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Currencies In-Depth

We remain bullish the yen, despite the BoJ maintaining yield curve control. In this report, we outline a few reasons for this stance.

Commodity currencies have been rather resilient, despite the broad rise in the dollar this year. In our view, we are about to experience a big rotation in commodity currency market performance at the crosses, from NZD, to CAD and finally to AUD.

In this report, we identify the Norwegian krone as a currency that could outperform especially at the crosses, irrespective of the broad dollar trend.

In this report, we assess that sterling likely bottomed below 1.04. We expect volatility in the currency to remain in place but are buyers below current levels. On balance, there is a tug of war between irresponsible fiscal policy and the pound as a global reserve currency. This will create a buy-in opportunity for investors who missed the latest dip.

Executive Summary Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong The HKD is facing its most critical test in several decades. While the peg is likely to survive (Feature Chart), the economic costs for Hong Kong SAR will be far reaching. Critically, monetary policy in Hong Kong SAR is being tailored behind a hawkish Fed, while economic ties with China increasingly warrant easier policy settings. This tug of war will be resolved via a reset in domestic spending and asset prices. Equity shares have been the first shoe to drop. Real estate values and consumer spending will be next. A hypothetical delinking of the peg will see the HKD depreciate since it is expensive on a real effective exchange rate basis. Longer term, the rising use of the RMB in Hong Kong SAR will render the peg a relic. It will also fit with China’s aims to internationalize the RMB. Bottom Line: The HKD peg is likely to survive in the near term, but the economic repercussions from maintaining the linked exchange-rate system will trigger a rethinking by the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) and mainland authorities. Eventually, HKD could be replaced by the CNY. For now, HKD interest rates are slated to rise further, which will have ramifications for domestic spending and asset prices. Feature Chart 1HKD Has Been Tracking Interest Rates HKD Has Been Tracking Interest Rates HKD Has Been Tracking Interest Rates The Hong Kong dollar (HKD) has been trading on the weak side of its convertibility band since May. In theory, this suggests there is intense pressure for the peg to be delinked, which should lead to a much weaker exchange rate. In practice, interest rates in Hong Kong have failed to keep up with the surge in US rates, which has led to widening interest rate differentials between Hong Kong and the US. As a result, investors have embarked on a massive carry trade, funding USD purchases with HKDs (Chart 1). HKD’s weakness has raised questions about whether the exchange rate could face a crisis of confidence. This will be a severe blow to the HKMA whose sole role is currency stability, with the HKD being the underlying bedrock of Hong Kong’s financial system. In this report, we suggest that the HKD will survive this crisis, just as it has navigated previous shocks since 1983. The brunt of the adjustment will be domestic, first from Hong Kong equities, but spreading to real estate and consumer spending. Longer term, the HKD might become a relic as transactions in Hong Kong are increasingly conducted in RMB. Will The Peg Be Sustained? Historically, currency pegs more often than not fail. Specific to the HKD, the peg is facing its most critical test in decades but is likely to survive for a few reasons. First, every HKD that the region of Hong Kong has ever printed is backed by USD reserves, to the tune of 1.8 times. Quite simply, FX reserves are much higher than the Hong Kong monetary base (Chart 2). This suggests the HKMA’s “convertibility promise” remains credible. Second, Hong Kong also ranks favorably when looking at the ratio of broad money supply to FX reserves. Every 42.3 cents of broad money creation can be backed by foreign currency, a ratio much higher than China and on par with Singapore (Chart 3). With a monetary base fully backed by FX reserves and a broad money-to-FX reserve ratio largely in line with other linked exchange rate systems, our bias is that the peg will remain in place at least over a cyclical horizon (12-18 months). Chart 2In Theory, The HKMA Can Defend The Peg In Theory, The HKMA Can Defend The Peg In Theory, The HKMA Can Defend The Peg Chart 3The HKMA Ranks Favorably To The PBoC The HKMA Ranks Favorably To The PBoC The HKMA Ranks Favorably To The PBoC This credibility will come at a huge cost to the domestic economy, however. By having a fixed exchange rate system and an open capital account, Hong Kong has given up control over domestic monetary policy. Consequently, it must import monetary policy from the US. As interest rates rise in the US, demand for US dollar deposits from Hong Kong concerns goes up, putting downward pressure on the exchange rate. To maintain the convertibility ratio, the HKMA must drain the system of Hong Kong dollars to lift domestic interest rates. This is quite visible not only from the drop in foreign exchange reserves, but also the drawdown in the aggregate balance of domestic banks parked at the HKMA (Chart 4). From May 11 through August, the HKMA has absorbed a total of HKD 213 billion, shrinking the aggregate balance in the banking system by more than 60%. Chart 4Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong Historically, the aggregate balance has had to drop much more to restore an equilibrium between interest rates in the US and Hong Kong SAR. The implication is that liquidity will continue to be drained from the system to ultimately defend the peg, and local interest rates will rise. There is one important caveat: Hong Kong SAR’s net international investment position stands at 580% of GDP, much higher than broad money supply. As such, the Hong Kong SAR does not have a solvency problem. What it faces is too much domestic liquidity, which is pushing HKD interest rates lower (Chart 5). Chart 5The HKD Is Facing A Liquidity, Rather Than A Solvency Crisis The Future Of The Hong Kong Dollar Peg The Future Of The Hong Kong Dollar Peg Ramifications Of The USD Peg When the HKD was tied to the US dollar in 1983, it made economic sense. Hong Kong SAR’s economy was more linked via trade to the US, compared to China (Chart 6). As such, stability vis-à-vis the US dollar was a vital appeal for traders, financiers, and all industries tied to the Hong Kong hub. Since then, there has been a tectonic shift in economic dependence. Exports to China now account for almost 60% of the total, while those to the US have fallen well below 8%. Quite simply, Hong Kong SAR still imports monetary policy from the US, while it is increasingly dependent on the Chinese economy. Nonetheless, there have been a few adjustments. The use of the RMB in Hong Kong SAR has been gradually gaining momentum. RMB deposits have risen to over HKD 800bn. As a share of narrow money supply (M1), it is almost 50% (Chart 7). There are also over 140 licensed banks in Hong Kong allowed to engage in RMB-based business. Chart 6Hong Kong And China Are Tied To The Hip Hong Kong And China Are Tied To The Hip Hong Kong And China Are Tied To The Hip Chart 7Hong Kong Is Transitioning Into A Defacto RMB System Hong Kong Is Transitioning Into A Defacto RMB System Hong Kong Is Transitioning Into A Defacto RMB System These links extend beyond just banking turnover. First introduced in 2014, the southbound trading links between China and Hong Kong SAR have become a major conduit for mainland investors to gain exposure to foreign firms. The China-Hong Kong stock connect has now handled over 2.6tn RMB in cumulative flows. This represented as high as 40% of the equity turnover in Hong Kong SAR (Chart 8). Capital account transactions have also been progressively relaxed, and the issuance of RMB bonds has been rising rapidly since 2008. Chart 8Lots Of Financial Links Between The HKD and RMB Lots Of Financial Links Between The HKD and RMB Lots Of Financial Links Between The HKD and RMB Hong Kong SAR’s strengthening ties with China comes with some good news. The increase in Chinese domestic liquidity is lowering the cost of capital for local enterprises. At the same time, it might also be fuelling very low domestic interest rates, forcing locals to chase higher rates elsewhere. This does not affect the peg if people sell the RMB to buy other currencies, including the dollar or maybe even the HKD. The bad news is that Hong Kong has now become a high-beta play on China as both economies are inexorably interlinked. Chart 9 shows that consumers in Hong Kong SAR tend to have much more volatile spending patterns compared to China, especially when economic growth is about to slow. One reason is that Hong Kong concerns are highly levered notably to the property market (Chart 10). For example, the debt service ratio in Hong Kong SAR sits at 32% of disposable income, much higher than China or other indebted economies (Chart 11). This makes the economy very vulnerable to rising interest rates. Chart 9Hong Kong Is Economically More Volatile Than China Hong Kong Is Economically More Volatile Than China Hong Kong Is Economically More Volatile Than China Chart 10Hong Kong Cannot Escape A Hard Landing (Part 1) Property Prices In Hong Kong Will Drop Property Prices In Hong Kong Will Drop Chart 11Hong Kong Cannot Escape A Hard Landing (Part 2) Hong Kong Cannot Escape A Hard Landing (Part 2) Hong Kong Cannot Escape A Hard Landing (Part 2) The bottom line is that as the HKMA withdraws domestic liquidity, this will reassert downward pressure on business activity and asset prices, particularly real estate. With private consumption a whopping 65% of GDP, household deleveraging will also prove to be a formidable headwind for domestic spending. Outside interest rates, Hong Kong SAR remains a trade hub. If global trade slows down meaningfully, this will lead to a deterioration in the current account. This triple whammy from slowing global trade, rising interest rates and consumer deleveraging could prove indigestible for Hong Kong assets. Policy Options Chart 12The Government Could Bail Out Hong Kong The Government Could Bail Out Hong Kong The Government Could Bail Out Hong Kong As highlighted above, the HKD peg will remain in place for the foreseeable future, but this will come at a huge cost. The advantage of the HKD peg is that the choice of the nominal anchor, the US dollar, renders it credible. As a financial hub, this is crucial for Hong Kong. Meanwhile, such an anchor also imposes fiscal discipline since government deficits cannot be monetized by money printing. In the case where the government tries to be profligate, the rise in inflation will lower real rates and lead to capital outflows. This will force the HKMA to sell US dollars and absorb local currency. Indeed, over the past several years, government debt in Hong Kong has been close to nil (Chart 12). The drawback of a fixed exchange-rate regime is that Hong Kong SAR has relinquished control over independent monetary policy. Such a union was justified when the economic cycles between the US and Hong Kong SAR were in sync, but now the region needs easier policy settings. The roadmap of the late 1990s could be what is in store for Hong Kong SAR. In short, the peg survived but the region went through a severe internal