Cyclicals vs Defensives
In mid-October we penned a Special Report identifying the top five reasons to favor cyclicals over defensives: capital expenditures upcycle, synchronized global growth in general and emerging markets (EM) growth in particular, U.S. dollar softness, risk premia suppression and diverging operating metrics.1 On the EM front in particular, China's recent inflationary impulse suggests that the path of least resistance remains higher for cyclicals versus defensives (top panel). Moreover, the bottom panel of the chart shows that over the past three decades when Chinese nominal GDP outpaces the U.S., EM stocks outperform the SPX and vice versa. In other words when China is firing on all cylinders commodity demand picks up steam and thus the most cyclical parts of the U.S. stock market outperform safe havens. Keep in mind that most cyclical sectors are levered to commodity prices, have high operating leverage and a sizable export exposure. One key risk that will put our cyclicals over defensives preference offside is a policy mistake from Chinese policymakers similar to the August 11, 2015 currency devaluation. However, this is a low probability event. Bottom Line: We reiterate out cyclical over defensive portfolio bent. 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy, "Top 5 Reasons To Favor Cyclicals Over Defensives," dated October 16, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
What Is The EM Signal For Cyclicals Versus Defensives?
What Is The EM Signal For Cyclicals Versus Defensives?
Highlights Economic Outlook: Global growth will stay strong over the next 12 months, with the U.S. surprising on the upside. Unfortunately, the global economy will succumb to a recession in 2019. Stagflation will become a major problem in the 2020s. Portfolio Strategy: We are sticking with our pro-risk stance for the time being, but are trimming our overweight recommendations to global equities and high-yield credit. Fixed Income: Maintain below benchmark duration exposure over the next 12 months. Underweight U.S., euro area, and Canadian government bonds; stay neutral the U.K., Australia, and New Zealand; overweight Japan. Equities: Favor cyclicals over defensives, but look to turn outright bearish on stocks late next year. For now, stay overweight the euro area and Japan relative to the U.S. in local-currency terms. In the EM universe, Chinese H-shares will outperform. Currencies and Commodities: While the recent dollar rebound has further to run, oil-sensitive currencies and the yuan will hold their ground against the greenback. It is too early to buy gold. Feature I. Global Macro Outlook: Reflation, Recession, And Stagflation The economic outlook over the coming years can be summarized in three words: reflation, recession, and stagflation. Reflation A Broad-Based Recovery Global growth is firing on all cylinders. The OECD estimates that all 46 of the economies that it tracks will see positive growth this year, the first time this has happened since 2007. Most leading economic indicators remain upbeat (Chart 1). This has left analysts scrambling to revise up their global GDP growth forecasts (Chart 2). Chart 1Most Leading Economic Indicators Remain Upbeat
Most Leading Economic Indicators Remain Upbeat
Most Leading Economic Indicators Remain Upbeat
Chart 2Global Growth Has Accelerated
Global Growth Has Accelerated
Global Growth Has Accelerated
The acceleration in global growth has occurred against the backdrop of tame inflation, which has allowed most central banks to keep interest rates at exceptionally low levels. Not surprisingly, risk assets have reacted positively. These goldilocks conditions should remain in place for the next 12 months. While most economies are growing at an above-trend pace, there is still plenty of spare capacity around the world. This means that inflation in countries such as the U.S. - where the labor market has returned to full employment - is likely to rise only gradually, as excess demand is satiated through higher imports. Such a redistribution of demand from countries with low levels of spare capacity to those with high levels is a win-win outcome for the global economy. Recession Running Out Of Room Unfortunately, all good things must come to an end. Weak productivity growth across most of the world is likely to cause bottlenecks to emerge over time, and this will cause inflation to move higher (Chart 3). Output gaps in the main developed economies would actually be higher today than at the height of the Great Recession had potential GDP grown at the rate the IMF projected back in 2008 (Chart 4). This is a testament to just how exceptionally weak potential growth has been. Chart 3Productivity Growth Has Slowed Across The Globe
Productivity Growth Has Slowed Across The Globe
Productivity Growth Has Slowed Across The Globe
Chart 4Weak Supply Growth Has Narrowed Output Gaps
Weak Supply Growth Has Narrowed Output Gaps
Weak Supply Growth Has Narrowed Output Gaps
U.S. growth will surprise to the upside over the next 12 months, leading to an unwelcome burst of inflation in late 2018 or early 2019. Financial conditions have eased sharply this year thanks to lower bond yields, narrower credit spreads, a weaker dollar, and a surging stock market. Changes in financial conditions lead growth by around 6-to-9 months, implying that U.S. growth could reach 3% early next year (Chart 5). This could take the unemployment rate down to 3.5% by end-2018, more than a full point below the Fed's estimate of full employment and even lower than the 2008 low of 3.8%. The unemployment rate could fall even further if Congress succeeds in passing legislation to cut taxes, as we expect it will. Our geopolitical team estimates that the GOP proposal would reduce federal revenues by $1.1-to-$1.2 trillion over ten years, or about 0.5% of GDP.1 In order to appease moderates, the final bill is likely to scale back the size of the tax cuts and shift more of the benefits to middle class households. Under the current proposal, the top 1% of taxpayers would receive 50% of the tax benefits (Chart 6). Our best bet is that the legislation will be enshrined into law in early 2018. Chart 5Easier Financial Conditions Will Boost U.S. Growth
Easier Financial Conditions Will Boost U.S. Growth
Easier Financial Conditions Will Boost U.S. Growth
Chart 6Republican Tax Would Disproportionately Benefit The Top 1%
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Welcome To The Steep Side Of The Phillips Curve The so-called Phillips curve, which depicts the relationship between unemployment and inflation, tends to become quite steep once unemployment falls to very low levels (Chart 7). It is easy to see why: When spare capacity is high, a modest decline in slack will still leave many workers idle. In such a setting, inflation is unlikely to rise. However, once the output gap is fully closed, any further decline in slack will cause bottlenecks to emerge, pushing wages and prices higher. The 1960s provide a useful lesson in that regard. Just like today, inflation hovered below 2% during the first half of that decade, even though unemployment was trending downward over this period. To most observers back then, the Phillips curve would have also seemed defunct. However, once the unemployment rate fell below 4%, core inflation took off, rising from 1.5% in early 1966 to nearly 4% in 1967 (Chart 8). The kink in the Phillips curve had been reached. Inflation ultimately made its way to 6% in 1970, four years before the first oil shock struck. Chart 7U.S. Economy Has Moved Into The 'Steep' Side Of The Phillips Curve
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Chart 8Inflation In The 1960s Took Off Once The Unemployment Rate Fell Below 4%
Inflation In The 1960s Took Off Once The Unemployment Rate Fell Below 4%
Inflation In The 1960s Took Off Once The Unemployment Rate Fell Below 4%
Many commentators have questioned the relevance of the sixties template on the grounds that the U.S. economy was less open to the rest of the world back then, trade unions had greater bargaining power, inflation expectations were not as well anchored, and the deflationary effects of new technologies were not as pervasive. We discussed these arguments in a report published earlier this month, concluding that they are not nearly as persuasive as one might think.2 The Difficulty Of Achieving A Soft Landing Rising inflation will compel the Fed to hike rates aggressively starting late next year in order to push the unemployment rate back towards NAIRU. A turn towards hawkishness is especially likely if Janet Yellen is replaced by someone such as former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh, whom betting markets now think has a 40% chance of becoming the next Fed chair (Chart 9). The problem for whoever ends up running the Fed is that it is very difficult to raise the unemployment rate by just a little bit. Modern economies are subject to massive feedback loops. When unemployment begins rising, households lose confidence and reduce spending. This prompts firms to slow hiring, leading to even less spending. The U.S. has never averted a recession in the post-war era whenever the unemployment rate has increased by more than one-third of a percentage point (Chart 10). Chart 9Who Will The Next Fed Chair Be?
Who Will The Next Fed Chair Be?
Who Will The Next Fed Chair Be?
Chart 10Even A Small Uptick In The Unemployment Rate Is Bad News For The Business Cycle
Even A Small Uptick In The Unemployment Rate Is Bad News For The Business Cycle
Even A Small Uptick In The Unemployment Rate Is Bad News For The Business Cycle
Lofty valuations are likely to exacerbate the adverse feedback loop described above during the next downturn. As growth slows, risk asset prices will tumble. This will cause business investment spending to dry up. Given America's dominant role in global financial markets, the U.S. recession will spread like wildfire to the rest of the world. Stagflation The Doves Reassert Control The next recession will probably be more painful for Wall Street than for Main Street. Fed-induced downturns tend to be swift but short-lived. The subsequent recoveries are usually V-shaped, rather than the elongated U-shaped recoveries that follow financial crises. Nevertheless, central banks around the world will undoubtedly start slashing rates again, perhaps even restarting their QE programs. Traumatized by the Great Recession, central bankers will overreact. The hawks will be blamed for the recession and forced to turn tail. The doves will reassert control. Fiscal policy will be significantly eased. This will be particularly the case if the next recession coincides with Trump's re-election campaign, brewing populism in Europe, and the spectre of military conflict in a variety of hotspots around the planet. Structural Forces Will Boost Inflation Meanwhile, millions of baby boomers will be in the process of leaving the workforce. This will lead to slower income growth, but not to slower spending growth - spending actually rises late in life due to spiraling health care costs (Chart 11). An increase in spending relative to income tends to push up prices. A recent IMF research report estimated that population aging has been highly deflationary over the past few decades, but will be very inflationary over the coming years (Chart 12). Chart 11Savings Over The Life Cycle
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Chart 12Demographic Shifts: From Highly Deflationary To Highly Inflationary
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
All this suggests that the dip in inflation during the next recession will be fleeting. As the recovery from the shallow recession unfolds, inflation will reaccelerate. Of course, at that point, central banks could step in to aggressively quell inflationary pressures. However, they are unlikely to do so. After the next recession-induced burst of fiscal stimulus, debt levels will be even higher than they are now. The temptation to inflate away this debt will intensify. And, in an environment of anemic real potential GDP growth, the means to generate inflation will become available: Central banks will simply need to keep rates below their "neutral" level. Central bankers will rationalize their actions on the grounds that higher inflation will allow them to bring real interest rates deeper into negative territory in the event of another economic downturn. A growing chorus of eminent economists has begun to argue that a 2% inflation target is too low. For example, just this week, Larry Summers stated that "I think we probably need to adjust our monetary policy framework ... to [one] that provides for higher nominal rates during normal times, so there's more room to cut rates during downturns."3 II. Financial Markets As with the economic outlook, the three words reflation, recession, and stagflation guide our views of where financial markets are heading over the coming years. We continue to maintain a pro-risk stance, but are trimming our overweight recommendation to equities and high-yield credit due to the fact that valuations have gotten stretched and we are entering the last innings of the business-cycle expansion (Table 1). Table 1BCA's Tactical Global Asset Allocation Recommendations*
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Equities Sticking With Bullish ... For Now Recessions and bear markets tend to go hand-in-hand (Chart 13). None of our recession timing indicators are warning of an imminent downturn, suggesting that the cyclical global equity bull market has further room to run (Chart 14). Chart 13Recessions And Bear Markets Usually Overlap
Recessions And Bear Markets Usually Overlap
Recessions And Bear Markets Usually Overlap
Chart 14AThis Business Cycle Has Further To Run
This Business Cycle Has Further To Run
This Business Cycle Has Further To Run
Chart 14BThis Business Cycle Has Further To Run
This Business Cycle Has Further To Run
This Business Cycle Has Further To Run
Strong growth in corporate earnings continues to underpin the rally in equities. The MSCI All-Country World index has increased by 11.9% in the first 9 months of the year, only slightly more than the 9.1% gain in earnings. As a result, the forward P/E ratio has only risen from 15.7 at the start of the year to 16.1 (Table 2). Table 2Earnings-Backed Price Appreciation
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Favor Cyclicals Over Defensives Above-trend global growth should boost profits over the next 12 months. We favor cyclical sectors over defensives, and are expressing this view through our long global industrial stocks/short utilities trade recommendation. The trade is up 0.9% since we initiated it last Friday and up 2.3% since I previewed it at BCA's annual New York Investment Conference earlier the same week. Capital spending tends to accelerate in the mature phase of business-cycle expansions, as a growing number of firms realize that they have insufficient capacity to meet rising demand. Our model predicts that global capex will grow at the fastest pace in six years (Chart 15). This should benefit industrial stocks. On the flipside, rising global yields will hurt rate-sensitive utilities (Chart 16). Chart 15Global Capex On The Upswing
Global Capex On The Upswing
Global Capex On The Upswing
Chart 16Higher Bond Yields Will Hurt Utilities
Higher Bond Yields Will Hurt Utilities Higher Bond Yields Will Hurt Utilities
Higher Bond Yields Will Hurt Utilities Higher Bond Yields Will Hurt Utilities
Financials should also outperform. Banks, in particular, will benefit from steeper yield curves, faster credit growth, and ongoing declines in nonperforming loans. Energy stocks are also attractive. As discussed below, we continue to maintain a generally upbeat view on the direction of oil prices. Prefer DM Over EM, Europe And Japan Over The U.S. While it is a close call, we see more upside for DM than EM stocks, as the former are less vulnerable to a dollar rebound and an increasingly hawkish Fed. Emerging market equities have had a good run over the past year, and are due for a breather. Our favorite EM equity idea for the fourth quarter is to be long Chinese H-shares. H-shares are heavily tilted toward financials and deep cyclicals, two sectors that we like. They also trade at a mere seven-times forward earnings and one-times book value (Chart 17). Within the DM space, European and Japanese equities should outperform U.S. stocks in currency-hedged terms. The sector composition of both the European and Japanese market is tilted toward stocks that will gain the most from strong global growth and increased capital spending. As our European strategists have documented, the European stock market is dominated by large multinationals whose fortunes are tied more to the global economy than to domestic prospects. This is largely true for the Japanese stock market as well. If our prediction for a somewhat weaker euro and yen comes to pass, profits in both regions will benefit from the currency translation effect. Valuations in Europe and Japan are also generally more attractive than in the U.S, even if one adjusts for different sector weights (Chart 18). Chart 17Chinese H-Shares: A Valuation Snapshot
Chinese H-Shares: A Valuation Snapshot
Chinese H-Shares: A Valuation Snapshot
Chart 18U.S. Stocks Look Pricey
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Small Cap Value Trumps Large Cap Growth Style-wise, we prefer small cap value over large cap growth. Value stocks generally do better in environments where cyclicals are outperforming defensives, while small caps tend to be high-beta bets on global growth (Chart 19). U.S. small caps will disproportionately benefit from cuts to statutory corporate taxes, since smaller companies typically have less ability to game the tax code in their favor. Timing The Next Bear Market As one looks beyond the next 12 months, the skies begin to darken for global equities. The stock market usually sniffs out recessions before they happen, but the lead time is quite variable and generally not that long (Table 3). For example, the S&P 500 peaked only two months before the start of the Great Recession in December 2007. Chart 19Favor Cyclicals And Value Plays
Favor Cyclicals And Value Plays
Favor Cyclicals And Value Plays
Table 3Stocks And Recessions: Case-By-Case
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Chart 20Stagflation Was Devastating For Stocks Stagflation Is Not A Stock-Friendly Environment
Stagflation Was Devastating For Stocks Stagflation Is Not A Stock-Friendly Environment
Stagflation Was Devastating For Stocks Stagflation Is Not A Stock-Friendly Environment
If the next recession begins in the second half of 2019, global equities will probably peak earlier that year or in late 2018. Given the starting point for valuations, U.S. equities are likely to fall 20%-to-30% peak-to-trough. While other global bourses are generally not as expensive, their higher-beta nature means that they will probably face similar if not worse declines. The fact that correlations tend to rise during risk-off episodes will only add to the bloodshed. Stocks And Stagflation If the experience of the 1970s is any guide, equities perform poorly in stagflationary environments (Chart 20). Investors tend to see stocks as a riskier substitute for bonds. When nominal bond yields rise, the dividend yield offered by stocks becomes less attractive. In theory, the increase in the nominal value of corporate net worth resulting from higher inflation should generate enough capital gains over time to compensate for the wider gap between dividend yields and bond yields. In practice, due to "money illusion" and other considerations, that does not fully occur, requiring that stocks become cheaper so that their expected return can rise. The Long-Term Outlook For Profit Margins A complicating factor going into the next decade will be what happens to profit margins. S&P 500 operating margins are close to their all-time highs (Chart 21). While margins will undoubtedly fall during the next recession, their subsequent recovery is likely to be encumbered by a number of shifting structural forces. A slew of labor-saving technological innovations depressed labor's share of income over the past few decades. So did the entry of over one billion new workers into the global labor force following the collapse of the Berlin Wall and China's transition to a capitalist economy. The fixation of central banks on bringing down inflation may have led to higher unemployment than what would otherwise have been the case, thereby undermining the bargaining power of workers. All this may change during the next decade. China's labor force has peaked and is on track to decline by over 400 million workers by the end of the century - a larger decline than the entire U.S. population (Chart 22). A shift towards persistently more expansionary monetary policy could also keep the labor market fairly tight. Chart 21U.S. Profit Margins Are Close To All-Time Highs
U.S. Profit Margins Are Close To All-Time Highs
U.S. Profit Margins Are Close To All-Time Highs
Chart 22China On Course To Lose More Than 400 Million Workers
China On Course To Lose More Than 400 Million Workers
China On Course To Lose More Than 400 Million Workers
Technological innovation will persist, but the firms that benefit from it are likely to attract more scrutiny from regulators. Republican voters - the traditional defenders of corporate America's God-given right to make a buck - are growing increasingly wary of big business. Wall Street, Silicon Valley, and the rest of the corporate establishment tend to be liberal on social issues and conservative on economic ones. Very few voters actually share this configuration of views (Chart 23). The Democratic Party's "Better Deal" moves it to the left on many economic issues. This runs the risk of leaving the U.S. without any major party actively pushing a pro-business agenda. That can't be good for profit margins. Bottom Line: Investors should stay overweight global equities, but trim exposure from moderate overweight to small overweight due to rising business-cycle risk, and look to get outright bearish late next year. The long-term outlook for equities is poor, especially in the U.S. where valuations are highly stretched. Chart 24 presents a stylized sketch of how we think the major stock market indices will evolve over the coming years. Chart 23An Absence Of Libertarians
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Chart 24Market Outlook: Equities
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Fixed Income Above-trend GDP growth and rising inflation are likely to push up long-term bond yields in most economies over the next few quarters, as flagged by our Central Bank Monitors (Chart 25). Bond yields will fall during the next recession and then begin to inexorably rise higher as stagflationary forces intensify (Chart 26). Looking out over the next 12 months, our regional allocation recommendations are as follows: Chart 25Our Central Bank Monitors Point To Growing Pressures To Tighten
Our Central Bank Monitors Point To Growing Pressures To Tighten
Our Central Bank Monitors Point To Growing Pressures To Tighten
Chart 26Market Outlook: Bonds
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Underweight The U.S., Euro Area, And Canada Chart 27Canada Enjoys Robust Growth
Canada Enjoys Robust Growth
Canada Enjoys Robust Growth
We remain underweight U.S. Treasurys in a global fixed-income portfolio. The market is pricing in only 44 basis points in Fed hikes between now and the end of next year, well below the 100 basis points of hikes implied by the dots in the Summary of Economic Projections. The U.S. yield curve has flattened since the start of the year. This should change over the next 12 months, as inflation expectations rebound from currently depressed levels. The yield curve in the euro area should steepen more than in the U.S., since the ECB has pledged not to raise rates until well after its asset purchase program is complete - something that is unlikely to happen until the end of next year. This implies that the 2-year spread between the two regions will widen in favor of the U.S., which should be bullish for the dollar. Canadian bond yields are likely to rise further (Chart 27). The unemployment rate has fallen to a nine-year low and the Bank of Canada expects the output gap to be fully closed by the end of this year. The economy grew by 3.7% year-over-year in the second quarter, well above the BoC's estimate of potential real GDP growth of 1.5%. The Bank's most recent Business Outlook Survey points to continued robust growth ahead. The bubbly housing market remains a concern, but delaying withdrawal of monetary accommodation risks exacerbating the problem. Neutral On Gilts And Aussie And Kiwi Bonds In contrast to most other developed economies, leading indicators point to slower U.K. growth in the months ahead (Chart 28). This undoubtedly reflects the ongoing uncertainty over Brexit negotiations, which are likely to drag on for quite some time. Core inflation has surged to 2.7% on the back of the sharp depreciation of the pound, but market expectations suggest that it is about to roll over. Nevertheless, with 10-year gilts fetching just 1.35%, the downside for yields is limited. The cheap pound should also prop up exports, partly offsetting the impact of diminished market access to the rest of the EU. The unemployment rate stands at 4.3%, slightly below the Bank of England's estimate of NAIRU. One way or another, the uncertainty over Brexit will fade, allowing gilt yields to move higher. As with gilts, the outlook for Australian and New Zealand bonds is mixed. Strong global growth should boost commodity prices. This will help the Australian economy. The unemployment rate in Australia has fallen to 5.6%, but involuntary part-time employment is high and wage growth has been stagnant. Industrial capacity utilization remains low, as reflected in a fairly large output gap (Chart 29). The market expects the RBA to deliver 38 basis points in rate hikes over the next 12 months. We think that's about right. New Zealand's 10-year yield stands at a relatively generous 2.96%, which makes it difficult to be too bearish on kiwi bonds. However, we do not see much scope for yields to fall from current levels. Nominal GDP is growing at over 5% and retail sales are expanding at nearly 7% (Chart 30). The terms of trade have risen to their highest level since the 1970s. The output gap is now fully closed and core inflation is edging higher. Despite this good news, the policy rate remains at a record low of 1.75%. We concur with market expectations that the RBNZ will start raising rates next year. Chart 28U.K. Growth Is Slowing
U.K. Growth Is Slowing
U.K. Growth Is Slowing
Chart 29There Is Still Slack In The Australian Economy
There Is Still Slack In The Australian Economy
There Is Still Slack In The Australian Economy
Chart 30New Zealand: Upbeat Indicators
New Zealand: Upbeat Indicators
New Zealand: Upbeat Indicators
Overweight JGBs CPI swaps predict that inflation in Japan will average only 0.5% over the next twenty years. As we argued last week, this is far too low.4 The secular drivers of deflation are fading and inflation will begin to surprise to the upside over the coming years (Chart 31). However, the path between here and there will be a choppy one. Considering that deflationary expectations remain deeply entrenched, the Bank of Japan is unlikely to abandon its yield curve targeting regime for at least the next few years. As government bond yields rise elsewhere in the world, 10-year JGBs will be the default winners. Investors thinking of going short Japanese government bonds should focus on 20-year or 30-year maturities, which are not subject to the BoJ's cap. Credit: Still Overweight, But Trimming Back Exposure High-yield credit spreads have fallen back near their post-recession lows after widening in the wake of the global manufacturing recession (Chart 32). We see little scope for further spread compression. Our U.S. Corporate Health Monitor remains in deteriorating territory (Chart 33), and higher Treasury yields will put downward pressure on corporate bond prices even if spreads remain constant. Nevertheless, the default-adjusted spread on U.S. high-yield debt of 212 basis points is still large enough to warrant a modest overweight to credit, especially since banks have started to loosen lending standards again. Chart 31Japan: Fading Deflationary Forces
Japan: Fading Deflationary Forces
Japan: Fading Deflationary Forces
Chart 32High-Yield Spreads Have Narrowed
High-Yield Spreads Have Narrowed
High-Yield Spreads Have Narrowed
Chart 33U.S. Corporate Health Continues To Deteriorate
U.S. Corporate Health Continues To Deteriorate
U.S. Corporate Health Continues To Deteriorate
Our Global Fixed Income Strategists prefer U.S. over European credit, given that spreads are lower in Europe, and the tapering of ECB asset purchases could reduce the demand for spread product. Currencies And Commodities The Dollar: Comeback Kid? Charts 34 and 35 show our expectations about the future path of the major currencies and commodities. Chart 34Market Outlook: Currencies
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Chart 35Market Outlook: Commodities
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear
BCA's Global Investment Strategy service went long the dollar in October 2014. We reiterated our bullish stance before the U.S. presidential elections, controversially arguing that "Trump Will Win And The Dollar Will Rally."5 Unfortunately, we remained long the dollar over the course of this year, which turned out to be a mistake. Strong growth abroad, weaker-than-expected inflation readings in the U.S., and the fizzling of the "Trump Trade" all contributed to dollar weakness. Technicals also played a role. Sentiment was extremely bullish towards the dollar at the start of the year, but extremely bearish towards the euro (Chart 36). The reversal of these technical trends helps explain why the euro appreciated a lot more than what one would have expected based simply on changes in interest rate differentials (Chart 37). Chart 36Euro: Long Positions Are Getting Stretched
Euro: Long Positions Are Getting Stretched
Euro: Long Positions Are Getting Stretched
Chart 37The Euro Has Overshot Interest Rate Spreads
The Euro Has Overshot Interest Rate Spreads
The Euro Has Overshot Interest Rate Spreads
Of course, if the spread between U.S. and euro area interest rates continues to narrow, it is likely that EUR/USD will strengthen. We are skeptical that it will. For one thing, financial conditions have eased sharply in the U.S. since the start of the year, but have tightened in the euro area (Chart 38). This suggests that U.S. growth will surprise on the upside whereas euro area growth could begin to disappoint. Chart 38U.S. Versus Euro Area Diverging Financial Conditions
U.S. Versus Euro Area Diverging Financial Conditions
U.S. Versus Euro Area Diverging Financial Conditions
The five-year, five-year forward OIS spread between the two regions stands at 87 basis points in nominal terms, and 25 basis points in real terms. The five-year forward spread is even lower if one calculates a GDP-weighted bond yield for the euro area rather than looking at the expected path of interbank rates. Such a small spread is inconsistent with the fact that the neutral rate is substantially higher in the U.S.6 We expect EUR/USD to fall to $1.15 by the end of 2017, and potentially decline further in 2018 as the Fed picks up the pace of rate hikes. The dollar is also likely to strengthen against the yen, as Treasury yields rise relative to JGB yields. We see less downside for the British pound and the Swedish krona against the greenback. This is reflected in our long GBP/EUR and long SEK/CHF trade recommendations, both of which remain in the black. Upside For Oil-Sensitive Currencies Our energy strategists still see further upside for crude oil prices, owing to favorable supply and demand conditions. They point to the fact that official forecasts by the EIA have consistently underestimated oil demand. They also note that compliance with OPEC 2.0 production cuts has been remarkably good, and that estimates of how much new shale output will hit the market over the next 12 months are too optimistic. Additionally, they believe that the decline in production from conventional oil fields around the world - especially offshore fields, where there has been a dearth of new investment in recent years - could be larger than expected.7 Geopolitical risks in Iraq, Libya, and Venezuela could also adversely affect supply. Firmer demand and lackluster supply will lead to further drawdowns in OECD oil inventories, which should be supportive of prices (Chart 39). We recently took profits of 13.8% on our recommendation to go long the December-2017 Brent oil futures contract, but are maintaining exposure to oil through our long CAD/EUR and RUB/EUR positions, as well as through our bias towards cyclical equities. Resilient Chinese Economy Should Support Metal Prices And The RMB Recent Chinese data have been on the soft side, giving rise to fears that the economy is heading towards a major slowdown. We are more optimistic. While growth has clearly slowed since the start of the year, it remains at an above-trend pace, as evidenced by numerous real-time measures of economic activity (Chart 40). Chart 39Falling Oil Inventories Should Lead To Higher Crude Prices
Falling Oil Inventories Should Lead To Higher Crude Prices
Falling Oil Inventories Should Lead To Higher Crude Prices
Chart 40Chinese Economy: No Need To Be Pessimistic
Chinese Economy: No Need To Be Pessimistic
Chinese Economy: No Need To Be Pessimistic
Even the housing market has managed to stay resilient, despite widespread predictions of imminent doom (Chart 41). The share of households planning to buy a new home remains close to all-time highs. The amount of land purchased by developers - a good leading indicator for housing starts - is accelerating. Reflecting these developments, property stocks are surging. Financial conditions have tightened, but so far this has largely bypassed the real economy. In fact, long-term bank lending to nonfinancial institutions has accelerated since the start of the year (Chart 42). The recently announced cuts to reserve requirements for small business loans should facilitate this trend. Chart 41Chinese Housing Market Remains Resilient
Chinese Housing Market Remains Resilient
Chinese Housing Market Remains Resilient
Chart 42Credit To Real Economy And Profit Rebound Bode Well For Capex
Credit To Real Economy And Profit Rebound Bode Well For Capex
Credit To Real Economy And Profit Rebound Bode Well For Capex
Meanwhile, industrial profits have rebounded, as rampant producer price deflation last year has given way to modest price gains this year. Increased retained earnings will give Chinese companies the wherewithal to spend more on capital equipment. A recovery in global trade should also help stoke export growth. (Chart 43). Despite strengthening this year, our indicators suggest the yuan is still in undervalued territory (Chart 44). Buoyant economic growth should alleviate capital flight and reduce the pressure on the authorities to engineer a further depreciation of the currency. This, in turn, should help support metal prices and other EM currencies, even in a setting where the dollar remains well bid. Chart 43Positive Global Trade Momentum: A Tailwind For Chinese Exports
Positive Global Trade Momentum: A Tailwind For Chinese Exports
Positive Global Trade Momentum: A Tailwind For Chinese Exports
Chart 44The Chinese Yuan Is Undervalued
The Chinese Yuan Is Undervalued
The Chinese Yuan Is Undervalued
Chart 45Gold: Waiting For Drivers Of Sustained Price Appreciation
Gold: Waiting For Drivers Of Sustained Price Appreciation
Gold: Waiting For Drivers Of Sustained Price Appreciation
Buy Gold ... But Not Yet Lastly, a few words on gold. Gold does well in situations where real rates are falling and the dollar is weakening (Chart 45). That's not the environment we find ourselves in today. Gold will have its day in the sun, but probably not before the stagflationary era begins in earnest after the next recession. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 This revenue loss is measured against a baseline where a number of tax breaks, which are currently set to expire, are extended. Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Is King Dollar Back?" dated October 4, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Is The Phillips Curve Dead Or Dormant?" dated September 22, 2017. 3 Summers, Lawrence, H. (@LHSummers). "Great piece by @jasonfurman in today's @WSJ: The U.S. can no longer afford deficit-increasing tax cuts." 01 Oct 2017. Tweet. 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Three Tantalizing Trades," dated September 29, 2017. 5 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "Three (New) Controversial Calls," dated September 30, 2016. 6 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Central Bank Showdown," dated September 8, 2017. 7 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy, "OPEC 2.0 Will Extend Cuts to June 2018," dated September 21, 2017. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights Recommendation Allocation
Quarterly - October 2017
Quarterly - October 2017
The global growth outlook remains strong, with corporate earnings likely to beat expectations for a couple more quarters. Inflation and Fed policy are key to asset allocation. We expect inflation to recover, which will push up interest rates and the dollar. But uncertainty is rising too: for example the composition of the FOMC next year, Chinese policy post the Party Congress, Geopolitics. We keep our pro-risk tilts, particularly overweights in euro area and Japanese equities, U.S. high-yield bonds, private equity, and cyclical sectors. But we reduce portfolio risk by bringing some allocations closer to benchmark, for example downgrading U.S. equities to neutral and reducing the underweight in EM. Feature Overview Growth Is Picking Up - But So Is Uncertainty The outlook for global economic growth remains almost unarguably positive (Chart 1). The key for asset allocation, then, comes down to whether inflation in the U.S. will rebound, and whether therefore the Fed will continue to tighten monetary policy in line with its current projections. This would likely cause long-term interest rates to rise and the dollar to appreciate, which would be positive for developed market equities and credit, but negative for government bonds, emerging market equities and commodities. This scenario has been our expectation - and the basis of our recommendations - for some time, and it remains so. In September, the market started coming around to our view - after months of pricing in that inflation would stay sluggish (which, therefore, had caused the euro and yen, government bonds, EM equities and commodities to perform well). In just a couple of weeks, the futures-market-priced probability of a December Fed hike has moved from 31% to 75%. This was triggered by little more than stabilization of core CPI (Chart 2), due mainly to shelter inflation, which anyway has a low weight in the core PCE inflation data that the Fed most closely watches. To us, this demonstrates just how sensitive the market is to any slight pickup in inflation, due to the fact that its expectations of Fed rate hikes over the next 12 months are so far below what the FOMC is signaling (Chart 3). Chart 1Lead Indicators Looking Good
Lead Indicators Looking Good
Lead Indicators Looking Good
Chart 2Is The Softness In Inflation Over?
Is The Softness In Inflation Over?
Is The Softness In Inflation Over?
Chart 3The Market Still Doesn't Believe The Fed
The Market Still Doesn't Believe The Fed
The Market Still Doesn't Believe The Fed
However, a risk to BCA's view is that the Fed turns dovish. Even Janet Yellen, in the press conference after the FOMC meeting on 20 September, admitted that the Fed needs "to figure out whether the factors that have lowered inflation are likely to prove persistent". If they do, she said, "it would require an alteration of monetary policy." FOMC member (and notable dove) Lael Brainard, in an important speech earlier in September, laid out the argument that, since inflation has missed the Fed's 2% target for five years, inflation expectations have been damaged (Chart 4) and that only a period during which inflation overshot could repair them. With Yellen's term due to expire next February and four other vacancies on the FOMC, personnel changes could significantly change the Fed's direction. Online prediction sites give a somewhat high probability to President Trump's replacing Yellen, with (the rather more hawkish) Kevin Warsh, a Fed governor in 2006-11 (Chart 5). However, presidents tend to like loose monetary policy - President Trump has said as much himself - which raises the possibility of his trying to steer the Fed in a direction that is more tolerant of rising inflation. A possible scenario, then, is of an accommodative Fed which allows equities markets to have a final meltup for this cycle, similar to 1999. Chart 4Have Inflation Expectations Been Damaged?
Have Inflation Expectations Been Damaged?
Have Inflation Expectations Been Damaged?
Chart 5Who Will Trump Choose To Lead The Fed?
Quarterly - October 2017
Quarterly - October 2017
Another current source of uncertainty is China. Money supply growth there has slowed sharply this year, after being pushed upwards by the government's reflationary policies in late 2015. This historically has been a good lead indicator of growth and, indeed, many cyclical indicators have surprised to the downside recently (Chart 6). It is also hard to predict whether, after October's five-yearly Communist Party congress, newly re-elected President Xi Jinping will move ahead with implementing structural reforms, even at the expense of a short-term slowdown of growth.1 We continue to think that risk assets have further upside for this cycle. Growth is likely to remain strong, the probability of a U.S. tax cut is rising, and corporate earnings should surprise to the upside for another couple of quarters (Q3 S&P500 EPS consensus forecasts remain cautious at 5% YoY, versus our model which suggests double-digit growth). Nonetheless, the cycle is now mature, global equities have already produced a total return of almost 40% since their recent bottom in February last year, and valuations in almost every asset class are stretched (Chart 7). Moreover, geopolitical risks - such as that from North Korean missiles - will not disappear quickly. We continue to pencil in the possibility of a recession in 2019 or 2020, caused by a sharp rise in inflation, especially in the U.S., which the Fed - whoever is running it - would have to stamp on by raising rates above the equilibrium level. Chart 6Is A Downturn Coming In China?
bca.gaa_qpo_2017_10_02_c6
bca.gaa_qpo_2017_10_02_c6
Chart 7Nothing Looks Cheap
Nothing Looks Cheap
Nothing Looks Cheap
Therefore, on the 12-month horizon we continue to recommend pro-risk and pro-cyclical positioning, for example an overweight in equities versus fixed income. However, given the rising uncertainty, we are reducing the scale of our bets a little and so, for example among our equity country and regional recommendations, move a little closer to benchmark by lowering the U.S. to neutral and reducing the degree of our underweight in EM. Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Global Asset Allocation garry@bcaresearch.com What Our Clients Are Asking How worried should we be about North Korea? Chart 8Threats - But Eventually A Diplomatic Solution
Threats - But Eventually A Diplomatic Solution
Threats - But Eventually A Diplomatic Solution
President Obama reportedly warned President Trump just prior to inauguration that North Korea would be his biggest headache. After 15 missile launches and a nuclear test this year (Chart 8, panel 1), investors are beginning to think the same. How big is the risk that the tension turns into warfare? BCA's Geopolitical strategists have written about the subject extensively.2 They conclude that military action is unlikely. An U.S. attack on North Korean missile or nuclear sites would simply provoke an attack with conventional weapons on Seoul, which is only 50 km from the border. Kim Jong-un undoubtedly knows that if he were to attack Guam or Japan, his country would be wiped out. In the end, then, a diplomatic solution is likely - but this will only be achieved after tension has risen sufficiently to force the two sides to the negotiating table. The analogy is Iran in 2012-15, where sanctions finally forced it to agree to a 10-year freeze in its nuclear plans. For the moment, sanctions seem unlikely to bite. North Korea's trade with China is not yet notably slowing (Chart 8, panel 2) and its GDP growth actually accelerated last year, albeit from stagnating levels, according to estimates from the Bank of Korea (Chart 8, panel 3). So the cycle of new threats and tougher sanctions will continue for a while. Historically, North Korean provocations caused related markets (such as South Korea stocks) to fall sharply for a few days, but this always represented a buying opportunity (Chart 8, panel 4). Given the likelihood of a diplomatic outcome, we think this remains a good rule of thumb. What will happen after China's 19th Party Congress, and will there be a slowdown in the economy? China's twice-a-decade National Party Congress will be held October 18-25. The outcome of the meeting could have important economic and market consequences. The key purpose of the Congress is to rotate China's political leaders. The 19th Party Congress is crucial because it marks the passing of a generation: President Xi Jinping will receive a second five-year term, but is predicted to consolidate his power by placing a younger generation of leaders who support his structural reforms into key positions. When Xi came to power, his reform agenda included de-emphasizing GDP targets; injecting private capital, competition and market discipline into the state-owned corporate sector; and fighting pollution. This agenda has since been compromised, with Xi reverting to infrastructure spending and credit growth to avoid painful adjustments. However, recently, there have been signs of a pullback in reflationary policies (Chart 9). Financial tightening is a key to reviving reform. Tighter controls on banks and leverage will translate into greater market discipline, and will put pressure on the sector most in need of change: SOEs. During the twice-a-decade National Financial Work Conference In late July, Yang Weimin, a key economic policymaker who is close to Xi, said, "The nation can't let leverage rise for the purpose of boosting economic expansion," signaling that the administration is willing to tackle difficult reform issues. He also mentioned the potential risks in the economy such as shadow banking, property bubbles, high leverage in SOEs, and local government debt, adding that the nation should set out its priorities and tackle them. Though it is impossible to predict the precise outcome of the Congress, the leadership reshuffle is likely to benefit Xi's reform agenda. The new leadership is likely to work on rebalancing growth toward consumption and services while encouraging private entrepreneurship and cutting back state-owned enterprises and, most importantly, deleveraging corporate debt. If China's credit impulse rolls over, the recent improvement in industrial profits and domestic demand will come under threat (Chart 9). As a result, China's cyclical growth is set to slow in 2018 as Xi reboots reform. Although economic risks will rise as the reform takes place, we still believe China H shares are attractive relative to other EM markets. In the long run, Xi's renewed reform drive should help China to get out of the "middle income trap'', which could help Chinese stocks to outperform EMs such as South Africa, Turkey and Brazil, where reforms are absent.3 Are Indian equities still a buy? In the three years since Prime Minister Narendra Modi's election, Indian stock prices have outperformed their emerging market peers by more than 20%. But the underlying growth dynamics do not justify this performance. We are turning cautious on India and downgrade Indian equities to neutral for the following reasons. India's GDP growth rate fell to a three-year low of 5.7% yoy in the April-June quarter. The administration's "Make In India" campaign is having limited impact, as seen in the near-zero growth of the manufacturing sector. Capital spending by firms has been dismal, further weighing on the outlook for productivity. Increasing layoffs and business shutdowns have produced considerable slack in the economy. Non-performing loans in the banking system have reached 11.8% of assets. As a result, credit growth to business has fallen almost to zero. This has slowed infrastructure development, as seen in the high level of stalled capital projects. The Reserve Bank of India has only just started the process of pushing banks to raise provisioning for distressed assets. The negative impact of last year's demonetization program is finally showing through. Less than 10% of Indians have ever used non-cash payment methods, and so demand for cyclical goods is slowing. Finally, Indian stocks have risen significantly in recent years, making them expensive relative to EM peers. In addition, profit growth has slowed, and return on equity converged with the EM average. Indian equities have been riding on expectations of reforms from the Modi administration. But, with the exception of the Goods & Services Tax (GST), the reform progress has been disappointing. We are turning cautious on Indian equities until we see improvements in the macro backdrop (Chart 10). Chart 9Sign of slowdown in Chinese Economy
Sign of slowdown in Chinese Economy
Sign of slowdown in Chinese Economy
Chart 10India: Loosing Steam?
India: Loosing Steam?
India: Loosing Steam?
How should global equity investors hedge foreign currency exposures? Chart 11Dynamic Hedging Outperforms Static Hedging
Quarterly - October 2017
Quarterly - October 2017
There have been many conflicting views on how to hedge foreign currency exposures in a global equity portfolio. Full hedge,4 no hedge,5 or simply 50% hedge?6 Or should all investors hold the reserve currencies (USD, euro and Swiss Franc), avoid commodities currencies (AUD and CAD) while being neutral on GBP and JPY?7 As published in a Special Report 8 on September 29, 2017, our research has found that not only should investors with different home currencies manage their foreign currency exposures differently, but also a dynamic hedging framework based on the indicators from BCA's Foreign Exchange Strategy service's Intermediate Timing Model (ITTM)9 outperforms all the static hedging strategies for all investors with six different home currencies (USD, EUR, JPY, GBP, AUD and CAD) (Chart 11). A few key observations from Chart 11 Static hedges reduces risk with little impact on returns for the USD and JPY investors only. Unlike the CAD investors, the AUD investors are much better off to hedge than not to, on a risk adjusted basis, even though AUD is also a commodity currencies, like the CAD. The 50% "least regret" hedge ratio has lived up to its reputation as it reduced risk by more than 50% without severely jeopardizing returns. And for the USD based investors, the 50% static hedge has a similar risk/return profile as the dynamic hedge. For all other five home currencies, however, the 50% static hedge underperforms the dynamic hedge. Global Economy Overview: Globally growth has accelerated, with inflation quiescent. We expect growth to continue to be strong, but U.S. inflation will start to normalize, which should trigger further Fed hikes and a rise in long-term rates. Japanese and euro zone growth will be less inflationary, given continued slack in these economies. U.S.: Growth has rebounded sharply after the seasonally weak Q1 and excessive expectations following the presidential election. The Citi Economic Surprise Index (Chart 12, panel 1) shows strong upward surprises. First-half GDP growth came in at 2.2% (above trend, which is estimated at 1.8%), and the manufacturing ISM reached 57.7 in September. The two big hurricanes will probably knock around 0.5 points off Q3 growth but the lesson from previous disasters is that this will be more than made up over the following three quarters. Rebounding capex, and consumption aided by a probable acceleration in wages, should keep GDP growth strong. Euro Area: Due to Europe's greater cyclicality and dependence on the global cycle, growth momentum is unsurprisingly even stronger than in the U.S., with Q2 GDP growth 2.3% YoY and the manufacturing PMI at 57.4. German growth has been particularly robust with the IFO index at 115.9, close to an all-time high, and German manufacturing wages growing by 2.9% YoY. The credit impulse suggests that the strong growth should continue, although the euro appreciation this year (and consequent tightening of financial conditions) might dampen it a little. Japan: Growth continues to be good in the external sector (with exports rising 18% YOY and industrial production 5%), but weak in the domestic economy, where household spending and core inflation continue to flatline. We do, though, see some first tentative signs of inflation: the Bank of Japan's estimate suggests the output gap has now closed, and the tight labor market is showing through in part-time hourly wages, which are rising 2.9%. Emerging Markets: China's PMI has oscillated around 50 all year (Chart 13, panel 3), as the authorities tried to stabilize growth ahead of October's Party Congress. But money supply and credit growth have been slowing all year, and this is now showing through in downside surprises in fixed asset investment and retail sales data. Especially if the congress moves towards structural reform and short-term pain, growth may slow further. This would be negative for other emerging markets, which depend on China for growth. Bank loan growth and domestic consumption generally remain weak throughout EM ex China. Chart 12Global Growth Is Accelerating...
Global Growth Is Accelerating...
Global Growth Is Accelerating...
Chart 13...Propelling Europe And Japan
...Propelling Europe And Japan
...Propelling Europe And Japan
Interest Rates: Inflation has been soft this year in the U.S. but is likely to pick up in coming months reflecting stronger economic growth and dollar depreciation. We expect the Fed to raise rates in December and confirm its three hikes next year. That should be enough to push the 10-year Treasury yield up to close to 3%. In Japan and the euro area, however, underlying inflationary pressures are much weaker. So we expect the Bank of Japan to stick to its yield curve control policy, and for the ECB to emphasize, when it announces in October next year's (reduced) asset purchase program, that it will be cautious about raising rates. Global Equities Chart 14Earnings Have Been Strong...
Earnings Have Been Strong...
Earnings Have Been Strong...
Q3 2017 was the second quarter in a row when the price appreciation in global equities was driven entirely by earnings growth, since the forward price-to-earnings ratio contracted by 2% compared to Q2 (Chart 14). Chart 15No Compelling Reasons To Make Large Bets
No Compelling Reasons To Make Large Bets
No Compelling Reasons To Make Large Bets
The scope of the improvement in earnings so far in 2017 has been wide. Not only are forward earnings being revised up, but 12-month trailing earnings growth has also been very strong, with all 10 top-level sectors registering positive earnings growth. Margins have steadily improved globally from the lows in early 2016. Despite the slight multiple compression in Q3, equity valuations are not cheap by historical standards. As an asset class, however, equities are still attractively valued compared to bonds, especially after the recent safe-haven buying drove global bond yields to very depressed levels. We remain overweight equities versus bonds on the 9-12 month horizon. Within equities, however, we think it's prudent to reduce portfolio risk by bringing allocations closer to benchmark weighting because 1) equities are not cheap, 2) volatility is low, 3) geopolitical tension is rising, and 4) year-on-year earnings growth over coming quarters may not be as strong as it has been so far this year because earnings in the first half of the 2016 were very depressed. As such, we downgrade the U.S. to neutral from overweight (+3 percentage points), and reduce the underweight in EM (to -2 from -5). We remain overweight the euro area and Japan (but hedge the yen exposure). Within EM, we have been more positive on China and remain so on a 6-9 month horizon. Sector-wise, we maintain our pro-cyclical tilt. Country Allocations: Downgrade U.S. To Neutral We started the year being "cautiously optimistic" with a maximum overweight (+6 ppts) in U.S. equities.10 We added risk at the end of the first quarter by reducing by half the U.S. overweight in order to upgrade the higher-beta euro area to overweight (+3) from neutral.11 The change has worked well, as the euro area outperformed the U.S. by 542 basis points (bps) in Q2 and then by 370 bps in Q3 in unhedged USD terms. Our DM-only quant model also started the year with a maximum overweight in the U.S., but the overweight was gradually reduced each month until July when the model indicated a benchmark weight for the U.S. The model continued its shift away from the U.S. in August and September, and now the U.S. is the largest underweight in the model. As we have previously stated, we use the quant model as one key input into our decision-making process, but we do not follow it slavishly because 1) no model can capture all the ever-changing driving forces in the market, and 2) the model moves more often than we prefer. In light of the rising geopolitical risks and low levels of volatility in all asset classes, we conclude that there are no longer compelling reasons to make large bets among the countries (Chart 15). Valuation in the U.S. is stretched, but neither is it cheap in EM anymore; both trailing and forward earnings growth in the U.S. are below the global average. Forward earnings in the EM look likely to outpace the global average, but EM trailing earnings growth seems to be losing steam. As such, we recommend investors to be neutral in the U.S. and use the funds to reduce the underweight in EM. Sector Allocation: Stay Underweight Global Utilities Overall, our sector positioning retains its tilt towards cyclicals and against defensives (see Table 1). Our global sector quant model, however, in September reduced its underweight in defensives by upgrading utilities to overweight from underweight, mainly due to the momentum factor. We have decided to overwrite the model result and maintain our underweight recommendation for the following reasons. In October, the model again downgraded utilities to underweight. In the most recent cycle post the Global Financial Crisis (GFC), the relative performance of utilities has been closely correlated with the performance of bonds vs. equities (Chart 16, top panel). This is not surprising given the bond-like nature of the sector. The sector enjoys a higher dividend yield than the global average: other than during the GFC, the excess yield has been in the range of 1-2%. In a low bond-yield environment, this yield pick-up is no doubt attractive. However, our house view is for global bond yields to rise over the next 9-12 months and we maintain our overweight on equities vs. bonds. As such, underweight utilities is in line with our overall risk/return assessment. In addition, even though the utilities sector has a higher dividend yield, the current reading is not particularly attractive compared to the five-year average (panel 4); valuation measures such as price to book (panel 3) show a neutral reading as well. The other sector where we override our quant model is Healthcare, which we favor as a long-term play because of favorable demographic trends, while the quant model points to an underweight due to short-term factors such as momentum and valuation. Smart Beta Update Year-to-date, the equal-weighted multi-factor portfolio has outperformed the global benchmark by 54 basis point (bps). (Table 1 and Chart 17) Among the five most enduring factors - size, value, quality, minimum volatility, and momentum - momentum is the only factor that has prevailed in both DM and EM universes, while quality has outperformed in the DM, but underperformed in EM. (Table 1) Chart 16Maintain Underweight Utilities
Maintain Underweight Utilities
Maintain Underweight Utilities
Chart 17MSCI ACW: Factor Relative Performance
MSCI ACW: Factor Relative Performance
MSCI ACW: Factor Relative Performance
Value has underperformed growth across the board (Table 1). The size performance, however, has large regional divergences in both value and growth spaces. Small cap has outperformed large cap consistently in both the value and growth spaces in the higher-beta euro area, Japan and U.K., while underperforming in the lower-beta U.S. (Table 2) We maintain our neutral view on styles and prefer to use sector positioning to implement the underlying factors given the historically close correlation between styles and cyclicals versus defensives (Chart 17, bottom two panels). Year-to-date cyclicals have outperformed defensives (Table 1). Table 1YTD Relative Performance*
Quarterly - October 2017
Quarterly - October 2017
Table 2YTD Total Returns* (%) Small Cap - Large Cap
Quarterly - October 2017
Quarterly - October 2017
Government Bonds Maintain Slight Underweight Duration. U.S. bond yields declined significantly in Q3 to below fair-value levels in response to heightened geopolitical risks and hurricanes (Chart 18, top panel). This safe-haven buying spread globally, despite ample evidence of faster global growth (middle panel) and less accommodative monetary policies from the major central banks. There is now considerable upside risk for global bond yields from these current low levels. Maintain Overweight TIPS Vs. Treasuries. The fall in nominal U.S. Treasury yields, however, was concentrated in the real yields, as 10-year break-even inflation widened in Q3 (Chart 18, panel 3). In terms of relative value, TIPS are now fairly valued vs. nominal bonds. However, our U.S. Bond Strategy's core PCE model, which closely tracks the 10-year TIPS breakeven rate (Chart 18, panel 3), is sending the message that inflationary pressures are building in the economy and that core PCE should reach the Fed's 2% target by the end of this year. This suggests that the bond markets are not providing adequate compensation for the inflationary economic backdrop. Underweight Canadian Government Bonds. The Bank of Canada (BOC) delivered another surprise 25 bps rate hike in September, due to "the impressive strength of the Canadian economy" and "the more synchronized global expansion that was supporting higher industrial commodity prices." BCA's Global Fixed Income Strategy has been underweight Canada in its hedged global portfolio and recommends investors not to fight the BOC despite little inflation pressure in the Canadian economy (Chart 19). Chart 18Poor Value in Nominal Government Bonds
Poor Value in Nominal Government Bonds
Poor Value in Nominal Government Bonds
Chart 19Bank of Canada: Shock Hawks
Bank of Canada: Shock Hawks
Bank of Canada: Shock Hawks
Corporate Bonds As inflation recovers and the Fed moves ahead with rate hikes, we expect long-term risk-free rates to rise moderately. Fair value for the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield is currently close to 2.7%. In the context of rising rates and continued economic expansion, we continue to prefer spread product over government bonds. Investment grade bonds in the U.S. trade at an average option-adjusted spread over Treasuries of 110 bps. While Aaa corporate spreads are expensive, other investment grade credit tiers appear fairly valued. Given the deterioration in our U.S. Corporate Health Monitor (Chart 20), amid a rise in leverage, over the past two years (Chart 21) we do not expect the spread to contract further or fall back close to historic lows. However, investors should still be moderately attracted by the carry in a low interest rate environment. Our preference is for U.S. investment-grade corporate bonds over European ones, since the latter could be negatively impacted when the ECB announces its tapering of asset purchases in October. High-yield bonds look attractive after a small rise in spreads and an improvement in the cyclical outlook over the past quarter. The current spread of U.S. high-yield, 360 bps, translates into a default-adjusted yield (assuming a 2.6% default rate and 49% recovery rate over the next 12 months) of 250 bps - close to the long-run average (Chart 22). European junk debt looks less attractive from a valuation perspective. Chart 20Corporate Health Is A Worry In The U.S.
Corporate Health Is A Worry In The U.S.
Corporate Health Is A Worry In The U.S.
Chart 21IG Spreads Unlikely To Contract Further
IG Spreads Unlikely To Contract Further
IG Spreads Unlikely To Contract Further
Chart 22High-Yield Debt Valuations Look Attractive
High-Yield Debt Valuations Look Attractive
High-Yield Debt Valuations Look Attractive
Commodities Chart 23Mixed View Towards Commodities
Mixed View Towards Commodities
Mixed View Towards Commodities
Secular perspective: Bearish We hold a bearish secular outlook for commodities, mainly due to our view on China's slowing economic growth and the increasing shift from traditional energy sources to alternatives. Cyclical perspective: Neutral Our short-term commodities view remains neutral since oil inventory drawdowns will push up the crude oil price further, and because low real interest rates will keep gold from falling this year. But industrial metals are likely to react negatively to the winding down of China's reflation after the Party Congress in mid-October. Precious metal: Short-term bullish, long-term bearish. We expect the Fed to tighten rates only slowly which, over time, will mean the central bank finds itself behind the curve on inflation. Real rates are expected to remain relatively low for the foreseeable future, which will be supportive of gold. Rising tension between North Korea and the U.S. could also give gold a lift. Industrial metals: Bearish The copper price has rallied by 10% during Q3 2017, thanks to supply-side disruptions at some of the world's largest copper mines, along with better-than-expected performance of the Chinese economy. However, mine interruptions will be transitory, and the world copper market is already back in balance (Chart 23, panel 3). Although the rebound in the Chinese PMI is keeping metal prices up, we believe China after the Party Congress will try to reengineer its economy towards being more consumption and services-led, which will temper demand for industrial metals. Energy: Bullish We believe that market has been overly pessimistic on oil, and that this will change due to declining inventories and better demand and supply dynamics. (Chart 23) The U.S. Energy Information Administration revised down its shale production forecast for 2H 2017 by 200,000 barrels/day, which should lower investors' concerns over shale overproduction. Libyan oil production, the biggest threat to our bullish oil view, faltered by 300,000/day in August, keeping OPEC in compliance with its promised cuts. Currencies U.S. Dollar: Year to date, the dollar is down by 8% on a trade-weighted basis (Chart 24). However, after a period of underperformance, the U.S. economy is improving relative to its G10 peers, as seen by the strong rebound in the U.S. ISM manufacturing index. Additionally, the pick-up in money velocity points to a recovery in core inflation. As inflation starts to pick up again, markets will discount additional Fed rate hikes. Stay bullish U.S. dollar over the next 12 months. Chart 24U.S. Dollar Recovery?
U.S. Dollar Recovery?
U.S. Dollar Recovery?
Pound: After a weak start to the year, sterling has recovered all its losses. Strong net FDI inflows have pushed the basic balance back into positive territory. However, Brexit negotiations will impact the financial sector, the largest target for FDI. Additionally, the recent sharp increase in inflation came from the pass-through effect of the weaker currency, and is not reflective of domestic economic activity. We expect increased political uncertainty to weigh down on future growth, forcing the Bank of England to maintain a dovish stance. Stay bearish over the next 12 months. Dollar: On a trade-weighted basis the currency is up 4% year to date, primarily driven by the rally in select metal prices. OECD's measure of output gap still points to substantial slack in the domestic economy, as seen in the downtrend in core inflation and nominal retail sales. However, despite improvements in global trade and domestic real estate activity, the Reserve Bank of Australia will keep policy easy in response to volatile commodity markets. Stay bearish over the next 12 months. Canadian Dollar: Driven by net portfolio inflows near record highs, the currency is up 6% on a trade-weighted basis so far this year. With improving economic activity, as seen in strong retail sales, the Bank of Canada expects the output gap to close in 2018. However, going forward, oil prices are unlikely to double again, and the combination of elevated indebtedness, bubby house prices and rising rates will create headwinds for the household sector. Stay bearish over the next 12 months. Alternatives Chart 25Favor PE, Real Assets
Favor PE, Real Assets
Favor PE, Real Assets
Return Enhancers: Favor private equity vs. hedge funds In 2017 so far, private equity has returned 9%, whereas hedge funds have managed only a 3.5% return (Chart 25). Given their strong performance, private equity firms are raising near-record amounts of capital from investors starved for yield. By contrast, hedge funds continue to underperform both global equities and private equity, as is typical outside of recessions or bear markets. However, increasing concerns about valuations in private markets have pushed private equity dry powder to new highs of $963 billion. We continue to favor private equity over hedge funds, albeit with a more cautious outlook. Within the hedge fund space, we favor event-driven funds over the cycle, and macro funds heading into a recession. Inflation Hedges: Favor direct real estate vs. commodity futures In 2017 to date, direct real estate has returned 3.3%, whereas commodity futures are down over 10%. With energy markets likely to continue to recover lost ground over the coming months, we stress the structural nature of our negative recommendation on commodities. Depressed interest rates will keep financing cheap, making the spread between real estate and fixed income yields attractive. However, the slowdown in commercial real estate has made us more cautious on the overall real estate space. With regards to the commodity complex, the long term transition of China to a service-based economy will continue the structural decline in commodity demand. Continue to favor direct real estate vs. commodity futures. Volatility Dampeners: Favor farmland & timberland vs. structured products In 2017 to date, farmland and timberland have returned 2.2% and 1.5% respectively, whereas structured products have returned 1.4%. Farmland continues to outperform timberland given the latter's lower correlation with growth. Timberland returns have also lagged farmland given the weak recovery in the U.S. housing market. Investors can reduce the volatility of a multi-asset portfolio with the inclusion of farmland and timberland. With regards to structured products, rising rates and deteriorating credit quality in the auto loan market will weigh on returns. Given the Fed's plans to start unwinding its balance sheet this year, increased supply will put upward pressure on spreads. Risks To Our View Our pro-risk positioning would be incorrect if global growth were to slow sharply. But we see little sign that this is a significant risk over the next six to 12 months. Of our three favorite indicators of recession risk, global PMIs remain strong, and the U.S. 10-minus-2 year yield curve is still solidly positive at around 80 BP. Only a small blip up in junk bond spreads in August (Chart 26) is of any concern, and it was probably caused just by geopolitical tensions. With U.S. and European consumption and capex looking strong, probably the biggest risk to global growth would come from China, similar to 2015, if October's Party Congress signals a shift to short-term pain to achieve structural reforms. Perhaps more likely is an upside surprise to growth, with BCA's models - based on consumer and business sentiment - pointing to around 3% real GDP growth in the U.S. and 2½% in the euro area over the coming couple of quarters (Chart 27). Such an acceleration of growth would raise the risk of upside surprises to inflation, which could cause a bigger sell off in bond markets than we currently anticipate. Chart 26Any Need To Worry About Credit Spreads?
Any Need To Worry About Credit Spreads?
Any Need To Worry About Credit Spreads?
Chart 27Could Growth Surprise On The Upside?
Could Growth Surprise On The Upside?
Could Growth Surprise On The Upside?
Chart 28Suppose Inflation Stays Stubbornly Low
Suppose Inflation Stays Stubbornly Low
Suppose Inflation Stays Stubbornly Low
Our positioning is not based on inflation remaining chronically low. But structural changes in the economy could cause this. While the Philips curve has not broken down completely, wage growth in the U.S. is 1-1½% lower than in previous expansions when the unemployment gap was at its current level (Chart 28). Could the Nairu be lower than the Fed's estimate of 4.6%? Has the gig economy somehow changed worker and employer behavior? 1 Please see What Our Clients Are Asking: "What Will Happen After China's 19th Party Congress, And Will There Be A Slowdown In The Economy?" of this report. 2 For their most comprehensive analysis, please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "North Korea: Beyond Satire," dated April 19, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report "China: Looking Beyond The Party Congress'' dated July 19, 2017. available at gps.bcaresearch.com). 4 Perold, A and E. Schulman, 1988, "The free lunch in currency hedging: Implications for investment policy and performance standards," Financial Analyst Journal 44, 45-50. 5 Froot K., 1993, "Currency hedging over long horizons," NBER working paper 4355. 6 Michenaud, S., and B., Solnik, 2008, "Applying Regret Theory to Investment Choices: Currency Hedging Decisions," Journal of International Money and Finance 27, 677-694. 7 Campbell, J., K. de Medeiros and L. Viceira, 2010, "Global Currency Hedging," Journal of Finance LXV, 87-122. 8 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report, "Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Equity Investors," dated September 29, 2017, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy "In Search of A Timing Model," dated July 22, 2016, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 10 Please see Global Asset Allocation, "Quarterly - December 2016," dated December 15, 2016. 11 Please see Global Asset Allocation, "Quarterly - April 2017," dated April 3, 2017. GAA Asset Allocation
Highlights Portfolio Strategy The S&P hotels, resorts and cruise lines index will suffer from a profit margin squeeze, which should weigh on valuations. Cut exposure to underweight. A cyclical capex recovery is a boon for software outlays and coupled with reviving animal spirits, signal that it no longer pays to underweight the S&P software index. Augment positions to a benchmark allocation. Recent Changes Downgrade the defensive/cyclical portfolio bias to neutral. Downgrade the S&P hotels, resorts and cruise lines index to underweight today. Lift the S&P software index to neutral. Table 1
Dollar The Great Reflator
Dollar The Great Reflator
Feature Chart 1Weak Dollar Positive Contributor##br## To EPS Growth
Weak Dollar Positive Contributor To EPS Growth
Weak Dollar Positive Contributor To EPS Growth
Equities broke out in a bullish fashion last week, as geopolitical fears subsided and the backlash from hurricane Irma was less severe than initially feared. Beneath the surface, non-inflationary synchronized global growth remains the dominant macro theme. While the latest U.S. CPI print was better than anticipated the Fed would have to see a couple more perky inflation reports before an uptrend is established, cementing the December hike. Until then, the path of least resistance is higher for equities. In our last Weekly Report, we noted that our four-factor S&P 500 operating EPS model has recently accelerated.1 This week, Chart 1 isolates the U.S. dollar as the sole regression variable on SPX earnings and the fitted value suggests that profits will likely surprise to the upside in the back half of the year despite difficult comparisons. Importantly, as we posited earlier this summer, irrespective of where the trade-weighted U.S. dollar ends the year, delayed FX translation effects will act as a tonic for S&P 500 profits. Since late-December's peak, the broad trade-weighted dollar has deflated by 9%. Regression analysis shows that a 1% fall in the U.S. dollar boosts operating EPS by 0.98%, with our dataset going back to the early 1970s. If, however, we narrow the interval of estimation starting in 1994 when NAFTA come into effect then the greenback's sensitivity on SPX EPS increases to 1.6%. While every cycle is different, a fresh all-time high in quarterly EPS - driven by a weak dollar - would not surprise us in Q3 and Q4. At some point, the deflating currency should show up in selling price inflation, again as a lagged effect (middle panel, Chart 2). This is encouraging for our firming operating leverage thesis, as a modest inflationary backdrop would reinforce top line growth (bottom panel, Chart 2). The implication of a sustainable revenue growth outlook is a profit margin-led flow through to EPS, especially for high fixed cost businesses. Already, sell side analysts' overall S&P 500 net earnings revisions are benefitting from the U.S. dollar's decline, and so is sector EPS breadth (trade-weighted dollar shown inverted, Chart 3). Chart 2Will The Dollar's Fall Show Up In Inflation?
Will The Dollar’s Fall Show Up In Inflation?
Will The Dollar’s Fall Show Up In Inflation?
Chart 3EPS Breadth Improvement
EPS Breadth Improvement
EPS Breadth Improvement
Moreover, U.S. dollar-based liquidity (defined as the sum of the Fed's balance sheet and foreign central bank U.S. Treasury holdings) has finally arrested its fall and has recently ticked higher above the zero line. This even mild increase in U.S. dollar-based liquidity represents a de facto easing in global monetary conditions, and historically has been synonymous with S&P 500 EPS acceleration (Chart 4). The upshot is that profits are on a solid upward trajectory. Chart 4Dollar Based Liquidity Also On The Rise
Dollar Based Liquidity Also On The Rise
Dollar Based Liquidity Also On The Rise
The equity market's sensitivity to the greenback has been increasing as the percentage of foreign sourced earnings has been rising over the decades. Globally-exposed goods-producers are in the driver's seat. This raises the question: what to do with our long held preference for defensives versus cyclicals? We are taking our cue from the U.S. dollar-induced shifting macro backdrop, and locking in gains of 11% since the mid-2014 inception in our defensive over cyclical sector tilt, and moving to the sidelines. As a reminder, since the beginning of the spring we have been tweaking our portfolio adding cyclical exposure and, at the margin, removing defensive protection.2 Thus, a defensive over cyclical sector preference is no longer in place. Synchronized global growth, reviving emerging markets, a stable China, and a deflating U.S. dollar are all giving us confidence that it no longer pays to play defense (Chart 5). Finally, following a sling shot recovery, relative valuations are on a more even keel, as is our relative Technical Indicator which is hovering in the neutral zone (Chart 6). Chart 5Book Gains And Move##br## To Neutral
Book Gains And Move To Neutral
Book Gains And Move To Neutral
Chart 6Valuations And Technicals##br## In The Neutral Zone
Valuations And Technicals In The Neutral Zone
Valuations And Technicals In The Neutral Zone
This week we are making an early cyclical downshift and deep cyclical upshift to our portfolio. Hotels Update: Check Out Time This year has been a good one to be overweight the S&P hotels, resorts and cruise lines index which has outperformed the S&P 500 by a wide margin. However, earnings expectations have moved broadly in line with the market in 2017, meaning that the index's outperformance has been entirely valuation multiple driven. Normalizing earnings to smooth out profit volatility reveals a more severe picture with valuation multiples at decade highs, above the historical mean and at a 40% premium to the broad market (Chart 7). The index's strength has been most pronounced since the beginning of the summer and, unsurprisingly given the cyclical rotation into highly discretionary stocks, has been exclusive to the cruise line operator segment of the index. The two relevant stocks (RCL and CCL) now represent nearly half of the S&P hotels, resorts and cruise lines index's market capitalization. Cruise line operators' margins have climbed to 10-year highs (top panel, Chart 8), justifying soaring stock prices. Profit gains have come on the back of healthy unit revenue as unit costs have remained mostly unchanged (third panel, Chart 8). Chart 7Very Expensive Beneath The Surface
Very Expensive Beneath The Surface
Very Expensive Beneath The Surface
Chart 8Cruise Lines Leading The Pack
Cruise Lines Leading The Pack
Cruise Lines Leading The Pack
Cruise line occupancy rates corroborate this firm demand backdrop. They have risen in line with margin gains (second panel, Chart 8), a result of improving passenger growth and constrained capacity (bottom panel, Chart 8). This has been the industry's largest margin lever, i.e.: incremental passengers per room come with much higher incremental margin. As cruise lines cannot increase their occupancy ad infinitum (occupancy rates above 100% already imply more than two occupants of a double-occupancy berth), further margin gains of this magnitude seem doubtful. In fact, if cruise operators are to continue growing profits, a capacity growth cycle will eventually have to begin anew, meaning margin contraction rather than expansion. Thus, extrapolating profit growth far into the future is fraught with danger, warning that sky-high valuation multiples are vulnerable to even a modest de-rating. The outlook is even less bright for hotels, an industry that has been losing its share of the consumer's wallet for some time (Chart 9, second panel). Specifically, the low/non-corporate end of the market seems increasingly exposed to competition from Airbnb and other room share competitors; cutthroat competition is pricing power negative with industry selling prices sinking into outright deflation (Chart 9, third panel). Hoteliers are trying to compensate for low prices with huge capacity additions, adding a sense of permanence to recent pricing power declines. However, just as pricing has fallen, the accommodation related employment cost index has gone vertical (bottom panel, Chart 9). The implication of soft pricing power and a rising wage bill is a profit letdown. Our newly introduced S&P hotels, resorts and cruise lines EPS model (comprising the U.S. dollar, employment, PCE and confidence measures) does an excellent job encompassing all these moving parts and confirms our bearish industry profit stance. In fact, it is pointing to significant relative declines vis-Ã -vis the S&P 500 (Chart 10). Chart 9Mind The Deflationary Impulse
Mind The Deflationary Impulse
Mind The Deflationary Impulse
Chart 10EPS Model Says Rush For The Exits
EPS Model Says Rush For The Exits
EPS Model Says Rush For The Exits
Putting it together, shrinking margins and increased capital deployment mean lower return on capital and hence lower valuation multiples. This implies that the index's relative gains are in the past. Bottom Line: Take some chips off the table and reduce exposure to underweight in the S&P hotels, resorts and cruise lines index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HOTL - MAR, CCL, RCL, HLT, WYN. Software: A Capex Upcycle Winner? Software stock relative performance has returned to its long-term uptrend, but remains far from the two standard deviations above-the-mean peak reached during the tech bubble (top panel, Chart 11). The structural pull from the proliferation of cloud computing and software-as-a-service has served as a catalyst to raise the profile of this more defensive and mature tech sub-sector. Traditional hardware tech sectors, like communications equipment, are also suffering from the "virtualization" threat as software is making inroads into hardware and blurring the lines between the two. Beyond this constructive backdrop, cyclical forces are also painting a brighter picture for software equities. Importantly, there is tentative evidence that a fresh capex upcycle has commenced (see Chart 3 from last Monday's Weekly Report 3), and if software commands a larger slice of the overall spending pie, industry profits should enjoy a healthy rebound (second panel, Chart 11). Small business sector plans to expand have returned to a level last seen prior to the Great Recession, underscoring that software related outlays will likely follow them higher. Recovering bank loan growth is also corroborating this upbeat spending message: capital outlays on software are poised to accelerate based on rebounding bank loans. The latter signals that businesses are beginning to loosen their purse strings anew (third & fourth panels, Chart 11). Reviving animal spirits also suggest that demand for software upgrades will stay elevated. CEO confidence is pushing decade highs. Such ebullience is positive for a pickup in software investments (second panel, Chart 12). It has also rekindled software M&A activity, with the number of industry deals jumping in recent months (bottom panel, Chart 13). Chart 11Back To Trend
Back To Trend
Back To Trend
Chart 12Capex Upcycle...
Capex Upcycle…
Capex Upcycle…
Chart 13... And Reviving Animal Spirits Are Key Drivers
… And Reviving Animal Spirits Are Key Drivers
… And Reviving Animal Spirits Are Key Drivers
Supply reduction presents a bullish backdrop for software selling prices that have exited deflation at a time when overall corporate sector inflation is decelerating. The upshot is that revenue growth will likely reaccelerate (middle panel, Chart 14). But before getting too carried away, there is some cause for concern. The S&P software index is priced to perfection fully reflecting most, if not all, of the positive drivers (bottom panel, Chart 14), warning that any sales/profit mishaps will likely knock relative performance over. Moreover, productivity dynamics are waving a yellow flag. Business sector productivity growth troughed in early 2017. Historically, this output per hour worked metric has been inversely correlated with software outlays (productivity shown inverted, third panel Chart 15). Importantly, even shown as a deviation from the long-term trend, productivity gains have troughed, suggesting that relative profit growth will likely remain muted (productivity shown inverted, bottom panel Chart 15). Keep in mind that, historically, software spending has been countercyclical (second panel, Chart 15) and given that we are not at the end of the line yet, relative outlays on software may not rebound to the same extent as our other aforementioned indicators suggest. Chart 14Impressive Pricing Power, ##br##But Fully Priced
Impressive Pricing Power, But Fully Priced
Impressive Pricing Power, But Fully Priced
Chart 15Productivity Dynamics##br## Are A Sizable Offset
Productivity Dynamics Are A Sizable Offset
Productivity Dynamics Are A Sizable Offset
Adding it up, enticing structural software forces aside, a cyclical capex recovery is a boon for software outlays and, coupled with reviving animal spirits, signal that it no longer pays to underweight this tech sub-sector. Bottom Line: The S&P software index does not deserve an underweight. Lift exposure to a benchmark allocation. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5SOFT - MSFT, ORCL, ADBE, CRM, ATVI, EA, INTU, ADSK, SYMC, RHT, SNPS, CTXS, ANSS, CA. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy & Global Alpha Sector Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Chart 5 of the U.S. Equity Strategy Report titled "Still Goldilocks", on September 11, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see the August 14, 2017 U.S. Equity Strategy Report titled "Three Risks" for a quick recap of most of our portfolio moves, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see the September 11, 2017 U.S. Equity Strategy Report titled "Still Goldilocks", available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps and stay neutral growth over value.
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Contrary to popular perception, non-cyclical sectors have led the market so far this year, while deep cyclical sectors are breaking down, in relative performance terms. Our models point to more of the same ahead. The oversold rebound in the pharmaceutical group may soon run into resistance so we recommend trimming positions to neutral. Put the proceeds into restaurants, a quasi-defensive group that enjoys a brightening sales outlook without pharma's political and regulatory risk. Recent Changes S&P Pharmaceuticals - Downgrade to neutral. S&P Restaurants - Upgrade to overweight. Table 1
Reading The Market's Messages
Reading The Market's Messages
Feature Equities are exhibiting signs of mild fatigue. Breadth has begun to narrow, and new highs have sagged compared with new lows (Chart 1). Both of these technical developments have warned of previous tactical pullbacks. The recent reset in oil prices may also test investor nerves. Oil prices have been a critical macro variable, because they influence inflation expectations and the corporate bond market (high yield bond spreads shown inverted, Chart 1). Crude oil price corrections have accurately timed equity retreats (Chart 1), and general risk aversion phases. To be sure, the global economy is no longer on a deflationary precipice, suggesting that weaker oil prices may not foreshadow a soft patch, but they may be a good enough excuse for profit taking in the equity market after a good run. Contrary to popular perception, cyclical sectors have not led the broad market so far in 2017. In fact, energy, materials and industrials have all broken down in relative performance terms (Chart 2), after peaking in mid-December. Only the technology sector has stayed resilient. Chart 1Short-Term Fatigue
Short-Term Fatigue
Short-Term Fatigue
Chart 2Cyclicals Have Broken Down
Cyclicals Have Broken Down
Cyclicals Have Broken Down
Chart 3Overshoot Renormalization
Overshoot Renormalization
Overshoot Renormalization
Insipid cyclical sector performance has occurred within the context of a synchronized lift in global economic growth and recovering corporate sector pricing power. So why are cyclical sectors lagging? It may simply be a digestion phase. However, a different interpretation is that a number of key macro factors fail to confirm the durability of last year's outperformance, suggesting that defensive outperformance could last. Concerns that the current global inventory cycle may not morph into a broad-based upturn in global final demand continue to linger: the global credit impulse remains anemic, the Fed and China are tightening monetary policy and commodity markets are cracking (Chart 3). The lack of any meaningful improvement in Chinese loan demand signals that the economy may be quick to cool as the authorities tap the breaks on credit growth. It would take a decisive depreciation in the U.S. dollar to boost the relative profit fortunes of capital spending-dependent cyclical sectors on a sustainable basis. On a more positive note, the Fed's benign forward guidance last week bears close attention. If the U.S. dollar loses upside support, particularly with the ECB contemplating a retreat from full throttle easing, it could change the investment landscape. By reminding markets that their inflation target is symmetric, the Fed signaled it will be willing to tolerate a modest inflation overshoot, which is positive for risk assets in the short run. A softer U.S. dollar would take the pressure off of developing countries, support commodity prices, and bolster our cyclical sector sales models and Cyclical Macro Indicators. However, Chart 4 shows that the objective message from our models remains consistent with continued defensive sector outperformance. With a more protectionist U.S. Administration, we remain reluctant to position exclusively for a much weaker dollar. The ongoing underperformance of emerging market equities relative to U.S. and global benchmarks reinforces that foreign-sourced profit growth continues to lag (Chart 5). Positioning for cyclical sector earnings outperformance requires healthier profits abroad, to spur a new capital investment cycle. Chart 4Heeding The Message From Our Models...
Heeding The Message From Our Models...
Heeding The Message From Our Models...
Chart 5... And The Markets
... And The Markets
... And The Markets
We will look to selectively add cyclical exposure when the objective message from our Indicators provides confirmation that earnings-driven outperformance lies ahead. At the moment, there is no such confirmation. In fact, the elevated reading in the SKEW index continues to signal that a defensive posture will optimize portfolio performance (Chart 5). In sum, we continue to characterize the broad market's current momentum as an overshoot phase, with additional technical upside potential, but the rally is starting to fray around the edges. In this environment, holding a mostly defensive basket with selective beta exposure is still recommended. Importantly, within the defensive universe, there are tweaks to be made, especially if the U.S. dollar stops rising. Fade The Pharmaceuticals Rebound Health care has been the second strongest of the eleven broad sectors year-to-date, contrary to popular perception. That is in line with the flattening yield curve, cresting in inflation expectations and a modest correction in oil prices (Chart 6), all of which have revived the allure of non-cyclical sectors. Moreover, our Cyclical Macro Indicator (CMI) for the health care sector remains firm, supported by the ongoing large pricing power advantage. Relative value is the most attractive it has been in five years. While the latter provides little timing help, it indicates low risk, especially with technical conditions still deeply oversold (Chart 7). Chart 6Health Care Is Storming Back
Health Care Is Storming Back
Health Care Is Storming Back
Chart 7Still Cheap And Oversold
Still Cheap And Oversold
Still Cheap And Oversold
The heavyweight pharmaceutical group has led the sector's tactical charge, recouping the ground lost, in relative performance terms, leading up to the U.S. election. While we were caught off guard by the severity of the pullback last September/October, we refrained from selling into an oversold market and noted our intention to lighten positions whenever the inevitable relief rally occurred. The time has come to execute on this thesis. Pharmaceutical stocks are very cheap and have discounted a hostile regulatory environment. The relative forward P/E is well below its historic mean, even though both 12-month and 5-year relative forward earnings growth expectations are depressed (Chart 8). Typically, the latter would serve to artificially inflate valuations. These conditions exist even though free cash flow growth remains strong; merger activity has been solid, albeit ebbing in recent months; and companies have used excess capital to reduce total shares outstanding (Chart 8). In other words, relative forward earnings would have to decline substantially to validate these expectations. Is this plausible? Much depends on the regulatory environment. While details of the U.S. Administration's proposal to replace the Affordable Care Act have started to leak out, final details are still elusive and legislative action is not imminent. So far, it appears as if a worst case scenario would see an increase in the number of uninsured Americans, with a rising cost of insurance (to the benefit of managed care companies). According to the Department of Health & Human Services, the uninsured rate of the U.S. population nearly halved from 16% in 2010 to 9% in 2015. That led to a lift in the number of procedures performed and bolstered hospital bottom lines. Hospitals are a major pharmaceutical buying group. Higher utilization rates fed increased pharmaceutical demand for a number of years. However, drug spending growth has dropped off, and if the legion of uninsured patients rises anew in the coming years, then hospital utilization rates will decline, taking drug consumption growth down with it. Moreover, Trump wants to streamline the FDA's approval process, which would ultimately boost the number of high margin new drugs coming to market. Drug stocks boomed back in the mid-1990s, the last time FDA approval rates accelerated meaningfully (Chart 9). Chart 8Full Capitulation
Full Capitulation
Full Capitulation
Chart 9Full Capitulation
Full Capitulation
Full Capitulation
But at the same time, if government is given leeway to negotiate drug prices directly with drug companies, then pricing power will continue to converge down toward overall corporate sector pricing power, especially if drug consumption rates ease (Chart 9). At the moment, drug consumption growth remains above the rate of overall consumption growth, but that is much slower than during the boom following the introduction of the Affordable Care Act. Retail sales at pharmacies are growing robustly, and hospitals are still adding staff, signaling that they continue to position for expansion, i.e. rising procedure volumes (Chart 10). On the downside, the strong U.S. dollar is a big drag on top-line growth. Drug imports exceed exports by a wide margin, resulting in a negative trade balance and a drag on U.S. drug company profits, all else equal. The combination of a sales growth deceleration and adequate channel inventories has capped drug output growth (Chart 10). That is a productivity and profit margin headwind. Against this background, the industry will need an external assist to deliver profit outperformance. Relative profit estimates rise when disinflationary forces reign supreme, as measured by the NFIB planned price hikes series (shown inverted, Chart 11). This measure of future corporate pricing power intentions has rolled over, but broader measures of inflation are creeping higher. Ergo, drug earnings forecasts may be challenged to keep pace with the overall corporate sector. Chart 10... But Growth Rates Are Slowing
... But Growth Rates Are Slowing
... But Growth Rates Are Slowing
Chart 11Mixed Signals
Mixed Signals
Mixed Signals
The good news is that even though U.S. dollar strength is an export drag, the negative drug trade balance suggests that it will hurt other industries more. Indeed, a rising currency often coincides with profit outperformance (Chart 11). There is not enough evidence that exogenous factors will offset slowing domestic drug consumption growth. In all, the case for a further and sustained relative performance recovery has weakened, and we are taking advantage of this year's oversold bounce to move to the sidelines. Bottom Line: Trim the S&P pharmaceuticals index to neutral. This position was deep in the money initially, but last year's downdraft pushed it into a loss position of 10%. BLBG: S5PHARX-JNJ, PFE, MRK, BMY, LLY, AGN, ZTS, MYL, PRGO, MNK. Restaurants: Increasing Appetite The broad consumer discretionary sector has been treading water, largely owing to fears that a border adjustment tax (BAT) will undermine the retailing sub-component. This consolidation has restored value and created an attractive technical entry point (Chart 12, bottom panel). Importantly, industry earnings fundamentals are on the upswing. Our consumer discretionary sector Cyclical Macro Indicator has perked up (Chart 12), supported by an increase in wages, and more recently, the decline in oil prices. The latter is freeing up disposable income, which consumers have an incentive to spend given that household net worth (HNW) has climbed to all-time highs as a percent of disposable income (Chart 13). Chart 12A Good Place To Shop
A Good Place To Shop
A Good Place To Shop
Chart 13Piggyback The Wealth Effect
Piggyback The Wealth Effect
Piggyback The Wealth Effect
While we remain overweight housing related equities (homebuilders and home improvement retailers) in addition to our upbeat view on the media and advertising complex, a buying opportunity has surfaced in the neglected S&P restaurants index. We booked gains on an underweight position and lifted exposure to neutral back in late-October. Since then, value has improved further, while leading sales indicators continue to firm. Stronger consumer finances should flow into the casual dining industry. Sales have already started to reaccelerate, and should climb further based on the leading message from HNW (Chart 14). The lower income, $15K-$35K, cohort is also feeling increasingly confident, according to the latest Conference Board survey data (Chart 14). Meanwhile, the National Association of Restaurants Performance Index has regained momentum (Chart 15), signaling increased activity and rising confidence among restaurateurs. While the gap between the cost of dining out and dining in remains wide, it has begun to narrow, which is a plus for store traffic, all else equal. Chart 14Buy Into Weakness
Buy Into Weakness
Buy Into Weakness
Chart 15At A Turning Point Domestically...
At A Turning Point Domestically...
At A Turning Point Domestically...
Chart 16... And Globally?
... And Globally?
... And Globally?
Our restaurants profit margin proxy (comprising restaurants CPI versus a blend of the industry's wage bill and food commodity costs) is trending higher. That is notable because it has a good track record in leading relative earnings growth estimates (Chart 15). Nevertheless, it is not all good news. International exposure remains a headache. Typically, soft EM currencies warn of translation drags on foreign sourced revenue (Chart 16). This cycle, there is an offset, as EM interest rates have come down, which is a plus for domestic demand (Chart 16). Thus, the headwind from outside the U.S. should abate as the year progresses. Adding it all up, factors are falling into place for a playable rally in the under-owned and unloved S&P restaurants index. This group offers attractive quasi-cyclical defensive exposure to replace the S&P pharmaceuticals index, without the political and regulatory risks. Bottom Line: Redeploy funds from the pharma downgrade and boost the S&P restaurants index to overweight. BLBG: S5REST-MCD, YUM, CMG, SBUX, DRI. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps. Favor growth over value (downgrade alert).
Momentum continues to trump all else, with the equity market surging to new all-time highs last week. However, in the background, the Fed is becoming steadily more hawkish, and the odds of a March rate hike have risen substantially. This should be cause for some trepidation. The market advance since November has been supported primarily by valuation expansion, along with some improvement in corporate profits. The forward P/E has climbed to 18, its highest level in well over a decade. The scope for further expansion is limited. Against this background, it is not surprising that a stealthy flight to safety has developed, although it is not uniform across asset classes. For instance, gold has outperformed most major currencies (note we recently upgraded the gold shares group as a portfolio hedge); global government yields have eased back while sovereign bond spreads have widened. In the U.S., the economically-sensitive transport group has rolled over in line with the yield curve narrowing, the equity SKEW index remains historically elevated, and a defensive vs. cyclical portfolio bias has outperformed handily since early December, on broad-based non-cyclical sector participation. These shifts, on the margin, signal that some investors are bracing for a bout of volatility. Bottom Line: The odds of an equity market sweet spot extension beyond the very near run have diminished as a consequence of ongoing strong economic data, which reflects the easing in financial conditions a year ago. Stick with a defensive over cyclical portfolio stance.
Caveat Emptor
Caveat Emptor
Since late last year, the market has adopted a more defensive than cyclically-oriented tenor. Defensive sectors have troughed at extremely attractive relative valuation levels, based on our models. Conversely, cyclical sectors have rolled over, meeting resistance at very demanding valuation levels of more than two standard deviations above normal. These nascent trend changes have developed even though economic data have generally surprised on the upside. Indeed, the global PMI has been strong, but any hint of a reversal would provide a catalyst for a full-fledged recovery in defensive vs. cyclical stocks. The contraction in U.S. bank lending growth may be heralding slippage in hard economic data (bottom panel), to the benefit of defensive vs. cyclical sectors. Keep in mind that the market is priced for non-inflationary growth nirvana, such that even modest economic disappointment could short circuit the buying binge. The yield curve has stopped widening and financial conditions are no longer easing, providing additional confirmation that the defensive vs. cyclical equity sector trough is more likely a budding trend change than a pause in a downtrend. The bottom line is that the character of the market advance is quietly changing, underscoring that investors should maintain a largely defensive portfolio structure. Please see yesterday's Weekly Report for more details.
A More Defensive Market Tone
A More Defensive Market Tone
Highlights Global manufacturing inventories are low but this does not guarantee higher share prices for global cyclical stocks. If an increase in inventories is accompanied by strengthening final demand, it will be very bullish for the global business cycle. If final demand growth falters, global cyclical plays will relapse amid rising inventories. China's inventory depletion has been due to the large fiscal and credit impulse in the past 12 months - i.e., improving final demand has been instrumental to inventory shedding. Looking forward, the mainland's aggregate credit and fiscal impulse seems to have topped out raising the odds of a reversal in EM/China plays sooner than later. The risk/reward of EM/China plays remains unattractive. Feature Global Manufacturing Inventories Global manufacturing inventories have been depleted over the past 12 months, and inventory levels are generally low (Chart I-1 and Chart I-2). Chart I-1Global Manufacturing Inventories Are Low
Global Manufacturing Inventories Are Low
Global Manufacturing Inventories Are Low
Chart I-2Global Manufacturing Inventories Are Low
Global Manufacturing Inventories Are Low
Global Manufacturing Inventories Are Low
Could inventory re-stocking extend the current manufacturing cycle recovery worldwide? Will low inventories and re-stocking in China lengthen the nation's business cycle upswing? Chart I-3 demonstrates inventory cycles and manufacturing production within manufacturing-intensive economies. The correlation is not stable. Currently, this entails that low manufacturing inventories and a potential rise in inventories over the course of this year do not guarantee acceleration in industrial output growth. Having reviewed manufacturing inventory cycles and their correlation with share prices, we conclude that the key to share prices is final demand - not inventory swings. Manufacturing inventories have dropped in the past 12 months because final demand has been robust (Chart I-4). Historically, periods of re-stocking have often coincided with poor equity market performance. Indeed, Taiwanese, Korean, Japanese and German non-financial share prices have no stable correlation with their respective manufacturing inventory cycles (Chart I-5). In short, manufacturing inventories could rise in the months ahead, but this does not guarantee higher share prices in cyclical industries. Chart I-3Inventories And Production ##br##Are Not Always Correlated
Inventories And Production Are Not Always Correlated
Inventories And Production Are Not Always Correlated
Chart I-4Robust Demand Has Led ##br##To Inventory Depletion
Robust Demand Has Led To Inventory Depletion
Robust Demand Has Led To Inventory Depletion
Chart I-5Non-Financial Share Prices And##br## Inventories: Little Correlation
Non-Financial Share Prices And Inventories: Little Correlation
Non-Financial Share Prices And Inventories: Little Correlation
By and large, the outlook for corporate profits is contingent on final demand rather than re-stocking. All of the above confirms that inventories are a residual of demand and supply. Stronger-than-expected demand is bullish for share prices, though it also often coincides with declining inventories. By contrast, rising inventories typically reflect demand falling behind output growth (one can define it as involuntary re-stocking) and these periods are not favorable for share price gains in cyclical industries. One caveat is that there could be a re-stocking cycle amid strengthening demand or, in other words, voluntary re-stocking. If this transpires in the coming months, it will be extremely bullish for share prices as it will supercharge output growth. While the latter scenario - inventory re-stocking amid strengthening final demand - could very well occur within the advanced economies this year, odds of such positive dynamics are low in EM/China. Bottom Line: Share prices in global cyclical sectors are driven by swings in final demand - not in inventories. Going forward, global manufacturing inventories will rise. If this rise is accompanied by strengthening demand, it will be very bullish for the global business cycle. Otherwise, global cyclical plays will relapse as inventories rise. What Drives China's Inventory Cycles Chart I-6 shows that China's manufacturing inventories typically deplete when the credit and fiscal impulse is rising, and vice versa. China's manufacturing inventories have been exhausted because demand has been strong in the past 12 months. In turn, demand strength has originated from the country's massive fiscal and credit stimulus push from the first half of 2016. Chart I-6China: Strong Policy Stimulus Led To Manufacturing Inventories Reduction
China: Strong Policy Stimulus Led To Manufacturing Inventories Reduction
China: Strong Policy Stimulus Led To Manufacturing Inventories Reduction
That said, China's aggregate fiscal and credit impulse seems to have recently rolled over, pointing to a top in its manufacturing mini-cycle and commodities prices (Chart I-7). This signals a potential deceleration in final demand. On the whole, the ongoing modest tightening by the People's Bank of China and by the bank regulator (the China Banking Regulatory Commission) amid a lingering credit bubble is raising the odds of a moderate credit slowdown in the months ahead. Even modest credit growth deceleration will result in a negative credit impulse (Chart I-8, top panel). Meanwhile, the mainland's fiscal impulse has already dropped (Chart I-8, bottom panel). Chart I-7China: Aggregate Credit And Fiscal##br## Stimulus Has Topped Out
China: Aggregate Credit And Fiscal Stimulus Has Topped Out
China: Aggregate Credit And Fiscal Stimulus Has Topped Out
Chart I-8China: A Breakdown Of Credit ##br##And Fiscal Impulses
China: A Breakdown Of Credit And Fiscal Impulses
China: A Breakdown Of Credit And Fiscal Impulses
On the whole, these developments are leading us to maintain our negative bias toward EM risk assets and China plays. What has gone wrong in our view/analysis on China in the past 12 months is that the nation's credit growth has stayed much stronger than we expected. In our April 13, 2016 report,1 we did a scenario analysis and argued that China's large fiscal stimulus push would be offset by a negative credit impulse if credit growth slowed from 11.5% to below 10%. In reality, credit growth has been between 11.5-12.5%, producing a positive credit impulse. Barring tightening by the central bank or bank regulators, mainland banks can continue originating loans/money at a double-digit pace, as they have been doing for many years (Chart I-9). In general, commercial banks do not need savings to create money/loans and there are few limits on Chinese banks originating loans "out of thin air," as we argued in our Trilogy of Special Reports on money/loan creation, savings and investment.2 Chart I-9China's Credit/Money Growth##br## Remains Rampant
China's Credit/Money Growth Remains Rampant
China's Credit/Money Growth Remains Rampant
Therefore, if credit growth does not slow, our negative view on China's growth will be off-the-mark again. The pressure point in such a case will be the exchange rate. Unlimited money creation/oversupply of local currency is bearish for the value of the RMB. The RMB will continue depreciating, but it is not certain if it will hurt EM risk assets. It is a major consensus view nowadays that the Chinese authorities will not allow growth to suffer ahead of the Party Congress in autumn of this year. Yet, the PBoC and bank regulators are modestly tightening to "normalize" credit growth. Some clients may wonder why we are placing so much emphasis on the rollover of credit and fiscal impulses now, while placing little emphasis on these same indicators in 2016 when they were recovering. The rationale is as follows: when there is a credit bubble - as there is in China now - we tend to downplay the importance of policy easing and put more significance on policy tightening. The opposite also holds true: when the credit/banking system is healthy, we tend to downplay the impact of moderate policy tightening and put greater emphasis on policy easing. In a credit bubble, it does not take much tightening to trigger a downtrend that unwinds excesses. Similarly, moderate tightening in a healthy credit system should not be feared. From a big picture perspective, we turned bearish on China's growth several years ago due to the formation of a credit bubble. The bubble has only gotten larger and an adjustment has not yet even started. This does not justify altering our fundamental assessment of China's growth outlook. It would have been ideal to turn positive tactically on EM/China plays a year ago. Unfortunately, we did not do that. Presently, chasing the market higher might not be the best investment idea. Based on all this and given: the sharp rally in EM/China plays and widespread investor complacency and consensus that "everything" will be fine before the end of this year; modest tightening in Chinese monetary policy amid lingering credit and asset (property and the corporate bond market) bubbles; our outlook for higher U.S. bond yields and a stronger U.S. dollar; the fact that financial markets are forward looking, and timing is impossible; We believe the risk/reward of EM/China plays remains unattractive. In regard to EM ex-China, as we documented in last week's report, domestic demand in the developing economies has not recovered at all, or is mixed at best. DM final demand strength and global manufacturing inventory rebuilding will certainly help Korea and Taiwan, but not other emerging economies. The most important variables for other EM economies including China are domestic demand and/or commodities prices. If commodities prices relapse along with China's credit and fiscal impulse (Chart I-7, bottom panel), EM financial markets will suffer regardless of the growth trends within advanced economies. In fact, strong U.S. growth could lead to higher U.S. interest rate expectations and prop up the U.S. dollar. This will also be a bad omen for EM and commodities. Bottom Line: China's inventory depletion has been due to the large fiscal and credit impulse in the past 12 months - i.e., improving final demand has been instrumental to inventory shedding. Looking forward, the mainland's aggregate credit and fiscal impulse seems to have topped out, raising the odds of a reversal in EM/China plays sooner than later. Industrial Metals Inventories And Prices There is no good data reflecting industrial metals inventories globally. London Metal Exchange and Shanghai Futures Exchange data are likely not indicative of global metals stockpiles. China accounts for close to 50% of global demand for industrial metals, and its demand is critical to prices. Given that the large spike in metals prices in the past several months has coincided with improving Chinese economic data, one would expect the mainland to be the driving force behind the rally. However, Chart I-10 demonstrates that China's imports of industrial metals actually contracted in 2016. This is puzzling, but we have to take it at face value. The top panel of Chart I-11 depicts that traders' net long positions in copper are at a six-year high. This might partially explain the rally in copper in the recent months. Chart I-10China's Import Of Base Metals##br## And Base Metals Prices
China's Import Of Base Metals And Base Metals Prices
China's Import Of Base Metals And Base Metals Prices
Chart I-11Traders Are Long ##br##Copper And Oil
Traders Are Long Copper And Oil
Traders Are Long Copper And Oil
Clearly, China has been depleting its stock of industrial metals, and is likely primed to increase its imports. Nevertheless, periods of metals re-stocking by the mainland have historically not entailed higher industrial metals prices (Chart I-10). On the contrary, rising Chinese imports of metals have actually coincided with falling prices. One can interpret this relationship as China buying industrial metals when prices are falling. This is consistent with China attempting to buy commodities on dips. As to metals inventories in China, the picture is as follows: Steel inventories have plummeted and are low (Chart I-12). One can safely argue that there will be an inventory re-stocking cycle in China. Nevertheless, it is highly uncertain if this will be bullish for steel prices and steel stocks. In fact, there has been a mild negative correlation between steel prices and inventories; historically, when inventories have risen, prices declined (Chart I-12, top panel). This confirms that inventory levels are a residual of demand and supply, and prices are often driven by final demand - not inventories. This is also corroborated by the bottom panel of Chart I-12, which illustrates that share prices of global steel companies are sometimes negatively correlated with China's steel inventories. Stock prices occasionally sell off when inventories rise, and rally when inventories are shrinking. In contrast to steel and steel products, iron ore inventories have risen, and it seems the re-stocking cycle is well advanced (Chart I-13). Chart I-12China: Steel Inventories And Prices
China: Steel Inventories And Prices
China: Steel Inventories And Prices
Chart I-13China: Iron Ore Inventories And Prices
China: Iron Ore Inventories And Prices
China: Iron Ore Inventories And Prices
Yet, again there is no strong correlation between inventories and prices of iron ore (Chart I-13). In our discussions with clients, investors often attribute the rally in industrial metals in general and steel prices in particular over the past 12 months to supply cutbacks in China. While supply reductions have helped in the case of certain metals, it is also evident that the rally in industrial commodities has been driven by rising demand globally and in China. First, China's aggregate credit and fiscal impulse was positive until very recently, implying strengthening demand and thereby higher metals prices. Second, if there were only production cutbacks in steel and other commodities and not demand recovery, the mainland's manufacturing PMI would not have risen (Chart I-14). Finally, steel production has risen both in China and the rest of the world (Chart I-15). Hence, world steel supplies have expanded in the past 12 months. Given this has coincided with rising steel prices, it confirms there has been notable improvement in demand for steel. Chart I-14China: Steel Prices Are Up ##br##Because Of Strong Demand
China: Steel Prices Are Up Because Of Strong Demand
China: Steel Prices Are Up Because Of Strong Demand
Chart I-15Chinese And Global ##br##Steel Production
Chinese And Global Steel Production
Chinese And Global Steel Production
We are not experts in the ebbs and flows of commodities supplies, but it seems the Chinese government's mandated steel capacity cutbacks have not prevented rising steel output in China. In the meantime, rising prices amid rising production and falling inventories are indicative of robust final demand for many metals. Bottom Line: Industrial metals prices have risen because demand in the real economy and among financial investors has been strong. That said, a rollover in China's fiscal and credit impulse and a strong U.S. dollar will likely create headwinds for industrial metals prices over the course of this year. A Word About Oil Inventories OECD oil product inventories have continued to rise, despite supply cuts (Chart I-16, top panel). At the same time, our proxy for change in China's oil inventories has been very elevated for a while, depicting strategic and/or commercial inventory building on the mainland (Chart I-16, bottom panel). It is true that supply curtailments have been instrumental to the rally in oil prices, but the continued inventory buildup also indicates that supply is still outpacing demand. Besides, traders' net long positions in crude have spiked close to their 2014 highs (Chart I-11, bottom panel). This corroborates that demand for crude, like for copper, has partially been financial rather than from final consumers. Finally, U.S. rig counts have recovered somewhat, which may be indicative of a continued rise in America's oil output (Chart I-17). Chart I-16Oil Inventories Keep On Rising
Oil Inventories Keep On Rising
Oil Inventories Keep On Rising
Chart I-17U.S. Rig Counts And Oil Production
U.S. Rig Counts And Oil Production
U.S. Rig Counts And Oil Production
Bottom Line: While we do not have expertise to follow or forecast oil supply dynamics, we are biased in believing that the risk-reward for oil prices is unattractive because of a strong U.S. dollar and potentially weak EM/China asset prices, which could trigger a reduction in net long positions in crude. Investment Conclusions Complacency reigns in the global financial markets. EM equity volatility has fallen close to its cycle lows, the U.S. VIX is depressed, U.S. equity investor sentiment is very elevated and EM corporate credit spreads have plummeted to a ten-year low (Chart I-18). While the timing of a reversal is impossible, the risk-reward profile of EM financial markets is greatly unattractive. The U.S. trade-weighted dollar has consolidated recently, and might be primed for another upleg. As the U.S. dollar resumes its uptrend, EM risk assets will likely sell off. Finally, EM share prices have failed to outperform the developed bourses much, despite the rally in commodities and amelioration in Chinese growth (Chart I-19). Chart I-18Complacency Reigns
Complacency Reigns
Complacency Reigns
Chart I-19EM Equities Have Not Yet Outperformed
EM Equities Have Not Yet Outperformed
EM Equities Have Not Yet Outperformed
Remarkably, analysts' net earnings revisions for EM stocks have so far failed to turn positive (Chart I-20). Either analysts' EPS expectations were originally still too high, or companies are failing to deliver profits. Whatever the reason, the implication is that the consensus is more bullish on EM than is suggested by the underlying fundamentals. Within an EM equity portfolio, our overweights remain Taiwan, Korea, India, China, Thailand, Russia and central Europe. Our underweights are Malaysia, Indonesia, Turkey, Brazil and Peru. We are neutral on other bourses. Finally, the EM equity benchmark is at a critical technical resistance level (Chart I-21) but odds do not favor a sustainable breakout. Chart I-20EM EPS Net Revisions Are Still Negative
EM EPS Net Revisions Are Still Negative
EM EPS Net Revisions Are Still Negative
Chart I-21EM Stocks: A Breakout Attempt
EM Stocks: A Breakout Attempt
EM Stocks: A Breakout Attempt
Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please refer to the Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report titled, "Revisiting China's Fiscal And Credit Impulses", dated April 13, 2016, available at ems.bcaresearch.com 2 Trilogy of Special Reports on money/loan creation, savings and investment, titled, "Misconceptions About China's Credit Excesses" dated October 26, 2016, "China's Money Creation Redux And The RMB", dated November 23, 2016 and "Do Credit Bubbles Originate From High National Savings?", dated January 18, 2017, available at ems.bcaresearch.com Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Our macro models are not signaling that investors should position as if robust and self-reinforcing economic growth lies ahead. Our Deep Cyclical indicators are the weakest, while defensive and interest rate-sensitive models are grinding higher. Deep cyclical sectors are very overvalued and overbought, while defensives are deeply undervalued and oversold. The message from our models is that sub-surface mean reversion is an apt theme for the next few months. The most attractive combination of macro, valuation and technical readings are in the consumer staples, health care sectors with the financials sector a close second, but it is overbought. The least attractive combinations are in energy, materials and industrials. Consistent with the objective readings from these Indicators, prospects for elevated market volatility, stronger economic growth in developed vs developing economies, a tighter Fed and expensive U.S. dollar are consistent with maintaining a largely defensive portfolio structure. Please see yesterday's Cyclical Indicator Update for more details.
Cyclical Indicator Update
Cyclical Indicator Update