Emerging Markets
The sharp spike in HIBOR will be short lived. The RMB "carry trade" has been largely unwound. The RMB will not experience the intense selling as seen in the past year. H shares are still trading at substantial discounts to A shares, which will inevitably continue to draw domestic investors. Strategically, H shares remain a better bet than their domestic counterparts.
We put the odds of an oil-production freeze agreement between OPEC and Russian officials next week in Algiers at slightly better than a coin toss.
The fiscal spending impulse in China is still positive but receding. The nation's productivity and potential GDP growth are bound to decline due to a rising role of government in capital and resource allocation. Hence, cyclical stabilization could well be overwhelmed by a structural slowdown. Another bubble is forming in China, this time in the corporate bond market. The amelioration in Korean and Taiwanese exports is due to the technology sector/semiconductors, and does not reflect broad-based improvement in global trade.
This week, we are introducing a new investment benchmark index that includes all the countries and sectors that we regularly cover in our research, and a detailed recommended portfolio that fully reflects our market views.
We extracted the key factors driving currency returns; these variables approximate the dollar, EM spreads, and commodities. Any currency's sensitivity to these factors can be estimated, offering a great degree of flexibility for investors to generate trade ideas. Based on our macro views, this approach recommends being short commodity currencies and being long the dollar. The BoJ, BoE, and Riksbank are also covered.
China's industrial sector is showing signs of regained strength. Odds of immediate fresh stimulus measures have declined, but Fed tightening will not become a serious policy constraint for the PBoC. Chinese stocks will not be immune in a broader global selloff, but the risk-return profile of this asset class is still favorable. Expect H shares to grind higher, albeit with increased volatility.
EM corporate credit spreads are too tight according to our fair value model. Such expensive valuations in conjunction with a strong sell signal from our Corporate Financial Health (CFH) Monitor signify that the EM corporate credit market is very vulnerable. The CFH Monitor currently heralds a major relapse in EM risk assets. A new relative value recommendation: long Russian and Chilean / short off-shore China corporate credit.
The median voter moving to the left has spurred paradigm shifts. These new regimes are giving way to transformational leaders who seek change by breaking convention. As they test their constraints and pursue their preferences, a cautious stance towards risk assets is warranted. In this Monthly Report, BCA's Geopolitical Strategy discusses Trump's recent comeback, rising EM political risk, and Italy's upcoming constitutional referendum.
Cuba will become a notable frontier market now that the Communist regime has no foreign geopolitical partner to prop it up. A poor demographic profile does not prevent the country from capitalizing on American tourism. It also stands to benefit from access to U.S. consumers and rising Chinese consumerism.