devaluation. During the Asian crisis, property prices fell by more than 60%. If that were to occur today, it would herald a prolonged period of high unemployment and stagnant wages to realign the region’s competitiveness with its trading partners. Hong Kong SAR stocks have already borne the brunt of an internal adjustment and are trading at very cheap multiples (Chart 13). The MSCI Hong Kong stock index is composed of mostly financials (47% of market cap) and property stocks (21% of market cap). As HKD rates are rising, loan growth in Hong Kong SAR is contracting and net interest margins have collapsed (Chart 14). This does not bode well for the near-term performance of financials. Chart 13Markets Have Already Discounted A Pessimistic Scenario For Hong Kong Shares Markets Have Already Discounted A Pessimistic Scenario For Hong Kong Shares Markets Have Already Discounted A Pessimistic Scenario For Hong Kong Shares Chart 14Banks In Hong Kong Are Facing A Tough ##br##Reckoning Banks In Hong Kong Are Facing A Tough Reckoning Banks In Hong Kong Are Facing A Tough Reckoning The good news is that similar to the late 1990s, banks are unlikely to go bust. Hong Kong SAR banks are well capitalized and delinquency rates are quite low, suggesting a banking crisis is unlikely to be a source of pain for the HKD peg (Chart 15). In fact, Hong Kong SAR banks rank favorably among their global peers in terms of capital adequacy (Chart 16). Chart 15Banks In Hong Kong Are Well Capitalized (Part 1) Banks In Hong Kong Are Well Capitalized (Part 1) Banks In Hong Kong Are Well Capitalized (Part 1) Chart 16Banks In Hong Kong Are Well Capitalized (Part 2) The Future Of The Hong Kong Dollar Peg The Future Of The Hong Kong Dollar Peg Specific to the currency, Hong Kong is also running recurring current account surpluses. This is boosting its FX reserves (Chart 17). That lends credibility to the peg in the near term. The bad news is that as the domestic economy slows down, and global trade comes close to a standstill, these surpluses could evaporate. One cost to Hong Kong is that the peg to the US dollar has made HKD incrementally expensive. Our model shows that the real effective exchange for HKD is about 2.5 standard deviations above fair value (Chart 18). Our view on the US dollar is that we could see depreciation over a 12-to-18-month horizon, but an overshoot in the near term is quite likely. A drop in the US dollar will help realign competitiveness in the HKD. Meantime, the market has also been pushing the currency towards the weaker side of its convertibility band. Chart 17Balance Of Payments Remain Favorable For The HKD Balance Of Payments Remain Favorable For The HKD Balance Of Payments Remain Favorable For The HKD Chart 18The HKD Is Expensive The HKD Is Expensive The HKD Is Expensive Longer term, as Hong Kong SAR continues to become more entwined with China, a peg to the CNY will make sense. This process will be the initial step in the region’s official embrace of the RMB system. That said, the process will be gradual since the US dollar remains very much a reserve currency, and the relevance of Hong Kong SAR as a financial center hinges upon easy access to the USD. What is more likely is that any re-pegging to the RMB will come many years down the road, when the yuan has become a fully convertible currency. The de-pegging of the HKD from the USD or adjusting the peg is as much a political discussion as an economic one. Political conditions for this change are not yet present given such a change will have major ramifications for the economy of Hong Kong SAR and will likely also reverberate through financial asset prices. One can imagine a scenario where HKD yields are forced to adjust to a new nominal anchor. Investors have been convinced through almost 30 years of history to treat the HKD as a proxy for the US dollar. That said, the economic pain associated with maintaining the HKD-USD peg will ensure authorities accelerate the use of RMBs in Hong Kong, with a goal of eventually adopting the yuan as the de facto currency. Adopting  a currency board akin to Singapore is another option that makes sense, especially since this would give the HKMA scope to link to cheaper currencies, such as the yen and euro. That said, this is unlikely to be politically palatable, especially for Beijing. A link to the yuan that already does this job makes sense. Finally, there is always the option to fully float the peg, but this would probably increase currency volatility. This is unlikely in the near term. The Goldilocks scenario for policymakers is when the US dollar eventually depreciates against major currencies, easing financial conditions for Hong Kong SAR concerns. This will dovetail nicely with the goals of the monetary authorities, maintain credibility while easing financial concerns for a very levered economy. Investment Conclusions The HKD peg will remain in place, but the financial dislocations will lead to significant internal devaluation in Hong Kong SAR. As US interest rates rise, the HKD will be under considerable pressure. The HKMA will have no choice but to allow HKD interest rates to rise. This will tip the property market and thrust the economy into deflation and a recession. Chinese bonds are the best hedge against this risk. Avoid property and financial shares for the time being. Were the peg to break today, the HKD will depreciate according to our valuation models. This suggests markets are right to push the HKD-linked rate towards the weaker end of the convertibility band. Despite the economic and financial pain, the HKMA will not abandon the peg. That means carry trades will continue to make money. Using the HKD as a funding currency still makes sense in the near term. In long run, the economic pain associated with maintaining the HKD-USD peg will make authorities in Beijing accelerate the use of the RMB in Hong Kong’s special administrative region. The eventual goal will be for Hong Kong SAR to adopt the yuan as its currency.   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Qingyun Xu, CFA Associate Editor  qingyunx@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Cyclical Holdings (6-18 months) Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
Executive Summary Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong The HKD is facing its most critical test in several decades. While the peg is likely to survive (Feature Chart), the economic costs for Hong Kong SAR will be far reaching. Critically, monetary policy in Hong Kong SAR is being tailored behind a hawkish Fed, while economic ties with China increasingly warrant easier policy settings. This tug of war will be resolved via a reset in domestic spending and asset prices. Equity shares have been the first shoe to drop. Real estate values and consumer spending will be next. A hypothetical delinking of the peg will see the HKD depreciate since it is expensive on a real effective exchange rate basis. Longer term, the rising use of the RMB in Hong Kong SAR will render the peg a relic. It will also fit with China’s aims to internationalize the RMB.​​​​​. Bottom Line: The HKD peg is likely to survive in the near term, but the economic repercussions from maintaining the linked exchange-rate system will trigger a rethinking by the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) and mainland authorities. Eventually, HKD could be replaced by the CNY. For now, HKD interest rates are slated to rise further, which will have ramifications for domestic spending and asset prices. Feature Chart 1HKD Has Been Tracking Interest Rates HKD Has Been Tracking Interest Rates HKD Has Been Tracking Interest Rates The Hong Kong dollar (HKD) has been trading on the weak side of its convertibility band since May. In theory, this suggests there is intense pressure for the peg to be delinked, which should lead to a much weaker exchange rate. In practice, interest rates in Hong Kong have failed to keep up with the surge in US rates, which has led to widening interest rate differentials between Hong Kong and the US. As a result, investors have embarked on a massive carry trade, funding USD purchases with HKDs (Chart 1). HKD’s weakness has raised questions about whether the exchange rate could face a crisis of confidence. This will be a severe blow to the HKMA whose sole role is currency stability, with the HKD being the underlying bedrock of Hong Kong’s financial system. In this report, we suggest that the HKD will survive this crisis, just as it has navigated previous shocks since 1983. The brunt of the adjustment will be domestic, first from Hong Kong equities, but spreading to real estate and consumer spending. Longer term, the HKD might become a relic as transactions in Hong Kong are increasingly conducted in RMB. Will The Peg Be Sustained? Historically, currency pegs more often than not fail. Specific to the HKD, the peg is facing its most critical test in decades but is likely to survive for a few reasons. First, every HKD that the region of Hong Kong has ever printed is backed by USD reserves, to the tune of 1.8 times. Quite simply, FX reserves are much higher than the Hong Kong monetary base (Chart 2). This suggests the HKMA’s “convertibility promise” remains credible. Second, Hong Kong also ranks favorably when looking at the ratio of broad money supply to FX reserves. Every 42.3 cents of broad money creation can be backed by foreign currency, a ratio much higher than China and on par with Singapore (Chart 3). With a monetary base fully backed by FX reserves and a broad money-to-FX reserve ratio largely in line with other linked exchange rate systems, our bias is that the peg will remain in place at least over a cyclical horizon (12-18 months). Chart 2In Theory, The HKMA Can Defend The Peg In Theory, The HKMA Can Defend The Peg In Theory, The HKMA Can Defend The Peg Chart 3The HKMA Ranks Favorably To The PBoC The HKMA Ranks Favorably To The PBoC The HKMA Ranks Favorably To The PBoC This credibility will come at a huge cost to the domestic economy, however. By having a fixed exchange rate system and an open capital account, Hong Kong has given up control over domestic monetary policy. Consequently, it must import monetary policy from the US. As interest rates rise in the US, demand for US dollar deposits from Hong Kong concerns goes up, putting downward pressure on the exchange rate. To maintain the convertibility ratio, the HKMA must drain the system of Hong Kong dollars to lift domestic interest rates. This is quite visible not only from the drop in foreign exchange reserves, but also the drawdown in the aggregate balance of domestic banks parked at the HKMA (Chart 4). From May 11 through August, the HKMA has absorbed a total of HKD 213 billion, shrinking the aggregate balance in the banking system by more than 60%. Chart 4Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong Liquidity Will Shrink Further In Hong Kong Historically, the aggregate balance has had to drop much more to restore an equilibrium between interest rates in the US and Hong Kong SAR. The implication is that liquidity will continue to be drained from the system to ultimately defend the peg, and local interest rates will rise. There is one important caveat: Hong Kong SAR’s net international investment position stands at 580% of GDP, much higher than broad money supply. As such, the Hong Kong SAR does not have a solvency problem. What it faces is too much domestic liquidity, which is pushing HKD interest rates lower (Chart 5). Chart 5The HKD Is Facing A Liquidity, Rather Than A Solvency Crisis The Future Of The Hong Kong Dollar Peg The Future Of The Hong Kong Dollar Peg Ramifications Of The USD Peg When the HKD was tied to the US dollar in 1983, it made economic sense. Hong Kong SAR’s economy was more linked via trade to the US, compared to China (Chart 6). As such, stability vis-à-vis the US dollar was a vital appeal for traders, financiers, and all industries tied to the Hong Kong hub. Since then, there has been a tectonic shift in economic dependence. Exports to China now account for almost 60% of the total, while those to the US have fallen well below 8%. Quite simply, Hong Kong SAR still imports monetary policy from the US, while it is increasingly dependent on the Chinese economy. Nonetheless, there have been a few adjustments. The use of the RMB in Hong Kong SAR has been gradually gaining momentum. RMB deposits have risen to over HKD 800bn. As a share of narrow money supply (M1), it is almost 50% (Chart 7). There are also over 140 licensed banks in Hong Kong allowed to engage in RMB-based business. Chart 6Hong Kong And China Are Tied To The Hip Hong Kong And China Are Tied To The Hip Hong Kong And China Are Tied To The Hip Chart 7Hong Kong Is Transitioning Into A Defacto RMB System Hong Kong Is Transitioning Into A Defacto RMB System Hong Kong Is Transitioning Into A Defacto RMB System These links extend beyond just banking turnover. First introduced in 2014, the southbound trading links between China and Hong Kong SAR have become a major conduit for mainland investors to gain exposure to foreign firms. The China-Hong Kong stock connect has now handled over 2.6tn RMB in cumulative flows. This represented as high as 40% of the equity turnover in Hong Kong SAR (Chart 8). Capital account transactions have also been progressively relaxed, and the issuance of RMB bonds has been rising rapidly since 2008. Chart 8Lots Of Financial Links Between The HKD and RMB Lots Of Financial Links Between The HKD and RMB Lots Of Financial Links Between The HKD and RMB Hong Kong SAR’s strengthening ties with China comes with some good news. The increase in Chinese domestic liquidity is lowering the cost of capital for local enterprises. At the same time, it might also be fuelling very low domestic interest rates, forcing locals to chase higher rates elsewhere. This does not affect the peg if people sell the RMB to buy other currencies, including the dollar or maybe even the HKD. The bad news is that Hong Kong has now become a high-beta play on China as both economies are inexorably interlinked. Chart 9 shows that consumers in Hong Kong SAR tend to have much more volatile spending patterns compared to China, especially when economic growth is about to slow. One reason is that Hong Kong concerns are highly levered notably to the property market (Chart 10). For example, the debt service ratio in Hong Kong SAR sits at 32% of disposable income, much higher than China or other indebted economies (Chart 11). This makes the economy very vulnerable to rising interest rates. Chart 9Hong Kong Is Economically More Volatile Than China Hong Kong Is Economically More Volatile Than China Hong Kong Is Economically More Volatile Than China Chart 10Hong Kong Cannot Escape A Hard Landing (Part 1) Property Prices In Hong Kong Will Drop Property Prices In Hong Kong Will Drop Chart 11Hong Kong Cannot Escape A Hard Landing (Part 2) Hong Kong Cannot Escape A Hard Landing (Part 2) Hong Kong Cannot Escape A Hard Landing (Part 2) The bottom line is that as the HKMA withdraws domestic liquidity, this will reassert downward pressure on business activity and asset prices, particularly real estate. With private consumption a whopping 65% of GDP, household deleveraging will also prove to be a formidable headwind for domestic spending. Outside interest rates, Hong Kong SAR remains a trade hub. If global trade slows down meaningfully, this will lead to a deterioration in the current account. This triple whammy from slowing global trade, rising interest rates and consumer deleveraging could prove indigestible for Hong Kong assets. Policy Options Chart 12The Government Could Bail Out Hong Kong The Government Could Bail Out Hong Kong The Government Could Bail Out Hong Kong As highlighted above, the HKD peg will remain in place for the foreseeable future, but this will come at a huge cost. The advantage of the HKD peg is that the choice of the nominal anchor, the US dollar, renders it credible. As a financial hub, this is crucial for Hong Kong. Meanwhile, such an anchor also imposes fiscal discipline since government deficits cannot be monetized by money printing. In the case where the government tries to be profligate, the rise in inflation will lower real rates and lead to capital outflows. This will force the HKMA to sell US dollars and absorb local currency. Indeed, over the past several years, government debt in Hong Kong has been close to nil (Chart 12). The drawback of a fixed exchange-rate regime is that Hong Kong SAR has relinquished control over independent monetary policy. Such a union was justified when the economic cycles between the US and Hong Kong SAR were in sync, but now the region needs easier policy settings. The roadmap of the late 1990s could be what is in store for Hong Kong SAR. In short, the peg survived but the region went through a severe internal devaluation. During the Asian crisis, property prices fell by more than 60%. If that were to occur today, it would herald a prolonged period of high unemployment and stagnant wages to realign the region’s competitiveness with its trading partners. Hong Kong SAR stocks have already borne the brunt of an internal adjustment and are trading at very cheap multiples (Chart 13). The MSCI Hong Kong stock index is composed of mostly financials (47% of market cap) and property stocks (21% of market cap). As HKD rates are rising, loan growth in Hong Kong SAR is contracting and net interest margins have collapsed (Chart 14). This does not bode well for the near-term performance of financials. Chart 13Markets Have Already Discounted A Pessimistic Scenario For Hong Kong Shares Markets Have Already Discounted A Pessimistic Scenario For Hong Kong Shares Markets Have Already Discounted A Pessimistic Scenario For Hong Kong Shares Chart 14Banks In Hong Kong Are Facing A Tough ##br##Reckoning Banks In Hong Kong Are Facing A Tough Reckoning Banks In Hong Kong Are Facing A Tough Reckoning The good news is that similar to the late 1990s, banks are unlikely to go bust. Hong Kong SAR banks are well capitalized and delinquency rates are quite low, suggesting a banking crisis is unlikely to be a source of pain for the HKD peg (Chart 15). In fact, Hong Kong SAR banks rank favorably among their global peers in terms of capital adequacy (Chart 16). Chart 15Banks In Hong Kong Are Well Capitalized (Part 1) Banks In Hong Kong Are Well Capitalized (Part 1) Banks In Hong Kong Are Well Capitalized (Part 1) Chart 16Banks In Hong Kong Are Well Capitalized (Part 2) The Future Of The Hong Kong Dollar Peg The Future Of The Hong Kong Dollar Peg Specific to the currency, Hong Kong is also running recurring current account surpluses. This is boosting its FX reserves (Chart 17). That lends credibility to the peg in the near term. The bad news is that as the domestic economy slows down, and global trade comes close to a standstill, these surpluses could evaporate. One cost to Hong Kong is that the peg to the US dollar has made HKD incrementally expensive. Our model shows that the real effective exchange for HKD is about 2.5 standard deviations above fair value (Chart 18). Our view on the US dollar is that we could see depreciation over a 12-to-18-month horizon, but an overshoot in the near term is quite likely. A drop in the US dollar will help realign competitiveness in the HKD. Meantime, the market has also been pushing the currency towards the weaker side of its convertibility band. Chart 17Balance Of Payments Remain Favorable For The HKD Balance Of Payments Remain Favorable For The HKD Balance Of Payments Remain Favorable For The HKD Chart 18The HKD Is Expensive The HKD Is Expensive The HKD Is Expensive Longer term, as Hong Kong SAR continues to become more entwined with China, a peg to the CNY will make sense. This process will be the initial step in the region’s official embrace of the RMB system. That said, the process will be gradual since the US dollar remains very much a reserve currency, and the relevance of Hong Kong SAR as a financial center hinges upon easy access to the USD. What is more likely is that any re-pegging to the RMB will come many years down the road, when the yuan has become a fully convertible currency. The de-pegging of the HKD from the USD or adjusting the peg is as much a political discussion as an economic one. Political conditions for this change are not yet present given such a change will have major ramifications for the economy of Hong Kong SAR and will likely also reverberate through financial asset prices. One can imagine a scenario where HKD yields are forced to adjust to a new nominal anchor. Investors have been convinced through almost 30 years of history to treat the HKD as a proxy for the US dollar. That said, the economic pain associated with maintaining the HKD-USD peg will ensure authorities accelerate the use of RMBs in Hong Kong, with a goal of eventually adopting the yuan as the de facto currency. Adopting  a currency board akin to Singapore is another option that makes sense, especially since this would give the HKMA scope to link to cheaper currencies, such as the yen and euro. That said, this is unlikely to be politically palatable, especially for Beijing. A link to the yuan that already does this job makes sense. Finally, there is always the option to fully float the peg, but this would probably increase currency volatility. This is unlikely in the near term. The Goldilocks scenario for policymakers is when the US dollar eventually depreciates against major currencies, easing financial conditions for Hong Kong SAR concerns. This will dovetail nicely with the goals of the monetary authorities, maintain credibility while easing financial concerns for a very levered economy. Investment Conclusions The HKD peg will remain in place, but the financial dislocations will lead to significant internal devaluation in Hong Kong SAR. As US interest rates rise, the HKD will be under considerable pressure. The HKMA will have no choice but to allow HKD interest rates to rise. This will tip the property market and thrust the economy into deflation and a recession. Chinese bonds are the best hedge against this risk. Avoid property and financial shares for the time being. Were the peg to break today, the HKD will depreciate according to our valuation models. This suggests markets are right to push the HKD-linked rate towards the weaker end of the convertibility band. Despite the economic and financial pain, the HKMA will not abandon the peg. That means carry trades will continue to make money. Using the HKD as a funding currency still makes sense in the near term. In long run, the economic pain associated with maintaining the HKD-USD peg will make authorities in Beijing accelerate the use of the RMB in Hong Kong’s special administrative region. The eventual goal will be for Hong Kong SAR to adopt the yuan as its currency.   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Qingyun Xu, CFA Associate Editor  qingyunx@bcaresearch.com
Listen to a short summary of this report.     Executive Summary A Beacon Of Hope For AUD A Beacon Of Hope For AUD A Beacon Of Hope For AUD Along with the Canadian dollar, the Aussie has been one of the best performing currencies during a broad-based dollar rally. Rising interest rates are part of the story, but there is more to Aussie strength than meets the eye. Aussie’s resilience is a conundrum worth exploring. First, it is a favorite short play for an imploding economic scenario in China, which suggests it should be a lot weaker. Second, the Aussie should be in the bottom quartile of FX returns in a risk-off currency scenario. Aussie strength can be attributed to strong commodity prices that are providing a terms-of trade-tailwind. Moreover, there is marginal evidence that demand for Australian-sourced commodities could be becoming a tad more inelastic. Chinese economic growth continues to disappoint, but upside surprises will be a welcome fillip for the AUD (Feature chart). On a terms-of-trade basis, the Australian dollar is very cheap. Falling commodity prices are a handicap, but the margin of safety on the valuation makes the AUD a safer bet. Go long AUD/USD if it touches 0.665 cents. AUD/NZD bets are also attractive. However, we will stay on the sidelines on AUD/JPY bets. RECOMMENDATIONS INCEPTION LEVEL inception date RETURN LONG AUD/USD 0.665 2022-08-26 - Bottom Line: The Aussie dollar could go on a fire sale in the coming weeks. We would be buyers of AUD/USD at 0.665 cents. Feature The Australian dollar has been relatively resilient amidst broad-based dollar strength. Year-to-date, AUD is down 3.7% versus a 13.0% rally in the DXY (Chart 1). This is a remarkable development since historically, the AUD has been a very pro-cyclical currency, bearing the heavy lifting of any dollar rally. AUD/JPY, a key barometer for a risk-on/risk-off environment is up 13.4% year to date, despite a broad-based selloff in many risk assets. Chart 1The AUD Has Outperformed The AUD Has Outperformed The AUD Has Outperformed The Aussie’s resilience is a conundrum worth exploring. First, it is a favorite short play for an imploding economic scenario in China, which suggests it should be a lot weaker. Second, the Aussie should be in the bottom quartile of FX returns in a risk-off currency scenario. In this report, we explore base case scenarios for the Australian dollar, with recommendations for both short-term and longer-term trades, as well as plays at the crosses. Technical Indicators Technical indicators suggest the AUD could be ripe for a rebound. Our intermediate-term indicator bottomed at 5.55 and has usually been associated with non-negligible rallies in the AUD (Chart 2). This indicator is volatile and our expectation is that it could relapse in the near term. However, that will be good news for investors that have a constructive view on AUD prospects. Consistently, speculators are very short the Australian dollar. China’s zero COVID-19 policy, along with property market troubles have made the AUD a favorite short play (Chart 3). Given AUD’s resilience, this suggests that speculators are being overwhelmed by a tidal wave of fundamental currency inflows, through commodity purchases, bond market investors and Aussie equity sector bulls. Chart 2Technicals Point To A Coiled-Spring Rebound In The Coming Months Technicals Point To A Coiled-Spring Rebound In The Coming Months Technicals Point To A Coiled-Spring Rebound In The Coming Months Chart 3Investors Have Been Shorting ##br##AUD Investors Have Been Shorting AUD Investors Have Been Shorting AUD Australian Commodity Demand Chart 4A Beacon Of Hope For The AUD A Beacon Of Hope For The AUD A Beacon Of Hope For The AUD Weakness in China is well known and discounted by financial market participants. The latest selloff in the RMB is a case in point. Yet positive economic surprises in China have been improving relative to peers in the developed market (Chart 4). There are two simple reasons for this. First, the Chinese government is easing domestic financial conditions. Contrary to popular belief, lower rates and higher stimulus in China are positive for the AUD since it boosts Australian exports via higher domestic demand (Chart 5). With the Chinese bond market becoming more and more liberalized, it is also becoming a good proxy for monetary conditions in China. As such, lower bond yields in China have tended to lead imports. This is good news for Aussie exports in the coming months. Chart 5AStimulus In China Is Historically Positive For AUD Stimulus In China Is Historically Positive For AUD Stimulus In China Is Historically Positive For AUD Chart 5BStimulus In China Is Historically Positive For AUD Stimulus In China Is Historically Positive For AUD Stimulus In China Is Historically Positive For AUD Second, the Australian capital account could also be on the mend as foreigners are more willing to re-rate Aussie shares (Chart 6). The Chinese credit cycle has often led to a re-rating in Aussie shares. Our China and Emerging Market strategists argue that stimulus measures might not be sufficient to turn around Chinese domestic demand. In our view, that is well priced into the Aussie, which could potentially experience another selloff in the coming weeks. However, any upside surprises in Chinese growth will be a welcome fillip for the Australian dollar. Chart 6China And Australia Are Tied To The Hip China And Australia Are Tied To The Hip China And Australia Are Tied To The Hip A Few Moats Around The AUD Infrastructure spending is a huge chunk of Chinese fixed asset investment. So, while the housing downturn will impact commodity demand, infrastructure could provide a welcome offset. This could be a big moat that investors should pay attention to. Infrastructure is 24.5% of fixed asset investment in China and 18.0% of steel demand (Chart 7). Chart 7AStimulus In China Is Historically Positive For AUD A Small Beacon Of Optimism In Australia A Small Beacon Of Optimism In Australia Chart 7BStimulus In China Is Historically Positive For AUD A Small Beacon Of Optimism In Australia A Small Beacon Of Optimism In Australia On a relative basis, Australian terms-of-trade have outperformed other commodity-producing nations. This is some evidence that the external demand for Aussie commodities could be becoming a tad more inelastic. Among Australia’s exports, liquified natural gas has been increasing both in price and as a share of total volume (Chart 8). This is following a natural tailwind. China has an imperative to become greener, which has led to a rise in the share of renewables and natural gas electricity generation (Chart 9). Australia is in the top three biggest exporters of liquified natural gas in the world and exports world class clean coal that China depends on. The result has been a tremendous gain in terms of trade (Chart 10).  Chart 8Some Aussie Exports Could Be Relatively Demand Inelastic Some Aussie Exports Could Be Relatively Demand Inelastic Some Aussie Exports Could Be Relatively Demand Inelastic Chart 9A Tailwind For Australia A Tailwind For Australia A Tailwind For Australia Chart 10Terms Of Trade Are Favorable In Australia Terms Of Trade Are Favorable In Australia Terms Of Trade Are Favorable In Australia Amidst this moat around the AUD is also a valuation cushion. As a result of strong export prices, the Australian dollar is undervalued on a terms of trade basis. While true that the AUD is vulnerable to a correction in commodity prices, the margin of safety on the valuation is sufficient for investors willing to ride out near term volatility (Chart 11). Remarkably, the 10-year government bond yield in Australia is 56.8 basis points above that in the US. This will have two profound opposing effects. First, from an interest rate perspective, it will cushion the drawdown in the Aussie, as interest-rate differentials matter for currency returns (Chart 12). On the other hand, it puts interest-rate sensitive parts of the economy, such as housing, at risk. Chart 11AUD Is Cheap On A Terms Of Trade Basis AUD Is Cheap On A Terms Of Trade Basis AUD Is Cheap On A Terms Of Trade Basis Chart 12AUD Is Cheap On A Fundamental Basis AUD Is Cheap On A Fundamental Basis AUD Is Cheap On A Fundamental Basis The Risks For The AUD The first risk for the AUD is a downturn in commodity prices. Chinese demand is genuinely slowing. This could lead to an undershoot in the AUD, as a terms-of-trade undershoot (Chart 13). That is why our recommended entry point is lower than today’s level at 0.665 cents. Chart 13A Commodity Correction Is A Risk For AUD A Commodity Correction Is A Risk For AUD A Commodity Correction Is A Risk For AUD Chart 14Housing Is A Big Risk For Australia Housing Is A Big Risk For Australia Housing Is A Big Risk For Australia The second consideration is housing prices. Real estate is experiencing a meaningful roll over in Australia. This has been led by Sydney and Melbourne, where prices were clearly overvalued, but the phenomenon is more broad based (Chart 14). Related Report  Foreign Exchange StrategyTwo Decades After The Creation Of The Euro The impact for financial markets and the AUD is two-fold. First, if the RBA continues to tighten and as this flattens the Aussie yield curve further, it will not be a welcome development for bank net interest margins and profits (Chart 15). Second, the market has already priced in interest rates higher in Australia compared to the US (Chart 16). A slowdown in housing construction activity, that makes the Aussie consumer more cautious could temper the pace of RBA rate hikes and put pressure on the AUD. Chart 15Watch The Relative Performance Of Bank Shares Watch The Relative Performance Of Bank Shares Watch The Relative Performance Of Bank Shares Chart 16The RBA Might Be Relatively Dovish in 2023 The RBA Might Be Relatively Dovish in 2023 The RBA Might Be Relatively Dovish in 2023 A Few Trades Ideas Australia provides a lot of the commodities countries need and want in today’s paradigm. That is bullish. Yet exposure to China is a clear risk that investors need to factor into investment decisions. Our trading strategy is as follows: We would buy AUD/USD at 0.665 cents. In our view, it could undershoot this level but will be an attractive longer-term buy. The risks to the housing market are higher in New Zealand compared to Australia (Chart 17). Terms of trade also likely to favor the Aussie versus the kiwi (Chart 18). As such, bet on long AUD/NZD trades. Chart 17AUD Can Withstand Higher Rates Relative To NZD AUD/NZD Is Attractive AUD/NZD Is Attractive Chart 18Terms Of Trade Will Drive AUD Higher Relative To NZD AUD/NZD Is Attractive AUD/NZD Is Attractive AUD/JPY will benefit from a rally in risk assets but is stretched. Thus, from a sentiment perspective, we are only neutral (Chart 19). Economic surprises could also likely underwhelm in Australia relative to the unloved Japanese market (Chart 20). Chart 19AUD/JPY Is Stretched AUD/JPY Is Stretched AUD/JPY Is Stretched Chart 20AUD/JPY Is Stretched AUD/JPY Is Stretched AUD/JPY Is Stretched   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Cyclical Holdings (6-18 months) Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
Listen to a short summary of this report.     Executive Summary Euro Bulls Are Evaporating Euro Bulls Are Evaporating Euro Bulls Are Evaporating The euro is likely to undershoot in the near term, as the winter months approach and economic volatility in Europe rises. However, much of the euro’s troubles are well understood and discounted by financial markets. This suggests a floor closer to parity for the EUR/USD. Unlike many other developed economies, the fiscal drag in the eurozone is likely to be minimal for the rest of this year and early next year. The forces pressuring equilibrium rates lower in the periphery are slowly dissipating. That should lift the neutral rate of interest in the entire eurozone. China’s zero Covid-19 policy along with property market troubles has weighed heavily on the euro, but that could change. RECOMMENDATIONS INCEPTION LEVEL inception date RETURN Long EUR/GBP 0.846 2021-10-15 -0.13 Short EUR/JPY 141.20 2022-07-07 2.46 Bottom Line: The euro tends to be largely driven by pro-cyclical flows, which will be a positive when risk sentiment picks up. Meanwhile, making a structural case for the euro is easy when it comes to valuation. According to our in-house PPP models, an investor who buys the euro today can expect to make 6% a year over the next decade, should the euro mean revert to fair value and beyond. Our current stance is more measured because investors could see capitulation selling in the coming months. Feature Chart 1Two Decades After The Creation Of The Euro Two Decades After The Creation Of The Euro Two Decades After The Creation Of The Euro The creation of the euro was an ambitious project. It began with a simple idea – let’s create the biggest monetary union and everything else will follow, not least, economic might. Over the last two decades, the euro has survived, but its ambitions have been jolted by various crises. Today, the euro is sitting around where it was at the initiation of the project (Chart 1). That has been a tremendous loss in real purchasing power for many of its citizens. Given that we are back to square one, this report examines the prospects for the euro from the lens of its original ambitions, while navigating the economic and geopolitical landscape today. Surviving The Winter Chart 2A European Recession Is Well Priced In A European Recession Is Well Priced In A European Recession Is Well Priced In Winter will be tough for eurozone citizens. But how tough? In our view, less than what the euro is pricing in. According to the ZEW sentiment index, the eurozone manufacturing PMI should be around 45 today, but sits at 49.8. The euro, which has been tracking the ZEW index tick-for-tick has already priced in a deep recession, worse than the 2020 episode (Chart 2). Bloomberg GDP growth consensus forecasts for the eurozone are still penciling in 2.8% growth for 2022, down from a high of 4%. For 2023, forecasts have hit a low of 0.8%. It is certainly possible that euro area growth undershoots this level, which will cause a knee jerk sell off in the euro. However, much of the euro’s troubles are well understood and discounted by financial markets. Natural gas storage is already close to 80%, the EU’s target, to help the eurozone navigate the winter. Coal plants are firing on all cylinders, and Germany has decided to delay the closure of its nuclear power plants. It is true that electricity prices are soaring, but part of the story has been weather-related, notably a heat wave across Europe, falling water levels along the Rhine that has delayed coal shipments, and lower wind speeds that have affected renewable energy generation. France is also having problems with nuclear power generation, due to little availability of water for cooling reactors. Looking ahead, energy markets are already discounting a steep fall in prices from the winter energy cliff (Chart 3). If that turns out to be true, it will be a welcome fillip for eurozone growth. First, it will ease the need for the ECB to tighten policy aggressively, and second, it will boost real incomes, which will support spending. This is not being discussed in financial markets today. Chart 3AFutures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Futures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Futures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Chart 3CFutures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Futures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Futures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Chart 3BFutures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Futures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Futures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Fiscal Policy To The Rescue? Unlike many other developed economies, the fiscal drag in the eurozone is likely to be minimal for the rest of this year and early next year (Chart 4). As funds from the next generation EU plan are being disbursed into strategic sectors, including renewable energy, Europe’s productive capital base will also improve. This is likely to have a huge multiplier effect on European growth. Chart 4AThe Fiscal Drag In The Eurozone Could Be Minimal The Fiscal Drag In The Eurozone Could Be Minimal The Fiscal Drag In The Eurozone Could Be Minimal Chart 4BThe Fiscal Drag In The Eurozone Could Be Minimal The Fiscal Drag In The Eurozone Could Be Minimal The Fiscal Drag In The Eurozone Could Be Minimal Taking a bigger-picture view, what has become evident in recent years is stronger solidarity among eurozone countries, both economically and politically. Related Report  Foreign Exchange StrategyMonth In Review: Inflation Is Still Accelerating Globally Economically, the standard dilemma for the eurozone was that interest rates were too low for the most productive nation, Germany, but too expensive for others, such as Spain and Italy. As such, the euro was often caught in a tug of war between a rising equilibrium rate of interest for Germany, but a very low neutral rate for the peripheral countries. The good news is that for the eurozone, a lot of this internal rupture has been partly resolved. Labor market reforms have seen unit labor costs in Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain collectively contract since 2008. This has effectively eliminated the competitiveness gap with Germany, accumulated over the last two decades (Chart 5). Italy remains saddled with a rigid and less productive workforce, but the overall adjustments have still come a long way to close a key fissure plaguing the common currency area. The result has been a collapse in peripheral borrowing spreads, relative to Germany (Chart 6). Ergo, interest payments as a share of GDP are now manageable. It is true that Italy remains a basket case but the ECB’s Transmission Protection Instrument (TPI) will ensure that peripheral spreads remain well contained and a liquidity crisis (in Italy) does not morph into a solvency one. Chart 5The Periphery Is Now Competitive The Periphery Is Now Competitive The Periphery Is Now Competitive Chart 6Peripheral Spreads Are Still Contained In Real Terms Peripheral Spreads Are Still Contained In Real Terms Peripheral Spreads Are Still Contained In Real Terms Beyond the adjustment in competitiveness, productivity among eurozone countries might also converge. Our European Investment Strategy colleagues suggest that the neutral rate is still wide between Germany and the periphery. That said, gross fixed capital formation in the periphery has been surging relative to core eurozone members (Chart 7). If this capital is deployed in the right sectors, it will have two profound impacts. First, the neutral rate of interest in the eurozone will be lifted from artificially low levels. The proverbial saying is that a chain is only as strong as its weakest link. This means that if the forces pressuring equilibrium rates lower in the periphery are slowly dissipating, that should lift the neutral rate of interest in the entire eurozone. Over a cyclical horizon, this should be unequivocally bullish for the euro. Second, and more importantly, economic solidarity among eurozone members will help ensure the survival of the euro, over the next decade and beyond. Chart 7The Periphery Could Become More Productive The Periphery Could Become More Productive The Periphery Could Become More Productive Trading The Euro The above analysis suggests long-term investors should be buying the euro today. However, the long run can be a very long time to be offside. Our trading strategy is as follows: Over the next 6 months, stay neutral to short the euro. The economic landscape for the eurozone remains fraught with risk. This is a typical recipe for a currency to undershoot. Eurozone banks are very sensitive to economic conditions in the eurozone, and ultimately the performance of the euro, and the signal from bank shares remains negative (Chart 8). Chart 8European Banks Are Not Part Of The Agenda Watch Eurozone Banks European Banks Are Not Part Of The Agenda Watch Eurozone Banks European Banks Are Not Part Of The Agenda Watch Eurozone Banks Investors have been cutting their forecasts for the euro but have not yet capitulated. Bets are that the euro will be at 1.10 by the end of next year, and 14% higher in two years. A bottom will be established when investors cut their forecasts below current spot prices (Chart 9). This corroborates with data from net speculative positions that have yet to hit rock bottom.  Chart 9Euro Bulls Are Evaporating Euro Bulls Are Evaporating Euro Bulls Are Evaporating Real interest rates in the euro area are still plunging across the curve, relative to the US. The two-year real yield has hit a cyclical low. Five-year, 10-year and 30-year real yields are also falling. Historically, the euro tends to trend higher when interest rate differentials are moving in favor of the eurozone (Chart 10). Chart 10AReal Rates Are Dropping In The Euro Area Real Rates Are Dropping In The Euro Area Real Rates Are Dropping In The Euro Area Chart 10BReal Rates Are Dropping In The Euro Area Real Rates Are Dropping In The Euro Area Real Rates Are Dropping In The Euro Area Hedging costs have risen tremendously, as the forward market (like investors) is already pricing in an appreciation in the euro. The embedded two-year return for EUR investors is circa 4%, in line with the carry costs (Chart 11). In real terms, the returns are closer to 9% to compensate for much higher inflation expectations in the eurozone. Higher hedging costs will dissuade foreign investors from gobbling up European assets on a hedged basis. Chart 11A 5% Rally In The Euro Is Already Anticipated A 5% Rally In The Euro Is Already Anticipated A 5% Rally In The Euro Is Already Anticipated In short, the euro is likely to enter a capitulation phase. Our sense is that that it will push EUR/USD below parity, towards 0.98. Below that level, we believe the risk/reward profile will become much more attractive for both short- and longer-term investors. Signals From External Demand Chart 12The Euro Is Increasingly Dependant On Chinese Data The Euro Is Increasingly Dependant On Chinese Data The Euro Is Increasingly Dependant On Chinese Data The eurozone is a very open economy. Exports of goods and services represented 51% of euro area GDP in 2021. This means that what happens with external demand, especially in the US, the UK and China, matters for European growth (Chart 12). Of all its major export partners, China is the biggest question mark. China’s zero Covid-19 policy along with property market troubles has weighed heavily on the euro. Historically, the Chinese credit impulse has been a good coincident indicator for EUR/USD. Lately, that relationship has decoupled (Chart 13A). We favor the view that the credit transmission mechanism in China is merely delayed, rather than broken. For one, a rising Chinese credit impulse usually leads European exports, and this time should be no different. Chinese bond markets are also becoming more liberalized, and as such are a key signal for financial conditions in China. For over a decade, easing financial conditions have usually been a good signal that import demand is about to improve (Chart 13B). This is good news for European export demand. The bottom line is that investors are currently too pessimistic on Europe’s growth prospects at a time when a few green shoots are emerging for external demand. That may not save the euro in the near term but will be a welcome fillip for euro bulls when it does undershoot. Chart 13AThe Muse For The Euro Is Chinese Data The Muse For The Euro Is Chinese Data The Muse For The Euro Is Chinese Data Chart 13BThe Muse For The Euro Is Chinese Data The Muse For The Euro Is Chinese Data The Muse For The Euro Is Chinese Data Concluding Thoughts Chart 14The Goldilocks Case For The Euro The Goldilocks Case For The Euro The Goldilocks Case For The Euro The euro tends to be largely driven by pro-cyclical flows. Fortunately for investors, European equities remain unloved, given that they are trading at some of the cheapest cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings multiples in the developed world. Analysts are aggressively revising up their earnings estimates for eurozone equities, relative to the US. They might be wrong in the near term, but over a 9-to-12-month horizon, this has been a good leading indicator for the euro.  Making a structural case for the euro is easy when it comes to valuation. According to our in-house PPP models, an investor who buys the euro today can expect to make 6% a year over the next decade, should the euro mean revert to fair value and beyond (Chart 14). Meanwhile, beyond the winter months, inflation could come crashing back to earth in the eurozone, which will provide underlying support for the fair value of the currency. Our near-term stance is more measured because investors are only neutral the euro, and risk reversals are not yet at a nadir. This is particularly relevant given that Europe still has a war in its backyard, with the potential of generating more market volatility ahead. Given this confluence of factors, we have chosen to play euro via two channels: Long EUR/GBP: As we argued last week, the UK has a bigger stagflation problem compared to the eurozone. This trade is also a bet on improving economic fundamentals between the eurozone and the UK, as well as a bet on policy convergence between the two economies. Short EUR/JPY: The yen is even cheaper than the euro. In a risk-off environment, EUR/JPY will sell off. In a risk-on environment, the yen can still benefit since it is oversold. Meanwhile, investors remain bullish EUR/JPY. Long EUR/USD: We will go long the euro if it breaks below 0.98.   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Cyclical Holdings (6-18 months) Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
Executive Summary Structural Tailwinds For The Franc Structural Tailwinds For The Franc Structural Tailwinds For The Franc  Volatility in FX markets is likely to remain elevated, as witnessed by the reaction of a full circle of central bank meetings this week.Policy convergence remains a good bet for interest rate curves and currency pairs. The SNB surprised markets by raising interest rates by 50 bps, to -0.25%, the first hike since 2007.Higher volatility will continue to buoy the Swiss franc in the short run.Structural appreciation in the franc is also likely over the coming decades (Feature Chart). Swiss stocks often perform well during economic downturns, but they are not particularly cheap, and are vulnerable to higher interest rates. Investors should only overweight Swiss stocks if they expect more significant downside to global stocks.Valuation favors the franc versus the dollar. However, EUR/CHF and GBP/CHF are closer to fair value. CHF/JPY is expensive; hence, the yen is a better hedge for downside economic surprises. Go short CHF/JPY as a trade.BCA’s Foreign Exchange Strategy was short CHF/SEK at 10.2 with stop loss at 10.5. That stop was hit overnight, triggering a loss of -3.3%. Stand aside for now.Bottom Line: Favor the franc over the short term against other pro-cyclical currencies, with a view to downgrade CHF when it becomes evident that economic growth is bottoming. Any further bout of Swiss equity outperformance, prompted by global risk aversion, offers an attractive selling opportunity versus Eurozone stocks.Feature Chart 1The SNB Has Capitulated To Rising Inflation The SNB Has Capitulated To Rising Inflation The SNB Has Capitulated To Rising Inflation  Volatility in FX markets is likely to remain elevated. This week, the Fed delivered its first 75 bps interest rate hike since 1994. It also increased its expected year-end level for the Fed Funds rate to 3.4% from 1.9%, and to 3.8% from 3.4% at the end of 2023. The FX market had been warming up to a hawkish surprise, but the dollar surged on the news, hitting a fresh two-decade high of 105.5, before later reversing gains.Meanwhile, the European Central Bank (ECB) held an emergency meeting on Wednesday, to try to mitigate the rise in Italian yields, which hit as high as 4.2% on Tuesday, or 243 bps over German 10-year yields. The subsequent statement released by the Governing Council offered no concrete details. Yes, the reinvestments of the proceeds from maturing debt in the Pandemic Emergency Purchase Program (PEPP) will flow mostly to peripheral markets, but investors want clarity on the nature of the long-awaited policy plan to tackle fragmentation risk in the Euro Area. As a result, peripheral bond markets will remain fragile until a bold program comes to fruition.To cement currency volatility this week, SNB Governor Thomas Jordan surprised markets by raising interest rates by 50 bps in Switzerland, to -0.25%, the first hike since the Global Financial Crisis (Chart 1). The negative interest rate threshold for sight deposits was also lowered, a move encouraging banks to pack reserves at the SNB. The Bank of England also raised interest rates in line with market expectations. The move initially disappointed GBP bulls, but sterling is holding above our 1.20 floor.An environment of monetary policy uncertainty, rising recession risks in response to high inflation, and the potential for central bank policy mistakes bodes well for safe-haven assets. In Europe, the market with the strongest defensive profile is Switzerland. In this report, we address whether investors should bet on continued appreciation of the franc and an outperformance of Swiss stocks, especially now that the SNB has turned hawkish.Switzerland Versus The WorldGlobal economic growth is slowing and a small/open economy like Switzerland’s has not been spared. The KOF economic barometer, a key leading indicator for Swiss GDP growth, has collapsed over the past twelve months from 144 to 97 as global industrial activity decelerated (Chart 2). Despite softening growth, global inflation refuses to decline, forcing central banks worldwide to lean into the slowdown. This threatens to cut the post-pandemic business cycle expansion short. Chart 2The SNB Is Tightening Into A Slowing Economy The SNB Is Tightening Into A Slowing Economy The SNB Is Tightening Into A Slowing Economy  Surprisingly, the Swiss economy is generally performing better than the rest of Europe. Historically, Swiss economic performance is procyclical due to the large share of exports within its GDP. Hence, a slowdown in global manufacturing often creates a large threat to Swiss growth. Going forward, can the Swiss economy diverge from that of the rest of the world (Chart 3)? Such a divergence is not probable, but a few factors will protect the Swiss economy:Switzerland still has one of the lowest policy rates in the G10, even after today’s 50bps interest rate increase. This has tremendously helped ease monetary conditions. Our monetary gauge is at its most accommodative level in over two decades (Chart 4). Chart 3The Swiss Economy Is Procyclical The Swiss Economy Is Procyclical The Swiss Economy Is Procyclical   Chart 4Swiss Monetary Conditions Are Still Accommodative Swiss Monetary Conditions Are Still Accommodative Swiss Monetary Conditions Are Still Accommodative  Swiss inflation remains the lowest in the G10 outside Japan. In Switzerland, the main driver of price increases has been goods, while services inflation remains subdued. Consequently, the SNB has been tolerating an appreciating franc to temper imported inflation (Chart 5), while keeping domestic borrowing costs at very accommodative levels. In its updated forecasts, the SNB now expects a -0.25% interest rate to allow Swiss inflation to moderate to 1.9% in 2023 and 1.6% in 2024. Chart 5Swiss Inflation Is Surprising To The Upside Swiss Inflation Is Surprising To The Upside Swiss Inflation Is Surprising To The Upside  Part of the reason Switzerland has low inflation has been the tremendous productivity gains, especially relative to its trading partners (Chart 6). Swiss income-per-capita is elevated, but wage growth has lagged output gains, which limits the risk of a wage-inflation spiral. It is notable that part-time employment continues to dominate job gains, implying that the need for precautionary savings will remain high in Switzerland. Chart 6A Productivity Profile For Switzerland A Productivity Profile For Switzerland A Productivity Profile For Switzerland  Higher productivity growth and the elevated national savings leave their footprint on the trade data. The Swiss trade balance is hitting fresh highs, unlike Europe or Japan (Chart 7). This could potentially create a problem for the Swiss economy as it puts upward pressure on the CHF at a time when global manufacturing output is slowing. However, Switzerland specializes in high value-added exports with an elevated degree of complexity, that stand early in global supply chains. These type of goods are likely to remain in high demand in a global environment marked by supply-chain bottlenecks and high-capacity utilization.  Chart 7Structural Tailwinds For The Franc Structural Tailwinds For The Franc Structural Tailwinds For The Franc  Finally, Switzerland does not import energy to fulfill its electricity production. Hydropower accounts for roughly 61.4% of electricity generation, followed by nuclear power at 28.5%. This has partially insulated Switzerland from the energy shock hurting economic activity and trade balances in the EU. For example, German electricity generation is 28.8% coal and 14.7% natural gas.Bottom Line: The Swiss economy is reopening and is relatively insulated from the Russia-Ukraine conflict. This limits to some degree how closely Switzerland will track the global and European economic slowdown. It creates a departure from the traditional pro-cyclicality of the Swiss economy.The SNB, The SARON Curve, And The Swiss FrancIf the Swiss economy surprises to the upside, the case for the SNB to tolerate a rising franc becomes even stronger. The pace of foreign exchange reserve accumulation is already decelerating (Chart 8). Governor Thomas Jordan has been very clear: as global prices rise, the fair value of the franc is also rising, which implies a willingness to tolerate currency strength. In a purchasing power parity framework, higher external inflation makes Swiss goods relatively cheaper. This allows foreigners to bid up the currency.Even with today’s updated pricing, the SNB is still expected to remain among the most dovish central banks in the G10 (Chart 9). If inflationary pressures prove sticky, the SNB will step up its hawkish rhetoric. If inflationary fears subside, then global rates will fall as well, which has usually been a boon for the franc. More specifically, this would be negative for the EUR/CHF cross (Chart 10). Chart 8Less Intervention By The SNB Less Intervention By The SNB Less Intervention By The SNB   Chart 9The SARON Curve Has Adjusted Higher The SARON Curve Has Adjusted Higher The SARON Curve Has Adjusted Higher   Chart 10EUR/CHF And Bund Yields Can Continue To Diverge EUR/CHF And Bund Yields Can Continue To Diverge EUR/CHF And Bund Yields Can Continue To Diverge  The Swiss economy can tolerate an appreciating CHF, but can it withstand higher interest rates? We believe so. Switzerland is a net creditor nation, but its domestic non-financial debt is also extremely elevated. Thus, the Swiss economy is vulnerable to higher rates, especially the housing market (Chart 11). Nonetheless, internal adjustments will soften the blow and increase affordability. Of note, property speculation in Switzerland has decreased in response to macroprudential measures. Growth in rental housing prices, which usually constitute the bulk of investment homes, has collapsed, but the price of owner-occupied homes has proven more robust (Chart 12). A cap on the percentage of secondary homes in any Canton as well as tighter lending standards have also helped. In a renewed update to its Financial Stability Report, Fritz Zurbrügg, Vice Chairman of the Governing Board, suggests that Swiss banks are well capitalized, especially given the recent reactivation of the countercyclical capital buffer. Chart 11Higher Rates Are A Risk For Swiss Real Estate Higher Rates Are A Risk For Swiss Real Estate Higher Rates Are A Risk For Swiss Real Estate   Chart 12Some Adjustment Already In Investment Home Prices Some Adjustment Already In Investment Home Prices Some Adjustment Already In Investment Home Prices  In the very near term, demographics might also be a tailwind. The pandemic limited immigration to Switzerland, but the working-age population is rebounding anew (Chart 13), which will create a cushion under housing and support domestic demand. Chart 13A Small Demographic Tailwind For Home Prices A Small Demographic Tailwind For Home Prices A Small Demographic Tailwind For Home Prices  Stronger aggregate demand in an inflationary world will justify the need for less monetary accommodation. In a nutshell, the SNB is likely to continue walking the path of “least regrets” like most central banks, by tightening monetary policy to meet its 2% inflation mandate, but pausing if economic conditions warrant.The currency has historically been used as a key tool for calibrating financial conditions. From a fundamental perspective, our PPP models suggest the franc is quite cheap versus the dollar but at fair value versus the euro and sterling. This is echoed by Governor Jordan, who no longer views the franc as expensive. Our models adjusts the consumption basket in Switzerland for an apples-to-apples comparison across both the UK and the eurozone (Chart 14). Chart 14AA CHF Is At Fair Value Versus The EUR And GBP A CHF Is At Fair Value Versus The EUR And GBP A CHF Is At Fair Value Versus The EUR And GBP   Chart 14BA CHF Is At Fair Value Versus The EUR And GBP A CHF Is At Fair Value Versus The EUR And GBP A CHF Is At Fair Value Versus The EUR And GBP  Finally, hedging costs for shorting the franc against the dollar have risen substantially (Chart 15). As such, any short bets on the franc are likely being placed naked. If the Fed ends up tempering its pace of rate hikes next year in response to weaker US activity, short-covering activity is likely to accentuate any pre-existing strength in the CHF. Chart 15Hedging Costs For USD/CHF Carry Trades Have Risen Hedging Costs Are Prohibitive Hedging Costs For USD/CHF Carry Trades Have Risen Hedging Costs Are Prohibitive Hedging Costs For USD/CHF Carry Trades Have Risen Hedging Costs Are Prohibitive  Bottom Line: The franc is undervalued against the dollar, and a good hedge against a rise in volatility versus other procyclical currencies. This places the franc in a good “heads I win, tails I don’t loose too much” bet. Swiss interest rates are also likely to climb higher. However, because the franc will do the bulk of the monetary tightening, the SNB is likely to lag the expectations now embedded in the SARON curve.What About Swiss Equities?Despite the cyclical nature of the Swiss economy, Swiss equities are extremely defensive. Swiss stocks have little to do with the domestic economy and are mostly a collection of large multinationals, dominated by the healthcare and consumer staples sectors, which together account for roughly 60% of the Swiss MSCI benchmark.This defensive attribute has created its own problem for Swiss equities. Relative to the Eurozone, the Swiss market has moved massively ahead of profitability, and it is now more expensive than at the apex of the European debt crisis in 2012 (Chart 16). Moreover, the jump in German yields is becoming increasingly problematic for Swiss stocks that historically perform poorly when global interest rates are rising (Chart 17). Chart 16Swiss Stocks Are Expensive Swiss Stocks Are Expensive Swiss Stocks Are Expensive   Chart 17A Lost Tailwind A Lost Tailwind A Lost Tailwind  In the near term, Swiss equities will only be able to defy the gravitational pull created by demanding valuations and higher yields if global risk aversion remains elevated. However, once global stocks find a floor and Italian spreads begin to narrow, Swiss stocks are likely to underperform massively (Chart 18). It could take a few more weeks before the BTP/Bund spreads narrow as the recent ECB announcement was rather tepid. However, the ECB holding an emergency meeting and issuing a formal statement addressing the problem facing peripheral bond markets suggests that a formal program designed to manage fragmentation risk will emerge before the end of the summer.Beyond their defensive attributes, Swiss stocks also correlate to the Quality Factor. The robust performance of this factor since the turn of the millennium, in Europe and globally, has allowed the Swiss market to greatly outperform Eurozone equities (Chart 19). However, the Quality Factor has begun to underperform, which indicates that the Swiss market is losing another of its underpinnings. Chart 18Near-term, Follow Risk Aversion Near-term, Follow Risk Aversion Near-term, Follow Risk Aversion   Chart 19Swiss Stocks Are About Quality Swiss Stocks Are About Quality Swiss Stocks Are About Quality  These observations imply that over the next 12 to 18 months, Swiss equities will underperform their Euro Area counterparts. Materials and consumer staples stand out as the two sectors with the most extended valuations relative to their Euro Area competitors, especially since their relative performances have become dissociated from relative profits (Chart 20). They should carry maximum underweights relative to their European counterparts. The healthcare sector is Switzerland’s largest market weight. It is not as expensive relative to the Eurozone as the materials and consumer staples sectors, but it carries enough of a premium that investors should still underweight this sector relative to its eurozone competitor (Chart 21). Chart 20Dangerous Setup For Swiss Materials and Staples Dangerous Setup For Swiss Materials and Staples Dangerous Setup For Swiss Materials and Staples   Chart 21The Swiss Heavyweight Is Becoming Pricey The Swiss Heavyweight Is Becoming Pricey The Swiss Heavyweight Is Becoming Pricey  Bottom Line: The defensive nature of the Swiss market has allowed for a large outperformance over European equities. However, the Swiss market is now very expensive on a relative basis, and it is vulnerable to higher interest rates. While global risk aversion can still buoy the Swiss market in the near term, conditions are falling into place for Swiss stocks to underperform their Eurozone counterpart over a 12-to-18 month window. Materials and consumer staples are the sectors mostly likely to experience a large underperformance relative to their Euro Area competitors, followed by the healthcare sector. Investment ConclusionsVolatility in FX markets is likely to remain elevated, as witnessed by the reaction of a full circle of central bank meetings this week.Policy convergence remains a good bet for interest rate curves and currency pairs. The SNB surprised markets by raising interest rates by 50 bps, to -0.25%, the first hike since 2007 (Chart 1).Higher volatility will continue to buoy the Swiss franc in the short run.Structural appreciation in the franc is also likely over the coming decades.Swiss stocks often perform well during economic downturns, but they are not particularly cheap, and vulnerable to higher interest rates. Investors should only overweight Swiss stocks if they expect more significant downside to global stocks.Valuation favors the franc versus the dollar. However, EUR/CHF and GBP/CHF are closer to fair value. CHF/JPY is expensive; hence the yen is a better hedge for downside economic surprises. Go short CHF/JPY as a trade.BCA’s Foreign Exchange Strategy was short CHF/SEK at 10.2 with stop loss at 10.5. That stop was hit overnight, triggering a loss of -3.3%. Stand aside for now. Chester NtoniforForeign Exchange Strategistchestern@bcaresearch.comMathieu Savary Chief European StrategistMathieu@bcaresearch.com
Listen to a short summary of this report.     Executive Summary Sentiment On Sterling Is Depressed Sentiment On Sterling Is Depressed Sentiment On Sterling Is Depressed The pound will suffer in the short term, setting the stage for a coiled-spring rebound. Cable is extremely cheap by most measures (Feature chart). The BoE could engineer a soft landing in the UK economy. If successful, it will annihilate sterling vigilantes, in a volte-face of the ERM crisis. We are cognizant of near-term risks. As such, we are long EUR/GBP with a target of 0.90, but will be buyers of cable at 1.20. Ultimately, the pound is undervalued on a longer-term basis. GBP/USD should touch 1.36 over the next 12-18 months. RECOMMENDATIONS INCEPTION LEVEL inception date RETURN long eur/gbp 0.846 2021-10-15 0.27 Bottom Line: The pound will likely face pressure in the near term, but will fare well over a cyclical horizon. Our 12-month target is 1.36. This target is based on a modest reversion towards PPP fair value, and some erosion in the “crisis” discount. Admittedly, sentiment on the pound is very depressed, and we could be wrong in our near-term assessment and cable has indeed bottomed. Feature Chart 1A Play On Cable Downside A Play On Cable Downside A Play On Cable Downside There has been much discussion around the premise that the pound could enter a capitulation phase, akin to an emerging market-style currency crisis. With inflation sitting at 9%, well above the Bank of England’s 2% target, the narrative is that interest rates need to rise substantially but will, at the same time, kill any recovery. The result will be a sharp fall in the pound. We began to highlight the near-term risks to cable in October of last year, going long EUR/GBP in the process, as a way to play sterling downside (Chart 1). That said, our longer-term view on the pound remained positive. In this report, we review what has changed since, and if a negative longer-term view is now warranted.   UK Balance Of Payments Almost all currency crises are rooted in a deterioration of the external balance, and this is certainly true for the UK. The trade deficit sits at 7.9% of GDP, the worst among G10 countries (Chart 2). As a result, the current account is also in deficit. That said, there are reasons for optimism. Related Report  Foreign Exchange StrategyAn Update On Sterling The Office for National Statistics (ONS) suggests that a change in methodology in January 2022 could be exarcebating the deterioration in the latest release of the trade balance. In our view, there are two key reasons why the UK’s balance of trade is worsening. The first is the oil shock – fuels constitute 11% of UK imports. Second, unprecedented fiscal stimulus led to an overshoot in goods imports. These negative forces are likely cyclical in nature, rather than structural. It is also noteworthy that most of the goods imported into the UK are machinery and transport equipment, which could go a long way in improving its productive capacity (Chart 3). Chart 2The UK Trade Balance Has Deteriorated The UK Trade Balance Has Deteriorated The UK Trade Balance Has Deteriorated Chart 3Goods Imports Have Been A Hit To The UK Trade Balance Goods Imports Have Been A Hit To The UK Trade Balance Goods Imports Have Been A Hit To The UK Trade Balance In parallel, there has been a structural improvement in the UK’s current account balance. This has mostly been driven by a rising primary income balance. In short, investments abroad are earning more, relative to domestic liabilities (Chart 4). The UK runs a large negative international investment position. Despite this, it has maintained the ability to issue debt bought by foreigners, while investing in high-return assets abroad. Secondary income has admittedly been in a structural deficit, but a falloff in transfer payments under the Brexit agreement will significantly improve this balance (Chart 5). Chart 4The UK Current Account Is Improving The UK Current Account Is Improving The UK Current Account Is Improving Chart 5A Fall In Brexit Payments Will Mend Secondary Income Is Sterling Facing Another Crisis? Is Sterling Facing Another Crisis? Finally, the pound’s share of global foreign exchange turnover is 12.8%, just behind the dollar, euro, and yen. That said, London dwarfs New York, Hong Kong, and Tokyo as a hub for foreign exchange trading (Chart 6). The pound also very much remains among the most desirable global currencies. Global allocation of FX reserves in sterling have been rising over the last decade (Chart 7). It currently stand at 4.8%, higher than the RMB at 2.8%, and all other emerging market currencies combined. Chart 6London Remains An Important Financial Center Is Sterling Facing Another Crisis? Is Sterling Facing Another Crisis? Chart 7The Pound Is Still A Reserve Currency The Pound Is Still A Reserve Currency The Pound Is Still A Reserve Currency It is noteworthy to revisit the period the pound experienced an EM-style crisis – under the European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM), when cable was effectively pegged to the German mark at an expensive level. At the time, UK inflation was running hot, while German inflation was more subdued. By importing monetary policy from the Bundesbank, the BoE was able to tame inflation, but at a high cost to growth. In Germany, the reunification boom warranted much higher interest rates, which was not appropriate for the UK . Cable eventually collapsed by 32.9% peak-to-trough, as the UK ran out of foreign currency reserves. Chart 8Cable Is Very Cheap Cable Is Very Cheap Cable Is Very Cheap There are three key differences between that episode and today: The pound is freely floating. Foreign exchange markets are extremely fluid and adjust to expectations quite quickly. A collapse in the pound seems unlikely, unless the UK faces a new large exogenous shock. Inflation is running hot in many countries, not just the UK. The pound is extremely cheap, and stimulative for the economy. On a real effective exchange rate basis, the pound is at record lows (Chart 8).     Will The BoE Make A Policy Mistake? Sterling is pricing in a policy mistake by the BoE. First, inflation is well above its 2% target. Second, the labor market has tightened significantly. The unemployment rate hit a 47-year low of 3.7%, and job vacancies are low, pushing wages higher. As such, either the BoE allows inflation expectations to become unmoored, destroying the purchasing power of the pound, or kills the recovery to maintain credibility (Chart 9). Chart 9The UK Labor Market Is Tight The UK Labor Market Is Tight The UK Labor Market Is Tight While difficult, there are reasons to believe the BoE can achieve a soft landing. According to an in-house study, only one-third of the rise in UK inflation has been driven by demand-side pull, with the balance related to supply factors.1 The latter have been the usual suspects – rising energy costs, supply shortages, and even legacies of the Brexit shock (Chart 10). UK electricity prices have cratered since the opening of the 1,400MW undersea cable with Norway (Chart 11). Chart 10Most Of The Increase To UK Prices Is Supply-Driven Is Sterling Facing Another Crisis? Is Sterling Facing Another Crisis? Chart 11A Sharp Drop In Electricity Prices A Sharp Drop In Electricity Prices A Sharp Drop In Electricity Prices Second, it is likely that the neutral rate of interest in the UK is lower in a post-Brexit, post-COVID-19 world. This is visible in trend productivity growth, but even the size of the labor force has shrunk significantly. The UK workforce is down by 560,000 people since the start of the pandemic. This has been partly due to less immigration and more retirees, but the vast majority has been due to health side-effects from the pandemic, and delays in getting adequate medical care. As a result, there has barely been a recovery in the UK participation rate (Chart 12). Chart 12AThe Participation Rate In The UK Is Below Trend The Participation Rate In The UK Is Below Trend The Participation Rate In The UK Is Below Trend Chart 12BA Low Participation Rate Across Many Regions A Low Participation Rate Across Many Regions A Low Participation Rate Across Many Regions In hindsight, a least-regrets strategy to policy tightening – lift rates faster now, and then back off if financial conditions tighten sufficiently – seems appropriate. Frontloading the pace of tightening will flatten the UK gilts curve further. With most borrowing costs in the UK tied to the longer end of the curve, refinancing costs might not edge up that much, while inflation expectations will be well contained. The real canaries in the coal mine from this strategy are the economies of Australia, New Zealand, and Canada, where household debt is much more elevated (Chart 13), and the percentage of variable rate mortgages  are higher. Chart 13Household Debt Is Not Alarming In The UK Household Debt Is Not Alarming In The UK Household Debt Is Not Alarming In The UK Larger fiscal stimulus will partially offset the near-term hit from tighter monetary policy. The additional £15 billion cost-of-living package announced last month is quite substantial at 0.7% of GDP. This gives the BoE breathing room to tighten policy in the near term. The redistributionist nature of the plan – taxing windfall profits from large energy companies, and using that to subsidize consumers most in need – could be what is required to achieve a soft landing, if the energy shock is temporary. Our Global Fixed Income colleagues upgraded UK gilts to overweight last month, on the basis that market pricing further out the SONIA curve was too aggressive. In our prior report on sterling, we also suggested that market expectations for interest rate increases may have overshot. Money markets are discounting a peak in the bank rate at 2.8%. The BoE’s new Market Participants survey suggests it will peak at 1.75%. While the BoE will deliver sufficient monetary tightening to lean against near-term inflationary pressures, it will be very wary to overdo it. This is especially true if the neutral rate in the economy is much lower. What Next For The Pound? Our view is that the pound faces near-term risks but is a buy longer term. There is an old adage that credibility is hard to earn, but easy to lose. For the UK in particular, this hits the mark. The Bank of England is the oldest central bank in the world, after the Riksbank. Yes, the BoE can make a policy mistake (as it has in the past), but treating the pound as an emerging market asset is a stretch (Chart 14). That said, our Chief European Strategist, Mathieu Savary, believes stagflation is not fully priced into UK assets. In the near term, he might be right. The UK’s large trade deficit puts the onus on foreigners to dictate movements in the pound. The pound does well when animal spirits are fervent. So far, markets have bid up a substantial safe-haven premium into the dollar (Chart 15). As a proxy, the pound has been sold. Northern Ireland could also return as a thorn in the side of sterling.  Chart 14The Pound Is A Risk-On Currency Cable And EM Stocks The Pound Is A Risk-On Currency Cable And EM Stocks The Pound Is A Risk-On Currency Cable And EM Stocks Chart 15The Dollar Has A Hefty Safe-Haven Premium The Dollar Has A Hefty Safe-Haven Premium The Dollar Has A Hefty Safe-Haven Premium From a bird’s eye view, three factors tend to drive currencies – the macroeconomic environment, valuation, and sentiment. For now, markets have latched on to the GBP’s vulnerability to an EM-style crisis. That said, cable is very cheap, even accounting for elevated UK inflation. Our in-house PPP model suggests the pound could appreciate by 4% per year, over the next 10 years, just to revert to fair value (Chart 16). Chart 16Cable Is Cheap Cable Is Cheap Cable Is Cheap Admittedly, the UK desperately needs an improvement in productivity growth for further currency gains. To encourage capital inflows that the pound depends on, the UK needs to be at the forefront of disruptive technologies such as electric cars, digital currencies, 3D printing, and even innovations in gene therapy. High finance and fashion will remain relevant for London, but the need for innovation is high.  Investment Conclusions Chart 17Sentiment On Sterling Is Depressed Sentiment On Sterling Is Depressed Sentiment On Sterling Is Depressed The pound will likely face pressure in the near term, but will fare well over a cyclical horizon. Our 12-month target is 1.36. This target is based on a modest reversion towards PPP fair value, and some erosion in the “crisis” discount. Admittedly, sentiment on the pound is very depressed, and we could be wrong in our near-term assessment if cable has indeed bottomed. Our intermediate-term timing model suggests that GBP is undervalued and has bottomed. Technical indicators also warn that cable is ripe for a fervent rebound (Chart 17). Particularly, our intermediate-term technical indicator is rebounding from oversold levels. The Aussie would outperform the pound in the long term, but AUD/GBP is vulnerable to a commodity relapse in the shorter term.   Housekeeping We were stopped out of our short EUR/JPY trade for a loss of -2.78%, as oil prices and bond yields rebounded. This trade is a hedge to our pro-cyclical portfolio, so we will look to reenter it at more attractive levels. We are also lowering the stop-loss on our short RUB trade. This is a speculative bet many clients will not be able to play, but we expect it to payoff over the longer term.   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Michael Saunders, "The route back to 2% inflation," (Speech given at the Resolution Foundation), May 9, 2022.   Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Cyclical Holdings (6-18 months) Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary