Disasters/Disease
Executive Summary China: Can The Economy Recover Without Housing Revival
Can The Economy Recover Without Housing Revival
Can The Economy Recover Without Housing Revival
The rebound in China’s business activity in June reflects the release of pent-up demand from the economic reopening after lockdowns in April and May. China’s credit growth recovered meaningfully in June due to large local government (LG) bond issuance. Private sector sentiment and credit demand remain sluggish. Home sales relapsed in the first two weeks of July after a one-off improvement in June, corroborating that the housing market’s fundamentals remain gloomy. Despite posting strong growth in June, Chinese exports are facing strong headwinds from weakening external demand. A contraction in exports is very likely in the second half of this year. Chinese domestic demand remains weak. Renewed rolling lockdowns are likely in view of the escalating Covid-19 cases related to a more infectious Omicron subvariant. The RMB will probably continue to depreciate relative to the US dollar in the next few months. Bottom Line: Investors should maintain a neutral stance on Chinese onshore stocks and an underweight stance on investable stocks in a global equity portfolio. The risk-reward profile of Chinese onshore and offshore stocks in absolute terms is not yet attractive. Chart 1High-Frequancy(Daily) Economic Indicators
High-Frequancy(Daily) Economic Indicators
High-Frequancy(Daily) Economic Indicators
The recent recovery in economic activity in June mainly reflects the release of pent-up demand after reopening from lockdowns in April and May. Odds are that this rebound will fade. The relapse in house sales and slowdown in steel production during the first two weeks of July suggest that China’s economy is still struggling to gain traction (Chart 1). China’s business cycle recovery will be more U shaped rather than a repeat of the V-shaped resurgence experienced following the early 2020 lockdown. At that time, a quick and strong revival in the property market and exports shored up China’s recovery in 2H20. In contrast, the economy’s progress in the second half of this year will be dragged down by shrinking exports, weak consumption and depressed demand for housing. China’s recovery will be more U shaped than V shaped for the following reasons: New financing schemes for infrastructure investment recently announced by authorities will not lead to a surge in infrastructure investments in 2H22. The basis is that these new funding sources will largely offset a shortfall in local government (LG) revenues from this year’s land sales, as we discussed in last week’s report. Thus, there will be little new stimulus for infrastructure beyond what was already approved in the budget plan earlier this year. Rolling lockdowns will persist as long as China’s stringent dynamic zero-Covid policy remains in place. The recent flare-up of the more infectious Omicron BA.5 subvariant cases in a few cities raise the likelihood of more lockdowns. The number of cities under mobility restrictions or some form of lockdown climbed during the second week of July (Chart 2). These cities account for around 11% of China’s GDP. The rolling lockdowns will continue to disrupt the economy. Private sector sentiment remains in the doldrums. The willingness to spend or invest among households and enterprises remains very depressed (Chart 3). This will ensure that the multiplier effect of fiscal and credit stimulus will be small. Chart 2The Odds Of Renewed Lockdowns Are Rising
The Odds Of Renewed Lockdowns Are Rising
The Odds Of Renewed Lockdowns Are Rising
Chart 3Sluggish Sentiment Among Chinese Households And Enterprises
Sluggish Sentiment Among Chinese Households And Enterprises
Sluggish Sentiment Among Chinese Households And Enterprises
Chart 4China: Can The Economy Recover Without Housing Revival
Can The Economy Recover Without Housing Revival
Can The Economy Recover Without Housing Revival
Since 2008 there has been no recovery in the mainland economy without buoyant real estate construction and surging property prices (Chart 4). Chinese exports are set to contract as the demand for goods from US and European consumers continues to shrink. Bottom Line: In absolute terms, the risk-reward profile of Chinese stocks is not yet attractive. We continue to recommend that investors maintain a neutral stance on China’s onshore stocks and underweight allocation on Chinese investable stocks within a global equity portfolio. Qingyun Xu, CFA Associate Editor qingyunx@bcaresearch.com Peeling Off Credit Data Chart 5June's Credit Growth Was Largely Driven By LG Bond Issuance
June's Credit Growth Was Largely Driven By LG Bond Issuance
June's Credit Growth Was Largely Driven By LG Bond Issuance
June’s strong credit growth was again driven by large LG bond issuance (Chart 5, top panel). Consequently, the credit impulse – calculated as a 12-month change in the flow of total social financing (TSF) as a percentage of nominal GDP – is much more muted when LG bond issuance is excluded (Chart 5, bottom panel). Medium- to long-term corporate loan growth only ticked up in June, but short-term bill financing has dropped dramatically (Chart 6). While it is difficult to quantify, it is highly likely that the modest upturn in corporate credit flow was due to (1) corporates’ pent-up demand for financing after the spring lockdowns and (2) the PBoC’s moral suasion used to boost the banks’ credit origination. Meanwhile, a PBoC survey released on June 29-30, showed that loan demand for all types of industrial enterprises plunged sharply in Q2, suggesting that sentiment is very weak among corporates (Chart 7). Chart 6Corporate Loan Growth Improved In June...
Corporate Loan Growth Improved In June...
Corporate Loan Growth Improved In June...
Chart 7… But Corporate Loan Demand Remains Very Weak
... But Corporates Remain Low Demand Very Weak
... But Corporates Remain Low Demand Very Weak
Household loan demand, which is highly correlated with home sales, remains shaky too (Chart 8, top panel). Medium- to long-term consumer loans continued to plunge, and the annual change in household loan origination remains negative (Chart 8, bottom panel). Chart 8Household Loan Demand Is Still Depressed
Household Loan Demand Is Still Depressed
Household Loan Demand Is Still Depressed
Chart 9The Credit And Fiscal Impulse Will Be Moderate
The Credit And Fiscal Impulse Will Be Moderate
The Credit And Fiscal Impulse Will Be Moderate
Overall, our projections for the combined credit and fiscal spending impulse for the rest of this year suggest that the aggregate fiscal and credit impulse will be improving but will be smaller than in 2020, 2016, 2013 and 2009 (Chart 9). Property Market: A Vicious Cycle Unfolding Home sales relapsed in the first two weeks of July after a one-off rebound in June. The weakness was broad-based across all city tiers. This implies that June’s bounce was driven by pent-up demand after lockdowns and does not represent a sustained revival (Chart 10). Sentiment among home buyers remains downbeat. The percentage of households planning to buy homes slipped further according to the PBoC’s urban household survey released on June 29 (Chart 11, top panel). Moreover, the percentage of households expecting home prices to rise has dived to the lowest level since early 2015 according to the same survey (Chart 11, bottom panel). Chart 10No Snapback In Housing Sales
No Snapback In Housing Sales
No Snapback In Housing Sales
Chart 11Downbeat Sentiment Among Home Buyers
Downbeat Sentiment Among Home Buyers
Downbeat Sentiment Among Home Buyers
Chart 12Real Estate Developers' Deteriorating Funding Will Further Dampen Housing Construction
Real Estate Developers' Deteriorating Funding Will Further Dampen Housing Construction
Real Estate Developers' Deteriorating Funding Will Further Dampen Housing Construction
Property developers are caught in a vicious cycle. Financing has not strengthened because the “three red lines” policy remains in place, and developers’ borrowing from banks shows no signs of amelioration (Chart 12, top panel). Critically, the plunge in the sector’s financing is resulting in shrinking housing completions (Chart 12, bottom panel). As property developers are suffering from liquidity shortages, they are dragging on existing construction projects. The upshot is that many Chinese cities are seeing delays in the completion of new homes. The latter is depressing buyers’ sentiment, generating a reluctance to buy properties, and curtailing deposits and advances to developers. In recent years, deposits and advances accounted for 50% of property developers’ financing. Without a substantial improvement in their financing, developers will not be in a position to service their excessive debts and deliver houses they have presold in the recent years. The latter will undermine their financing, closing the vicious cycle. In short, real estate developers’ liquidity shortfalls are evolving into solvency problems. These will continue dampening construction activity. An Export Contraction Ahead China’s exports were robust in June as supply chain and logistic disruptions faded. This was corroborated by last month’s advance in suppliers’ delivery times and production subindexes of China’s official Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) (Chart 13). Chart 13Chinese Logistics And Backlog Orders Pressures Have Eased In June
Chinese Logistics And Backlog Orders Pressures Have Eased In June
Chinese Logistics And Backlog Orders Pressures Have Eased In June
Yet, China’s new exports orders remain in contractionary territory (Chart 14). Moreover, the softness of Shanghai’s export container freight index is also signaling weakness in China’s exports (Chart 15). Chart 14External Demand For Chinese Export Goods Will Be Dwindling
External Demand For Chinese Export Goods Will Be Dwindling
External Demand For Chinese Export Goods Will Be Dwindling
Chart 15Signs Of Moderation In China's Exports
Signs Of Moderation In China's Exports
Signs Of Moderation In China's Exports
The shift in consumer spending in developed economies from manufactured goods to services has created headwinds for Chinese exports. US and European consumption of goods (ex-autos) is set to decline below its long-term trend (Chart 16). Given that retail inventories in the US have skyrocketed well above their pre-pandemic trend, US demand for consumer goods and, hence, Chinese exports will dwindle significantly when US retailers start to destock (Chart 17). Falling real household disposable income in the US and Europe will also fortify the downward trend in demand for consumer goods that China is a major producer of. Therefore, we expect shrinking Asian and Chinese exports in the second half of this year. Chart 16Developed Economies’ Household Demand For Goods ex-Autos Will Shrink
Developed Economies' Household Demand For Goods ex-Autos Will Experience Mean Reversion
Developed Economies' Household Demand For Goods ex-Autos Will Experience Mean Reversion
Chart 17Well-Stocked Shelves In The US Bode Poorly For Chinese Exports
Well-Stocked Shelves In The US Bode Poorly For Chinese Export
Well-Stocked Shelves In The US Bode Poorly For Chinese Export
Very Sluggish Domestic Demand Both consumer spending and capital expenditure remain in the doldrums. Traditional infrastructure investments picked up strongly in June, while investments in the real estate sector weakened further (Chart 18). Contracting exports will weigh on investments in manufacturing. Even as infrastructure investment recovers modestly, the downtrend in manufacturing and property fixed-asset investments will cap China’s capital spending in 2H22. Capital spending in traditional infrastructure, real estate and manufacturing account for 24%, 19% and 31% of fixed-asset investment, respectively. Chart 18Shrinking Real Estate Investment Will Remain A Drag On Chinese Investment Growth In 2H
Shrinking Real Estate Investment Will Remain A Drag On Chinese Investment Growth In 2H
Shrinking Real Estate Investment Will Remain A Drag On Chinese Investment Growth In 2H
Chart 19Contracting Import Volume Reflects China's Sluggish Domestic Demand
Contracting Import Volume Reflects China's Sluggish Domestic Demand
Contracting Import Volume Reflects China's Sluggish Domestic Demand
Imports for domestic consumption (excluding imports for processing and re-exports) are a good proxy for domestic demand trajectory. In June, import volumes contracted deeply at 12% on a year-on-year basis, reflecting sluggish domestic demand (Chart 19). Worryingly, import volume contraction is widespread from key commodities to semiconductors and capital goods (Chart 20A and 20B). Chart 20ABroad-Based Contraction In Imports
Broad-Based Contraction In ... Chinese Imports Of Key Commodities Deteriorated In June
Broad-Based Contraction In ... Chinese Imports Of Key Commodities Deteriorated In June
Chart 20BBroad-Based Contraction In Imports
... Imports And key Imports Categories Chinese Domestic Demand Has Been Absent Over The Past 12 Months
... Imports And key Imports Categories Chinese Domestic Demand Has Been Absent Over The Past 12 Months
Chart 21Rising New Covid Cases In China Will Constrain Domestic Consumption Recovery
Rising New Covid Cases In China Will Constrain Domestic Consumption Recovery
Rising New Covid Cases In China Will Constrain Domestic Consumption Recovery
Moreover, the recent increase in Covid-19 cases and ensuing lockdowns in China will curb household consumption and the service sector’s activities in the next few months (Chart 21). Newly released labor market data show a mixed picture. The nationwide urban survey-based unemployment rate fell in June, but the unemployment rate among younger workers surged to the highest point since data collection began in 2018 (Chart 22, top panel). Reflecting weak employment conditions, new urban job creation in the first half of the year withered compared with the same period last year (Chart 22, bottom panel). Rapidly deteriorating income prospects are reinforcing households’ downbeat sentiment. A PBoC survey released on June 29 shows that confidence of future income in Q2 plummeted to its lowest level during the past two decades, while the preference for more saving deposits soared to the highest level since data collection began in 2002 (Chart 23). The latter entails that households’ consumption recovery will be gradual and halting, at best, in the second half of this year. Chart 22Skyrocketed Unemployment Rate Among Young Workers Is A Big Problem Of Chinese Labor Market
Skyrocketed Unemployment Rate Among Young Workers Is A Big Problem Of Chinese Labor Market
Skyrocketed Unemployment Rate Among Young Workers Is A Big Problem Of Chinese Labor Market
Chart 23Low Confidence In Future Income Contributes To Households' Unwillingness To Consume
low Confidence In Future Income Contributes To Households' Unwillingness To Consume
low Confidence In Future Income Contributes To Households' Unwillingness To Consume
The RMB Is Facing Downside Risks In The Near Term Chart 24RMB Is Still Vulnerable
RMB Is Still Vulnerable
RMB Is Still Vulnerable
The RMB has depreciated by about 6% against the US dollar since March, and we believe this trend will continue in the next few months. China’s interest rate differential versus the US dollar has fallen deeper into negative territory, and the gap may widen even more given that the inflation and monetary policy cycles in China and the US will continue to diverge (Chart 24, top panel). Thus, Chinese fixed-income market outflow pressures could endure this year (Chart 24, bottom panel). Moreover, as discussed in the section above, Chinese exports are set to shrink in the second half of the year. This will also weigh on the RMB. Notably, Chinese companies have started to increase their demand for USD. The net FX settlement rate by banks on behalf of clients has fallen below zero, albeit only marginally (Chart 25). This means more non-financial enterprises (such as exporters and investors) bought from than sold foreign currency to banks (Chart 25, bottom panel). Furthermore, foreign outflows from the onshore equity market have resumed and will likely be sustained, at least through the next few months (Chart 26). Foreign investors will likely flee from Chinese onshore stocks as global stocks continue selling off and China’s economic recovery disappoints in the second half of this year. Chart 25Contracting Exports Will Weigh On The RMB
Contracting Exports Will Weigh On The RMB
Contracting Exports Will Weigh On The RMB
Chart 26Onshore Equity Market Foreign Outflow Pressures Remain, At Least In The Near Term
Onshore Equity Market Foreign Outflow Pressures Remain, At Least In The Near Term
Onshore Equity Market Foreign Outflow Pressures Remain, At Least In The Near Term
Chinese Equity Market Technicals: Tell-Tale Signs Chart 27A-Shares Has Not Broken Above 200-Day Moving Average
A-Shares Has Not Broken Above 200-Day Moving Average
A-Shares Has Not Broken Above 200-Day Moving Average
The rebound in China’s onshore CSI 300 stock index had been obstructed at its 200-day moving average (Chart 27). A failure to break above this technical resistance would imply non-trivial downside – a retest of its recent lows, at least. The relative performance of the MSCI China All-Share Index – which includes all onshore- and offshore-listed stocks – versus the global equity index has petered off at its previous troughs (Chart 28). This is a tell-tale sign of a major relapse. Chart 28A Tell-Sign Of Major Downtrend
A Tell-Sign Of Major Downtrend
A Tell-Sign Of Major Downtrend
Chart 29Chinese Tech Stocks Still Appear Fragile
Chinese Tech Stocks Still Appear Fragile
Chinese Tech Stocks Still Appear Fragile
The Hang Seng Tech index – which tracks Chinese offshore tech stocks/platform companies – has also failed to break above its 200-day moving average (Chart 29). This entails that the bear market in these share prices might not be yet over. Chart 30Two Large-Cap Chinese Stocks
Two Large-Cap Chinese Stocks
Two Large-Cap Chinese Stocks
China’s two largest stocks (by market capitalization) – Tencent and Alibaba – may not be out of the woods: Alibaba has failed at its 200-day moving average (Chart 30, top panel). Tencent has failed to rebound at all (Chart 30, bottom panel). Odds are it will likely drop more. Table 1China Macro Data Summary
China’s Recovery: U Or V Shaped?
China’s Recovery: U Or V Shaped?
Table 2China Financial Market Performance Summary
China’s Recovery: U Or V Shaped?
China’s Recovery: U Or V Shaped?
Footnotes Strategic Themes Cyclical Recommendations
Executive Summary Financial markets have buckled under the weight of 40-year highs in inflation that have forced the Fed and other major central banks to promise no quarter in their fight against inflation, spooking investors with visions of Volcker-like monetary policy. Well-anchored long-run inflation expectations suggest that the Fed may not have to throttle the economy before the year is out to achieve “clear and convincing evidence” that inflation is trending lower. The labor market may be in a sweet spot in which jobs are plentiful, but workers lack the leverage to drive compensation high enough to initiate a wage-price spiral. Corporate earnings may be more resilient than many investors fear. An earnings recession is not inevitable, as S&P 500 earnings have grown at a robust rate when year-over-year consumer prices have risen between 3.5 and 7%. Not As Bad As We First Thought
Not As Bad As We First Thought
Not As Bad As We First Thought
Bottom Line: A once-in-a-century global pandemic, unprecedented fiscal and monetary policy responses and war have produced an especially uncertain macroeconomic backdrop. We acknowledge that financial markets could go either way, but we think the bearish consensus presents an opportunity to outperform by overweighting risk assets over the next twelve months. Feature 2022 has been a gloomy year for the economy and financial assets of all stripes. The reckoning from the excessive monetary and fiscal stimulus that allowed the economy to come through the pandemic mostly unscathed while fueling the greatest eight-quarter stretch of real household net worth gains on record, arrived ahead of schedule, hurried along by war in eastern Europe. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine took a bite out of global grain and energy supplies, sending the prices of select commodities soaring and contributing to the worst developed-nation inflation in four decades. Global equity and bond markets have been upended by apprehension over just how forcefully the Fed and other central banks will have to squeeze their economies to keep inflation from taking lasting root. No investor should take the Fed lightly, but the sense of gloom pervading general media, financial media, Wall Street broker-dealers, our clients and their clients is at risk of going a little too far if it hasn’t already. This is a fraught moment, and the uncertainty is heightened by the unprecedented events of the last two years, but we perceive the backdrop as far more mixed than it’s being made out to be. As a result, we think there’s much more potential for positive surprises over the next year than most investors perceive. To give clients a chance to see it our way, we are getting out of the way. This week’s report belongs to the charts and we present them with a minimum of commentary. We do not know how things will turn out – the backdrop is unprecedented and leaves all of us to find our way without historical antecedents to guide us – and we are approaching our job with elevated humility and lower-than-normal conviction. We have been advising clients to be prepared to shorten the holding periods of their positions just as we are prepared to change our mind swiftly if incoming data fail to validate our view. For now, however, we continue to believe that the potential for positive surprises is greater than market pricing acknowledges and we recommend overweighting equities in multi-asset portfolios over the next twelve months. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Chart 1Omicron Has Produced A Lot Of Infections,...
Omicron Has Produced A Lot Of Infections,...
Omicron Has Produced A Lot Of Infections,...
Chart 2... But They've Been Decidedly Less Serious
... But They've Been Decidedly Less Serious
... But They've Been Decidedly Less Serious
Chart 3Core Inflation Will Cool As Demand Shifts To Services, ...
Core Inflation Will Cool As Demand Shifts To Services, ...
Core Inflation Will Cool As Demand Shifts To Services, ...
Chart 4...And Households Maintain Their Discipline
...And Households Maintain Their Discipline
...And Households Maintain Their Discipline
Table 1The Term Structure Of Inflation Expectations …
Chartbook
Chartbook
Chart 5… Remains Comfortably Inverted
Chartbook
Chartbook
Chart 6Households See It Like Investors ...
Households See It Like Investors ...
Households See It Like Investors ...
Chart 7... For Now, Anyway
... For Now, Anyway
... For Now, Anyway
Chart 8Real Wages Have Been Falling For A Year And A Half ...
Real Wages Have Been Falling For A Year And A Half ...
Real Wages Have Been Falling For A Year And A Half ...
Chart 9... As Workers Are At The Bottom Of A Steep Structural Hill
... As Workers Are At The Bottom Of A Steep Structural Hill
... As Workers Are At The Bottom Of A Steep Structural Hill
Table 2Excess Savings Provide A Cushion Against Rising Food And Fuel Costs
Chartbook
Chartbook
Chart 10High-End Households Have Had A Good Pandemic, Too
High-End Households Have Had A Good Pandemic, Too
High-End Households Have Had A Good Pandemic, Too
Chart 11Businesses Haven't Taken Down The Help Wanted Signs ...
Businesses Haven't Taken Down The Help Wanted Signs ...
Businesses Haven't Taken Down The Help Wanted Signs ...
Chart 12... And There's No Lack Of Supply To Fill The Positions
... And There's No Lack Of Supply To Fill The Positions
... And There's No Lack Of Supply To Fill The Positions
Table 3Inflation Isn’t So Bad For Nominal Earnings …
Chartbook
Chartbook
Chart 13... And Companies May Be Re-Learning That Now
... And Companies May Be Re-Learning That Now
... And Companies May Be Re-Learning That Now
Chart 14Originators Have Lent To Good Borrowers …
Chartbook
Chartbook
Chart 15... On Proper Terms This Time Around
... On Proper Terms This Time Around
... On Proper Terms This Time Around
Footnotes
In this <i>Strategy Outlook</i>, we present the major investment themes and views we see playing out for the rest of the year and beyond.
BCA Research’s China Investment Strategy service continues to recommend a neutral stance in Chinese equities within a global portfolio. China’s economic data moved up slightly in May from an extremely depressed level in April. A normalization of the supply…
Executive Summary High food and fertilizer prices are at risk of morphing into a full-blown food crisis in several developing countries. Some countries were plagued by severe food insecurity even before the Ukraine war broke out. The Ukraine war has upended two crucial aspects of food security: availability of food grains as well as the availability of fertilizers. A few Middle Eastern and African countries, who are dependent on both imported cereals and crude oil, are experiencing the greatest difficulty. The stock-to-use ratio of food grains is alarmingly low in several countries. Some of them also have high twin deficits (i.e., fiscal and current account deficits) – indicating that governments there would be hard-pressed to provide necessary relief. Several Countries Need To Import Over 90% Of Their Cereal Consumption
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
Bottom Line: All aspects considered, we reckon Lebanon, Egypt, Kenya, Peru, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka to be the most at risk of experiencing a food crisis, and consequent socio-political upheaval. Feature Food prices have surged in most parts of the world. In some developing countries however, food inflation is threatening to morph into a food crisis. In the year ahead, high food and fertilizer prices could accentuate food insecurity in several poorer countries − with major socio-political ramifications. In this report, we identify the nations most at risk, especially among countries included in the MSCI Emerging and Frontier Equity Indexes. Our research indicates that Lebanon, Egypt, Kenya, Peru, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka are the most vulnerable to a food crisis, and consequent socio-political upheaval. Food Inflation: In The Stratosphere In a few countries such as Lebanon and Venezuela, food inflation is at a mind-boggling 370% and 200%, respectively. It is abnormally high in many other developing countries as well – including Turkey (92%), Argentina (64%), Iran (49%), Sri Lanka (45%), Ghana (30%), and Egypt (28%). In several other countries such as Colombia, Nigeria, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Kazakhstan, food prices are rising at about 20% or more. That is also the case in war-torn Ukraine and Russia (Chart 1). Chart 1Food Inflation Has Become Extremely Painful In Some Countries
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
In a few countries such as Turkey, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, currency depreciation could explain part of the rise in food prices. Chart 2Food Prices Began To Surge Well Before The Ukraine Crisis
Food Prices Began To Surge Well Before The Ukraine Crisis
Food Prices Began To Surge Well Before The Ukraine Crisis
That said, given that only a minor share of all food consumed is imported by these countries, the sharp rise in overall food prices cannot be explained away by currency depreciation alone. Rather, it points to genuine price pressures in domestically grown food. That is also the case in all other countries where food inflation is higher than currency depreciation. Notably, in many of these countries, food inflation was quite high even before the Ukraine war broke out. Indeed, global food grain prices had begun to surge in mid-2020 – well before Russia’s invasion began (Chart 2). And yet, the onset of the Ukraine war and the resulting sanctions and logistics bottlenecks have worsened the situation dramatically. Even though food prices have eased marginally in the past couple of weeks, they are still extremely elevated compared to pre-pandemic levels. More worryingly, many countries are now at risk of experiencing a full-blown food crisis. Pre-existing Food Insecurity Some developing countries are more susceptible to a food crisis than others. This is because they were already plagued by food insecurity even before the Ukraine war broke out. The x-axis of Chart 3 shows the extent of “severe food insecurity”1 in various developing nations, as per the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa and Peru stand out in this respect among the countries included in the MSCI EM & Frontier market equity indexes: as high as 18 to 26% of the total population in these countries experienced severe food insecurity between 2018 and 2020. Chart 3Countries With Pre-Existing Food Insecurity Are More At Risk
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
Notably, these countries also happen to have high fiscal deficits; and in some cases, high public debt (Chart 3, y-axis). This leaves their governments with less room to provide necessary relief should an acute food crisis hit their population. Not surprisingly, some of the countries plagued by severe food insecurity are highly dependent on grain imports to meet their domestic demand. The x-axis of Chart 4 shows the cereal import dependency of various countries as a percentage of their cereal intake. Most middle eastern countries such as Lebanon, Jordan, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Oman need to import nearly all of their cereal consumptions, as per FAO data. That said, what sets the truly vulnerable cereal importers apart from the rest is that some of them do not have much export earnings to pay for their rising food import bills. For instance, in Lebanon, food imports alone cost two-thirds of its total goods export revenues before the pandemic, according to FAO. For Egypt, Jordan and Kenya, food imports used up over 40% of their export earnings (Chart 4, y-axis). Chart 4Several Countries Need To Import Over 90% Of Their Cereal Consumption
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
These figures must have gone up further as food prices have risen significantly in the past two years. If high food prices persist, the balance of payments of these countries will deteriorate further. That, in turn, will negatively affect their currencies and general inflation. High Oil Prices Adding To The Woes Many oil and gas producers in the Middle East and Africa are also large net importers of food. Current high crude prices, however, are helping them to foot their food bills. But countries who need to import both food and oil and gas are facing a double whammy. Chart 5 shows that several food importers are indeed large net importers of oil and gas too. On this parameter, Lebanon, Pakistan, Jordan and Kenya appear to be facing the most acute pain − their annual food plus net oil import bills are very high, ranging from 60 to 120% of their goods export revenues. Needless to say, if both food and oil prices remain elevated, these nations could face major socio-economic upheavals. Chart 5Countries Which Need To Import Both Food And Fuel Are The Most Distressed
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
Chart 6Industrial Metals And Ore Producers Will Face More Pain Going Forward
Industrial Metals And Ore Producers Will Face More Pain Going Forward
Industrial Metals And Ore Producers Will Face More Pain Going Forward
On a separate note, many producers of industrial metals/raw materials such as Chile and Peru may also soon experience more difficulties. The reason is that industrial metal prices have recently rolled over relative to food prices (Chart 6). Going forward, slowing global growth will likely push down industrial metal prices further, robbing these nations of a major source of income. Falling income amid high food prices would hurt the population even more, as the former will also limit the authorities’ ability to provide relief. The Implications Of The Ukraine War Could Linger The Ukraine war has upended the two most crucial aspects of food security: availability of food grains and fertilizers. Notably, the exportable surplus of food and fertilizers in the world are concentrated in only a handful of countries. Russia and Ukraine are key among them. In the case of wheat, 28% of global exports (in volume terms) in 2021 came from Russia (18%) and Ukraine (10%), as per the FAO. In the case of barley, their share was 24%, and for corn (maize) 12%. Chart 7Grain Prices Have Surged Across The Board
Grain Prices Have Surged Across The Board
Grain Prices Have Surged Across The Board
These two countries are dominant in some oilseed exports as well. Ukraine (37%) and Russia (26%) together held about two-thirds of the global sunflower oil export market share. In the case of rapeseed, Ukraine had about 20% of global export share. Much of these supplies now face severe logistical hurdles. That, in turn, has pushed up grain and edible oil prices globally, hurting all countries whether they are dependent on food imports or not (Chart 7). That said, the countries who are heavily dependent on Russian and Ukrainian supplies are particularly hit hard. Chart 8 shows the import dependency of some countries on Russian and Ukrainian wheat. Turkey, Lebanon and Egypt will have to urgently find alternative suppliers as a very large share of their imports now face uncertainty. The same can be said about Eritrea, Somalia and some former Soviet republics. In the case of fertilizers, Russia was the largest supplier of nitrogen-based fertilizers2 (the kind that is most heavily used) at 17% of global exports in 2021. The country was also the second largest exporter of potassium-based fertilizer (23%), and the third largest in phosphorus-based fertilizers (16%). Ukraine, however, has not been a big exporter of fertilizers. Just like in the case of wheat, several countries had been highly dependent on Russian fertilizers. Among EM countries, Peru procured 42% of its fertilizer needs from Russia last year. Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia each imported about 22% from Russia. That figure was substantially higher for some other developing countries such as Ghana (37%), Cameroon (47%), and Honduras (50%) (Chart 9). Given the numerous sanctions imposed on a multitude of Russian entities, shipments of Russian fertilizers are now at risk. As such, all these countries need to find substitute suppliers urgently. Chart 8Russia And Ukraine Supplied Over 80% Of Wheat Imports For Many Countries
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
Chart 9Russia Supplied Over 40% Of Fertilizer Imports For Many Countries
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
Notably, it’s not just the logistics/availability issues that fertilizer users must contend with. Prices of fertilizers have also surged by a massive 200 to 300% compared to pre-pandemic levels. The reason for that is sky-high natural gas prices, which is the primary feedstock of (nitrogen-based) fertilizers (Chart 10). Chart 10High Natural Gas Prices Will Keep Fertilizers Expensive
High Natural Gas Prices Will Keep Fertilizers Expensive
High Natural Gas Prices Will Keep Fertilizers Expensive
Since Russia is also a major natural gas producer, the current situation does not bode well for the fertilizer price relief outlook. New western sanctions on Russia and countermeasures by Russia are continuing relentlessly. As such, one can expect that natural gas prices will likely stay elevated for the foreseeable future. That will keep fertilizers expensive. Meanwhile, the scarcity and/or high prices of fertilizers would force farmers in many poor countries to curtail their fertilizer use during the ongoing / upcoming crop season. That in turn would imperil their domestic food production, accentuating overall food scarcity. Where Do Countries’ Food Stocks Stand Now? Chart 11 shows various developing countries’ combined stockpile of food grains (wheat, corn and soybean) relative to their yearly usage (i.e., the stock-to-use ratio). Chart 11The Stock Of Foodgrains Is Precariously Low In Many Countries
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
Among the countries who have high cereal import dependency (and, who are not oil producers), the stock-to-use ratio is particularly low for Lebanon, Jordan, Chile, Peru, and Egypt. Since some of the countries with low food stock-to-use ratio are also dependent on imported food and fertilizers, they are even more susceptible to an outright food shortage this year. Lebanon, Egypt and Peru are three such countries among MSCI included ones. If various countries’ stock-to-use figures are juxtaposed with their twin deficits, their wherewithal to provide necessary relief should their food stocks become inadequate can be demonstrated. Chart 12 shows that several countries with a low food stock-to-use ratio are also plagued by high twin deficits, and therefore low capacity to provide relief. Examples are Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt, Nigeria and Venezuela. Chart 12Some Countries With Low Food Stock Have A Low Capacity To Provide Relief
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
Are Developing Countries Heading Into Food Crises?
Food Price Shock: Is It Inflationary Or Deflationary? High food prices can sometimes lead to higher general inflation. The starting point of that is usually household inflation expectations: facing higher grocery prices every day, consumer expectations of future prices become unmoored. That said, whether the higher inflation ‘expectations’ will evolve into higher ‘realized’ inflation depends on households’ (labor) power to negotiate wages. If they are successful to gain higher wages, core inflation also begins to rise in tandem with food inflation, which might eventually lead to a wage-inflation spiral. In most developing nations, however, that does not look to be the case. Wages are rising sharply in only a handful of countries. Moreover, since a very high share of consumer spending in developing countries is accorded to food (25% to 55%), higher food bills are eating substantially into households’ real discretionary spending. That does not bode well for (non-food) corporate earnings. In addition, the central banks in many developing economies are raising interest rates in response to high inflation. All these will likely push many developing economies on the brink of a recession. Investment Conclusions Currently, most emerging and frontier market nations are facing a deteriorating growth outlook – thanks to tight fiscal and tightening monetary policies domestically, a very strong US dollar, rising global interest rates, and a subpar Chinese recovery. High food and/or fuel prices are additional ‘taxes’ on their economies, and especially for the import-dependent ones. As a result, their growth will be stymied further. The consequence could well be socio-political volatility. Incidentally, the last time global food prices witnessed a major surge (about 40%) was back in 2010. That was soon followed by social upheavals in much of the Middle East (known as the ‘Arab Spring’) and elsewhere in the developing world. In the present episode, food prices have risen by 70% in two years. As mentioned, some of the countries facing food and fertilizer scarcity are also plagued by low grains stocks (relative to requirement) and have weak fiscal and external accounts. Considering all the aspects, we reckon that Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt, Kenya, Peru, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka are most-at-risk of slipping into a food crisis this year and beyond. Incidentally, the Emerging Markets Strategy team holds a bearish view on the near-term performances of EM stocks and bonds. Investors should stay underweight EM relative to global equities and bonds. Absolute return investors should stay on the sidelines. Rajeeb Pramanik Senior EM Strategist rajeeb.pramanik@bcaresearch.com Sebastian Rodriguez Research Associate sebastian.rodriguez@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Severe food insecurity refers to missing meals and/or reduced food intake because of financial constraints 2 The three main type of chemical fertilizers are nitrogen-based (urea and ammonia), potassium-based (potash), and phosphorus-based (phosphates).
Executive Summary At our monthly view meeting on Monday, BCA strategists voted to change the House View to a neutral asset allocation stance on equities, with a slight plurality favoring an outright underweight. The view of the Global Investment Strategy service is somewhat more constructive, as I think it is still more likely than not that the US will avoid a recession; and that if a recession does occur, it will be a fairly mild one. Nevertheless, the risks to my view have increased. I now estimate 40% odds of a recession during the next 12 months, up from 20% a month ago. In The Past, When Unemployment Has Started Rising In The US, It Has Kept On Rising
In The Past, When Unemployment Has Started Rising In The US, It Has Kept On Rising
In The Past, When Unemployment Has Started Rising In The US, It Has Kept On Rising
Bottom Line: With the S&P 500 down 27% in real terms from its highs at the time of the meeting, the view of the Global Investment Strategy service is that a modest overweight is appropriate. However, investors should refrain from adding to equity positions until more clarity emerges about the path for inflation and growth. Heading For Recession? Every month, BCA strategists hold a view meeting to discuss the most important issues driving the macroeconomy and financial markets. This month’s meeting, which was held yesterday, was especially pertinent as it comes on the heels of a substantial decline in global equities. The key issue that we grappled with was whether the Fed could achieve a proverbial soft landing or whether the US and the rest of the global economy were spiraling towards recession (if it wasn’t already there). I began the meeting by showing one of my favorite charts, a deceptively simple chart of the US unemployment rate (Chart 1). The chart makes three things clear: 1) The US unemployment rate is rarely stable; It is almost always either rising or falling; 2) Once it starts rising, it keeps rising. In fact, the US has never averted a recession when the 3-month average of the unemployment rate has risen by more than a third of a percentage point; and 3) As a mean-reverting series, the unemployment rate is most likely to start rising when it is very low. Chart 1In The Past, When Unemployment Has Started Rising In The US, It Has Kept On Rising
In The Past, When Unemployment Has Started Rising In The US, It Has Kept On Rising
In The Past, When Unemployment Has Started Rising In The US, It Has Kept On Rising
Taken at face value, the chart paints a damning picture about the economic outlook. The US unemployment rate is near a record low, which means that it has nowhere to go but up. And once the unemployment rate starts going up, history suggests that a recession is inevitable. Five Caveats Despite this ominous implication, I did highlight five caveats. First, the observation that even a modest increase in the unemployment rate invariably heralds a recession is based on a limited sample of business cycles from the US. Across the G10, soft landings have occurred, Canada being one example (Chart 2). Second, unlike the unemployment rate, the employment-to-population ratio is still 1.1 percentage points below its pre-pandemic level, and 4.6 percentage points below where it was in April 2000. A similar, though less pronounced, pattern holds if one focuses only on the 25-to-54 age cohort (Chart 3). Chart 2G10 Economies Sometimes Manage To Avoid A Recession Amid Rising Unemployment
G10 Economies Sometimes Manage To Avoid A Recession Amid Rising Unemployment
G10 Economies Sometimes Manage To Avoid A Recession Amid Rising Unemployment
Chart 3The Employment-To-Population Ratio Remains Below Pre-Pandemic Levels
The Employment-To-Population Ratio Remains Below Pre-Pandemic Levels
The Employment-To-Population Ratio Remains Below Pre-Pandemic Levels
While the number of people not working either because they are worried about the pandemic, or because they are still burning through their stimulus checks, has been trending lower, it is still fairly high in absolute terms (Chart 4). As my colleague Doug Peta discussed in his latest report, one can envision a scenario where job growth remains positive, but the unemployment rate nonetheless edges higher as more workers rejoin the labor force. Chart 4ALabor Supply Should Increase As Covid Fears Continue To Abate And More Workers Burn Through Their Stimulus Savings (I)
Labor Supply Should Increase As Covid Fears Continue To Abate And More Workers Burn Through Their Stimulus Savings (I)
Labor Supply Should Increase As Covid Fears Continue To Abate And More Workers Burn Through Their Stimulus Savings (I)
Chart 4BLabor Supply Should Increase As Covid Fears Continue To Abate And More Workers Burn Through Their Stimulus Savings (II)
Labor Supply Should Increase As Covid Fears Continue To Abate And More Workers Burn Through Their Stimulus Savings (II)
Labor Supply Should Increase As Covid Fears Continue To Abate And More Workers Burn Through Their Stimulus Savings (II)
Third, the job vacancy rate is extremely high today – much higher than a pre-pandemic “Beveridge Curve” would have predicted (Chart 5). This provides the labor market with a wide moat against an increase in firings. As Fed governor Christopher Waller has emphasized, the main effect of the Federal Reserve’s efforts to cool labor demand could be to push down vacancies rather than to push up unemployment. Fourth, as we have highlighted in past research, the Phillips curve is kinked at very low levels of unemployment (Chart 6). This means that a decline in unemployment from high to moderate levels may do little to spur inflation, but once the unemployment rate falls below its full employment level, then watch out! Chart 5The Fed Hopes That Its Tightening Policy Will Bring Down Job Openings More Than It Pushes Up The Unemployment Rate
The Fed Hopes That Its Tightening Policy Will Bring Down Job Openings More Than It Pushes Up The Unemployment Rate
The Fed Hopes That Its Tightening Policy Will Bring Down Job Openings More Than It Pushes Up The Unemployment Rate
Chart 6The Phillips Curve Is Kinked At Very Low Levels Of Unemployment
Hard Or Soft Landing? BCA Strategists Debate The Question
Hard Or Soft Landing? BCA Strategists Debate The Question
The converse is also true, however. If a small decrease in unemployment can trigger a large increase in inflation, then a small increase in unemployment can trigger a large decrease in inflation, provided that long-term inflation expectations remain reasonably well anchored in the meantime. In other words, it is possible that the so-called “sacrifice ratio” — the amount of output that has to be sacrificed to reduce inflation — may be quite low. Fifth, and perhaps most importantly, there is a lot of variation from one recession to the next in how much unemployment rises. In general, the greater the financial and economic imbalances going into a recession, the deeper it tends to be. US household balance sheets are in reasonably good shape these days. Households are sitting on $2.2 trillion in excess savings (Chart 7). Yes, most of those savings belong to relatively well-off households. But as Chart 8 illustrates, even rich people spend well over half of their income. Chart 7Households Have Only Just Begun To Draw Down Their Accumulated Savings
Households Have Only Just Begun To Draw Down Their Accumulated Savings
Households Have Only Just Begun To Draw Down Their Accumulated Savings
Chart 8Even The Rich Spend The Majority Of Their Income
Hard Or Soft Landing? BCA Strategists Debate The Question
Hard Or Soft Landing? BCA Strategists Debate The Question
The ratio of household debt-to-disposable income in the US is down by a third since its peak in 2008. Despite falling equity prices, the ratio of household net worth-to-disposable income is still up nearly 50 percentage points since the end of 2019, mainly because home prices have risen (Chart 9). As is likely to be the case in many other countries, home prices in the US will level off and quite possibly decline over the next few years. In and of itself, that may not be such a bad outcome for equity markets since lower real estate prices will cool aggregate demand, thus lowering inflation without the need for much higher interest rates. The danger, of course, is that we could see a replay of the GFC. This risk cannot be ignored but is probably quite small. The quality of mortgage lending has been very strong over the past 15 years. Moreover, unlike in 2007, when there was a large glut of homes, the homeowner vacancy rate today is at a record low. Tepid homebuilding has pushed the average age of the US residential capital stock to 31 years, the highest since 1948 (Chart 10). Chart 9The US Household Debt Burden Has Come Down Significantly Since 2008, While Net Worth Is Still Higher Than Before The Pandemic
The US Household Debt Burden Has Come Down Significantly Since 2008, While Net Worth Is Still Higher Than Before The Pandemic
The US Household Debt Burden Has Come Down Significantly Since 2008, While Net Worth Is Still Higher Than Before The Pandemic
Chart 10Tight Supply Conditions In The Housing Market Argue Against A Repeat Of The GFC
Tight Supply Conditions In The Housing Market Argue Against A Repeat Of The GFC
Tight Supply Conditions In The Housing Market Argue Against A Repeat Of The GFC
A Bleaker Picture Outside The US The situation is admittedly dicier outside the US. Putin’s despotic regime continues to wage war on Ukraine. While European natural gas prices are still well below their March peak, they have recently surged as Russia has begun to throttle natural gas exports (Chart 11). The euro area manufacturing PMI clocked in a respectable 54.6 in May but is likely to drop over the coming months as higher energy prices restrain production. The only saving grace is that fiscal policy in Europe has turned more expansionary. The IMF’s April projection foresaw the structural primary budget balance easing from a surplus of 1.2% of GDP between 2014 and 2019 to a deficit of 1.2% of GDP between 2022 and 2027, the biggest swing among the major economies (Chart 12). Even the IMF’s numbers probably underestimate the fiscal easing that will transpire considering the need for Europe to invest more in energy independence and defense. Chart 11The European Economy Is Threatened By Rising Gas Prices
The European Economy Is Threatened By Rising Gas Prices
The European Economy Is Threatened By Rising Gas Prices
Chart 12Euro Area Fiscal Policy Is Expected To Be More Expansionary In The Years To Come Than Before The Pandemic
Hard Or Soft Landing? BCA Strategists Debate The Question
Hard Or Soft Landing? BCA Strategists Debate The Question
The Chinese economy continues to suffer from the “triple threat” of renewed Covid lockdowns, a shift of global demand away from manufactured goods towards services, and a floundering property market. We expect the Chinese property market to ultimately succumb to the same fate that befell Japan 30 years ago. Chart 13Chinese Stocks Are Cheap
Chinese Stocks Are Cheap
Chinese Stocks Are Cheap
Unlike Japanese stocks in the early 1990s, however, Chinese stocks are trading at fairly beaten down valuations – 10.9-times earnings and 1.4-times book for the investable index (Chart 13). With the Twentieth Party Congress slated for later this year and the population jaded by lockdowns, the political incentive to shower the economy with cash and loosen the reins on regulation will intensify. A Scenario Analysis For The S&P 500 Corralling all these moving parts is no easy matter. We would put the odds of a US recession over the next 12 months at 40%. This is double what we would have said a month ago when we tactically upgraded stocks after the S&P 500 fell below the 4,000 mark. The May CPI report was clearly a shocker, both to the Fed and the markets. The median dot in the June Summary of Economic Projections sees the Fed funds rate rising to 3.8% next year, smack dab in the middle of our once highly out-of-consensus estimate of 3.5%-to-4% for the neutral rate of interest. With interest rates potentially moving into restrictive territory next year, equity investors are right to be concerned. Yet, as noted above, if a recession does occur, it is likely to be a fairly mild one. At the time of the BCA monthly view meeting, the S&P 500 was already down 23% in nominal terms and 27% in real terms from its peak in early January. We assume that the S&P 500 will fall a further 10% in real terms over the next 12 months in a “mild recession” scenario (30% odds) and by 25% in a “deep recession” scenario (10% odds). Conversely, we assume that the S&P 500 will be 20% higher in 12 months’ time in a “no recession” scenario (60% odds). Note that even in a “no recession” scenario, the real value of the S&P 500 would still be down 12% in June 2023 from its all-time high. On a probability-weighted basis, the expected 12-month real return across all three scenarios works out to 6.5%, or 8% with dividends (Table 1). That is enough to justify a modest overweight in my view – but given the risks, just barely. Investors focused on capital preservation should consider a more conservative stance. Table 1S&P 500 Drawdowns Depending On Whether The US Will Enter A Recession And How Severe It Will Be
Hard Or Soft Landing? BCA Strategists Debate The Question
Hard Or Soft Landing? BCA Strategists Debate The Question
Most of my colleagues were more cautious than me, as they generally thought that the odds of a recession were greater than 50%. They voted to shift the BCA house view to a neutral asset allocation stance on equities, with a slight plurality favoring an outright underweight (10 for underweight; 9 for neutral; and 6 for overweight). Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Global Investment Strategy View Matrix
Hard Or Soft Landing? BCA Strategists Debate The Question
Hard Or Soft Landing? BCA Strategists Debate The Question
Special Trade Recommendations Current MacroQuant Model Scores
Hard Or Soft Landing? BCA Strategists Debate The Question
Hard Or Soft Landing? BCA Strategists Debate The Question
Listen to a short summary of this report. Executive Summary Chinese Stocks Are Relatively Cheap
Chinese Stocks Are Relatively Cheap
Chinese Stocks Are Relatively Cheap
The Chinese economy faces a trifecta of economic woes: 1) The threat of renewed Covid lockdowns; 2) Cooling export demand; 3) A floundering housing market. Trying to reflate the Chinese housing bubble would only damage the long-term prospects of China’s economy. A much better option would be to adopt measures that boost disposable income. Not only would this help offset the drag from slowing export growth and a negative housing wealth effect, but it would also take some of the sting out of China’s zero-Covid policy. With the Twentieth Party Congress slated for later this year, the political incentive to shower the economy with cash will only intensify. Chinese equities are trading at only 10-times forward earnings and about 1-times sales. A significant upward rating for equity valuations is likely if the government adopts broad-based income-support measures. Go long the iShares MSCI China ETF ($MCHI) as a tactical trade. Bottom Line: China faces a number of economic woes, but these are fully discounted by the market. What has not been discounted is a broad-based stimulus program focused on income-support measures. Dear Client, I will be visiting clients in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Abu Dhabi next week. No doubt, the outlook for oil prices will feature heavily in my discussions. I will brief you on any insights I learn in my report on June 17. In the meantime, I am pleased to announce that Matt Gertken, BCA’s Chief Geopolitical Strategist, will be the guest author of next week’s Global Investment Strategy report. Best regards, Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist Triple Threat The Chinese economy faces a trifecta of economic woes: 1) The threat of renewed Covid lockdowns; 2) Cooling export demand; 3) A floundering housing market. Let us discuss each problem in turn. Problem #1: China’s Zero-Covid Policy in the Age of Omicron Chart 1China’s Lockdown Index Remains Elevated
China: A Trifecta Of Economic Woes
China: A Trifecta Of Economic Woes
China was able to successfully suppress the virus in the first two years of the pandemic. However, the emergence of the Omicron strain is challenging the government’s commitment to its zero-Covid policy. The BA.2 subvariant of Omicron is 50% more contagious than the original Omicron strain and about 4-times more contagious than the Delta strain. While 89% of China’s population has been fully vaccinated, the number drops off to 82% for those above the age of 60. And those who are vaccinated have been inoculated with vaccines that appear to be largely ineffective against Omicron. Keeping a virus as contagious as measles at bay in a population with little natural or artificial immunity is exceedingly difficult. While the authorities are starting to relax restrictions in Shanghai, China’s Effective Lockdown Index remains at elevated levels (Chart 1). A number of domestically designed mRNA vaccines are in phase 3 trials. However, it is not clear how effective they will be. Shanghai-based Fosun Pharma has inked a deal to distribute 100 million doses of Pfizer’s vaccine, but so far neither it nor Moderna’s vaccine have been approved for use. Our working assumption is that China will authorize the distribution of western-made mRNA vaccines later this year if its own offerings prove ineffectual. The Chinese government has already signed a deal to manufacture a generic version of Pfizer’s Paxlovid, which has been shown to cut the risk of hospitalization by 90% if taken within five days of the onset of symptoms. In the meantime, the authorities will continue to play whack-a-mole with Covid. Investors should expect more lockdowns during the remainder of the year. Problem #2: Weaker Export Growth China’s export growth slowed sharply in April, with manufacturing production contracting at the fastest rate since data collection began. Activity appears to have rebounded somewhat in May, but the new export orders components of both the official and private-sector manufacturing PMIs still remain below 50 (Chart 2). Part of the export slowdown is attributable to lockdown restrictions. However, weaker external demand is also a culprit, as evidenced by the fact that Korean export growth — a bellwether for global trade — has decelerated (Chart 3). Chart 2China’s Export Growth Has Rolled Over
China's Export Growth Has Rolled Over
China's Export Growth Has Rolled Over
Chart 3Softer Export Growth Is Not A China-Specific Phenomenon
Softer Export Growth Is Not A China-Specific Phenomenon
Softer Export Growth Is Not A China-Specific Phenomenon
Spending in developed economies is shifting from manufactured goods to services. Retail inventories in the US are now well above their pre-pandemic trend, suggesting that the demand for Chinese-made goods will remain subdued over the coming months (Chart 4). The surge in commodity prices is only adding to Chinese manufacturer woes. Input prices rose 10% faster than manufacturing output prices over the past 12 months. This is squeezing profit margins (Chart 5). Chart 4Well-Stocked Shelves In The US Bode Poorly For Chinese Export Demand
Well-Stocked Shelves In The US Bode Poorly For Chinese Export Demand
Well-Stocked Shelves In The US Bode Poorly For Chinese Export Demand
Chart 5Surging Input Costs Are Weighing On The Profits Of Chinese Commodity Users
Surging Input Costs Are Weighing On The Profits Of Chinese Commodity Users
Surging Input Costs Are Weighing On The Profits Of Chinese Commodity Users
A modest depreciation in the currency would help the Chinese export sector. However, after weakening from 6.37 in April to 6.79 in mid-May, USD/CNY has moved back to 6.66 on the back of the recent selloff in the US dollar. Chart 6The RMB Tends To Weaken When EUR/USD Is Rising
The RMB Tends To Weaken When EUR/USD Is Rising
The RMB Tends To Weaken When EUR/USD Is Rising
We expect the dollar to weaken further over the next 12 months as the Fed tempers its hawkish rhetoric in response to falling inflation. Chart 6 shows that the trade-weighted RMB typically strengthens when EUR/USD is rising. Chester Ntonifor, BCA’s Chief Currency Strategist, expects EUR/USD to reach 1.16 by the end of the year. Problem #3: Flagging Property Market Chinese housing sales, starts, and completions all contracted in April (Chart 7). New home prices dipped 0.2% on a month-over-month basis, and are up just 0.7% from a year earlier, the smallest gain since 2015. The percentage of households planning to buy a home is near record lows (Chart 8). Chart 7The Chinese Property Market Has Been Cooling
The Chinese Property Market Has Been Cooling
The Chinese Property Market Has Been Cooling
Chart 8Intentions To Buy A House Have Declined
Intentions To Buy A House Have Declined
Intentions To Buy A House Have Declined
China’s property developers are in dire straits. Corporate bonds for the sector are, on average, trading at 48 cents on the dollar (Chart 9). Goldman Sachs estimates that the default rate for property developers will reach 32% in 2022, up from their earlier estimate of 19%. The government is trying to prop up housing demand. The PBoC lowered the 5-year loan prime rate by 15 bps on May 20th, the largest such cut since 2019. The authorities have dropped the floor mortgage rate to a 14-year low of 4.25%. They have also taken steps to make it easier for property developers to issue domestic bonds. BCA’s China strategists believe these measures will foster a modest rebound in the property market in the second half of this year. However, they do not anticipate a robust recovery – of the sort experienced following the initial wave of the pandemic – due to the government’s continued adherence to the “three red lines” policy.1 China is building too many homes. While residential investment as a share GDP has been trending lower, it is still very high in relation to other countries. China’s working-age population is now shrinking, which suggests that housing demand will contract over the coming years (Chart 10). Chart 9Chinese Property Developer Bonds Are Trading At Distressed Levels
Chinese Property Developer Bonds Are Trading At Distressed Levels
Chinese Property Developer Bonds Are Trading At Distressed Levels
Chart 10Shrinking Working-Age Population Implies Less Demand For Housing
Shrinking Working-Age Population Implies Less Demand For Housing
Shrinking Working-Age Population Implies Less Demand For Housing
Chinese real estate prices are amongst the highest anywhere. The five biggest cities in the world with the lowest rental yields are all in China (Chart 11). The entire Chinese housing stock is worth nearly $100 trillion, making it the largest asset class in the world. As such, a decline in Chinese home prices would generate a sizable negative wealth effect. Chart 11Chinese Real Estate Is Expensive
China: A Trifecta Of Economic Woes
China: A Trifecta Of Economic Woes
A Silver Bullet? Trying to reflate the Chinese housing bubble would only damage the long-term prospects of China’s economy. Luckily, one does not need to fill a leaky bucket through the same hole the water escaped. As long as there is enough demand throughout the economy, workers who lose their jobs in declining sectors will eventually find new jobs in other sectors. China needs to reorient its economy away from its historic reliance on investment and exports towards consumption. The easiest way to do that is to adopt measures that boost disposable income, which has slowed of late (Chart 12). Not only would this help offset the drag from slowing export growth and a negative housing wealth effect, but it would also take some of the sting out of China’s zero-Covid policy. The authorities have not talked much about pursuing large-scale income-support measures of the kind adopted by many developed economies during the pandemic. As a result, market participants have largely dismissed this possibility. Yet, with the Twentieth Party Congress slated for later this year, the political incentive to shower the economy with cash will only intensify. Chinese equities are trading at only 10-times forward earnings and about 1-times sales (Chart 13). A significant upward rating for equity valuations is likely if the government adopts broad-based income-support measures. As we saw in the US and elsewhere, stimulus cash has a habit of flowing into the stock market; and with real estate in the doldrums, equities may become the asset class of choice for many Chinese investors. With that in mind, we are going long the iShares MSCI China ETF ($MCHI) as a tactical trade. Chart 12Disposable Income Growth Has Been Trending Lower
Disposable Income Growth Has Been Trending Lower
Disposable Income Growth Has Been Trending Lower
Chart 13Chinese Stocks Are Relatively Cheap
Chinese Stocks Are Relatively Cheap
Chinese Stocks Are Relatively Cheap
At a global level, a floundering Chinese property market would have been a cause for grave concern in the past, as it would have represented a major deflationary shock. Times have changed, however. The problem now is too much inflation, rather than too little. To the extent that reduced Chinese investment injects more savings into the global economy and knocks down commodity prices, this would be welcomed by most investors. China’s economy may be heading for a “beautiful slowdown.” Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Follow me on LinkedIn Twitter Footnotes 1 The People’s Bank of China and the housing ministry issued a deleveraging framework for property developers in August 2020, consisting of a 70% ceiling on liabilities-to-assets, a net debt-to-equity ratio capped at 100%, and a limit on short-term borrowing that cannot exceed cash reserves. Developers breaching these “red lines” run the risk of being cut off from access to new loans from banks, while those who respect them can only increase their interest-bearing borrowing by 15% at most. View Matrix
China: A Trifecta Of Economic Woes
China: A Trifecta Of Economic Woes
Special Trade Recommendations Current MacroQuant Model Scores
China: A Trifecta Of Economic Woes
China: A Trifecta Of Economic Woes
Executive Summary What Will Be The Implications Of China’s Common Prosperity Policies?
What Will Be The Implications Of China's Common Prosperity Policies?
What Will Be The Implications Of China's Common Prosperity Policies?
On the one hand, Chinese stocks are oversold, equity valuations are attractive and investor sentiment is downbeat. This means that a lot of bad news has already been priced into Chinese share prices, which is positive from a contrarian perspective. On the other hand, the government remains committed to its dynamic zero-COVID policy and will resort to lockdowns whenever there is an outbreak. The Omicron variants have extremely high transmission rates, which means that the probability of new lockdowns is non trivial. Hence, the biggest risk to Chinese share prices is renewed outbreaks and lockdowns – developments which are impossible to forecast. That is why, in our opinion, Chinese stocks are facing fat tails risks. Infrastructure spending will recover modestly in H2 2022. The property sector rebound will be very muted. Chinese exports will contract. The structural outlook is unfriendly for shareholders of platform companies. The known unknowns are: Will the dynamic zero-COVID policy be successful in containing the virus? Will “animal spirits” among consumers and businesses be revived? Will western investors come back to Chinese stocks? The RMB is facing near-term risks as its interest rate differential versus the US dollar dips deeper into negative territory. Bottom Line: For absolute return investors, one way to play such a bifurcated market outlook is to buy out-of-money call options and out-of-money put options simultaneously while maintaining a core / benchmark allocation in Chinese stocks. We maintain our long A-shares / short investable Chinese stocks strategy. Feature As strict lockdowns in key cities are lifted, the Chinese economy is bound for a snap back. Consumer spending will improve, and the government’s infrastructure push will revive capital spending modestly. What does this mean for Chinese stocks? Numerous crosscurrents make the current outlook for Chinese stocks hard to navigate. This report elaborates on variables that we can forecast and those we cannot. Odds of a material rally are not insignificant, but the probability of another relapse is not trivial either. That is why Chinese stocks presently have fat tails. For absolute return investors, one way to play such a bifurcated market outlook is to buy out-of-money call options and out-of-money put options simultaneously while maintaining a core/ benchmark allocation in Chinese stocks. The rationale for maintaining a neutral position is that Chinese share prices could also be range-bound in the coming months. In other words, positives could offset negatives, and the fat tails outcomes might not transpire. In regard to relative performance and regional allocation, we continue to recommend that emerging market portfolios overweight Chinese A-shares and maintain a neutral stance on investable stocks. Meanwhile, global equity portfolios should remain neutral on A-shares while underweighting investable ones. This positioning is consistent with our overall EM allocation – we continue to recommend underweighting EM within a global equity portfolio. What We Know Equity Valuations And Investor Sentiment Are Depressed To begin with, there are a number of indicators that point to low equity valuations and depressed investor sentiment towards Chinese stocks: Analysts’ net EPS revisions for both Chinese A-shares and investable stocks have plunged deep into negative territory (Chart 1). Chinese net EPS revisions are also low relative to EM and global stocks (Chart 2). Chart 1Sentiment On Chinese Stocks Is Downbeat
Sentiment On Chinese Stocks Is Downbeat
Sentiment On Chinese Stocks Is Downbeat
Chart 2Net EPS Revisions: China vs. EM And China vs. Global Stocks
Net EPS Revisions: China vs. EM And China vs. Global Stocks
Net EPS Revisions: China vs. EM And China vs. Global Stocks
The average of the NBS manufacturing PMI new orders and backlog of orders suggests that A-shares EPS will shrink considerably (Chart 3). A-share valuations have become attractive. Our composite valuation indicator points to below average valuations (Chart 4, top panel). This indicator is based on three variables: (1) median multiples; (2) 20% trimmed-mean multiples; and (3) equal-weighted multiples. The latter uses equal weights rather than market cap weights for sub-sectors in the calculation. Chart 3China: Corporate Profits Are Contracting
China: Corporate Profits Are Contracting
China: Corporate Profits Are Contracting
Chart 4Chinese A-Shares Are Attractive
Chinese A-Shares Are Attractive
Chinese A-Shares Are Attractive
In turn, each component is constructed using the averages of the trailing P/E, forward P/E, price-to-cash earnings, price-to-book value (PBV) and price-to-dividend ratios. The 20%-trimmed mean excludes the top 10% and the bottom 10% of sub-sectors, i.e., it removes outliers. Our cyclically adjusted P/E ratio for A-shares currently stands at close to one standard deviation below its mean (Chart 4, bottom panel). The trailing and forward P/E ratios for the equal-weighted A-share index are 18 and 12, respectively. As to the investable universe, any valuation measure for the index is not useful because banks and SOEs continue to be “cheap” for a reason. In turn, internet stocks are fallen angels and their past valuations are not a good roadmap for the future. We discuss the structural outlook for their profitability below. Chart 5Chinese Investable Stocks Have Reached Technical Support Lines
Chinese Investable Stocks Have Reached Technical Support Lines
Chinese Investable Stocks Have Reached Technical Support Lines
Finally, Chinese equities have become oversold. Investable non-TMT share prices are back to their lows of the past 12 years while TMT/growth stocks are at their long-term moving average (Chart 5). In sum, a lot of bad news has already been priced into Chinese share prices, which is positive from a contrarian perspective. Dynamic Zero-COVID Policy We have a very high conviction level that the government will remain committed to its dynamic zero-COVID policy for now. COVID cases in Shanghai and Beijing have declined following the lockdowns. This will only embolden authorities to pursue their dynamic zero-COVID policy and resort to lockdowns whenever outbreaks occur. Consistent with the dynamic zero-COVID policy, the government will inject more stimulus into the economy to offset the negative impact of past and potential future lockdowns. With inflation very subdued, the central government will not shy away from stimulating demand. In fact, the PBoC is allegedly resorting to “window guidance”, i.e., instructing banks to increase their loan origination. However, we do not have a high conviction view on: (1) whether lockdowns could prevent the virus from spreading and (2) whether stimulus will lift household and business confidence and their willingness to consume and invest. See more on this below. Infrastructure Investment Will Recover Modestly So far, the data does not suggest that a recovery in infrastructure investment is underway. Chart 6 illustrates that the number of investment projects approved by National Development and Reform Commission and the length of newly installed electricity transmission lines are not yet rising (Chart 6). Also, steel bar and cement prices are falling despite low output of these materials (Chart 7). This signifies very weak demand. Chart 6Few Signs of Recovery In Infrastructure Investment
Few Signs of Recovery In Infrastructure Investment
Few Signs of Recovery In Infrastructure Investment
Chart 7Falling Prices of Raw Materials = Weak Demand
Falling Prices of Raw Materials = Weak Demand
Falling Prices of Raw Materials = Weak Demand
Furthermore, land sales make up 40% of local government revenue and the value of land sales is down substantially from a year ago. Lower land sales weighing on local government finances and their ability to spend. Nevertheless, odds are that the central government will force local governments to boost infrastructure investment modestly by providing more funding and increasing their special bond issuance quota. For example, Beijing ordered state-owned policy banks to set up an 800 billion yuan ($120 billion) line of credit for infrastructure projects. Chart 8A Snapback in Home Sales Is Possible
A Snapback in Home Sales Is Possible
A Snapback in Home Sales Is Possible
That said, a revival in traditional infrastructure investment will be more muted than it has been in past cycles. Beijing has been very clear in recent years that local governments should not pursue inefficient debt-fueled infrastructure spending, to the point that local officials have been warned that they will be held responsible for debt-financed spending during their lifetime, i.e., even after they retire from their positions. This risk – and the lack of funding due to the shortfall in land sales – will structurally limit local governments’ capacity and drive to invest in traditional infrastructure. The Property Sector Rebound Will Be Muted Residential property sales will likely tick up after having crashed by 30% in the past 12 months (Chart 8). Yet, this will be a mean-reversion rebound rather a full-fledged cyclical recovery. Even though authorities have been easing restrictions for property buyers, any rebound in home sales and construction activity will be modest for the following reasons: The economic slump of the past 12 months and recent lockdowns have weighed on household incomes, which will hinder demand. Housing remains unaffordable for many households who live in poor conditions. Meanwhile, many affluent households already own multiple properties. A lack of confidence in the outlook for house prices will reduce high-income household’s willingness to invest in new properties. Even though restrictions have eased, property developers – which have experienced a major crackdown, are still overleveraged, and face uncertain housing demand – will be reluctant to increase their debt and start new projects. Rather, the lack of funding for property developers points to a major drop in completions in the near term (Chart 9). As we argued in the report titled China: Is The Property Carry Trade Over?, the real estate market is experiencing a structural breakdown, rather than a cyclical one. The performance of property developers stocks supports this hypothesis (Chart 10, top panel). As such, any recovery will be tame and fragile. Chart 9Shrinking Property Developer Funding = Less Housing Completion
Shrinking Property Developer Funding = Less Housing Completion
Shrinking Property Developer Funding = Less Housing Completion
Chart 10Structural Breakdowns in Stocks And Bonds Of Property Developers
Structural Breakdowns in Stocks And Bonds Of Property Developers
Structural Breakdowns in Stocks And Bonds Of Property Developers
In addition, the prices of property developers offshore bonds remain in a clear downtrend (Chart 10, bottom panel). Exports Are Set To Contract Chinese exports will contract in H2 2022 due to reduced spending on goods in the US and Europe as well as in the developing world. Specifically, in the US and euro area, consumption of goods ex-autos boomed during the pandemic and will revert to their means as households spend more on services and less on goods (Chart 11). Declining real household disposable income will also reinforce this trend (Chart 12). Chart 11US and Euro Area ex-Auto Goods Consumption Will Shrink
US and Euro Area ex-Auto Goods Consumption Will Shrink
US and Euro Area ex-Auto Goods Consumption Will Shrink
Chart 12US And Euro Area Household Real Disposable Income Is Contracting
US and Euro Area Household Real Disposable Income Is Contracting
US and Euro Area Household Real Disposable Income Is Contracting
In fact, US retail inventory of goods ex-autos has already surged (Chart 13). As retailers cut back on their new orders, Chinese exports will contract materially. Chart 13US Retail Goods ex-Auto Inventories Have Swelled
US Retail Goods ex-Auto Inventories Have Swelled
US Retail Goods ex-Auto Inventories Have Swelled
In addition, domestic demand in developing economies will also disappoint. EM household spending on consumer goods will underwhelm as more of their income is spent on food and energy. Also, high and rising local interest rates will curb credit origination in mainstream emerging economies. Consequently, their capital spending, employment and income growth will remain subdued. In China, exports as a share of GDP has increased to 19% from 17.5% in 2019. Hence, a contraction in exports will be painful for the overall economy. The Structural Outlook Is Unfriendly For Shareholders Of Platform Companies The government has toned down its rhetoric and its actions related to platform/internet companies. However, we view this development as a tactical rather than a structural change. The key economic policymaker Liu He made market friendly statements towards platform companies on March 16 and May 17 when their share prices were plunging. We believe that the aim of his comments was solely to calm the market and restore investor confidence. We maintain that the structural outlook for shareholders of platform companies remains negative for the following reasons: Higher uncertainty about their business model = higher equity risk premium = lower equity multiples. The government will be regulating their profitability like those of monopolies and oligopolies, which justifies lower multiples. These companies will be performing social duties – i.e. redistributing profits from shareholders to the Chinese people. Beijing’s involvement in their management and the prioritization of national and geopolitical objectives over shareholder interests. Risks of delisting from US stock exchanges are significant. Common prosperity policies pose a risk to the broader corporate sector. These policies will redistribute national income from corporates to households. Chart 14 illustrates that the share of employee compensation has been rising and the share of corporate profits in national income has been falling since 2011-12. These trends will be reinforced by common prosperity policies in the coming years. This is an negative development for shareholders of Chinese companies. Chart 14What Will Be The Implications Of China's Common Prosperity Policies?
What Will Be The Implications Of China's Common Prosperity Policies?
What Will Be The Implications Of China's Common Prosperity Policies?
The Known Unknowns Will The Dynamic Zero-COVID Policy Be Successful? The biggest risk to Chinese share prices is renewed virus outbreaks and lockdowns. It is impossible to forecast these risks. That is why, in our opinion, Chinese stocks are facing fat tail risks. On the one hand, Omicron variants have extremely high transmission rates, making the virus very hard to contain. On the other hand, the government has shown that its dynamic zero-COVID policy has for now succeeded in containing the virus in both Shanghai and Beijing. It is certain, however, that the Chinese economy will incur considerable costs to prevent Omicron from spreading. In addition to the financial costs of ongoing widespread testing, there are also logistical impediments and inefficiencies that these testing and verification policies introduce, even in the absence of lockdowns. Will “Animal Spirits” Among Consumers And Businesses Revive? Another major unknown is whether confidence among consumers and businesses will recover so that they resume spending. If private sector sentiment remains weak, then stimulus measures will have a low multiplier. In other words, the ongoing stimulus will likely fail to boost economic activity. Our proxies for marginal propensity to spend by households and enterprises have been very depressed (Chart 15). Other sentiment/confidence surveys convey the same message. Further, credit demand is non-existent. Banks have lately been buying corporate acceptance bills to fulfill their loan quota (Chart 16). Chart 15Chinese Households And Enterprises Are Reluctant To Spend More
Chinese Households And Enterprises Are Reluctant To Spend More
Chinese Households And Enterprises Are Reluctant To Spend More
Chart 16China: Banks Bought Refinancing Bills in April To Make Their Loan Quota
China: Banks Bought Refinancing Bills in April To Make Their Loan Quota
China: Banks Bought Refinancing Bills in April To Make Their Loan Quota
Critically, the property market has always been a key determinant of overall consumer and business sentiment. Since 2008, there has been no recovery in the Chinese economy without a recovery of property sales, prices and construction (Chart 17). We are doubtful that property sales and construction will stage a strong recovery in the next six to nine months. Thus, our bias is that the multiplier effect of Chinese stimulus will underwhelm in the coming months. Will Western Investors Come Back To Chinese Stocks? Geopolitical tensions between the US and China and the events around the US-Russia clash reduce the likelihood that western investors will come back to Chinese markets, even as growth prospects improve. Chart 18 demonstrates that foreign investors have only marginally reduced their holdings of Chinese onshore stocks (A-shares) and bonds. These data encompass not only western investors, but also investors from other emerging Asian countries. Chart 17China: Housing Cycle = Business Cycle
China: Housing Cycle = Business Cycle
China: Housing Cycle = Business Cycle
Chart 18Foreigners Sold A Small Portion Of Their Onshore Equity and Bond Holdings
Foreigners Sold A Small Portion Of Their Onshore Equity and Bond Holdings
Foreigners Sold A Small Portion Of Their Onshore Equity and Bond Holdings
The risk is that western investors will use any rebound in Chinese shares to reduce their exposure. This will weigh on investable stocks and preclude any significant and durable rally. A Word On The Exchange Rate The RMB will remain volatile in the coming months and will likely depreciate further against the US dollar: Shrinking exports will weigh on foreign exchange availability from exporters. With Asian currencies depreciating against the US, Beijing will be willing to tolerate moderate and gradual yuan depreciation against the greenback to maintain its export competitiveness. The one-year interest rate differential between China and the US has recently turned negative which has probably triggered a shift of deposits from RMB into the USD (Chart 19). In Hong Kong, deposits have recently begun shifting from yuan to HKD, i.e., USD (Chart 20). This development has coincided with the China-US, and hence, China-HK, interest rate differential turning negative. Chart 19China-US: The Interest Rate Differential Has Turned Negative
China-US: The Interest Rate Differential Has Turned Negative
China-US: The Interest Rate Differential Has Turned Negative
Chart 20A Shift From RMB To HKD or USD Deposits
A Shift From RMB To HKD or USD Deposits
A Shift From RMB To HKD or USD Deposits
Finally, there will be more foreign capital outflows if either (1) COVID outbreaks and, hence, lockdowns persist, or (2) US-China tensions escalate. As Chart 18 above illustrates, foreign portfolio capital outflows have so far been modest. Bottom Line: The near-term outlook for the US dollar remains positive as the Fed maintains its hawkish stance. Consistently, the RMB will struggle in the near term but its multi-year outlook is positive. Investment Recommendations The outlook for Chinese stocks is characterized by fat tails. Odds of a material rally are not insignificant but also the probability of another relapse is not trivial either. For absolute return investors, one way to play such a bifurcated market outlook is to buy out-of-money call options and out-of-money put options simultaneously while maintaining a core / benchmark allocation in Chinese stocks. In regard to relative performance /regional allocation, we continue to recommend that emerging market portfolios overweight Chinese A-shares and maintain a neutral stance towards investable stocks. Meanwhile, global equity portfolios should remain neutral on A-shares while underweighting investable ones. This positioning is in-line with our overall EM allocation – we continue to recommend underweighting EM within a global equity portfolio. Consistently, we maintain our long A-shares / short investable Chinese stocks strategy. Onshore government bond yields will continue sliding as the main problem in China is deflation and weak growth, not inflation. The RMB is facing near term risks as its interest rate differential versus the US dollar dips deeper into negative territory. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com
Highlights The economic and financial market developments that have occurred over the past month are consistent with several of the risks that we identified in our recent reports. We warned in our April report that the outlook for equities had deteriorated meaningfully since the beginning of the year and recommended that investors maintain, at most, a very modest overweight toward stocks in a global multi-asset portfolio. We see the performance of the equity market over the past month as reflecting the beginning of the recession scare that we warned was coming. Still, several factors continue to suggest that this is indeed a scare, and not an actual recession. Section 2 of this month’s report reviews the US housing market for signs of an imminent recession. While a slowdown in the housing market is clearly underway, we do not yet see signs that this slowdown is recessionary. It remains an open question how forcefully Russia is willing to weaponize its natural gas exports in response to a seemingly imminent European embargo on Russian oil, and whether Russia will deploy this strategy now or later. For now, our base case view is that the euro area economy will slow and will probably contract in Q2, but it will avoid a debilitating energy-driven recession. China’s zero-tolerance COVID policy has failed to contain the disease, and it is now clear that more and more outbreaks will occur across the country over the coming months. Our base case view is that additional fiscal & monetary support is forthcoming if the spread of the disease progresses as we expect. We are likely to downgrade our outlook for global economic activity as well as our recommended allocation to risky assets if it does not materialize. Our profit margin warning indicators have deteriorated over the past month, and it is now our view that a contraction in S&P 500 margins is likely. Still, a major decline should be avoided, and we expect that S&P 500 earnings will grow at a low, single-digit rate over the coming year. We continue to recommend a marginally overweight stance towards risky assets over the coming 6-12 months, along with a neutral regional equity stance, a modestly overweight stance towards value over growth, an overweight stance towards small caps, a modestly short duration stance within a fixed-income portfolio, and short US dollar positions. Not Out Of The Woods Yet Chart I-1In May, Global Stocks Nearly Fell Into Bear Market Territory
In May, Global Stocks Nearly Fell Into Bear Market Territory
In May, Global Stocks Nearly Fell Into Bear Market Territory
May was a painful month for the equity market. Globally, stocks fell more than 4% in US$ terms, led by the US. May’s selloff pushed global stocks close to bear market territory relative to their early-January high (Chart I-1), a threshold that was breached in intra-day terms in the US last week. We warned in our April report that the outlook for equities had deteriorated meaningfully since the beginning of the year and recommended that investors maintain, at most, a very modest overweight toward stocks in a global multi-asset portfolio. In our view, the economic and financial market developments that occurred over the past month are consistent with several of the risk we identified in our recent reports. We continue to recommend that investors remain minimally overweight risky assets. Our view that investors should not be underweight risky assets hinges on three expectations: the avoidance of a US recession over the coming year, a continuation of Russian natural gas exports to key gas-reliant European countries, and the announcement from Chinese policymakers of either significant additional stimulus in its traditional form or income-support policies of the type that prevailed in developed economies in the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. Confirmation of these expectations is likely to push us to upgrade our recommended stance toward risky assets, especially if equities continue to sell off in response to growth fears. Conversely, we are likely to recommend downgrading risky assets to neutral or underweight if evidence mounts that our expectations are unlikely to materialize. A US Recession Scare Is Underway We noted in last month’s report that the US economy would likely avoid a recession over the coming year, but that a recession scare was quite likely. We emphasized a probable slowdown in the housing market as the locus of investors’ recessionary concern, and the US housing market data is indeed now surprising significantly to the downside (Chart I-2). We see the performance of the equity market over the past month as reflecting the beginning of the recession scare that we warned was coming. Chart I-3 highlights that the composition of the US equity selloff since the beginning of the year has looked quite unlike the growth-driven selloffs that occurred over the past decade, in that real bond yields have been a strong driver of the decline in stocks. By contrast, May’s decline has looked more like a typical growth scare, with real bond yields somewhat cushioning the impact of a significant rise in the equity risk premium. Chart I-2The US Housing Market Is Clearly Slowing
The US Housing Market Is Clearly Slowing
The US Housing Market Is Clearly Slowing
Chart I-3May’s Selloff Was Driven By Growth Fears, Not Rising Interest Rates
June 2022
June 2022
Chart I-4 highlights that it is not just the housing market that is worrying investors. The chart shows that the Conference Board’s US leading economic indicator (LEI) is slowing quite sharply, in line with previous episodes of a major growth scare. And while the weakest components of the LEI modestly improved on average in April, Chart I-5 highlights that the collapse in real wage growth alongside the recently severe underperformance of consumer stocks has fed concerns that high inflation has eroded household purchasing power – and that a contraction in real spending is imminent. Chart I-4A Serious US Growth Scare Is Underway
A Serious US Growth Scare Is Underway
A Serious US Growth Scare Is Underway
Chart I-5The Decline In Real US Wage Growth Has Caused A Major Selloff In Consumer Stocks
The Decline In Real US Wage Growth Has Caused A Major Selloff In Consumer Stocks
The Decline In Real US Wage Growth Has Caused A Major Selloff In Consumer Stocks
In Section 2 of this month’s report we provide further analysis supporting the view that the US housing market will not drive the US economy into recession. But we do continue to believe that a slowdown in housing activity is likely, and that concerns about a housing-driven recession will linger. Still, several factors continue to suggest that the US is experiencing a recession scare, and not an actual recession: The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model is currently predicting US real GDP growth that is only modestly below trend in Q2, and the overall estimate continues to be dragged significantly lower by a sizably negative contribution from the change in inventories (Chart I-6). Without this negative inventories effect, the Atlanta Fed’s model would be forecasting real annualized growth of over 3%. After having decelerated significantly in the second half of last year because of a broadening in consumer price inflation, Chart I-7 highlights that real personal consumption expenditures reaccelerated and real personal income ex-transfers stabilized in Q1. Chart I-6No Sign Of A Major Decline In Q2 Consumer Spending
June 2022
June 2022
Chart I-7Real Income Growth Is Stabilizing, And Real Consumer Spending Is Accelerating
Real Income Growth Is Stabilizing, And Real Consumer Spending Is Accelerating
Real Income Growth Is Stabilizing, And Real Consumer Spending Is Accelerating
US manufacturing industrial production surged in April, led by motor vehicle production (Chart I-8, panel 1). It is true that industrial production is a coincident indicator and thus does not necessarily argue against the idea that a recession is imminent. A pickup in vehicle production is encouraging, however, as it suggests that the 15% surge in the level of new car prices over the past year that contributed to the erosion in household real incomes may be set to reverse (panel 2). Chart I-8A Pickup In Auto Production Should Help Lower Car Prices And Improve Consumer Purchasing Power
A Pickup In Auto Production Should Help Lower Car Prices And Improve Consumer Purchasing Power
A Pickup In Auto Production Should Help Lower Car Prices And Improve Consumer Purchasing Power
Services spending is likely to improve, as deliveries of Pfizer’s Paxlovid antiviral drug continue to ramp up and vaccines are eventually approved for children under the age of six. Charts I-9A and I-9B highlight several real services spending categories that remain below their pre-pandemic levels, which in our view have been clearly linked to the pandemic and are not likely to be permanently lower. Americans have not likely stopped going to the gym, amusement parks, movies, live concerts, or the dentist, nor have their stopped needing to put elderly relatives in nursing care homes. They are also highly unlikely to stop traveling. There is some internal debate at BCA about the impact that working-from-home trends will have on the level of services spending, but we would note that essentially all of the spending categories shown in Charts I-9A and I-9B have exhibited uptrends that only appear to have been affected by consumer responses to the Delta and Omicron waves of the pandemic. Widely-available treatment options that reduce the fatality rate of the disease close to that of the flu are likely to be perceived by the public as an effective end of the pandemic, boosting spending on lagging categories of services spending. Chart I-9AAn Eventual End To The Pandemic…
June 2022
June 2022
Chart I-9B…Will Cause A Further Improvement In Services Spending
...Will Cause A Further Improvement In Services Spending
...Will Cause A Further Improvement In Services Spending
Based on high-frequency data from OpenTable, the number of seated diners in US restaurants is not exhibiting any major warning signs for US consumer spending (Chart I-10). Real spending in restaurants has been strongly correlated with overall real personal consumption expenditures over the past two decades, and thus Chart I-10 is not suggesting that a collapse in overall spending is imminent. Chart I-10High-Frequency Data Does Not Yet Show A Major Pullback In US Consumer Spending
High-Frequency Data Does Not Yet Show A Major Pullback In US Consumer Spending
High-Frequency Data Does Not Yet Show A Major Pullback In US Consumer Spending
As a final point concerning the risk of recession in the US, investors should note that the recent behavior of inflation expectations is encouraging and points to a potentially imminent peak in Fed hawkishness. Over the past few months, we have expressed our concern about the pace of increase in long-dated household inflation expectations. We highlighted last month that long-term market-based inflation expectations were also exhibiting some potential signs of becoming unanchored. However, Chart I-11 highlights that the momentum of long-dated household inflation expectations is now starting to flag, and that long-term market-based inflation expectations recently decreased in response to escalating growth fears. Chart I-12 clearly shows a slowing pace of core consumer prices, which will act to restrain further significant increases in long-dated inflation expectations. Chart I-11Long-Dated Inflation Expectations Point To A Potentially Imminent Peak In Fed Hawkishness
June 2022
June 2022
Chart I-12Core Inflation Momentum Is Clearly Slowing
Core Inflation Momentum Is Clearly Slowing
Core Inflation Momentum Is Clearly Slowing
Chart I-13 highlights that investors expect the Fed to raise the policy rate by the end of the year to a level even higher than what Jerome Powell implied during the Fed’s May press conference: a target range for the Fed funds rate of 2.5-2.75%, corresponding to two more 50 basis point hikes and three 25 basis point hikes during the FOMC’s September, November, and December meetings. Chart I-13Expectations For Fed Rate Hikes This Year Are Likely To Come Down If Inflation Continues To Moderate
June 2022
June 2022
It is likely that the market’s expectation for rate hikes this year will fall over the coming few months if the monthly pace of core inflation continues to slow. The Fed itself may soon signal a less intense pace of tightening than Powell recently implied – a perspective that we feel is supported by the minutes of the May FOMC meeting. That would allow the US economy to “digest” the recent adjustment in interest rates with less uncertainty about the economic outlook, which would lower the odds that a “mid-cycle slowdown” morphs into a full-blown recession. A Debilitating Energy-Driven Recession In Europe Is Not In The Cards, For Now The key issue pertaining to the European economic outlook remains the question of whether Europe’s imports of Russian natural gas will be interrupted. A European embargo of Russian oil now seems likely, which would likely cause Russian oil production to decline. Our Commodity & Energy strategy service now expects Brent oil to trade at $120/bbl on average for the remainder of the year, $5/bbl higher than current levels (Chart I-14). We agree with our Commodity & Energy Strategy team’s updated oil price forecast, but we have a different view about the odds that Russia will respond to a European oil embargo by cutting its natural gas exports to the EU. We still think this is a risk, not yet a likely event, although it may still occur later in the year. A full and immediate cutoff of natural gas exports to gas-dependent European countries such as Germany and Italy would not only destabilize the Russian economy by substantially reducing its current account surplus, it would also cause a severe recession in Europe through a combination of gas rationing to industries by government decree and surging energy prices (Chart I-15). Chart I-14A European Embargo Of Russian Oil Will Cause Brent To Rise To $120/bbl
A European Embargo Of Russian Oil Will Cause Brent To Rise To $120/bbl
A European Embargo Of Russian Oil Will Cause Brent To Rise To $120/bbl
Chart I-15A Full Cutoff Of Russian Natural Gas Would Cause A Severe European Recession
A Full Cutoff Of Russian Natural Gas Would Cause A Severe European Recession
A Full Cutoff Of Russian Natural Gas Would Cause A Severe European Recession
That could erode European voters’ willingness to provide military support for Ukraine, but it could instead backfire and galvanize European public opinion against Russia – and remove leverage that may be potentially used to secure a ceasefire agreement that will preserve its military gains in eastern Ukraine. Chart I-16Europe Is Replenishing Its Gas Storage, But It Cannot Yet Withstand A Full Cutoff
June 2022
June 2022
Russia may respond to an oil embargo by throttling the amount of natural gas exported to key European countries in a fashion that raises natural gas prices and prevents European countries from building up sufficient storage for the upcoming winter – a process that is underway but is far from complete (Chart I-16). But it remains an open question how forcefully Russia is willing to weaponize its natural gas exports, and whether it will deploy this strategy now or later. For now, our base case view is that the euro area economy will slow and will probably contract in Q2, but it will avoid a debilitating energy-driven recession. China: The Only Way Out Is Through Among the three pillars of the global economy – the US, China, and Europe – the last is arguably the least important. Today, the US and China are the core drivers of global demand, and we are therefore more concerned about the economic impact of China’s zero-tolerance COVID policy than we are about a slowdown or mild recession in Europe. Given how contagious the Omicron variant of COVID-19 has shown itself to be, and given how widespread recent outbreaks have been, it is now clear that China’s zero-tolerance policy has failed to contain the disease and that more and more outbreaks will occur across the country over the coming months. Despite public statements to the contrary, we suspect that Chinese policymakers are well aware of this situation, but are constrained by the consequences of removing the zero-tolerance policy. Recent studies suggest that China could face intensive care demand that is sixteen times existing capacity and upwards of 1.5 million deaths by removing the policy,1 roughly 1.5 times the cumulative amount of deaths that have occurred in the US during the pandemic. But the economic consequences of maintaining the zero-tolerance policy will also be severe, and therefore also likely represent a constraint on policymakers. Charts I-17 and I-18 show that China’s labor market and industrial sector have already slowed sharply over the past few months, at a pace and magnitude that is unlikely to be politically sustainable for much longer. In addition, Chart I-19 shows that China’s credit impulse fell meaningfully in April. Chart I-17China’s Labor Market Is Cratering…
China's Labor Market Is Cratering...
China's Labor Market Is Cratering...
Chart I-18…As Is Its Manufacturing Sector
... As Is Its Manufacturing Sector
... As Is Its Manufacturing Sector
Chart I-19More Fiscal & Monetary Support Will Be Needed In China Soon, If COVID-19 Cases Continue To Spread
More Fiscal & Monetary Support Will Be Needed In China Soon, If COVID-19 Cases Continue To Spread
More Fiscal & Monetary Support Will Be Needed In China Soon, If COVID-19 Cases Continue To Spread
This would be tolerable if the decline in activity was likely to be short-lived as it was at the very beginning of the pandemic, but we no longer see this as a probable outcome. We acknowledge that reported cases of COVID-19 have steadily declined in cities in the Yangtze River region, and we agree that the Shanghai lockdown may soon end for a time. But we doubt that this will mark the end of outbreaks in the region, or prevent major outbreaks from occurring in other parts of the country. If China cannot relax its zero-tolerance policy or tolerate the degree of economic weakness entailed by its continued application, then additional fiscal and monetary support is likely. While China’s leadership has stepped up its pro-growth policy measures, as evidenced by the recent cut in the 5-year loan prime rate, we strongly suspect that more support will be needed. This support may take the form of traditional stimulus via local government spending, or it may involve the introduction of income-support policies of the kind that prevailed in developed economies in the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. Chart I-20The Chinese Housing Market Is Slowing Significantly, Lowering The Risk Of Speculation From Income Support Policies
The Chinese Housing Market Is Slowing Significantly, Lowering The Risk Of Speculation From Income Support Policies
The Chinese Housing Market Is Slowing Significantly, Lowering The Risk Of Speculation From Income Support Policies
Chinese policymakers who are eager to prevent another significant releveraging of the economy and who want to avoid another major deterioration in housing affordability may perhaps be forgiven for seeing the developed economy experience with these programs as a poor roadmap to follow. House prices have exploded in most advanced economies during the pandemic, which has significantly contributed to a major decline in affordability. However, with the benefit of hindsight, Chinese policymakers would likely be able to recalibrate any income support program to avoid some of the excesses that occurred in DM countries, such as policies that caused aggregate disposable income to increase in the US and Canada during the pandemic. In addition, Chart I-20 highlights that the starting point for the Chinese property market is one in which house prices are seemingly poised to contract at the worst pace since late 2014 / early 2015. The latter suggests that Chinese policymakers have more ability to support household income without causing an explosion in house prices and speculative activity than DM policymakers did in 2020. Regardless of its form, it is the view of the Bank Credit Analyst service that China cannot avoid the provision of significant additional fiscal/monetary support if it maintains its zero-tolerance COVID policy for the remainder of the year given our assumption that potentially major outbreaks will continue. It is our base case view that additional support is forthcoming over the coming weeks and months if the spread of the disease progresses as we expect. We are likely to downgrade our outlook for global economic activity as well as our recommended allocation to risky assets if it does not materialize. US Corporate Profits In A Nonrecessionary Slowdown Scenario Chart I-21US Forward Earnings Very Rarely Fall While The Economy Continues To Expand
June 2022
June 2022
Chart I-3 highlighted that the US equity market selloff in May shifted from one that was strongly driven by rising real government bond yields to one in which a rising equity risk premium was the dominant driver. And yet, the chart showed that there has been no negative contribution to US stock prices from falling earnings expectations, with expected earnings having continued to rise since the beginning of the year. While it may seem counterintuitive to investors that forward earnings expectations are not falling in the middle of a major growth scare, Chart I-21 highlights that this is not abnormal. The chart highlights that forward earnings expectations rarely decline outside of the context of a recession, because actual earnings typically do not decline when the economy is expanding. This means that the potential for earnings to decline shows up as a rise in the equity risk premium during growth scares, which is what has generally occurred since the beginning of the year (excluding energy, forward EPS estimates have fallen slightly this year). In last month’s Section 2, we noted that nonrecessionary earnings declines almost always occur because of contractions in profit margins. We argued that risks to US equity margins might rise later this year. In fact, since we published our report last month, some of these risks have already materialized: our new profit margin warning indicator has jumped significantly (Chart I-22), and our sector profit margin diffusion index has fallen below the boom/bust line (Chart I-23). As such, it is now our view that a contraction in S&P 500 profit margins is likely over the coming year, which contrasts with analyst EPS growth expectations of 9.5% and sales per share growth expectations of 8% (meaning that analysts are currently forecasting a margin expansion). Chart I-22A Contraction In S&P 500 Profit Margins...
A Contraction In S&P 500 Profit Margins...
A Contraction In S&P 500 Profit Margins...
Chart I-23...Now Looks Likely
...Now Looks Likely
...Now Looks Likely
Will a likely contraction in profit margins cause an outright decline in earnings over the coming year? Investors should acknowledge that this is a risk, but for now our answer is no. Chart I-24For Now, A Severe Contraction In Margins Does Not Seem Probable
For Now, A Severe Contraction In Margins Does Not Seem Probable
For Now, A Severe Contraction In Margins Does Not Seem Probable
Taken at face value, our sector diffusion index shown in Chart I-23 suggests that profit margins are set to decline by 2 percentage points over the coming year, which would indeed imply a 7-8% contraction in earnings per share assuming 8% revenue growth. However, the index is much better at predicting inflection points in profit margins than the magnitude of the change; in several cases over the past three decades the model correctly predicted a decline in profit margins, but implied a much larger change in margins than what actually occurred. In addition, our model shown in Chart I-22 has yet to cross above the 50% mark into probable territory, and Chart I-24 highlights that net earnings revisions and net positive earnings surprises are falling but have not yet reached levels that would be consistent with a major margin decline. In sum, we expect that S&P 500 earnings will grow at a low, single-digit rate over the coming year given our expectation of a nonrecessionary slowdown scenario. This implies that US equity returns will be uninspiring over the coming year, but they will be likely be positive and will likely beat the returns offered from bonds. Investment Strategy Recommendations Considerable uncertainty remains about the global economic and financial market outlook, and there are several identifiable risks that would warrant an underweight stance towards risky assets were they to materialize. We agree that an aggressively overweight stance is not justified. Chart I-25Without A Recession, The US Equity Risk Premium Is Very Likely To Decline
Without A Recession, The US Equity Risk Premium Is Very Likely To Decline
Without A Recession, The US Equity Risk Premium Is Very Likely To Decline
However, the fact that corporate profits do not usually fall while the economy is expanding underscores why investors should be reluctant to significantly cut their risky asset exposure unless a recession appears likely. Without a recession, the US equity risk premium is very likely to decline (Chart I-25), meaning that 10-year Treasury yields closer to 4% or a significant contraction in profit margins would be required for US stocks to post negative returns over the coming 6-12 months. We would not rule out either of these outcomes, but we also do not think that they are probable. To conclude, it is fair to say that global investors are not out of the woods yet, but we continue to recommend a marginally overweight stance towards risky assets on the basis that the US will avoid a recession over the coming year, Russia is not yet likely to push Europe into a debilitating recession, and China will further ease fiscal & monetary policy to support growth. In addition to a modest overweight towards stocks in a multi-asset portfolio, we continue to recommend the following: A neutral regional equity stance, with global ex-US equities on upgrade watch in response to an improvement in the European economic outlook and further fiscal & monetary support in China. The recent passive outperformance of global ex-US stocks has occurred mainly because US stocks have fallen more than global stocks, which have “caught up” to mounting US and global growth fears. As such, ex-US stocks have outperformed for the wrong reasons, and investors should wait for durable signs of an improving global growth outlook and a falling US dollar before shifting in favor of a global ex-US equity stance. A modestly overweight stance towards value over growth stocks on the basis of better valuation. However, most of the pandemic-related outperformance of growth stocks has already reversed (Chart I-26), suggesting that the outperformance of value is getting late. An overweight stance toward global small-cap stocks over their large-cap peers, as they are now unequivocally inexpensive and have remained resilient as global growth fears have intensified (Chart I-27). Chart I-26Modestly Favor Value Stocks Due To Better Valuation, But The COVID Effects On Equity Style Have Mostly Reversed
Modestly Favor Value Stocks Due To Better Valuation, But The COVID Effects On Equity Style Have Mostly Reversed
Modestly Favor Value Stocks Due To Better Valuation, But The COVID Effects On Equity Style Have Mostly Reversed
Chart I-27Small Cap Stocks Have Recently Proven Resilient, And Are Extremely Cheap
Small Cap Stocks Have Recently Proven Resilient, And Are Extremely Cheap
Small Cap Stocks Have Recently Proven Resilient, And Are Extremely Cheap
A modestly short duration stance within a fixed-income portfolio. Short US dollar positions, as the dollar is clearly benefiting from growth fears that will wane. In addition, the US dollar is very expensive, and extremely overbought. Concerning our recommended duration stance, we acknowledge that a slower pace of rate hikes than what investors currently expect and a slowing pace of inflation would normally argue for a long duration stance. But we do not expect the Fed to stop raising interest rates unless a recession seems likely, and a slower but steady path of tightening, in conjunction with easing inflation, makes it more likely that the US economy will be able to “digest” the recent adjustment in rates without tipping into recession. This, in turn, increases the odds that the Fed funds rate will peak at a higher level than investors currently expect, which should ultimately push long-maturity yields higher rather than lower. On balance, this suggests that investors should be modestly short duration, even if long-maturity bond yields move temporarily lower over the coming few months. Long-duration positions are perhaps reasonable on a 0-3 month time horizon, but over a 6-12 month time horizon we continue to recommend a modestly short stance. Jonathan LaBerge, CFA Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst May 26, 2022 Next Report: June 30, 2022 II. Is The US Housing Market Signaling An Imminent Recession? The Fed’s hawkish shift over the past six months has caused a sharp increase in US interest rates. In this report we examine the US housing market for signs of an imminent recession, given the housing sector’s strong interest rate sensitivity. In addition to a severe contraction in real home improvement spending, there are several other housing-related indicators that are ostensibly pointing in a bearish direction. The growth in total home sales and the MBA mortgage application purchase index are already in negative territory, housing affordability has deteriorated meaningfully, and the National Association of Home Builders’ (NAHB) housing market index is falling sharply. However, the breadth of house prices and building permits, consumer surveys, housing equity sector relative performance, and the fact that mortgage rates have likely peaked for the year point to a more optimistic outlook for housing. At a minimum, they do not yet suggest that the current slowdown in housing-related activity is recessionary. Structural factors are also supportive of the pace of housing construction in the US. While a slowdown in the housing market is clearly underway, it is not occurring after a period of excessive housing construction. The opposite is true: the US and several other developed market economies have underbuilt homes over the past decade. This should limit the drag on economic growth from housing-related activity, and reduces the odds that a housing market slowdown will morph into a housing-driven US recession. Chart II-1The Fed's Hawkish Shift Has Caused An Extremely Sharp Rise In Interest Rates
The Fed's Hawkish Shift Has Caused An Extremely Sharp Rise In Interest Rates
The Fed's Hawkish Shift Has Caused An Extremely Sharp Rise In Interest Rates
The Fed’s hawkish shift over the past six months has caused US interest rates to rise at an extremely rapid pace. Panel 1 of Chart II-1 highlights that the spread between the US 2-year Treasury yield and the 3-month T-bill yield reached a 20-year high in early April of this year. Panel 2 shows that the two-year change in the 30-year mortgage rate will reach the highest level since the early 1980s by the end of this year if mortgage rates remain at their current level. Over the longer run, it is the level of interest rates that matters more than their change. However, changes in interest rates and other key financial market variables are also important drivers of economic activity, especially when they happen very rapidly. Given the speed of the recent adjustment in US interest rates, and the fact that the Fed funds rate will have likely reached the Fed’s neutral rate forecast by the end of this year, investors have understandably become concerned about the potential for a recession in the US. In this report we examine the US housing market for signs of an imminent recession, given the housing sector’s strong interest rate sensitivity. We conclude that while a slowdown in the housing market is clearly underway, several signs suggest that this slowdown is not recessionary. Investors should remain laser-focused on the pace of housing-related activity over the coming 6-12 months, but for now our assessment of the housing market is consistent with a modest overweight stance towards stocks within a multi-asset portfolio. A Brief Review Of The Housing Sector’s Contribution To Growth Table II-1 highlights the importance of the housing sector as a driver/predictor of US recessions. This table highlights that real residential investment is not a particularly important contributor to real GDP growth during nonrecessionary quarters, but it is the only main expenditure component exhibiting negative growth on average in the year prior to a recession.2 Table II-1Real Residential Investment Tends To Contract In The Year Prior To A Recession
June 2022
June 2022
When examining the contribution to economic growth from the housing sector, investors and housing market analysts often fully equate real residential investment with housing construction. In fact, while direct construction of housing units accounts for a sizeable portion of the contribution to growth from housing, it is just one of four components. This is an important point, as one of the often-overlooked elements of real residential investment has strongly leading properties and is currently providing a very negative signal about the housing sector. Chart II-2 breaks down what we consider as aggregate real “housing-related activity”, and Chart II-3 presents the contributions to annualized quarterly growth in housing activity from the four components. For the sake of completeness, we include personal consumption expenditures on furnishings and household equipment as part of housing-related activity, alongside the two main components of real residential investment: permanent site construction (including single and multi-family properties), and “other structures.” In reality, “other structures” is not predominantly accounted for by the construction of different types of residential properties; it is almost entirely composed of spending on home improvements and brokerage commissions on the sale of existing residential properties. Chart II-2Housing Construction Is An Important Part Of Residential Investment, But There Are Other Contributing Factors
June 2022
June 2022
Chart II-3Home Improvement Spending And Brokerage Commissions Also Drive Residential Investment
June 2022
June 2022
Aside from the link between existing home sales and the general demand for newly-built homes, the prominence of brokerage commissions in other residential structures investment helps explain why existing home sales are strongly correlated with real residential investment (Chart II-4, panel 1). Given that a distributed lag of monthly housing starts maps closely to permanent site construction (panel 2), starts and existing home sales explain a good portion of the contribution to growth from housing-related activity. Of the two remaining components of housing-related activity, Chart II-5 highlights that personal consumption expenditures on furniture and household equipment generally coincide with the pace of housing construction and new home sales. We take this to mean that the consumption component of housing-related activity is typically a derivative of the decision to build a new home or sell an existing one. Chart II-4Existing Home Sales Explain Commissions, And Housing Starts Explain Permanent Site Construction
Existing Home Sales Explain Commissions, And Housing Starts Explain Permanent Site Construction
Existing Home Sales Explain Commissions, And Housing Starts Explain Permanent Site Construction
Chart II-5The Pace Of Contraction In Home Improvement Spending Is Worrying
The Pace Of Contraction In Home Improvement Spending Is Worrying
The Pace Of Contraction In Home Improvement Spending Is Worrying
What is not coincident with construction and existing home sales is residential home improvement: Panel 2 of Chart II-5 highlights that it has strongly leading properties, and is currently contracting at its worst rate since the 2008 recession. Data on real home improvement spending is only available quarterly from 2002, so the ability to compare the current situation to previous housing market cycles is limited. But the pace of contraction is worrying and underscores that investors should be on the lookout for corroborating signs of a major contraction in the housing market. Is The Housing Data Sending A Recessionary Signal? In addition to the severe contraction in real home improvement spending shown in Chart II-5, there are several other housing-related indicators that are ostensibly pointing in a bearish direction. In particular, Chart II-6 highlights that both the growth in total home sales and the MBA mortgage application purchase index are already in negative territory, that housing affordability has deteriorated meaningfully, and that the National Association of Home Builders’ (NAHB) housing market index is falling sharply. However, there are also several signs pointing to a more optimistic outlook for housing, or at least indicating that the current slowdown in housing-related activity is not recessionary. We review these more optimistic indicators below. The Breadth Of House Prices And Building Permits In sharp contrast to previous periods of serious housing market weakness and/or recessionary periods, there is no sign yet of a major slowdown in US house price appreciation including cities with the weakest gains. In fact, Chart II-7 highlights that house prices have recently been reaccelerating on a very broad basis after having slowed in the second half of last year, which hardly bodes poorly for new home construction. Chart II-6A US Housing Sector Slowdown Is Certainly Underway
A US Housing Sector Slowdown Is Certainly Underway
A US Housing Sector Slowdown Is Certainly Underway
Chart II-7No Sign Yet Of A Major Deceleration In House Prices
No Sign Yet Of A Major Deceleration In House Prices
No Sign Yet Of A Major Deceleration In House Prices
It is true that US house price data is somewhat lagging, so it is quite likely that price weakness is forthcoming. However, there has been no sign of a major slowdown in prices through to March 2022, by which point 30-year mortgage rates had already risen 200 basis points from their 2021 low. More importantly, Chart II-8 highlights that a state-by-state diffusion index of authorized housing permits has done a very good job at leading the growth in permits nationwide, and is currently not pointing to a contraction in activity. Chart II-9 presents explanatory models for the growth in US housing starts and total home sales based on our state permits diffusion index, pending home sales, the change in mortgage rates, and housing affordability. The chart underscores that a contraction in housing activity is not what these variables would predict, even though starts and sales should be growing at a much more modest pace than what has prevailed on average over the past two years. Chart II-8Our Building Permits Diffusion Index Leads Housing Construction Activity, And Is Not Pointing To A Major Slowdown
Our Building Permits Diffusion Index Leads Housing Construction Activity, And Is Not Pointing To A Major Slowdown
Our Building Permits Diffusion Index Leads Housing Construction Activity, And Is Not Pointing To A Major Slowdown
Chart II-9Reliably Leading Indicators Of Construction And Home Sales Do Not Point To A Recessionary Outcome
Reliably Leading Indicators Of Construction And Home Sales Do Not Point To A Recessionary Outcome
Reliably Leading Indicators Of Construction And Home Sales Do Not Point To A Recessionary Outcome
Consumer Surveys The University of Michigan consumer survey shows that consumers feel it is the worst time to buy a home since the early-1980s (Chart II-10), which seems like a clearly negative sign for the housing market and an indication of the likely impact of tighter policy on housing-related activity. And yet, panel 2 highlights that this is the result of the fact that house prices in the US have surged during the pandemic, not that mortgage rates have risen too high. It is true that the number of survey respondents citing “interest rates are too high” is rising sharply, but this factor as a share of all “bad time to buy” reasons given is not meaningfully higher than it was in 2018, 2011, or 2006. It is clear that high prices are also the culprit for why consumers report that it is a bad time to buy large household durables and not that large household durables are unaffordable or that interest rates are too high (Chart II-11). Chart II-10Nearly The Worst Time To Buy A Home, Mostly Due To Prices (Not Interest Rates)
Nearly The Worst Time To Buy A Home, Mostly Due To Prices (Not Interest Rates)
Nearly The Worst Time To Buy A Home, Mostly Due To Prices (Not Interest Rates)
Chart II-11Same Story For Large Household Durables
Same Story For Large Household Durables
Same Story For Large Household Durables
It may seem counterintuitive for investors to see Charts II-10 and II-11 as in any way positive for the housing market. But, to us, the notion that elevated house prices are the main source of poor affordability supports the idea that a normalization of the housing market will occur through a combination of marginally lower demand, a slower pace of house price appreciation, and a sustained pace of housing market construction. This implies that existing home sales may be weaker than housing construction over the coming year, but the latter will help to support the contribution to overall economic growth from housing-related activity. Housing Sector Relative Performance Despite the significant slowdown in real home improvement spending and the recent decline in the NAHB’s housing market index, Chart II-12 highlights that home improvement retail and homebuilding stocks have not exhibited significantly negative abnormal returns over the past year – as they did in 1994/1995 and in the lead up to the global financial crisis. The chart, which presents a rolling 1-year “Jensen’s alpha” measure for both industries, attempts to capture the risk-adjusted performance of the industry versus the S&P 500. While the chart shows that both industries have generated negative alpha over the past year, the magnitude does not appear to be consistent with a recession. In the case of homebuilder stocks in particular, negative abnormal returns over the past year should have been meaningfully worse given the year-over-year change in mortgage rates. Chart II-13 highlights that homebuilder performance has not been cushioned by a deep valuation discount in advance of the rise in mortgage rates. Chart II-12Housing-Related Equity Sectors Are Not Warning Of A Housing-Driven Recession
Housing-Related Equity Sectors Are Not Warning Of A Housing-Driven Recession
Housing-Related Equity Sectors Are Not Warning Of A Housing-Driven Recession
Chart II-13Homebuilders Were Not Excessively Cheap Before Mortgage Rates Spiked
Homebuilders Were Not Excessively Cheap Before Mortgage Rates Spiked
Homebuilders Were Not Excessively Cheap Before Mortgage Rates Spiked
In short, the important takeaway for investors is that the relative performance of housing-related stocks is not yet consistent with a housing-led US recession. Mortgage Rates Are Not Restrictive, And Have Likely Peaked As we highlighted in Chart II-1, the two-year change in the US 30-year conventional mortgage rate will be the largest in history by the end of this year, save the Volcker era, if the mortgage rate remains at its current level. However, it is not just the change in interest rates that matters for economic activity, but rather also the level. Encouragingly, Chart II-14 highlights that the level of mortgage rates has not yet risen into restrictive territory relative to the economy’s underlying potential rate of growth. In addition, it appears that mortgage rates have overreacted to the expected pace of monetary tightening – and thus have likely peaked for this year. Two points support this view: First, panel 2 of Chart II-14 highlights that the 30-year mortgage rate is one standard deviation too high relative to the 10-year Treasury yield, underscoring that the former has overshot. And second, Chart II-15 highlights that the mortgage rate is still too high even after controlling for business cycle expectations, current coupon MBS yields, and bond & equity market volatility. Chart II-14Mortgage Rates Are Not Yet Restrictive, But Have Likely Peaked For The Year
Mortgage Rates Are Not Yet Restrictive, But Have Likely Peaked For The Year
Mortgage Rates Are Not Yet Restrictive, But Have Likely Peaked For The Year
Chart II-15No Matter How You Slice It, US Mortgage Rates Are Stretched
No Matter How You Slice It, US Mortgage Rates Are Stretched
No Matter How You Slice It, US Mortgage Rates Are Stretched
Structural Factors Supporting Housing Construction Chart II-16The US And Several Other DM Countries Have Underbuilt Homes Since The Global Financial Crisis
The US And Several Other DM Countries Have Underbuilt Homes Since The Global Financial Crisis
The US And Several Other DM Countries Have Underbuilt Homes Since The Global Financial Crisis
Our analysis above points to a scenario in which the housing market slows in a nonrecessionary fashion, supported by relatively buoyant construction activity. Structural factors, which are mostly a legacy of the global financial crisis, are also supportive of the pace of housing construction in the US and other developed market economies. We presented Chart II-16 in our June 2021 Special Report, which shows the most standardized measure of cross-country housing supply available for several advanced economies: the trend in real residential investment relative to real GDP over time. These series are all rebased to 100 as of 1997, prior to the 2002-2007 US housing market boom. The chart makes it clear that advanced economies generally fall into two groups based on this metric: those that have seen declines in real residential investment relative to GDP, especially after the global financial crisis (panel 1) and those that have experienced either an uptrend in housing construction relative to output or a flat trend (panel 2). The US, along with the euro area, the UK, and Japan, all belong to the first group, with commodity-producing and Scandinavian countries belonging to the second group. The point of the chart is that the US and most other major DM economies have seemingly experienced a chronic undersupply of homes in the wake of the global financial crisis, which should continue to support housing construction activity even if demand for housing is slowing because of a sharp increase in mortgage rates. Given that the trend in real residential investment to GDP is a somewhat crude metric of housing supply, Chart II-17 presents a more precise measure for the US. It shows the standardized trend in permanent site residential structures investment (both single- and multi-family) relative to both the US population and the number of households. The chart makes it clear that the US vastly overbuilt homes from the late-1990s to 2007, but also vastly underbuilt since 2008. Relative to the number of households, real permanent site residential structures investment is still half of a standard deviation below its long-term average – even after the surge in construction that occurred in 2020. Chart II-18 highlights a similar message: it shows that the US homeowner vacancy rate (the proportion of the housing stock that is vacant and for sale) was at a 66-year low at the end of the first quarter. Chart II-19 shows that the monthly supply of existing one-family homes on the market is also at a multi-decade low, but that the supply of new homes for sale spiked in April. Chart II-17More Precise Home Supply Measures Underscore That The US Needs To Build More Houses
More Precise Home Supply Measures Underscore That The US Needs To Build More Houses
More Precise Home Supply Measures Underscore That The US Needs To Build More Houses
Chart II-18The Homeowner Vacancy Rate Is Extremely Low
The Homeowner Vacancy Rate Is Extremely Low
The Homeowner Vacancy Rate Is Extremely Low
At first blush, this spike in the monthly supply of new homes relative to sales is quite concerning, as it has risen back to levels that prevailed in 2007. One point to note is that the increase in new home inventory relates to homes still under construction; the inventory of completed homes for sale remains quite low. In addition, from the perspective of a homebuilder, a rise in the monthly supply of new homes relative to home sales is only concerning if it translates into a significant increase in the amount of time to sell a completed home, as has historically been the case (Chart II-20). Chart II-19Existing Home Inventories Remain Low Relative To Sales...
Existing Home Inventories Remain Low Relative To Sales...
Existing Home Inventories Remain Low Relative To Sales...
Chart II-20...And Higher New Home Inventories Are Not Affecting Time-To-Sale Of Completed Homes
...And Higher New Home Inventories Are Not Affecting Time-To-Sale Of Completed Homes
...And Higher New Home Inventories Are Not Affecting Time-To-Sale Of Completed Homes
Chart II-20 highlights that a fairly significant divergence between these two series has emerged over the past decade. Despite roughly five-six months’ supply of new home inventory on average since 2012, the median number of months required to sell a new home rarely exceeded four. In early-2019 the monthly supply of new homes also spiked, and a relatively modest and nonrecessionary slowdown in housing starts was sufficient to prevent any meaningful rise in the amount of time required to sell a newly completed home. Notably, the models that we presented in Chart II-9 led the slowdown in total home sales and starts in late-2018/early-2019, and they are not pointing to a major contraction today. The key point for investors is that while a slowdown in the housing market is clearly underway, it is not occurring after a period of excessive housing construction. In fact, the opposite is true: despite a surge in construction during the pandemic, it remains below its historical average relative to the population and especially the number of households. This should act to limit the drag on economic growth from housing-related activity, and therefore reduces the odds that a housing market slowdown will morph into a housing-driven US recession. Investment Implications We noted in our May report that the inversion of the 2-10 yield curve has set a recessionary tone to any weakness in US macroeconomic data, and that a recession scare was likely. Recent negative housing market data surprises underscore that a slowdown in the US housing market is clearly underway, and that this will likely feed recessionary concerns for a time. Investors should continue to be highly focused on the evolution of US macro data when making asset allocation decisions over the coming 6-12 months, as the current economic and financial market environment remains highly uncertain. This should include a strong focus on the housing market, as consumer surveys highlight that the overall impact of falling real wages and high house prices could cause a more pronounced slowdown in housing-related activity than we expect – and that the change and level of interest rates would imply. Nevertheless, our analysis of the historical predictors of housing construction and sales points to the conclusion that the ongoing housing market slowdown is not likely to be recessionary in nature. This, in conjunction with the factors that we noted in Section 1 of our report, support maintaining a modest overweight towards stocks within a multi-asset portfolio over the coming 6-12 months. Jonathan LaBerge, CFA Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst III. Indicators And Reference Charts BCA’s equity indicators generally paint a pessimistic picture for stock prices. Our monetary indicator is at its weakest level in almost three decades, and our valuation indicator highlights that stocks are still expensive. Meanwhile, both our sentiment and technical indicators have broken down, and have not yet reached levels that would indicate an imminent reversal. Investors should be, at most, very modestly overweight stocks versus bonds over the coming year. Equity earnings will likely rise over the coming year if the US economy avoids a recession (as we expect), but analysts are pricing in too much growth over the coming year. A contraction in profit margins is now likely, signaling that earnings will grow at a low single-digit pace. Net earnings revisions are falling, but are not yet signaling a large enough decline in margins that would cause earnings to contract even in the face of positive revenue growth. Within a global equity portfolio, we recommend a neutral regional equity allocation. The recent passive outperformance of global ex-US stocks has occurred mainly because US stocks have fallen more than global stocks, which have “caught up” to mounting US and global growth fears. Investors should wait for durable signs of an improving global growth outlook and a falling US dollar before shifting in favor of a global ex-US equity stance. Within a fixed-income portfolio, long-duration positions are reasonable on a 0-3 month time horizon given that 10-year Treasurys are significantly oversold. But over a 6-12 month time horizon, we continue to recommend a modestly short stance. A slower but steady path of tightening, in conjunction with easing inflation, makes it more likely that the US economy will be able to “digest” the recent adjustment in rates without tipping into recession. This should ultimately push long-maturity yields higher rather than lower. Our composite technical indicator for commodity prices continues to highlight that commodities are overbought. Still, the geopolitical situation continues to favor higher energy prices, as a seemingly imminent European oil embargo against Russia will likely lower Russian oil production. Additional fiscal & monetary support in China is likely to cause a renewed rally in industrial metals, although they may fall in the nearer-term as COVID-19 cases continue to spread across China. We remain structurally bullish on industrial metals prices given that Russia’s aggression has sped up Europe’s decarbonization timeline. US and global LEIs remain in positive territory but have now rolled over significantly from very elevated levels. Our global LEI diffusion index is now rising, which may herald a stabilization in our global LEI. Manufacturing PMIs are falling in the US and globally, but have not yet fallen below the boom/bust line and are far from levels normally consistent with a recession. EQUITIES: Chart III-1US Equity Indicators
US Equity Indicators
US Equity Indicators
Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk
Willingness To Pay For Risk
Willingness To Pay For Risk
Chart III-3US Equity Sentiment Indicators
US Equity Sentiment Indicators
US Equity Sentiment Indicators
Chart III-4US Stock Market Breadth
US Stock Market Breadth
US Stock Market Breadth
Chart III-5US Stock Market Valuation
US Stock Market Valuation
US Stock Market Valuation
Chart III-6US Earnings
US Earnings
US Earnings
Chart III-7Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Chart III-8Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
FIXED INCOME: Chart III-9US Treasurys And Valuations
US Treasurys And Valuations
US Treasurys And Valuations
Chart III-10Yield Curve Slopes
Yield Curve Slopes
Yield Curve Slopes
Chart III-11Selected US Bond Yields
Selected US Bond Yields
Selected US Bond Yields
Chart III-1210-Year Treasury Yield Components
10-Year Treasury Yield Components
10-Year Treasury Yield Components
Chart III-13US Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
US Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
US Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
Chart III-14Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Chart III-15Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
CURRENCIES: Chart III-16US Dollar And PPP
US Dollar And PPP
US Dollar And PPP
Chart III-17US Dollar And Indicator
US Dollar And Indicator
US Dollar And Indicator
Chart III-18US Dollar Fundamentals
US Dollar Fundamentals
US Dollar Fundamentals
Chart III-19Japanese Yen Technicals
Japanese Yen Technicals
Japanese Yen Technicals
Chart III-20Euro Technicals
Euro Technicals
Euro Technicals
Chart III-21Euro/Yen Technicals
Euro/Yen Technicals
Euro/Yen Technicals
Chart III-22Euro/Pound Technicals
Euro/Pound Technicals
Euro/Pound Technicals
COMMODITIES: Chart III-23Broad Commodity Indicators
Broad Commodity Indicators
Broad Commodity Indicators
Chart III-24Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Chart III-25Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Chart III-26Commodity Sentiment
Commodity Sentiment
Commodity Sentiment
Chart III-27Speculative Positioning
Speculative Positioning
Speculative Positioning
ECONOMY: Chart III-28US And Global Macro Backdrop
US And Global Macro Backdrop
US And Global Macro Backdrop
Chart III-29US Macro Snapshot
US Macro Snapshot
US Macro Snapshot
Chart III-30US Growth Outlook
US Growth Outlook
US Growth Outlook
Chart III-31US Cyclical Spending
US Cyclical Spending
US Cyclical Spending
Chart III-32US Labor Market
US Labor Market
US Labor Market
Chart III-33US Consumption
US Consumption
US Consumption
Chart III-34US Housing
US Housing
US Housing
Chart III-35US Debt And Deleveraging
US Debt And Deleveraging
US Debt And Deleveraging
Chart III-36US Financial Conditions
US Financial Conditions
US Financial Conditions
Chart III-37Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Chart III-38Global Economic Snapshot: China
Global Economic Snapshot: China
Global Economic Snapshot: China
Jonathan LaBerge, CFA Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst Gabriel Di Lullo Research Associate Footnotes 1 Cai, J. . et al., Modeling Transmission Of SARS-CoV-2 Omicron in China, Nature Medicine. May 10, 2022. 2 This is aside from the contribution to growth from imports, which mechanically subtract from consumption and investment when calculating GDP.
Listen to a short summary of this report. Executive Summary The US Inflation Surprise Index Has Rolled Over
Goldilocks: A Skeptical Q&A
Goldilocks: A Skeptical Q&A
Global equities are nearing a bottom and will rally over the coming months as inflation declines and growth reaccelerates. While equity valuations are not at bombed-out levels, they have cheapened significantly. Global stocks trade at 15.3-times forward earnings. We are upgrading tech stocks from underweight to neutral. The NASDAQ Composite now trades at a forward P/E of 22.6, down from 32.9 at its peak last year. The 10-year Treasury yield should decline to 2.5% by the end of the year, which will help tech stocks at the margin. The US dollar has peaked. A weakening dollar will provide a tailwind to stocks, especially overseas bourses. US high-yield spreads are pricing in a default rate of 6.2% over the next 12 months, well above the trailing default rate of 1.2%. Favor high-yield credit over government bonds within a fixed-income portfolio. Bottom Line: The recent sell-off in stocks provides a good opportunity to increase equity allocations. We expect global stocks to rise 15%-to-20% over the next 12 months. Back to Bullish We wrote a report on April 22nd arguing that global equities were heading towards a “last hurrah” in the second half of the year as a Goldilocks environment of falling inflation and supply-side led growth emerges. Last week, we operationalized this view by tactically upgrading stocks to overweight after having downgraded them in late February. This highly out-of-consensus view change, coming at a time when surveys by the American Association of Individual Investors and other outfits show extreme levels of bearishness, has garnered a lot of attention. In this week’s report, we answer some of the most common questions from the perspective of a skeptical reader. Q: Inflation is at multi-decade highs, global growth is faltering, and central banks are about to hike rates faster than we have seen in years. Isn’t it too early to turn bullish? A: We need to focus on how the world will look like in six months, not how it looks like now. Inflation has likely peaked and many of the forces that have slowed growth, such as China’s Covid lockdown and the war in Ukraine, could abate. Q: What is the evidence that inflation has peaked? And may I remind you, even if inflation does decline later this year, this is something that most investors and central banks are already banking on. Inflation would need to fall by more than expected for your bullish scenario to play out. A: That’s true, but there is good reason to think that this is precisely what will happen. Overall spending in the US is close to its pre-pandemic trend. However, spending on goods remains above trend while spending on services is below trend (Chart 1). Services prices tend to be stickier than goods prices. Thus, the shift in spending patterns caused goods inflation to rise markedly with little offsetting decline in services inflation. To cite one of many examples, fitness equipment prices rose dramatically, but gym membership fees barely fell (Chart 2). Chart 1Total US Consumer Spending Is Almost Exactly At Its Pre-Pandemic Trend, But The Composition Of Spending Remains Skewed
Total US Consumer Spending Is Almost Exactly At Its Pre-Pandemic Trend, But The Composition Of Spending Remains Skewed
Total US Consumer Spending Is Almost Exactly At Its Pre-Pandemic Trend, But The Composition Of Spending Remains Skewed
Chart 2Asymmetries Matter: Firms Manufacturing Sports Equipment Jacked Up Prices, But Gyms Barely Cut Prices
Asymmetries Matter: Firms Manufacturing Sports Equipment Jacked Up Prices, But Gyms Barely Cut Prices
Asymmetries Matter: Firms Manufacturing Sports Equipment Jacked Up Prices, But Gyms Barely Cut Prices
As goods demand normalizes, goods inflation will come down. Meanwhile, the supply of goods should increase as the pandemic winds down, and hopefully, a detente is reached in Ukraine. There are already indications that some supply-chain bottlenecks have eased (Chart 3). Q: Even if supply shocks abate, which seems like a BIG IF to me, wouldn’t the shift in spending towards services supercharge what has been only a modest acceleration in services inflation so far? A: Wages are the most important driver of services inflation. Although the evidence is still tentative, it does appear as though wage inflation is peaking. The 3-month annualized growth rate in average hourly earnings for production and nonsupervisory workers slowed from 7.2% in the second half of 2021 to 3.8% in April (Chart 4). Assuming productivity growth of 1.5%, this is consistent with unit labor cost inflation of only slightly more than 2%, which is broadly consistent with the Fed’s CPI inflation target.1
Image
Chart 4Wage Pressures May Be Starting To Ease
Wage Pressures May Be Starting To Ease
Wage Pressures May Be Starting To Ease
Image
Moreover, a smaller proportion of firms expect to raise wages over the next six months than was the case late last year according to a variety of regional Fed surveys (Chart 5). The same message is echoed by the NFIB small business survey (Chart 6). Consistent with all this, the US Citi Inflation Surprise Index has rolled over (Chart 7). Chart 6... Small Business Owners Included
... Small Business Owners Included
... Small Business Owners Included
Chart 7The US Inflation Surprise Index Has Rolled Over
The US Inflation Surprise Index Has Rolled Over
The US Inflation Surprise Index Has Rolled Over
Q: What about the “too cold” risk to your Goldilocks scenario? The risks of recession seem to be rising. A: The market is certainly worried about this outcome, and that has been the main reason stocks have fallen of late. However, we do not think this fear is justified, certainly not in the US (Chart 8). US households are sitting on $2.3 trillion excess savings, equal to about 14% of annual consumption. The ratio of household debt-to-disposable income is down 36 percentage points from its highs in early 2008, giving households the wherewithal to spend more. Core capital goods orders, a good leading indicator for capex, have surged. The homeowner vacancy rate is at a record low, suggesting that homebuilding will be fairly resilient in the face of higher mortgage rates. Q: It seems like the Fed has a nearly impossible task on its hands: Increase labor market slack by enough to cool the economy but not so much as to trigger a recession. You yourself have pointed out that the Fed has never achieved this in its history. A: It is correct that the unemployment rate has never risen by more than one-third of a percentage point in the US without a recession occurring (Chart 9). That said, there are three reasons to think that a soft landing can be achieved this time.
Image
Chart 9When Unemployment Starts Rising, It Usually Keeps Rising
When Unemployment Starts Rising, It Usually Keeps Rising
When Unemployment Starts Rising, It Usually Keeps Rising
First, increasing labor market slack is easier if one can raise labor supply rather than reducing labor demand. Right now, the participation rate is nearly a percentage point below where it was in 2019, even if one adjusts for increased early retirement during the pandemic (Chart 10). Wages have risen relatively more at the bottom end of the income distribution. This should draw more low-wage workers into the labor force. Furthermore, according to the Federal Reserve, accumulated bank savings for the lowest-paid 20% of workers have been shrinking since last summer, which should incentivize job seeking (Chart 11). Chart 10Labor Participation Has Further Scope To Recover
Labor Participation Has Further Scope To Recover
Labor Participation Has Further Scope To Recover
Chart 11Depleted Savings Will Force More Lower-Wage Workers Into The Labor Market
Depleted Savings Will Force More Lower-Wage Workers Into The Labor Market
Depleted Savings Will Force More Lower-Wage Workers Into The Labor Market
Second, long-term inflation expectations remain well contained, which makes a soft landing more likely. Median expected inflation 5-to-10 years out in the University of Michigan survey stood at 3% in May, roughly where it was between 2005 and 2013 (Chart 12). Median expected earnings growth in the New York Fed Survey of Consumer Expectations was only slightly higher in April than it was prior to the pandemic (Chart 13). Chart 12Consumer Long-Term Inflation Expectations Have Risen But Remain Relatively Low
Consumer Long-Term Inflation Expectations Have Risen But Remain Relatively Low
Consumer Long-Term Inflation Expectations Have Risen But Remain Relatively Low
Chart 13US Consumers Do Not Expect Wages To Grow At A Much Higher Rate Than In The Pre-Pandemic Period
US Consumers Do Not Expect Wages To Grow At A Much Higher Rate Than In The Pre-Pandemic Period
US Consumers Do Not Expect Wages To Grow At A Much Higher Rate Than In The Pre-Pandemic Period
A third reason for thinking that a soft landing may be easier to achieve this time around is that the US private-sector financial balance – the difference between what the private sector earns and spends – is still in surplus (Chart 14). This stands in contrast to the lead-up to both the 2001 and 2008-09 recessions, when the private sector was living beyond its means. Q: You have spoken a lot about the US, but the situation seems dire elsewhere. Europe may already be in recession as we speak! A: The near-term outlook for Europe is indeed challenging. The euro area economy grew by only 0.8% annualized in the first quarter. Mathieu Savary, BCA’s Chief European Strategist, expects an outright decline in output in Q2. To no one’s surprise, the war in Ukraine is weighing on European growth. The Bundesbank estimates that a full embargo of Russian oil and gas would reduce German real GDP by an additional 5% on top of the damage already inflicted by the war (Chart 15). Chart 14The US Private-Sector Financial Balance Remains In Surplus
The US Private-Sector Financial Balance Remains In Surplus
The US Private-Sector Financial Balance Remains In Surplus
Chart 15Germany’s Economy Will Sink Without Russian Energy
Goldilocks: A Skeptical Q&A
Goldilocks: A Skeptical Q&A
While such a full embargo is possible, it is not our base case. In a remarkable about-face, Putin now says he has “no problems” with Finland and Sweden joining NATO, provided that they do not place military infrastructure in their countries. He had previous threatened a military response at the mere suggestion of NATO membership. In any case, there are few signs that Putin’s increasingly insular and dictatorial regime would respond to an oil embargo or other economic incentives. The wealthy oligarchs who were supposed to rein him in are cowering in fear. It is also not clear if Europe would gain any political leverage over Russia by adopting policies that push its own economy into a recession. It is worth noting that the price of the December 2022 European natural gas futures contract is down 39% from its peak at the start of the war (Chart 16). It is also noteworthy that European EPS estimates have been trending higher this year even as GDP growth estimates have been cut (Chart 17). This suggests that the analyst earnings projections were too conservative going into the year. Chart 16European Natural Gas Futures Are High But Below Their Peak
European Natural Gas Futures Are High But Below Their Peak
European Natural Gas Futures Are High But Below Their Peak
Chart 17European And US EPS Estimates Have Been Trending Higher This Year
European And US EPS Estimates Have Been Trending Higher This Year
European And US EPS Estimates Have Been Trending Higher This Year
Chart 18Chinese Property Sector: Signs Of Contraction
Chinese Property Sector: Signs Of Contraction
Chinese Property Sector: Signs Of Contraction
Q: What about China? The lockdowns are crippling growth and the property market is in shambles. A: There is truth to both those claims. The government has all but said that it will not abandon its zero-Covid policy anytime soon, even going as far as to withdraw from hosting the 2023 AFC Asian Cup. While the number of new cases has declined sharply in Shanghai, future outbreaks are probable. On the bright side, China is likely to ramp up domestic production of Pfizer’s Paxlovid drug. Increased availability of the drug will reduce the burden of the disease once social distancing restrictions are relaxed. As far as the property market is concerned, sales, starts, completions, as well as home prices are all contracting (Chart 18). BCA’s China Investment Strategy expects accelerated policy easing to put the housing sector on a recovery path in the second half of this year. Nevertheless, they expect the “three red lines” policy to remain in place, suggesting that the rebound in housing activity will be more muted than in past recoveries.2 Ironically, the slowdown in the Chinese housing market may not be such a bad thing for the rest of the world. Remember, the main problem these days is inflation. To the extent that a sluggish Chinese housing market curbs the demand for commodities, this could provide some relief on the inflation front. Q: So bad news is good news. Interesting take. Let’s turn to markets. You mentioned earlier that equity sentiment was very bearish. Fair enough, but I would note the very same American Association of Individual Investors survey that you cited also shows that investors’ allocation to stocks is near record highs (Chart 19). Shouldn’t we look at what investors are doing rather than what they’re saying? A: The discrepancy may not be as large as it seems. As Chart 20 illustrates, investors may not like stocks, but they like bonds even less. Chart 19Individual Investors Still Hold A Lot Of Stock
Individual Investors Still Hold A Lot Of Stock
Individual Investors Still Hold A Lot Of Stock
Image
Chart 20B... But They Like Bonds Even Less
... But They Like Bonds Even Less
... But They Like Bonds Even Less
Chart 21Global Equities Are More Attractively Valued After The Recent Sell-Off
Global Equities Are More Attractively Valued After The Recent Sell-Off
Global Equities Are More Attractively Valued After The Recent Sell-Off
Global equities currently trade at 15.3-times forward earnings; a mere 12.5-times outside the US. The global forward earnings yield is 6.7 percentage points higher than the global real bond yield. In 2000, the spread between the earnings yield and the real bond yield was close to zero (Chart 21). It should also be mentioned that institutional data already show a sharp shift out of equities. The latest Bank of America survey revealed that fund managers cut equity allocations to a net 13% underweight in May from a 6% overweight in April and a net 55% overweight in January. Strikingly, fund managers were even more underweight bonds than stocks. Cash registered the biggest overweight in two decades. Q: Your bullish equity bias notwithstanding, you were negative on tech stocks last year, arguing that the NASDAQ would turn into the NASDOG. Given that the NASDAQ Composite is down 29% from its highs, is it time to increase exposure to some beaten down tech names? A: Both the cyclical and structural headwinds facing tech stocks that we discussed in These Three High-Flying Equity Sectors Could Come Crashing Back Down To Earth and The Disruptor Delusion remain in place. Nevertheless, with the NASDAQ Composite now trading at 22.6-times forward earnings, down from 32.9 at its peak last year, an underweight in tech is no longer appropriate (Chart 22). A neutral stance is now preferable. Chart 22Tech Stock Valuations Have Returned To Earth
Tech Stock Valuations Have Returned To Earth
Tech Stock Valuations Have Returned To Earth
Q: I guess if bond yields come down a bit more, that would help tech stocks? A: Yes. Tech stocks tend to be growth-oriented. Falling bond yields raise the present value of expected cash flows more for growth companies than for other firms. While we do expect global bond yields to eventually rise above current levels, yields are likely to decline modestly over the next 12 months as inflation temporarily falls. We expect the US 10-year yield to end the year at around 2.5%. Q: A decline in US bond yields would undermine the high-flying dollar, would it not? A: It depends on how bond yields abroad evolve. US Treasuries tend to be relatively high beta, implying that US yields usually fall more when global yields are declining (Chart 23). Thus, it would not surprise us if interest rate differentials moved against the dollar later this year. Chart 23US Treasuries Have A Higher Beta Than Most Other Government Bond Markets
US Treasuries Have A Higher Beta Than Most Other Government Bond Markets
US Treasuries Have A Higher Beta Than Most Other Government Bond Markets
It is also important to remember that the US dollar is a countercyclical currency (Chart 24). If global growth picks up as pandemic dislocations fade and the Ukraine war winds down, the dollar is likely to weaken. Chart 24The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
Image
A wider trade deficit could also imperil the greenback. The US trade deficit has increased from US$45 billion in December 2019 to US$110 billion. Equity inflows have helped finance the trade deficit, but net flows have turned negative of late (Chart 25). Finally, the dollar is quite expensive – 27% overvalued based on Purchasing Power Parity exchange rates. Q: Let’s sum up. Please review your asset allocation recommendations both for the next 12 months and beyond. A: To summarize, global inflation has peaked. Growth should pick up later this year as supply-chain bottlenecks abate. The combination of falling inflation and supply-side led growth will provide a springboard for equities. We expect global stocks to rise 15%-to-20% over the next 12 months. Historically, non-US stocks have outperformed their US peers when the dollar has been weakening (Chart 26). EM stocks, in particular, have done well in a weak dollar environment Chart 26Non-US Stocks Will Benefit From A Weaker US Dollar
Non-US Stocks Will Benefit From A Weaker US Dollar
Non-US Stocks Will Benefit From A Weaker US Dollar
Chart 27The Market Is Too Pessimistic On Default Risk
The Market Is Too Pessimistic On Default Risk
The Market Is Too Pessimistic On Default Risk
Within fixed-income portfolios, we recommend a modest long duration stance over the next 12 months. We favor high-yield credit over safer government bonds. US high-yield spreads imply a default rate of 6.2% over the next 12 months compared to a trailing 12-month default rate of only 1.2% (Chart 27). Chart 28Falling Inflation Will Buoy Consumer Sentiment
Falling Inflation Will Buoy Consumer Sentiment
Falling Inflation Will Buoy Consumer Sentiment
Our guess is that this Goldilocks environment will end towards the end of next year. As inflation comes down, real wage growth will turn positive. Consumer confidence, which is now quite depressed, will improve (Chart 28). Stronger demand will cause inflation to reaccelerate in 2024, setting the stage for another round of central bank rate hikes. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Follow me on LinkedIn Twitter Footnotes 1 The Federal Reserve targets an average inflation rate of 2% for the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index. Due to compositional differences between the two indices, CPI inflation has historically averaged 30-to-50 basis points higher than PCE inflation. This is why the Fed effectively targets a CPI inflation rate of 2.3%-to-2.5%. 2 The People’s Bank of China and the housing ministry issued a deleveraging framework for property developers in August 2020, consisting of a 70% ceiling on liabilities-to-assets, a net debt-to-equity ratio capped at 100%, and a limit on short-term borrowing that cannot exceed cash reserves. Developers breaching these “red lines” run the risk of being cut off from access to new loans from banks, while those who respect them can only increase their interest-bearing borrowing by 15% at most. Global Investment Strategy View Matrix
Goldilocks: A Skeptical Q&A
Goldilocks: A Skeptical Q&A
Special Trade Recommendations Current MacroQuant Model Scores
Goldilocks: A Skeptical Q&A
Goldilocks: A Skeptical Q&A