Currencies In-Depth
Executive Summary Markets Priced For A Restrictive Level Of Australian Rates
Markets Priced For A Restrictive Level Of Australian Rates
Markets Priced For A Restrictive Level Of Australian Rates
The neutral interest rate in Australia is lower than in past cycles, for several reasons: low potential growth, weak productivity, high household debt and inflated housing valuations. Interest rate markets are discounting a very aggressive monetary tightening cycle in Australia, with the RBA Cash Rate expected to reach 2.6% by end-2022 and 3.1% by end-2023. Australian inflation will peak in H2/2022, and the RBA will not need to raise rates beyond the midpoint of the RBA's estimated neutral range of 2-3%. The Australian dollar has not responded to rising interest rate expectations or high commodity prices, largely due to weak Chinese growth. The Aussie is cheap and has upside if China delivers more economic stimulus. The newly-elected Labor-led government will not be able to pursue its ambitious social and environmental agenda without finding more revenue to offset the inflationary impact of larger budget deficits. Expect modest fiscal stimulus, with increased spending, but also minor tax hikes for multinational corporations and high-income earners. Bottom Line: For global bond investors, an overweight allocation to Australian government bonds is warranted with the RBA likely to disappoint aggressive market rate hike expectations. For currency investors, the undervalued Australian dollar is an attractive play on an eventual rebound of Chinese growth. Feature The month of May has been eventful for investors in Australia. The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) delivered its first interest rate hike since 2010 on May 3, a move that markets had expected but which was much earlier than the RBA’s prior forward guidance. The May 21 federal election returned the Labor party to power for the first time since 2013. These events introduce new risks for the Australian economy and financial markets, altering a policy backdrop that had been highly stimulative - and, more importantly, highly predictable - during the pandemic but must now change in response to the new reality of high inflation. In this Special Report, jointly published by BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy, Foreign Exchange Strategy and Geopolitical Strategy, we discuss the investment implications of the start of the monetary tightening cycle and the new government in Australia. Our main conclusions: markets are somehow pricing in both too many RBA rate hikes and not enough currency upside for the Australian dollar, while expectations for major fiscal policy changes should be tempered. Will The RBA Kill The Economic Recovery? Australian government bonds have been one of the worst performers in the developed world so far in 2022 (Chart 1), delivering a total return of -9.1% in AUD terms, and -9% in USD-hedged terms, according to Bloomberg. The benchmark 10-year yield now sits at 3.20%, up +142bps since the start of the year but off the 8-year intraday high of 3.6% reached in early May. Australia has historically been a “high-beta” bond market that sees yields rise more when global bond yields are rising. That is a legacy of the days when the RBA had to push policy rates to levels that exceeded other major central banks like the Fed during global tightening cycles. But by the RBA’s own admission, the neutral policy interest rate is now lower than in previous years, perhaps no more than 0% in real terms according to RBA Governor Philip Lowe. Our RBA Monitor, which consists of economic and financial variables that typically correlate to pressure on the RBA to tighten or ease policy, has been signaling since mid-2021 that higher interest rates were increasingly likely (Chart 2). However, markets have moved to price in a very rapid and aggressive tightening, with a whopping 268bps of rate hikes discounted over the next year in the Australian overnight index swap (OIS) curve. Chart 1Australian Bond Yields Have Surged Vs Global Peers
Australian Bond Yields Have Surged Vs Global Peers
Australian Bond Yields Have Surged Vs Global Peers
Chart 2Markets Expect Very Aggressive RBA Tightening
Markets Expect Very Aggressive RBA Tightening
Markets Expect Very Aggressive RBA Tightening
The growth component of the RBA Monitor will likely soon ease up with the OECD leading economic indicator for Australia in a clear downtrend (bottom panel). However, the inflation component of the RBA Monitor will stay elevated for longer given current high inflation - headline CPI inflation in Australia hit a 20-year high of 5.1% in Q1/2022 - and the tight Australian labor market. Even with those robust inflation pressures, markets are pricing in a peak level of interest rates that appears far more restrictive than the RBA is willing, and likely able, to deliver. We see three primary reasons for this. Weak Potential Growth Implies A Lower Neutral Rate The OIS curve is priced for the RBA Cash Rate staying between 3-4% over the next decade (Chart 3). The real policy rate (adjusted by CPI swap forwards as the proxy for inflation expectations), is expected to average around 1% over that same period. Those are the highest “terminal rate” estimates among the G10 economies. At the press conference following the May 3 rate hike, RBA Governor Lowe noted that “it’s not unreasonable to expect that the normalization of interest rates over the period ahead could see interest rates rise to 2.5%”. Lowe said that was the midpoint of the RBA’s 2-3% inflation target, thus the expected normalization of policy rates would take the inflation-adjusted real rate to 0%. That is a far cry from the more aggressive increase in real rates discounted in the Australian OIS and CPI swap curves. Lowe also noted that a real rate above 0% “over time […] would require stronger productivity growth in Australia.” On that front, the data is not suggesting that the RBA will need to reconsider its views on the neutral real interest rate anytime soon. The 5-year annualized growth rate of labor productivity is an anemic -0.8%, down from the mid-2010s peak of around 1.5% and far below the late-1990s peak of around 2.5% (Chart 4). Chart 3Markets Priced For A Restrictive Level Of Australian Rates
Markets Priced For A Restrictive Level Of Australian Rates
Markets Priced For A Restrictive Level Of Australian Rates
Chart 4A Powerful Structural Reason For A Lower Australian Neutral Rate
A Powerful Structural Reason For A Lower Australian Neutral Rate
A Powerful Structural Reason For A Lower Australian Neutral Rate
Chart 5The Australian Housing Cycle Is Peaking
The Australian Housing Cycle Is Peaking
The Australian Housing Cycle Is Peaking
Assuming a pre-pandemic growth rate of the working age population of between 1-1.5%, and productivity around 0.5%, Australia’s potential GDP growth rate is, at best, around 2% (middle panel) and is likely even lower than that. The working-age population growth rate fell to 0% during the pandemic due to migration restrictions that have yet to be lifted. However, population growth had already been slowing pre-COVID due to falling birth rates and reduced worker visa caps in 2018-19. High Household Debt Raises Interest Rate Sensitivity Of Consumer Demand Sluggish trend growth is not the only reason why Australia’s neutral interest rate is lower than markets are discounting. Given elevated housing valuations and aggressive lending practices, highly indebted Australian households are now more sensitive to rate increases than in years past. Australian mortgage lenders began aggressively issuing shorter-term (typically 3-year) fixed rate mortgages in 2020 after the collapse in bond yields due to the initial COVID shock, to entice borrowers to lock in low interest rates. This raised the share of new fixed rate mortgages from a historic average around 15% of all new mortgages to nearly 50%. Since the RBA ended its yield curve control policy last November, which targeted 3-year bond yields, 3-year fixed mortgage rates have surged from 2.93% to 4.34%. That already has had an impact on housing demand - home price growth has peaked in the major cities according to CoreLogic, while building approvals are contracting on a year-over-year basis (Chart 5). As the surge of fixed rate mortgage loans begin to mature in 2023, Australian homeowners will see a major spike in refinancing costs, both for fixed rate and variable rate lending. This trend should weaken home demand, and house price inflation, even further. Inflation Will Soon Peak The RBA expects softer house price inflation to help slow overall Australian inflation rates. The central bank is projecting headline CPI inflation to fall from the latest 5.1% to 4.3% by June 2023 and 2.9% by June 2024 (Chart 6). That would still be a level near the top of the RBA target band, but the downtrend could be even faster than that. As in many other countries, the latest surge in Australian inflation has been led by a rapid increase in goods prices related to severe demand/supply mismatches at a time of global supply chain bottlenecks. Australian goods inflation hit an 31-year high of 6.6% in Q1/2022, essentially matching the housing component of the CPI index (Chart 7). Yet with US goods inflation having already peaked, as have global shipping costs, it is likely that Australia goods inflation will soon follow suit. This will lower headline Australian inflation to levels more consistent with services inflation, which reached 3% in Q1/2022. Chart 6The RBA Sees Persistent Above-Target Inflation
The RBA Sees Persistent Above-Target Inflation
The RBA Sees Persistent Above-Target Inflation
That floor in more domestically-driven services inflation will also be influenced by the pace of wage growth in Australia. The latest reading on the best wage indicator Down Under, the Wage Price Index, showed that year-over-year wage growth only reached 2.4% in Q1/2022. Chart 7Australia Goods Inflation Should Soon Peak
Australia Goods Inflation Should Soon Peak
Australia Goods Inflation Should Soon Peak
This is a surprisingly low outcome given the tightness of the Australian labor market with the unemployment rate at an all-time low of 3.9% (Chart 8). Depressed labor supply is not a factor keeping the unemployment rate low, as the labor force participation rate and hours worked are both above pre-pandemic levels. Prior to the rate hike at the May 3 policy meeting, the RBA had been highlighting soft wage growth as a reason to delay the start of the monetary tightening cycle. After the May meeting, RBA Governor Lowe noted that according to the RBA’s “liaison” surveys of Australian businesses, nearly 40% of respondents said they were giving wage increases above 3%. The RBA believes that wage growth in the 3-4% range is consistent with Australian inflation remaining within the RBA’s 2-3% target band, a condition that was deemed necessary before rate hikes could begin. The message from the RBA liaison surveys was enough to trigger the start of the tightening cycle. While the Australia OIS curve is priced for an aggressive series of rate hikes, and shorter-term interest rate expectations are elevated, there is less inflationary concern priced into medium-term inflation expectations. The 5-year/5-year forward Australia CPI swap is at 2.2%, down -15bps since the start of 2022 and barely within the RBA target band. Some of that is a global factor – the 5-year/5-year forward US TIPS breakeven has declined by -44bps over just the past month. However, the Australia 5-year/5-year forward CPI swap peaked at the start of the year, just as Australian interest rate expectations began to ratchet higher (the 2-year Australia government bond yield was 0.35% at the start of 2022 and now sits at 2.61%). An increasing amount of discounted rate hikes, occurring alongside falling inflation expectations, is a sign that markets are incrementally pricing in a restrictive monetary policy. We agree with RBA Governor Lowe’s assessment that the neutral nominal Cash Rate is, at best, 2.5%. Thus, the current discounted peak in the Cash Rate of 3.2% would be restrictive. Very strong consumer spending growth at a time when inflation was already high could be a sign that a restrictive monetary stance is now necessary. However, the outlook for Australian consumption is not without risks. Consumer confidence has plunged alongside declining purchasing power, as wage growth has lagged the inflation upturn (Chart 9). While the expectation is that inflation will peak and wage growth will pick up over the latter half of 2022, it is still uncertain if the relative moves will be large enough to give a meaningful lift to real wage growth and consumer spending power. Chart 8Medium-Term Inflation Expectations Falling, Despite Low Unemployment
Medium-Term Inflation Expectations Falling, Despite Low Unemployment
Medium-Term Inflation Expectations Falling, Despite Low Unemployment
Chart 9Headwinds For The Australian Consumer
Headwinds For The Australian Consumer
Headwinds For The Australian Consumer
The RBA believes that consumer spending will be supported by the high level of savings, with the household saving rate currently at 13.6%. Yet the high level of household debt means that debt service burdens will rise as interest rates move higher, which may limit the degree to which Australian consumers run down savings to fuel greater consumer spending. Another reason why a more restrictive monetary policy could be needed is if there was a substantial loosening of fiscal policy that was fueling faster growth, especially at a time when inflation was already overshooting. This makes an analysis of the latest election results highly relevant to the path of Australian interest rates. Bottom Line: Markets are pricing in a shift to a restrictive level of interest rates in Australia, an outcome that is not necessary with inflation set to peak at a time of high household leverage. Labor Party Takes Power With Limited Political Capital Australia’s federal election on May 21 brought a Labor Party government into power, headed by new Prime Minister Anthony Albanese. National policy is unlikely to change substantially. Australia has low political risk but high geopolitical risk – meaning that domestic politics are manageable for investors but China’s conflict with the West and other geopolitical events are revolutionizing Australia’s place in the world. The previous Liberal-National Coalition government had been in power since 2013, had never found a stable leader, and had been buffeted by a series of external shocks: a commodity bust, China trade conflict, the COVID-19 pandemic, and inflation. Hence it is no surprise that Labor came back to power – it almost did so in 2019. However, Labor’s popularity is questionable. The new government does not have a robust political mandate: Labor will fall short of a single-party majority (or will have a very thin majority at best): As we go to press, Labor won 74 seats out of 151 in the House of Representatives. A party needs 76 seats for a majority. Labor will likely rely on three Green Party seats and some of the 10 independents to pass legislation. These minor parties will have considerable influence. Labor’s popular vote share is underwhelming: Labor won 32.8% of the popular vote, down from 33.3% in 2019, and beneath the 36% of the vote won by the outgoing Liberal-National Coalition (Table 1). The Green Party rose to 12% of the vote. While this only translates to three seats in parliament, the Greens will hold the balance of power. Table 1Australian Federal Election Results, 2022
The New Normal In Australia
The New Normal In Australia
Labor does not control the Senate: A bill requires a majority vote in both the House and Senate for passage. A majority requires 38 seats, but Labor and the Greens are currently slated to fall short at 36 seats. Hence, as in the House, the Labor Party will rely on “cross-bench” votes from minor parties to get a majority for bills. Labor won through pragmatism and moderation: Having suffered a surprise defeat in 2019, the Labor Party adopted a more moderate and pragmatic tone in the current election. Prime Minister Albanese campaigned on a motto of “safe change,” declared that he was “not woke,” and adopted a relatively hawkish tilt on trade and foreign policy (China relations) and immigration (“boat people”). Labor has limited room for maneuver in international relations: China’s economy is slowing down and stimulus does not work as well as it used to. China’s political system is reverting to autocracy and the Xi Jinping administration is attempting to carve a sphere of influence in the region, increasing long-term security threats to Australia in Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands. China has declared a “no limits” strategic partnership with a belligerent Russia, leaving the US no option but to pursue containment strategy against both powers. Prime Minister Albanese has already met with President Biden and the Quadrilateral Dialogue to emphasize Australia’s need to counter China’s newly assertive foreign policy. While Albanese may attempt to reduce trade tensions with China, any such moves will be heavily constrained. Inflation, not climate change, brought Labor to power: The media is hailing the election as a historic shift on the question of climate change and climate policy. But popular opinion has not changed much on this topic in recent years and the election results only partially support the thesis. A better explanation is that the pandemic and its inflationary aftermath galvanized opposition to the ruling Liberal-National Coalition. Hence both fiscal policy and climate policy – the most important areas of change – will be constrained by inflation. Chart 10Australia Cannot Cut Defense Amid China Challenge
The New Normal In Australia
The New Normal In Australia
There are two key policy takeaways from the above assessment: First, on fiscal policy, the new Labor-led government will face limitations due to inflation and the macroeconomic cycle. It will likely respond to inflation – the crisis that got it elected – even though China’s slowdown will produce negative surprises for global and Australian growth. The government will not be able to cut defense spending given the geopolitical setting (Chart 10). That means it will also not be able to pursue its ambitious social and environmental agenda without finding more revenue to offset the inflationary impact of larger budget deficits. Tax hikes are coming for multinational corporations and high-income earners. In terms of the size of the fiscal impact, the Labor Party promised spending increases worth AUD$18.9 billion (1.0% of GDP), to be offset by tax hikes amounting to AUD$11.5 billion in new revenue (0.6% of GDP). The result would be an AUD$7.5 billion increase in the budget deficit (0.4% of GDP) – a net fiscal stimulus (Chart 11). Currently the IMF projects a 1.84% fiscal drag in the cyclically adjusted budget deficit for 2023, so Labor’s plans would reduce that drag by 0.4%. However, the fiscal plans will change once the new Treasurer James Chalmers produces a new budget proposal in October. Comparison with a like-minded economy is therefore useful to put the policy change into perspective. Canada’s politics shifted from center-right to center-left in 2015 and the left-leaning government at that time put forward an agenda similar to Australia’s Labor Party today. Ultimately the budget balance declined from 0.17% to -0.45% of GDP from peak to trough (Chart 12). This 0.62% of GDP stimulus provides a point of comparison. Yet inflation was not a constraint on government spending at that time. The new Australian government may not exceed that size of stimulus in an inflationary context. But it could easily surpass it if the global economy falls back into recession. Chart 11Australian Labor’s Proposed Fiscal Stimulus
The New Normal In Australia
The New Normal In Australia
Chart 12Canada Offers Clue To Size Of Australian Stimulus
The New Normal In Australia
The New Normal In Australia
Second, on climate policy, the new ruling coalition probably will pass major climate legislation, given the importance of Greens and left-leaning independents. But Labor will have to constrain the smaller parties’ climate ambitions to preserve popular support in areas where fossil fuel industries remain strong. Australia consumes substantially more carbon per capita than other developed economies and will continue to rely on fossil fuel exports for growth. In other words, climate policy will bring incremental rather than radical change. Bottom Line: If a global recession is avoided, then the new government’s counter-cyclical fiscal policies may work. If not, they will produce a double whammy for the Australian economy: new corporate and resource taxes on top of a slowdown in exports. The AUD As A Shock Absorber Despite a higher repricing of the interest rate curve in Australia, and elevated commodity prices, the Australian dollar (AUD) has been very soft. Part of the story is broad-based US dollar strength that has sapped any potential rebound in the AUD. More specifically, a survey of the key drivers of the AUD unveils the main source of currency weakness, by process of elimination: The divergence in monetary policy between the RBA and the Fed? No. Clearly, that has not been a driver this time around as the RBA is expected to lift rates to 3.2% over the next 12 months, in line with market pricing for rate hikes from the Federal Reserve. The commodity cycle? No. Commodity prices are softening, after being in a supply-driven bull market. As a premier resource producer, the Australian economy is intricately intertwined with the outlook for coal, iron ore, copper and even liquefied natural gas prices. As Chart 13 highlights, the AUD has massively deviated from the level implied by rising terms of trade for Australia. This is a departure from a historical correlation that has been in place since the end of the Bretton Woods system. Resource booms tend to be either demand or supply driven, or a combination of both. This time around supply restrictions have played a major role. The message from the AUD is that it responds much better to improving demand conditions. Global and relative growth dynamics? YES: The overarching driver of a weak AUD as hinted above has been slowing Chinese demand. The Zero COVID-19 policy in China has led to a drastic reduction in import volumes. This is hurting Australia’s external balance at the margin, as Chinese import volumes contract (Chart 14). Chart 13The AUD Has Lagged Terms Of Trade
The AUD Has Lagged Terms Of Trade
The AUD Has Lagged Terms Of Trade
Chart 14The AUD Is Very Sensitive To China
The AUD Is Very Sensitive To China
The AUD Is Very Sensitive To China
There are two key takeaways from the above analysis. First, the hawkish path for interest rates priced for the RBA is not yet reflected in a weak AUD. This implies that currency and bond markets are on a collision course. Either the RBA ratifies market pricing and triggers a coiled spring rebound in the AUD, or hawkish expectations will be tempered as inflationary pressures moderate. Second, the AUD will be very sensitive to any improvement in Chinese demand, the overarching driver of currency weakness. We expect the Chinese authorities to ramp up credit stimulus, to offset weakening demand from the Zero COVID-19 policy. The AUD has historically been very sensitive to changes in Chinese money and credit variables (Chart 15). From a fundamental perspective, a lot of pessimism is embedded in the Aussie dollar. Australian GDP has already recovered above pre-pandemic levels and could be on a path to achieve escape velocity if China recovers. Chinese fiscal and monetary policy should be eased going forward. Chinese bond yields have already dropped, reflecting an easing in domestic financial conditions. Meanwhile, Australia’s commodity exposure is well suited for a green energy shift. Besides being relatively competitive in supplying the types of raw materials that China needs and wants, (higher-grade ore, which is more expensive, but pollutes less, and is in high demand in China), Australia is a big exporter of liquefied natural gas, whose prices have been soaring in recent months and is critical in the Russia-Ukraine conflict and green energy shift (Chart 16). This will provide a multi-year tailwind for Australian export volumes and terms of trade. Chart 15The Chinese Economy Could Be Bottoming
The Chinese Economy Could Be Bottoming
The Chinese Economy Could Be Bottoming
Chart 16Australia Is Resource Superstar
Australia Is Resource Superstar
Australia Is Resource Superstar
Bottom Line: BCA Research Foreign Exchange Strategy went long AUD at 72 cents. In the near term, this position could prove quite volatile as markets try to discern a clear path for global growth. But given cheap valuations and beaten down sentiment, it should prove profitable in the longer term. Investment Conclusions For Fixed Income Investors Chart 17Australian Government Bond Investment Recommendations
Australian Government Bond Investment Recommendations
Australian Government Bond Investment Recommendations
Our careful analysis of Australian growth, inflation, the RBA’s likely next moves leads us to the following investment conclusions for Australian bonds (Chart 17): Maintain neutral duration exposure within dedicated Australian bond portfolios (for now): On a forward basis, the entire Australian yield curve is converging to that discounted 3.5% peak in the Cash Rate (top panel). Eventually, Australian bond yields will fall once inflation clearly peaks in H2/2022 and markets realize that the RBA will not be hiking as fast as expected, justifying an above-benchmark duration tilt. Until then, Australian bond yields will be rangebound, especially with the RBA no longer buying bonds via quantitative easing, leaving more bond issuance to be absorbed by private investors. Underweight Australian inflation-linked bonds versus nominal-paying government bonds: Inflation will soon peak, and the discounted RBA stance is too hawkish – a recipe for lower inflation breakevens. Overweight Australian government bonds within global bond portfolios: Australia has returned to its “high-yield-beta” status, which means that an overweight stance is warranted when global bond yields are stable or falling. BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy’s Global Duration Indicator, a growth-focused leading indicator of the momentum of global bond yields, is signalling a more stable backdrop for global yields over the rest of 2022. The Duration Indicator is also a fine leading indicator of the relative return performance of Australian government bonds (middle panel) and is supportive of an overweight stance on Australian debt. Go Long December 2022 Australia Bank Bill futures: This is a tactical trade (i.e. investment horizon of no more than six months), based on the extreme pricing of rate hikes by year-end. The market price of the December 2022 futures contract is currently 97.11, or an implied interest rate of 2.89% compared to the current RBA Cash Rate of 0.35%. That contract is priced for far too many rate hikes than will be delivered over the remaining seven RBA meetings of 2022. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Chester Ntonifor Chief Foreign Exchange Strategist ChesterN@bcaresearch.com Matt Gertken Chief Geopolitical Strategist mattg@bcaresearch.com
Listen to a short summary of this report. Dear Client, In lieu of our weekly report next week, I will be hosting a webcast on Tuesday with my colleague Mathieu Savary, Chief European Strategist, on the implications of stagflation on European assets and global FX markets. I look forward to answering any questions you might have. Kind regards, Chester Executive Summary The Yen And Interest Rates
The Yen And Interest Rates
The Yen And Interest Rates
The Japanese yen is in liquidation. The historical evidence suggests waiting for an exhaustion in selling pressure, before placing fresh bets. This exhaustion is likely to occur once global bond yields stabilize (Feature chart), and energy price inflation abates. A move lower in these two key variables would catalyze an explosive rebound in the yen, on the back of very cheap valuations and a large net short speculative position. The Bank of Japan will not meaningfully pivot soon. The reason is that downside risks to the Japanese economy supersede the risk of an inflation overshoot. What Japan needs is stronger fiscal spending, that would offset deficient domestic demand. That said, Japan is also one of the best candidates for generating non-inflationary growth, a bullish backdrop for the currency. Our 2022 target for the yen is 110. Our sense is that most of the downside risks are well understood by markets, while upside surprises are much underappreciated. RECOMMENDATIONS INCEPTION LEVEL inception date RETURN Short chf/JPY 135 2022-04-21 - Bottom Line: The yen has undershot. According to our in-house PPP models, the Japanese currency is undervalued by 35%. Historically, an investor buying the yen at such undervalued levels has made 6% per year over the subsequent 5 years. Feature The yen’s move in recent weeks has been explosive. Since early March, the yen has collapsed by 11%, pushing USD/JPY from around 115 to a nudge below 130. Over the last year, the yen is down 16%. In retrospect, a chart formation since 1990 suggests this is a classic liquidation phase that is unlikely to reverse until fundamentals shift. The two key drivers of yen weakness have been higher global yields, and elevated energy prices. Chart 1 shows that the yen has been perfectly tracking the US 10-year Treasury yield. Yield curve control (YCC) is leading to a capitulation of both domestic and foreign investors, fleeing from Japanese bonds towards external bond markets. Looking out the curve, investors do not expect the Bank of Japan to lift rates higher than 50 bps until 2028 (Chart 2). Chart 1The Yen And Interest Rates
The Yen And Interest Rates
The Yen And Interest Rates
Chart 2The BoJ Is Expected To Stay Dovish
The BoJ Is Expected To Stay Dovish
The BoJ Is Expected To Stay Dovish
Meanwhile, higher energy costs are also putting selling pressure on the yen as merchants sell JPY to pay for more expensive imports in US dollars. Is Selling Pressure Exhausted? Chart 3A Technical Profile Of The Japanese Yen
A Technical Profile Of The Japanese Yen
A Technical Profile Of The Japanese Yen
The key question for investors is whether the carnage in the yen is in an apocalyptic phase. The answer depends on the time horizon. Daily traders, reconciling positions every few hours, should continue shorting the yen. Exhaustion in selling pressure is likely to manifest itself through a few technical patterns, most notably, a consolidation phase. Chart 3 suggests that reversals in the yen have tended to pass through a period of indigestion, allowing investors enough time to play on a reversal. We are not there yet. That said, for longer-term investors, being contrarian could pay off handsomely. The 1-year drawdown in the yen is within the scope of historical capitulation phases (Chart 4). Since JPY became freely floating, selloffs have been around 15%-20% especially during major events (the Asian financial crisis or the manufacturing recession the last decade, for example). The last major selloff was around Abenomics in 2012, a pivotal event. Chart 4The Yen Drawdown Has Matched Previous Capitulation Phases
The Yen Drawdown Has Matched Previous Capitulation Phases
The Yen Drawdown Has Matched Previous Capitulation Phases
Speculators are also very short JPY and sentiment is quite depressed. This is bullish from a contrarian perspective. Low rates in Japan have led to the proliferation of carry trades. While these are likely to persist, the bulk of investors have already jumped on this bandwagon. A stabilization and/or reversal in US Treasury yields could flush out stale shorts in the yen (Chart 5). If, as we expect, the greenback does weaken in the second half of this year, that will also support the yen. Chart 5Sentiment On The Yen Is Very Depressed
Sentiment On The Yen Is Very Depressed
Sentiment On The Yen Is Very Depressed
Japan’s Economic Outlook The yen tends to appreciate when the Japanese economy is exiting a recession (Chart 6). Part of the reason why the yen has been so weak is because economic growth in Japan has been anemic. While the external sector has been benefiting from a global trade boom, the domestic sector has been under siege from the pandemic, until recently. Chart 6The Yen Tends To Rebound When The Japanese Economy Recovers
The Yen Tends To Rebound When The Japanese Economy Recovers
The Yen Tends To Rebound When The Japanese Economy Recovers
It is notable that while goods spending has been picking up around the world, the personal consumption component of GDP in Japan remains 5% below the pre-pandemic trend. Shinkansen passenger volumes are still down 42% this year after an even bigger collapse last year. Inbound tourists, a meaningful source of demand, has collapsed from about 25% of the overall Japanese population before the pandemic to zero today. These dire statistics are likely to reverse. The manufacturing PMI is ticking higher. The number of daily new COVID-19 cases has dramatically rolled over. This will be a welcome fillip to much subdued consumer and business sentiment. 2% Inflation = Mission Impossible? The BoJ is likely to get its wish of 2% inflation in the coming months. However, it will prove fleeting. The overarching theme for Japan is an aging and declining population which has put a lid on consumer prices (Chart 7). This will support real interest rates. Inflation does not tend to accelerate on the island until the output gap is fully closed. That has yet to occur. Meanwhile, the political push to cut mobile phone prices has been a drag on CPI. Mobile phone charges alone have cut around 1.2%-1.5% from the core core measure of Japanese inflation, according to the BoJ. This has been a structural trend. As a result, long-term inflation expectations in Japan remain anchored near 1%, even though the rest of the world is seeing a price boom (Chart 8). The revealed preference is for low/stable prices. Chart 7Demographics Are Weighing On Japanese##br##Inflation
Demographics Are Weighing On Japanese Inflation
Demographics Are Weighing On Japanese Inflation
Chart 8Long-Term Inflation Expectations In Japan Are Rising, But Muted
Long-Term Inflation Expectations In Japan Are Rising, But Muted
Long-Term Inflation Expectations In Japan Are Rising, But Muted
Clearly, the Bank of Japan would like this to change, as it aims for a persistent 2% inflation target. That said, it will be unable to adjust monetary settings aggressively. The BoJ already owns over 50% of Japanese government bonds, and that has made the market very illiquid. As a result, ownership as a share of GDP is nearing attrition (Chart 9). Related Report Foreign Exchange StrategyThe Yen In 2022 Arguably, the BoJ could widen the target band for yield curve control, while lowering short rates further below zero, but that is unlikely to do much for inflation expectations. It could also expand its 0% bank loan scheme beyond renewable industries, and/or small/medium-sized firms, but the problem in Japan is a lack of demand. The currency remains the sole policy lever for the BoJ. Unfortunately, for a small, open economy, the BoJ has less control over the currency. The Ministry of Finance last intervened to support the currency in 1998 (Chart 10). That helped the yen temporarily, but global factors dictated its longer-term trend. Intervention this time around will not assuage the whale of carry traders. Chart 9The BoJ Has Not Been Aggressively Buying Government Bonds
The BoJ Has Not Been Aggressively Buying Government Bonds
The BoJ Has Not Been Aggressively Buying Government Bonds
Chart 10The MoF Could Soon ##br##Intervene
The MoF Could Soon Intervene
The MoF Could Soon Intervene
A falling yen would allow some pass-through inflation, but this is unlikely to be sticky. The yen needs to fall 10% every year to generate 1% inflation in Japan (Chart 11). Meanwhile, a policy based on depreciating your currency could lead to a crisis of confidence, especially vis-à-vis Japanese trade partners. Our model for core core inflation suggests that all the weakness in the currency will only boost this print to 0.5% in the coming months (Chart 12). Chart 11Currency Weakness Will Only Temporarily Help Boost Inflation
Currency Weakness Will Only Temporarily Help Boost Inflation
Currency Weakness Will Only Temporarily Help Boost Inflation
Chart 12Core CPI Will Not Meaningfully ##br##Recover
Core CPI Will Not Meaningfully Recover
Core CPI Will Not Meaningfully Recover
What Japan needs is more fiscal spending. For a low-growth economy, with ultra-loose monetary settings, the fiscal multiplier tends to be much larger. Putting it all together, real rates are unlikely to fall very much in Japan. This is very positive for the yen in a world with deeply negative real rates. As demand recovers, and the Japanese economy generates non-inflationary growth, the currency should find a solid footing. Why Valuation Matters Chart 13The Yen Is Very Cheap
The Yen Is Very Cheap
The Yen Is Very Cheap
Japan is running a big trade deficit on the back of high energy prices. A cheap currency at least increases Japan’s competitiveness. This is particularly the case since the boom in external demand has been a much welcome cushion for Japanese growth. According to our PPP models, the Japanese yen is the cheapest G10 currency, undervalued by around 35% (Chart 13). Why valuations matter is because an investor who buys the yen today can expect to make 6% a year over the next half decade, based on the historical correlation between valuation and subsequent currency returns (Chart 14). This will especially be the case if Japanese inflation keeps lagging inflation in the US. As we argued at the beginning of this report, US yields will need to stabilize before long yen positions make sense on a tactical basis (Chart 15). Chart 14Valuation Matters For The Japanese Yen
Valuation Matters For The Japanese Yen
Valuation Matters For The Japanese Yen
Chart 15Global Yields Need To Stabilize For The Yen To Bounce
Global Yields Need To Stabilize For The Yen To Bounce
Global Yields Need To Stabilize For The Yen To Bounce
The Yen As A Safe Haven The yen still appears to have the best correlation with a rising VIX (Chart 16). In a world of slowing global growth and the potential for equity market turbulence, this bodes well for long yen positions. That said, the carry on this position will be unbearable especially if the Federal Reserve continues to sound hawkish. The better play on potential yen strength is a short CHF/JPY position. Historically, these currencies have tended to move together. However, more recently, the CHF has risen substantially versus the JPY, suggesting some mean reversion is due (Chart 17). Chart 16The Yen Remains A Good Hedge
The Yen Remains A Good Hedge
The Yen Remains A Good Hedge
Chart 17Go Short CHF/JPY
Go Short CHF/JPY
Go Short CHF/JPY
Strategically, we were stopped out of our short USD/JPY position at 128, initiated at 124. Our 2022 target for the yen is 110. Our sense is that most of the downside risks are well understood by markets, while upside surprises are much underappreciated. Tactically, we will wait for the consolidation phase we outlined earlier in this report, before initiating fresh positions. 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 The Currency And Interest Rates: On A Collision Course?
The Currency And Interest Rates: On A Collision Course?
The Currency And Interest Rates: On A Collision Course?
The dip in the Swedish krona has priced in a recession in the domestic economy. If a contraction does indeed occur, the impact on the currency is already a fait accompli. If it does not, the currency is poised for a coiled spring rebound. Fundamentally, the krona is cheap, and there is a dearth of SEK bulls, which is positive from a contrarian perspective. The Riksbank’s mandate is price stability. Given inflationary pressures and a weak currency, the Riksbank will have no choice but to turn more hawkish or lose credibility (Feature chart). There is potential for a brewing demand boom in Sweden – via refugees from Ukraine and Russia – that would increase government outlays and strengthen the need for higher rates. Admittedly, catalysts for SEK weakness remain in place – geopolitical tensions, rising energy costs and a stampede into safe-haven assets, including the dollar. Our strategy therefore is to buy on dips. We could be on the precipice of a capitulation phase that will present investors with an opportunity to accumulate the SEK at a fire-sale price. RECOMMENDATIONS INCEPTION LEVEL inception date RETURN Short chf/sek 10.15 2022-04-14 0.27 Bottom Line: Sweden is a small, open economy, very sensitive to global economic conditions. A recession is already priced by weakness in the SEK. Investors willing to tolerate volatility should buy the SEK on any further weakness. Feature Chart 1The SEK Tracks The DXY
The SEK Tracks The DXY
The SEK Tracks The DXY
The Riksbank has been one of the more dovish central banks, both within the G10 and globally. Policy rates in Sweden are still at the zero bound, while they are rising in many other countries. In the Riksbank’s latest monetary policy report, domestic inflationary pressures were characterized as transitory. As such, the repo rate would not be raised until the second half of 2024. The consequence of the Riksbank’s dovishness has been weakness in the Swedish krona, and a steep rise in inflation expectations. Most central banks are admitting that emergency policy settings are no longer appropriate in the current environment, especially after unprecedented monetary and fiscal stimulus. Yet, Sweden remains in the dovish camp. In this report, we argue that the Riksbank will have to raise rates sooner rather than later to maintain credibility and fend off inflationary pressures. The result of the Riksbank’s easy monetary policy has been the proliferation of massive carry trades, as investors sell the SEK and buy the dollar and/or other higher yielding currencies (Chart 1). As a small open economy, this could potentially unanchor longer-term inflation expectations, via a weak currency. Why Should The Riksbank Hike Rates? Chart 2The SEK Has Priced A Swedish Recession
The SEK Has Priced A Swedish Recession
The SEK Has Priced A Swedish Recession
Sweden is likely to experience a technical recession in the coming quarters. The new orders-to-inventories ratio has contracted sharply, underscoring that the manufacturing sector will deflate (Chart 2). As a small, open economy, the manufacturing sector holds the key to the business cycle. Despite this, our bias is that the Riksbank will overlook the temporary dip in economic activity for the following reasons: The currency has already acted as a relief valve, which should cushion further downside in manufacturing activity (Chart 3). This is especially beneficial in a world where purchasing managers’ indices are declining everywhere. By the same token, the incentive for a central bank to raise rates when inflation is rising and the currency is more compelling, compared to a regime where a stronger currency tightens monetary conditions. Chart 4 shows that is weak is krona has been a fluid conduit for higher inflation in Sweden. A stronger krona will cap rising inflation expectations. Chart 3SEK Weakness Has Been A Welcome Relief Valve
SEK Weakness Has Been A Welcome Relief Valve
SEK Weakness Has Been A Welcome Relief Valve
Chart 4SEK Weakness = High Imported Inflation
SEK Weakness Equals High Imported Inflation
SEK Weakness Equals High Imported Inflation
It is remarkable that the traditional relationship between the SEK and oil prices (which is positive) has broken down (Chart 5). This is because rising oil prices usually reflect strong global demand, which benefits Sweden. This time around, a weak SEK is a tax on the economy as energy prices soar. Chart 5The Energy Shock To Sweden Has Been Unusual
The Energy Shock To Sweden Has Been Unusual
The Energy Shock To Sweden Has Been Unusual
The Chinese credit impulse has bottomed, which is historically a good sign that Swedish central bankers can tolerate a stronger currency (Chart 6). Sweden’s biggest trade surplus is with the US, which in turn has the biggest trade deficit with China (Chart 7). As such, the relationship between the Swedish krona and the Chinese credit impulse is tightly knit. China’s zero COVID-19 policy is generating huge supply bottlenecks that are affecting inter-oceanic supply chains, but the pent-up demand once that ends could be tectonic. Chart 6The SEK Tracks The Chinese Credit Impulse
The SEK Tracks The Chinese Credit Impulse
The SEK Tracks The Chinese Credit Impulse
Chart 7Sweden Needs The US And China
Sweden Needs The US And China
Sweden Needs The US And China
The Riksbank’s mandate is to manage inflation expectations. Inflation is at 6%. The Riksbank’s own measure of resource utilization is at a level that has typically been associated with a much higher repo rate. The output gap is closing, raising the risk of a wage inflation spiral (Chart 8). Simply put, the Riksbank would have to raise interest rates or engender a crisis of confidence in monetary policy. Chart 8A Taylor Rule Approach Suggests Interest Rates Are Too Low
A Taylor Rule Approach Suggests Interest Rates Are Too Low
A Taylor Rule Approach Suggests Interest Rates Are Too Low
Finally, house prices are surging to record highs, on the back of very low mortgage rates and extremely accommodative monetary policy (Chart 9). Chart 9Low Rates Have Led To A Debt Binge And Housing Boom
Low Rates Have Led To A Debt Binge And Housing Boom
Low Rates Have Led To A Debt Binge And Housing Boom
A Potential Demand Boom The unemployment rate in Sweden remains above pre-pandemic levels. More importantly, it might rise in the coming quarters, but that would not be particularly worrisome. The reason is a potential increase in the labor dividend in Sweden, as new entrants increase the size of the labor force. First, the employment component of the manufacturing PMI index suggests employment growth should remain around 2% or so. There has been a tight correlation between employment growth in Sweden and the purchasing managers’ survey of the employment outlook (Chart 10). In our view, there is good reason to expect employment growth to remain resilient and in turn, stimulate demand. Related Report Foreign Exchange StrategyThe Unsung Case For The Euro Sweden has a long history of openness towards immigration compared to many other European countries. If we go back to the Syrian crisis several years ago, the number of asylum seekers skyrocketed to over 160,000 or circa 1.5% of the total population (Chart 11). This was a huge labor dividend. This time around, migrants from both Ukraine and Russia will add to the skilled pool of domestic workers. Some estimates suggest there could be as many as 200,000 immigrants, just from the current crisis. This said, it will also increase frictional unemployment, as new migrants integrate into the labor force and adopt a new language. Chart 10Employment Is Holding Up In Sweden
Employment Is Holding Up In Sweden
Employment Is Holding Up In Sweden
Chart 11There Is Potential For A Huge Labor Dividend
There Is Potential For A Huge Labor Dividend
There Is Potential For A Huge Labor Dividend
Foreign-born workers have been rising as a share of the Swedish labor force and now constitute about 20% of the total population (Chart 12). This growth dividend will be reaped for years to come. With the Social Democrats in power, upside surprises to immigration numbers are within a reasonable confidence interval of outcomes. In a nutshell, Sweden enjoys a relatively positive demographic outlook (Chart 13). Chart 12Foreign Workers Are Important
Foreign Workers Are Important
Foreign Workers Are Important
Chart 13Sweden Has A Demographic Dividend
Sweden Has A Demographic Dividend
Sweden Has A Demographic Dividend
The inflow of migrants has a mixed impact on inflation. While there is downward pressure on wages, due to an increase of lower-paying jobs, there is still upward pressure on housing and consumption, notwithstanding a fiscal boost as the government spends more on social services. Meanwhile, the unemployment rate among foreign-born people is around 16.2%. This means that the Phillips curve is flat for the first few years, before it starts to steepen. The Riksbank clearly understands these dynamics, which is why over the prior years, its stance has been dovish even when the Swedish economy has been holding up well. The difference this time is that inflation is surging, and the potential for cost-push pressures to translate into demand-pull inflation (via higher wages) is rising in Sweden. In our view, Governor Stefan Ingves will renormalize policy as quickly as possible, given that he is managing a small open economy with one of the cheapest currencies in the G10 universe, with a large footprint of imported inflation. Trading Strategy Chart 14The Riksbank Will Have To Raise Rates
The Riksbank Will Have To Raise Rates
The Riksbank Will Have To Raise Rates
Our currency strategy is to buy the SEK on weakness. The recent dovish path by the ECB will mean that the Riksbank will tread very carefully in sounding too hawkish. However, every real-time indicator of its mandate suggests emergency policy settings are no longer necessary. Real rates are falling in Sweden relative to both the US and the euro area. As such, the SEK has not yet priced a shift in the Riksbank's policy setting. (Chart 14). This suggests that while the carry cost is high from being long the SEK at current levels, a capitulation phase will present investors with an opportunity to accumulate the SEK at a fire-sale price. As for Long EUR/SEK, the cross could overshoot, but will head lower on a 12–18-month horizon. Long SEK/CHF positions are also attractive. 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 The RMB And Real Interest Rates
The RMB And Real Interest Rates
The RMB And Real Interest Rates
The RMB has overshot and will likely consolidate gains in the coming months. The said, the yuan remains underpinned by a current account surplus, positive real rates, and a valuation cushion. This will support modest appreciation over the next 12-18 months (Feature Chart). The dollar is likely to enter a period of weakness beyond the Russo-Ukrainian crisis, underpinning a firm RMB. Yield spreads between China and the US will narrow across the bond curve, slowing the pace of any RMB appreciation. In its quest to dominate Asian trade flows, China will also seek a stable yuan which can be an anchor for regional currencies. Low volatility in the Chinese bond and currency market will increasingly make it an attractive hedge for global portfolio managers. This will encourage RMB inflows. The financial sanctions on Russia from the ongoing Ukrainian conflict will accelerate Chinese diversification from US assets. It will also boost the use of RMB in global trade, lifting its share in global FX reserves. Bottom Line: In the near term, USD/CNY is due for a bounce and could retrace to 6.5. It is also the case that a lot of the gains in the Chinese RMB have been frontloaded, suggesting a flattish path ahead. Beyond the near term, we expect the DXY to hit 90 in the next 12-18 months, which will boost the RMB towards 6.0. Feature The RMB has been strong across the board versus most major currencies (Chart 1). Year-to-date, the DXY dollar index is up 2% while the CFETS basket is up 3%. This places the Chinese yuan as one of the best performing major currencies this year. Such a configuration where USD/CNY diverges from the broad dollar trend has been very rare in recent history (Chart 2). More importantly, this has occurred amidst very low volatility. Chart 1A Bull Market In Yuans
A Bull Market In Yuans
A Bull Market In Yuans
Chart 2USD/CNY And The Dollar Diverge
USD/CNY And The Dollar Diverge
USD/CNY And The Dollar Diverge
In this Special Report, we try to understand the driving forces behind a rising RMB, to gauge its likely path going forward. In our view, while the yuan is vulnerable tactically, it is underpinned by strong structural forces that support modest appreciation over the next 12-18 months. The Chinese Economy, Interest Rates, And The RMB An exchange rate is simply a mechanism to equalize rates of returns across countries. For most currencies, the key determinants of this arbitrage window are real interest rate differentials. In China, while nominal interest rates vis-à-vis the US have been collapsing, real interest rate differentials are near a record high. This has been the key driver of a rising RMB (Chart 3). Real interest rates tend to matter because high and rising inflation destroys the purchasing power of any currency. Our bias is that higher real rates in China versus the US will persist and keep the RMB firm. Five key reasons underpin this view: The Chinese economy is expected to accelerate this year relative to the US. The IMF expects 4.8% GDP growth in China, versus 4% in the US. Bloomberg consensus estimates corroborate this view – 5.2% growth is expected for China this year, versus 3.6% for the US. Even the Chinese government’s GDP growth target this year is 5.5%, much higher than street estimates. US interest rates are likely to rise over the medium term, but so will those in China. The Chinese credit impulse has bottomed, and it is usually a good precursor to both stronger economic activity and higher relative government bond yields (Chart 4). Chart 3The RMB And Real Versus Nominal Rates
The RMB And Real Versus Nominal Rates
The RMB And Real Versus Nominal Rates
Chart 4Interest Rate Differentials And The Credit Impulse
Interest Rate Differentials And The Credit Impulse
Interest Rate Differentials And The Credit Impulse
While Chinese productivity growth is slowing, it remains structurally higher compared to that in the US or Europe. Stronger productivity growth suggests the neutral rate of interest in China will remain higher than in Western economies for years to come. This will continue to attract further fixed-income inflows. The RMB is a procyclical currency and tends to benefit when flows into emerging market assets in general, and Chinese stocks in particular, are fervent. While the Chinese authorities have cracked down on the property and information technology/communication service sectors, they have done so without causing widespread capital flight and hurting the RMB (Chart 5). Going forward, odds are that the interest from foreign bargain hunters will rise as these sectors reset from lower and much cheaper levels. It is well known that the Chinese economy has excess capacity, which is inherently deflationary (and positive for real rates). Like Japan, China has excess savings and deficient demand (Chart 6). However, in an inflationary world, this excess capacity can easily be exported, especially to the US, which is on the verge of overheating. A healthy trade balance in China suggests there is little reason for the RMB to depreciate meaningfully. Chart 6Excess Savings In China And Low Inflation
Excess Savings In China And Low Inflation
Excess Savings In China And Low Inflation
Chart 5The RMB And Chinese Equities
The RMB And Chinese Equities
The RMB And Chinese Equities
It is remarkable that despite being the largest commodity importer in the world, terms of trade in China is picking up. Rising terms of trade is usually synonymous with a stronger currency. On the flip side, a stronger currency will also temper inflationary pressures in China (Chart 7). Chart 7The RMB, Terms Of Trade And Inflation
The RMB, Terms Of Trade And Inflation
The RMB, Terms Of Trade And Inflation
The bottom line is that real interest rates will remain relatively high in China, even as the US begins to tighten monetary policy while China eases. The reason is that the US economy is much more inflationary, and Chinese bond yields tend to rise when the PBoC stimulates growth. Market Liberalization And Portfolio Flows With attractive real yields, Chinese bonds have been gaining widespread investor appeal. Their inclusion in the world’s three major bond indices has been a seminal milestone in the process of liberalizing the Chinese fixed-income market. Chinese bonds have also acted as perfect portfolio hedges, moving inversely to US and global equities (Chart 8). The result has been significant portfolio inflows into Chinese bonds. As a reminder, Chinese bonds were initially included in the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index (BBGA) in April 2019. Following that, they were added to the JP Morgan Government Bond - Emerging Market Index (GBI-EM) in February 2020. Finally, FTSE Russell announced their inclusion of in the FTSE World Government Bond Index (WGBI) as of October 2021. Since their inclusion, a net US$350 billion has flowed into Chinese bonds. We estimate that about 35% of that has been due to index inclusion. The amount of Chinese onshore bonds held by overseas investors has breached US$600 billion, a record high (Chart 9). Chart 9A Healthy Appetite From Foreign Investors
A Healthy Appetite From Foreign Investors
A Healthy Appetite From Foreign Investors
Chart 8RMB Bonds As A Portfolio Hedge
RMB Bonds As A Portfolio Hedge
RMB Bonds As A Portfolio Hedge
In a nutshell, the path of the RMB in the short term will follow relative growth dynamics between China and the rest of the world, but structural factors such the inclusion of RMB bonds in global portfolios will underpin strong inflows into the Chinese fixed-income market. The Dollar, Trade, And Lessons From The Ukrainian Conflict Chart 10China Is Destocking USDs
China Is Destocking USDs
China Is Destocking USDs
Another factor to consider vis-à-vis the RMB is the dollar’s reserve status, and the overreach that it commands. Quite simply, transactions conducted in US dollars anywhere fall under US law. This means that if a company in any country buys energy from Iran and the transaction is done in US dollars, the Treasury has powers to sanction the parties involved. Russian holdings of US Treasurys peaked during the Georgian war and have since fallen to near 0% of total reserves. Even so, the world has witnessed how vulnerable the Russian economy has been to a cut-off from the Society For Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) messaging system. China is the largest holder of US Treasurys and what it decides to do with this war chest of savings is of critical importance. At a minimum, a few trends that have been underway in recent years are likely to accelerate. China will continue to destock its holding of Treasurys into gold and other currencies (Chart 10). This will put downward pressure on the dollar and boost the RMB. In fact, ever since China started destocking Treasurys in earnest in 2015, the DXY has been unable to sustainably punch through the 100 level. Trade flows in Asia remain rather buoyant, even as globalization has peaked (Chart 11A and 11B). With most Asian countries having China as a large trading partner, the logical step will be more and more invoicing in RMB. Most global trade hubs in history (such as Hong Kong for example) have always sought a stable currency with low volatility to instill confidence in trade. China is likely to also favor a stable RMB. Chart 11AChina Could Dominate Asian Trade
China Could Dominate Asian Trade
China Could Dominate Asian Trade
Chart 11BAsian Trade Is Booming
What Next For The RMB?
What Next For The RMB?
As Asian trade continues to expand, the PBoC can step in as the regional central bank and lender of last resort. It is notable that China is already engaging in this role. Since the global financial crisis, the number of bilateral swap lines offered to foreign central banks by the PBoC has ballooned (Chart 12). According to the most recent data (from the PBoC), the Chinese central bank had bilateral local currency swap agreements with central banks or monetary authorities in 40 countries and regions, with a total amount of around 4 trillion yuan. The People’s Bank of China has massive foreign exchange reserves, worth about US$3.2 trillion. This means it can provide swap agreements that will almost cover the totality of EM foreign dollar debt. The Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS) already allows the transfer and clearing of yuan-denominated payments. In 2021, the system processed US$12.7 trillion, a 75% increase in turnover from the previous year.1 While the system still largely relies on SWIFT messaging for most cross-border transactions, progress towards independence is moving fast. The key point is that as China continues to rise as an economic power and increases the share of RMB trade within its sphere of influence, the yuan will naturally become the de facto Asian currency. This will allow the RMB to continue to gain international appeal (Chart 13). Chart 12The People's Bank Of Asia?
What Next For The RMB?
What Next For The RMB?
Chart 13The RMB And International Appeal
The RMB And International Appeal
The RMB And International Appeal
Valuation Concerns Most of the discussion above has focused on the cyclical outlook for the Chinese economy and bond yields, as well as the geopolitical ramifications from the Russo-Ukrainian conflict. While the macro environment is by far the most important driver of currencies, valuation and sentiment tend to matter as well. On this note: Our productivity model suggests the RMB is at fair value. Productivity in China remains higher than among its western trading partners, but the gap has been closing. This has flattened the slope of the fair-value model (Chart 14). That said, the US and Europe are generating much higher inflation than China, suggesting there is higher pressure for unit labor costs to rise in these countries. This will improve the competitive profile of the RMB. Our PPP model for the RMB, using an apples-to-apples consumer basket vis-à-vis the US suggests the RMB is undervalued by 11% (Chart 15). Historically, such levels of undervaluation have seen the RMB appreciate by 2% per year over the next 4 years (Chart 16). Chart 14The RMB Is At Fair Value Based On Productivity Trends
The RMB Is At Fair Value Based On Productivity Trends
The RMB Is At Fair Value Based On Productivity Trends
Chart 15The RMB Is Cheap Based On Relative Prices
The RMB Is Cheap Based On Relative Prices
The RMB Is Cheap Based On Relative Prices
Chart 16Potential RMB Returns For Foreign Investors
Potential RMB Returns For Foreign Investors
Potential RMB Returns For Foreign Investors
Valuation tends to be important because it is usually the trigger for imbalances to manifest themselves. Back in 2015-20162 when Chinese capital outflows (especially illicit flows) were rampant amongst global and Chinese concerns, the RMB also happened to be very overvalued. Today, such a risk is much limited. Concluding Thoughts The RMB and the dollar tend to move in harmony, and so a discussion of one entails talking about the other. We have characterized the dollar this year as caught in a tug of war. Specifically, aggressive rate hikes by the Federal Reserve will boost interest rate differentials in favor of the US but undermine the equity market via a derating in stocks. This will tighten financial conditions, nudging the Fed to pivot. On the other hand, less accommodation by the Fed will significantly unwind the rate-driven rally that has nudged the DXY close to 100. On the other hand, the Chinese credit impulse has bottomed meaning bond investors will benefit from rising bond yields in China. Equity investors will also benefit from a cheaper market, as well as exposure to sectors that are primed to benefit as the global economy reopens. This combination could sustain the pace of foreign capital inflows. In the near term, USD/CNY is due for a bounce and could retrace to 6.5. It is also the case that a lot of the gains in the Chinese RMB have been front loaded, suggesting a flattish path ahead. Beyond the near term, we expect the DXY to hit 90 in the next 12-18 months, which will boost the RMB towards 6.0. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/markets/europe/what-is-chinas-onshore-yuan-clearing-settlement-system-cips-2022-02-28/ 2 Please see Chinese Investment Strategy Special Report, titled “Monitoring Chinese Capital Outflows,” dated March 20, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
Executive Summary Lots Of Pent-Up Demand
Lots Of Pent-Up Demand
Lots Of Pent-Up Demand
The yen is unlikely to meaningfully appreciate until global bond yields stabilize. That said, very cheap valuations and a large net short position provide ample ammunition for an explosive rebound should macroeconomic conditions fall into place. The macro catalyst is likely to come from a domestic growth rebound. Unlike other developed economies, private consumption in Japan has been rather anemic on the back of cascading lockdowns. Inflation in Japan will remain contained in 2022, meaning the Bank of Japan will stay dovish. That said, the Japanese economy is also one of the best candidates for generating non-inflationary growth, a bullish backdrop for the currency. Our 2022 target for the yen is 104. Our sense is that most of the downside risks are well understood by markets, while upside surprises are much underappreciated. Recommendations Inception Level Inception Date Return Short CHF/JPY 125.05 2022-02-17 - Bottom Line: Real rates are likely to remain quite attractive in Japan. While that has not been a key driver of the currency in the short term, it remains an anchor over a longer horizon. According to our in-house PPP models, an investor who buys the yen today can expect to make 6% a year over the next decade, based on the historical correlation between valuation and subsequent currency returns. Feature Chart 1Anemic Passenger Volumes
Anemic Passenger Volumes
Anemic Passenger Volumes
The Japanese economy grew by 1.7% in 2021. For an economy with a potential growth rate of only 0.5%, this is an impressive feat. Even more remarkable is that this growth occurred within the context of very anemic domestic demand. The external sector in Japan has been benefiting from a global trade boom, while the domestic sector has been under siege from the pandemic. Anecdotally, the situation on the ground remains rather dire. Shinkansen passenger volumes are still down 35% this year after an even bigger collapse last year. According to Nikkei Asia, the waiting list to enter Japan continues to grow, as border restrictions are enforced. Of the 626,000 individuals approved for residence in Japan since January 2020, only 35% have filtered through. More broadly, at the peak, tourist arrivals (a meaningful source of demand) represented 25% of the overall Japanese population. Today, that number remains near zero (Chart 1). Amidst the gloom, pockets of Japanese financial markets are beginning to suggest a turnaround in economic conditions. The yield curve in Japan is steepening, usually a sign that monetary conditions remain very conducive to growth. Historically, that has been a bullish signal for the yen (Chart 2). Meanwhile, despite the surge in global bond yields, Japanese bank stocks are outperforming. The banking sector is usually one of the first to sniff out an improvement in economic fortunes (Chart 3). Chart 2The Yen And The Japanese Yield Curve
The Yen And The Japanese Yield Curve
The Yen And The Japanese Yield Curve
Chart 3Japanese Banks Are Outperforming
Japanese Banks Are Outperforming
Japanese Banks Are Outperforming
Outside financials, with inflation surging around the world, the Japanese economy is one of the best candidates for generating non-inflationary growth. This is bullish for the currency as real rates rise. Our bias is that while it might be too early to go long the yen today, conditions are gradually falling into place for a coiled spring rebound. The Case For Japanese Growth While the manufacturing PMI in Japan hit an 8-year high of 55.4 in January, the services PMI sits at 47.6, the lowest in the G10. The number of daily new COVID-19 cases breached 100,000 this month, the highest since the pandemic began two years ago. Hospitalizations and deaths are also rising acutely. However, there is rising evidence that Japan is beginning to put the worst of the pandemic behind it. 79.5% of the population is fully vaccinated, versus just about 50% six months ago. Booster shots are being ramped up quickly. The effective reproduction rate of the virus has dropped sharply, from 2.29 at the end of last year to 1.19 currently. According to government officials, there will be sufficient progress made on the virus front to begin relaxing border requirements and restrictions by next month. Optimism on the COVID-19 front will be a welcome fillip to much subdued consumer and business sentiment. Consumption outlays in Japan remain well below the pre-pandemic trend, especially towards services (Chart 4). As the economy reopens, and the labor market recovery continues, the war chest of Japanese savings that have been built in recent years should be modestly unwound. The job-to-applicants ratio is inflecting higher and workers’ propensity to consume has been improving (Chart 5). Chart 5A Labor Market Recovery Will Boost Spending
A Labor Market Recovery Will Boost Spending
A Labor Market Recovery Will Boost Spending
Chart 4Lots Of Pent-Up Demand
Lots Of Pent-Up Demand
Lots Of Pent-Up Demand
Wage increases remain very modest in Japan. Fumio Kishida, the Japanese prime minister has called for wage increases above 3%. His government also wants to raise the minimum wage from ¥930 to ¥1000, after a 3% increase last year. As the Shuntō (spring wage negotiations) begin, unions are likely to become more vocal in demanding wage increases. However, with a large share of temporary workers in Japan, and company preferences for one-time bonuses versus permanent pay increases, overall wage growth in Japan should remain in the 1-2% range, in line with BoJ forecasts. This puts Japan miles away from a wage inflation price spiral. From a contrarian perspective, it also means that falling unit labor costs are making the currency extremely competitive (Chart 6). Chart 6Japanese Workers Are Both Productive And Competitive
Japanese Workers Are Both Productive And Competitive
Japanese Workers Are Both Productive And Competitive
Chart 7A Smaller Fiscal Drag In 2022
A Smaller Fiscal Drag In 2022
A Smaller Fiscal Drag In 2022
In a nutshell, Japan has had cascading shocks from the consumption tax hike in 2019 to six waves of COVID-19 over the last two years. These have led to a massive build in pent-up demand, which should be unleashed in the coming quarters. Government outlays will also go a long way towards boosting aggregate demand. A supplementary budget of ¥36tn was put together last year and approved for the fiscal year that ends this April. The even bigger 2022 budget of ¥107.6tn should also help ease the fiscal drag in 2022 (Chart 7). For a low-growth economy like Japan, with ultra-loose monetary settings, the fiscal multiplier tends to be much larger. The Export Machine Continues To Hum A boom in external demand has been a much welcome cushion for Japanese growth. Rising energy prices are hurting the nominal trade balance, but real net exports remain firm. Foreign machinery orders are still rising over 30% year on year, boosting industrial production in Japan (Chart 8). Demand from China has been an important component of foreign sales. As monetary policy is eased in Beijing, domestic demand should start to improve, preventing Japanese exports from collapsing. One of the most cyclical components of Japanese exports is machine tool orders, which remain firm (Chart 9). Chart 9A Chinese Recovery Will Cushion Export Growth
A Chinese Recovery Will Cushion Export Growth
A Chinese Recovery Will Cushion Export Growth
Chart 8Machinery Orders Remain Robust
Machinery Orders Remain Robust
Machinery Orders Remain Robust
Monetary Policy And Inflation The Bank of Japan is unlikely to adjust monetary settings aggressively, amidst a recovery in demand. It could widen the target band for yield curve control, while bringing short rates back to zero, but this will require a vigorous rebound in demand and inflation. It could also scrap its 0% bank loan scheme but given these are targeted (especially towards renewable industries, and small/medium-sized firms), that is unlikely. Remarkably, the BoJ has not had to increase its holdings of government securities over the last year, as markets have viewed its policy as credible (Chart 10). Doing little is likely the best path of action for the BoJ in 2022. Chart 112% Inflation = Mission Impossible?
2% Inflation = Mission Impossible?
2% Inflation = Mission Impossible?
Chart 10Not Much QE By The BoJ
Not Much QE By The BoJ
Not Much QE By The BoJ
The key variable for the BoJ remains its 2% inflation target, which seems elusive for the time being. Inflation does not tend to accelerate in Japan until the output gap is fully closed. That has yet to occur. Meanwhile, the political push to cut mobile phone prices has been a drag on CPI. Mobile phone charges alone have cut around 1.2%-1.5% from the core core measure of Japanese inflation, according to the BoJ (Chart 11). Moreover, the decline in phone charges has been structural, even though it is usually touted as a one-off. A falling yen would allow some pass-through inflation, but this is unlikely to be sticky. The yen needs to fall 20% every year to generate 2% inflation in Japan (Chart 12). The pass-through is likely to be much higher for price-volatile items such as food and energy, which is likely to create angst among the rapidly ageing population. Chart 122% Inflation = 20% Yen Depreciation
2% Inflation = 20% Yen Depreciation
2% Inflation = 20% Yen Depreciation
Putting it all together, real rates are unlikely to fall very much in Japan. This is very positive for the yen in a world with deeply negative real rates. As demand recovers, and the Japanese economy generates non-inflationary growth, the currency should find a solid footing. The Yen And Portfolio Flows It will be very difficult for the yen to rally if global yields continue to rise aggressively (Chart 13). With yield curve control in Japan, the nominal spread with foreign yields has been narrowing. However, the cost of hedging those foreign yields has also risen dramatically, which has prevented Japanese investors from aggressively flocking to overseas fixed income markets (Chart 14). That said, the weakness in the yen also suggests speculators have been borrowing in JPY to bet on carry strategies. Chart 13Global Yields Need To Stabilize To Cushion The Yen
Global Yields Need To Stabilize To Cushion The Yen
Global Yields Need To Stabilize To Cushion The Yen
Chart 14No Massive Outflows From Japan Yet
No Massive Outflows From Japan Yet
No Massive Outflows From Japan Yet
The rise in Treasury yields has yet to hit exhaustion from a technical perspective. Our bond strategists expect the 10-year yield to reach 2.25%, which will also enter the zone where we have historically seen some consolidation. The J.P. Morgan survey shows that most of its clients are short duration, but speculators are only modestly short 10-year or 30-year Treasurys (Chart 15). Chart 16USD/JPY And DXY Tend To Move Together
USD/JPY And DXY Tend To Move Together
USD/JPY And DXY Tend To Move Together
Chart 15Modest Upside In Treasury Yields?
Modest Upside In Treasury Yields?
Modest Upside In Treasury Yields?
Once yields stabilize, and the dollar starts to weaken, the positive real rate spread between Japan and the US should attract yen inflows, or at least nudge speculators to start liquidating massive short positions. As a counter-cyclical currency, the yen usually weakens against other developed market currencies, but USD/JPY tends to fall, on broad dollar weakness (Chart 16). Finally, the recent turbulence in markets has seen the yen begin to shine as a safe haven, more so than the US dollar and the Swiss franc (Chart 17). In the near term, this is a catalyst for long yen positions. With US interest rates having risen significantly versus almost all G10 countries in recent quarters, the dollar has become a carry currency. It is difficult for any currency to act as both a safe haven and carry currency, due to opposing driving forces. A rise in volatility will be a boost for the yen. Chart 17The Yen Is The Better Hedge
The Yen Is The Better Hedge
The Yen Is The Better Hedge
Valuations And A Trade Idea In a report titled “A Short Note On US Dollar Valuations,” we suggested that the yen was the most undervalued G10 currency. According to our in-house PPP models, an investor who buys the yen today can expect to make 6% a year over the next decade, based on the historical correlation between valuation and subsequent currency returns (Chart 18). This will especially be the case if Japanese inflation keeps lagging inflation in the US. As a play on rising volatility, cheaper valuations, and a positive carry, we suggest investors short CHF/JPY today, with a stop at 127, and a target of 115. Historically, these currencies have tended to move together. However, more recently, CHF has risen substantially versus JPY, suggesting some mean reversion is due (Chart 19). Chart 18The Yen Is Very Cheap
The Yen Is Very Cheap
The Yen Is Very Cheap
Chart 19Sell CHF/JPY
Sell CHF/JPY
Sell CHF/JPY
Housekeeping We are closing our long AUD/NZD trade for a modest profit of 2.5%. We introduced this tactical trade over 6 months ago and are now cognizant of the negative carry as global yields rise. As a reminder we usually hold tactical trades for 6 months, and cyclical trades for 6-18 months. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
Executive Summary The Euro And Relative Growth
The Euro And Relative Growth
The Euro And Relative Growth
The euro is likely to appreciate over the course of 2022. But the path will be volatile, with a retest of recent EUR/USD lows within the central band of possible outcomes. Our 2022 target for the euro is 1.20. This partly hinges on cheap valuations. Beyond 2022, a bold estimate could see the euro gravitate towards 1.40. The pricing of interest rate hikes by the ECB this year are too aggressive. But this is also the case for the Federal Reserve, especially if inflation proves transitory. Our bias is that appreciation in the euro will be more driven by improving relative economic fundamentals as the 2022 cycle unfolds. A bottom in Chinese growth could be the ultimate arbiter of which mega economy outperforms. Sentiment on the euro is only neutral. This suggests that an escalation in Russo-Ukrainian tensions, as well as a more dovish ECB, are key risks in the short term. A short EUR/JPY position is a good hedge for this risk. In our FX portfolio, we are long EUR/CHF and long EUR/GBP as equally playable themes. We would buy the EUR/USD at current levels but suspect a better entry point awaits us. Recommendations Inception Level Inception Date Return Long EUR/CHF 1.05 2021-11-19 0.62% Long EUR/GBP 0.846 2021-10-15 -.71% Bottom Line: A positive surprise in Chinese growth, which will boost the euro area trade balance, will be a catalyst for eurozone growth. So will a decline in Russo-Ukrainian tensions and lower energy inflation. Feature The most persistent question we have received in recent weeks is the outlook for the euro. As the premier anti-dollar asset, most clients have been surprised by recent strength in the European currency, betting that a hawkish Fed and US exceptionalism will push the greenback to new highs. A domestic energy crisis interlinked with a brewing war in their backyard has created perfect conditions for selling the euro. With US inflation surprising to the upside, the case for maintaining a dollar-bullish stance remains in place. Yet, the dollar is well below its previous highs. Our suspicion is that the market faces a conundrum. Transitory inflation will nudge the Fed to underwhelm market expectations of aggressive rate hikes. Meanwhile, sticky inflation means that other central banks will eventually catch up to the Federal Reserve in tightening monetary policy. This tug of war has been a defining theme of our strategy for currencies in 2022.1 Specific to the euro area, there is a lot of bad economic news that is now well priced in, while good news is underappreciated by markets. This is becoming evident in the interest rate market, where real Bund yields are creeping noticeably higher. The spread of Omicron in the euro area is receding in lockstep with the deceleration in the US (Chart 1). As a result, the potential growth profile of the euro area is improving tremendously (Chart 2). Should this prove durable, it will put a solid floor under the euro. Chart 1The Pandemic Is Receding
The Pandemic Is Receding
The Pandemic Is Receding
Chart 2The Euro And Relative Growth
The Euro And Relative Growth
The Euro And Relative Growth
The Case For European Growth Growth is moderating around the world. That said, the German manufacturing PMI has been sharply outpacing that of the US. What is also true is that most measures of euro area growth that we monitor are rising fast relative to the US. The results are preliminary, but the possibility of a growth rotation from the US to other economies, including the eurozone, is very much underappreciated by markets. The economic surprise index in the euro area is strong relative to the US, pointing to a stronger euro (Chart 3). Bloomberg economic forecasts suggest that euro area growth will outpace growth in the US this year. According to the consensus, the euro area will grow by 4.2% in 2022, compared to the US at 3.9%. Remarkably, eurozone growth has typically lagged growth in the US by a significant margin. If past is prologue, it suggests the euro is not priced for this paradigm change (Chart 4). Chart 3Economic Surprises And ##br##The Euro
Economic Surprises And The Euro
Economic Surprises And The Euro
Chart 4Bloomberg Forecasters Expect A Pickup In Eurozone Growth
Bloomberg Forecasters Expect A Pickup In Eurozone Growth
Bloomberg Forecasters Expect A Pickup In Eurozone Growth
Other economic forecasts corroborate this view. The IMF expects eurozone growth to moderate from 5.2%, to 3.9% in 2022. This is an advantage over the US, where growth is expected to moderate from 5.6% in 2021, to 4% in 2022. The Atlanta Fed GDP growth tracker suggests US growth will slow to a crawl in Q1. The ZEW survey points to a meaningful rebound in the German (and euro area) PMI in the coming months (Chart 5). This will further widen the gap between European and US growth. The key denominator for all these forecasts is a bottoming in Chinese growth. The euro area needs the manufacturing and external sector to keep humming, with China as a critical import partner. Industrial production in the euro area, relative to the US, tends to track the Chinese credit impulse closely (Chart 6). Our bias is that the Chinese credit impulse has bottomed. This will be a catalyst for more Chinese demand for European goods. Chart 5The ZEW Survey Points To An Improving German PMI
The ZEW Survey Points To An Improving German PMI
The ZEW Survey Points To An Improving German PMI
Chart 6Europe Is Partly Dependent On China
Europe Is Partly Dependent On China
Europe Is Partly Dependent On China
The ECB And Interest Rates Chart 7The Gap Between Expected US-EUR Interest Rates Is Wide
The Gap Between Expected US-EUR Interest Rates Is Wide
The Gap Between Expected US-EUR Interest Rates Is Wide
The markets have begun to reprice higher interest rates in the eurozone. Admittedly, this has been partly due to higher expected inflation. In our view, the repricing by markets is warranted due to the gaping wedge between US versus European interest rate expectations. According to December 2022 contracts, markets expect the Fed to hike interest rates by significantly more than the ECB (Chart 7). It is true that structurally, inflation in the eurozone has been lower than in the US. In fact, our European Investment Strategy colleagues highlight that by stripping out energy, and the impact of VAT tax increases, European inflation is even lower. When CPI baskets are adjusted item for item, eurozone inflation today is indeed lower compared to the US, but not by much (Chart 8). For example, energy and transportation are only 14% of the eurozone CPI basket versus 26% in the US (Table 1). Meanwhile, the ECB targets HICP inflation (not core) that sits at 5.1%, versus a target of 2%. Chart 8Item-For-Item Inflation: US Versus Eurozone
Item-For-Item Inflation: US Versus Eurozone
Item-For-Item Inflation: US Versus Eurozone
Table 1Differences In The US And Eurozone CPI Basket
The Unsung Case For The Euro
The Unsung Case For The Euro
In the coming months, inflation is likely to subside in the eurozone, but probably by less than markets expect. The key driver of inflation expectations in the eurozone (and in the US) are long-dated commodity prices (Chart 9). This has become even more evident, given the surge in electricity prices across many European countries. Robert Ryan, our Chief Commodity Strategist, expects long-dated crude prices to be revised upward, as the oil curve remains persistently backwardated. This puts a floor on how low inflation expectations can relapse in the euro area and will keep the ECB on edge. Meanwhile, the employment picture in the eurozone is also improving. Adjusting for the higher rate of structural unemployment, euro area joblessness compares favorably with the US (Chart 10). It is true that wage growth remains anemic, but it is also the case that the behavior of wages can exhibit a structural shift at very low levels of employment. Chart 9What Drives Eurozone Inflation Expectations?
What Drives Eurozone Inflation Expectations?
What Drives Eurozone Inflation Expectations?
Chart 10US Versus Eurozone Labor Markets
US Versus Eurozone Labor Markets
US Versus Eurozone Labor Markets
Finally, the euro zone has a lot of pent-up demand. This could help bolster growth in the coming quarters and even beyond. While not a subject of this report, we suspect that the cascading crises in the eurozone could have sown the seeds for a productivity boom in the coming years. For a 12-18-month outlook, high savings and easy fiscal policy will allow European growth to recover in the coming quarters. EUR/USD Valuation And Future Returns 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 4%-5% a year over the next decade, should the euro stay at current levels of undervaluation versus the US. This will occur if Eurozone inflation keeps lagging that in the US. (Chart 11). That said, this is the Goldilocks case. A simple return to PPP fair value will suggest the euro will rise by a robust 20%. For 2022, our forecast for the euro is more in the 1.20-1.23 range, 8% above current levels. Our stance is measured because investors are only neutral the euro (Chart 12). Usually, this means that the macroeconomic environment becomes the dominant driver, rather than sentiment. With a Russo-Ukrainian crisis still in the backyard and the potential for more market volatility, an undershoot in the euro cannot be ruled out. Chart 11The Goldilocks Case For The Euro
The Goldilocks Case For The Euro
The Goldilocks Case For The Euro
Chart 12Sentiment On The Euro Is Only Neutral
Sentiment On The Euro Is Only Neutral
Sentiment On The Euro Is Only Neutral
That said, interest rate differentials are now moving in favor of the euro. Italian BTPs now yield 1.9%, like US Treasurys. The US Treasury-Bund spread has also narrowed. This removes a lot of the incentive for Europeans to flood the US Treasury or TIPs market, should market volatility subside. Given this confluence of factors, we have chosen to play euro strength via two channels: Long EUR/CHF: This trade will benefit from positive interest rate differentials. Also, the Swiss franc has been bid up relative to the euro on safe-haven demand. This has outpaced the traditional demand for safety, using the DXY index as a proxy (Chart 13). Long EUR/GBP: This is a bet on improving economic fundamentals between the eurozone and the UK (Chart 14), as well as a bet on policy convergence between the two economies. Chart 13Stay Long EUR/CHF
Stay Long EUR/CHF
Stay Long EUR/CHF
Chart 14Stay Long EUR/GBP
Stay Long EUR/GBP
Stay Long EUR/GBP
Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Report, “The Biggest Macro Question By FX Investors Could Potentially Be The Least Relevant”, dated January 14, 2022. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
Highlights The strength in the Swiss franc will moderate going forward. This suggests that EUR/CHF is a buy, while USD/CHF will remain in a tight wedge. With Omicron likely to rage across economies, including Switzerland, the Swiss National Bank will have to use currency weakness as a tool to ease financial conditions. In the very near term, heightened volatility could however support the franc. Remain long CHF/NZD, but tighten stop losses to 1.58. Feature As a defensive currency, the Swiss franc has been strong this year. EUR/CHF has broken below 1.05 and is now sitting under the March 2020 lows. Meanwhile, USD/CHF has been rather stable despite broad dollar strength (Chart 1). Economic fundamentals in Switzerland have greatly improved, justifying some support for the currency. However, a new wave of COVID-19 is currently ravaging the economy. Daily new infections are close to their 2020 peak, despite a well-vaccinated population (Chart 2). As restrictions are put in place, this will slow economic activity. This will also nudge the SNB to intervene in the currency market to ease financial conditions. Chart 1The Franc Has Been Quite Strong Versus The Euro
The Franc Has Been Quite Strong Versus The Euro
The Franc Has Been Quite Strong Versus The Euro
Chart 2A New Wave Of Covid-19 In ##br##Switzerland
A New Wave Of Covid-19 In Switzerland
A New Wave Of Covid-19 In Switzerland
The Swiss Recovery Chart 3Swiss Inflation Is The Strongest In Decades
Swiss Inflation Is The Strongest In Decades
Swiss Inflation Is The Strongest In Decades
The Swiss economy was recovering smartly. In July, the manufacturing PMI hit a high of 71, suggesting the most robust economic conditions in decades. Correspondingly, the unemployment rate has fallen to 2.5%, close to most estimates of NAIRU, and domestic inflation is rising briskly. The SECO consumer survey shows that inflation expectations in Switzerland are the highest in over a decade (Chart 3). This has been a very reliable indicator for underlying consumer prices. While supply bottlenecks in the global manufacturing chain have contributed to rising goods prices, services in Switzerland are also being repriced upward. This suggests that the economic recovery in Switzerland is genuine and capacity constraints are broad-based. The key risk is that most of these trends can quickly reverse as rising infections instill caution amongst businesses and individuals. This will come at a time when the recent strength in the Swiss franc becomes an unwelcome tightening in financial conditions. Operation Weak Franc For a small, open economy like Switzerland, the exchange rate often dictates the trend in domestic inflation. Therefore, the recent strength in the franc will begin to act as a drag. Import prices are rising 9% year on year which has supported domestic prices. However, if past is prologue, the strength in the franc will quickly reverse this trend, as a strong currency tends to depress import prices (Chart 4). This could quickly become a headache for the SNB, since inflation, while rising, remains below the central bank’s 2% target. The market expects the SNB to start lifting rates from -0.75% as soon as 2023 (Chart 5). This has contributed to some strength in the franc, especially vis-à-vis the euro. But with Omicron a key risk factor for economic prospects, a strong franc will quickly dent any economic green shoots in Switzerland, especially vis-à-vis Europe (Chart 6). Chart 4A Strong Currency Will Temper Inflationary Pressures
A Strong Currency Will Temper Inflationary Pressures
A Strong Currency Will Temper Inflationary Pressures
Chart 5The SNB Will Probably Lag Market Rate Expectations
The SNB Will Probably Lag Market Rate Expectations
The SNB Will Probably Lag Market Rate Expectations
Chart 6A Slowing European Economy Will Affect Switzerland
A Slowing European Economy Will Affect Switzerland
A Slowing European Economy Will Affect Switzerland
Euro area core inflation currently sits at 2.6%, while Swiss core inflation, though improving, is only 0.6%. This suggests that monetary policy between the ECB and the SNB cannot sustainably diverge if the goal is stable inflation. Either inflation proves sticky, and the ECB becomes a tad more hawkish, or inflation is transitory, which will quicken the need for the SNB to ease monetary conditions. Chart 7The SNB May Have Been Sterilizing Rising FX Reserves
The SNB May Have Been Sterilizing Rising FX Reserves
The SNB May Have Been Sterilizing Rising FX Reserves
Given the SNB has the lowest policy rate in the developed world, the currency is the only viable tool to adjust monetary policy. On this front, the SNB has been slightly hawkish. For example, the pace of foreign exchange reserve accumulation has been accelerating of late due to the boom in global trade, but the Swiss monetary base has been rather stable. Sight deposits, a clear proxy for SNB intervention have been rising timidly. This suggests some spectre of sterilization (Chart 7). Economically, the SNB is walking a fine line between a predominantly deflationary backdrop in Switzerland and a highly levered economy. Too little stimulus and the economy could enter a debt-deflation spiral, while too much stimulus will result in a build-up of imbalances. One of the historical imbalances in Switzerland has been a build-up in property speculation. The good news is that macro-prudential measures have helped diffuse the market (Chart 8). Growth in rental housing prices, which usually constitute the bulk of investment homes, has collapsed, and this is positively deviating from growth in owner-occupied homes. This suggests that macro-prudential measures have helped curtail speculative demand, including a cap on second homes and stricter lending standards (Chart 9). This allows the SNB to maintain accommodative settings, if warranted. Chart 8A Softer Housing Market Gives The SNB Breathing Room
A Softer Housing Market Gives The SNB Breathing Room
A Softer Housing Market Gives The SNB Breathing Room
Chart 9Macroprudential Measures And The Adjustment In Housing
Macroprudential Measures And The Adjustment In Housing
Macroprudential Measures And The Adjustment In Housing
In the very near term, demographics are also likely to be a drag for housing demand, given a rising prevalence of Omicron and a possible curb on immigration (Chart 10). This will strengthen the case for easier monetary policy. In a nutshell, the SNB will likely walk the path of “least regret,” by keeping monetary policy accommodative until it is clear that the global environment has become more benign. This will especially be the case if the ECB stays dovish. Chart 10Restrictions Could Limit Immigration/Housing Demand
Restrictions Could Limit Immigration/Housing Demand
Restrictions Could Limit Immigration/Housing Demand
CHF As A Safe Haven The CHF is as much driven by global dynamics as domestic actions by the SNB. With global uncertainty likely to remain elevated, this will boost the franc in the near term. The franc tends to do well in an environment where volatility is rising (Chart 11). Being long CHF/NZD has performed well in recent weeks, and while we will tighten stops on this trade, it remains an attractive bet (Chart 12). Economically, market expectations of higher rates in New Zealand are likely to be revised lower as economic uncertainty stays elevated. Chart 11The Swiss Franc Loves Volatility
The Swiss Franc Loves Volatility
The Swiss Franc Loves Volatility
Chart 12Remain Long CHF/NZD
Remain Long CHF/NZD
Remain Long CHF/NZD
Meanwhile, Switzerland ticks all the characteristics of a safe-haven currency. It has a large net international investment position, which benefits the franc during risk-off episodes. Meanwhile, rising productivity over the years has led to a structural surplus in its trading balance and a rising fair value for the currency. Consequently, the franc has tended to have an upward bias over the years, supercharged during periods of risk aversion (Chart 13). Chart 13Do not Bet Against A Weak Franc Long Term
Do not Bet Against A Weak Franc Long Term
Do not Bet Against A Weak Franc Long Term
In a nutshell, the franc will benefit in the very near term as volatility stays elevated. This favors long CHF/NZD, CHF/GBP and CHF/CAD positions. However, we believe EUR/CHF has already hit capitulation levels, as the SNB cannot tolerate a much stronger appreciation of the franc versus the euro. Investment Conclusions The franc will follow a “one step up, two steps down” pattern. Rising volatility will boost the franc. But a rollover in economic activity will nudge the SNB towards more currency market intervention. As such, the franc will appreciate against the greenback in an environment where the dollar resumes its downtrend, but it will also likely lag pro-cyclical currencies. We are long EUR/CHF on this basis but are keeping tight stops at 1.03. Rising interest rates benefit EUR/CHF (Chart 14). With interest rates in Switzerland well below other countries, the Swiss franc rapidly becomes a funding currency for carry trades. Carry trades, especially towards peripheral bonds in Europe, hurt the franc. Chart 14Rising Yields Will Anchor EUR/CHF Higher
Rising Yields Will Anchor EUR/CHF Higher
Rising Yields Will Anchor EUR/CHF Higher
Chart 15The Franc Is Expensive Versus The Euro
The Franc Is Expensive Versus The Euro
The Franc Is Expensive Versus The Euro
Our models suggest the franc is still about 11% overvalued versus the euro. Over the history of the model, this has been a big premium, likely to adjust in favor of the euro (Chart 15). The big risk is that if inflation remains sticky in the eurozone, the fair value of the franc relative to the euro will incrementally rise. Usually, the Swiss franc tends to do well with rising volatility. This could be the playbook over the next few months. The VIX index is relatively low, and countries are reintroducing lockdowns, while speculators are short the franc. Our recommendations are as follows: USD/CHF will remain in a 0.91-to-0.94 range over the next 3 months. EUR/CHF is below the COVID-19 2020 lows suggesting it is a buy at current levels. NZD/CHF remains a sell in the short term. So does GBP/CHF. Once the dollar resumes its downtrend, short the CHF versus Scandinavian currencies. 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
Highlights UK GDP is on track to overtake pre-pandemic levels. This will strengthen the case for the BoE to tighten monetary policy. That said, markets are aggressively pricing in a hawkish BoE. This creates room for near-term disappointment. The post-Brexit environment still remains volatile, especially vis-à-vis Northern Ireland. This opens a window to tactically go long EUR/GBP. Ultimately, the pound is undervalued on a longer-term basis. GBP/USD should touch 1.45 over the next 12 months. Feature Chart I-1A Robust Recovery In UK Growth
An Update On Sterling
An Update On Sterling
The UK recovery has been progressing smartly (Chart I-1). GDP growth is on track to increase by 7.25% this year, and 6% next year, according to the Bank of England (BoE). This is well above potential, and will eclipse growth in other developed economies. Markets have reacted accordingly. The pound is marginally higher versus the dollar this year, despite broad-based USD strength. Gilt yields have risen versus most developed market long rates. The OIS curve is already discounting at least 3 rate hikes by the BoE next year, much higher than most other developed market central banks (Chart I-2). The risk is that it creates downside risks for sterling in the near-term, even if the longer-term outlook remains bullish. Chart I-2A Violent Repricing In Interest Rate Expectations
A Violent Repricing In Interest Rate Expectations
A Violent Repricing In Interest Rate Expectations
Robust Domestic Conditions Most measures of domestic demand in the UK remain robust. The employment rate is higher than in the US, with unemployment fast approaching NAIRU (Chart I-3). Projections from the BoE no longer forecast an acute impact from the expiration of the furlough scheme. Unemployment should hit 4.25% in 2022, pinning it close to the lows of the last several decades. Chart I-3The UK Versus US Jobs Recovery An Employment Boom
The UK Versus US Jobs Recovery An Employment Boom
The UK Versus US Jobs Recovery An Employment Boom
Robust labor market conditions are beginning to shift bargaining power to workers. Vacancy rates are closing in on fresh highs relative to unemployed workers and wages have inflected noticeably higher (Chart I-4). The BoE has noted that compositional effects could have exarcerbated the pace of wage increases, with most job losses aggregated in sectors with lower pay. As the economy progresses towards full employment, wage growth will moderate from current levels, but will still be very robust by historical standards. Inflation has been the wild card in the UK. The headline inflation print is currently 3.2%, while core CPI sits at 3.1%, well above the MPC’s 2% target. Meanwhile, the 10-year CPI swap rate has shot up to 4.2%, brewing expectations that higher inflation could become entrenched (Chart I-5). This has pushed up bets that the central bank could turn even more hawkish. Chart I-4Employees Are Gaining Bargaining Power
Employees Are Gaining Bargaining Power
Employees Are Gaining Bargaining Power
Chart I-5Will UK Inflation Be Transitory?
Will UK Inflation Be Transitory?
Will UK Inflation Be Transitory?
From a big picture perspective, the acute increase in money supply growth stemming from aggressive easing by the BoE has stimulated economic activity. As such, the velocity of money is rising sharply in the UK (Chart I-6). To prevent a potential overheating of the economy, the BoE will need to raise rates. This is bullish for cable. Finally, house price inflation in the UK remains robust. While this has been a global phenomenon, surveys suggest that the pace of house price increases will accelerate in the coming months (Chart I-7). With the most negative interest rates in the G10, this will be cause for concern for the BoE Chart I-6Money Velocity In The UK
Money Velocity In The UK
Money Velocity In The UK
Chart I-7Will The Housing Boom Be Sustained?
Will The Housing Boom Be Sustained?
Will The Housing Boom Be Sustained?
The Policy Response Chart I-8The BoE Will Withdraw Emergency Monetary Settings
The BoE Will Withdraw Emergency Monetary Settings
The BoE Will Withdraw Emergency Monetary Settings
On the monetary policy front, the BoE is acting accordingly. Asset purchases are slated to end soon, with the central bank having bought £869bn of its £895bn target (Chart I-8). In fact, two members of the MPC voted at the last policy meeting to reduce this target by £35bn, which would have effectively ended QE. Meanwhile, markets are priced for at least three interest rate hikes over the next 12 months. We agree that tighter monetary policy is warranted over the longer term. However, our bias is that market expectations for interest rate increases may have overshot, a potential setup for disappointment in the very near term. Offsetting Factors Inflation in the UK could prove transitory, and fall much faster than the market expects. According to BoE forecasts, inflation should settle closer to 2% by the end of next year. Yet the market is still pricing in very sticky inflation in the UK. The 5-year inflation swap currently sits at 4.4%, while the 10-year sits at 4.2%. These are very high numbers which are susceptible to downside surprises in the coming months. A firm trade-weighted pound will be the first catalyst for lower inflation. Historically, a strong GBP has dampened inflationary pressures through lower input costs (Chart I-9). It is remarkable that there has been a strong divergence between the currency and inflation expectations in the current regime. This can be partly attributed to a pandemic-related surge in restaurant and hotel costs, high transportation costs, and a surge in housing utilities, all amidst an electricity shortage (Chart I-10). Global supply chains are also under siege. Chart I-9The Inflation Overshoot Will Not Persist
The Inflation Overshoot Will Not Persist
The Inflation Overshoot Will Not Persist
Chart I-10Transport And Utility Inflation Could Prove Transitory
An Update On Sterling
An Update On Sterling
However, energy costs in Europe could modestly subside in the coming months. The opening of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, connecting Russia with Europe, will help alleviate the euro zone energy crisis. For the UK in particular, the opening of the 1,400 MW undersea cable with Norway this month should assuage the electricity shortage. The pace of house price appreciation may also temper going forward. The UK holiday stamp duty, introduced in July 2020, expired last month. Under the scheme, taxes paid on property purchases were exempt to a ceiling of initially £500,000 until March 2021, and eventually £250,000. Housing in the UK has been supported by low interest rates and higher savings, factors pushing up global real estate demand, but the pickup in housing transactions ahead of the expiry of the rebate should ebb. The post-Brexit environment also remains volatile, especially vis-à-vis Northern Ireland. Significant checks exists on goods from the UK to Northern Ireland, even if they are slated for final consumption. This is leading to delays, and hampering UK businesses. The UK has been pushing back strongly against this, asking for an adjustment to the Brexit agreement. So far, the UK trade balance with the EU has been recovering, but overall, balance of payments dynamics remain a negative (Chart I-11). As we go to press, Europe’s Brexit negotiator, Maros Sefcovic, is being pressed by member states to draw up retaliatory measures, should the UK default on its agreement. Chart I-11The UK Trade Balance With The EU Is At Risk
An Update On Sterling
An Update On Sterling
Finally, the pound is also being held hostage to global macro dynamics. The UK runs a basic balance deficit. This means portfolio inflows, both in equities and bonds are needed to finance the trade deficit. These portfolio flows accelerated this year, but are now relapsing (Chart I-12). The risk is that a correction in global equity markets could exarcebate this trend (Chart I-13). Chart I-12Portfolio Flows Into The UK Have ##br##Slowed
Portfolio Flows Into The UK Have Slowed
Portfolio Flows Into The UK Have Slowed
Chart I-13The Pound Is Susceptible To A Market Correction
The Pound Is Susceptible To A Market Correction
The Pound Is Susceptible To A Market Correction
Trading Opportunities The pound is likely to fare well over a cyclical horizon. Our 12-month target is 1.45 with a best-case scenario above 1.50. This target is based on mean reversion towards fair value. On a real effective exchange rate basis, the pound is about 15% below the mean. This is lower than where it was after the UK exited the Exchange Rate Mechanism in 1992 (Chart I-14). Over time, the pound will converge towards the mid-point of this historical range, pushing it near 1.50. Our in-house PPP models suggest the pound is undervalued by 12%. Our models on average revert to the mean over three years, suggesting the pound could revert to fair value in the next 12-to-18 months (Chart I-15).1 Our intermediate-term timing model suggests the pound is 0.5 standard deviations below fair value, and will also gravitate towards 1.50 over the next year or two. This model incorporates risk variables such as corporate spreads and commodity prices that drive fluctuations in the pound (Chart I-16). Chart I-14The Trade-Weighted Pound Is Cheap
The Trade-Weighted Pound Is Cheap
The Trade-Weighted Pound Is Cheap
Chart I-15GBP/USD Is Cheap On A PPP Basis
GBP/USD Is Cheap On A PPP Basis
GBP/USD Is Cheap On A PPP Basis
Chart I-16GBP/USD Is Cheap On A Competitive Basis
GBP/USD Is Cheap On A Competitive Basis
GBP/USD Is Cheap On A Competitive Basis
However, in the near term, the pound could relapse versus other G10 currencies. EUR/GBP: Interest rate expectations are bombed out in the euro area, relative to the UK. This is occurring at a time when PMI data remain relatively upbeat in the eurozone (though rolling over, Chart I-17). A modest reset in relative rate expectations could ignite EUR/GBP. We are initiating a long position at 0.846, with a stop loss at 0.835. GBP/JPY: The pound has rallied hard against the yen this year. Yet, real interest rates in the UK have cratered relative to Japan, as inflation has overshot in the former. The trade balance with Japan is also deteriorating, one year after a free-trade agreement was signed (Chart I-18). This divergence cannot last as relative trade surpluses/deficits have driven the exchange rate over the last three decades. We expect the yen to modestly outperform the pound in the next 3-to-6 months. AUD/GBP: The Aussie should outperform the pound. First, the cross has tremendously lagged levels implied by relative terms of trade. Even if commodity prices relapse, the margin of safety will remain very wide. Second, investors are massively short the Aussie relative to cable. From a contrarian perspective, this will pull AUD/GBP higher (Chart I-19). Chart I-17Buy EUR/GBP For A Trade
Buy EUR/GBP For A Trade
Buy EUR/GBP For A Trade
Chart I-18GBP/JPY Is Vulnerable In The Short Term
GBP/JPY Is Vulnerable In The Short Term
GBP/JPY Is Vulnerable In The Short Term
Chart I-19AUD/GBP Still Has Upside
AUD/GBP Still Has Upside
AUD/GBP Still Has Upside
Overall, sentiment on the pound remains ebullient, and our intermediate-term technical indicator has yet to hit capitulation lows (Chart I-20). This is modestly negative in the short term. That said, should the dollar experience broad-based weakness, as we expect, the pound might underperform the crosses, but will fare well against the dollar. Chart I-20Cable Will Hit Capitulation Lows Soon
Cable Will Hit Capitulation Lows Soon
Cable Will Hit Capitulation Lows Soon
Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Strategy Report, "Updating Our PPP Models," dated November 13, 2020. Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Cyclical Holdings (6-18 months) Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
Highlights A lot of pessimism is embedded in the Aussie dollar, making it a potent candidate for a powerful mean-reversion rally. The key catalyst will be a reversal in COVID-19 infection rates which are holding the Aussie economy hostage. Marginally, there is good news on that front. On a terms-of-trade basis, the Australian dollar is very cheap. Falling commodity prices are a handicap, but the valuation margin of safety makes the AUD a safer bet on a reflationary theme. At the crosses, we are already long AUD/NZD, but AUD/JPY and AUD/CHF should be winners in the next six-to-nine months. Feature The Australian economy was on a strong recovery path before a resurgence in Covid-19 infections handicapped this improvement. Australian GDP recovered to pre-pandemic levels in Q1 and the latest Q2 release suggests the Australian economy was on the path to achieve escape velocity (Chart I-1). Chart I-1The Aussie Economy Has Recovered
Is The Australian Dollar A Buy?
Is The Australian Dollar A Buy?
The bounce in the Australian dollar has mirrored the improvement in the economy. From a low of 55 cents in early 2020, the Aussie rose over 40% to a high of 80 cents in earlier this year. However, more recently, there has been a strong correction in the AUD, reflecting both domestic and global concerns about growth. The key question for investors is whether the decline in the Aussie represents an excessive move or heralds a more malignant outcome for the currency. In our view, if risk sentiment stays ebullient, then the Australian dollar will be a potent candidate for a coiled-spring rebound. However, on the downside, there has already been a lot of bad news priced into the Aussie, making the reward/risk picture more favorable (Chart I-2). The Delta Variant The Delta variant of Covid-19 is ravaging across most countries, and the Australian economy has been particularly susceptible. While in absolute terms, Australia’s infection rates are faring better than most developed markets, the momentum of the latest wave has knocked down a nascent boom in Aussie economic conditions (Chart I-3). Chart I-2The Aussie And Global Stocks Have Diverged
The Aussie And Global Stocks Have Diverged
The Aussie And Global Stocks Have Diverged
Chart I-3The Delta Variant Is Ravaging Australia
The Delta Variant Is Ravaging Australia
The Delta Variant Is Ravaging Australia
Sydney is now entering its third month of lockdown, and the state of Victoria has just extended mobility restrictions for another three weeks. However, the population is getting vaccinated quickly, with almost 40% having received two jabs. Should the current trajectory of vaccinations continue, Australia could fully lift restrictions on its citizens by the fourth quarter. It is noteworthy that Australia has been here before, and during the last two waves in March and August of last year, the country was able to weather the storm with lower vaccination rates. As such, the latest wave should prove transient, allowing economic conditions to normalize after a weak Q3. AUD And The Global Cycle As a premier commodity producer, the Australian economy is intricately linked to the global economic cycle, especially what happens in China. Chart I-4 shows that both the Caixin and National Bureau of Statistics manufacturing PMIs in China lead Australian manufacturing activity. With the majority of Australian exports going to China, it makes the Aussie economy very sensitive to Chinese domestic conditions. Our China Investment Strategy colleagues believe that fiscal policy will be eased going forward, while the tightening in monetary conditions is past its peak, especially in the face of Covid-19 and floods ravaging China. Chinese bond yields have already dropped, reflecting an easing in domestic financial conditions. With the Chinese bond market becoming more and more liberalized, it is becoming a good proxy for monetary conditions in China. As such, the trend in bond yields has tended to lead Chinese imports. This suggests that Aussie exports should remain robust in the coming months (Chart I-5). Chart I-4How Long Will The China Slowdown Last?
How Long Will The China Slowdown Last?
How Long Will The China Slowdown Last?
Chart I-5Easing Financial Conditions In China
Easing Financial Conditions In China
Easing Financial Conditions In China
Chart I-6Chinese Policy And The AUD
Chinese Policy And The AUD
Chinese Policy And The AUD
A similar pattern to March of last year might be repeated this year, should Covid-19 fears remain persistent. China led the pack vis-à-vis other countries by injecting stimulus much earlier on, which helped ease domestic financial conditions. As a result, imports of key raw materials such as copper, iron ore, steel, and crude oil rose higher, helping Australian export volumes. This time around, excess money supply in China is rebounding from extremely depressed levels. While the near-term trajectory suggests some more volatility for the Aussie, the cyclical outlook is improving (Chart I-6). A Terms-Of-Trade Boom Despite a slowing Chinese economy, commodity prices remain resilient. Australian terms-of-trade have outperformed that of other commodity-producing nations (Chart I-7). Australia is relatively competitive in supplying the types of raw materials that China needs and wants. For example, Australian exporters produce higher-grade ore, which is more expensive, pollutes less, and is in high demand in China. Similarly, Australia is a big exporter of liquefied natural gas, whose prices have been soaring in recent months. Going forward, Australia’s terms-of-trade improvement is likely to continue. China’s clear energy policy shift away from coal and towards natural gas will buffet LNG export volumes. Also, given that reducing, if not outright eliminating, pollution is a long-term strategic goal in China, this will provide a multi-year tailwind for both cleaner ore and gas exports. The pattern of an improving terms-of-trade picture but deteriorating domestic fundamentals has placed the AUD in a tug-of-war scenario. One of the key primary drivers of the AUD exchange rate has been the basic balance, the sum of the current account and long-term capital flows. The basic balance is making secular highs, suggesting the AUD should be above its 2011 peak near 1.10 (Chart I-8). This suggests that room for mean reversion is substantive. Chart I-7A Boom In Aussie Terms Of Trade
A Boom In Aussie Terms Of Trade
A Boom In Aussie Terms Of Trade
Chart I-8The AUD Has Lagged Terms Of Trade
The AUD Has Lagged Terms Of Trade
The AUD Has Lagged Terms Of Trade
In a nutshell, Australia sports the best improvement in both trade and current account balances in the G10 over the last few years (Chart I-9). Investment in projects in the resource space are now bearing fruit, easing the external funding requirement. This has ended the 35-year-long deficit in the current account. A rising current account naturally increases the demand for the Australian dollar, which buffets the currency. Domestic Considerations And The RBA By most accounts, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has achieved its objectives. Most measures of inflation are near target, unemployment is close to NAIRU, and wages have bottomed and are marginally inflecting higher (Chart I-10). The next batch of numbers coming out of Australia will likely be weak, as the RBA will outline next week, but any weakness in the Aussie will represent a buying opportunity. Chart I-9A Record Surplus In Australias Basic Balance
A Record Surplus In Australias Basic Balance
A Record Surplus In Australias Basic Balance
Chart I-10Fundamentals In The Aussie Economy Are On The Mend
Fundamentals In The Aussie Economy Are On The Mend
Fundamentals In The Aussie Economy Are On The Mend
Taking a step back, the recovery in the Australian jobs market has been spectacular. Unemployment is at 4.6%, very close to NAIRU. Meanwhile, the participation rate has recovered to pre-pandemic levels as pandemic-aid schemes wear off. The Liberal-National coalition government was very proactive, especially with the “Job Seeker” and “Job Keeper” schemes, providing a valuable cushion for domestic economic conditions. With a very low government debt burden, there is obviously scope to expand the scheme further should conditions dictate. House prices are rebounding in a trajectory the RBA likes to see, driven by credit from owner-occupied housing (Chart I-11). This suggests that at least at the margin, house prices are being driven by domestic demand/supply fundamentals. The key takeaway is that relative to its commodity-currency peers, Australia is well along its house-price adjustment path, having been one of the first developed market countries to introduce macroprudential measures. This suggests that beyond the very near term, emergency policy settings are no longer appropriate for the Aussie economy. The RBA is likely to taper asset purchases from $A5 billion a week, to $A4 billion as telegraphed (Chart I-12), but there is scope for a hawkish surprise at next week’s meeting. Markets are already discounting an increasing path for interest rates starting next year, but not so relative to the US. This could change as the RBA responds to improving economic conditions. Chart I-11A Sustainable Increase In House Prices
A Sustainable Increase In House Prices
A Sustainable Increase In House Prices
Chart I-12The RBA Could Unexpectedly Change Policy Settings
The RBA Could Unexpectedly Change Policy Settings
The RBA Could Unexpectedly Change Policy Settings
Meanwhile, real rates are already more attractive in Australia compared to the US, especially at the short end of the curve. A Valuation Cushion The cherry on the cake for the Aussie is that it is cheap according to most of our valuation measures. As we highlighted in a recent report, trading the Aussie on a valuation basis alone has added significant alpha over the last several years. One of our favorite metrics for the Australian dollar’s fair value is its real effective exchange rate relative to its terms of trade. On this basis, the Aussie dollar is cheap by about 20% (Chart I-13). Our intermediate-term timing models, published a fortnight ago, shows the Australian dollar as 9% cheap, or near one standard deviation below the mean. Our purchasing power parity (PPP) models point to a slight undervaluation in the Australian dollar. It also helps that speculators are very short the Aussie, which is bullish from a contrarian perspective (Chart I-14). Chart I-13The AUD Is Cheap
The AUD Is Cheap
The AUD Is Cheap
Chart I-14Investors Are Short The AUD
Investors Are Short The AUD
Investors Are Short The AUD
How Should Investors Position Themselves? AUD/USD will close its undervaluation gap in the medium-to-long term, as happens with most currencies. This will lift the AUD towards 85 cents. In the short term, long AUD/NZD and long AUD/JPY remain attractive bets for those not willing to take directional dollar bets. In our portfolio, we are already long AUD/NZD for the following reasons: The markets have already priced in a very hawkish RBNZ and a very dovish RBA (Chart I-15). Our bias is that as Covid-19 proves to be a global problem, there will be a renormalization in interest rate expectations. Terms of trade in Australia will continue to outperform that of New Zealand. AUD/NZD and relative terms of trade tend to move together (Chart I-16). Chart I-15AUD/NZD Remains A Buy
AUD/NZD Remains A Buy
AUD/NZD Remains A Buy
Chart I-16Terms Of Trade And AUD/NZD
Terms Of Trade And AUD/NZD
Terms Of Trade And AUD/NZD
AUD/NZD is very cheap on a historical basis. This level of valuation has provided strong support in the past (Chart I-17). Meanwhile, the Australian yield curve has steepened, albeit with some recent flattening, but banks have still underperformed the improvement in the interest rate term structure (Chart I-18). A bottoming economy will benefit banks, which make up almost 35% of the Australian MSCI index, and thus there could be renewed foreign inflows. Chart I-17AUD/NZD Is Cheap
AUD/NZD Is Cheap
AUD/NZD Is Cheap
Chart I-18Stay Long Aussie Banks
Stay Long Aussie Banks
Stay Long Aussie Banks
Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
Chart II-2USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
Data out of the US this week was mixed: The payrolls report was well below expectations. Non-farm payrolls came in at 235K, versus an expected increase of 733K. Both the labor force participation rate and average hourly earnings remained steady at 61.7% and 4.3% year-on-year, respectively. The ISM report was robust for August. The manufacturing PMI improved from 59.5 to 59.9. New orders rose from 64.9 to 66.7 The PCE deflator came it at 3.6% year-on-year, in line with estimates. The US dollar DXY index fell this week. The weak payrolls report reiterates the fact that risks from tighter monetary policy in the US are overstated. This was the conclusion from the Jackson Hole meeting last week, that saw a drop in both the US dollar and bond yields. Report Links: Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears - March 19, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar? - February 19, 2021 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
Euro area data remains robust: Core CPI came in at 1.6% year-on-year in August. Headline CPI was a more robust 3%. The final read from the Markit manufacturing PMI remained at a robust 61.4 in August. The services PMI did decline from 59.5 to 59. Retail sales increased by a robust 3.1% in July. The euro rose by almost 1% this week. Covid-19 cases seem to be rolling over in Europe while firing in other nations. This will increase support for the euro, as well as expectations the ECB could dial back monetary accommodation. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 The Euro Dance: One Step Back, Two Steps Forward - April 2, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
Recent Japanese data has been on the strong side: Retail sales rose 2.4% year-on-year in July. The employment report was strong. The unemployment rate fell to 2.85 and the job-to-applicant ratio rose from 1.13 to 1.15. Housing starts rose 10% year-on-year in July. Capital spending for Q2 was 5.3% year-on-year, well above expectations. The yen was flat against the dollar this week. In an environment where global risk is ebullient, the yen tends to underperform other pro-cyclical currencies. This was very evident this week. Report Links: The Case For Japan - June 11, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
Data out of the UK this week was encouraging: The Lloyds business barometer improved from 30 to 36. Nationwide home prices rose 11% year-on-year in August. The Markit services PMI was steady at 55 in August. The pound rose by 0.6% this week. UK will continue to benefit from higher vaccination rates, compared to the rest of the G10. That said, other pro-cyclical currencies, such as the AUD, could benefit from a robust vaccination campaign, outperforming GBP. Report Links: Why Are UK Interest Rates Still So Low? - March 10, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Thoughts On The British Pound - December 18, 2020 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
Australian data is slated to slow, but the recent numbers have been encouraging: Private sector credit rose 4% year-on-year in August. Q2 GDP was a robust 9.6% year-on-year. Exports rose 5% month-on-month in July. The AUD was the best-performing currency this week, rising almost 2%. We discuss the AUD at length in this week’s front section. Our bias is that the AUD will benefit from easing monetary policy in China and high commodity prices. Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields & The Currency? - January 20, 2021 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
The was scant data out of New Zealand this week: Building permits rose 2.1% month-on-month in July. CoreLogic house prices are inflecting 27% year-on-year in August. ANZ Business confidence slipped from -3.8 to -14.2 in August. The NZD was up almost 2% this week. We like the NZD cyclically, but our bias is that hawkish expectations from the RBNZ could be watered down, which could make the kiwi lag other commodity currencies like the Aussie. Report Links: How High Can The Kiwi Rise? - April 30, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
Data out of Canada this week has been weak: Q2 GDP missed expectations, falling 1.1% versus an expected increase of 2.5%. The Markit manufacturing PMI increased from 56.2 to 57.2 in August. Net trade deteriorated in July, but Canada is still booking a C$0.8bn surplus. The CAD rose by 0.7% this week. The backdrop for the loonie is positive as the Bank of Canada continues to taper asset purchases and remains on a path to increase interest rates. The upcoming election could also usher in more fiscal stimulus for Canada. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? - February 12, 2021 The Outlook For The Canadian Dollar - October 9, 2020 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
The data out of Switzerland this week was weak: The KOF indicator declined from 129.8 to 113.5 in August. This was well below expectations. CPI in August was slightly above expectations at 0.4% year-on-year for the core and 0.9% for headline. GDP for Q2 was in line with expectations, at 1.8% quarter-on-quarter. The Swiss franc was flat this week. The franc will continue to benefit from rolling bouts of volatility, but at the margin, it will lag the bounce in other currencies as global risk sentiment stays ebullient. Report Links: An Update On The Swiss Franc - April 9, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
Data out of Norway this week was positive: Credit growth improved 5.3% year-on-year in July The current account balance was a healthy NOK 93.2bn in June. The unemployment rate fell from 3.1% to 2.7%. The NOK was up around 1% this week. We are long Scandinavian currencies on a bet that the dollar will fall cyclically. Meanwhile, the Norges Bank has signaled they will increase interest rates ahead of both the Federal Reserve and the ECB. This will benefit real rates in Norway. Report Links: The Norwegian Method - June 4, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
Recent data from Sweden have been improving: The Swedbank manufacturing and services PMI remained robust in August at 60.1 and 64.7 respectively. The August current account balance showed a healthy surplus of SEK 80.3 billion. The economic tendency survey for August came in at 121.1 from 119.8. Consumer confidence rose from 106.5 to 108.6 in August. The SEK was up almost 1% this week. There are many signs the Swedish economy is improving. This is paring back expectations of more stimulus from the Riksbank. We are short both EUR/SEK and USD/SEK as reflation plays. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 Sweden Beyond The Pandemic: Poised To Re-leverage - March 19, 2020 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades Footnotes
Highlights The yen is the most underappreciated currency in developed markets today. Our bullish thesis on the yen rests on a simple pillar: Japan will successfully overcome the pandemic like its Western counterparts. This good news is not yet reflected in the price of the yen or Japanese assets. The Japanese economy is also one of the best candidates for generating non-inflationary growth, a bullish backdrop for any equity market or currency. Remain short USD/JPY. The biggest risk to our view is a big rebound in US Treasury yields that catalyzes outflows from Japan and bids up the dollar. Feature The Japanese economy remains under siege from the pandemic. The number of new Covid-19 cases is at the highest level per capita in developed Asia (Chart I-1). As a result, the manufacturing PMI is the lowest in the region (and the developed world for that matter), even though global demand for goods is booming. As an industrial powerhouse very much dependent on external growth, this result has been both surprising, and a severe blow to the domestic recovery. A third wave of infections has also crippled the services sector, pinning its recovery well behind its global peers. The combination has led to an underperformance of both the Japanese currency and stock market (Chart I-2). Chart I-1Japan Is A Basket Case In Developed Asia
Japan Is A Basket Case In Developed Asia
Japan Is A Basket Case In Developed Asia
Chart I-2The Japanese Recovery Has Lagged
The Japanese Recover Has Lagged
The Japanese Recover Has Lagged
There are a variety of hypotheses for Japan’s anemic recovery. The initial government response to the pandemic was slow and botched, with a nationwide lockdown only implemented on April 16 last year, much later than other economies. The health response has also been disappointing – despite a high availability of hospital beds, only a small percentage were used to treat Covid-19 patients. As a matter of fact, only a fifth of Japan’s 8,000+ hospitals are public, which has slowed the pace of both treatments and more recently, vaccinations. This is dampening both business and consumer sentiment, crippling the recovery. In this report, we explore how fast and how soon Japan can emerge from crisis management mode. More importantly, with Japanese shares and the currency laggards in this recovery, has the stage been set for a coiled-spring rebound? Our bias is that most of the bad news may already be reflected in depressed asset prices, while an inevitable economic recovery is not. Mapping The Japanese Recovery The pace of vaccination is accelerating in Japan and should soon hit the critical 50%-60% threshold necessary to reach herd immunity (Chart I-3). Shipments of the vaccine have been increasing since May, with 100 million Pfizer doses, and 40 million Moderna shots expected by the end of June. According to government officials, Japan aims to secure enough doses to inoculate its entire population by the end of September. Chart I-3AAn Accelerating Pace Of Vaccinations In Japan
An Accelerating Pace Of Vaccinations In Japan
An Accelerating Pace Of Vaccinations In Japan
Chart I-3BCurrency Returns Have Roughly Tracked Vaccination Progress
The Case For Japan
The Case For Japan
A turnaround in the vaccination campaign would not only boost public opinion about the Covid-19 response but would also be a welcome fillip to much subdued consumer and business sentiment. Economic surprises in Japan have flipped from being the most disappointing in the developed world to the most robust. Expectation surveys are also pointing to rising optimism about future growth (Chart I-4). It should only be a matter of time for hard data to follow suit. The first catalyst for a recovery will come from consumption, particularly around the Olympics. While foreign spectators will not be allowed in Japan, athletes, organizers and sponsors should jumpstart the pickup in inbound tourism. At the peak in 2019, tourist arrivals were almost 25% of the entire Japanese population, compared to almost zero today (Chart I-5). Chart I-4Green Shoots In Japan
Green Shoots In Japan
Green Shoots In Japan
Chart I-5Nowhere To Go But Up
Nowhere To Go But Up
Nowhere To Go But Up
More importantly, a pickup in tourism will also coincide with improvement in labor market conditions. Real wages are accelerating at the fastest pace in a decade. This is boosting household spending, as the unemployment rate declines. Should a recovery trigger less need for precautionary savings, this will further boost consumption (Chart I-6). It is important to note that significant headwinds to Japanese consumption are now abating. The consumption tax hike in 2019 delivered a severe punch to aggregate demand. COVID-19 eventually dealt a near-fatal blow. The silver lining is that those two shocks have led to a massive build in pent-up demand, which should be unleashed in the coming quarters. Government outlays have also gone a long way towards boosting aggregate demand during the pandemic. A new budget to be compiled in October or November should help ease the fiscal drag in 2022 (Chart I-7). The fiscal multiplier tends to be much larger in a liquidity trap, so it will be important for the government to resist the urge to rein in spending amidst a surging debt profile. Chart I-6A Recovery In ##br##Consumption
A Recovery In Consumption
A Recovery In Consumption
Chart I-7The Fiscal Thrust In 2022 Could Be Less Negative
The Fiscal Thrust In 2022 Could Be Less Negative
The Fiscal Thrust In 2022 Could Be Less Negative
Our bias is that a vigorous rebound in Japanese consumption, as was witnessed in other developed economies, could jumpstart the economic recovery. The Risk Of A China Slowdown A boom in external demand has been a much welcome cushion for Japanese growth, especially amidst weak domestic demand. The risk is that this tailwind becomes a headwind as Chinese growth slows. In our view, this risk should be monitored, but is likely overstated. First, while 23% of Japanese sales go to China, other developed and emerging markets account for the lion’s share of exports. For example, exports to the US account for 18% of sales while EU exports account for 9%. One of the most cyclical components of Japanese exports is machine tool orders, which continue to inflect higher. If Chinese growth does indeed slow, it accounts for large but not overwhelming 30% of overall orders (Chart I-8). From a much broader perspective, rising infrastructure spending and an economic recovery around the world should continue to buffer foreign machinery orders and demand for Japanese goods, keeping industrial production humming (Chart I-9). Chart I-8A Boom In Foreign Demand
A Boom In Foreign Demand
A Boom In Foreign Demand
Chart I-9A Renewed Industrial Cycle
A Renewed Industrial Cycle
A Renewed Industrial Cycle
Japanese Growth, Inflation And The Yen The best environment for any currency is when the economy can generate non-inflationary growth. Japan may well be entering this paradigm. Like most other economies, Japan saw the worst private-sector contraction in decades. For an economy whose interest rates have lingered near zero since the 1990s, this is not good news. However, whenever the structural growth rate of the Japanese economy (proxied as private-sector GDP) has begun to recover from very low levels (and even before), the trade-weighted yen has staged powerful rallies (Chart I-10). Chart I-10The Yen And Japanese Growth
The Yen And Japanese Growth
The Yen And Japanese Growth
Part of the reason is that any Japanese growth improvement is likely to be non-inflationary. Most developed economies are seeing both realized or expected inflation at or exceeding their central bank’s targets. This is not the case in Japan (Chart I-11). This means that real rates should remain quite elevated, a positive for the currency. The three key variables the authorities pay attention to for inflation, core CPI, the GDP deflator and the output gap, are low and falling (Chart I-12). Always forgotten is that the overarching theme for prices in Japan is a rapidly falling (and ageing) population. This means that generating inflation is a more arduous task than in other developed economies. Meanwhile, with almost 50% of the Japanese consumption basket in tradeable goods, domestic inflation is as much driven by the influence of the BoJ as it is by globalization. Chart I-11Higher Real Rates In Japan
Higher Real Rates In Japan
Higher Real Rates In Japan
Chart I-122% = Mission Impossible?
2% = Mission Impossible?
2% = Mission Impossible?
Real rates are likely to stay positive in Japan for the foreseeable future. For one, there is not much the BoJ can do in terms of easing policy. The central bank already owns 50% of outstanding JGBs, and about 89% of ETFs. As such, the supply side puts a serious limitation on how much more stimulus the BoJ can provide (Chart I-13). Chart I-13Stealth Tapering By The BoJ?
Stealth Tapering By The BoJ?
Stealth Tapering By The BoJ?
Meanwhile, the most potent policy for the Bank of Japan is to keep Japanese rates low as global yields are rising. This is because yield curve control will incrementally lower the appeal of higher Japanese real yields. We expect that in an environment where global inflationary pressures are normalizing (3-6 months), this is much less of a risk. The Yen In The Current Global Context Foreigners have a huge sway on the performance of Japanese assets, especially equities. Foreign holders account for near 30% of the Japanese equity float (Chart I-14). The size of day-to-day flows could be much bigger. As such, a call on the yen is also predicated on substantial inflows from foreign buying. The yen and the Japanese equity market have historically been negatively correlated. However, it is possible that Japanese domestic profits are no longer driven only by translation effects, but true underlying productivity gains (Chart I-15). On this note, the return on equity of Japanese shares has overtaken that of the euro area, even though they still trade at a price-to-book discount to their European counterparts. This could result in less yen hedging by foreign investors, which would restore a positive relationship between the relative share price performance and the currency. Chart I-14Large Foreign Participation In Japanese Stocks
Large Foreign Participation In Japanese Stocks
Large Foreign Participation In Japanese Stocks
Chart I-15A Breakdown In ##br##Correlation?
A Breakdown In Correlation?
A Breakdown In Correlation?
As a counter-cyclical currency, the yen usually weakens against other developed market currencies when global growth picks up. However, this is less likely in an environment where global yields remain anchored at low levels. Real interest rates are already higher in Japan, and any improvement in Japanese growth will revive talks about normalization from the BoJ. Even if the BoJ eventually stands pat, the starting point is extremely short positioning by speculators, which could trigger a potent short squeeze (Chart I-16). Chart I-16Dollar Weakness = Yen Strength (Usually)
Dollar Weakness = Yen Strength (Usually)
Dollar Weakness = Yen Strength (Usually)
Finally, the yen rises versus the dollar not only during recessions, but also during most episodes of broad-based dollar weakness. As such as a low-beta currency, the yen could weaken on its crosses, but still rise versus the dollar. Stay short USD/JPY. FX Trading Model We regularly update our FX trading model as a mechanical check on what could otherwise be subjective currency biases. Fortunately, our model agrees with us for the month of June, with recommendations to short the US dollar, mostly against the yen (Chart I-17). For risk management purposes, we are also tightening stops on our short AUD/MXN, and long Scandinavian currency basket positions to protect profits. Chart I-17ATrading Model Is Bullish Yen
Trading Model Is Bullish Yen
Trading Model Is Bullish Yen
Chart I-17BTrading Model Is Bearish NZD
Trading Model Is Bearish NZD
Trading Model Is Bearish NZD
Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
Chart II-2USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
The recent data out of the US have been robust: The May employment report showed an increase of 559K jobs, versus expectations of a 650K increase. The unemployment rate declined from 6.1% to 5.8% in May. The Jolts job opening survey showed an increase from 8.3mn to 9.3mn. CPI came in at 5% year on year in May, outpacing expectations of a 4.7% rise. Month on month, CPI grew by 0.6% in May, above the 0.4% consensus. Core CPI came in at 3.8% year on year in May, beating the expected 3.4%. The US dollar DXY index was down 0.4% this week. The broad theme in FX markets has been a normalization in US yields, despite a strong CPI report and an otherwise robust jobs report. This suggests market participants are already positioned for an upside surprise in US data. We are agnostic towards the US dollar in the next 1-3 months but will use any bounce as a selling opportunity. Report Links: Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears - March 19, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar? - February 19, 2021 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
Recent data from the euro area remain upbeat: The euro Sentix confidence index bounced from 21 to 28.1 in June. Both employment and GDP growth in the first quarter were better than expectations. The ECB kept monetary policy on hold but upgraded its economic forecasts for both 2021 and 2022. The euro was up 0.4% this week. While the focus on the euro has been on the possibility of the ECB tapering asset purchases, the biggest driver of the currency has been relative growth. We expect eurozone GDP to continue inflecting higher, in line with the ECB’s revised forecasts. This is bullish the euro. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
Recent data from Japan was robust: Average cash earnings rose 1.6% year on year in April. Overtime pay rose by 6.4%. The GDP report was revised upward, with year on year growth at -3.9% for the first quarter, compared to a previous assessment of -4.8%. The Eco Watchers Survey for May came in at 38.1, with the outlook component actually rising. Machine tool orders are inflecting higher, rising 141% year on year in May. The yen was up by 0.8% against the USD this week. The yen is the most underappreciated currency in developed markets today. Our bullish thesis on the yen rests on a simple pillar: Japan will successfully overcome the pandemic like its Western counterparts. This good news is not yet reflected in the price of the yen or Japanese assets. Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
The recent data out of UK have been solid: Halifax house prices are rising almost 10% year on year as of May. The BRC retail sales monitor also remains robust at 18.5% year on year in May. The pound was up by 0.4% this week against the USD. Cable has already priced dividends from a fast vaccine rollout, and the positive impact on the domestic UK economy. As such, more pronounced GBP gains will need to stem from an improvement in UK productivity. We are bullish on GBP over the long-term based on valuation but will stand aside in the near term. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
There was scant data out of Australia this week: The AIG Services index rose from 61 to 61.2. While the NAB business confidence index edged lower from 23 to 20 in May, the survey component was more upbeat, rising from 32 to 37. The AUD was up by 1.3% this week against the USD. Price pressures remain weak in Australia and the vaccination progress continues to lag, even though it has been accelerating lately. This will keep the RBA dovish. This provides a small window to short the AUD, as other central banks turn more hawkish. Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields & The Currency? - January 20, 2021 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
The was scant data out of New Zealand this week: ANZ busines confidence came in at -0.4% in Q1, versus 1.8% last quarter. Electronic card retail sales increased by 1.7% month on month in May after a 4.4% increase in April. The NZD was up by 0.7 % this week against the dollar. The biggest risk to the New Zealand economy is a self-reinforcing deflationary spiral from a currency that rallies too far, too fast. However, in a context of slowing Chinese growth, this is less likely. We are short the NZD against the CHF, as insurance should a riot point in markets develop. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
The recent data out of Canada have been as expected: Canada lost 68K jobs in May, but this was mostly tied to the lockdowns. Losses were concentrated to part-time employment. The unemployment rate did rise from 8.1% to 8.2%. The May Ivey PMI rose from 60.6 to 64.7. The Canadian trade balance improved from -C$1.4bn to a surplus of C$0.6bn in April. The Bank of Canada kept policy on hold this week, both in terms of interest rates and asset purchases. The CAD was flat against USD this week. Most of the normalization by the BoC has already been priced in the OIS curve, which is denting any near-term policy impact on the CAD. In our view, near term catalysts for the exchange rate will stem from what happens to crude oil prices as well as the Canadian recovery, as the world economy reopens. On this front, we remain bullish. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? - February 12, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
The was scant data out of Switzerland this week: The unemployment rate fell to 3% in May, from 3.2%. CPI came in at 0.6% in May, double the rate of the previous month. The Swiss franc was up by 1% this week against the USD. The franc currently sits in a “heads I win, tails I do not lose too much” juncture. It is cheap with a real effective exchange rate that is at one standard deviation below fair value. As such, should the pickup in global trade continue, this will buffet the franc. That said, the franc also benefits from bouts of volatility as a safe-haven currency. On this basis, we are long CHF/NZD as contrarian play. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
The was scant data out of Norway this week: Core CPI came in at 2.7% in May, lower than the previous month. PPI growth registered a 29.4% increase in April, year on year. The NOK was up by 1.3% this week against the dollar, the best performing G10 currency. Our special report on the NOK last week pointed to many catalysts that should keep the currency an outperformer in the coming quarters. We remain short both USD/NOK and EUR/NOK and are tightening stops this week to protect profits. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
Recent data from Sweden have been positive: The current account surplus rose from SEK 69.8bn to SEK 78.3bn in Q1. Industrial production came in at 26.4% year on year in April. CPI came in at 1.8% year on year and 0.2% month on month in May, in line with expectations. CPIF registered at 2.1% year on year and 0.2% month on month increase in May, both below the consensus. The SEK was up by 1.2% this week against the USD. Sweden stands to be one of the economies that benefits most from a renewed industrial cycle. This is by virtue of its export orientation and huge industrial concentration compared other economies. Meanwhile, the SEK remains one of the cheapest currencies in our models. We are short both EUR/SEK and USD/SEK. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades