Cyclicals vs Defensives
Highlights The Chinese economy continues to recover, albeit less quickly than the first two months following a re-opening of the economy. The demand side of the Chinese economic recovery in May marginally outpaced the supply side, with a notable improvement concentrated in the construction sector. We are initiating two new trades: long material sector stocks versus the broad indices, in both onshore and offshore equity markets. Feature The recovery in China’s economy and asset prices has entered a “tapering phase”, in which the speed of the recovery is normalizing from a rapid rebound two months after the economy re-opened. The direction of the ultra-accommodative monetary and fiscal stance has not changed, but the aggressiveness in the stimulus impulse is abating as the recovery continues. As we highlighted in last week’s report, the announced stimulus at this year's NPC was less than meets the eye of investors.1 Chart 1A Quick Reversal In The Outperformance Of Chinese Stocks
A Quick Reversal In The Outperformance Of Chinese Stocks
A Quick Reversal In The Outperformance Of Chinese Stocks
Near-term downside risks in Chinese stocks were highlighted by last week’s quick reversal in the outperformance of Chinese equities relative to global benchmarks (Chart 1). As the US and European economies re-open and the stimulus impulse in major developed markets (DMs) is at peak intensity, Chinese stocks will underperform those in DMs, particularly US stocks. The re-escalation in Sino-US tensions will also add to the near-term volatility in Chinese equities. Therefore, we maintain our tactical (0-3 months) neutral view on aggregate Chinese equity indexes, in both domestic and offshore markets. Beyond Q2, however, our baseline view still supports an outperformance in Chinese stocks. The stepped-up stimulus measures since March should start to trickle down into the broader economy. Global business activities and demand will slowly normalize in the summer, helping to revive China’s exports. Moreover, an intensified pressure on employment, indicated in this month’s employment subcomponents in manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMIs, should prompt policymakers to roll out more growth-supporting measures in Q3. Tables 1 and 2 below highlight key developments in China’s economic and financial market performance in the past month. Table 1China Macro Data Summary
China Macro And Market Review
China Macro And Market Review
Table 2China Financial Market Performance Summary
China Macro And Market Review
China Macro And Market Review
Chart 2ASpeed Of Manufacturing Activity Recovery Has Moderated
Speed Of Manufacturing Activity Recovery Has Moderated
Speed Of Manufacturing Activity Recovery Has Moderated
China’s official manufacturing PMI slipped to 50.6 in May from 50.8 a month earlier (Chart 2A). While the reading suggests that manufacturing activities are still in an expansionary mode, the speed of the expansion has moderated compared with April and March. The supply side of manufacturing activities and employment were the biggest drags on May’s official PMI. The production subcomponent in the PMI decelerated whereas new orders increased from April (Chart 2A, bottom panel). The net result is an improved supply-demand balance in the manufacturing sector, however, the improvement is marginal. It also differs from the V-shaped recovery in 2008/09, when both new orders and production subcomponents grew simultaneously (Chart 2B). The demand side of the economy is still concentrated in the policy-driven construction sector. The rebound in construction PMI continues to significantly outpace that in manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMIs (Chart 2C, top panel). The construction employment sub-index ticked up by 1.7 percentage points in May, compared with a slowdown of 0.8 percentage points in manufacturing and 0.1 percentage points in non-manufacturing employment PMIs (Chart 2C, bottom panel). Chart 2BDemand Struggles To Outpace Supply
Demand Struggles To Outpace Supply
Demand Struggles To Outpace Supply
Chart 2CDemand Recovery Is Concentrated In Construction
Demand Recovery Is Concentrated In Construction
Demand Recovery Is Concentrated In Construction
While a buoyant construction sector should provide a strong tailwind to raw material prices and related machinery sales, a laggard recovery from other sectors means the upside potential in aggregate producer prices (PPI) will be limited in the current quarter. In May, there was a rebound in the PMI sub-indices measuring raw material purchase prices and ex-factory prices, which heralds easing in the contraction of PPI in Q2 (Chart 3). However, neither of the PMI price sub-indices has returned to levels reached in January, when PPI growth was last positive. Moreover, weaker readings in the purchases and raw material inventory subcomponents suggest that manufacturers may be reluctant to restock due to sluggish global trade and a lagging rebound in domestic demand (Chart 3, bottom panel). This month’s PMI shows that the employment subcomponents in both the manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMIs are contracting (Chart 4). Because demand for Chinese export goods remains sluggish, we expect unemployment in China’s labor-intensive export manufacturing sector to rise in Q2 and even into Q3. The intensified pressure on employment will likely prompt Chinese policymakers to roll out more demand-supporting measures. Chart 3PPI Contraction Will Ease But Upside Limited In Q2/Q3
PPI Contraction Will Ease But Upside Limited In Q2/Q3
PPI Contraction Will Ease But Upside Limited In Q2/Q3
Chart 4Employment In Trouble, A Catalyst For More Easing
Employment In Trouble, A Catalyst For More Easing
Employment In Trouble, A Catalyst For More Easing
The BCA Li Keqiang Leading Indicator rose moderately in April. A plunge in the Monetary Conditions Index (MCI) limited the magnitude of the indicator's increase, offsetting an uptick in money supply and credit growth (Chart 5). A rapid disinflation in headline consumer prices (CPI) since the beginning of this year has pushed up the real savings deposit rate, which contributed to the MCI’s nose-dive. In our view, the MCI’s sharp drop is idiosyncratic and does not signify a tightening in the PBoC’s monetary stance or overall monetary conditions. Huge fluctuations in food prices have been driving the headline CPI since March 2019, while the core CPI remains stable. While food prices historically have very little correlation with the PBoC's monetary policy actions, a disinflationary environment will provide the central bank more room for easing. Odds are high that the PBoC will cut the savings deposit rate for the first time since 2015. Chart 5Monetary Conditions Are Not As Tight As The Indicator Suggests
Monetary Conditions Are Not As Tight As The Indicator Suggests
Monetary Conditions Are Not As Tight As The Indicator Suggests
The yield curve in Chinese government bonds quickly flattened around the time of the National People’s Congress (NPC), with the short end of the curve rising faster than the long end (Chart 6). This is in keeping with our assessment that while the market is expecting the recovery to continue in China, it is unimpressed with the intensity of upcoming stimulus and monetary easing. Monetary easing seems to be taking a pause, but we do not think this indicates a change in the PBoC’s policy stance (Chart 7). Instead, weak global demand, slow recovery in the domestic economy and intensified pressure on domestic employment, all will incentivize policymakers to up their game by mid-year. As such, we expect the yield curve to steepen again in H2, with the short-end of the curve fluctuating at a low level and the 10-year government bond yield picking up when the economy gains traction. Chart 6The Bond Market May Be Incorrectly Pricing In A Monetary Tightening
The Bond Market May Be Incorrectly Pricing In A Monetary Tightening
The Bond Market May Be Incorrectly Pricing In A Monetary Tightening
Chart 7A Pause Before More Easing In June
A Pause Before More Easing In June
A Pause Before More Easing In June
The spread in Chinese corporate bond yields has dropped by more than 30bps from its peak in April. This is in line with that of major DM countries and a reflection of the easier liquidity conditions globally (Chart 8). We anticipate that the yield spreads in Chinese corporate bonds will continue to normalize. However, a flare in US-China tensions will put upward pressure on the financing costs of lower-rated corporations (Chart 8, bottom panel). The default rate among Chinese corporate bonds is unlikely to rise meaningfully this year, in light of ultra-accommodative monetary conditions and the Chinese government’s bailout programs to backstop corporate defaults. Chinese corporate bond defaults and non-performing loans historically have correlated with periods of financial sector de-leveraging and de-risking, other than during economic downturns. We continue to recommend investors hold China’s corporate bonds in the coming 6-12 months in a USD-CNH hedged term. Chart 8Financing Costs May Rise For Lower-Rated Corporations
Financing Costs May Rise For Lower-Rated Corporations
Financing Costs May Rise For Lower-Rated Corporations
Chart 9Cyclicals Are Struggling To Break Out
Cyclicals Are Struggling To Break Out
Cyclicals Are Struggling To Break Out
Among Chinese equities, cyclical sectors have struggled to outperform defensives in both onshore and offshore markets (Chart 9). This reflects investors’ concerns over the slow recovery in domestic demand and heightened geopolitical risk between the US and China. As such, we continue to favor domestic, demand-driven sectors among the cyclical stocks, such as consumer discretionary and construction-related materials. We upgraded consumer discretionary stocks from neutral to overweight on May 20, and we are now initiating two trades to long material sector stocks versus the broad markets in both the domestic and investable markets. The constituents of both China’s investable and domestic material sectors are highly concentrated in the metal and mining subsectors, which roughly account for half of the material sectors’ weight in the MSCI and MSCI A Onshore Indexes, respectively. Chart 10 highlights that the material sectors’ relative performance is highly correlated with CRB raw materials in both domestic and investable markets. Given that China’s credit cycles historically lead the CRB material index by about six months, China’s massive credit stimulus will boost CRB raw materials by end-Q2 and thus, the outperformance of the material sectors. The RMB has depreciated by almost 3% in the wake of a re-escalation in US-China frictions. The CNY/USD spot rate is approaching its weakest point reached in September 2019 (Chart 11). Furthermore, on May 29, the PBoC set the CNY/USD reference rate at its lowest level since 2008, a move that suggests defending the RMB is no longer in China’s interest. Downward pressure on the RMB will persist in the months leading up to the November US presidential election. The US economy is in a much more fragile state than in 2018/19, which may hinder President Trump’s willingness to resort to tariffs between now and November. However, we cannot completely roll out the probability that Trump will impose further tariffs on Chinese exports, if he is losing the election through weak public support and is removed from his financial and economic constraints. In any case, in the coming months CNY/USD exchange rate will likely continue to decouple from the economic fundamentals such as interest rate differentials (Chart 11, bottom panel). Instead, the exchange rate will be largely driven by market sentiment surrounding the US-China frictions. Volatility in CNY/USD will increase, but the overall trend in the CNY/USD will continue downwards as long as the escalation in US-China tensions persists. On a 6- to 12-month horizon, however, we expect that the depreciation trend in the RMB to moderately reverse as the Chinese economy continues to strengthen. Chart 10Material Sectors Should Benefit From The Stimulus And Construction Boom
Material Sectors Should Benefit From The Stimulus And Construction Boom
Material Sectors Should Benefit From The Stimulus And Construction Boom
Chart 11The CNY/USD Will Continue To Decouple From Interest Rate Differentials
The CNY/USD Will Continue To Decouple From Interest Rate Differentials
The CNY/USD Will Continue To Decouple From Interest Rate Differentials
Qingyun Xu, CFA Senior Analyst qingyunx@bcaresearch.com Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Taking The Pulse Of The People’s Congress," dated May 28, 2020, available at cis.bcaresearch.com Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights The good stock market = ‘growth defensives’ like technology that benefit from lower bond yields. The bad stock market = ‘value cyclicals’ like banks that suffer from lower bond yields. Structurally favour growth defensives given that ultra-low bond yields are here to stay. Adjust the sovereign bond portfolio to: Long 30-year US T-bonds and Spanish Bonos. Short 30-year German Bunds and French OATs. Fractal trade: Long 10-year Spanish Bonos, short 10-year New Zealand bonds. Feature It has become increasingly meaningless to talk about ‘the stock market’ as one entity. The stock market has split into two distinct markets: a ‘good stock market’ and a ‘bad stock market’. To be clear, the split started before the coronavirus crisis, but the crisis has hastened the break-up (Chart of the Week). Chart of the WeekThe Good Stock Market, And The Bad Stock Market
The Good Stock Market, And The Bad Stock Market
The Good Stock Market, And The Bad Stock Market
What distinguishes the good stock market from the bad stock market? The answer is the relationship with the bond yield. For the good market, the dominant message from lower bond yields is a valuation boom and higher prices (Chart I-2); but for the bad market, the dominant message from lower bond yields is a profits recession and lower prices. Chart I-2Tech Stocks Rally On Lower Bond Yields
Tech Stocks Rally On Lower Bond Yields
Tech Stocks Rally On Lower Bond Yields
The Good Stock Market, And The Bad Stock Market For the good stock market, the valuation uplift that comes from lower bond yields far outweighs the coronavirus induced slump to sales and profits. Conversely, for the bad stock market, the coronavirus induced slump to sales and profits far outweighs any valuation uplift from lower bond yields. For the ‘good stock market’, the valuation uplift from lower bond yields outweighs the coronavirus induced slump to sales and profits. The valuation uplift from lower bond yields is greatest for growth stocks. This is because the further into the future that cashflows are, the greater the increase in their ‘net present values’ Moreover, this valuation uplift becomes exponential at ultra-low bond yields. As bond prices start to have less upside than downside, they become riskier. Hence, both components of the required return on growth stocks – the bond yield and the equity risk premium – shrink together, justifying the exponentially higher net present value (Chart I-3). Chart I-3Tech Valuations Rise Exponentially On Lower Bond Yields
Tech Valuations Rise Exponentially On Lower Bond Yields
Tech Valuations Rise Exponentially On Lower Bond Yields
Meanwhile, the coronavirus induced slump to sales and profits is greatest for cyclical stocks. For many cyclicals – such as airlines, hotels, and restaurants – the hit to sales, profits, and employment will be long-lasting, as consumer and business behaviour adapts to the post Covid-19 world. Hence: The good stock market = ‘growth defensives’ whose epitome is technology. The bad stock market = ‘value cyclicals’ whose epitome is banks (Chart I-4). Chart I-4Banks Sell Off On Lower Bond Yields
Banks Sell Off On Lower Bond Yields
Banks Sell Off On Lower Bond Yields
Banks suffer a double whammy. Not only does the lower bond yield signify a structurally poor outlook for credit creation which constitutes bank ‘sales’, but the flattening yield curve also signifies a shrinking net interest (profit) margin. Euro area banks suffer an additional complication. They are exposed to the sovereign yield spread on ‘periphery’ bonds such as Italian BTPs over German bunds. A widening of such spreads signals heightening tensions within the euro area, which hurts the solvencies of periphery banks with large holdings of periphery bonds (Chart I-5). Chart I-5Euro Area Banks Also Sell Off On Wider Sovereign Yield Spreads
Euro Area Banks Also Sell Off On Wider Sovereign Yield Spreads
Euro Area Banks Also Sell Off On Wider Sovereign Yield Spreads
It follows that euro area banks need two conditions to rally. High quality bond yields must rise, and peripheral euro area yield spreads must fall. Given that such a star alignment is likely to be the exception rather than the norm, euro area banks should be bought for the occasional countertrend rally when technical signals justify it. Right now, the required signal is for high-quality bonds to become technically overbought, presaging a tactical bout of bond underperformance and bank outperformance. However, our most-trusted technical indicator is not yet giving the required signal. Stay tuned (Chart I-6). Chart I-6Bonds Are Not Yet Technically Overbought
Bonds Are Not Yet Technically Overbought
Bonds Are Not Yet Technically Overbought
In the meantime, we prefer to play the euro area’s increasing solidarity – specifically, to underwrite a €500bn coronavirus recovery plan – through relative value positions in sovereign bonds. In our recent webcast Why Leaving The Euro Would be MAD, But Mad Things Happen we pointed out that in the euro era, labour market competitiveness in Spain has improved by more than in France. Making it hard to justify the near 100bps yield premium on 30-year Spanish Bonos versus French OATs (Chart I-7). Chart I-7The Yield Premium On Spanish Bonos Is Hard To Justify
The Yield Premium On Spanish Bonos Is Hard To Justify
The Yield Premium On Spanish Bonos Is Hard To Justify
Since inception a year ago, our long 30-year US T-bonds and Italian BTPs versus 30-year German Bunds and Spanish Bonos is up by 15 percent. It is time to adjust this bond portfolio. Go long 30-year US T-bonds and Spanish Bonos versus 30-year German Bunds and French OATs. And take profit on long 10-year Italian BTPs versus 10-year Spanish Bonos. Are Ultra-Low Bond Yields Sustainable? At first glance, the divergence of the stock market into a booming good part and a languishing bad part might tempt investors to play long-term ‘mean reversion’: specifically, to sell growth defensives like technology and buy value cyclicals like banks. But be careful. The concept of mean reversion is only meaningful if the underlying trend is sideways – or in technical terms ‘stationary’. Statistics 101 warns us that if the underlying trend is not stationary, the concept of mean reversion – and indeed the much-abused concept of ‘standard deviation’ – is meaningless. If inflation persists below 2%, bond yields will remain ultra-low. Given that all investment is now just one big correlated trade to the bond yield, this raises a crucial question: is the bond yield stationary? Put another way, are bonds in an almighty bubble? Are bond yields unsustainably low, and at risk of a violent spike upwards? The answer depends on a further question: is sub-2 percent inflation unsustainably low? (Chart I-8) If inflation persists below central banks’ totemic 2 percent inflation target, then central banks will have no choice but to push and hold the monetary easing ‘pedal to the metal’. Therefore, bond yields will keep trending lower until, one by one, they reach the lower bound at around -1 percent. Chart I-8Is Sub-2 Percent Inflation Unsustainably Low?
Is Sub-2 Percent Inflation Unsustainably Low?
Is Sub-2 Percent Inflation Unsustainably Low?
To us, the answer to this question is crystal clear. Not only is sub-2 percent inflation sustainable, it is the norm. Genuine price stability is not an arbitrary 2 percent inflation target that central banks can pluck out of the air. Rather, it is a steady state of broadly flat-lining prices that economies can remain in for centuries, so long as governments do not debase the broad money supply. Between 1675 and 1914 – when Great Britain was mostly on the gold standard – the price level barely budged, meaning inflation averaged near-zero for hundreds of years (Chart I-9). Chart I-9Inflation Averaged Near-Zero For Hundreds Of Years
Inflation Averaged Near-Zero For Hundreds Of Years
Inflation Averaged Near-Zero For Hundreds Of Years
Today we have fiat money rather than the gold standard. However, the rapidly growing cryptocurrency asset-class is an embryonic 21st century gold standard ‘waiting in the wings.’ The mere fact that an alternative, and potentially superior, monetary system is waiting in the wings is a strong incentive for competent governments to preserve the value of fiat money. Which is to say, an incentive not to destroy the genuine price stability that advanced economies have now re-entered after a brief lapse in the 20th century. Ultra-Low Bond Yields Are Here To Stay, Structurally Favouring Growth Defensives It is in the gift of governments to destroy price stability should they desire. Witness Argentina, Venezuela or Zimbabwe. Yet these examples and the example of the 1970s teach us that when price stability is destroyed, inflation appears non-linearly, which is to say unpredictably and uncontrollably. This is because it suddenly becomes rational for governments to create money as fast as possible, and for consumers and firms to spend it as fast as possible. As the product of money supply and its velocity equals nominal demand, inflation skyrockets (Chart I-10). Chart I-10When Price Stability Is Destroyed, Inflation Appears Non-Linearly
The Good Stock Market, And The Bad Stock Market
The Good Stock Market, And The Bad Stock Market
An early warning sign that governments are on the road to Venezuela is that central banks lose their independence. Or, at the very least, their inflation-targeting remits become diluted. Neither of these seem conceivable right now. Sub-2 percent inflation was the norm for hundreds of years. Never say never – but in the advanced economies the destruction of price stability is a tail-risk rather than a central threat. The upshot is that ultra-low bond yields are here to stay. Long-term investors should structurally own the good stock market – growth defensives – and structurally avoid the bad stock market – value cyclicals. That said, from time to time, there will be tactical countertrend opportunities to go long value cyclicals like banks. Stay tuned for those tactical opportunities. This leaves one final question: when all investment has just become one big correlated trade to the bond yield, how can investors take on uncorrelated positions to diversify? The answer is to take long-short positions within growth defensives, and within value cyclicals. For example, within growth defensives right now, stay tactically long personal products versus healthcare. Fractal Trading System* As discussed, Spanish Bonos offer good relative value. They are also technically oversold relative to other developed market sovereign bonds. Accordingly, this week’s recommended trade is long Spanish 10-year Bonos, short New Zealand 10-year bonds. Set the profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 3.5 percent. In other trades, long PLN/EUR quickly achieved its 2 percent profit target at which it was closed. The rolling 1-year win ratio now stands at 62 percent. Chart I-11
10-Year Bond: Spain VS. New Zealand
10-Year Bond: Spain VS. New Zealand
When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Dhaval Joshi Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Cyclical stocks have underperformed defensive equities by their greatest extent since the great recession of 2008. A key driver of their underperformance has been the expanding deflationary fears engulfing the global economy. The performance of cyclical…
Dear Client, I will be discussing the economic and financial implications of the pandemic with my colleague Caroline Miller this Friday, March 27 at 8:00 AM EDT (12:00 PM GMT, 1:00 PM CET, 8:00 PM HKT). I hope you will be able to join us for this webcast. Next week, we will send you a special report prepared by BCA’s Chief Economist Martin Barnes. Martin will provide his perspective on the current crisis, focusing on some of the longer-run implications. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights The world is in the midst of a deep recession. Growth should recover in the third quarter as the measures taken to compensate for the initial slow response to the crisis are relaxed and existing measures are better calibrated to reduce economic distress. Continued monetary support and unprecedented fiscal stimulus should help drive the recovery once businesses reopen and workers return to their jobs. Investors should maintain a modest overweight to global equities. US stocks will lag their foreign peers over the next 12 months. The US dollar has peaked. A weaker dollar should help lift commodity prices and the more cyclical sectors of the stock market. High-yield credit spreads will narrow over the next 12 months, but we prefer investment-grade credit on a risk-reward basis. Investors are understating the potential long-term inflationary consequences of all the stimulus that has been unleashed on the global economy. Buy TIPS and gold. I. Macroeconomic Outlook The global economy is now in recession. The recession has occurred because policymakers saw it as the lesser of two evils. They judged, with good reason, that a temporary shutdown of most non-essential economic activities was a price worth paying to contain the virus. Outside of China, the level of real GDP is likely to be down 1%-to-3% in Q1 of 2020 relative to Q4 of 2019, and down another 5%-to-10% in Q2 relative to Q1. On a sequential annualized basis, this implies that GDP growth could register a negative print of 40% in some countries in the second quarter, a stunning number that has few parallels in history. Growth in China should stage a modest rebound in the second quarter, reflecting the success the country has had in containing the virus. Nevertheless, the level of Chinese economic activity will remain well below its pre-crisis trend, with exports increasingly weighed down by the collapse in overseas spending. A One-Two Punch The “sudden stop” nature of the downturn stems from the fact that the global economy was simultaneously hit by both a massive demand and supply shock. When households are confined to their homes, they cannot spend as much as they normally would. This is particularly the case in an environment of heightened risk aversion, which usually leads to increased precautionary savings. At times like these, businesses also slash spending in a desperate effort to preserve cash. All this reduces aggregate demand. On the supply side, production has been impaired because of workers’ inability to get to their jobs. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, less than 30% of US employees can work from home (Chart 1). Since modern economies rely on an intricate division of labor, disturbances in one part of the economy quickly ripple through to other parts. The global supply chain ceases to function normally. Chart 1US: Who Can Work From Home And Who Cannot?
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Think of this as a Great Depression-style demand shock combined with a category five hurricane supply shock. The fact that both of these shocks have been concentrated in the service sector, which represents at least two-thirds of GDP in most economies, has made the situation even worse (Chart 2). During most recessions, the service sector is the ballast that helps stabilize the economy in the face of sharp declines in the more cyclical sectors such as manufacturing and housing. This time is different. Chart 2The Service Sector Accounts For A Big Chunk Of GDP And Has Been Very Hard Hit
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
The Shape Of The Recovery: L, U, or V? Provided that the number of new infections around the world stabilizes during the next two months, growth should begin to recover in the third quarter. What will the recovery look like? From the perspective of sequential quarterly growth rates, a V-shaped recovery is inevitable simply because a string of quarters of negative 20%-to-40% growth would quickly leave the world with no GDP at all. However, thinking in terms of growth rates is not the best approach. It is better to think of the level of real GDP. Chart 3 shows three scenarios: 1) An L-shaped profile for real GDP where the level of output falls and then remains permanently depressed relative to its long-term trend; 2) A sluggish U-shaped recovery where output slowly rebounds starting in the second half of the year; and 3) A rapid V-shaped recovery where output quickly moves back to its pre-crisis trend. Chart 3Profile Of The Recovery: L, U, or V?
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
We had previously thought that the recovery from the pandemic would be V-shaped. Compared to the sluggish recovery following the Great Recession, that is likely still true. However, at this point, we would prefer to characterize the probable recovery as being more U-shaped in nature. This is mainly because the measures necessary to contain the virus may end up having to remain in place, in one form or another, for the next few years. Why Not L? Given the likelihood that containment measures will continue to weigh on economic activity, how can an L-shaped “recovery” be avoided? While such a dire outcome cannot be ruled out, there are three reasons to think “U” is more likely than “L”. Reason #1: We Will Learn From Experience It is almost certain that we will figure out how to fine-tune containment measures to reduce the economic burden without increasing the number of lives lost. There are still many questions that remain unanswered. For example: Are restaurants where family members sit together really more dangerous than bars or conferences where strangers are milling about talking to one another? How dangerous is air travel? Modern airplanes have hospital-grade filtration systems that recirculate all the air in the cabin every three minutes. Might this explain why there has only been a handful of flight attendants that have tested positive for the virus? How contagious are children, who often may not present any symptoms at all? Which drugs might slow the spread of the disease or perhaps even cure it? To what extent would widespread mask-wearing help? Yes, a mask may not prevent you from catching the virus, but if there is major social stigma associated with being unmasked in public, then people who have the virus and may not know it will be less of a threat to others. One study estimates that the virus could be completely eradicated if 80% of people always wore masks.1 With time, we will learn the answers to these questions. We will also be able to stockpile masks, ventilators, respirators, and test kits – all of which are currently in short supply – to better combat the virus. Reason #2: We Are NowOvercompensating For Lost Time Second, most countries are currently at the stage where they are trying not just to bring down the basic reproduction number for the virus to 1, but to drive it down to well below 1. There is merit in doing so. If you can reduce the reproduction number to say, 0.5, meaning that 100 people with the virus will pass it on to only 50 other people, then the number of new infections will fall rapidly over time. This is what China was finally able to achieve. A recent study documented that China succeeded in bringing down the reproduction number in Wuhan from 3.86 to 0.32 once all the containment measures had been implemented (Chart 4).2 Chart 4Severe Containment Measures Have Changed The Course Of The Wuhan Outbreak
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
The critical point is that once you reduce the number of new infections to a sufficiently low level, you can then relax the containment measures by just enough so that the reproduction number rises back to 1. At that point, the number of new infections at any given point in time will be constant. One can see this point by imagining a bicycle coasting down a mountain road. Ideally, the rider should apply uniform pressure on the brakes at the outset of the descent to prevent the bicycle from accelerating too quickly. However, if the rider is too slow to apply the brakes and ends up going too fast, he or she will then need to overcompensate by pressing hard on the brakes to slow the bike down before easing off the brakes a bit. Most of the world is currently in the same predicament as the cyclist who failed to squeeze the brakes early on. We are overcompensating to get the infection rate down. However, once the infection rate has fallen by enough, we can ease off the most economically onerous measures, allowing GDP to slowly recover. Reason #3: Containment Measure Will Be Eased As More People Acquire Immunity Much of the popular discussion of the epidemiology of COVID-19 has failed to distinguish between the basic reproduction number, R0, and the effective reproduction number, Re. The former measures the average number of people a carrier of the virus will infect in an entirely susceptible population, whereas the latter measures the average number of people who will be infected after some fraction of the population acquires immunity either by surviving the disease or getting vaccinated. Mathematically, Re = R0*(1-P), where P is the proportion of the population which has acquired immunity. For example, suppose P=0.5, meaning that half the population has acquired immunity. In this case, the average number of people a carrier will infect will be only half as high as when no one has immunity. As we discuss below, there is considerable uncertainty about how fast P will increase over time, including whether it could spike upwards if a vaccine becomes widely available. Still, any increase in P will make it more difficult for the virus to propagate. Over time, this will permit policymakers to raise R0 at an accelerating rate towards the level it would naturally be in the absence of any containment measures (Chart 5). Such a strategy would allow economic activity to increase without raising Re; that is to say, without triggering an explosion in the number of new cases. Chart 5Populations Acquiring Immunity Is Key
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
The Virus Endgame How long will it take to dismantle all the containment measures completely? This partly depends on what medical breakthroughs occur and what measures are needed to “flatten the curve” of new infections (Chart 6). Right now, most countries are trying to drive down the number of new infections to very low levels in the hopes that either a vaccine will be invented or new treatment options will become available. Chart 6Flattening The Curve
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
We are not medical experts and will not offer an opinion on how likely a breakthrough may be. What we would say is that combating the virus has become a modern-day Manhattan project. If the project succeeds, a V-shaped recovery could still ensue. What if the virus evades the best efforts of scientists to eradicate it? In that case, the only way for life to return to some semblance of normalcy is for the population to acquire herd immunity. How many people would need to be infected? In the context of the foregoing discussion, this is equivalent to asking how high P needs to rise for Re to fall below 1. The equation above tells us this must correspond to the value of P for which R0 (1-P) <1. Solving for P yields P > 1-1/R0. In the absence of social distancing and other containment measures, most estimates of R0 for COVID-19 place it between 1.5 and 4. This implies that between one-third (1-1/1.5) to three-quarters (1-1/4) of the population would need to be infected for herd immunity to set in. Even if one allows for the likelihood that significantly more resources will be marshalled to allow hospitals to service a greater number of patients, we estimate that it would take 2-to-3 years to reach that point.3 To be clear, the virus’ ability to spread will decline even before herd immunity is achieved. An increase in the share of the population who survived and became naturally inoculated against the virus would allow policymakers to relax containment measures, perhaps to such an extent that eventually only the simplest of actions such as increased hand-washing and widespread mask-wearing would be enough to prevent hospitals from being overwhelmed. This underscores our baseline expectation of a U-shaped economic recovery. Second-Round Effects Suppose the global economy starts to recover in the third quarter of this year as the measures taken to compensate for the initial slow response to the crisis are relaxed, existing measures are better calibrated to reduce economic distress, and more younger and healthier people acquire natural immunity to the virus, thus reducing the vulnerability of the old and frail. Does that mean we are out of the woods? Not necessarily! We still have to worry about the second-round economic effects. Even if the virus is contained, there is a risk that the economy will be so scarred by the initial drop in output that it will fail to recover. A vicious circle could emerge where falling spending leads to higher unemployment, leading to even less spending. In the current environment, the tendency for unemployment to rise may be initially mitigated by the decision of a few large companies with ample financial resources to pay their workers even if they are confined to their homes. This would result in a decline in labor productivity rather than higher unemployment. That said, given the severity of the shock and the fact that many of the hardest-hit firms are in the labor-intensive service sector, a sharp rise in joblessness is still inevitable, particularly in countries with flexible labor markets such as the US. Chart 7Worries Over Job Security Abound
Worries Over Job Security Abound
Worries Over Job Security Abound
Today’s spike in US initial unemployment claims is testament to that point (Chart 7). In fact, the true increase in the unemployment rate will probably be greater than what is implied by the claims data because many state websites did not have the bandwidth to handle the slew of applications. In addition, under existing rules, the self-employed and those working in the “gig economy” do not qualify for unemployment benefits (this has been rectified in the bill now making its way to the White House). The Role Of Policy Could we really end up in a world where the virus is contained, and people are ready and able to work, only to find that there are no jobs available? While such a sorry outcome cannot be dismissed, we would bet against it. This outcome would only arise if there is insufficient demand throughout the economy when it reopens. Unlike in 2008/09 when there was a lot of moralizing about how this or that group deserved to be punished for their reckless behavior, no one in their right mind today would argue that the workers losing their jobs and the companies facing bankruptcy somehow had it coming. What can policymakers realistically do? On the monetary side, policy rates are already close to zero in most developed economies. A number of emerging markets still have scope to cut rates, but even there, many find themselves not far from the zero bound (Chart 8). Chart 8DM Rates At The Zero Bound, With EM Rates Approaching
DM Rates At The Zero Bound, With EM Approaching
DM Rates At The Zero Bound, With EM Approaching
Chart 9A Mad Scramble For Cash
A Mad Scramble For Cash
A Mad Scramble For Cash
That said, cutting interest rates right now is not the only, and probably not the most important, way for central banks to stimulate their economies. The global economy is facing a cash shortage. Companies are tapping credit lines at a time when banks would normally be looking to increase their own cash reserves. The mad scramble for cash has caused libor, repo, and commercial paper spreads to surge (Chart 9). And not just any cash. As the world’s reserve currency, the dollar is increasingly in short supply (Chart 10). This explains why cross-currency basis spreads have soared and why the DXY index has jumped to the highest level in 17 years. Chart 10Dollars Are In Short Supply
Dollars Are In Short Supply
Dollars Are In Short Supply
Flood The Zone Chart 11US Mortgage Spreads Have Spiked
US Mortgage Spreads Have Spiked
US Mortgage Spreads Have Spiked
The good news is that there is no limit to how many dollars the Federal Reserve can create. The Fed has already expanded the supply of bank reserves by initiating the purchase of $500 billion in treasuries and another $200 billion in agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS) since relaunching its QE program on March 15th. Further MBS purchases will be especially useful given that mortgage rates have not come down as quickly as Treasury yields (Chart 11). The Fed has also dusted off the alphabet soup of programs created during the financial crisis to improve proper market functioning, and has even added a few more to the list, including a program to support investment-grade corporate bonds and another to support small businesses. In order to ease overseas funding pressures, the Fed has opened up swap lines with a number of central banks. We expect these lines to be expanded to more countries if the situation necessitates it. The Coming Mar-A-Lago Accord? We also think that there is at least a 50-50 chance that we could see coordinated currency interventions designed to drive down the value of the US dollar. Federal Reserve, Treasury, and IMF guidelines all permit currency intervention to counter “disorderly market conditions.” While a weaker dollar would erode the export competitiveness of some countries, this would be more than offset by the palliative effects of additional dollar liquidity stemming from US purchases of foreign securities, as well as the relief that overseas dollar borrowers would receive from dollar depreciation. Thus, on balance, a weaker dollar would result in an easing of global financial conditions. Liquidity Versus Solvency Risk Some might complain that the actions of the Fed and other central banks go well beyond their mandates. They might argue that it is one thing to provide liquidity to the financial system; it is quite another to socialize credit risk. We think these arguments are largely red herrings. For one thing, concern about credit risk can be addressed by having governments backstop central banks for any losses they incur. Moreover, there is no clear distinction between liquidity and solvency risk during a financial crisis. The former can very easily morph into the latter. For example, consider the case of Italy. Would you buy more Italian bonds if the yield rises? That depends on two competing considerations. On the one hand, a higher yield makes the bond cheaper. On the other hand, a higher yield may make it more difficult for the government to service its debt obligations, which raises the risk of default. If the second consideration outweighs the first, your inclination may be to sell the bond. To the extent that your selling causes yields to rise further, that could lead to another wave of selling. As Chart 12 illustrates, this means that there may be multiple equilibria in fixed-income markets. It is absolutely the job of central banks to try to steer the economy towards the good ”low yield” equilibrium rather than the bad “default” equilibrium. Chart 12Multiple Equilibria In Debt Markets Are Possible Without A Lender Of Last Resort
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
In this light, ECB president Christine Lagarde’s statement on March 12th that “we are not here to close spreads” – coming on the heels of a spike in Italian bond yields and a 13% drop in euro area stocks the prior day – was one of the most negligent things a central banker has ever said. To her credit, she has since walked back her comments. The ECB has also launched the Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme (PEPP), a EUR 750bn asset-purchase program, which gives the central bank considerable flexibility over the timing, composition, and geographic makeup of purchases. Further actions, including upsizing the PEPP, creating a “conditionality-lite” version of the ESM program, and perhaps even issuing Eurobonds, are possible. All this should help Italy. Accordingly, BCA’s global fixed-income team upgraded Italian government bonds to overweight this week. Using Fiscal Policy To Align Financial Time With Economic Time While central banks will play an important role in mitigating the crisis, most of the economic burden will fall on fiscal policy. How much fiscal support is necessary and what should it consist of? To get a sense of what is optimal, it is useful to distinguish between the concept of financial time and economic time. Financial time and economic time usually beat at the same pace. Most of the time, people have financial obligations – rent, mortgage payments, spending on necessities – that they match with the income earned from work. Likewise, companies have expenses that they match with the revenue that they derive from various economic activities. No one worries when economic time and financial time deviate in predictable ways. For example, GDP collapses around 5pm on Monday only to recover at 9am on Tuesday. The fact that many western Europeans take most of August off for vacation is also not a problem, since everyone expects this. The problem occurs when economic time and financial time deviate in unpredictable ways. That is the case at present. Today, economic time has ground to a halt as businesses shutter their doors and workers confine themselves to their homes. Yet, financial time continues to march on. This implies that in the near term, the correct course of action is for governments to transfer money to households and firms to allow them to service their financial obligations. One simple way of achieving this is through wage subsidies, where the government pays companies most of the wage bill of their employees who, through no fault of their own, are unable to work. Note that this strategy does not boost GDP. By definition, an idle worker is one who does not contribute to economic output. What this strategy does do is alleviate needless hardship, while creating pent-up demand for when businesses start to open their doors again. Once the virus is contained, traditional fiscal stimulus that boosts aggregate demand will be appropriate. How much money are we talking about? In the case of the US, suppose that annualized growth is -5% in Q1, -25% in Q2, and +10% in Q3 and Q4, respectively. That would leave the level of real GDP down 4% on the year compared to 2019. Assuming trend GDP growth of 2%, that implies an annual shortfall of income (consisting of wages and lost profits) that the government would have to cover amounting to 6% of GDP. The $2 trillion stimulus bill amounts to 10% of GDP, although not all of that will be spent during the next 12 months and about a quarter of the amount is in the form of loans and loan guarantees. Still, on size, we would give it an “A”. On composition, we would give it a “B”, as it lacks sufficient funding for state and local governments to cover the likely decline in the tax revenues that they will experience. This could result in layoffs of first responders, teachers, etc. Given that the US was running a fiscal deficit going into the crisis, all this additional stimulus could easily push the budget deficit to over 15% of GDP. While this is a huge number, keep in mind that in a world where interest rates are below the trend growth rate of the economy, a government can permanently increase its budget deficit by any amount it wants while still achieving a stable debt-to-GDP ratio over the long haul.4 Today, we are not even talking about a permanent increase in the deficit, but a temporary increase that could last a few years at most. If we end up in a depression, don’t blame the virus; blame politicians. Fortunately, given that the political incentives are aligned towards fiscal easing rather than austerity, our guess is that a depression will be averted. Appendix A summarizes the monetary and fiscal measures that have already been taken in the major economies. II. Investment Strategy As anyone who has ever watched a horror movie knows, the scariest part of the film is the one before the monster is revealed to the audience. No matter how good the makeup or set design, our imaginations can always conjure up something much more frightening than Hollywood can invent. Right now, we are fighting an invisible enemy that is ravaging the world. Victory is in sight. The number of new infections has peaked in China and South Korea. I mentioned during last week’s webcast that we should watch Italy very carefully. If the number of new infections peaks there, that would send an encouraging signal to financial markets that other western democracies will be able to get the virus under control. While it is too early to be certain, this may be happening: Both the number of new cases and deaths in Italy have stabilized over the past five days (Chart 13). Chart 13A Peak In The Number Of New COVID-19 Cases In Italy Would Send An Encouraging Signal
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Of course, there is still the risk that the number of new infections will rise again if containment measures are relaxed prematurely. However, as we spelled out in this report, there are good reasons to think that these measures will not need to be as severe as the ones currently in place. As such, it is likely that global growth will begin to rebound in the third quarter of this year. Equities: A Modest Overweight Is Warranted We turned more cautious on the near-term outlook for global equities earlier this year, but upgraded our recommendation on the morning of February 28th after the MSCI All-Country World Index fell by 12% over the prior week. While stocks did rally by 7% during the following three trading days, they subsequently plunged to multi-year lows. In retrospect, we should have paid more attention to our own warnings in our earlier report titled “Markets Too Complacent About The Coronavirus.” 5 For now, we would recommend a modest overweight to stocks on both a 3-month and 12-month horizon. Monetary and fiscal easing and the prospect of a peak in the number of new cases in Italy could continue to support stocks in the near term, while a rebound in growth starting this summer should pave the way for a recovery in corporate earnings over a 12-month horizon. Chart 14US Equity Valuations Are Not Yet At Bombed-Out Levels
US Equity Valuations Are Not Yet At Bombed-Out Levels
US Equity Valuations Are Not Yet At Bombed-Out Levels
Of course, when it comes to financial markets, one should always be prepared to adjust one’s conviction level if prices either rise or fall significantly. We mentioned two weeks ago that we would move to a high-conviction overweight if the S&P 500 fell below 2250. While the index did briefly fall below this level, it has since bounced back to about 2630. At its current level, the S&P 500 is trading at 15.3-times forward earnings (Chart 14). While this is not particularly expensive, it is still well above the trough of 10.5-times forward earnings reached in 2011 during the height of the euro crisis. And keep in mind that current earnings estimates are based on the stale assumption that S&P 500 companies will earn $172 over the next four quarters, down only 3% from the peak earnings estimate of $177 reached in February. With this in mind, we are introducing a lower and upper bound for global equity prices at which we will adjust our view. To keep things simple, we will focus on the S&P 500, which accounts for over half of global stock market capitalization. If the S&P 500 falls below (and stays below) 2250, we would recommend a high-conviction overweight to global stocks. If the index rises above 2750, we would recommend a neutral equity allocation. Anything between 2250 and 2750 would justify the current stance of modest overweight. Going forward, we will adjust this range as events warrant it. Our full slate of views can be found in the table at the end of this report. Sector And Regional Equity Allocation: Favor Cyclicals and Non-US Over A 12-Month Horizon Not surprisingly, defensive equity sectors outperformed cyclicals both in the US and abroad during this month’s selloff. Financials also underperformed on heightened worries about rising defaults and the adverse effect on net interest margins from flatter yield curves (Chart 15). Chart 15Cyclicals And Financials Underperformed On The Way Down
Cyclicals And Financials Underperformed On The Way Down
Cyclicals And Financials Underperformed On The Way Down
Chart 16Non-US Stocks Are Cheaper Even After Adjusting For Differences In Sector Weights
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Cyclicals and financials have outperformed the broader market over the past few days as risk sentiment has improved. They are likely to continue outperforming over a 12-month horizon as global growth eventually recovers and yield curves steepen modestly. To the extent that cyclicals and financials are overrepresented in stock market indices outside the US, this will give non-US equities the edge. Stocks outside the US also benefit from more favorable valuations. Even after adjusting for differences in sector weights, non-US stocks are quite a bit cheaper than their US peers as judged by price-to-earnings, price-to-book, and other valuation measures (Chart 16). The US Dollar Has Probably Peaked Another factor that should help cyclical stocks later this year is the direction of the US dollar. The greenback has been buffeted by two major forces this year (Chart 17). Chart 17The Dollar Has Been Facing Crosscurrents
The Dollar Has Been Facing Crosscurrents
The Dollar Has Been Facing Crosscurrents
Chart 18USD Is A Countercyclical Currency
USD Is A Countercyclical Currency
USD Is A Countercyclical Currency
Between February 19 and March 9, the dollar weakened as US bond yields fell more than yields abroad. This eliminated some of the yield advantage that had been supporting the dollar last year. Starting around the second week of March, however, global financial stresses escalated. Money began to flow into the safe-haven Treasury market. Global growth prospects also deteriorated sharply. As a countercyclical currency, this helped the dollar (Chart 18). Looking out, interest rate differentials are unlikely to return anywhere close to where they were at the start of this year, given that the Fed will probably keep rates near zero at least until the middle of 2021. Meanwhile, aggressive central bank liquidity injections should reduce financial stress, while a rebound in global growth will allow capital to start flowing back towards riskier foreign markets. This should result in a weaker dollar. Once Growth Bottoms, So Will Commodities Chart 19Low Prices Force US Shale Cutbacks
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
The combination of a weaker dollar, a rebound in global growth starting this summer, and increased infrastructure stimulus spending in China should help lift resource prices. This will also buoy currencies such as the AUD, CAD, and NOK in the developed market space, and RUB, CLP, ZAR, and IDR, in the EM space. Oil prices have tumbled on the back of the sudden stop in global economic activity and the breakdown of the agreement between OPEC and Russia to restrain crude production. BCA’s commodity strategists expect the Saudis and Russians to come to an agreement to reduce output, as neither side has an incentive to pursue a prolonged price war. They see Brent prices averaging $36/barrel in 2020 and $55/barrel in 2021. However, prices are not likely to go much higher than $60/barrel because that would take them well above the current breakeven cost for shale producers, eliciting a strong supply response (Chart 19). Spread Product: Favor IG Over HY A rebound in oil prices from today’s ultra-depressed levels should help the bonds of energy companies, which are overrepresented in high-yield indices. This, together with stronger global growth and improving risk sentiment, should allow HY spreads to narrow over a 12-month horizon. Chart 20High-Yield Credit Is Pricing In Only A Moderate Recession
High-Yield Credit Is Pricing In Only A Moderate Recession
High-Yield Credit Is Pricing In Only A Moderate Recession
Nevertheless, we think investment grade currently offers a better risk-reward profile. While HY spreads have jumped to more than 1000 basis points in the US, they are still nowhere close to 2008 peak levels of almost 2000 basis points. Like the equity market, high-yield credit is pricing in only a modest recession, with a default rate on par with the 2001 downturn (Chart 20). Moreover, central banks around the world are racing to protect high-quality borrowers from default. The Fed’s announcement that it will effectively backstop the investment-grade corporate bond market could be a game changer in this regard. Unfortunately for HY credit, the moral hazard consequences of bailing out companies that investors knew were risky when they first bought the bonds are too great for policymakers to bear. Government Bonds: Deflation Today, Inflation Tomorrow? As noted at the outset of this report, the current economic downturn involves both an adverse supply and demand shock. Outside of a few categories of consumer staples and medical products, we expect demand to fall more than supply, resulting in downward pressure on prices. This deflationary impulse will be exacerbated by rising unemployment. Looking beyond the next 12-to-18 months, the outlook for inflation is less clear. On the one hand, it is possible that the psychological trauma from the pandemic will produce a permanent, or at least semi-permanent, increase in precautionary savings. If budget deficits are reined in too quickly, many countries could find themselves facing a shortage of aggregate demand. This would be deflationary. On the other hand, one can easily envision a scenario where monetary policy remains highly accommodative and many of the fiscal measures put in place to support households are maintained long after the virus is eradicated. This could be particularly true in the US, where our geopolitical team now expects Joe Biden to win the presidential election. In such an environment, unemployment could fall back to its lows, eventually leading to an overheated economy. Our hunch is that the more inflationary scenario will unfold over the next 2-to-3 years. Interestingly, that is not the market’s opinion. For example, the 5-year US TIPS breakeven inflation rate is currently only 0.69% and the 10-year rate is 1.07%. This means that a buy-and-hold investor will make money owning TIPS versus nominals if inflation averages more than 0.69% per year for the next five years, or 1.07% per year for the next decade. That is a bet we would be willing to take. Finally, a word on gold. Just as during the Global Financial Crisis, gold failed to be an attractive hedge against financial risk during the recent stock market selloff – bullion dropped by 15% from $1704/oz to $1451/oz, before rebounding back to $1640/oz over the past few days as risk sentiment improved. Nevertheless, gold remains a good hedge against long-term inflation risk. And with the US dollar likely to weaken over the next 12 months, gold prices should move up even if near-term inflationary pressures remain contained. As such, we are upgrading our outlook on the yellow metal. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Appendix A Appendix A Table 1Central Banks Still Had Some Options When Crisis Hit
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Appendix A Table 2Massive Stimulus In Response To Pandemic
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Footnotes 1 Jing Yan, Suvajyoti Guha, Prasanna Hariharan, and Matthew Myers, “Modeling the Effectiveness of Respiratory Protective Devices in Reducing Influenza Outbreak,” U.S. National Library of Medicine, (39:3), March 2019. 2 Chaolong Wang, Li Liu, Xingjie Hao, Huan Guo, Qi Wang, Jiao Huang, Na He, Hongjie Yu, Xihong Lin, Sheng Wei, and Tangchun Wu, “Evolving Epidemiology and Impact of Non-pharmaceutical Interventions on the Outbreak of Coronavirus Disease 2019 in Wuhan, China,”medrxiv.org, March 6, 2020. 3 This calculation assumes that 5% of infected people need ICU care and each spends an average of 2 weeks in the ICU. It also assumes that hospitals are able to expand their capacity by 30 additional ICU beds per 100,000 people per year to treat COVID-19. 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Is There Really Too Much Government Debt In The World?” dated February 22, 2019, available at gis.bcarearch.com. 5 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Markets Too Complacent About The Coronavirus,” dated February 21, 2020, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. Global Investment Strategy View Matrix
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
MacroQuant Model And Current Subjective Scores
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V
Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights At the current rate of work resumption, March’s PMI should rebound to its “normal range” from February’s historic lows. If so, our simple calculation, using China’s PMI figures and GDP growth in Q4 2008 as a template, suggests that China's economic growth in Q1 2020 should come in at around 3.2%. Chinese stocks passively outperformed global benchmarks in the last two weeks. The likelihood of a stimulus overshoot in the next 6-12 months continues to rise, supporting our view that Chinese stocks will actively outperform global benchmark in the coming months. Cyclical stocks have significantly outperformed defensives lately. While this is consistent with our constructive view towards Chinese equities in general, the magnitude of a tech stock rally in the domestic market of late appears to be somewhat excessive. As such, investors should focus their sector exposure in favor of resources, industrials, and consumer discretionary. The depreciation in the RMB against the dollar will come primarily from a stronger dollar rather than a weaker RMB, and the downside in the value of the RMB should be limited. Feature Despite the past week’s plunge in global equities due to the threat of a worldwide COVID-19 pandemic, Chinese stocks have outperformed relative to global benchmarks. This underscores our view that epidemic risks within China are slowly abating, and China’s reflationary response to the crisis will likely overcompensate for the short-term economic shock. Tables 1 and 2 highlight key developments in China’s economy and its financial markets in the past month. On the growth front, both the February official and Caixin PMIs dropped to historic lows as a result of the virus outbreak and nationwide lockdown. On the other hand, economic data from January confirmed that pre-outbreak activity in China was on track to recovery. Daily data also suggests that production in China continues to resume. Moreover, monetary conditions have significantly loosened and fiscal supports have materially stepped up. Chinese equities in both onshore and offshore markets dropped by 2% and 7% respectively (in absolute terms) from their January 13 peaks. Nevertheless, they have both significantly outperformed global equities, particularly in the past week. Equally-weighted cyclical stocks versus defensives in the onshore market have also moved up sharply, driven by a rally in the technology sector stocks. While the outperformance of cyclical stocks is consistent with our constructive view towards Chinese stocks, the magnitude appears to be excessive. Thus, we would advise investors positioning for a cyclical recovery in China to favor exposure in resources, industrials and consumer discretionary stocks. Table 1China Macro Data Summary
China Macro And Market Review
China Macro And Market Review
Table 2China Financial Market Performance Summary
China Macro And Market Review
China Macro And Market Review
In reference to Tables 1 and 2, we have a number of observations concerning developments in China’s macro and financial market data: Chart 1Inventory And Production Shortages Are A Bigger Near-Term Concern Than Weaknesses In Demand
Inventory And Production Shortages Are A Bigger Near-Term Concern Than Weaknesses In Demand
Inventory And Production Shortages Are A Bigger Near-Term Concern Than Weaknesses In Demand
February’s drop in the official PMI below 40% is reminiscent of November 2008, which was the height of the global financial crisis. The raw material inventory sub-index of the PMI in February fell to a record low, a clear indication of strain in China’s manufacturing sector. While the finished goods inventory sub-index ticked up slightly compared with January, factories will likely run out of existing raw materials to produce goods if transportation logistics do not return to normal soon (Chart 1). A higher number in the new orders sub-index relative to production output also suggests the pressure on the supply side will intensify if the virus outbreak in China worsens and continues to disrupt manufacturing activities. This will in turn undermine the effectiveness of Chinese policy response. Daily data from various sources suggests Chinese industrial activities continue to pick up. Between February 10 (the first official return-to-work day after an extended Chinese New Year holiday) and February 25 (the cutoff date for responding to PMI surveys), daily coal consumption in China’s six largest power plants was only about 60% of consumption compared from the same period last year (adjusted for the Lunar Year calendar). This is in line with the 35.7 reading in February’s manufacturing PMI, versus 49.2 a year ago. In the last four days of February, however, coal consumption reached nearly 70% of last year’s consumption. This figure is in keeping with a 10 percentage point increase in the rate of work resumption of enterprises above-designated size in China’s coastal regions.1 If energy consumption and work resumption rates reach about 90% by the end of March compared with Q1 2019, then PMI in March should pick up to 45% or higher. A 45% or higher reading in March’s PMI will imply economic impact from the virus outbreak is mostly limited to February. A simple calculation using China’s GDP growth in Q4 2008 as a template suggests that China's economic growth in Q1 2020 should come in at around 3.2% in real terms. This is in line with the estimate from BCA's Global Investment Strategy service.2 As we pointed out in November last year,3 China is frontloading additional fiscal stimulus in Q1 2020 to secure the economic recovery, which started to bud prior to the virus outbreak. The increase in January’s credit numbers confirms our projection. The monthly flow in total social financing in January (with only three work weeks effectively) reached above RMB 5 trillion. This figure exceeded that in January 2019, the highest monthly credit number last year. Local government bond issuance in January was almost double that a year ago, and a total of 1.2 trillion local government bonds were issued in the first two months of this year - a 53% jump from the same period last year. This suggests that fiscal stimulus has indeed stepped up in 2020. Money supply in January was slightly distorted by the earlier Chinese New Year (it fell in January this year instead of February as in most years) and the COVID-19 outbreak. M1 registered zero growth from a year ago, whereas it grew by 0.4% in January 2019.4 Normally, during the month of the Chinese New Year, households have more cash in deposits whereas corporations have less as they pay pre-holiday bonuses to employees. This seasonality factor causes the growth rate in M0 to rise and M1 growth to fall. The seasonality was exacerbated by the nationwide lockdown on January 20 this year, as many real estate developers reportedly suffered from a significant reduction in home sales and delays in deposits for down payments. Household consumption in the service sector during the Chinese New Year was also severely suppressed. This explains near-zero growth in M1 and a larger-than-expected increase in household deposits in January (Chart 2). We expect the growth in both M0 and M1 to start normalizing in March, as production and household consumption continue to resume. While we do not expect large fluctuations in housing prices, we think growth in home sales may accelerate from Q2 2020. There are early signs that the government is starting to relax restrictions on the real estate sector, on a region by region basis. Land sales remain a major source of local governments’ income, accounting for more than half of total revenues as of last year. Chart 3 shows that as government expenditures lead land sales, a major increase in fiscal stimulus and local government spending means that a significant bump in land sales will be needed in 2020. A strengthening supply of land, coupled with the unlikelihood of large fluctuations in property prices, suggests that there will be more policy supports to the real estate sector and more incentives to boost housing demand. Chart 2Corporates Are Short On Cash
Corporates Are Short On Cash
Corporates Are Short On Cash
Chart 3Land And Home Sales Likely To Pick Up In 2020
Land And Home Sales Likely To Pick Up In 2020
Land And Home Sales Likely To Pick Up In 2020
In the past two weeks, China’s equity market has registered a near-vertical outperformance in both investable and domestic stocks relative to global benchmarks (Chart 4). While this recent outperformance was passive in nature, our policy assessment supports future active outperformance. The recently announced pro-growth policy initiatives increasingly resemble those rolled out at the start of the last easing cycle in 2015/2016. These policy initiatives increase the odds that the upcoming “insurance stimulus” will overcompensate for the short-term economic shock, and will likely lead to a significant rebound in corporate profits in the next 6-12 months. This supports our bullish view on Chinese stocks. Chart 5 also shows that, unlike during the 2015’s “bubble and bust” cycle, both the valuation and margin trading as a percentage of total market cap in China’s onshore market remain materially lower than 2015. Equally-weighted cyclical sectors continue to outperform defensives in both China’s investable and domestic markets, particularly the latter where stock prices in the technology sector were up 12% within the past month. While the outperformance of cyclical stocks relative to defensives is consistent with our constructive view towards Chinese equities in general, the magnitude appears to be somewhat excessive. Given this, we would advise investors positioning for a cyclical recovery in China’s economy to focus their sector exposure in favor of resources, industrials, and consumer discretionary stocks. Chart 4Chinese Stocks Strongly Outperformed Global Benchmarks Over The Past Two Weeks
Chinese Stocks Strongly Outperformed Global Benchmarks Over The Past Two Weeks
Chinese Stocks Strongly Outperformed Global Benchmarks Over The Past Two Weeks
Chart 5Onshore Market Trading Does Not Seem Overly Leveraged
Onshore Market Trading Does Not Seem Overly Leveraged
Onshore Market Trading Does Not Seem Overly Leveraged
China’s three-month repo rate (the de facto policy rate) has fallen significantly in the past month, roughly 30bps below its lowest level in 2016 (Chart 6). China’s government bond yields have also reached their lowest level since 2016. While corporate bond yield spreads in other major economies have picked up sharply in the past month, the reverse is happening in China. This suggests that the market is pricing in further easing and the notion that policy supports will be effective in preventing a surge in corporate bond default rate. From a global perspective, yield spreads on China’s onshore corporate bonds have been elevated since 2016. This indicates that investors have long either priced in a much higher default rate among Chinese corporate bond issuers, or demand an unjustifiably large risk premium (Chart 7). Since we expect Chinese policymakers to continue easing, risks of a surge in China’s corporate bond default rate remain low this year. As such, until we see signs that the Chinese authorities are reverting to a financial de-risking mode, we will continue to favor onshore corporate versus duration-matched government bonds. Chart 6Monetary Policy Now More Accommodative Than 2015-2016
Monetary Policy Now More Accommodative Than 2015-2016
Monetary Policy Now More Accommodative Than 2015-2016
Chart 7Chinese Corporates Pay High Risk Premium For Their Bonds, Even At A Relatively Low Default Rate
Chinese Corporates Pay High Risk Premium For Their Bonds, Even At A Relatively Low Default Rate
Chinese Corporates Pay High Risk Premium For Their Bonds, Even At A Relatively Low Default Rate
Chart 8The RMB Likely To Continue Outperforming Other EM Currencies
The RMB Likely To Continue Outperforming Other EM Currencies
The RMB Likely To Continue Outperforming Other EM Currencies
As we go to press, the Federal Reserve Bank has just made a 50bps cut to the Fed rate, the first emergency cut since the global financial crisis. The USD weakened against the Euro, the Japanese Yen, as well as the RMB immediately following the rate cut. While this reflects the market’s concerns of a worsening virus outbreak and the rising possibility of an economic slowdown in the US, the USD as a countercyclical currency will likely appreciate against most cyclical currencies as the virus continues spreading globally. Hence, the depreciation in the RMB against the dollar will come primarily from a stronger dollar rather than a weaker RMB, and the downside in the value of the RMB should be limited. The continuation of resuming production in China and the expectations of a Chinese economic recovery in Q2 will support an appreciation in the RMB against other EM currencies (Chart 8). Qingyun Xu, CFA Senior Analyst qingyunx@bcaresearch.com Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 http://app.21jingji.com/html/2020yiqing_fgfc/ 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Markets Too Complacent About The Coronavirus," dated February 21, 2020, available at gis.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Questions From The Road: Timing The Turn," dated November 20, 2020, available at gis.bcaresearch.com 4 M1 is mainly made up by cash demand deposits from corporations, whereas M0 is mainly deposits from households Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Mixed Data
Mixed Data
Neutral It has been particularly difficult to distinguish a clear signal from noise lately with regard to the cyclicals versus defensives ratio. Relevant macro drivers, operating metrics and profit fundamentals, valuations and technicals all have been emitting conflicting messages. The recent coronavirus epidemic will likely make the waters murkier still. US Equity Strategy’s Global Trade Activity Indicator has turned south recently following in the footsteps of the Chinese manufacturing PMI data that ticked down and are slated to drop below the boom/bust line in the current month (top & bottom panels). The bond market also reflects a gloomy global economic backdrop with the global 10-year Treasury yield sinking like a stone. Such a lackluster bond market will likely weigh on relative share prices (middle panel). Bottom Line: Remain on the sidelines on cyclicals versus defensives. For more details on the positive data on the cyclicals/defensives ratio please refer to this Monday’s Weekly Report.
Cyclical stocks have been stuck in the doldrums versus defensives for the better part of two years. This is unsurprising, given the manufacturing downturn which arrested global trade, commodity prices, and overall business activity. What is remarkable is that…
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Most of the macro and operating indicators we track are sending conflicting messages on the anticipated direction in the cyclical/defensive ratio. Stay on the sidelines on cyclicals versus defensives. While the coronavirus epidemic will take a bite out of airline demand in the near-term, firm consumer confidence, rising consumer outlays, recovering services PMIs, rising airline pricing power, falling kerosene prices, compelling relative valuations and oversold technicals, all signal that airlines are well positioned to regain altitude on a cyclical time horizon. Recent Changes There are no changes to our portfolio this week. Table 1
Will The Fed Save The Day, Again?
Will The Fed Save The Day, Again?
Feature The SPX shrugged off the persistently negative coronavirus epidemic news and made fresh all-time highs last week (top panel, Chart 1). Domestic flush liquidity remains the dominant macro theme coupled with the expectation of a sizable fiscal and monetary easing out of China in the coming months. Importantly, according to the CME there is a 60% chance of a Fed interest rate cut priced in for the July 29, 2020 FOMC meeting which jumps to over 80% probability for the December 16, 2020 meeting. This is sustaining downward pressure on the 10-year Treasury yield, which in turn is boosting equities. A glum JOLTS report along with the 12-month fed funds rate discounter corroborate that additional Fed easing is likely nearing (middle & bottom panels, Chart 1). Chart 1Is A Fed Interest Rate Cut Looming?
Is A Fed Interest Rate Cut Looming?
Is A Fed Interest Rate Cut Looming?
Chart 2Unsustainable Rise In “Tenuous Trio”
Unsustainable Rise In “Tenuous Trio”
Unsustainable Rise In “Tenuous Trio”
The extreme concentration in excess returns in a handful of tech stocks is another potential trouble spot for equities that we have been highlighting recently. Nevertheless, beneath the surface trouble is brewing. Chart 2 shows three asset classes rising concurrently. The “tenuous trio” as we have called stocks, Treasurys and the greenback in the past, cannot rise in tandem. When all three asset prices appreciate, it typically foreshadows equity market trouble. In this particular iteration, even the VIX is up for the year, representing a big break in historical correlations. Worrisomely, since 2018 every time the VIX and the SPX became positively correlated, the broad market subsequently suffered a setback (Chart 3). While the SPX is making all-time highs, the VIX is neither making all-time lows nor cyclical lows. Importantly, equity market volatility is staying stubbornly close to 15, slightly below the ten-year average. As a reminder, a “VIX reading of 15 means that in 30 days the S&P 500 is expected to trade between 4.3% lower and 4.3% higher than its current level”.1 Chart 3Watch Out For Vol
Watch Out For Vol
Watch Out For Vol
The extreme concentration in excess returns in a handful of tech stocks is another potential trouble spot for equities that we have been highlighting recently.2 Chart 4 shows the percentage of GICS2 sectors with negative two-year relative share price momentum. The higher this diffusion rises the fewer the sectors that drive the SPX’s return. Historically, when our diffusion hits the 70% mark, it signals exhaustion in equity market returns. In fact, 70% readings in this diffusion indicator led both the 2000 and 2007 peaks in the SPX. Chart 4Heed The Diffusion Index’s Message
Heed The Diffusion Index’s Message
Heed The Diffusion Index’s Message
This week we update our views on the cyclical /defensive portfolio bent and a niche industrials sub-group. Meanwhile on the economic front, the JOLTS report made for grim reading. Labor market softness was evident across the board and it was not squarely concentrated in the manufacturing sector. While this indicator only goes back two cycles, it is flashing yellow for the prospects of the broad equity market (top panel, Chart 5). Importantly, we will continue to monitor the job openings numbers as they are sending the exact opposite signal compared with unemployment insurance claims (job openings shown inverted, middle & bottom panels, Chart 5). This week we update our views on the cyclical /defensive portfolio bent and a niche industrials sub-group. Chart 5Avoid Getting JOLTed
Avoid Getting JOLTed
Avoid Getting JOLTed
Mixed Signals We have been neutral the cyclicals/defensives ratio for the past 8 months and continue to recommend investors stay on the sidelines for a while longer. It has been particularly difficult to distinguish a clear signal from noise lately for the cyclicals versus defensives ratio. Relevant macro drivers, operating metrics and profit fundamentals, valuations and technicals all have been emitting conflicting messages and the recent coronavirus epidemic will likely make the waters murkier still. US Equity Strategy’s Global Trade Activity Indicator has turned south recently following in the footsteps of the Chinese manufacturing PMI data that ticked down and are slated to drop below the boom/bust line in the current month (top & bottom panels, Chart 6). The bond market also reflects a gloomy global economic backdrop with the global 10-year Treasury yield sinking like a stone. Such a lackluster bond market will likely weigh on relative share prices (middle panel, Chart 6). CEOs remain a depressed bunch and it is all but certain that for, at least, the next three months executives will put capex plans on the backburner. Basic resources are most at risk and keep in mind that relative capex growth was already decelerating prior to the coronavirus epidemic (top & second panels, Chart 7). Chart 6Trade Uncertainty…
Trade Uncertainty…
Trade Uncertainty…
Chart 7… And Capex Softness Weighs On Cyclicals
… And Capex Softness Weighs On Cyclicals
… And Capex Softness Weighs On Cyclicals
A soft sales backdrop coupled with inventory accumulation are firing a warning shot. Relative share prices will likely succumb to the still weak total business sales-to-inventories ratio (third panel, Chart 7). Importantly, an inventory liquidation phase will continue to exert downward pressure on relative profit margins (bottom panel, Chart 7). Chart 8Pricing Power Proxy Blues
Pricing Power Proxy Blues
Pricing Power Proxy Blues
Our simple relative pricing power proxy for the cyclical/defensive ratio best encapsulates these relative selling price pressures. The CRB metals-to-gold price ratio is on the verge of a breakdown and warns that the wide gulf that has opened up between our pricing power proxy and relative share prices will narrow via a sell off in the latter (Chart 8). Nevertheless, this stands in marked contrast to the ISM manufacturing prices paid subcomponent of the Report On Business survey and actual cyclicals/defensives pricing power momentum (bottom panel, Chart 9). Chart 9The US Dollar Holds The Key
The US Dollar Holds The Key
The US Dollar Holds The Key
Were the greenback to depreciate in the coming months as our FX strategists expect, then cyclicals selling prices would definitively regain the upper hand versus their defensives counterparts (top & middle panels, Chart 9). But, the jury is still out. Sell-side analysts remain optimistic that relative profits will stage a significant comeback in the next year, but on a short-term basis have been trimming cyclical versus defensive earnings revisions (middle & bottom panels, Chart 10). While our macro-factor relative profit growth models were staging a comeback all last year, they ticked down last month (second panel, Chart 10). Finally, relative technical and valuation conditions are both tracing out a bottom near the one standard deviation below the historical mean, a level that has marked prior recoveries in relative share prices (Chart 11). Chart 10Mixed Bag
Mixed Bag
Mixed Bag
Chart 11Unloved & Undervalued
Unloved & Undervalued
Unloved & Undervalued
Bottom Line: Most of the macro and operating indicators we track are sending conflicting messages on the anticipated direction in the cyclical/defensive ratio. Remain on the sidelines on cyclicals versus defensives, but stay tuned. Clipped Wings? Airline stocks have taken it to the chin lately on the back of coronavirus demand destruction fears, but we reiterate our overweight stance as extreme bearishness appears overdone. Investors tend to overreact to events such as virus epidemics, but we deem that such fears typically create trading opportunities, especially in the hardest-hit sectors. Similar to hotels (that we upgraded to neutral last week), airlines are part of the tourism-related industries that have suffered disproportionately. Were we not overweight the S&P airlines index, we would not hesitate to initiate such a position. True, consumer and business demand for air transportation services will come under pressure in the near-term, however looking further out such demand destruction will likely prove transitory. Chart 12 shows that the cyclical demand backdrop is robust for the US airline industry. Overall consumer outlays jumped recently, PCE services momentum is perking up, airfare PCE is outpacing overall consumer spending – an impressive feat – and consumer confidence is perched near cycle highs sustaining a wide gap with relative share prices (bottom panel, Chart 12). US domestic and international passenger enplanements are running near the 5%/annum growth rate and the recent rebound in the global and US services PMIs suggests that any kink in demand will likely prove short-lived (Chart 13). Chart 12Firming Cyclical…
Firming Cyclical…
Firming Cyclical…
Chart 13…Demand Backdrop…
…Demand Backdrop…
…Demand Backdrop…
Importantly, this firm cyclical demand backdrop is reflected in accelerating airline selling price inflation both on domestic and international routes (second & third panels, Chart 14). However, profit margins have yet to reflect this encouraging top line growth backdrop. The airline load factor spread (calculated as load factor minus break-even load factor) also heralds a profit margin expansion phase (bottom panel, Chart 14). Chart 14…Is A Boon For Selling Prices
…Is A Boon For Selling Prices
…Is A Boon For Selling Prices
Chart 15Lower Fuel Costs Should Turbocharge Profit Margins
Lower Fuel Costs Should Turbocharge Profit Margins
Lower Fuel Costs Should Turbocharge Profit Margins
Tack on the roughly 16% year-to-date drubbing in oil prices and airline profit margins will expand in 2020. This is true especially for the bulk of the industry that does not hedge kerosene costs (jet fuel shown inverted, Chart 15). The analyst community has been pessimistic about the prospects of airline stocks. Revenue and profit growth expectations are slated to tail the SPX in the coming twelve months. This sets a low bar for the industry to surpass in coming earnings seasons (Chart 16). Finally, investors have thrown in the towel, pushing relative valuations to extremely depressed levels to the tune of nearly two standard deviations below the historical mean (middle panel, Chart 17). Relative technicals are also washed out and signal that, at least, a reflex rebound is in store in the coming months (bottom panel, Chart 17). Chart 16Low Bar To Surpass
Low Bar To Surpass
Low Bar To Surpass
Chart 17Contrary Alert: Pessimism Reigns Supreme
Contrary Alert: Pessimism Reigns Supreme
Contrary Alert: Pessimism Reigns Supreme
In sum, while the coronavirus epidemic will take a bite out of airline demand in the near-term, firm consumer confidence, rising consumer outlays, recovering services PMIs, rising airline pricing power, falling kerosene prices, compelling relative valuations and oversold technicals, all signal that airlines are well positioned to regain altitude on a cyclical time horizon. Bottom Line: Stay overweight the S&P airlines index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG S5AIRLX – LUV, DAL, UAL, AAL, ALK. Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 https://us.spindices.com/vix-intro/ 2 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Three EPS Scenarios”, dated January 13, 2020, and “When The Music Stops…”, dated January 27, 2020, both available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Strategic (10-Year) Trade Recommendations
Will The Fed Save The Day, Again?
Will The Fed Save The Day, Again?
Size And Style Views June 3, 2019 Stay neutral cyclicals over defensives (downgrade alert) January 22, 2018 Favor value over growth May 10, 2018 Favor large over small caps (Stop 10%) June 11, 2018 Long the BCA Millennial basket The ticker symbols are: (AAPL, AMZN, UBER, HD, LEN, MSFT, NFLX, SPOT, TSLA, V).
GAA DM Equity Country Allocation Model Update The GAA DM Equity Country Allocation model is updated as of December 31, 2019. The model made two significant changes to its allocations this month. First, the allocation to the US is now neutral from underweight previously; second, Australia becomes the second largest overweight (from underweight previously), largely due to an improvement in liquidity conditions. Japan, the UK and France remain the three large underweight countries, as shown in Table 1. Table 1Model Allocation Vs. Benchmark Weights
GAA Quant Model Updates
GAA Quant Model Updates
As shown in Table 2 and Charts 1, 2 and 3, the overall model outperformed the MSCI World benchmark in December by 7 bps, driven by the outperformance from the Level 2 model (17 bps), especially the overweight of Spain and underweight of Japan. The Level 1 model also generated one basis point of outperformance from the slight underweight in the US. Since going live, the overall model has outperformed by 64 bps, with 270 bps of outperformance by the Level 2 model, offset by 58 bps of underperformance from Level 1. Table 2Performance (Total Returns In USD %)
GAA Quant Model Updates
GAA Quant Model Updates
Chart 1GAA DM Model Vs. MSCI World
GAA DM Model Vs. MSCI World
GAA DM Model Vs. MSCI World
Chart 2GAA US Vs. Non US Model (Level 1)
GAA U.S. Vs. Non U.S. Model (Level 1)
GAA U.S. Vs. Non U.S. Model (Level 1)
Chart 3GAA Non US Model (Level 2)
GAA Non U.S. Model (Level 2)
GAA Non U.S. Model (Level 2)
For more on historical performance, please refer to our website http://gaa.bcaresearch.com/trades/allocation_performance. For more details on the models, please see Special Report, “Global Equity Allocation: Introducing The Developed Markets Country Allocation Model,” dated January 29, 2016, available at https://gaa.bcaresearch.com. Please note that the overall country and sector recommendations published in our Monthly Portfolio Update and Quarterly Portfolio Outlook use the results of these quantitative models as one input, but do not stick slavishly to them. We believe that models are a useful check, but structural changes and unquantifiable factors need to be considered as well when making overall recommendations. GAA Equity Sector Selection Model The GAA Equity Sector Model (Chart 4) is updated as of December 31, 2019. The model’s relative tilts between cyclicals and defensives have changed compared to last month. The global growth proxies used in our model have turned bullish, based on rising metal prices and EM currencies appreciating relative to the US dollar. This in turn led the model to reverse its defensive overweight it had instated last month on Consumer Staples and favor more cyclical sectors. The valuation component remains muted across all sectors except Energy. The accommodative stance likely to be implemented by global central banks will continue to lead the model to favor a mixed bag of cyclical and defensive sectors. The model is now overweight five sectors in total, four cyclical versus one defensive sectors. These are Consumer Discretionary, Information Technology, Financials, Materials, and Health Care. Chart 4Overall Model Performance
Overall Model Performance
Overall Model Performance
Table 3Overall Model Performance
GAA Quant Model Updates
GAA Quant Model Updates
For more details on the model, please see the Special Report “Introducing the GAA Equity Sector Selection Model”, dated July 27, 2016, as well as the Sector Selection Model section in the Special Alert “GAA Quant Model Updates”, dated March 1, 2019 available at https://gaa.bcaresearch.com. Table 4Current Model Allocations
GAA Quant Model Updates
GAA Quant Model Updates
Xiaoli Tang Associate Vice President xiaoliT@bcaresearch.com Amr Hanafy Research Associate amrh@bcaresearch.com
Dear Client, In lieu of our regular report next week, I will be hosting a webcast on Wednesday, December 18th at 10:00 AM EST, where I will discuss the major investment themes and views I see playing out for 2020. This will be the last Global Investment Strategy report of 2019, with publication resuming early next year. On behalf of the entire Global Investment Strategy team, I would like to wish you a Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, and a Healthy New Year! Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Overall Investment Strategy: Global growth should accelerate in 2020. Favor stocks over bonds. A more defensive stance will be appropriate starting in late 2021. Equities: Upgrade non-US equities to overweight at the expense of their US peers. Cyclical stocks, including financials, will outperform defensives. Fixed Income: Central banks will stay dovish, but bond yields will nevertheless rise modestly thanks to stronger global growth. Favor high-yield corporate credit over investment grade and sovereigns. Currencies: The US dollar will weaken in 2020 against EUR, GBP, CAD, AUD, and most EM currencies. The dollar will be flat against the yen and the Swiss franc. Commodities: Oil and industrial metals prices will move higher. Gold prices will be range-bound next year, but should rally in 2021 once inflation finally breaks out. GIS View Matrix
Strategy Outlook – 2020 Key Views: Full Speed Ahead
Strategy Outlook – 2020 Key Views: Full Speed Ahead
I. Global Macro Outlook Stronger Global Growth Ahead We turned bullish on global equities last December after temporarily moving to the sidelines in the summer of 2018. Last month, we increased our procyclical bias by upgrading non-US stocks within our recommended equity allocation at the expense of their US peers. The decision to upgrade non-US equities stems from our expectation that global growth will strengthen in 2020. Global financial conditions have eased sharply this year, largely due to the dovish pivot by many central banks. Monetary policy affects the economy with a lag. This is one reason why the net number of central banks cutting rates has historically led global growth by about 6-to-9 months (Chart 1). Chart 1The Effects Of Easing Monetary Policy Should Soon Trickle Down To The Economy
The Effects Of Easing Monetary Policy Should Soon Trickle Down To The Economy
The Effects Of Easing Monetary Policy Should Soon Trickle Down To The Economy
In addition, there is mounting evidence that the global manufacturing cycle is bottoming out (Chart 2). The “official” Chinese PMI produced by the National Bureau of Statistics rose above 50 in November for the first time since May. The private sector Caixin manufacturing PMI has been improving for five consecutive months. The euro area manufacturing PMI increased over the prior month, led by gains in Germany and France. Chart 2A Fairly Regular Three-Year Manufacturing Cycle
A Fairly Regular Three-Year Manufacturing Cycle
A Fairly Regular Three-Year Manufacturing Cycle
Chart 3The Auto Sector Is Showing Signs Of Life (I)
The Auto Sector Is Showing Signs Of Life (I)
The Auto Sector Is Showing Signs Of Life (I)
The PMI data for the US has been mixed. The ISM manufacturing index weakened in November. In contrast, the Markit PMI rose to a seven-month high. Despite its shorter history, we tend to give the Markit PMI more credence. It is based on a larger sample of companies and has sector weights that closely match the actual composition of US output. As such, the Markit PMI is better correlated with hard data on manufacturing production, employment, and factory orders. The auto sector has been particularly hard hit during this manufacturing downturn. Fortunately, the industry is showing signs of life. The Markit euro area auto sector PMI has rebounded, with the new orders-to-inventory ratio moving back into positive territory for the first time since the autumn of 2018. US banks stopped tightening lending standards for auto loans in the third quarter. They are also reporting stronger demand for vehicle financing (Chart 3). In China, vehicle production and sales are improving on a rate-of-change basis (Chart 4). Both automobile ownership and vehicle sales in China are still a fraction of what they are in most other economies, suggesting further upside for sales (Chart 5). Chart 4The Auto Sector Is Showing Signs Of Life (II)
The Auto Sector Is Showing Signs Of Life (II)
The Auto Sector Is Showing Signs Of Life (II)
Chart 5China: Structural Outlook For Autos Is Bright
China: Structural Outlook For Autos Is Bright
China: Structural Outlook For Autos Is Bright
Trade War Uncertainty The trade war remains the biggest risk to our sanguine view on global growth. As we go to press, rumors are swirling that the US and China have reached a “Phase One” trade deal that would cancel the scheduled December 15th tariff hike and roll back as much as half of the existing tariffs. If this were to occur, it would be consistent with our expectation of a trade truce. Nevertheless, it is impossible to be certain about how things will unfold from here. The best we can do is think through the incentives that both sides face and assume they will act in their own self-interest. For President Trump, the key priority is to get re-elected next year. Trump generally gets poor grades from voters on most issues. The one exception is the economy. Rightly or wrongly, the majority of voters approve of his handling of the economy (Chart 6). An escalation of the trade war would hurt the US economy, especially in a number of Midwestern states that Trump needs to win to remain president (Chart 7). Chart 6Trump Gets Reasonably High Marks On His Handling Of The Economy, But Not Much Else
Strategy Outlook – 2020 Key Views: Full Speed Ahead
Strategy Outlook – 2020 Key Views: Full Speed Ahead
Chart 7Economic Health Of The US Midwest Matters For Trump
Economic Health Of The US Midwest Matters For Trump
Economic Health Of The US Midwest Matters For Trump
A resurgence in the trade war would also hurt Trump’s credibility. The point of the tariffs was not simply to raise revenue; it was to get China to the negotiating table. As a self-described master negotiator, President Trump now has to produce a “great” deal for the American people. If he had finalized an agreement with China a year or two ago, he would currently be on the hook for showing that it resulted in a smaller trade deficit. But with the presidential election only a year away, he can semi-credibly claim that the trade balance will only improve after he is re-elected. For their part, the Chinese would rather grapple with Trump now than face him after the election when he will no longer be constrained by re-election pressures. China would also like to avoid facing someone like Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders, who may insist on including stringent environmental and human rights provisions in any trade deal. At least with Trump, the Chinese know that they are getting someone who is focused on commercial issues. Contrary to most media reports, there is a fair amount of overlap between what Trump wants and what the Chinese themselves would like to achieve. For example, as China has moved up the technological ladder, many Chinese companies have begun to complain about intellectual theft by their domestic rivals. Thus, strengthening intellectual property protection has become a priority for Chinese officials. Along the same vein, China aspires to transform the RMB into a reserve currency. A country cannot have a reserve currency unless it also has an open capital account. Hence, financial market liberalization must be part of China’s long-term reform strategy. These mutual interests between the US and China could provide the basis for a trade truce. The Changing Nature Of Chinese Stimulus Chart 8China: Credit Growth Is Only A Few Percentage Points Above Nominal GDP Growth
China: Credit Growth Is Only A Few Percentage Points Above Nominal GDP Growth
China: Credit Growth Is Only A Few Percentage Points Above Nominal GDP Growth
If a détente in the trade war is reached, will this prompt China to go back to its deleveraging campaign? We do not think so. For one thing, there can be no assurance that a trade truce will last. Thus, China will want to maintain enough stimulus as an insurance policy. In addition, credit growth is currently running only a few percentage points above nominal GDP growth (Chart 8). With the ratio of credit-to-GDP barely rising, there is little need to bring credit growth down much from current levels. This does not mean that the Chinese authorities will allow credit growth to increase significantly further. Instead, the authorities will continue shifting the composition of credit growth from the riskier shadow banking sector to the safer formal banking sector, while increasingly leaning on fiscal policy to buttress growth. One of the developments that has gone largely unnoticed by investors this year is that China’s general government deficit has climbed from around 3% of GDP in mid-2018 to 6.5% of GDP at present (Chart 9). Some of this stimulus has been used to finance tax cuts for households. Some of it has also been used to finance infrastructure spending, which requires imports of raw materials and capital goods. As a result of this fiscal easing, the combined Chinese credit/fiscal impulse has risen to a two-year high. It leads global growth by about nine months (Chart 10). Chart 9China Has Been Stimulating, Fiscally
China Has Been Stimulating, Fiscally
China Has Been Stimulating, Fiscally
Chart 10Chinese Stimulus Should Boost Global Growth
Chinese Stimulus Should Boost Global Growth
Chinese Stimulus Should Boost Global Growth
Europe On The Upswing Chart 11Euro Area Growth: The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly
Euro Area Growth: The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly
Euro Area Growth: The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly
Chart 12German Economy: Some Green Shoots
German Economy: Some Green Shoots
German Economy: Some Green Shoots
The weakness in euro area growth this year has been concentrated in Germany and Italy. France and Spain have actually grown at a trend-like pace (Chart 11). Germany should benefit from stronger global growth and a recovery in automobile production next year. The recent rebound in the German PMI, as well as improvements in the expectations components of the IFO, ZEW, and Sentix surveys are all encouraging in this regard (Chart 12). Italy should also gain from an easing in financial conditions and receding political risks (Chart 13). The Italian 10-year government bond yield has fallen from a high of 3.69% in October 2018 to 1.23% at present. Chart 13Easing Financial Conditions And Less Political Uncertainty Will Help Italy
Easing Financial Conditions And Less Political Uncertainty Will Help Italy
Easing Financial Conditions And Less Political Uncertainty Will Help Italy
Chart 14Euro Area Fiscal Thrust
Euro Area Fiscal Thrust
Euro Area Fiscal Thrust
Fiscal policy across the euro area is also turning more stimulative. The fiscal thrust in the euro area rose to 0.4% of GDP this year mainly due to a somewhat larger budget deficit in France (Chart 14). The thrust should remain positive in 2020. Even in Germany, fiscal policy should loosen. Faster wage growth in Germany is eroding competitiveness relative to the rest of the euro area (Chart 15). That could force German policymakers to ratchet up fiscal stimulus in order to support demand. Already, the Social Democrats are responding to poor electoral performance by adopting a more proactive fiscal policy, hoping to stop the loss of votes to the big spending Greens. Chart 15Germany: Faster Wage Growth Eroding Competitiveness Relative To The Rest Of The Euro Area
Germany: Faster Wage Growth Eroding Competitiveness Relative To The Rest Of The Euro Area
Germany: Faster Wage Growth Eroding Competitiveness Relative To The Rest Of The Euro Area
Chart 16Boris Johnson Won't Pursue A No-Deal Brexit
Boris Johnson Won't Pursue A No-Deal Brexit
Boris Johnson Won't Pursue A No-Deal Brexit
The UK economy should start to recover next year as Brexit uncertainty fades and fiscal policy turns more stimulative. Exit polls suggest that the Conservatives will command a majority government following today's election. There is not enough appetite within the Conservative party for a no-deal Brexit (Chart 16). As such, today's victory will allow Prime Minister Boris Johnson to push his proposed deal through Parliament. It will also allow him to fulfill his pledge to pass a budget that boosts spending. Japan: Own Goal Japan has been hard hit by the global growth slowdown, given its close ties to its Asian neighbors, namely China. Add on a completely unnecessary consumption tax hike, and it is no wonder the economy has been faltering. Despite widespread weakness, there have been some very preliminary signs of improvement of late: The manufacturing PMI ticked up in November, while the services PMI rose back above 50. Consumer confidence also moved up to the highest level since June. Furthermore, Prime Minister Abe announced a multi-year fiscal package worth approximately 26 trillion yen. The headline number grossly overstates the size of the stimulus because it includes previously announced measures as well as items such as land acquisition costs that will not directly benefit GDP. Nevertheless, the package should still boost growth by about 0.5% next year, offsetting part of the drag from higher consumption taxes. US: Chugging Along Despite the slowdown in global growth, a stronger dollar, and the trade war, US real final demand is on track to grow by 2.5% this year (Chart 17). This is above the pace of potential GDP growth of 1.7%-to-2%. Chart 17Underlying US Growth Remains Above Trend
Strategy Outlook – 2020 Key Views: Full Speed Ahead
Strategy Outlook – 2020 Key Views: Full Speed Ahead
The Fed’s 75 basis points of rate cuts has moved monetary policy even further into accommodative territory. Not surprisingly, residential housing – the most interest rate-sensitive part of the economy – has responded favorably (Chart 18). While the tailwind from lower mortgage rates will dissipate by next summer, we do not anticipate much weakness in the housing market. This is because the inventory levels and vacancy rates remain near record-low levels (Chart 19). The shortage of homes should buttress both construction and prices. Chart 18US Housing: On Solid Ground (I)
US Housing: On Solid Ground (I)
US Housing: On Solid Ground (I)
Chart 19US Housing: On Solid Ground (II)
US Housing: On Solid Ground (II)
US Housing: On Solid Ground (II)
Strong labor and housing markets will support consumer spending, which represents nearly 70% of the economy. Business capital spending should also benefit from lower rates, receding trade tensions, and rising wages which are making firms increasingly eager to automate. II. Financial Markets Global Asset Allocation We argued in the section above that global growth should rebound next year thanks to easier financial conditions, an upturn in the global manufacturing cycle, a detente in the trade war, and modest Chinese stimulus. Chart 20 shows that stocks usually outperform bonds when global growth is accelerating. This occurs partly because corporate earnings tend to rise when growth picks up. BCA’s US equity strategy team expects S&P 500 EPS to increase by 5% next year if global growth merely stabilizes. An acceleration in global growth would surely lead to even stronger earnings growth. On the flipside, investors also tend to price out rate cuts (or price in rate hikes) when growth is on the upswing, resulting in lower bond prices (Chart 21). Chart 20Stocks Usually Outperform Bonds When Global Growth Is Accelerating
Stocks Usually Outperform Bonds When Global Growth Is Accelerating
Stocks Usually Outperform Bonds When Global Growth Is Accelerating
Chart 21Improving Global Growth Boosts Earnings Growth...And Expectations Of Rate Hikes
Improving Global Growth Boosts Earnings Growth...And Expectations Of Rate Hikes
Improving Global Growth Boosts Earnings Growth...And Expectations Of Rate Hikes
Relative valuations also favor stocks over bonds. Despite the stock market rally this year, the MSCI All-Country World Index currently trades at a reasonable 15.8-times forward earnings. This is below the forward PE ratio of 16.7 reached in January 2018 and even below the forward PE ratio of 16.4 hit in May 2015. Analysts expect global EPS to increase by 10% next year, below the historic 12-month expectation of 15% (Chart 22). In contrast to most years when analyst forecasts prove to be wildly overoptimistic, the current EPS forecast is likely to be met. Chart 22Analyst Expectations Are Not Wildly Optimistic
Analyst Expectations Are Not Wildly Optimistic
Analyst Expectations Are Not Wildly Optimistic
Chart 23Equity Risk Premium Remains Quite Elevated
Equity Risk Premium Remains Quite Elevated
Equity Risk Premium Remains Quite Elevated
If one inverts the PE ratio, one can calculate an earnings yield for global equities of 6.3%. One can then calculate the implied equity risk premium (ERP) by subtracting the real long-term bond yield from the earnings yield. As Chart 23 illustrates, the ERP remains quite elevated by historic standards. Some observers might protest that the ERP is elevated mainly because bond yields are so low. If low bond yields are discounting very poor economic growth prospects, perhaps today’s PE ratio should be lower than it actually is? The problem with this argument is that growth prospects are not so bad. The IMF estimates that global growth will be slightly above its post-1980 average over the next five years (Chart 24). While trend growth is falling in both developed and emerging economies, the rising share of faster-growing emerging markets in global GDP is helping to prop up overall growth. Chart 24The Trend In Global Growth Has Remained Steady Thanks To Faster-Growing EM
The Trend In Global Growth Has Remained Steady Thanks To Faster-Growing EM
The Trend In Global Growth Has Remained Steady Thanks To Faster-Growing EM
Sector And Regional Equity Allocation US stocks have outperformed their overseas peers by 10% year-to-date and by 137% since 2008. About half of the outperformance of US equities since the Great Recession was due to faster sales-per-share growth, a third was due to stronger margin growth, and the rest was due to relative PE expansion (Chart 25). Chart 25Faster Sales Growth, Rising Margins, And Relative PE Expansion Helped Drive US Outperformance Over The Past Decade
Strategy Outlook – 2020 Key Views: Full Speed Ahead
Strategy Outlook – 2020 Key Views: Full Speed Ahead
It is worth noting that the outperformance of US stocks is a fairly recent phenomenon. Between 1970 and 2008, European equity prices and EPS actually rose slightly faster than in the US (Chart 26). EM stocks also outperformed the US in the decade leading up to the Global Financial Crisis. Chart 26US Earnings Have Not Always Outpaced Their Peers
US Earnings Have Not Always Outpaced Their Peers
US Earnings Have Not Always Outpaced Their Peers
We expect US stocks to rise in 2020 by about 5%-to-10%, but to lag their foreign peers in common-currency terms. There are four reasons for this: Sector skews favor non-US equities. Cyclical stocks tend to outperform defensives when global growth is strengthening and the US dollar is weakening (Chart 27). Cyclical sectors are overrepresented outside the US. We would include financials in our definition of cyclicals. Faster global growth next year will lift long-term bond yields. Since central banks are unlikely to raise rates, yield curves will steepen. Steeper yield curves will boost net interest margins, thus helping bank shares (Chart 28). European banks are more dependent on the spread between lending and borrowing rates than US banks, since the latter derive more of their profits from fees. Non-US stocks are quite a bit cheaper than their US peers. The forward PE for US equities currently stands at 18.1, well above the forward PE of 13.6 for non-US equities. Other valuation measures reveal an even bigger premium on US stocks (Chart 29). Differences in sector weights account for about a quarter of the valuation gap between the US and the rest of the world. The rest of the gap is due to cheaper valuations within sectors. Financials, for example, are notably less expensive in the rest of the world, particularly in Europe (Chart 30). The valuation gap between the US and the rest of the world is even starker if we compare earnings yields with bond yields. Since bond yields are lower outside the US, the implied equity risk premium is significantly higher for non-US stocks. Profit margins have less scope to rise in the US than in the rest of the world. According to MSCI data, net operating margins currently stand at 10.3% in the US compared to 7.9% abroad. Unlike in the US, margins in Europe and EM are still well below their pre-recession peaks (Chart 31). While US margins are unlikely to fall next year thanks to stronger global growth, rising wage growth will negatively impact profits in some labor-intensive industries. Labor slack is generally greater abroad, which should limit cost pressures. Uncertainty over the US election is likely to limit the gains to US equities. All of the Democratic frontrunners have pledged to roll back the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act to one degree or another. A full repeal of the Act would reduce S&P 500 EPS by about 10%. While such a dramatic move is far from guaranteed – for starters, it would require that the Democrats gain control of both the White House and the Senate – it does pose a risk to investors. The same goes for increased regulatory actions, which Senators Sanders and Warren have both vocally championed. Chart 27Cyclicals Do Well Versus Defensives When Global Growth Is Strengthening And The US Dollar Is Weakening
Cyclicals Do Well Versus Defensives When Global Growth Is Strengthening And The US Dollar Is Weakening
Cyclicals Do Well Versus Defensives When Global Growth Is Strengthening And The US Dollar Is Weakening
Chart 28Steeper Yield Curves Help Financials
Steeper Yield Curves Help Financials
Steeper Yield Curves Help Financials
Chart 29US Equities Are More Expensive Than Stocks Abroad
US Equities Are More Expensive Than Stocks Abroad
US Equities Are More Expensive Than Stocks Abroad
Chart 30European Financials Trade At A Substantial Discount To Their US Peers
European Financials Trade At A Substantial Discount To Their US Peers
European Financials Trade At A Substantial Discount To Their US Peers
Chart 31Profit Margins Have Less Scope To Rise In The US Than In The Rest Of The World
Profit Margins Have Less Scope To Rise In The US Than In The Rest Of The World
Profit Margins Have Less Scope To Rise In The US Than In The Rest Of The World
Within the non-US universe, euro area stocks have the most upside potential. In contrast, we see less scope for Japanese stocks to outperform the global benchmark because of uncertainties over the impact of the consumption tax hike on domestic demand. In addition, a weaker trade-weighted yen next year will annul the currency translation gains that unhedged equity investors can expect to receive from other non-US stock markets. Lastly, the passage of a new investment law that requires investors wishing to “influence management” to receive prior government approval could cast a pall over recent efforts to improve corporate governance in Japan. Fixed Income Chart 32Inflation Excluding Shelter Has Been Muted
Inflation Excluding Shelter Has Been Muted
Inflation Excluding Shelter Has Been Muted
Chart 33Long-Term Bond Yields Will Move Higher As Faster Growth Pushes Up Estimates Of The Neutral Rate
Long-Term Bond Yields Will Move Higher As Faster Growth Pushes Up Estimates Of The Neutral Rate
Long-Term Bond Yields Will Move Higher As Faster Growth Pushes Up Estimates Of The Neutral Rate
Central banks will remain on the sidelines next year. Inflation is still running well below target in most economies. Even in the US, where slack has largely been absorbed and wage growth has risen, core inflation excluding housing has averaged only 1.2% over the past five years (Chart 32). Nevertheless, long-term bond yields will still move higher next year as investors revise up their estimate of the neutral rate in response to faster growth (Chart 33). On a regional basis, BCA’s fixed-income experts favor low-beta bond markets (Chart 34). Japanese bonds have a very low beta to the overall Barclays Global Treasury index because inflation expectations are quite depressed and the Bank of Japan will actively intervene to prevent yields from rising. On a USD currency-hedged basis, the Japanese 10-year yield stands at a relatively decent 2.38%, above the yield of 1.79% on comparable maturity US Treasurys (Table 1). Chart 34Favor Lower-Beta Government Bond Markets In 2020
Favor Lower-Beta Government Bond Markets In 2020
Favor Lower-Beta Government Bond Markets In 2020
Table 1Bond Markets Across The Developed World
Strategy Outlook – 2020 Key Views: Full Speed Ahead
Strategy Outlook – 2020 Key Views: Full Speed Ahead
In contrast to Japan, the beta of US Treasurys to the overall global bond index is relatively high, implying that Treasurys will underperform other sovereign bond markets in a rising yield environment. The beta for Germany, UK, Australia, and Canada lie somewhere between Japan and the US. Consistent with our bullish view on global equities, we expect corporate bonds to outperform sovereign debt in 2020 (Chart 35). Despite the weakness in manufacturing, US banks further eased terms on commercial and industrial loans in Q3, according to the Fed’s Senior Loan Officer Survey. Chart 35Stronger Growth Causes Corporate Spreads To Tighten
Stronger Growth Causes Corporate Spreads To Tighten
Stronger Growth Causes Corporate Spreads To Tighten
At the US economy-wide level, neither interest coverage nor debt-to-asset ratios are particularly stretched (Chart 36). Admittedly, the picture looks less flattering if we focus solely on high-yield issuers (Chart 37). That said, a wave of defaults is very unlikely to occur in 2020, so long as the Fed is on hold and economic growth is on the upswing. Chart 36Corporate Debt: A Benign Top-Down View
Corporate Debt: A Benign Top-Down View
Corporate Debt: A Benign Top-Down View
Chart 37Corporate Debt: More Concerning Picture Among High-Yield Issuers
Corporate Debt: More Concerning Picture Among High-Yield Issuers
Corporate Debt: More Concerning Picture Among High-Yield Issuers
Chart 38US Corporates: Focus On High-Yield Credit
HY Spread Targets US Corporates: Focus On High-Yield Credit
HY Spread Targets US Corporates: Focus On High-Yield Credit
Moreover, despite narrowing this year, high-yield spreads still remain above our fixed-income team’s estimate of fair value (Chart 38). They recommend moving down the credit curve and increasing the weight in Caa-rated bonds. These have underperformed this year largely because of technical factors such as their large exposure to the energy sector and relatively short duration. As oil prices rise next year, energy sector issuers will feel some relief. Moreover, unlike this year, rising long-term government bond yields in 2020 should also make shorter-duration credit more attractive. In contrast to high-yield spreads, investment-grade spreads have gotten quite tight. Investors seeking high-quality bond exposure should shift towards Agency MBS, which still carry an attractive spread relative to Aa- and A-rated corporate bonds. European IG bonds should also outperform their US peers thanks to faster growth in Europe next year and ongoing support from the ECB’s asset purchase program. Looking beyond the next 12-to-18 months, there is a strong chance that inflation will increase materially from current levels. The unemployment rate across the G7 has fallen to a multi-decade low, while the share of developed economies reaching full employment has hit a new cycle high (Chart 39). Chart 39ADeveloped Markets: Unemployment Rates Keep Trending Lower... And Full Employment Reaching New Cycle Highs
Developed Markets: Unemployment Rates Keep Trending Lower... And Full Employment Reaching New Cycle Highs
Developed Markets: Unemployment Rates Keep Trending Lower... And Full Employment Reaching New Cycle Highs
Chart 39BDeveloped Markets: Unemployment Rates Keep Trending Lower... And Full Employment Reaching New Cycle Highs
Developed Markets: Unemployment Rates Keep Trending Lower... And Full Employment Reaching New Cycle Highs
Developed Markets: Unemployment Rates Keep Trending Lower... And Full Employment Reaching New Cycle Highs
Chart 40The Phillips Curve Is Alive And Well
The Phillips Curve Is Alive And Well
The Phillips Curve Is Alive And Well
For all the talk about how the Phillips curve is dead, wage growth remains well correlated with labor market slack (Chart 40). Rising wages will boost real disposable incomes, leading to more spending. If economies cannot increase supply to meet higher demand, prices will rise. It simply does not make sense to argue that the price of apples will increase if the demand for apples exceeds the supply of apples, but that overall prices will not increase if the demand for all goods and services exceeds the supply of all goods and services. It will take at least until mid-2021 for inflation to rise above the Fed’s comfort zone. It will take even longer for rates to reach restrictive territory, and longer still for tighter monetary policy to make its way through the economy. However, at some point in 2022, the interest-rate sensitive sectors of the US economy will buckle, setting off a global economic downturn and a deep bear market in equities and credit. Enjoy it while it lasts. Currencies And Commodities The US dollar is a countercyclical currency, meaning that it usually moves in the opposite direction of the global business cycle (Chart 41). This countercyclicality stems from the fact that the US, with its large service sector and relatively small manufacturing base, is a “low beta economy.” Strong global growth does help the US, but it benefits the rest of the world even more. Thus, capital tends to flow out of the US when global growth strengthens, which puts downward pressure on the dollar. As global growth picks up in 2020, the dollar will weaken. EUR/USD should increase to around 1.15 by end-2020. GBP/USD will rise to 1.40. USD/CNY will move to 6.8. The Australian and Canadian dollars, along with most EM currencies, will strengthen as well. However, the Japanese yen and Swiss franc are likely to be flat-to-down against the dollar, reflecting the defensive nature of both currencies. Today's rally in the pound has raised the return on our short EUR/GBP trade to 10.5%. For now, we would stick with this position. Chart 42 shows that the pound should be trading near 1.30 against the euro based on real interest rate differentials, which is still well above the current level of 1.20. Chart 41The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
Chart 42Interest Rate Differentials Suggest More Upside For The Pound
Interest Rate Differentials Suggest More Upside For The Pound
Interest Rate Differentials Suggest More Upside For The Pound
The trade-weighted dollar will continue to depreciate until late-2021, and then begin to strengthen again as the Fed turns more hawkish and global growth starts to falter. Commodity prices tend to closely track the global growth/dollar cycle (Chart 43). Industrial metal prices will fare well next year. Oil prices will also move up. Globally, the last of the big projects sanctioned prior to the oil-price collapse in late 2014 are coming online in Norway, Brazil, Guyana, and the US Gulf. Our commodity strategists expect incremental oil supply growth to slow in 2020, just as demand reaccelerates. Gold is likely to be range-bound for most of next year reflecting the crosswinds from a weaker dollar on the one hand (bullish for bullion), and receding trade war risks and rising bond yields on the other hand. Gold will have its day in the sun starting in 2021 when inflation finally breaks out. Our key market charts are shown on the following page. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Chart 43Dollar Weakness Is A Boon For Commodities
Dollar Weakness Is A Boon For Commodities
Dollar Weakness Is A Boon For Commodities
Key Financial Market Forecasts
Strategy Outlook – 2020 Key Views: Full Speed Ahead
Strategy Outlook – 2020 Key Views: Full Speed Ahead
MacroQuant Model And Current Subjective Scores
Strategy Outlook – 2020 Key Views: Full Speed Ahead
Strategy Outlook – 2020 Key Views: Full Speed Ahead
Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades