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Executive Summary Definitions Matter Definitions Matter Definitions Matter Year-to-date, cyclical stocks have underperformed their defensive counterparts. It is difficult to quantify this underperformance precisely considering the divergence in definitions of what makes a sector cyclical or defensive. We offer a novel way to classify sectors based on a combination of equity beta coefficients and correlations with global macro and financial variables. Importantly, we acknowledge the importance of granularity by looking at the GICS2 sectors. This new approach leads to a cyclicals/defensives equity performance that is superior and more in line with the global economic cycle. Bottom Line: A proper definition of what constitutes a cyclical and a defensive equity sector is essential – whether a recession is around the corner and investors adopt a more defensive portfolio tilt or markets are just responding to what might simply be a mid-cycle slowdown.   Investors around the globe are holding their breath over two questions: Has inflation peaked? And will the US and Europe enter a recession? A peak in inflation may be enough to avoid a hard landing, as it would allow the Federal Reserve and the ECB to moderate their policy tightening. However, if inflation is not peaking, central banks will be forced to engineer recessions. Related Report  European Investment StrategyPlenty Of Risks For Cyclical Stocks In turn, the answers to these questions will determine how cyclical equities perform relative to defensives. So far, the underperformance of cyclical sectors relative to defensives has mostly reflected a valuation squeeze. But if a recession takes place, relative profits will drive the next phase of this market cycle. For now, European defensive sectors are likely to retain the upper hand until EM/China economic activity recovers enough to provide a lift to cyclical sectors, and/or the US dollar rally reverses course on a sustained basis. Chart 1Definitions Matter Definitions Matter Definitions Matter Despite their recent rebound, Euro Area cyclical stocks have underperformed relative to their defensive counterparts over the past nine months. However, quantifying this underperformance depends on how one defines cyclicals and defensives (Chart 1). The aim of this Special Report is to address this issue. There is no perfect way to define a sector as a cyclical or a defensive. In this piece, we review the generally accepted definitions. We draw two conclusions from our assessment; (i) the GICS1 sectors are too broad to get an accurate representation of cyclicals/defensives, and (ii) the use of only one indicator of cyclicality, such as the OECD Composite Leading Indicator (LEI), is lacking. We propose a different approach, which looks at the GICS2 sectors and applies an average of the market beta and the correlations to a set of global macro as well as financial variables sensitive to the global economy. This novel approach leads to a cyclicals/defensives equity performance that is more properly aligned with the global economic cycle. Challenging the Accepted Approach Each of the definitions of the cyclicals/defensives split has its own merit. For example, our own preferred definition of cyclical equities excludes the tech sector, because it sports a negative correlation with interest rates.     Finance theory posits that companies (or sectors) may be categorized based on how they perform in different phases of the business cycle. Consequently, cyclical companies should perform better in the first stages of a new business cycle (especially coming out of a recession) and defensive companies should shine during downturns. Table 1Definitions Matter Revisiting Cyclicals Versus Defensives Revisiting Cyclicals Versus Defensives MSCI defines cyclical and defensive sectors by measuring the correlation between sectors’ relative annual performance to the annual change in the OECD Composite Leading Indicator (LEI) of the corresponding region.1 Table 1 presents the current MSCI classification. There are two issues with this approach. First, results differ substantially depending on the sample period (Table 2). GICS1 sectors match their definitions when using the full history available (from 1995 to present). However, on shorter samples, starting for example from 2005 or 2015, the correlations do not necessarily support the current MSCI classification; the communication services sector correlates negatively with the Euro Area OECD LEI from 2005 to present,2 while the energy sector displays a positive correlation since 2015. Table 2Cyclicality Changes Over Time Revisiting Cyclicals Versus Defensives Revisiting Cyclicals Versus Defensives Looking at the five-year moving correlation of the relative performance of European sectors to the annual change in OECD LEI, four things stand out (Chart 2). First, the energy sector displays a positive correlation, meaning that it behaves as a cyclical. Second, it is not clear that communication services should be labeled a cyclical sector. Third, although tech has on average displayed a five-year moving correlation with activity of around 0.5, it is increasingly behaving like a defensive sector. And fourth, over the past 20 years, all sectors have at one point or another moved from a positive (negative) correlation to a negative (positive) one. Chart 2Cyclicality Is Not Static Cyclicality Is Not Static Cyclicality Is Not Static The second issue with the MSCI approach is the use of the OECD LEIs. While the OECD LEIs are satisfactory at capturing the peaks and troughs in economic activity, we have some concerns over relying on this measure alone to label a sector as cyclical or defensive. Many of the country’s LEIs already include stock prices. Moreover, academic studies have found that the LEIs performed worse than some of their single component indicators, but displayed more accuracy – that is, fewer false signals. In particular, financial components used in some of the country’s LEIs, such as interest rates, spreads, and credit indicators, proved to be better classifiers of both growth and business cycles than the overall LEIs. Chart 3Global Growth Sensitivity Global Growth Sensitivity Global Growth Sensitivity Finally, many (if not most) of the components of the LEIs are domestic variables. As a result, they may not properly reflect how the global economic and trade cycles affect an economy such as that of the Euro Area. In fact, the correlation between the relative performance of Euro Area cyclicals versus defensives and the annual change in the US and Global LEIs is similar to the correlation between the cyclical/defensive split and the Euro Area LEI (Chart 3).3  Reclassifying Cyclicals And Defensives We may draw two conclusions from our earlier assessment; (i) the GICS1 sectors are too broad to secure an accurate definition of cyclicals/defensives, and (ii) the use of only one indicator of cyclicality, such as the OECD LEI, is insufficient. Granularity Holds The Key Many industries or sectors have experienced profound changes over the past decades. Industries evolve and new ones emerge that may disrupt the status quo. For instance, today’s tech sector shares few similarities with its past-self twenty years ago. Chart 4AMore Granularity Needed (I) More Granularity Needed (I) More Granularity Needed (I) Without getting to the company level, many GICS2 sectors already exhibit characteristics deviating substantially from those of the GICS1 sectors of which they are a part (Chart 4A & 4B). Most noticeably: Within industrials: commercial and professional services (9% weight) have a negative correlation with the LEI of -0.23 (Chart 4A, top panel). Within consumer discretionary: the correlation of the retailing sector with the LEI (15% weight) went from 0.75 in the early 2010s to -0.5 in 2018 and has since been trending toward 0 (Chart 4A, third panel). Within tech: software and services (46% weight) sport a negative moving correlation of -0.25, and highlight that this sector has effectively become akin to “digital utilities.” Meanwhile, technology hardware and equipment display a correlation close to 0 (Chart 4A, fourth panel). Chart 4BMore Granularity Needed (II) More Granularity Needed (II) More Granularity Needed (II) Within communication services: telecommunication services (78% weight) still behave like a defensive sector, and it appears that the cyclicality of the GICS1 sector is driven by media and entertainment stocks (Chart 4B, top panel). Within consumer staples: food beverage and tobacco (53% weight) now display a positive correlation of 0.1 with the LEI, whereas it used to have a -0.8 correlation until 2018 (Chart 4B, second panel). Within energy: GICS2 sectors have displayed positive correlations since 2015 (Chart 4B, third panel). For the remaining GICS1 sectors, namely materials, financials, utilities, and healthcare, except for large swings observed in the past, their respective GICS2 sub-sectors currently display correlation coefficients sharing the same sign as their broader aggregates. Thus, adding granularity by looking at the GICS2 sector level instead of the GICS1 classification when creating cyclical and defensive baskets offers a more accurate picture. Good Old Beta Is the market itself the best indicator of a stock’s cyclicality? The returns on the stocks of cyclical (defensive) sectors should reflect high (low) correlation with the market index’s returns. Table 3A presents the beta coefficients obtained from linearly regressing the monthly equity returns of European GICS1 sectors on the monthly equity returns of the All-Country World benchmark. We run into the same issue of getting different results based on the sample period. Historically, the energy sector has had a beta coefficient below 1, but, from 2005, its beta has risen to 1.12. Meanwhile, communication services has a beta coefficient below 1 across all three sample periods selected. Table 3AGICS1 Beta Coefficients Revisiting Cyclicals Versus Defensives Revisiting Cyclicals Versus Defensives We perform the same exercise at the European GICS2 sector level (Table 3B). The results reify the benefit of additional granularity when defining cyclicals and defensives. Table 3BGICS2 Beta Coefficients Revisiting Cyclicals Versus Defensives Revisiting Cyclicals Versus Defensives Combining Correlations With Macro And Financial Variables While stock prices are certainly anticipatory, at times they can also decouple from the business cycle. Equity markets and stock indices are becoming more concentrated, which means that measuring cyclicality through beta alone is no longer sufficient. We complement the use of the beta coefficients with a composite measure of cyclicality based on correlations with global macro and financial variables. We select the following global macro variables (Chart 5A):​​​​​​​ Global Manufacturing PMI Global Industrial Production G3 Capital New Orders Global Exports Chart 5AGlobal Macro Variables Selected Global Macro Variables Selected Global Macro Variables Selected Chart 5BFinancial Variables Selected Financial Variables Selected Financial Variables Selected And we opt for the following high-frequency financial variables (Chart 5B): Trade-weighted USD: The cyclicals-to-defensives ratio and the trade-weighted US dollar display a robust negative correlation. A strong dollar both tightens global financial conditions and indicates weaker economic growth. GS Commodity Price Index: Commodity prices reflect both global supply and demand dynamics. Strong economic activity usually lifts commodity prices, while a slowdown hurts commodity demand. US 10-year Treasury Yield: The relationship with the US 10-year Treasury yield is somewhat more complex. At the beginning of a new business cycle, higher yields reflect reflation and usually correlate with an outperformance of cyclical equities. However, if yields rise too much, they start hurting growth prospects and end up damaging cyclicals. If they fall, it usually reflects increasing growth fears, which is negative for cyclical shares. Junk Spreads: US high-yield corporate bond spreads and the cyclicals/defensives ratio have a strong negative correlation. Widening junk spreads coincide with the end of the business cycle when fears of rising default risk precede a recession. Although these financial variables are highly anticipatory, they are also prone to whipsaws. Consequently, they must be viewed in conjunction with macro variables. We also compute the five-year moving correlations between monthly equity returns of European sectors relative to the ACW benchmark and the two sets of macro and financial variables (Table 4A & 4B). The results are broadly consistent between the long-term correlations with macro and financial variables, as well as with the beta coefficients,4 which comforts us into using a simple average of the three. Table 4ACombining Coefficients For GICS1 Sectors Revisiting Cyclicals Versus Defensives Revisiting Cyclicals Versus Defensives Table 4BCombining Coefficients For GICS2 Sectors Revisiting Cyclicals Versus Defensives Revisiting Cyclicals Versus Defensives At the GICS1 sector level, our new approach indicates that the energy sector should be treated as a cyclical, not a defensive. In fact, it displays more cyclicality than the tech sector. Communication services should also be defined as cyclicals, although it is less of a clear cut than for the other sectors since the adjusted beta coefficient is the culprit behind the negative sign. Taking a closer look at the GICS2 sector level once again provides valuable insight. The computed mean correlation for cyclical GICS2 sectors is 0.34, with a variance of 0.04 and standard deviation of 0.2. For defensive GICS2 sectors, the computed mean correlation is -0.23, with a variance of 0.02 and a standard deviation of 0.13. Assessing This New Approach Having reclassified the GICS2 sectors as cyclicals or defensives, the next step is to assess how this approach performs compared to the MSCI definition of cyclicals/defensives. To do so, we use the average coefficients displayed on Table 4B to create a dynamic basket of cyclicals and defensives GICS2 sectors. These baskets are weighted by market capitalization and are updated monthly. Chart 6New Baskets Of Cyclicals/Defensives New Baskets Of Cyclicals/Defensives New Baskets Of Cyclicals/Defensives Chart 6 shows how the novel cyclical vs. defensives performs over time in the Euro Area relative to the other definitions. Next, we perform a simple back-testing exercise to assess the performance over time of the new cyclicals-to-defensives ratio, with the Global Manufacturing PMI as a control variable. A superior definition of cyclicals vs. defensives should lead to a better performance of cyclicals when the PMI is above its 50 boom/bust line and improving, and to a better performance of defensives when the PMI is below 50 and deteriorating. We look at coincident equity returns (Table 5A). Overall, the results indicate that our new approach is superior and more accurate, both on a 3- and 12-month time horizon. This is especially true when the global economy is deteriorating. When the PMI is below 50 and falling, our basket of defensives outperforms our basket of cyclicals on average by 20% on a 12-month horizon, compared to 14% using the MSCI definition. Table 5AAssessing The Performance (I) Revisiting Cyclicals Versus Defensives Revisiting Cyclicals Versus Defensives The subsequent performance of cyclicals relative to defensives following certain thresholds for the PMI also reinforces our new approach (Table 5B). Interestingly, our new basket of defensives is the only one to outperform cyclicals twelve months after the Global Manufacturing PMI deteriorated over several months and is below 50. Table 5BAssessing The Performance (II) Revisiting Cyclicals Versus Defensives Revisiting Cyclicals Versus Defensives ​​​​​​​ Bottom Line: We are introducing a new approach to defining cyclical versus defensive equities. GICS1 sectors are too broad to achieve an accurate definition of cyclicality. However, the GICS2 classification offers the necessary level of granularity to do so. Moreover, we broaden the set of variables used to determine whether a GICS2 sector is cyclical or defensive. This new approach offers tighter links with the state of the global economy when selecting cyclical or defensive portfolio biases. For now, since EM economies and China remain under duress and the USD has yet to roll over clearly, we maintain our preference for defensive stocks over their cyclical counterparts within equity portfolios.   Jeremie Peloso, Editor/Strategist JeremieP@bcaresearch.com Amr Hanafy Associate Editor AmrH@bcaresearch.com Mathieu Savary, Chief European Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com     Footnotes 1     Applied Research MSCI, “Index Performance in Changing Economic Environments,” 2014, p. 4. 2     Admittedly, communications services – formerly known as telecommunication services – was removed from the list of defensive sectors and classified as a cyclical one following the 2018 GICS structure adjustment. 3    In the remainder of the report, the relative equity performance of European sectors is measured against the ACW index. 4    We normalized the beta coefficients to have a mean of zero, to be comparable with correlation coefficients.
Executive Summary We continue to recommend overweighting risk assets in multi-asset portfolios over the next six months because we believe financial markets have prematurely priced in too much pessimism. Against a particularly uncertain macroeconomic backdrop, we think all investors should have reduced conviction in their views. Asking how one could be getting it wrong is especially relevant today. We identify seven prominent risks to our view, with unanchored inflation expectations and consumer retrenchment posing the biggest threats to our risk-friendly recommendations. The former would imply economic overheating that would prompt the Fed to squash the expansion; the latter would herald a period of insufficient growth. Inflation Expectations Are Still Contained Inflation Expectations Are Still Contained Inflation Expectations Are Still Contained Bottom Line: We are on the alert for several ways our glass-half-full view could be disappointed but none of them has yet emerged. We continue to recommend positioning a portfolio in line with it. Feature We will be taking our summer vacation this week and will not publish next Monday, August 29th. We will resume our regular publication schedule on September 5th. Chart 1Overdone Overdone Overdone We held our quarterly webcast last week, in which we reiterated three main points that will be familiar to US Investment Strategy readers. One, the demise of the American consumer has been greatly exaggerated. Two, monetary policy works with a lag. Three, stubbornly high inflation will bring about the end of the expansion and the bull markets in equities and credit, but not just yet. Those points reinforce our view that equities and credit will outperform Treasuries and cash over the rest of the year and place us at the more bullish end of the continuum inside and outside of BCA for the near term, though we are much more circumspect about the prospect for risk assets over the next twelve months and beyond. We also spent some time digging into the reasons that we are more constructive than the average bear. Those reasons largely revolved around the idea that financial markets prematurely discounted the negative effects that will follow sometime after the Fed flips monetary policy settings from easy to tight. After tightening sharply over the first half of the year (Chart 1, top panel), we think financial conditions are due for a break as Treasury yields settle into a well-defined range (Chart 1, second panel), credit spreads consolidate their retracement after sharply widening (Chart 1, third panel), the S&P 500 finds a footing and retraces more of its first half losses (Chart 1, fourth panel) and the dollar, cooling off after a torrid run (Chart 1, bottom panel), prepares to weaken over the intermediate term. We did not have time to answer all the questions from the webcast Q&A before the hour was up and we spent much of the week replying to them over email. Several of the questions asked what we are most worried about, or which indicators are most likely to signal that we are getting the outlook wrong. We ask ourselves these questions continuously and they are an ideal way to conclude a gathering like last Monday’s. Although we didn’t get to address them live, examining the biggest risks to our view as a coda in this week's bulletin is the next best thing. Risk #1: Unanchored Inflation Expectations We view a breakout in inflation expectations as the biggest risk to our view. If households, businesses and investors were to expect that inflation would inflect meaningfully higher over the long term, they would adjust their behavior in ways that could make high inflation beget still higher inflation. The ensuing self-reinforcing cycle would become much more difficult for the Fed to break and would presumably involve a stark repricing of Treasury securities and risk assets. Related Report  US Investment StrategyRisks To Our View We have been warily monitoring inflation expectations over the near term (0-2 years, top panel in Charts 2 and 3), the intermediate term (3-5 years, middle panel) and the long term (6-10 years, bottom panel), as has the Fed. We have become increasingly emboldened by the stability of the intermediate- and long-term series, even in the face of the highest measured inflation in 40-plus years. Now that near-term expectations have rolled over, some of the risk that elevated current inflation will begin to bleed into long-run expectations is fading. We remain relieved that businesses, investors and consumers (Chart 4) have not yet assumed high inflation will persist but if longer-run inflation expectations threaten to become unanchored, we will abandon our constructive take on the economy and risk assets. Chart 2High Reported Inflation ... High Reported Inflation ... High Reported Inflation ... ​​​​​​ Chart 3... Has Yet To Translate Into ... ... Has Yet To Translate Into ... ... Has Yet To Translate Into ... ​​​​​​ Chart 4... Meaningfully Higher Long-Run Inflation Expectations ... Meaningfully Higher Long-Run Inflation Expectations ... Meaningfully Higher Long-Run Inflation Expectations Risk #2: A Renewed COVID Breakout The other risks are not as significant as unmoored inflation expectations but they are meaningful nonetheless. A renewed COVID breakout that imposed the de facto equivalent of rolling blackouts in production and transportation would partially undo the supply chain improvements that have helped relieve some of the upward pressure on goods inflation while hampering global growth. That could have the doubly negative impact of squeezing S&P 500 earnings while rekindling inflation pressures, nudging the US and global economies toward stagflation. Effective vaccinations and treatments have rendered COVID little more than a nuisance in the States (Chart 5) and other developed nations, but if the pandemic surges back to life elsewhere in the world, we would have to reconsider our more constructive take. Chart 5Initially A Scourge, COVID Is Now An Annoyance Initially A Scourge, COVID Is Now An Annoyance Initially A Scourge, COVID Is Now An Annoyance Risk #3: Geopolitical Pressures Our in-house geopolitical experts were among the first to sound the alarm on Ukraine early in the year. A worsening of the conflict there, or anything that imperils Europe’s access to energy supplies or further restricts global supplies of grain, will also cloud the picture for risk assets. Our geopolitical team has long viewed the Taiwan Strait as a potential major geopolitical flashpoint and a sharp increase in Sino-American tensions would make us reconsider our thesis as well. Our in-house team warns that Iran could be another source of instability and we will have to remain aware of the potential for geopolitics to throw a wrench into otherwise neutral-to-bullish macro conditions. Risk #4: US Consumers Lose Their Nerve Though we haven’t tried to rank the risks beyond a breakout in inflation expectations, a big pickup in the savings rate is the second largest risk on our list. If households reverse field and start saving their disposable income at a rate above their post-crisis/pre-pandemic average (Chart 6), it would signal that their aggregate consumption decisions were beginning to match their gloomy responses to confidence surveys. That would erode our conviction that they will deploy their excess pandemic savings to keep consumption – and the US economy – expanding near its trend rate. If consumers begin to circle the wagons in paradox-of-thrift fashion, it would present a nearly insurmountable obstacle for our thesis. Chart 6A Massive Savings Cushion To Support Consumption ... A Massive Savings Cushion To Support Consumption ... A Massive Savings Cushion To Support Consumption ... Risk #5: Consumer Credit Deterioration As SIFI bank executives noted in last month’s second quarter earnings calls, consumer credit has performed spectacularly well. Credit card net charge-offs are hovering at all-time lows, mortgage foreclosure rates are microscopic, and the only signs of stress have emerged, faintly, at the lowest ends of the wealth and income distributions. The very gentle softening in consumer credit that lenders have seen so far (Chart 7) could turn into something more worrisome if inflation fails to moderate and/or the jobs market goes south. If consumer credit begins palpably deteriorating, it would signal that the excess savings buffer does not offer as much protection as we thought. Chart 7... And Consumer Credit Risks To Our View (Again) Risks To Our View (Again) Risk #6: A Softening Labor Market Chart 8Still A Lot Of Help Wanted Still A Lot Of Help Wanted Still A Lot Of Help Wanted An extremely robust labor market has helped solidify our conviction that a sizable moat protects the US economy from unwelcome near-term surprises. Despite evident deceleration in growth over the first half of the year, net payrolls have continued to grow at a rapid clip and ongoing demand for additional hires (Chart 8) remains strong. The labor market could soften more rapidly than it has so far or than we project it will in the near term. Risk assets’ window for outperformance will shorten the faster the labor demand moat shrinks. Risk #7: Technical Support Could Prove Fleeting We have been further encouraged by the ease with which the S&P 500 sliced through resistance around 4,175 on its second try last week and has remained above that level (Chart 9). We see 4,175 providing tactical support to the index, limiting its near-term downside. If the support were to fail a test, we will be forced to re-evaluate US equities’ near-term risk-reward profile. Chart 9The S&P 500 Appears To Have Some Near-Term Technical Support Risks To Our View (Again) Risks To Our View (Again) A client alerted us last week to a longer-term technical pattern that might serve to put a bottom under equities. Since 1950, no bear market has made new lows after retracing at least 50% of its decline. We explored the pattern beginning with the November 1968-May 1970 bear market and found that tests of the 50% retracement level were few and far between. The bear market action of the last 50-plus years by no means guarantees that the S&P 500 will encounter difficulty punching back through the 50% threshold (4,231.67) it crossed on Friday August 12th, but the index has gathered some positive technical omens during its two-month rally. Investment Implications There is no shortage of potential risks right now and we reiterate our heightened vigilance. Investors must contend with the combination of a once-in-a-century global pandemic, the unprecedented fiscal and monetary responses to its outbreak, the first major cross-border war in Europe since 1945 and four-decade highs in inflation across major developed economies. Our conviction levels are lower than normal and our inherent compulsion to ask where we could be getting it wrong now verges on paranoia. Though we are continuously looking over our shoulder, we are comforted by nearly unanimous glass-half-empty sentiment. We still believe that it won’t take much for corporate earnings and the economy to surprise to the upside. The latest iteration of the Bank of America Merrill Lynch portfolio manager survey revealed that sentiment is no longer “apocalyptically bearish,” but we still expect that relative performance pressures will prod many bearishly positioned managers to cover their risk asset underweights. We remain constructive on risk assets over the next six months, though we will likely take some chips off the table if the S&P 500 rallies into the 4,500-to-4,600 range as we expect. It is a core part of our process to seek out information that may invalidate our hypotheses and we don’t even have to venture beyond the confines of BCA to gather it right now. Our differences with our colleagues are not as large as they might seem in our daily BCA Live and Unfiltered live stream, however, as they boil down to timing. We are neutral-to-bearish twelve months out, as we anticipate another equity bear market will begin around the second half of next year once it becomes apparent that the FOMC will not stand down from its 2% inflation goal. We simply think there’s money to be made from the long side in the interim.   Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com  
Japan’s core CPI (ex-fresh food) grew 2.4% y/y in July, from 2.2% in June. The “core core” CPI measure (ex-fresh food and energy) grew 1.2% y/y in July, surprising slightly to the upside. Despite core inflation surpassing the BoJ’s 2% price stability…
According to our Global Investment strategists, falling food and energy prices will push US headline inflation lower beginning next month.  This will trigger multiple positive adjustments in markets and asset prices over the short term, which will be…
As of Thursday’s close, the 2-year/10-year US Treasury curve is inverted, with the 10-year yield trading -35bps below the 2-year yield.  In Europe, there is no inversion, with the 10-year German yield trading 37bps above the 2-year yield. Why the…
BCA Research’s US Political Strategy service concludes that negative surprises in the form of social unrest, political violence, and domestic terrorism usually cause only a short-term spike in financial market volatility. A major crisis that affects election…
Executive Summary   US Support For A Military Coup? Trump Raid Heightens Political Risk Trump Raid Heightens Political Risk A confluence of structural and cyclical factors makes the US highly prone to social and political instability, as in 2020. Today’s stagflationary economic environment further amplifies domestic political risk. The Biden administration’s decision to pursue a criminal investigation of former President Trump will drive political polarization higher, as will the overall 2022-24 political cycle. Investors should expect negative surprises from US politics, including social unrest, political violence, and domestic terrorism of whatever stripe. Such crisis events usually cause only a short-term spike in financial market volatility. A major crisis that affects election results could have a more lasting impact. The base case for US policy in 2023-24 is gridlock, which is marginally disinflationary. It would take an extraordinary surprise to change that.  On a relative basis, US assets benefit from domestic political risk because geopolitical risk rises even faster. Recommendation (Tactical) INITIATION DATE Return Long DXY (Dollar Index) Feb 23, 2022 10.8% Bottom Line: Investors should expect volatility and negative “October surprises” in the short term, at least through the midterm elections. US domestic political risk is high and will also amplify global geopolitical risk. Feature The US’s rolling political crisis is escalating again and political violence is likely to rise in the lead up to the midterm elections on November 8 and the presidential election in November 2024. The Department of Justice (DoJ) refused on August 15 to release the affidavit underpinning the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI) raid on former President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida. Never before has a US president suffered a raid on his home by the country’s federal law enforcement agencies – though presidents have been investigated before. It is not yet clear what charges will be brought against Trump but it is highly likely that he will be indicted for something. The Justice Department released a redacted version of the search warrant suggesting that Trump may be accused of having kept state secrets at his home in violation of the Presidential Records Act and possibly also the 1917 Espionage Act. Speculation says that some information he took back from the White House relates to nuclear weapons.1 The DoJ is pursuing a criminal investigation. The former president could very well end up on trial, or even in jail, but it is also possible that changes in political power will prevent him from going. What are the investment implications, if any? The US will see significant social and political upheaval but the main investment implication is that the US will continue to play an unpredictable and disruptive role abroad, perpetuating a flight to safety in financial markets, at least until the midterm elections are over.  Drivers Of US Political Instability The US political crisis should first be seen through the lens of geopolitics: The US is a continent-sized nation that is separated from the other world powers by large oceans. It is therefore highly defensible and economically insulated, with total exports accounting for only 10.2% of GDP.  However, this insularity and relative security create space for a fast growing and evolving society that is primarily focused on doing business rather than strengthening the state. The rapid creation of wealth is good but also produces large disparities in region, class, and race that periodically undermine stability. Maintaining domestic stability across the continent would be a constant challenge even if the government were not a federal republic with short political cycles driven by fickle popular opinion. Freedom is a source of political contention as well as wealth creation.   Over the past 70 years the society has become less religious and more secular, while the economy has become less manufacturing-oriented and more service-oriented. The shift to a high-tech and information-driven society has empowered the highly educated at the expense of the less educated. Capital owners have benefited from rising asset values, deregulation, and globalization, while labor has witnessed stagnant real wages. Agricultural and manufacturing regions have fallen behind.  Social stability is especially hard to maintain during cyclical periods of economic distress, highlighted today by the rising Misery Index (Chart 1). While inflation may subside in the short run, it will probably persist in the long run, and unemployment has nowhere to go but up. There is a demographic and generational factor that is also driving US instability today: The Baby Boom generation did not begin their adult lives with a robust policy consensus, like their parents’ generation, which shared sacrifices during the Great Depression and World War II. Instead the Boomers began with deep divisions due to the Vietnam War and social revolution of the 1960s. As they grew in wealth and power in the 1980s-90s, pro-growth tax policy, deregulation, and rapid socioeconomic changes aggravated these divisions. Inequality surged  (Chart 2). The Iraq War and 2008 financial crisis made matters worse. Chart 1US: High Misery Index US: High Misery Index US: High Misery Index Chart 2US: High Inequality US: High Inequality US: High Inequality Now the elites of this generation, who lead the two major parties, are trying to secure their economic and political interests before retirement and death. Bluntly, the pro-business faction is trying to prevent the pro-government faction from clawing back its wealth. Political polarization has reached the highest level since the early twentieth century (Chart 3). While polarization has subsided from the peaks of 2020, it could still exceed those peaks in the 2022-24 political cycle. The US will remain at or near “peak polarization” until generational change and geopolitical conflicts forge a new policy consensus. Bottom Line: The US is geopolitically secure but periodically struggles to maintain domestic stability. Today it is witnessing a confluence of structural and cyclical factors that generate social unrest and historic levels of political polarization. The 2022-24 election cycle will be tumultuous. Chart 3US: Peak Polarization US: Peak Polarization US: Peak Polarization Disaffection Can Lead To Violence Any kind of fanaticism can lead to violent extremism. Militants have emerged from secular movements on the right and left, from communism to fascism, as well as from religious movements.2 In recent years the US has seen a rise in violence, including crime and terrorism. Mass shootings have spiked since the 2008 financial crisis. Terrorism has revived to the highest levels since the 1980s, 96% of which is domestic terrorism (Chart 4). Recent improvements to the social safety net may or may not reduce violence. The stagflationary economic backdrop bodes ill. Opinion polls are of dubious accuracy when they ask people to admit to militant or criminal inclinations, but they still take the temperature of society. Several recent polls suggest that as many as 25% of Americans are willing to consider violence as a means of resolving political problems (Chart 5). Chart 4US: Domestic Terrorism, Political Violence Trump Raid Heightens Political Risk Trump Raid Heightens Political Risk Chart 5US Support For Political Violence? Trump Raid Heightens Political Risk Trump Raid Heightens Political Risk In addition, 55% of Republicans and 40% of independents claim that a military coup could be justified when there is “a lot of corruption,” a subjective standard to say the least (Chart 6). While this number has spiked over the 2020 election cycle, it also shows a substantial pre-existing willingness to entertain authoritarian solutions to political disputes. We do not take these polls at face value given the difficult subject matter. When a major violent event occurs and real people die, popular “support” for political violence will collapse across the United States. Nevertheless these data suggest a high level of disaffection and discontent, which is supported by the structural socioeconomic problems cited above.   Chart 6US Support For A Military Coup? Trump Raid Heightens Political Risk Trump Raid Heightens Political Risk The January 6, 2021 incident at the US Capitol was the crescendo of an explosion of social unrest that occurred across the country in 2020, triggered by the aforementioned structural factors, the Covid-19 pandemic, race riots, and political conflict over the 2020 election. The number of homicides rose to 7.4 per hundred thousand people, the highest annual number since the 1990s, higher than in 2001 when the 9/11 terrorist attacks occurred, and reminiscent of the turbulent late 1960s. This year’s midterm elections will be the first major electoral test since the chaotic events of 2020 and none of the underlying drivers of unrest have been resolved. On the contrary, recent signs are pointing to another escalation of social and political upheaval. The 2024 election will also spark unrest and violence. Bottom Line: The number of violent incidents is rising while a substantial minority of public opinion appears willing to entertain violent means of resolving political disputes. From Reality TV To Real Rebellion? The FBI’s raid on Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate is naturally triggering a backlash from Trump supporters and Republicans. These groups were already distrustful of the federal government and particularly the FBI for spying on the Trump presidential campaign in the 2016 election.3 Republican support for the FBI and DoJ will fall sharply from its current level in opinion polling taken in 2019 (Chart 7, top panel). Trump opponents will argue that Trump is being investigated because of wrongdoing while Trump supporters will think that the Biden administration is trying to prevent him from running for re-election in 2024. Any lack of transparency by the Justice Department will heighten suspicion and acrimony. Chart 7US Views On 2021 Rebellion Trump Raid Heightens Political Risk Trump Raid Heightens Political Risk A fraction of radicalized Trump supporters could be motivated by this extraordinary event to conduct attacks. Already an armed suspect, allegedly linked to a right-wing extremist group and to the January 6 rebellion at the Capitol, attempted to storm an FBI field office in Cincinnati, Ohio. The Department of Homeland Security and FBI have warned about the risk of domestic terrorism for several years and have issued a new warning since the FBI raid on Mar-a-Lago.4 There is no easy way to resolve the dispute over the 2020 election or the January 6 rebellion because these events have taken on mythic status in the eyes of the different factions. For about half of Republicans, the January 6 incident was a patriotic defense of freedom – rather than an insurrection or attempt to prevent the peaceful and democratic transfer of power (Chart 7, bottom panel). Some small portion of those who view the election as stolen could become radicalized and act out violently. Trump received 46% of the popular vote in 2016 and 47% in 2020 (Chart 8). His favorability has suffered since the January 6 events but not as much as one might think. Among Republicans, Trump’s favorability remains largely unperturbed (Chart 9). While the vast majority of these voters are law-abiding, the decision to raid Trump’s home, and any future decision to press criminal charges, will drastically increase the risk of radicalization on the fringes. Chart 8Trump’s Share Of Popular Vote Trump Raid Heightens Political Risk Trump Raid Heightens Political Risk Chart 9Trump’s Popular Support Post-2020 Trump Raid Heightens Political Risk Trump Raid Heightens Political Risk It does not take a social scientist to recognize the potential for an increase in political violence if the federal government is perceived as using the arm of the law to prevent a popular candidate from contesting past or future elections. The risk of political violence cannot be dismissed because the US is a particularly well-armed country. There were 120 civilian-held firearms per 100 persons in the United States as of 2017. By contrast, the nearest country is France, with only 20 firearms per 100 persons (Chart 10). That does not mean that a major incident of violence will necessarily stem from the right wing. Only five years ago an extremist left-wing gunman tried to assassinate a whole group of Republican lawmakers while they were playing baseball. Earlier this year the Department Homeland Security warned about violent reactions to the Supreme Court’s overturning of the Roe v. Wade decision on abortion.5 If and when a major incident of political violence occurs, the public reaction will be a powerful rejection of violence across the political spectrum. For example, President Bill Clinton’s administration benefited from the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995 (Chart 11). Much will depend on the nature of the attack and which faction is most able to capitalize on its victimization. Chart 10Right To Bear Arms Shall Not Be Infringed Trump Raid Heightens Political Risk Trump Raid Heightens Political Risk Chart 11OKC Bombing Spurred Rally Round The Flag OKC Bombing Spurred Rally Round The Flag OKC Bombing Spurred Rally Round The Flag Ultimately instability will generate a popular consensus opposed to political violence and supportive of law and order, just as it did in previous periods of American upheaval. The future policy consensus will be “federalist” in orientation due to America’s geopolitics: there will be an increasing need to unify the states to achieve other strategic imperatives like prosperity and national security. We call this theme “Limited Big Government.” This re-centralization process will involve the federal government intervening to stabilize the society. It is not obvious which political party will first capture this consensus. It depends on the nature and timing of any crisis events and the cyclical rotation of parties. Bottom Line: The US is a heavily armed country that is currently prone to social and political instability. The risk of political violence and domestic terrorism of whatever stripe is already very high. In addition, a substantial portion of the country’s right-wing faction believes that the 2020 election was stolen, that the January 6 rebellion was justified, and that the federal government is now abusing its law enforcement powers to prevent a candidate from running in 2024. Domestic terrorism risk will increase.   Implications For The 2024 Election Federal agencies were well aware of the risk of a domestic backlash when they decided to raid Mar-a-Lago. Investigators may or may not produce ironclad evidence of wrongdoing by Trump, but polarization will continue to be the overriding dynamic in the short run. It is unlikely that any evidence will convince the different parties to change their opinions of Trump.    Assuming Republicans retake the House of Representatives this fall, they will likely impeach Biden, though they will lack the votes in the Senate to remove him from office. US domestic policy will be effectively paralyzed as the partisan conflict continues. The 2024 election will be required to settle the Trump saga and the future direction of US national policy. Trump’s legal troubles could be a blessing or a curse for the Republican Party in the 2024 cycle: If Trump is disqualified or put in jail, then he will become a political martyr for his populist base, motivating Republican voter turnout. At the same time, the Republican Party establishment will gain the advantage of nominating a more favorable candidate who will be eligible to hold the presidency for eight years. Republicans would benefit. If Trump is not disqualified, then he will be even more incentivized to run for the Republican nomination to avoid legal prosecution. In that case he will hinder Republican appeal among moderate and independent voters – leaving them vulnerable to a party split or third-party challenge. Even if he wins, he will only be eligible for the presidency for four years, limiting his party’s prospects. Republicans would suffer. The takeaway from the above is that Trump’s interests continue to be at odds with the interests of the Republican Party elite. If the Democrats aggressively prosecute Trump and try to put him behind bars, they will in fact help unify and motivate the Republican Party opposition. Two further conclusions can be drawn: First, because of the January 6 incident and the political fallout, any future attempt by protesters or rioters to storm a major federal power center will likely be met with overwhelming force rather than accommodation. If that occurs, and state violence is seen as partisan, then the party that uses force will suffer in public opinion. As with domestic terrorism, a major crisis is likely to occur. But it will ultimately be conducive to a new national policy consensus.  Second, US domestic instability will incentivize foreign powers to take advantage of US distraction to pursue their national interests aggressively in their own region. At the same time, the US government will also pursue a reactive foreign policy to attempt to divide the opposition and suppress domestic dissent. Therefore US domestic political instability increases global geopolitical instability.   Market Response Will Be Volatility What are the investment ramifications of the above? US corporate earnings are heavily insulated from political crises that do not affect either US policy or the structure of the government and economy. Volatility sometimes pops briefly during domestic terrorist events but not in a way that affects the investment outlook (Chart 12). Investors should bear this in mind since another crisis event is coming. True, if the Mar-a-Lago raid affects the midterm election – and hence the composition of the US government in 2023-24 – then financial markets will respond to some extent. However, investors can safely ignore this risk because the stagflationary economy will be the chief factor in the midterms and already favors the opposition party. For the same reason it remains highly likely that Republicans will retake the House of Representatives, producing legislative gridlock in 2023. The result is disinflationary in the short run, though inflation will be a persistent problem over the long run. If Democrats somehow retain control of both houses of Congress, i.e. the “Blue sweep risk,” then investors would see a substantial change in the policy outlook, as Democrats would have a second chance to raise taxes and social spending. But the odds of a blue sweep are low. Our House election model implies that Democrats will lose 22 seats when they only need to lose a net of five seats to lose control. Our Senate model gives 47.5% chance of Democrats retaining control, too close to call at this point (Appendix). The odds of another blue sweep are only 20% according to online betting market PredictIt. Chart 12Market Historically Ignores Domestic Terrorism Market Historically Ignores Domestic Terrorism Market Historically Ignores Domestic Terrorism US political instability has, if anything, supported the US dollar and US equity and bond outperformance for many years. The more unstable the US, the more unstable the world. Indeed, because of the US’s geopolitical position, the US often exports domestic instability to the rest of the world. That is the situation today as the Biden administration’s domestic-focused, reactive foreign policy exacerbates the conflicts with Russia and China. The Biden administration is willing to escalate strategic tensions with both China and Russia in the lead-up to the midterm elections – and this tendency will likely become the Biden Doctrine, lasting into 2024. Investors should remain defensively positioned, and overweight US assets, at least until the midterm election is over.     Matt Gertken Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist mattg@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1     Read the warrant behind FBI search of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago,” PBS, August 12, 2022, pbs.org. 2     See Katarzyna Jasko et al, “A comparison of political violence by left-wing, right-wing, and Islamist extremists in the United States and the world,” PNAS [Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America] 119:30 (2022), July 18, 2022, pnas.org. See also Herbert McClosky and Dennis Chong, “Similarities and Differences between Left-Wing and Right-Wing Radicals,” British Journal of Political Science 15:3 (1985), pp. 329-63, jstor.org.  3    See Jessica Lee, “Did Obama Get Caught ‘Spying’ on Trump’s 2016 Campaign?” Snopes, September 29, 2020, snopes.com. See also Wall Street Journal Editorial Board, “Trump Really Was Spied On,” February 14, 2022, wsj.com. 4    See Department of Homeland Security, “Strategic Intelligence Assessment and Data on Domestic Terrorism,” July 11, 2022, dhs.gov; Christopher Wray, “Worldwide Threats to the Homeland,” Federal Bureau of Investigation, September 17, 2020, fbi.gov. See also Ryan Lucas, “FBI, Homeland Security warn about threats to law enforcement after Trump search,” NPR, August 15, 2022, npr.org. 5    See Stef W. Kight, “DHS memo: Violent extremism ‘likely’ in wake of Roe v. Wade decision,” Axios, June 24, 2022, axios.com. Strategic Themes Open Tactical Positions (0-6 Months) Open Cyclical Recommendations (6-18 Months) Regional Geopolitical Risk Matrix  
Listen to a short summary of this report.     Executive Summary Euro Bulls Are Evaporating Euro Bulls Are Evaporating Euro Bulls Are Evaporating The euro is likely to undershoot in the near term, as the winter months approach and economic volatility in Europe rises. However, much of the euro’s troubles are well understood and discounted by financial markets. This suggests a floor closer to parity for the EUR/USD. Unlike many other developed economies, the fiscal drag in the eurozone is likely to be minimal for the rest of this year and early next year. The forces pressuring equilibrium rates lower in the periphery are slowly dissipating. That should lift the neutral rate of interest in the entire eurozone. China’s zero Covid-19 policy along with property market troubles has weighed heavily on the euro, but that could change. RECOMMENDATIONS INCEPTION LEVEL inception date RETURN Long EUR/GBP 0.846 2021-10-15 -0.13 Short EUR/JPY 141.20 2022-07-07 2.46 Bottom Line: The euro tends to be largely driven by pro-cyclical flows, which will be a positive when risk sentiment picks up. Meanwhile, making a structural case for the euro is easy when it comes to valuation. According to our in-house PPP models, an investor who buys the euro today can expect to make 6% a year over the next decade, should the euro mean revert to fair value and beyond. Our current stance is more measured because investors could see capitulation selling in the coming months. Feature Chart 1Two Decades After The Creation Of The Euro Two Decades After The Creation Of The Euro Two Decades After The Creation Of The Euro The creation of the euro was an ambitious project. It began with a simple idea – let’s create the biggest monetary union and everything else will follow, not least, economic might. Over the last two decades, the euro has survived, but its ambitions have been jolted by various crises. Today, the euro is sitting around where it was at the initiation of the project (Chart 1). That has been a tremendous loss in real purchasing power for many of its citizens. Given that we are back to square one, this report examines the prospects for the euro from the lens of its original ambitions, while navigating the economic and geopolitical landscape today. Surviving The Winter Chart 2A European Recession Is Well Priced In A European Recession Is Well Priced In A European Recession Is Well Priced In Winter will be tough for eurozone citizens. But how tough? In our view, less than what the euro is pricing in. According to the ZEW sentiment index, the eurozone manufacturing PMI should be around 45 today, but sits at 49.8. The euro, which has been tracking the ZEW index tick-for-tick has already priced in a deep recession, worse than the 2020 episode (Chart 2). Bloomberg GDP growth consensus forecasts for the eurozone are still penciling in 2.8% growth for 2022, down from a high of 4%. For 2023, forecasts have hit a low of 0.8%. It is certainly possible that euro area growth undershoots this level, which will cause a knee jerk sell off in the euro. However, much of the euro’s troubles are well understood and discounted by financial markets. Natural gas storage is already close to 80%, the EU’s target, to help the eurozone navigate the winter. Coal plants are firing on all cylinders, and Germany has decided to delay the closure of its nuclear power plants. It is true that electricity prices are soaring, but part of the story has been weather-related, notably a heat wave across Europe, falling water levels along the Rhine that has delayed coal shipments, and lower wind speeds that have affected renewable energy generation. France is also having problems with nuclear power generation, due to little availability of water for cooling reactors. Looking ahead, energy markets are already discounting a steep fall in prices from the winter energy cliff (Chart 3). If that turns out to be true, it will be a welcome fillip for eurozone growth. First, it will ease the need for the ECB to tighten policy aggressively, and second, it will boost real incomes, which will support spending. This is not being discussed in financial markets today. Chart 3AFutures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Futures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Futures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Chart 3CFutures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Futures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Futures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Chart 3BFutures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Futures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Futures Markets Suggest The Energy Crunch Will Ebb Fiscal Policy To The Rescue? Unlike many other developed economies, the fiscal drag in the eurozone is likely to be minimal for the rest of this year and early next year (Chart 4). As funds from the next generation EU plan are being disbursed into strategic sectors, including renewable energy, Europe’s productive capital base will also improve. This is likely to have a huge multiplier effect on European growth. Chart 4AThe Fiscal Drag In The Eurozone Could Be Minimal The Fiscal Drag In The Eurozone Could Be Minimal The Fiscal Drag In The Eurozone Could Be Minimal Chart 4BThe Fiscal Drag In The Eurozone Could Be Minimal The Fiscal Drag In The Eurozone Could Be Minimal The Fiscal Drag In The Eurozone Could Be Minimal Taking a bigger-picture view, what has become evident in recent years is stronger solidarity among eurozone countries, both economically and politically. Related Report  Foreign Exchange StrategyMonth In Review: Inflation Is Still Accelerating Globally Economically, the standard dilemma for the eurozone was that interest rates were too low for the most productive nation, Germany, but too expensive for others, such as Spain and Italy. As such, the euro was often caught in a tug of war between a rising equilibrium rate of interest for Germany, but a very low neutral rate for the peripheral countries. The good news is that for the eurozone, a lot of this internal rupture has been partly resolved. Labor market reforms have seen unit labor costs in Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain collectively contract since 2008. This has effectively eliminated the competitiveness gap with Germany, accumulated over the last two decades (Chart 5). Italy remains saddled with a rigid and less productive workforce, but the overall adjustments have still come a long way to close a key fissure plaguing the common currency area. The result has been a collapse in peripheral borrowing spreads, relative to Germany (Chart 6). Ergo, interest payments as a share of GDP are now manageable. It is true that Italy remains a basket case but the ECB’s Transmission Protection Instrument (TPI) will ensure that peripheral spreads remain well contained and a liquidity crisis (in Italy) does not morph into a solvency one. Chart 5The Periphery Is Now Competitive The Periphery Is Now Competitive The Periphery Is Now Competitive Chart 6Peripheral Spreads Are Still Contained In Real Terms Peripheral Spreads Are Still Contained In Real Terms Peripheral Spreads Are Still Contained In Real Terms Beyond the adjustment in competitiveness, productivity among eurozone countries might also converge. Our European Investment Strategy colleagues suggest that the neutral rate is still wide between Germany and the periphery. That said, gross fixed capital formation in the periphery has been surging relative to core eurozone members (Chart 7). If this capital is deployed in the right sectors, it will have two profound impacts. First, the neutral rate of interest in the eurozone will be lifted from artificially low levels. The proverbial saying is that a chain is only as strong as its weakest link. This means that if the forces pressuring equilibrium rates lower in the periphery are slowly dissipating, that should lift the neutral rate of interest in the entire eurozone. Over a cyclical horizon, this should be unequivocally bullish for the euro. Second, and more importantly, economic solidarity among eurozone members will help ensure the survival of the euro, over the next decade and beyond. Chart 7The Periphery Could Become More Productive The Periphery Could Become More Productive The Periphery Could Become More Productive Trading The Euro The above analysis suggests long-term investors should be buying the euro today. However, the long run can be a very long time to be offside. Our trading strategy is as follows: Over the next 6 months, stay neutral to short the euro. The economic landscape for the eurozone remains fraught with risk. This is a typical recipe for a currency to undershoot. Eurozone banks are very sensitive to economic conditions in the eurozone, and ultimately the performance of the euro, and the signal from bank shares remains negative (Chart 8). Chart 8European Banks Are Not Part Of The Agenda Watch Eurozone Banks European Banks Are Not Part Of The Agenda Watch Eurozone Banks European Banks Are Not Part Of The Agenda Watch Eurozone Banks Investors have been cutting their forecasts for the euro but have not yet capitulated. Bets are that the euro will be at 1.10 by the end of next year, and 14% higher in two years. A bottom will be established when investors cut their forecasts below current spot prices (Chart 9). This corroborates with data from net speculative positions that have yet to hit rock bottom.  Chart 9Euro Bulls Are Evaporating Euro Bulls Are Evaporating Euro Bulls Are Evaporating Real interest rates in the euro area are still plunging across the curve, relative to the US. The two-year real yield has hit a cyclical low. Five-year, 10-year and 30-year real yields are also falling. Historically, the euro tends to trend higher when interest rate differentials are moving in favor of the eurozone (Chart 10). Chart 10AReal Rates Are Dropping In The Euro Area Real Rates Are Dropping In The Euro Area Real Rates Are Dropping In The Euro Area Chart 10BReal Rates Are Dropping In The Euro Area Real Rates Are Dropping In The Euro Area Real Rates Are Dropping In The Euro Area Hedging costs have risen tremendously, as the forward market (like investors) is already pricing in an appreciation in the euro. The embedded two-year return for EUR investors is circa 4%, in line with the carry costs (Chart 11). In real terms, the returns are closer to 9% to compensate for much higher inflation expectations in the eurozone. Higher hedging costs will dissuade foreign investors from gobbling up European assets on a hedged basis. Chart 11A 5% Rally In The Euro Is Already Anticipated A 5% Rally In The Euro Is Already Anticipated A 5% Rally In The Euro Is Already Anticipated In short, the euro is likely to enter a capitulation phase. Our sense is that that it will push EUR/USD below parity, towards 0.98. Below that level, we believe the risk/reward profile will become much more attractive for both short- and longer-term investors. Signals From External Demand Chart 12The Euro Is Increasingly Dependant On Chinese Data The Euro Is Increasingly Dependant On Chinese Data The Euro Is Increasingly Dependant On Chinese Data The eurozone is a very open economy. Exports of goods and services represented 51% of euro area GDP in 2021. This means that what happens with external demand, especially in the US, the UK and China, matters for European growth (Chart 12). Of all its major export partners, China is the biggest question mark. China’s zero Covid-19 policy along with property market troubles has weighed heavily on the euro. Historically, the Chinese credit impulse has been a good coincident indicator for EUR/USD. Lately, that relationship has decoupled (Chart 13A). We favor the view that the credit transmission mechanism in China is merely delayed, rather than broken. For one, a rising Chinese credit impulse usually leads European exports, and this time should be no different. Chinese bond markets are also becoming more liberalized, and as such are a key signal for financial conditions in China. For over a decade, easing financial conditions have usually been a good signal that import demand is about to improve (Chart 13B). This is good news for European export demand. The bottom line is that investors are currently too pessimistic on Europe’s growth prospects at a time when a few green shoots are emerging for external demand. That may not save the euro in the near term but will be a welcome fillip for euro bulls when it does undershoot. Chart 13AThe Muse For The Euro Is Chinese Data The Muse For The Euro Is Chinese Data The Muse For The Euro Is Chinese Data Chart 13BThe Muse For The Euro Is Chinese Data The Muse For The Euro Is Chinese Data The Muse For The Euro Is Chinese Data Concluding Thoughts Chart 14The Goldilocks Case For The Euro The Goldilocks Case For The Euro The Goldilocks Case For The Euro The euro tends to be largely driven by pro-cyclical flows. Fortunately for investors, European equities remain unloved, given that they are trading at some of the cheapest cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings multiples in the developed world. Analysts are aggressively revising up their earnings estimates for eurozone equities, relative to the US. They might be wrong in the near term, but over a 9-to-12-month horizon, this has been a good leading indicator for the euro.  Making a structural case for the euro is easy when it comes to valuation. According to our in-house PPP models, an investor who buys the euro today can expect to make 6% a year over the next decade, should the euro mean revert to fair value and beyond (Chart 14). Meanwhile, beyond the winter months, inflation could come crashing back to earth in the eurozone, which will provide underlying support for the fair value of the currency. Our near-term stance is more measured because investors are only neutral the euro, and risk reversals are not yet at a nadir. This is particularly relevant given that Europe still has a war in its backyard, with the potential of generating more market volatility ahead. Given this confluence of factors, we have chosen to play euro via two channels: Long EUR/GBP: As we argued last week, the UK has a bigger stagflation problem compared to the eurozone. This trade is also a bet on improving economic fundamentals between the eurozone and the UK, as well as a bet on policy convergence between the two economies. Short EUR/JPY: The yen is even cheaper than the euro. In a risk-off environment, EUR/JPY will sell off. In a risk-on environment, the yen can still benefit since it is oversold. Meanwhile, investors remain bullish EUR/JPY. Long EUR/USD: We will go long the euro if it breaks below 0.98.   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Cyclical Holdings (6-18 months) Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
Dispatches From The Future: From Goldilocks To President DeSantis
Listen to a short summary of this report.     Executive Summary Back From The Future: An Investor’s Almanac Dispatches From The Future: From Goldilocks To President DeSantis Dispatches From The Future: From Goldilocks To President DeSantis Stocks will rally over the next six months as recession risks abate but then begin to swoon as it becomes clear the Fed will not cut rates in 2023. A second wave of inflation will begin in mid-2023, forcing the Fed to raise rates to 5%. The 10-year US Treasury yield will rise above 4%. While financial conditions are currently not tight enough to induce a recession, they will be by the end of next year. In the past, the US unemployment rate has gone through a 20-to-22 month bottoming phase. This suggests that a recession will start in early 2024. The US dollar will soften over the next six months but then get a second wind as the Fed is forced to turn hawkish again. Over the long haul, the dollar will weaken, reflecting today’s extremely stretched valuations.   Bottom Line: Investors should remain tactically overweight global equities but look to turn defensive early next year. Somewhere in Hilbert Space I have long believed that anything that can possibly happen in financial markets (as well as in life) will happen. Sometimes, however, it is useful to focus on a “base case” or “modal” outcome of what the world will look like. In this week’s report, we do just that, describing the evolution of the global economy from the perspective of someone who has already seen the future unfold. September 2022 – Goldilocks! US headline inflation continues to decline thanks to lower food and gasoline prices (Chart 1). Supply-chain bottlenecks ease, as evidenced by falling transportation costs and faster delivery times (Chart 2). Most measures of economic activity bottom out and then begin to rebound. The surge in bond yields earlier in 2022 pushed down aggregate demand, but with yields having temporarily stabilized, demand growth returns to trend. The S&P 500 moves up to 4,400. Chart 1ALower Food And Gasoline Prices Will Drag Down Headline Inflation (I) Lower Food And Gasoline Prices Will Drag Down Headline Inflation (I) Lower Food And Gasoline Prices Will Drag Down Headline Inflation (I) Chart 1BLower Food And Gasoline Prices Will Drag Down Headline Inflation (II) Lower Food And Gasoline Prices Will Drag Down Headline Inflation (II) Lower Food And Gasoline Prices Will Drag Down Headline Inflation (II)   October 2022 – Europe’s Prospects of Avoiding a Deep Freeze Improve: Economic shocks are most damaging when they come out of the blue. With about half a year to prepare for a cut-off of Russian gas, the EU responds with uncharacteristic haste: Coal-fired electricity production ramps up; the planned closure of Germany’s nuclear power plants is postponed; the French government boosts nuclear capacity, which had been running at less than 50% earlier in 2022; and, for its part, the Dutch government agrees to raise output from the massive Groningen natural gas field after the EU commits to establishing a fund to compensate the surrounding community for any damage from increased seismic activity. EUR/USD rallies to 1.06.  November 2022 – Divided Congress and Trump 2.0: In line with pre-election polling, the Democrats retain the Senate but lose the House (Chart 3). Markets largely ignore the outcome. To no one’s surprise, Donald Trump announces his candidacy for the 2024 election. Over the following months, however, the former president has trouble rekindling the magic of his 2016 bid. His attacks on his main rival, Florida governor Ron DeSantis, fall flat. At one rally in early 2023, Trump’s claim that “Ron is no better than Jeb” is greeted with boos. Chart 2Supply-Chain Pressures Are Easing Supply-Chain Pressures Are Easing Supply-Chain Pressures Are Easing Chart 3Democrats Will Lose The House But Retain The Senate Dispatches From The Future: From Goldilocks To President DeSantis Dispatches From The Future: From Goldilocks To President DeSantis   December 2022 – China’s “At Least One Child Policy”: The 20th Party Congress takes place against the backdrop of strict Covid restrictions and a flailing housing market. In addition to reaffirming his Common Prosperity Initiative, President Xi stresses the need for actions that promote “family formation.” The number of births declined by nearly 30% between 2019 and 2021 and all indications suggest that the birth rate fell further in 2022 (Chart 4). Importantly for investors, Xi says that housing policy should focus not on boosting demand but increasing supply, even if this comes at the expense of lower property prices down the road. Base metal prices rally on the news. Chart 4China's Baby Bust China's Baby Bust China's Baby Bust January 2023 – Putin Declares Victory: Faced with continued resistance by Ukrainian forces – which now have wider access to advanced western military technology – Putin declares that Russia’s objectives in Ukraine have been met. Following the playbook in Crimea and the Donbass, he orders referenda to be held in Zaporizhia, Kherson, and parts of Kharkiv, asking the local populations if they wish to join Russia. The legitimacy of the referenda is immediately rejected by the Ukrainian government and the EU. Nevertheless, the Russian military advance halts. While the West pledges to maintain sanctions against Russia, the geopolitical risk premium in oil prices decreases. February 2023 – Credit Spreads Narrow Further: At the worst point for credit in early July 2022, US high-yield spreads were pricing in a default rate of 8.1% over the following 12 months (Chart 5). By late August, the expected default rate has fallen to 5.2%, and by January 2023, it has dropped to 4.5%. Perceived default risks decline even more in Europe, where the economy is on the cusp of a V-shaped recovery following the prior year’s energy crunch. Chart 5The Spread-Implied Default Rate Has Room To Fall If Recession Fears Abate The Spread-Implied Default Rate Has Room To Fall If Recession Fears Abate The Spread-Implied Default Rate Has Room To Fall If Recession Fears Abate March 2023 – Wages: The New Core CPI? US inflation continues to drop, but a heated debate erupts over whether this merely reflects the unwinding of various pandemic-related dislocations or whether it marks true progress in cooling down the economy. Those who argue that higher interest rates are cooling demand point to the decline in job openings. Skeptics retort that the drop in job openings has been matched by rising employment (Chart 6). To the extent that firms have been converting openings into new jobs, the skeptics conclude that labor demand has not declined. In a series of comments, Jay Powell stresses the need to focus on wage growth as a key barometer of underlying inflationary pressures. Given that wage growth remains elevated, market participants regard this as a hawkish signal (Chart 7). The 10-year Treasury yield rises to 3.2%. The DXY index, having swooned from over 108 in July 2022 to just under 100 in February 2023, moves back to 102. After hitting a 52-week high of 4,689 the prior month, the S&P 500 drops back below 4,500. Chart 6Drop In Job Openings Is Matched By Rise In Employment Drop In Job Openings Is Matched By Rise In Employment Drop In Job Openings Is Matched By Rise In Employment Chart 7Wage Growth Remains Strong Wage Growth Remains Strong Wage Growth Remains Strong   April 2023 – Covid Erupts Across China: After successfully holding back Covid for over three years, the dam breaks. When lockdowns fail to suppress the outbreak, the government shifts to a mitigation strategy, requiring all elderly and unvaccinated people to isolate at home. It helps that China’s new mRNA vaccines, launched in late 2022, prove to be successful. By early 2023, China also has sufficient supplies of Pfizer’s Paxlovid anti-viral drug. Nevertheless, the outbreak in China temporarily leads to renewed supply-chain bottlenecks. May 2023 – Biden Confirms He Will Stand for Re-Election: Saying he is “fit as a fiddle,” President Biden confirms that he will seek a second term in office. Little does he know that the US will be in a recession during most of his re-election campaign. Chart 8Consumer Confidence And Real Wages Tend To Move Together Consumer Confidence And Real Wages Tend To Move Together Consumer Confidence And Real Wages Tend To Move Together June 2023 – Inflation: The Second Wave Begins: The decline in inflation between mid-2022 and mid-2023 sows the seeds of its own demise. As prices at the pump and in the grocery store decline, real wage growth turns positive. Consumer confidence recovers (Chart 8). Household spending, which never weakened that much to begin with, surges. The economy starts to overheat again, leading to higher inflation. After having paused raising rates at 3.5% in early 2023, the Fed indicates that further hikes may be necessary. The DXY index strengthens to 104. The S&P 500 dips to 4,300. July 2023 – Tech Stock Malaise: Higher bond yields weigh on tech stocks. Making matters worse, investors start to worry that many of the most popular US tech names have gone “ex-growth.” The evolution of tech companies often follows three stages. In the first stage, when the founders are in charge, the company grows fast thanks to the introduction of new, highly innovative products or services. In the second stage, as the tech company matures, the founders often cede control to professional managers. Company profits continue to grow quickly, but less because of innovation and more because the professional managers are able to squeeze money from the firm’s customers. In the third stage, with all the low-lying fruits already picked, the company succumbs to bureaucratic inertia. As 2023 wears on, it becomes apparent that many US tech titans are entering this third stage. August 2023 – Long-term Inflation Expectations Move Up: Unlike in 2021-22, when long-term inflation expectations remained well anchored in the face of rising realized inflation, the second inflation wave in 2023 is accompanied by a clear rise in long-term inflation expectations. Consumer expectations of inflation 5-to-10 years out in the University of Michigan survey jump to 3.5%. Whereas back in August 2022, the OIS curve was discounting 100 basis points of Fed easing starting in early 2023, it now discounts rate hikes over the remainder of 2023 (Chart 9). The 10-year yield rises to 3.8%. The 10-year TIPS yield spikes to 1.2%, as investors price in a higher real terminal rate. The S&P 500 drops to 4,200. The financial press is awash with comparisons to the early 1980s (Chart 10). Chart 9The Markets Expect The Fed To Cut Rates By Over 100 Basis Points Starting In 2023 The Markets Expect The Fed To Cut Rates By Over 100 Basis Points Starting In 2023 The Markets Expect The Fed To Cut Rates By Over 100 Basis Points Starting In 2023 Chart 10The Early-1980s Playbook The Early-1980s Playbook The Early-1980s Playbook October 2023 – Hawks in Charge: After a second round of tightening, featuring three successive 50 basis-point hikes, the Fed funds rate reaches a cycle peak of 5%. The 10-year Treasury yield gets up to as high as 4.28%. The 10-year TIPS yield hits 1.62%. The DXY index rises to 106. The S&P 500 falls to 4,050. November 2023 – Housing Stumbles: With mortgage yields back above 6%, the US housing market weakens anew. The fallout from rising global bond yields is far worse in some smaller developed economies such as Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, where home price valuations are more stretched (Chart 11). Chart 11Rising Rates Will Weigh On Developed Economies With Pricey Housing Markets Rising Rates Will Weigh On Developed Economies With Pricey Housing Markets Rising Rates Will Weigh On Developed Economies With Pricey Housing Markets January 2024 – Unemployment Starts to Rise: After moving sideways since March 2022, the US unemployment rate suddenly jumps 0.2 percentage points to 3.6%, with payrolls contracting for the first time since the start of the pandemic. The 22-month stretch of a flat unemployment rate is broadly in line with the historic average (Table 1). Table 1In Past Cycles, The Unemployment Rate Has Moved Sideways For Nearly Two Years Before A Recession Began Dispatches From The Future: From Goldilocks To President DeSantis Dispatches From The Future: From Goldilocks To President DeSantis February 2024 – The US Recession Begins: Although there was considerable debate about whether the US was entering a recession at the time, in early 2025, the NBER would end up declaring that February 2024 marked the start of the recession. The 10-year yield falls back below 4% while the S&P 500 drops to 3,700. Lower bond yields are no longer protecting stocks.  March 2024 – The Fed Remains in Neutral: Jay Powell says further rate hikes are unwarranted in light of the weakening economy, but with core inflation still running at 3.5%, the Fed is in no position to ease. April 2024 – The Global Recession Intensifies: The US unemployment rate rises to 4.7%. The economic downdraft is especially sharp in America’s neighbor to the north, where the Canadian housing market is in shambles. Back in June 2022, the Canadian 10-year yield was 21 basis points above the US yield. By April 2024, it is 45 basis points below. Europe and Japan also fall into recession. Commodity prices continue to drop, with Brent oil hitting $60/bbl. May 2024 – The Fed Cuts Rates: Reversing its position from just two months earlier, the Federal Reserve cuts rates for the first time since March 2020, lowering the Fed funds rate from 5% to 4.5%. The Fed funds rate will ultimately bottom at 2.5%, below the range of 3.5%-to-4% that most economists will eventually recognize as neutral. August 2024 – Republican National Convention: Unwilling to spend much of his own money on the campaign, and with most donations flowing to DeSantis, Trump’s bid to reclaim the White House fizzles. While the former president never formally bows out of the race, the last few months of his primary campaign end up being a nostalgia tour of his past accomplishments, interspersed with complaints about all the ways that he has been wronged. In the end, though, Trump makes a lasting imprint on the Republican party. During his acceptance speech, in typical Trumpian style, Ron DeSantis attacks Joe Biden for “eating ice cream while the economy burns” and declares, to thunderous applause, that “Americans are sick and tired of having woke nonsense hurled in their faces and then being dared to deny it at the risk of losing their jobs.” Chart 12The Dollar Is Very Overvalued The Dollar Is Very Overvalued The Dollar Is Very Overvalued October 2024 – The Stock Market Hits Bottom: While the unemployment rate continues to rise for another 12 months, ultimately reaching 6.4%, the S&P troughs at 3,200. The 10-year Treasury yield settles at 3.1% before starting to drift higher. The US dollar, which began to weaken anew after the Fed starts cutting rates, enters a prolonged bear market. As in past cycles, the dollar is unable to defy the gravitational force from extremely stretched valuations (Chart 12). November 2024 – President DeSantis: Against the backdrop of rising unemployment, uncomfortably high inflation, and a sinking stock market, Ron DeSantis cruises to victory in the 2024 presidential election. Unlike Trump, DeSantis deemphasizes corporate tax cuts and deregulation during his presidency, focusing instead on cultural issues. With the Democrats still committed to progressive causes, big US corporations discover that for the first time in modern history, neither of the two major political parties are willing to champion their interests. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Follow me on LinkedIn & Twitter Global Investment Strategy View Matrix Dispatches From The Future: From Goldilocks To President DeSantis Dispatches From The Future: From Goldilocks To President DeSantis Special Trade Recommendations Current MacroQuant Model Scores Dispatches From The Future: From Goldilocks To President DeSantis Dispatches From The Future: From Goldilocks To President DeSantis      
Consistent with a slowing economy, the Conference Board’s US Leading Economic Index (LEI) has declined for a fifth consecutive month and its year-on-year change now stands at 0. A contraction in this measure tends to precede recessions. Meanwhile, some…