0.8% month-on-month, better than expectations. The Japanese yen rose by 0.4% against the US dollar this week and remains one of the strongest G10 currencies in April. Our intermediate-term indicator has collapsed and speculators are net short the currency. We remain short EUR/JPY as a portfolio hedge. 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 mildly positive: February GDP rose 0.4% versus the prior month, slightly falling short of the expected 0.6% rise. Both the industrial and manufacturing production and the construction output exceeded expectations in February, growing at 1%, 1.3%, and 1.6% month-on-month. The trade deficit with the EU increased to 16.4B in February. The British pound rose by 0.3% against the US dollar this week, ranking in the middle among G10 currencies and flat against the Euro. We exited our short EUR/GBP trade last week to take profit on UK’s vaccination success and expected catch up phase for other economies. The elevated net speculative positioning on the pound also makes us neutral.  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 were strong: NAB business conditions came in at 25 in March versus 17 in February. The Westpac Consumer Confidence Index for April rose 6.2% month-on-month to 118.8, highest since August 2010.  The labor recovery remains on track. 71K new jobs were added in March versus expectations of 35K. The unemployment rate also fell from 5.8% to 5.6%. The Australian dollar remained flat against the US dollar this week. However, the recent robust data, soaring terms of trade, and high bond yields make AUD/USD a suitable recovery trade. That said, given Mexico’s proximity to the US where recent economic data are strong, we are short the AUD/MXN pair. 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 The was scant data out of New Zealand this week: RBNZ held the official cash rate at 0.25% and its asset purchase program steady against a backdrop of a heated housing market, citing uncertainty over the outlook for growth. The NZIERB Business Confidence came in at -13% for Q1 versus -6% in Q4, a first decline in four quarters. The New Zealand dollar remained flat against the US dollar this week. On the day of the rate announcement, NZD rallied while the OIS curve flattened, which is a perplexing development. We believe the OIS curve had the appropriate response. Near term upside risk for Kiwi is the planned travel bubble with Australia. We are long the AUD/NZD. 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 The recent data out of Canada have been strong: The Bank of Canada Business Outlook Survey was robust. The sentiment indicator recorded 2.87 in Q1, up from 1.3 in Q4 and highest since 2018. The March employment report was blockbuster. There were 303K new jobs versus an expectation of 100K. The split between part-time and full-time was healthy, 175K versus 128K. This brought down the unemployment rate to 7.5% in March, beating both forecasts and the February reading of 8.2%. The Canadian dollar rose by 0.3% against the US dollar this week. We spend some time in the front section discussing the Canadian dollar, which could be a little vulnerable in the short term, but could touch 84 cents in the coming 12-months. 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: The unemployment reading was 3.3% in March, lower than both the forecast and prior month. The Swiss franc was flat against the US dollar this week, remaining a top performer amongst the G10 currencies in April. As we indicated in last week’s report, the Franc may be due for a rebound after its underperformance in the first three months this year. While the CHF may continue its appreciation against the US dollar, we are long EUR/CHF on valuations concern, but are maintaining tight stops at 1.095. Our USD/CHF intermediate-term indicator is also due for a reversal. 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 The recent data out of Norway have been mixed: GDP in February fell by 0.5% month-on-month. House prices increased by 3.4% quarter-on-quarter in Q1. March CPI came in at 3.1% year-on-year, versus expectations of a 3.4% increase. CPI disappointment was driven mainly by a 0.6% month-on-month decline in consumer goods prices. The Norwegian krone remained flat against the US dollar this week. Despite the Norges Bank’s expected rate hike this year, the earliest amongst the G10 nations, the NOK may see near term downside risks given the weak inflation data this month and the potential weakening in oil prices due to renewed virus lockdowns globally. Strategically we remain long NOK along with SEK for an eventual decline in the dollar.    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 The recent inflation data out of Sweden have been strong: The CPIF measure, favored by the Riksbank, rose 1.9% year-on-year versus the 1.5% increase in February. The rise was only was 1.4% ex-energy, but most inflation measures have rebounded powerfully from the 2020 lows. The Swedish krona, up by 1.4% against US dollar this week, was a top performing G10 currency both this week and in April. The 5-year and 10-year inflation swaps remain well anchored above the 2% level, suggesting markets are not regarding the increase in Swedish inflation as transitory. This could bring forward rate hike expectations. The higher 2-year real yield in Sweden versus US, due to higher US inflation, will also support the SEK. However, new Covid-19 cases remain a concern. 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 The Swiss economy will benefit from the pickup in global growth. The recent weakness in the franc has been a welcome development for the Swiss National Bank, but technicals suggest a coiled spring rally in CHF is likely. However, as a low-beta currency, the Swiss franc will lag the upturn in other pro-cyclical currencies over the longer term. We remain long EUR/CHF as a tactical trade but maintain tight stops at 1.095. Long CHF/NZD and CHF/GBP positions look attractive at current levels. Similar to our short EUR/JPY position, this is an excellent portfolio hedge. Feature Chart I-1The Swiss Economy Is On The Mend The Swiss Economy Is On The Mend The Swiss Economy Is On The Mend The Swiss economy has recovered smartly. As of March, the manufacturing PMI was at 66.3, the highest since 2006. If past manufacturing sentiment is prologue, the Swiss economy is about to experience its biggest rebound in decades (Chart I-1). This will quell any deflationary fears about domestic conditions in Switzerland and begin to re-anchor inflation expectations upwards. This will also be a very welcome development for the SNB. The Swiss franc has been one of the worst performing currencies this year, but that might be about to change. For one, dollar sentiment has been reset with the rise in the DXY index this year. Second, the global economy is transitioning from disinflationary to a gentle tilt towards inflation. This will lift global prices, including import prices into Switzerland. Rising import prices will ease the need for the SNB to maintain emergency monetary settings. Finally, the weakness in the currency has eased financial conditions for Swiss concerns. The Reopening Trade Most economies are entering into a third wave of the Covid-19 pandemic and the Swiss economy is no exception. However, the Swiss authorities have been able to bring the number of new infections down to levels below the euro area in general and Sweden in particular. Vaccinations are progressing smoothly with almost 20% of the population inoculated as of today. This provides a coiled springboard to lift the Swiss economy into robust growth later this year. Switzerland is one of the most open economies in the G10. Exports of goods and services account for over 65% of Swiss GDP, much higher than the euro area (Chart I-2). The constituent of Swiss exports tends to be defensive (medical goods, gold, watches, jewelry) so the franc does not necessarily outperform in a global growth upswing, but definitely does better than the dollar which anchors a more closed economy. Inflation dynamics in Switzerland will be particularly beholden to improvement in the private sector. As we show in Chart I-1, employment should remain robust in the months ahead, which will support wages. Import prices in Switzerland are also about to catapult upwards, which will help lift the consumer price basket (Chart I-3). For a small, open economy like Switzerland, the exchange rate often dictates the trend in domestic inflation, and the weakness in the franc has been a beneficial cushion for good prices. The rise in global tradeable prices is also acting as a catalyst. For the first time in many years, the pendulum might be swinging towards a worry about inflation in SNB corridors. Chart I-2Switzerland Has A Huge Exposure To Trade Switzerland Has A Huge Exposure To Trade Switzerland Has A Huge Exposure To Trade Chart I-3Swiss Inflation Will Rise Swiss Inflation Will Rise Swiss Inflation Will Rise Particularly, a rise in Swiss inflation will lessen the need for the SNB to keep rates at the -0.75 level in place for over half a decade. It will also lessen to need for the SNB to fight against franc strength.  Global Developments In A CHF Context There are some additional tailwinds to a strong CHF in today’s context. Volatility has collapsed, with the VIX index well below 20. If one could predict with absolute certainty what will happen with global growth, equity prices, bond yields, or even Covid-19, then low volatility makes sense. However, in the current context of elevated valuations, high uncertainty and a precarious health landscape, it almost makes perfect sense that volatility should rise. The franc tends to do well in an environment where volatility is rising (Chart I-4). Chart I-4The Swiss Franc Tracks The VIX The Swiss Franc Tracks The VIX The Swiss Franc Tracks The VIX Chart I-5Long-Term Support On CHF/NZD Has Held Long-Term Support On CHF/NZD Has Held Long-Term Support On CHF/NZD Has Held In fact, from a broad picture perspective, a rotation from US growth outperformance to other parts of the globe that are also stimulating their domestic economies could be met with higher dollar volatility. This has historically been beneficial for the Swiss franc (Chart I-6). Ergo, being long the franc could constitute a “heads, I win; tails I do not lose too much” proposition. Rising global growth and a lower dollar will help the franc, but so will a rise in volatility. Chart I-6CHF/NZD Tracks Dollar Volatility CHF/NZD Tracks Dollar Volatility CHF/NZD Tracks Dollar Volatility Our Geopolitical Strategy team has also been recommending long Swiss franc positions since February as they believe the Biden administration faces several imminent and serious foreign policy tests, namely over Russia’s military buildup on the Ukraine border, China’s military pressure tactics against Taiwan, and Middle East tensions ahead of any revived US-Iran nuclear deal. They see a 60% chance of some kind of crisis – if not war – over the Taiwan Strait and any of these other issues could also motivate safe haven demand for the rest of this year.  With regard to CHF/GBP, an upside surprise for the Scottish National Party in the May 6 parliamentary election could also hurt the pound since it would herald a second Scots independence referendum in the not-too-distant future. Trading Dynamics As A Safe Haven Chart I-7CHF And The Copper/Gold Ratio CHF AND THE COPPER/GOLD RATIO CHF AND THE COPPER/GOLD RATIO Switzerland ticks off all the characteristics of a safe-haven currency. Its large net international investment position of over 100% of GDP generates huge income inflows. Meanwhile, rising productivity over the years has led to a structural surplus in its trading balance and a rising fair value for the currency. Consequently, the franc has tended to have an upward bias over the years, supercharged during periods of risk aversion. This makes the franc a useful constituent of any currency portfolio. More specifically, the franc has tracked the gold-to-copper ratio in recent years. Copper is a good barometer for global economic health while gold is a good proxy for the demand for safety. If the overarching theme is that complacency reigns across markets, a nudge towards safety will benefit flows into the franc (Chart I-7). The current interest-rate regime could also affect the franc-dollar relationship. Global yields have risen. To the extent that we are due for some reprieve, the franc will benefit, given its “low beta” status. Meanwhile, net portfolio flows into Switzerland suffered from the Trump tax cuts that pushed US affiliates in Switzerland to repatriate investments. President Biden’s tax reform will halt and/or reverse this process. SNB Action And Market Implications The past weakness in the franc has been a welcome development for the SNB. In fact, since the start of this year, Swiss central bankers have not had to ramp up asset purchases. Both the dollar and the euro have been relatively strong (Chart I-8). In other words, global dynamics have eased monetary conditions for the Swiss authorities. The latest Article IV report from the IMF also justifies the SNB’s monetary stance. Currency intervention was cited as a viable tool should the SNB do a policy review, especially given the potential inefficacies from QE due to the small bond market in Switzerland. Herein lies the key takeaway for the franc – while it could appreciate in an environment where the dollar resumes its downtrend, it will likely lag other pro cyclical currencies over the longer term. This is because the SNB will be loath to see the franc unanchor inflation expectations. We are long EUR/CHF on this basis, but are keeping tight stops at 1.095. Three key factors suggest this trade could still work well in the coming 12-18 months. Rising interest rates benefit EUR/CHF (Chart I-9). With interest rates in Switzerland well below other countries, the Swiss franc rapidly becomes a funding currency for carry trades. Carry trades, especially towards peripheral bonds in Europe hurt the franc. Chart I-8A Weaker Franc Is Doing The Heavy Lifting For The SNB A Weaker Franc Is Doing The Heavy Lifting For The SNB A Weaker Franc Is Doing The Heavy Lifting For The SNB Chart I-9EUR/CHF Tracks German ##br## Yields EUR/CHF Tracks German Yields EUR/CHF Tracks German Yields The Swiss trade balance has suffered in the face of a global slowdown. It will also lag the European rebound (Chart I-10). In a downturn, commoditized goods prices are the first to drop and recover, while more specialized goods prices eventually gain ground later. Swiss goods are not easily substitutable which is a benefit, but prices are also slower to adjust. Our models suggest the franc is still about 5% overvalued versus the euro. Over the history of the model, this has been a modest premium, but allows the euro to outperform the Swiss franc (Chart I-11). Chart I-10Structural Appreciation In The Swiss Franc Structural Appreciation In The Swiss Franc Structural Appreciation In The Swiss Franc Chart I-11EUR/CHF Is Still Cheap EUR/CHF Is Still Cheap EUR/CHF Is Still Cheap Economically, the SNB has to walk a fine line between a predominantly deflationary backdrop in Switzerland and a rising debt-to-GDP ratio that pins it among the highest in the G10 (Chart I-12). Too little stimulus and the economy runs the risk of entering a debt-deflation spiral, as inflation expectations are revised downwards. Too much stimulus and the result will be a build-up of imbalances, leading to an eventual bust. Chart I-12Lots Of Private Debt In Switzerland Lots Of Private Debt In Switzerland Lots Of Private Debt In Switzerland Today, the SNB is in a sweet spot. Almost every other G10 country is providing the fiscal and monetary stimulus necessary to lift Switzerland from its deflationary paradigm. Investment Conclusions Chart I-13Structural Appreciation In The Franc Still Possible Structural Appreciation In The Franc Still Possible Structural Appreciation In The Franc Still Possible Our long-term fair value models suggest the Swiss franc is currently cheap versus the dollar (Chart I-13). This makes it attractive from a strategic perspective. Usually, the Swiss franc tends to be more of a dormant currency, gently appreciating towards fair value but periodically interspersed with bouts of intense volatility. Interestingly, we may be entering such a riot point. The VIX is low and countries are reintroducing lockdowns, yet overall sentiment remains unequivocally bullish. Finally, Switzerland ticks off all the characteristics of a safe-haven currency. As such, while the dollar has benefited from its reserve status, the franc remains an appropriate hedge in any currency portfolio. In a nutshell, our recommendations are as follows: USD/CHF will stay under parity. EUR/CHF can hit 1.2. NZD/CHF is a sell in the short-term. So is GBP/CHF. The Scandinavian currencies will outperform the franc on a 12-18 month horizon.   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 US economic data has been spectacular this week: Starting with the jobs report, the US added 916K jobs in March versus a consensus of 660K jobs. The unemployment rate fell from 6.2% to 6% and wages increased by 4.2% year-on-year. The boost to domestic demand dented the trade balance. The deficit widened from $68.2bn to $71.1bn in February. The FOMC minutes were a non event for markets. The DXY index is giving back some of the gains it accumulated this year, rising over 1% this week. With the US 10-year yield now facing strong resistance near the 1.7% level, the case for a stronger USD is fading. As consensus forecasts coagulate towards a stronger USD, positioning has also been reset towards USD long positions auguring for some volatility in the months ahead. Report Links: Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears - March 19, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar? - February 19, 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 Sentix investor index catapulted from 5 to 13.1 in April. The Eurozone remains the unsung hero in this recovery. PPI increased to 1.5% year-on-year in February from 0% last month. The euro rose by 1.2% against the dollar this week. To be clear, there are still stale euro longs among more fundamental holders of the currency. This suggests the flushing out of weak hands has more to go. However, the balance of evidence suggests euro area data could reward long positions later this year.  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 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 improving: PMI indices remain under 50, but reflect a possible coiled-spring rebound underway. Consumer confidence rebounded from 33.8 to 36.1 in March. The Eco Watchers survey was also encouraging. Sentiment rebounded from 41.3 to 49 in March. The Japanese yen rose by 1.24% against the US dollar this week, and remains the strongest G10 currency in recent trading days. Falling yields have seen Japanese investors retreat from overseas markets such as the UK, pushing up the yen. Speculative positioning is also net yen bearish, which is constructive from a contrarian standpoint. 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 positive: Car registrations are picking up smartly, suggesting durable demand might be returning to the UK. Registrations rose 11.5% year-on-year in March versus -35.5% the year before. The UK construction PMI hit a high of 61.7, the highest since 2014. The pound fell by almost 2% versus the euro this week. The violent correction in EURGBP might be a harbinger of the rotation brewing for both UK and US assets versus their global counterparts. Stay tuned. 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: The RBA kept rates unchanged at 0.1%. Both the services and manufacturing PMIs remained at an expansionary 55.5 level. The Aussie rose by 0.4% this week. We like the AUD, and are long AUD/NZD as a trade. However, the outperformance of the US economy is also handsomely rewarding AUD/MXN shorts. Mexico benefits a lot more from a pick-up in the US economy than Australia. 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 have been positive: The ANZ commodity price index ticked up by 6.1% in March. ANZ Business confidence deteriorated in March. The activity outlook fell from 16.6 to 16.4 and confidence fell from -4.1 to -8.4. The New Zealand dollar rose by 60bps against the US dollar this week. New Zealand will start taking the back seat in the coming economic rotation as other economies play catch up. The improvement in kiwi terms of trade has been a boon for the currency, and will limit downside on NZD. However, shorting the NZD at the crosses remains an attractive proposition. 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 scant data out of Canada this week: The Bloomberg Nanos confidence index continues to suggest that Canadian GDP will surprise to the upside. The index rose from 63.7 to 64.1 last week. Demand for Canadian goods remains robust. The trade surplus came in at C$1.04bn in February. The Ivey purchasing managers’ index catapulted to 72.9 from 60 in March. The Canadian dollar was flat against the US dollar this week. While this might come as a surprise, three reasons explain this performance. First, the loonie is one of the best-performing G10 currencies this year and some specter of rotation was in play this week. Second, the correction in oil prices hurt the loonie. Finally, should US economic optimism become more widespread, other currencies could benefit. 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: Sight deposits were relatively flat at CHF700bn last week. The Swiss Franc rose by 2% against the US dollar this week. This week’s piece is dedicated to the possibility that the franc has a coiled-spring rebound in the near term. Safe-haven currencies are now benefitting from the drop in yields, while the franc has underperformed other currencies this year. This is welcome news for the SNB.  We have been long EUR/CHF on this expectation, and recommend investors 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 March DNB manufacturing PMI came in at 56.1 from 57.5. Industrial production rose by 5.9% year-on-year versus expectations of a 1.5% increase. The NOK rose by 0.75% against the dollar this week. Norway has handled the Covid-19 crisis admirably and it is an added boon that oil prices, a key export and income valve for Norway, are rising smartly. This has prompted the Norges bank to rapidly bring forward rate hike expectations. This leaves little scope for the NOK to fall durably. 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 above expectations: The Swedbank manufacturing PMI came in at 63.7 in March versus expectations of 62.5. Industrial orders came in at 8.5% year-on-year versus expectations of 5.3% in February. The Swedish krona rose by 2% this week ranking it as the best performing G10 currency. Sweden needs to do a better job at containing the Covid-19 crisis, which will unlock tremendous value in the krona. As a positive, the global manufacturing cycle continues humming and will buffeting Swedish industrial production. 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 Global manufacturing activity will soon peak due to growing costs and China’s policy tightening. This process will allow the dollar’s rebound to continue. EUR/USD’s correction will run further. This pullback in the euro is creating an attractive buying opportunity for investors with a 12- to 24-month investment horizon. Eurozone banks will continue to trade in unison with the euro. Feature The correction in the euro has further to run. The dollar currently benefits from widening real interest differentials, but a growing list of headwinds will cause a temporary setback for the global manufacturing sector, which will fuel the greenback rally further. Nonetheless, EUR/USD will stabilize between 1.15 and 1.12, after which it will begin a new major up-leg. Consequently, investors with a 12- to 24-month investment horizon should use the current softness to allocate more funds to the common currency. A Hiccup In Global Industrial Activity Global manufacturing activity is set to decelerate on a sequential basis and the Global Manufacturing PMI will soon peak. The first problem for the global manufacturing sector is the emergence of financial headwinds. The sharp rebound in growth in the second half of 2020 and the optimism created by last year’s vaccine breakthrough as well as the rising tide of US fiscal stimulus have pushed US bond yields and oil prices up sharply. These financial market moves are creating a “growth tax” that will bite soon. Mounting US interest rates have lifted global borrowing costs while the doubling in Brent prices has increased the costs of production and created a small squeeze on oil consumers. Thus, even if the dollar remains well below its March 2020 peak, our Growth Tax Indicator (which incorporates yields, oil prices and the US dollar) warns of an imminent top in the US ISM Manufacturing and the Global Manufacturing PMI (Chart 1). Already, the BCA Global Leading Economic Indicator diffusion index has dipped below the 50% line, which usually ushers in downshifts in global growth. A deceleration in China’s economy constitutes another problem for the global manufacturing cycle. Last year’s reflation-fueled rebound in Chinese economic activity was an important catalyst to the global trade and manufacturing recovery. However, according to BCA Research’s Emerging Market Strategy service, Beijing is now tightening policy, concerned by a build-up in debt and excesses in the real estate sector. Already, the PBoC’s liquidity withdrawals are resulting in a decline of commercial bank excess reserves, which foreshadows a slowing of China’s credit impulse (Chart 2). Chart 1The Global Growth Tax Will Bite The Global Growth Tax Will Bite The Global Growth Tax Will Bite Chart 2Chinese Credit Will Slow Chinese Credit Will Slow Chinese Credit Will Slow In addition to liquidity withdrawals, Chinese policymakers are also tightening the regulatory environment to tackle excessive debt buildups and real estate speculation. The crackdown on property developers and house purchases will cause construction activity to shrink in the second half of 2021. Meanwhile, tougher rules for both non-bank lenders and the asset management divisions of banks will further harm credit creation. BCA’s Chief EM strategist, Arthur Budaghyan, notes that consumer credit is already slowing. Chinese fiscal policy is unlikely to create a counterweight to the deteriorating credit impulse. China’s fiscal impulse will be slightly negative next year. Chinese financial markets are factoring in these headwinds, and on-shore small cap equities are trying to break down while Chinese equities are significantly underperforming global benchmarks. Chart 3Deteriorating Surprises Deteriorating Surprises Deteriorating Surprises Bottom Line: The combined assault from the rising “growth tax” and China’s policy tightening is leaving its mark. Economic surprises in the US, the Eurozone, EM and China have all decelerated markedly (Chart 3), which the currency market echoes. Some of the most pro-cyclical currencies in the G-10 are suffering, with the SEK falling relative to the EUR and the NZD and AUD both experiencing varying degrees of weakness. The Euro Correction Will Run Further… Until now, the euro’s decline mostly reflects the rise in US interest rate differentials; however, the coming hiccup in the global manufacturing cycle is causing a second down leg for the euro. First, the global economic environment remains consistent with more near-term dollar upside, due to: Chart 4Commodities Are Vulnerable Commodities Are Vulnerable Commodities Are Vulnerable A commodity correction that will feed the dollar’s rebound. Aggregate speculator positioning and our Composite Technical Indicator show that commodity prices are technically overextended (Chart 4). With this backdrop, the coming deceleration in Chinese economic activity is likely to catalyze a significant pullback in natural resources, which will hurt rates of returns outside the US and therefore, flatter the dollar. The dollar’s counter-cyclicality. The expected pullback in the Global Manufacturing PMI is consistent with a stronger greenback (Chart 5). The dollar’s momentum behavior. Among G-10 FX, the dollar responds most strongly to the momentum factor (Chart 6). Thus, the likelihood is high that the dollar’s recent rebound will persist, especially because our FX team’s Dollar Capitulation Index has only recovered to neutral from oversold levels and normally peaks in overbought territory.  Chart 5The Greenback's Counter-Cyclicality The Greenback's Counter-Cyclicality The Greenback's Counter-Cyclicality Chart 6The Dollar Is A High Momentum Currency The Euro Dance: One Step Back, Two Steps Forward The Euro Dance: One Step Back, Two Steps Forward Second, the euro’s specific dynamics remain negative for now. Based on our short-term valuation model, the fair value of EUR/USD has downshifted back to 1.1, which leaves the euro 7% overvalued (Chart 7). Until now, real interest rate differentials and the steepening of the US yield curve relative to Germany’s have driven the decline in the fair value estimate. However, the deceleration in global growth also hurts the euro’s fair value because the US is less exposed than the Eurozone to the global manufacturing cycle. Chart 7The Euro's Short-Term Fair Value Is At 1.1 The Euro's Short-Term Fair Value Is At 1.1 The Euro's Short-Term Fair Value Is At 1.1 Chart 8Speculators Have Not Capitulated Speculators Have Not Capitulated Speculators Have Not Capitulated The euro is also technically vulnerable, similar to commodities. Speculators are still massively net long EUR/USD and the large pool of long bets in the euro suggests that a capitulation has yet to take place (Chart 8). The euro responds very negatively to a weak Chinese economy. The Eurozone has deeper economic ties with China than the US. Exports to China account for 1.7% of the euro area’s GDP, and 2.8% of Germany’s compared to US exports to China at 0.5% of GDP. Indirect financial links are also larger. Credit to EM accounts for 45% of the Eurozone’s GDP compared to 5% for the US. Thus, the negative impact of a Chinese slowdown on EM growth has greater spillovers on European than on US ones rates of returns. A weak CNY and sagging Chinese capital markets harm the euro. The euro’s rebound from 1.064 on March 23 2020 to 1.178 did not reflect sudden inflows into European fixed-income markets. Instead, the money that previously sought higher interest rates in the US left that country for EM bonds and China’s on-shore fixed-income markets, the last major economies with attractive yields. These outflows from the US to China and EM pushed the dollar down, which arithmetically helped the euro. Thus, the recent EUR/USD correlates closely with Sino/US interest rate and with the yuan because the euro’s strength reflects the dollar demise (Chart 9). Consequently, a decelerating Chinese economy will also hurt EUR/USD via fixed-income market linkages. Finally, the euro will depreciate further if global cyclical stocks correct relative to defensive equities. Deep cyclicals (financials, consumer discretionary, energy, materials and industrials) represent 59% of the Eurozone MSCI benchmark versus 36% of the US index. Cyclical equities are exceptionally overbought and expensive relative to defensive names. They are also very levered to the global business cycle and Chinese imports. In this context, the expected deterioration in both China’s economic activity and the Global Manufacturing PMI could cause a temporary but meaningful pullback in the cyclicals-to-defensives ratio and precipitate equity outflows from Europe into the US (Chart 10). Chart 9EUR/USD And Chinese Rates EUR/USD And Chinese Rates EUR/USD And Chinese Rates Chart 10EUR/USD Will Follow Cyclicals/Defensives EUR/USD Will Follow Cyclicals/Defensives EUR/USD Will Follow Cyclicals/Defensives Bottom Line: A peak in the global manufacturing PMI will hurt the euro, especially because China will meaningfully contribute to this deceleration in global industrial activity. Thus, the euro’s pullback has further to run. An important resistance stands at 1.15. A failure to hold will invite a rapid decline to EUR/USD 1.12. Nonetheless, the euro’s depreciation constitutes nothing more than a temporary pullback. … But The Long-Term Bull Market Is Intact We recommend buying EUR/USD on its current dip because the underpinnings of its cyclical bull market are intact. Chart 11Investors Structurally Underweight Europe Investors Structurally Underweight Europe Investors Structurally Underweight Europe First, investors are positioned for a long-term economic underperformance of the euro area relative to the US. The depressed level of portfolio inflows into Europe relative to the US indicates that investors already underweight European assets (Chart 11). This pre-existing positioning limits the negative impact on the euro of the current decrease in European growth expectations (Chart 11, bottom panel). Second, as we wrote last week, European growth is set to accelerate significantly this summer. Considering the absence of ebullient investor expectations toward the euro, this process can easily create upside economic surprises later this year, especially when compared to the US. Moreover, the deceleration in Chinese and global growth will most likely be temporary, which will limit the duration of their negative impact on Europe. Third, the US stimulus measure will create negative distortions for the US dollar. The addition of another long-term stimulus package of $2 trillion to $4 trillion to the $7 trillion already spent by Washington during the crisis implies that the US government deficit will not narrow as quickly as US private savings will decline. Therefore, the US current account deficit will widen from its current level of 3.5% of GDP. As a corollary, the US twin deficit will remain large. Meanwhile, the Fed is unlikely to increase real interest rates meaningfully in the coming two years because it believes any surge in inflation this year will be temporary. Furthermore, the FOMC aims to achieve inclusive growth (i.e. an overheated labor market). This policy combination forcefully points toward greater dollar weakness. The US policy mix looks particularly dollar bearish when compared to that of the Eurozone. To begin with, the balance of payment dynamics make the euro more resilient. The euro area benefits from the underpinning of a current account surplus of 1.9% of GDP. Moreover, the European basic balance of payments stands at 1.5% of GDP compared to a 3.6% deficit for the US. Additionally, FDI into Europe are rising relative to the US. The divergence in the FDI trends will continue due to the high probability that the Biden administration will soon increase corporate taxes. Chart 12The DEM In The 70s The DEM In The 70s The DEM In The 70s The combination of faster vaccine penetration and much larger fiscal stimulus means that the US economy will overheat faster than Europe’s. Because the Fed seems willing to tolerate higher inflation readings, US CPI will rise relative to the Eurozone. In the 1970s, too-easy policy in Washington meant that the gap between US and German inflation rose. Despite the widening of interest rate and growth differentials in favor of the USD or the rise in German relative unemployment, the higher US inflation dominated currency fluctuations and the deutschemark appreciated (Chart 12). A similar scenario is afoot in the coming years, especially in light of the euro bullish relative balance of payments. Fourth, valuations constitute an additional buttress behind the long-term performance of the euro. Our FX strategy team Purchasing Power Parity model adjusts for the different composition of price indices in the US and the euro area. Based on this metric, the euro is trading at a significant 13% discount from its long-term fair value, with the latter being on an upward trend (Chart 13).  Furthermore, BCA’s Behavioral Exchange Rate Model for the trade-weighted euro is also pointing up, which historically augurs well for the common currency. Lastly, even if the ECB’s broad trade-weighted index stands near an all-time high, European financial conditions remain very easy. This bifurcation suggests that the euro is not yet a major hurdle for the continent and can enjoy more upside (Chart 14). Chart 13EUR/USD Trades Well Below Long-Term Fair Value EUR/USD Trades Well Below Long-Term Fair Value EUR/USD Trades Well Below Long-Term Fair Value Chart 14Easy European Financial ##br##Conditions Easy European Financial Conditions Easy European Financial Conditions Chart 15Make Room For the Euro! Make Room For the Euro! Make Room For the Euro! Finally, the euro will remain a beneficiary from reserve diversification away from the USD. The dollar’s status as the premier reserve currency is unchallenged. However, its share of global reserves has scope to decline while the euro’s proportion could move back to the levels enjoyed by legacy European currencies in the early 1990s (Chart 15). Large reserve holders will continue to move away from the dollar. BCA Research’s Geopolitical Strategy team argues that US tensions with China transcend the Trump presidency.  Meanwhile, the current administration’s relationship with Russia and Saudi Arabia will be cold. For now, their main alternative to the dollar is the euro because of its liquidity. Moreover, the NGEU stimulus program creates an embryonic mechanism to share fiscal risk within the euro area. The Eurozone is therefore finally trying to evolve away from a monetary union bereft of a fiscal union. This process points toward a lower probability of a break up, which makes the euro more attractive to reserve managers. Bottom Line: Despite potent near-term headwinds, the euro’s long-term outlook remains bright. Global investors already underweight European assets, yet balance of payment and policy dynamics point toward a higher euro. Moreover, valuations and geopolitical developments reinforce the cyclical tailwinds behind EUR/USD. Thus, investors with a 12- to 24-month investment horizon should use the current euro correction to gain exposure to the European currencies. Any move in EUR/USD below 1.15 will generate a strong buy signal. Sector Focus: European Banks And The Istanbul Shake The recent decline in euro area bank stocks coincides with the 14% increase in USD/TRY and the 17% decline in the TUR Turkish equities ETF following the sacking of Naci Ağbal, the CBRT governor. President Erdogan is prioritizing growth over economic stability because his AKP party is polling poorly ahead of the 2023 election. The Turkish economy is already overheating, and the lack of independence of the CBRT under the leadership of Şahap Kavcıoğlu promises a substantial increase in Turkish inflation, which already stands at 16%. Hence, foreign investors will flee this market, creating further downward pressures on the lira and Turkish assets. European banks have a meaningful exposure to Turkey. Turkish assets account for 3% of Spanish bank assets or 28% of Tier-1 capital. For France, this exposure amounts to 0.7% and 5% respectively, and for the UK, it reaches 0.3% and 2%. As a comparison, claims on Turkey only represent 0.3% and 0.5% of the assets and Tier-1 capital of US banks. Unsurprisingly, fluctuations in the Turkish lira have had a significant impact one the share prices of European banks in recent years, even after controlling for EPS and domestic yield fluctuations (Table 1). Table 1TRY Is Important To European Banks… The Euro Dance: One Step Back, Two Steps Forward The Euro Dance: One Step Back, Two Steps Forward Nonetheless, today’s TRY fluctuations are unlikely to have the same lasting impact on European banks share prices as they did from 2017 to 2019 because European banks have already shed significant amounts of Turkish assets (Chart 16).  This does not mean that European banks are out of the woods yet. The level of European yields remains a key determinant of the profitability of Eurozone’s banks, and thus, of their share prices (Chart 17, top panel). Moreover, the euro still tightly correlates with European bank stocks as well (Chart 17, bottom panel). As a result, our view that the global manufacturing cycle will experience a temporary downshift and the consequent downside in EUR/USD both warn of further underperformance of European banks. Chart 16… But Less Than It ##br##Once Was The Euro Dance: One Step Back, Two Steps Forward The Euro Dance: One Step Back, Two Steps Forward Chart 17Higher Yields And A stronger Euro, These Are Few Of My Favorite Things Higher Yields And A stronger Euro, These Are Few Of My Favorite Things Higher Yields And A stronger Euro, These Are Few Of My Favorite Things These same views also suggest that this decline in bank prices is creating a buying opportunity. Ultimately, we remain cyclically bullish on the euro and the transitory nature of the manufacturing slowdown implies that global yields will resume their ascent. The cheap valuations of European banks, which trade at 0.6-times book value, make them option-like vehicles to bet on these trends, even if the banking sectors long-term prospects are murky. Moreover, they are a play on Europe’s domestic recovery this summer. We will explore banks in greater detail in future reports.   Mathieu Savary, Chief European Investment Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com
Highlights Higher yields in China should continue to encourage inflows into the RMB. However, the gap between Chinese and US/global interest rates will narrow. This will temper the pace of RMB appreciation. The RMB remains modestly undervalued. Higher productivity gains in China will raise the fair value of the currency. The US dollar could have entered a structural bear market. This will also buffet the CNY-USD exchange rate. A big driver for the RMB in the coming years will also be widespread diversification away from USD assets. This will dovetail nicely with the ascension of the RMB in global FX reserves. Feature Chart 1The RMB Often Moves With Relative Rates The RMB Often Moves With Relative Rates The RMB Often Moves With Relative Rates The appreciation in the Chinese yuan has been a boon for global bond, equity and currency investors. With extremely low volatility, the yuan has appreciated by approximately 10% since its May 2020 lows. This places the rise in the RMB on par with what we saw in the 2017/2018 period. It also makes the yuan one of the best performing emerging market currencies this year. One of the key drivers of the yuan’s stellar performance has been the interest rate gap between China and the US (Chart 1). The Chinese economy was one of the first to emerge from the pandemic-driven lockdown. As economic activity recovered, so did local bond yields. With global bond yields now on the rise, this raises the specter that Sino-global bond yield spreads will narrow. The implications for the path of the Chinese yuan are worth monitoring. On the other hand, structural factors also argue that the path of least resistance for the US dollar over the next few years is down. This is positive for the Chinese yuan. Which force will dominate the path of the RMB going forward? In this Special Report, we discuss the intersection between the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) monetary policy and the global environment, and what that means for the Chinese yuan on a 12-month horizon. China And The Global Cycle The evolution of the global economic cycle has important implications for the yuan exchange rate in particular, because the RMB is a pro-cyclical currency. The USD/CNY has been moving tick for tick with emerging market equities, Asian currencies and commodity prices (Chart 2). Meanwhile, China has also been a major engine for global growth. Ever since the global financial crisis, the money and credit cycle in China has led the global recovery (Chart 3). With the authorities set to modestly decelerate the pace of credit creation, it will be important to gauge if this is a risk to global growth and, by extension, the path of the RMB. Chart 2The RMB Has Traded Like A Pro-cyclical Currency The RMB Has Traded Like A Pro-cyclical Currency The RMB Has Traded Like A Pro-cyclical Currency Chart 3The Chinese Impulse Leads ##br##The Global Cycle The Chinese Impulse Leads The Global Cycle The Chinese Impulse Leads The Global Cycle     In our view, while the credit impulse in China will roll over, the impact will be to slow the pace of RMB appreciation rather than reverse it, because: The interest rate gap between China and the rest of the world will remain very wide. The current level of 10-year yields in China is 3.3% versus 1.4% in the US. In a world of very low nominal interest rates, a differential of almost 200 basis points makes all the difference. Our base case is that the Chinese credit impulse could slow to 30% of GDP. If past is prologue, this could compress the yield spread to 1.5% but will still provide a meaningful yield pickup for foreign investors (Chart 4). Meanwhile, the real rate differential between China and the US might not narrow much if China continues to reign in credit growth, while the US pursues inflationary policies. Already, inflation in China is collapsing relative to the US, which supports relative real rates in China.   The credit impulse tends to lead the economy by six to nine months, thus, for much of 2021, Chinese growth will remain robust. Overall industrial production is picking up meaningfully, with the production of electricity and steel, and all inputs into the overall manufacturing value chain inflecting higher. This will continue to support bond yields in China (Chart 5). In recent weeks, both steel and iron ore prices have been soaring. While supply bottlenecks are playing a role, it is evident from both the manufacturing data and the trend in prices that demand is also a key driver (Chart 6). Chart 4The China-US Spread Will Stay Positive The China-US Spread Will Stay Positive The China-US Spread Will Stay Positive Chart 5Underlying Economic Activity Is Resilient Underlying Economic Activity Is Resilient Underlying Economic Activity Is Resilient Chart 6Strong Chinese Demand For Commodities Strong Chinese Demand For Commodities Strong Chinese Demand For Commodities China has had a structurally higher productivity growth rate compared to the US or Europe for many years, which will continue. It is also the reason why the fair value of the currency has been rising over the last two decades (Chart 7). Higher productivity growth suggests the neutral rate of interest in China will remain high for many years and will attract further fixed income inflows. China is running a basic balance surplus, which indicates that the RMB does not need to cheapen to entice capital inflows (Chart 8). Chart 7The RMB Is Not Overvalued The RMB Is Not Overvalued The RMB Is Not Overvalued Chart 8A Basic Balance Surplus A Basic Balance Surplus A Basic Balance Surplus Chinese bonds are gaining wider investor appeal. Following their inclusion in the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index (BBGA) since April 2019, and in the JP Morgan Government Bond - Emerging Market Index (GBI-EM) since February 2020, FTSE Russell announced the inclusion of Chinese government bonds in the FTSE World Government Bond Index (WGBI) as of October 2021. The inclusion of Chinese government bonds in all of the world’s three major bond indices is a seminal milestone in the process of liberalizing the Chinese fixed-income market. Based on both the US$2-4 trillion in AUM, tracking the WGBI index and a 5-6% weight of Chinese bonds, an additional US$150 billion in foreign investments will flow into China’s bond market following the WGBI inclusion. Moreover, the JPMorgan Global Index team predicts that the inclusion of Chinese bonds in the world’s three major bond indices will bring RMB inflows of up to US$250-300 billion. This will be particularly true if Chinese bonds are perceived as a better hedge against equity volatility (Chart 9). Finally, currencies respond to relative rates of return, which include equity returns in addition to fixed income ones. The relative performance of the Chinese equity market in common currency terms has also moved neck and neck with the performance of the RMB (Chart 10). Chart 9Chinese Bonds Could Become The Perfect Hedge Chinese Bonds Could Become The Perfect Hedge Chinese Bonds Could Become The Perfect Hedge Chart 10The RMB Follows Domestic Equity Relative Performance The RMB Follows Domestic Equity Relative Performance The RMB Follows Domestic Equity Relative Performance Bottom Line: Even though the Chinese credit impulse will continue to roll over, bond investors will still benefit from enticing real interest rates in China as its neutral rate of interest is higher. Equity investors will also benefit from a cheaper market, as well as exposure to sectors that are primed to benefit as the global economy reopens. This combination will sustain the pace of foreign capital inflows (Chart 11). Chart 11Inflows Into China Remain Strong Inflows Into China Remain Strong Inflows Into China Remain Strong The Dollar Versus The RMB          The path of the RMB in the short-term will follow relative growth dynamics between China and the rest of the world, but structural factors such as the dollar’s reserve status will also dictate its longer-term trend. What China (and other countries for that matter) decide to do with their war chest of US Treasuries is of critical importance.  In recent years, foreign investors have been fleeing the US Treasury market at an exceptional pace. On a rolling 12-month total basis, the US saw an exodus of about US$500 billion in bond flows from foreigners, the largest on record (Chart 12). Vis-à-vis official flows, China has become the number one contributor to the US trade deficit. Concurrently, Beijing has been destocking its holdings of Treasuries, if only as retaliation against past US policies, or perhaps to make room for the internationalization of the RMB (Chart 13). Chart 12An Exodus From US Treasurys An Exodus From US Treasurys An Exodus From US Treasurys Chart 13China Destocking Of Treasurys China Destocking Of Treasurys China Destocking Of Treasurys Data from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) shows that the allocation of global foreign exchange reserves towards the US dollar peaked at about 72% in the early 2000s and has been in a downtrend since. Meanwhile, allocation to other currencies, including the RMB, is surging. Moreover, foreign central banks have been amassing tremendous gold reserves, notably Russia and China, almost to the tune of the total annual output of the yellow metal. A diversification away from dollars and into other currencies such as the RMB and gold will be a key factor in dictating currency trends in the next few years (Chart 14). Chart 14The RMB Rises In Global Currency Reserves The RMB Rises In Global Currency Reserves The RMB Rises In Global Currency Reserves The US dollar will remain the reserve currency of the world for years to come, but that exorbitant privilege is clearly fraying at the edges. This is especially the case as balance-of-payments dynamics are deteriorating. Rising US twin deficits have usually been synonymous with a cheapening dollar. Bottom line: For one reason or another, foreign central banks are diversifying out of dollars. This could be a long-term trend, which will dictate the path of the dollar (and by extension the RMB) in the years to come. Other Considerations Chart 15A Forward Discount On The RMB A Forward Discount On The RMB A Forward Discount On The RMB The RMB has historically suffered from capital outflows, especially illicit flows. This is less risky today than in 2015-2016.1  Nonetheless, investors must monitor this possibility. Typically, offshore markets have anticipated the yuan’s depreciation. Back in 2014, offshore markets started pricing in a rising USD/CNY rate, and maintained that view all the way through to 2018, when the yuan eventually bottomed. Right now, 12-month non-deliverable forwards expect a modest depreciation in the yuan (Chart 15). Offshore markets in Hong Kong and elsewhere can be prescient because more often than not, they are the destination for illicit flows out of China. However, this time might be different. First, higher relative interest rates in China have lowered the forward RMB rate investors will receive to hedge currency exposure. Second, junkets (key operators in Macau casinos) have been one of the often-rumored vehicles used for Chinese money to leave the country.2 These junkets bankroll their Chinese clients in Macau while collecting any debts in China, allowing for illicit capital outflows. This was particularly rampant before the Chinese 2015-2016 corruption clampdown, when Macau casino equities were surging while equity prices in China were subdued. This time around, with tourism taking a backseat, the Chinese MSCI index is heavily outpacing the performance of Macau casino stocks, suggesting little evidence of hot money outflows (Chart 16). Chart 16China Versus Macau Stocks: Little Hot Money Outflows Like In 2013/2014 China Versus Macau Stocks: Little Hot Money Outflows Like In 2013/2014 China Versus Macau Stocks: Little Hot Money Outflows Like In 2013/2014 Sino-US trade relations will also affect the exchange rate. China remains the biggest contributor to the US trade deficit, even though the gap has narrowed (Chart 17). There is little evidence that the Biden administration will engage in an all-out trade war with China, but the case for subtle skirmishes exists. Chart 17The US Trade Deficit With China Remains Wide The US Trade Deficit With China Remains Wide The US Trade Deficit With China Remains Wide In a broader sense, the pandemic might have supercharged the de-globalization trend witnessed since 2011. The stability and self-sufficiency in the production capacity of any country's core supply chain have become paramount. From the perspective of the US, this means introducing more policies that attract investment into domestic manufacturing, such as clean energy. US multinational companies may also continue to diversify production risk away from China to other emerging countries, among them Vietnam, Myanmar, and India. This will curtail FDI flows into China at the margin (previously mentioned Chart 8). Concluding Thoughts Chart 18The RMB And The Trade-Weighted Dollar The RMB And The Trade-Weighted Dollar The RMB And The Trade-Weighted Dollar While USD/CNY could bounce in the near term, it is likely to reach 6.2 in the next 12 months. Interest rate spreads at the long end already overtook their 2017 highs and are near cyclically elevated levels. The bond market tends to lead the currency market by a few months, since China does not yet have a fully flexible and open capital account. Meanwhile, the path of the US dollar will also be critical for the USD/CNY exchange rate. We expect the USD to keep depreciating, which will boost the RMB (Chart 18).3 A slower pace of RMB appreciation will fend off interventionist policies by the PBoC. While the exchange rate has appreciated sharply since mid-2020, the CFETS rate has not deviated much from the onshore USD/CNY rate. This will remain the case if the pace of RMB appreciation moderates.   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Chinese Investment Special Report, titled “Monitoring Chinese Capital Outflows,” dated March 20, 2019, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see Reuters article “Factbox: How Macau’s casino junket system works,” available at reuters.com. 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, titled “2021 Key Views: Tradeable Themes,” dated December 4, 2020, available at bcaresearch.com. Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Highlights The Canadian economy is usually a high-beta play on global growth. However, given the stop-and-go pattern of the pandemic, Canada might lag the global recovery for now. The Bank of Canada’s (BoC) stance will be to fade any near-term improvement in the economy. This will cap Canadian yields in the interim, and act as a drag on an appreciating currency. That said, this would only provide a coiled spring for Canadian yields and the currency once the global economy is on more solid footing. Stay neutral Canadian government bonds in a global portfolio for now, but place on downgrade watch. The driver for CAD/USD is shifting from relative interest rates to terms of trade. Rising oil prices are a positive. CAD/USD should continue to rise for the rest of the year, but will underperform the NOK. The CAD should also outperform a basket of oil consumers such as the EUR, INR, and the TRY. Feature Canada has typically been a high-beta economy, but the Covid-19 crisis has certainly dented the traditional relationship. Chart 1 shows that for much of the last two decades, Canadian growth has outpaced that of its G10 peers during the expansionary phase of an economic cycle. The IMF predicts that the same cycle might not play out over the next two years. Real GDP growth estimates for both 2021 and 2022 in Canada are 3.6% and 4.1%, in line with the G10 over this period. Meanwhile, the accuracy and relevance of these estimates will be highly dependent on the rapidly changing nature of the pandemic. Importantly, high-frequency Canadian growth estimates are already relapsing, as the Covid-19 crisis has induced widespread lockdowns and brought economic activity to a standstill. The Canadian PMI has collapsed relative to the rest of the G10. The risk is that this will lead to a weaker exchange rate (Chart 2) and softer bond yields than normal. Chart 1Canadian Growth Usually Outperforms In Expansions Canadian Growth Usually Outperforms In Expansions Canadian Growth Usually Outperforms In Expansions Chart 2Relative Growth Relapsing ##br##In Canada Relative Growth Relapsing In Canada Relative Growth Relapsing In Canada In this Special Report, jointly written with BCA’s Global Fixed Income Strategy, we explore whether the Canadian recovery will lead or lag the global cycle. This has implications for relative monetary policy, the exchange rate, and bond yields. Canada has usually been a holy grail for foreign direct investment and portfolio flows due to its greater reliance on export growth, commodity demand, and the economy’s lever to the manufacturing cycle. Our bias is that this time around, the recovery could be delayed as the authorities fend off the pandemic, keeping monetary policy dovish and capping Canadian bond yields relative to the US. This will change later this year as the narrative around the pandemic evolves. Canada To Lag, For Now The slowdown in economic activity in Canada coincided with a rapid expansion in the number of new Covid-19 cases, as the northern hemisphere stepped into the winter months. This has led to Canada implementing one of the most stringent lockdown measures around the world. According to Map 1 as of February 10, Canada sat in the top quartile ranking of restrictive measures. Map 1Very Stringent Lockdown Measures In Canada Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? At first blush, Canada ranks quite well in terms of vaccine coverage, relative to the number of new infections (Chart 3). However, progress on the vaccination front has been underwhelming. Canada has vaccinated around 3% of its population, far less than most other G10 economies (Chart 4). The reason is a vaccine shortage, as other countries prioritize local inoculations. There have also been production hiccups. In the interim, this will subdue economic activity relative to the level of potential growth. Chart 3Great Starting Point For Canada,... Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? Chart 4...But Low Vaccine Roll-Out Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? The service industry is crucial to return the economy to full employment, and the leisure and hospitality sectors have been hit particularly hard. Over the last year, Canada has lost 572K jobs. 92% of these have been service related and 60% have been in the accommodation, food services, wholesale trade, and  retail trade sectors. This is keeping a lid on overall consumer and business confidence measures. Unless it becomes safer for these workers to return to work, this will continue to be a drag on consumption. While the unemployment rate in Canada peaked below that in the US, the jobs recovery has been more muted (Chart 5). Chart 5A Slower Jobs Recovery ##br##Than The US A Slower Jobs Recovery Than The US A Slower Jobs Recovery Than The US Chart 6Strong Potential For A Coiled-Spring Rebound Strong Potential For A Coiled-Spring Rebound Strong Potential For A Coiled-Spring Rebound That said, it has not all been negative news. Retail sales were very robust for the month of November, suggesting a high propensity for the economy to regain vigor once lockdown measures are eased. While there was some element of restocking ahead of new restrictive measures, retail sales have been robust throughout the recovery (Chart 6, top panel). The steady rise in oil prices, along with the recovery in the global business cycle, is also boosting capital-spending intentions (Chart 6, middle panel). This will be an added boost to GDP growth. The latest BoC Business Outlook Survey saw the biggest improvement in the sales outlook in a decade (Chart 6, bottom panel). Improving foreign demand, especially from the US, was a welcome positive development. Rising input costs, particularly shipping fees, are a problem, but with transportation indices (such as the Baltic dry index) rolling over, margin pressures will ease. The bottom line is that the Canadian economy remains a coiled spring until the overhang of the Covid-19 crisis clears. Only then can the economy revert back to the high-beta status that has defined it for much of the last two decades. The BoC Will Stay Relatively Dovish Chart 7Is Canada Still A High-Beta Bond Market? Is Canada Still A High-Beta Bond Market? Is Canada Still A High-Beta Bond Market? Canada’s historical experience as a high-beta economy, leveraged to global growth momentum, has also translated into Canada having a high-beta government bond market (Chart 7).  Canadian bond yields are relatively more sensitive to movements in global bond yields, particularly during periods of rising yields that coincide with cyclical upswings in global growth.  That sensitivity has fallen during the pandemic, however, as the BoC has been forced into an extraordinarily easy monetary policy stance. This includes not only cutting policy rates to 0% but aggressively expanding its balance sheet through quantitative easing (QE) operations (Chart 8).  While the rate cuts matched the moves seen by the Fed and other major central banks, the BoC’s QE stands out among the others - measured on a year-over-year basis, the BoC’s balance sheet has grown by a stunning 350%! The BoC has needed to be that aggressive, given the extent of the pandemic-related economic downturn in Canada. According to our Central Bank Monitors - comprised of economic, inflation and financial variables that measure the pressure to adjust monetary policy – the BoC stands out as having the greatest need for accommodative policy settings (Chart 9). Looking at the sub-components of the BoC Monitor, the weakness is centered on the economic components. This suggests that there will be no pressure on the BoC to back away from the current extraordinarily accommodative monetary policy settings without a broader-based recovery in the Canadian economy. The bond market agrees with this assessment, discounting no change in interest rates over the next couple of years. The front end of the Canadian government bond yield curve has been anchored at extremely low levels, with the 2-year yield ranging between 0.15% and 0.35% since April 2020. Chart 8BoC Has Been Aggressive With QE BoC Has Been Aggressive With QE BoC Has Been Aggressive With QE Chart 9BoC Needs To Stay Accommodative, For Now BoC Needs To Stay Accommodative, For Now BoC Needs To Stay Accommodative, For Now Underwhelming inflation is another reason to expect a continued dovish policy bias from the BoC.  Headline CPI inflation was only 0.7% in December, below the BoC’s 1-3% inflation target band, after briefly dipping into outright deflation in the spring of 2020 (Chart 10).  The readings from the BoC’s preferred core inflation measures are not as depressed, with the median CPI inflation rate at 1.8%, just under the midpoint of the BoC target band. Chart 10No Imminent Inflation Threat In Canada No Imminent Inflation Threat In Canada No Imminent Inflation Threat In Canada A sustained upturn in inflation, however, is unlikely without a reduction in spare economic capacity.  The Canadian unemployment rate declined from a peak of 13.7% last May to 8.6% in December, but that remains well above most estimates of full employment.  The long-term unemployment rate is slowly inching higher, however, reaching 2.4% in December, up nearly 1.5 percentage points since May. This suggests that some of the temporary unemployment in lockdown-stricken industries is becoming permanent, a potentially worrying sign for future inflation pressures if Canada continues to struggle with the vaccine rollout. The BoC estimates that there is still ample capacity in the economy as measured by the output gap, which was at -5.8% in Q4/2020 using the central bank’s preferred method of estimating potential GDP.1 This is lower than the OECD’s estimate of the Canadian output gap, which is not projected to be fully eliminated until 2023. In its latest Monetary Policy Review published last month, the BoC noted that they project potential GDP growth to average only 1.4% between 2021 and 2023, 0.4 percentage points below the pre-pandemic estimate of trend growth. That reduction comes almost entirely from a lowered estimate of labor productivity growth resulting from the weakness in business investment spending combined with the growing permanent “scarring” effect on the Canadian labor force from the pandemic. Weaker potential growth implies that the long-run equilibrium interest rate must also be lower. The BoC now estimates that the neutral nominal policy interest rate is somewhere between 1.75% and 2.75%, a range that is 0.5 percentage points below the pre-pandemic level. This implies that the range for the neutral real rate is between -0.25% and +0.75% after adjusting for inflation using the midpoint of the BoC’s 1-3% target band. This is a significant drop in the equilibrium level of interest rates in response to the Covid-19 shock. By comparison, the NY Fed’s estimate of Canada’s neutral real rate (or “r-star”) was around 1.5% pre-pandemic (Chart 11).  Interest rate markets are pricing in an outcome at the low end of that range. The Canadian overnight index swap curve now discounts that the BoC will not begin raising rates until early 2023 and will raise rates very slowly thereafter, even with the central bank projecting a return to 2% headline CPI inflation by 2023 (Chart 11, middle panel). In other words, the market expects several years of negative real policy interest rates in Canada.  As a result, real yields from Canadian inflation-linked bonds are now below zero (Chart 11, bottom panel), even as inflation breakevens have been drifting higher. What could prompt the BoC to move to a less dovish policy bias and, potentially, a faster pace of monetary tightening than the market expects?  Obviously, good news on the vaccine rollout and a reopening of the locked-down parts of the Canadian economy would prompt the BoC to begin tweaking its policy settings in response to reduced uncertainty on growth.  This would start with a reduced pace of QE asset purchases, as BoC Governor Tiff Macklem noted at last month’s monetary policy meeting. Concerns over financial stability risks could also motivate the BoC to begin dialing back monetary accommodation. The plunge in longer-term interest rates has helped fuel another upturn in the Canadian housing market. The BoC’s housing affordability index is back down below the levels that predated the rapid surge in house prices during the previous decade (Chart 12, top panel).  House prices are increasing at nearly a 10% pace, with the uptrend likely to continue given the rise in the ratio of existing home sales to housing starts (Chart 12, middle panel). Chart 11BoC Policy Encouraging Negative Real Yields BoC Policy Encouraging Negative Real Yields BoC Policy Encouraging Negative Real Yields Chart 12Another BoC Fueled Housing Boom Another BoC Fueled Housing Boom Another BoC Fueled Housing Boom Given the BoC’s past focus on excessive valuations on Canadian housing in recent years, concerns that a new housing bubble had been triggered by overly accommodative monetary policy could prompt the BoC to begin dialing back QE or signal that rate hikes could come sooner than the market expects. Chart 13Fiscal Drag Expected In 2021 Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? Additional fiscal stimulus could also change the BoC’s thinking on policy settings. The IMF’s estimate of the “fiscal thrust” (the change in the cyclically-adjusted primary budget balance) in Canada was massive in 2020, equal to 17.4% of potential GDP, as Canadian governments at both the federal and provincial level unleashed an arsenal of tools to fight the economic shock of the pandemic (Chart 13).  Far less stimulus is expected in 2021 as the Canadian economy reopens. However, the Canadian government did announce an additional C$70-100 billion in stimulus at the end of 2020 and has committed to maintaining fiscal support once the pandemic has ended.  That could be enough to prompt the BoC to begin tightening up monetary policy if fiscal policy is not reined in more quickly as the Canadian economy recovers and the Canadian output gap closes at a faster pace. Summing it all up, it seems likely that the BoC will maintain its current easy policy settings until well into the second half of 2021.  A faster than expected recovery in Canadian growth could trigger a move sooner than that, but it is highly unlikely that the BoC would turn less dovish before the US Federal Reserve for fear of causing a surge in the Canadian dollar. The BoC’s aggressive QE expansion has helped offset the potential tightening of Canadian financial conditions stemming from the loonie’s recent appreciation by holding down Canadian bond yields (Chart 14).  The BoC has room to do more, if necessary, if the CAD continues moving higher before the Canadian economy can handle more currency strength. Chart 14BoC QE Is Now A 'Defensive' Strategy BoC QE Is Now A 'Defensive' Strategy BoC QE Is Now A 'Defensive' Strategy There is a good chance that the Fed will begin signalling a tapering of its own QE bond buying towards the end of 2021.  We would expect the BoC to signal reduced QE fairly soon thereafter, especially as a Fed taper would likely only happen if the Covid-19 vaccine distribution was successful and the US economy was starting to return to normal. Investment Conclusions: Fixed Income Chart 15Canadian Bond Strategy Overview Canadian Bond Strategy Overview Canadian Bond Strategy Overview Our analysis of the Canadian economic, inflation and policy backdrop leads us to the following investment recommendations (Chart 15): Duration: Investors should maintain a moderately below-benchmark stance on Canadian duration exposure. Canadian yields will continue to drift higher over the next 6-12 months, even if the BoC maintains an aggressive pace of QE, on the back of a cyclical global economic upturn that will keep putting mild upward pressure on global bond yields. Country Allocation: We are sticking with our current neutral recommended allocation to Canadian government bonds in global fixed income portfolios, for now.  We are also placing Canada on “downgrade watch”, as the BoC will likely move faster than other central banks (except the Fed) to begin withdrawing policy accommodation if the vaccine rollout is successful and the Canadian economy recovers at a faster pace.  Yield Curve: We recommend positioning for additional steepening of the Canadian yield curve.  The front end of the curve will continue to be pinned down by the BoC maintaining dovish forward guidance on the timing of future rate hikes. At the same time, the longer end of the curve will continue to move higher on the back of rising inflation expectations in the near term and, potentially, a move to reduced QE later in 2020. Inflation-Linked Bonds: We continue to recommend dedicated bond investors favor Canadian Real Return Bonds over nominal Canadian government debt, despite less attractive valuations relative to mid-2020. 10-year inflation breakevens are still below the midpoint of the BoC’s 1-3% inflation target band, and will continue to creep higher – even if the CAD appreciates further - until the BoC signals a shift to less dovish policy. Investment Conclusions: CAD The key drivers of the Canadian dollar are what happens to natural resource prices, specifically crude oil, and the Bank of Canada’s monetary policy stance relative to the Federal Reserve. The fact that the BoC will fade any near-term improvement in the Canadian outlook suggests that interest rates will not be an important driver for the CAD/USD exchange rate, as we have witnessed recently (Chart 16). It also means that the CAD will underperform at the crosses, specifically vis-à-vis countries with central bankers likely to adopt a faster hawkish bias. At the top of this list is the Norges Bank. With very low rates globally, the currency correlation with yield differentials matters less. Instead, other factors, such as terms of trade (or relative equity market performance) will matter a lot more, as they have in recent months. As a major oil-producing nation, it is well known that an important driver of the loonie has been the price of crude oil. Our commodity strategists predict that Brent crude will hit about $71 next year. This is much more than the forward markets are discounting. Rising forward prices have usually been synonymous with a higher CAD (Chart 17). Chart 16Currency And Interest Rates Diverge Currency And Interest Rates Diverge Currency And Interest Rates Diverge Chart 17Path Of Oil Prices Is Critical Path Of Oil Prices Is Critical Path Of Oil Prices Is Critical Meanwhile, currency markets react to net portfolio flows, and those into Canada have been improving. It may be a sign of bargain hunting by international investors (Chart 18). While awareness towards global warming and climate change are mainstream, energy stocks have been in a 12-year relative bear market, suggesting much of the bad news is in the price. Meanwhile, global energy stocks trade at a price-to-book discount of 60% and have a dividend yield of 5.3%. The relative performance of the Canadian equity market is very much correlated to the relative price trajectory of energy stocks, suggesting some measure of mean reversion is due (Chart 19). Chart 18Some Bargain Hunting In ##br##Canadian Assets Some Bargain Hunting In Canadian Assets Some Bargain Hunting In Canadian Assets Chart 19Energy (And Canadian) Stocks Are A Coiled Spring Energy (And Canadian) Stocks Are A Coiled Spring Energy (And Canadian) Stocks Are A Coiled Spring Finally, our fundamental intermediate-term model, which incorporates commodity prices, suggests that the loonie is much undervalued (Chart 20). This puts 80-82 cents within striking distance, above which the CAD could reach escape velocity. Meanwhile, the CAD also has upside against the euro, the Indian rupee, and the Turkish lira. Rising oil prices are a terms-of-trade boost for oil exporters but lead to demand destruction for oil importers. In general, a strategy for playing oil upside is to be long a basket of energy producers versus energy consumers (Chart 21). Chart 20The CAD Is Undervalued The CAD Is Undervalued The CAD Is Undervalued Chart 21CAD Versus Oil Consumers CAD Versus Oil Consumers CAD Versus Oil Consumers While the outlook for oil is positive, Canadian players suffer from two hiccups: First, continued new fuel standards will reduce the need for Canadian crude, which is of a heavier blend, with a much higher sulfur content. This will widen the discount between Western Canadian Select (WCS) and light sweet crude. This is bad news for Canadian oil producers and the loonie. Second, pipeline capacity remains a major hurdle to getting Canadian crude to US refineries. This leads to a transportation discount for Canadian crude oil. The Enbridge Line 3 replacement is facing delays from the state of Minnesota (390K additional barrels). The Keystone XL pipeline, a major release valve for Canadian oil (830K barrels a day in capacity), was rejected by US President Joe Biden. The Trans-Mountain Expansion project (690K additional barrels), connecting Alberta to the Westridge Marine Terminal and Chevron refinery in Burnaby, is slated to be competed only by the end of 2022. All this could slash Canadian market share as global oil markets recover. Chart 22Remain Short CAD/NOK Remain Short CAD/NOK Remain Short CAD/NOK Netting it all out, we expect the rise in crude oil prices to $71 per barrel to more than offset a widening in the Canadian discount due to transportation bottlenecks. This will still provide upside for the Canadian dollar as terms of trade continue to improve. However, this also places short CAD/NOK trades in a sweet spot. While Canadian crude is likely to remain trapped in the oil sands for now, North Sea crude will face fewer transportation bottlenecks in the near term. This suggests that the path of least resistance for the CAD/NOK is down (Chart 22). As for AUD/CAD, we are neutral the cross near parity. On the one hand, as oil prices play catchup with the spectacular rise in metals prices, relative terms of trade favor the CAD. Last week, we went short the AUD/MXN cross on this basis. The improvement in the US economy, compared to the rest of the G10, also benefits Canada more. On the other hand, Australia is handling the Covid-19 crisis pretty well, suggesting the economy could achieve higher output growth much faster. In conclusion, the following trades make sense for the CAD: Long CAD/USD Long CAD/(EUR+TRY+INR) Short CAD/NOK Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The BoC’s preferred potential GDP measure is derived from the “integrated framework” method, which uses trend growth rates of labor and labor productivity to estimate trend GDP growth.
Highlights The dollar bounce has further to run. The DXY index could touch 94 before working off oversold conditions. In this environment, yen long positions also provide an attractive hedge. Meanwhile, Japan has stepped back into deflation, with the resurgence in Covid-19 cases constraining activity and consumption spending. A modest rise in real rates will lead to a self-reinforcing upward spiral for the yen. Remain strategically short USD/JPY. Tactical investors can also short EUR/JPY as a trade. Eventually, when global growth picks up, the yen will weaken at the crosses. However, this is less likely in an environment where global yields remain anchored at low levels. We were stopped out of our long silver/short gold position last week. Reinstate. Feature The powerful bounce in global markets from the March lows is morphing into a speculative frenzy. The highlight this week centered on a few stocks, such as GameStop, Blackberry, and AMC Entertainment holdings, that have entered a manic phase. While liquidity conditions remain extremely favorable for risk assets, only a small shift in market sentiment may be required to trigger a reversal. The big risk from a technical perspective is that this reversal might be deeper and longer than most expect, given extremely overbought conditions. The dollar has tended to strengthen as market volatility rises. 2020 saw the rapid accumulation of dollar shorts, as low interest rates squeezed investors into more speculative assets, such as cryptocurrencies (Chart I-1). With these assets now having  jumped high into the stratosphere, and dollar-short positioning at a bearish nadir, the nascent bounce in the USD could morph into something bigger. In our report a fortnight ago,1 we argued for a 2%-4% rise, putting 94 on the DXY index within striking distance. Chart I-1Some Signs Of Speculative Froth Some Signs Of Speculative Froth Some Signs Of Speculative Froth Chart I-2The Yen Benefits From A Rise In Volatility The Yen Benefits From A Rise In Volatility The Yen Benefits From A Rise In Volatility The yen also generally benefits from rising volatility (Chart I-2). Should a market correction develop, it will provide the necessary catalyst for established long yen positions. Meanwhile, as we argue below, the backdrop in Japan is becoming more deflationary, which is also yen bullish. We are already short USD/JPY in our portfolio and recommend going short EUR/JPY for a trade. The Yen And Global Markets The AUD/JPY rate is extremely sensitive to equity market conditions (Chart I-3). Therefore, one of the ways to play a potential reversal in equity markets and a rise in volatility is to short the AUD/JPY cross. While we certainly recommend this trade tactically, we prefer to express this view via a short EUR/JPY position. There are three main reasons for this.  First, despite a significant rally in AUD/JPY, speculators are still very short the cross, as we showed two weeks ago. This is because short USD positions have been expressed in a concentrated number of currencies, including the euro. In a nutshell, speculators are very long EUR/USD and just neutral EUR/JPY (Chart I-4). This favors EUR short positions from a contrarian perspective, compared to AUD. Chart I-3The Yen And Equity Markets The Yen And Equity Markets The Yen And Equity Markets Chart I-4Go Short EUR/JPY For A Trade Go Short EUR/JPY For A Trade Go Short EUR/JPY For A Trade Second, Australia is doing much better in terms of containing the spread of Covid-19, compared to Europe as we argued last week.2 Australian export volumes and prices continue to recover smartly, and the basic balance remains in a healthy surplus. Meanwhile, there is a rising risk that the Covid-19 crisis will hit Europe particularly hard in Q1 this year. Interest rate markets are already beginning to discount this view. Real interest rates in the euro area are collapsing relative to Japan (Chart I-5). This will limit any fixed-income flows into the euro area from Japanese investors. At the margin, this is negative EUR/JPY. Third, given the most recent stimulus out of Europe, the European Central Bank’s (ECB) balance sheet is expanding faster than that of the Bank of Japan (BoJ). This has historically been negative for the EUR/JPY (Chart I-6). Chart I-5EUR/JPY And Real Interest Rates EUR/JPY And Real Interest Rates EUR/JPY And Real Interest Rates Chart I-6EUR/JPY And Relative Balance Sheets EUR/JPY And Relative Balance Sheets EUR/JPY And Relative Balance Sheets In a nutshell, equity markets are due for a healthy reset. In a similar fashion, a washing out of stale euro long positions will ensure the bull market for 2021 unfolds with higher conviction. Tactical investors can also short EUR/JPY as a trade. Outright short EUR/USD positions also make sense in the near term.  The Yen And Japanese Growth Japan has re-entered a debt-deflation spiral, and it is unclear how it will exit this predicament, other than via a rebound in external demand. While it remains our base case that external demand will recover, the yen will be held hostage in the interim to short-term safe-haven inflows, as real rates remain well bid. Like most other economies, Japan is seeing the worst private-sector contraction in decades. For an economy that has held interest rates near zero since the better part of the 90s, this is not good news. Whenever the structural growth rate of the Japanese economy has fallen below interest rates, the trade-weighted yen has staged a powerful rally (Chart I-7). A strong yen, on the back of deficient domestic demand, then leads to a self-fulfilling deflationary spiral. Chart I-7The Story Of Japan In One Chart The Story Of Japan In One Chart The Story Of Japan In One Chart The latest Bank of Japan (BoJ) meeting was a clear indication that the central bank was out of policy bullets (the central bank left policy largely unchanged). The BoJ began to acknowledge this problem with the end of the Heisei era3 two years ago. A policy review is due in March of this year, but with aggressive stimulus in place since governor Haruhiko Kuroda took helm almost a decade ago, it is difficult to see how any changes could steer Japan out of deflation and towards a 2% inflation target anytime soon.  For example, with the BoJ owning 47% of outstanding JGBs, about 80% of ETFs and almost 5% of JREITs, the supply side puts a serious limitation on how much more stimulus the BoJ can provide. As a result, the impulse of the BoJ’s balance sheet could soon begin to fade, especially relative to that of other central banks (Chart I-8). Chart I-8The BoJ's Balance Sheet Could Peak Soon The BoJ's Balance Sheet Could Peak Soon The BoJ's Balance Sheet Could Peak Soon 2% Inflation = Mission Impossible? Most developed economies have not been able to meet their inflation targets over the last decade. While this might change going forward with unprecedented monetary and fiscal stimulus, it will not happen anytime soon. For example, the US is a much more closed economy than Japan and has not been able to maintain a 2% inflation rate since the Global Financial Crisis. This makes the BoJ’s target of 2% a pipe dream in the near future. Strictly looking at the data, the situation is even worse, with Japan having categorically stepped back into deflation (Chart I-9). The three key variables the authorities pay attention to for inflation – Core CPI, the GDP deflator, and the output gap – are all negative or rolling over. In fact, since the financial crisis, prices in Japan have only been able to really rise after a tax hike. Always forgotten is that the overarching theme for prices in Japan is a rapidly falling (and aging) population, leading to deficient demand (Chart I-10). Chart I-9Japan Is Back In Deflation Japan Is Back In Deflation Japan Is Back In Deflation Chart I-10Japan Prices And Demographics Japan Prices And Demographics Japan Prices And Demographics This view is corroborated in the inflation swap market. 5, 10, and 20-year inflation swaps in Japan are all depressed (Chart I-11). More importantly, with almost 50% of the Japanese consumption basket in tradeable goods, domestic inflation is as much driven by the influence of the BoJ or demographics, as it is by globalization. Chart I-11Is 2 Percent Inflation Mission Impossible? Is 2% Inflation Mission Impossible? Is 2% Inflation Mission Impossible? Fiscal Policy To The Rescue? Chart I-12Falling Consumer Confidence In Japan Falling Consumer Confidence In Japan Falling Consumer Confidence In Japan Most governments have carte blanche on fiscal stimulus. While it is certainly the case that the Japanese government could boost spending via transfer payments, much of this income is more likely to be saved than spent by the private sector. In other words, the savings ratio for workers continues to surge. If consumers were not willing to spend prior to COVID-19,4 they are unlikely to do so under much more uncertain future conditions (Chart I-12). Some of the government’s outlays will certainly go a long way to boosting aggregate demand, since the fiscal multiplier tends to be much larger in a liquidity trap. This will especially be the case for increased social security spending such as child education, construction activity, or the move towards promoting cashless transactions (with a tax rebate). However, there are important near-term offsets. The first is a potential postponement of the Olympics once again for 2021. This will continue to be a drag on Japanese construction activity. Second, the Covid-19 pandemic has severely curtailed tourism in Japan, especially as Niseko and Hakuba, important ski destinations for foreigners, lose inbound momentum. Tourism makes up a non-negligible component of Japanese income. Finally, the labor (and income) dividend from immigration has practically vanished. The Yen Beyond The Near Term Eventually, when global growth picks up, the yen will weaken at the crosses. However, this is less likely in an environment where global yields remain anchored at low levels. Real interest rates are already higher in Japan, and the above factors could meaningfully generate a deflationary impulse. As such, the starting point for yen long positions is already favorable (Chart I-13). Chart I-13The Yen And Relative Interest Rates The Yen And Relative Interest Rates The Yen And Relative Interest Rates Chart I-14DXY And USD/JPY Usually Move Together DXY And USD/JPY Usually Move Together DXY And USD/JPY Usually Move Together A continued rise in global equity markets is a key risk to our scenario. This will especially favor short dollar positions. However, as a low-beta currency, our contention is that the yen will surely weaken at its crosses, but could strengthen versus the dollar. The yen rises versus the dollar not only during recessions, but during most episodes of broad dollar weakness (Chart I-14). While short EUR/JPY positions will suffer, short USD/JPY bets should still fare well. As such, we remain strategically short USD/JPY. It is rare to find such a “heads I win, tails I do not lose too much” proposition. Housekeeping We were stopped out of our long silver/short gold position for a modest profit of 6%. We have profitably traded silver for almost two years now, and could see a speculative breakout in the metal over the next few months. We recommend reinstating this trade today with the ratio at 71, while maintaining our target at 65 and setting the stop loss at 72.5. We were also stopped out of our long petrocurrency basket versus the euro. With heightened volatility in oil prices, we will be looking to re-establish this trade from lower levels.   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see our Foreign Exchange Strategy report, "Sizing A Potential Dollar Bounce," dated January 15, 2021. 2 Please see our Foreign Exchange and Global Fixed Income Strategy report, "Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields And Currency," dated January 20, 2021. 3 The Heisei era refers to the period of Japanese history corresponding to the reign of Emperor Akihito, from January 8, 1989 until his abdication on April 30, 2019. 4 Ricardian equivalence suggests in simple terms that public-sector dissaving will encourage private-sector savings. Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 Chart I-2USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the US have been resilient: US manufacturing activity continues to outperform its peers, with a solid 59.1 print on the Markit PMI for January. The S&P CoreLogic house price index grew by 9.5% year-on-year in November. Consumer confidence remains resilient, with the expectations component surging for the month of January. 4Q GDP came in at an annualized 4% quarter-on-quarter, in line with expectations. The DXY index was flat this week. The latest FOMC meeting reinforced the view that there will be no rush to tighten US monetary policy. Two preconditions for tightening is inflation well above 2% and tight labor market conditions. This suggests the path for least resistance for the US dollar is down, albeit with some near-term consolidation. Report Links: The Dollar In A Blue Wave - January 8, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 The Dollar In A Market Reset - October 30, 2020 The Euro Chart I-3EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 Chart I-4EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 Recent data from the euro area are softening: Manufacturing PMIs are rolling over, with the aggregate index down to 54.7 in January from 55.2. The German IFO Business climate index also softened from 92.1 to 90.1 in January. GfK consumer confidence slipped from -7.3 to -15.6 in February. The euro fell by 0.3% against the US dollar this week. As the broad dollar continues to work off oversold conditions, the euro remains a potent valve to allow for this reset. We are shorting EUR/JPY this week to profit from any setback in risk assets.  Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Addressing Client Questions - September 4, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 The Japanese Yen Chart I-5JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 Chart I-6JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 Recent data from Japan has been disappointing: Departmental store sales fell by 13.7% year-on-year in December. Retail sales are softening overall in Japan. Tokyo CPI will be released overnight and is expected to stay weak. The Japanese yen fell by 0.7% against the US dollar this week. Our highest conviction call over the next one to three months is to be long the yen both versus the dollar and versus the euro. As we discuss in the front section of this report, short USD/JPY is an attractive “heads I win, tails I do not lose too much” bet. Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 The Near-Term Bull Case For The Dollar - February 28, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 British Pound Chart I-7GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 Chart I-8GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 Recent data out of the UK have been softening: The Markit manufacturing PMI fell from 57.5 to 52.9 in January. 88K jobs were lost in the three months ending November. This pushed up the ILO unemployment rate to 5%. Average weekly earnings rose by 3.6% year-on-year in November. The British pound was flat against the US dollar this week. Post-Brexit relations and Covid-19 vaccinations continue to dominate the news flow in Britain. The latter is progressing, but a difficult adjustment remains for Britain’s exporters. This will add volatility to the pound. We remain short EUR/GBP on valuation grounds.  Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart I-9AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 Chart I-10AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 Recent data from Australia have been improving: CPI went up a notch in the fourth quarter, to 0.9% from 0.7%. The weighted median number was more encouraging at 1.4% NAB Business conditions improved from 9 to 14 in December. However, the expectations component deteriorated from 12 to 4. 4Q export prices rose by 5.5% quarter-on-quarter. The Australian dollar fell by 0.9% against the US dollar this week. The Aussie has been consolidating gains for most of January. The dominant feature driving the Aussie in the near term will continue to be terms of trade. We expect the AUD to resume its uptrend after a brief consolidation phase. We shied from implementing a short AUD/JPY trade today, preferring to express this view via short EUR/JPY. Report Links: An Update On The Australian Dollar - September 18, 2020 On AUD And CNY - January 17, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart I-11NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 Chart I-12NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 There was scant data out of New Zealand this week:  The trade surplus in 2020 was NZ$2.9bn, compared to a deficit of NZ$4.5bn in 2019.  The New Zealand dollar fell by 0.4% against the US dollar this week. Agricultural prices are consolidating after a rebounding from the lows of last year. Poor weather continues to be a worry on the supply side, but this is already reflected in very long Ag positioning. More should continue to deflate air off the high-flying kiwi. Report Links: Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Place A Limit Sell On DXY At 100 - November 15, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart I-13CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 Chart I-14CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 Recent data from Canada continues to disappoint: Building permits fell by 4.1% month-on-month in December. The Canadian dollar plunged by 1.3% against the US dollar this week. Oil prices are consolidating this year’s gains, which has weighed on the loonie. There is also the issue of the cancelled keystone XL pipeline, which is adding a risk premium for Canadian crude. We are short CAD/NOK as a trade, to capitalize on the latter headwind. Report Links: Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Swiss Franc Chart I-15CHF Technicals 1 CHF Technicals 1 CHF Technicals 1 Chart I-16CHF Technicals 2 CHF Technicals 2 CHF Technicals 2 There was scant data out of Switzerland this week: The Swiss franc fell by 0.3% against the US dollar this week. The Swiss national bank (SNB) has two headaches to contend with in the coming weeks: a potential correction in the euro, which encourages safe-haven flows into the franc, and the lagged effects on a strong currency on domestic prices. This will force the hand of the SNB to continue being foreign exchange reserves at an aggressive pace. Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart I-17NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 Chart I-18NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 The data out of Norway has been robust: The unemployment rate came down in November to 5% from 5.2%. The Norwegian krone fell by 2% this week on oil-related losses. Despite this, good management of the COVID-19 situation remains a positive catalyst relative to US or European peers. We expect the krone to keep outperforming for the rest of the year. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 Swedish Krona Chart I-19SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 Chart I-20SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 Recent data from Sweden has been mixed: The unemployment rate ticked up in December from 8.3% to 8.7%. Retail sales fell by 0.6% year-on-year in December, after rising by 5.7% the previous month. The trade balance improved from SEK1.4bn to SEK2.7bn in December. The Swedish krona fell by 0.8% against the US dollar this week. As a high beta currency, the Swedish krona typically bears the brunt of a US dollar rally. However, this time around, valuations provide a sufficient margin of safety for investors that are long. 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
Dear client, This is our final publication of the year. We thank you very much for your continued readership, and extend our best wishes for a safe and prosperous new year. Chester Ntonifor, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy Highlights Brexit risk is properly priced in the EUR/GBP cross but not in the GBP/USD cross. As such, the best way to position for an eventual trade deal between the EU and the UK is to go short the EUR/GBP cross. A no-deal Brexit could see the pound undershoot to 1.25 in the very short term. This could also coincide with a broad-based technical bounce in the dollar. However, the pound is moderately undervalued on a longer-term basis. GBP/USD should touch 1.45 by the end of 2021. Feature Chart I-1An Asymmetry In Pricing An Asymmetry In Pricing An Asymmetry In Pricing Two weeks before the close of a very momentous year, the EU-UK Brexit imbroglio is still in a stalemate. Our base case remains that a deal will be struck at the 11th hour. However, there is a non-negligible probability that the UK will exit the EU without a trade deal on December 31. In this high-stakes standoff, a clear interpretation of the possible outcomes is important for investors, not only from an economic perspective, but specifically for cable positioning in the coming year. In a nutshell, our conclusion is that Brexit risk is properly priced in the EUR/GBP cross, but not in the GBP/USD exchange rate (Chart I-1). Where Are We Today? There has been progress made on negotiations between the EU and UK. The three main issues that were intractable from both sides included: fishing rights over British waters; a level-playing field clause that ensures British compliance in future EU competition rules; and the diplomatic resolution of disputes. On all issues, we have had a few key developments: The issues surrounding  fishing are not relevant economically but are a strong sticking point politically. Economically, fishing constitutes 0.3% of British GDP and 0.5% of exports (Chart I-2). Therefore, it is an economic red herring. Politically, however, the whole Brexit debate is one about sovereignty. And there is no better way for the British to cement this sovereignty than by taking control over their waters, where over 50% of the catch on England’s shores is by non-British firms.1  The EU recognizes this sticking point and is just demanding “predictability and stability” in future relations. In the end, the UK should be able to negotiate an agreement with larger control over what happens along their coastlines. Surprisingly, there seems to be more of an agreement on the level-playing field clause, though our initial assumption was that this would be the major stumbling block. Agreement to adhere to future EU rules on environmental and labor standards seemed almost impossible on the surface of any sovereignty deal. But the issues of domestic subsidies (and their impact on competition) appear now largely resolved. State aid was a fulcrum of the discussion on open and fair trade between the EU and UK. In retrospect, both the UK and EU appear very aligned on critical issues such as climate change, with the UK even ahead of the EU on matters such as clean energy (Chart I-3). Chart I-2Fishing Is An Economic Red Herring Fishing Is An Economic Red Herring Fishing Is An Economic Red Herring Chart I-3The UK Has Reformed Power Generation The UK Has Reformed Power Generation The UK Has Reformed Power Generation There also appears to be progress made on the issue of dispute resolution, and this will especially be the case if a strong and independent arbitration system can be agreed upon. It is a good sign that none of the parties on either the EU or UK side are suggesting this as a roadblock. UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson is preparing for an emergency session of the House of Commons next week, to approve a trade deal. This points to  rising odds of a deal being sealed by the weekend. A Decision Tree For GBP Chart 1 shows that while EUR/GBP is trading near the highs of the decade, GBP/USD has significantly appreciated from the March lows. From this simple comparison, there appears to be more of a Brexit discount in GBP/EUR compared to GBP/USD. This view is corroborated by the options market: Out-of- the-money calls on GBP/EUR are trading at the biggest discount to puts since the Brexit referendum (Chart I-4). Prior to the broad-based dollar decline this year, the hard floor for cable was 1.20. This was the low hit after the Brexit referendum and after Boris Johnson was elected prime minister of the UK. Both events underscored maximum pessimism on the pound from Brexit. While EUR/GBP is trading near the highs of the decade, GBP/USD has significantly appreciated from the March lows. From this simple comparison, there appears to be more of a Brexit discount in GBP/EUR compared to GBP/USD.  However, since March of this year, we now have had a broad-based dollar decline. Intuitively, that has raised the floor for the pound in the case of a no-deal Brexit. A simple back-of-the-envelope calculation suggests that the new floor for cable is just under 1.30, rather than the 1.20 that prevailed before the dollar downtrend.2 That is the good news for holders of cable. The bad news is that the pound could well undershoot this level, since the dollar is technically ripe for a rebound and global stocks are technically due for a reset. As our colleagues in the European Investment Strategy service have pointed out,3 a huge part of the rally in the pound has also been driven by improving risk sentiment (Chart I-5). A reversal of this, completely unrelated to Brexit, will hurt the pound. Chart I-4Lots Of EUR/GBP Bulls Lots Of EUR/GBP Bulls Lots Of EUR/GBP Bulls Chart I-5The Pound And The Stock Market The Pound And The Stock Market The Pound And The Stock Market As such, the pound faces two risks: One from a no-deal Brexit and the other from a broad-based dollar rebound. Our conclusion is that if both happen simultaneously, this could knock GBP/USD towards 1.25. GBP Fair-Value Models Chart I-6Cable Is Cheap Cable Is Cheap Cable Is Cheap With the pound near 1.36, the next natural question is how high can it rise? Our contention is towards 1.45 by the end of 2021. The reason is that the pound is still undervalued according to many of our models. On a real effective exchange rate basis, the pound is about 1.5 standard deviations below the mean. This pins the pound lower than where it was after the UK exited the ERM in 1992 (Chart I-6). Over time, the pound will converge towards the mid-point of this historical range, pushing it above 1.50. Our in-house PPP models suggest the pound is undervalued by 12%. Our models take on average three years to revert to the mean, pushing cable above 1.50 in the next couple of years. As a reminder, our in-house PPP models adjust the weights of components in the consumer basket, so that we get a more apples-to-apples comparison across countries (Chart I-7).4  Chart I-7The Pound Is Undervalued The Pound Is Undervalued The Pound Is Undervalued Our intermediate-term timing model suggests the pound will also gravitate towards 1.50 over the next year or two. This model is much quicker at reverting to the mean, and incorporates risk variables such as corporate spreads and commodity prices that drive near-term fluctuations in the pound (Chart I-8). Our in-house PPP models suggest the pound is undervalued by 12%. One model, based on relative productivity, is signaling a red flag for cable (Chart I-9). A major drag on UK economic growth over the past four years has been the collapse in business confidence and the associated contraction in capital spending. Since the UK’s EU referendum – that is, prior to  the actual withdrawal of the UK from the EU – Brexit has left a lasting mark on the UK economy through elevated uncertainty, severe weakness in business investment spending, and anemic productivity. The net result is an economy with lower trend growth and a structurally weak exchange rate.5 Chart I-8GBP/USD Could Hit 1.45 Next Year GBP/USD Could Hit 1.45 Next Year GBP/USD Could Hit 1.45 Next Year Chart I-9The UK Needs To Boost Its Productivity The UK Needs To Boost Its Productivity The UK Needs To Boost Its Productivity As such, we expect a knee-jerk rally in the pound towards 1.45 in the event that we get a Brexit deal. For a rally towards 1.50 and beyond, it will require that UK growth, and especially productivity growth, begins to outpace that of its trading partners. EUR/GBP And Relative Economic Fundamentals Beyond the issue of Brexit, how is the UK economy faring on a cyclical basis? The answer is better than its trading partners: The manufacturing PMI of the UK has been improving relative to that of the Eurozone. With the population already getting inoculated in the UK, relative economic fundamentals will continue to favor the UK (Chart I-10). Chart I-10UK Is Outperforming The Eurozone UK Is Outperforming The Eurozone UK Is Outperforming The Eurozone Similarly, consumption is doing better in the UK than in the euro area. Thanks to the furlough scheme, UK households are getting much needed income to sustain spending. Historically, this has been negative for EUR/GBP (Chart I-11). Chart I-11Consumption In The UK Holding Up Well Consumption In The UK Holding Up Well Consumption In The UK Holding Up Well The cheapness of the pound has allowed the UK to close the gap in its current account deficit (Chart I-12). As such, weakness in GBP/EUR is no longer justified by current account imbalances. Going forward, whether the UK is able to outperform the Eurozone will depend on the willingness of businesses to put capital to work and revive capital spending. It is arguable that with so much pent-up investment demand in the UK, the room for a mini-boom in capital spending is quite large. It is therefore encouraging that money velocity in the UK has been outpacing that in the Eurozone, suggesting a revival in animal spirits (Chart I-13). Chart I-12The Benefits Of A Cheap Pound The Benefits Of A Cheap Pound The Benefits Of A Cheap Pound Chart I-13The UK Needs A Revival Of Animal Spirits The UK Needs A Revival Of Animal Spirits The UK Needs A Revival Of Animal Spirits In a nutshell, relative fundamentals already favor being short the EUR/GBP cross. And, as we have argued above, the best way to position for an eventual trade deal between the EU and UK is also to short the EUR/GBP cross. In the FX portfolio, we are short EUR/GBP with a target of 0.8 and a stop loss at 0.96. On AUD/GBP And GBP/JPY The performance of the pound on other crosses will be mixed. A ranking model shows that the pound sits at par relative to the aussie, but is less attractive relative to the yen and the Scandinavian currencies (Chart I-14). As such, we are neutral on the AUD/GBP at current levels. However, on a 12-month horizon, we expect AUD/GBP to hit 0.60. Chart I-14The Scandinavian Currencies Are Very Attractive Thoughts On The British Pound Thoughts On The British Pound First, real interest rates are a key driver of the AUD/GBP exchange rate. In the very near term, Australia is benefiting greatly from the faster reopening of the Chinese economy. But Britain is also profiting from pent-up demand that has developed since the Brexit referendum. As such, both economies should see upward momentum in 2021. We do not expect either the Reserve Bank of Australia nor the Bank of England to fight these trends. This will keep relative bond yields tempered and will result in a  wash for the cross (Chart I-15). Rising commodity prices are usually bullish for AUD/GBP. On a longer-term basis, the aussie should outperform the pound. This will be driven by a terms of trade boost to Australian growth that will start to lift longer-term relative bond yields. Rising commodity prices are usually bullish for AUD/GBP (Chart I-16). Chart I-15AUD/GBP And Real Interest Rates AUD/GBP And Real Interest Rates AUD/GBP And Real Interest Rates Chart I-16AUD/GBP And Commodity Prices AUD/GBP And Commodity Prices AUD/GBP And Commodity Prices On GBP/JPY, the path will highly depend on who benefits the most from rising global trade in 2021. Real interest rates are higher in Japan, which favors the yen (Chart I-17). But the UK’s trade deficit with Japan has also been shrinking in recent years. With a new UK-Japan trade deal in place, this trend could continue and allow GBP/JPY to bottom towards the middle of next year. Chart I-17Wait To Buy GBP/JPY Wait To Buy GBP/JPY Wait To Buy GBP/JPY Concluding Thoughts Our currency positions as we enter 2021 largely reflect our expectation for the dollar to keep declining. A full list of our active positions is available on page 12. On both cable and the euro, our recommendations are two-fold: Remain short EUR/GBP and buy GBP/USD if it hits 1.25.   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Oliver Barnes and Chris Morris, "Brexit trade deal: Who really owns UK fishing quotas?" BBC News, dated December 7, 2020 2 GBP/USD has appreciated by about 18% since the March lows, while the DXY has depreciated by about 13%. The difference of 5% is roughly the premium embedded in cable from a Brexit deal. 3 Please see European Investment Strategy Strategy Report, "Exhausted? Brexit, The ECB And Tech Stocks," dated December 10, 2020. 4 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Strategy Report, "Updating Our PPP Models," dated November 13, 2020. 5 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "United Kingdom: Cyclical Slowdown Or Structural Malaise," dated September 20, 2019. 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 Recent data from the US have been soft: The Markit Manufacturing PMI was little changed at 56.5 in December, while the services PMI fell to 55.3 from 58.4. The Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index increased from 76.9 to 81.4 in December. Initial jobless claims jumped to 885,000 for the week ending on December 11. Retail sales declined by 1.1% month-on-month in November. The DXY index plunged by 1.5% this week. On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve kept its interest rate unchanged and vowed to maintain bond purchases until we see “substantial progress” in economic recovery. Moreover, the US Congress could vote on a $900 billion COVID-19 aid bill. The massive liquidity injections continue to provide a backdrop for the multi-year decline in the dollar, consistent with our USD bearish view. Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 The Dollar In A Market Reset - October 30, 2020 A Few Market Observations - October 23, 2020 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 have been solid: The Markit Manufacturing Index increased from 53.8 to 55.5 in December. The Services PMI also jumped from 41.7 to 47.3. Both headline and core consumer price inflation were unchanged at -0.3% and 0.2% year-on-year, respectively in November. The trade surplus expanded from €23.7 billion to €25.9 billion in October. Industrial production increased by 2.1% month-on-month in October. The euro appreciated by 1.3% against the US dollar this week. The ECB continued to urge the banking sector to preserve capital ahead of a default surge when governments wind down loan guarantees. That said, we expect the European growth to outperform, especially relative to the US, and we expect EUR/USD to march higher in coming years. Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Addressing Client Questions - September 4, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 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 have been mostly positive: The Jibun Bank Manufacturing PMI marginally increased from 49 to 49.7 in December. Both exports and imports declined by 4.2% and 11.1% year-on-year, respectively in November. The adjusted trade surplus increased from ¥314.3 billion to ¥570.2 billion. Industrial production increased by 4% month-on-month in October. The Japanese yen appreciated by 1.5% against the US dollar this week. The December “Tankan Survey” released this week showed that the all industry index jumped to -15 from -28 in the previous survey. The manufacturing component recovered from -37 to -20, and the non-manufacturing component also increased from -21 to -11. Notably, the recovery is broad-based with improvement in both supply and demand conditions. Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 The Near-Term Bull Case For The Dollar - February 28, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 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 in the UK have been mostly positive: The Markit Manufacturing PMI increased from 55.6 to 57.3 in December. The services index also increased from 47.6 to 49.9. The unemployment rate slightly increased from 4.8% to 4.9% in October. However, average earnings increased by 2.7% year-on-year for the 3 months to October. Headline retail price inflation fell from 1.3% to 0.9% year-on-year in November.  The British pound surged by 2.4% this week. The Bank of England kept its interest rate on hold at 0.1% this week, unanimously voted by the monetary policy committee. The Bank’s bond-buying program will also stay unchanged at £895 billion. While Brexit uncertainty persists, we believe that the pound is still undervalued and has room to appreciate. Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 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 have been solid: The Commonwealth Bank Manufacturing PMI slightly increased from 55.8 to 56 in December. The Services PMI also increased from 55.4 to 57.4. On the employment front, the unemployment rate declined from 7% to 6.8% in November. 90,000 positions were added last month, including 84,200 full-time jobs and 5,800 part-time jobs. The Australian dollar appreciated by 1.8% against the US dollar this week. In the RBA meeting minutes released this week, the RBA lifted the GDP growth expectations for the last quarter of 2020. The RBA noted that recovery had established reasonable momentum and that employment had recovered faster than anticipated. We continue to favor the Australian dollar amid the brighter economic outlook. Report Links: An Update On The Australian Dollar - September 18, 2020 On AUD And CNY - January 17, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 Recent data in New Zealand have been positive: GDP grew by 14% quarter-on-quarter in Q3, or 0.4% year-on-year. The current account deficit narrowed to NZ$3.5 billion in Q3, from a NZ$6.7 billion deficit in the same quarter last year. Year to date, the current account deficit represents only 0.8% of GDP, the lowest over the past 19 years. The New Zealand dollar appreciated by 1.5% against the US dollar this week. The Westpac Survey showed that New Zealand’s consumer confidence index rebounded significantly from 95.1 in September to 106 in December. Both present and expected conditions have greatly improved. With the government having controlled the spread of Covid-19, the services sector is expected to recover heading into the new year. Report Links: Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Place A Limit Sell On DXY At 100 - November 15, 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 Recent data from Canada have been solid: Headline consumer price inflation increased from 0.7% to 1% year-on-year in November. Core inflation also jumped from 1% to 1.5% year-on-year. ADP employment recorded an increase of 40,800 jobs in November. Housing starts rose by 14.4% month-on-month to 246,033 units in November. The Canadian dollar appreciated by 0.7% against the US dollar this week, lagging other currencies. During a speech this week, Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem warned against another coronavirus wave during the holiday season. He also mentioned that “the economic recovery from the pandemic is at a very difficult stage.” We expect the BoC to passively fight additional currency strength. Report Links: Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 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 Recent data from Switzerland have been mostly positive: Exports rose by 4.8% month-on-month to CHF 18.8 billion in November. Imports were up 4.2% month-on-month to CHF 15.7 billion. The trade surplus widened to CHF 3.1 billion from CHF 2.9 billion the previous month. Producer and import prices fell by 2.7% year-on-year in November. The Swiss franc appreciated by 0.7% against the US dollar this week. On Thursday, the SNB kept its interest rate unchanged at -0.75%, the lowest worldwide. Moreover, SNB Chairman Thomas Jordan acknowledged that the Bank has made “considerable FX purchases” this year and that interventions were necessary to stabilize the franc, given large safe-haven inflows during the economic crisis. We are long EUR/CHF in our FX portfolio and are currently 1.6% in the money. Report Links: The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 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 Recent data from Norway have been soft: The trade surplus narrowed from NOK 2.7 billion to NOK 0.2 billion in December. The Norwegian krone surged by 3% against the US dollar this week. This Thursday, the Norges Bank kept its interest rate at 0% as expected, while implying that it may be able to raise rates earlier than expected. In the latest “Economic Trends for Norway and Abroad” report, Statistics Norway also noted that “vaccination is likely to push up interest rates next year,” as the impact of the pandemic diminishes. The Norges Bank is among the central banks that are likely to gradually raise rates early. Long NOK remains our high-conviction view. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 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 Recent data from Sweden have been negative: The unemployment rate increased to 7.7% in November, up 0.9% from the same month last year. The Swedish krona surged by 2.5% against the US dollar this week amid broad dollar weakness. The latest “Labor Force Survey” released this Thursday noted that Sweden’s labor market recovery remains subdued. In November 2020, there were 5,062,000 employed people, which is 78,000 less than the same month last year. The average number of hours worked in November also fell by 3.9% year-on-year. That said, the Swedish krona remains one of the most attractive G10 currencies based on its cheap valuation and positive growth outlook. Kelly Zhong Research Analyst 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 There is some evidence that the euro could gravitate to 1.50 over the next few years. The key assumption is that the equilibrium rate of interest will rise in the euro area relative to that in the US. Our bias is that fair value for the euro is closer to 1.35, or 15% above current levels. Over the very near term, the risks are tilted towards the downside. But while EUR/USD could punch below 1.15, an undershoot towards parity is highly unlikely. In our FX portfolio, we are long EUR/CHF and short EUR/GBP. We would buy the euro outright below 1.15. Feature The markets have rejoiced at the success of a few vaccine trials and are looking forward to a return to normalcy in 2021. Around the world, equity markets have rallied in symphony. Even secular dogs such as the Japanese Nikkei, which has been in a relative bear market for many decades, broke to fresh 21-year highs. Copper prices are rising fervently, and measures of risk, such as the VIX index or high-yield corporate spreads, are collapsing to pre-pandemic levels both in the US and Europe. As a procyclical currency, the euro has also been quite cheerful. Bullish sentiment on the euro is at a decade high and the currency has rallied 11% from the lows, commensurate with the drop in the DXY index (Chart 1). As a share of total open interest, 80% of speculators are bullish on the euro. Historically, sentiment at this level has been usually associated with the euro being closer to 1.50. Chart 1Sentiment On The Euro Is Elevated Sentiment On The Euro Is Elevated Sentiment On The Euro Is Elevated Chart 2The Euro Is Lagging Copper Prices The Euro Is Lagging Copper Prices The Euro Is Lagging Copper Prices The juxtaposition of much welcomed good news and elevated sentiment sets the euro in a very precarious tug of war. Standard theory suggests that the post-pandemic trade may already be priced into the common currency, given bullish sentiment. This augurs for a reversal. On the other hand, other measures also suggest that the rally in the euro has more room to run. For example, copper prices and the euro have tended to move together, and the red metal suggests EUR/USD should be above 1.20 (Chart 2). Similarly, EUR/JPY has lagged the stellar performance of global equity prices. Is the lagging performance of EUR/USD sending the right signal, suggesting caution? Or is the common-currency a coiled spring ready to head much higher in 2021? How To Forecast The Euro According to Bloomberg forecasts, the euro will be at 1.25 by the end of 2022 (Chart 3). By our reckoning, these forecasts are much too pessimistic. The key driver of the EUR/USD exchange rate is the relative growth profile between the euro area and the US, how that profile is likely to evolve in the future, and the implication for relative monetary policies. Anything else that tries to predict the euro is a subset of this much bigger question. How is growth in the euro area likely to evolve compared to the US? There are many ways to approach this issue, with surprisingly similar results. The key driver of the EUR/USD exchange rate is the relative growth profile between the euro area and the US. The first is just to take the IMF growth estimates at face value. According to the Fund, the euro area economy is projected to contract by 8.3% this year, almost double that of the US, which is 4.3%. But by next year, the economy is expected to bounce back more fervently. Euro area growth is expected to advance by 5.2% compared to 3.1% in the US. Much of the rise will be due to a surge in investment within the euro area, especially driven by pent-up demand in the peripheral countries. This growth acceleration is projected to continue well into 2023. Back-of-the envelope calculations suggest that this will pin EUR/USD around 1.35 (Chart 4) Chart 3Few Expect The Euro Above 1.25 Few Expect The Euro Above 1.25 Few Expect The Euro Above 1.25 Chart 4EUR/USD And Relative Growth EUR/USD And Relative Growth EUR/USD And Relative Growth The Case For European Growth We tend to side with the IMF’s forecasts and even argue that this might actually be on the conservative side for the euro area. There are two major reasons for this, both of which are bilaterally important. First, the neutral rate of interest in the euro area may have moved a step function higher relative to the US. The standard dilemma for the euro zone is that interest rates have always been too low for the most productive nation, Germany, but too expensive for others, such as Spain and Italy. The silver lining is that the European Central Bank (ECB) has now lowered domestic interest rates and eased policy to the point where they are accommodative for all euro zone countries.1 Bond yields in peripheral Europe are collapsing relative to those in Germany and France (Chart 5). This makes it much easier for the less-productive, peripheral countries to borrow and invest. This will boost productivity, lifting the neutral rate. Chart 5The Neutral Rate In The Euro Area The Neutral Rate In The Euro Area The Neutral Rate In The Euro Area Second and equally important, the periphery has become as competitive as the core. Through labor market reforms, internal devaluation, and recurring recessions throughout the last decade, unit labor costs in Greece, Ireland, Portugal, and Spain have converged with that in Germany and France. This has effectively eliminated the competitiveness gap that had accumulated over the past two decades (Chart 6). Even Italy, which remained saddled with a rigid and less productive workforce, has seen unit labor costs begin to crest. Chart 6Southern Europe Is Competitive Again Southern Europe Is Competitive Again Southern Europe Is Competitive Again According to the Holston-Laubach-Williams estimates at the NY Fed, the natural rate of interest in the euro area is now higher than in the US, something that has rarely occurred over the 20-year history of the common currency. Based on these estimates, the euro could gravitate towards 1.50 (Chart 7). Chart 7EUR/USD And The Neutral Rate EUR/USD And The Neutral Rate EUR/USD And The Neutral Rate US Versus Europe Chart 8Productivity In Europe Has Lagged Productivity In Europe Has Lagged Productivity In Europe Has Lagged In today’s world, 1.50 for the euro is certainly very high and will surely stir up some action from the ECB well before we approach these levels. As most of my colleagues would argue, no central bank wants a strong currency.2 But how can we gauge the above premise that the neutral rate of interest should be higher in the euro area due to the tectonic shifts over the last few years? One way is to look at trend productivity growth. Since the 1960s, up until the Great Financial Crisis, trend productivity growth was around 2.2% in the US and 2.8% in the euro area. However, since 2009, productivity growth has been 0.6% per year in the euro area and 1.1% in the US (Chart 8). In other words, the European debt crisis has substantially subdued productivity growth in the euro area. If indeed the crisis is behind us, and we assume European productivity growth returns back to trend over the next 10 years, while making up for the shortfall relative to the US, this will pin it at roughly 1.6% higher in Europe relative to the US. Cumulatively, that is a rise of around 20%. Meanwhile, we highlighted last week that the euro was undervalued by over 10%.3 This pins the euro above 1.50. The Euro At Parity And Inflation Chart 9US Versus Euro Area Inflation US Versus Euro Area Inflation US Versus Euro Area Inflation While the euro might gravitate higher in the next few years, it is unlikely to do so in a straight line. Meanwhile, deflation is a key near-term threat for the euro (Chart 9). With the ECB clearly telegraphing that it will do more easing in December, the relative monetary policy stance is not favorable. That said, there are three key points to consider about inflation. First, most G10 central banks were unable to meet their inflation mandate when output gaps were closing and the economy was at full employment. This makes it less likely they will meet their mandate anytime soon. This is not just an ECB problem, but one for the Fed, BoJ, and even the RBA. Second, inflation tends to be a global phenomenon in the developed world, meaning desynchronized cycles in inflation dynamics are quite rare. Finally, with balance sheets expanding everywhere in the G10, the potential for higher inflation once output gaps close will be universal. European productivity growth will have to outpace that in the US by roughly 1.6%, to play catch up. Going forward, an agreement on the mutualization of European debt means we can begin to expect more synchronized business cycles as fiscal stabilizers kick in. The reason is that both fiscal and monetary policy can now be synchronized across member states. This makes shortfalls in inflation less likely. Finally, while deflation can be a sign of an expensive currency, there is little evidence that this is the case for the euro. The euro area continues to sport very healthy trade and current account surpluses, a sign that the euro remains very competitive among its trading partners. Intra-European trade represents a large share of cross-border transactions in Europe, meaning currency considerations are less important. In 2019, most member states had a share of intra-EU exports of between 50% and 75%. The bottom line is that disappointing inflation dynamics could lead to a knee-jerk selloff in the euro, but this should be an opportunity to accumulate long positions. The Cyclical Catalyst Ultimately, European growth is cyclically tied to export growth. And with a huge concentration of cyclical sectors, such as financials, industrials, materials and energy, in European bourses, the euro tends to be largely driven by pro-cyclical flows. Earnings revisions between the euro area and the US have generally led the EUR/USD exchange rate by about 9-12 months (Chart 10).  Chart 10EUR/USD Tracks Relative Profits EUR/USD Tracks Relative Profits EUR/USD Tracks Relative Profits So far, the signs are positive. The impulse from Chinese credit is providing a release valve for European exports (Chart 11). So even if social distancing remains in place for longer than people expect, it still allows economies that are geared more towards manufacturing such as Europe, Japan, and China to keep churning higher. This could boost European earnings in a meaningful way. Chart 11Chinese Demand For European Goods Chinese Demand For European Goods Chinese Demand For European Goods Fortunately for investors, European equities, especially those in the periphery, remain unloved, given that they are trading at some of the cheapest cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings multiples in the developed world (Chart 12A). Over the next decade, it would be surprising if some of these “old economy” stocks did not unwind their discount via both rising earnings and multiples. Many emerging markets, including China, still depend on “old-economy” materials such as oil, and industrial machinery, that Europe sells. The impulse from Chinese credit is providing a release valve for European exports. Even in the commodity space, cyclical metals like copper are still massively underperforming safe havens like gold. This has largely  tracked the discount between European stocks and US stocks. A bet on a reversal could prove very profitable (Chart 12B).   Chart 12AEuro Stocks Are Cheap Euro Stocks Are Cheap Euro Stocks Are Cheap Chart 12BEuro Stocks Could Rerate Euro Stocks Could Rerate Euro Stocks Could Rerate Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "EUR/USD And The Neutral Rate Of Interest," dated June 14, 2019, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Nobody Wants A Strong Currency," dated November 17, 2020, gfis.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Updating Our PPP Models," dated November 13, 2020. fes.bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades