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Highlights The 2018 outlook for both economic growth and corporate profits remains constructive for risk assets, although evidence is gathering that global growth is peaking. Some measures of global activity related to capital spending have softened in recent months. Nonetheless, the G3 aggregate for capital goods orders remains in an uptrend, suggesting that it is too soon to call an end in the mini capital spending boom. Our global leading indicators are not heralding any major economic slowdown. The dip in early 2018 in the Global ZEW index likely reflected uncertainty over protectionist trade action. Economic growth in the major countries outside of the U.S. may have peaked, but will remain robust at least through this year. The potential for a trade war is a key risk facing investors. Sino-American tensions are likely to intensify over the long term as the two nations spar over geopolitical and military supremacy. That said, there are hopeful signs that the latest trade skirmish will not degenerate into a full-blown trade war and thereby cause lasting damage to risk assets. Stay overweight equities and corporate bonds. President Trump will announce on May 19 whether he will terminate the nuclear agreement with Iran. Cancelation could be a game-changer for Iranian internal politics, and the return of hardliners would signal greater instability in the region. Stay long oil and related investments. The profit picture remains bright as global margins continue to make new cyclical highs and earnings revisions are elevated. EPS growth is peaking in Europe and Japan, but has a bit more upside in the U.S. later this year. Cross-country equity allocation is a tough call, but relative monetary policy, our positive view for the dollar, the potential for earnings surprises and better value bias us toward European stocks relative to the U.S. in local currency terms. Rising U.S. corporate leverage is not an issue now, but could intensify the next downturn as ratings are slashed, defaults rise and banks tighten lending standards. The bond bear market remains intact, although the consolidation phase has further to run. By Q1 2019, the Fed could find itself with inflation close to target, above-trend growth driven by a strong fiscal tailwind, and an unemployment rate that is a full percentage point below NAIRU. Policymakers will then try to nudge up the unemployment rate, but the odds of avoiding a recession are very low. Feature Investors are right to be concerned following the March 23 U.S. announcement of tariffs on about $50 billion of Chinese imports. The President is low in the polls and needs a victory of some sort heading into midterm elections. Getting tough on trade plays well with voters, and the President faces few constraints from Congress on this issue. Trump wants a raft of items from China, including opening up to foreign investment and a crackdown on intellectual theft. Sino-American tensions are likely to intensify over the long term as the two nations spar over geopolitical and military supremacy.1 That said, we do not expect the latest trade skirmish to degenerate into a full-blown trade war. First, China has already signaled it wants to avoid significant escalation. Beijing has offered several concessions, and its threat of retaliatory trade action has been measured so far. On the U.S. side, the fact that the Administration has decided to bring its case against China to the World Trade Organization (WTO) shows that the Americans are willing to proceed through the normal trade-dispute channels. The bottom line is that, while we cannot rule out escalating trade action that causes meaningful damage to the equity market, it is more likely that the current round of tensions will be limited to brief flare-ups. Investors should monitor the extent of European involvement. If Europe joins the U.S. effort to force China to change its trade practices via the WTO, then China will have little choice but to give in without a major fight. In terms of other geopolitical risks, North Korea should move to the back burner for a while now that the regime has agreed to negotiations. Of greater near-term significance is May 19, when Trump will announce whether he will terminate the nuclear agreement with Iran. Cancelation could be a game-changer for Iranian internal politics, and the return of hardliners would signal greater instability in the region. Oil prices would benefit if the May deadline for issuing waivers on Iran sanctions passes. Trade penalties against Iran would reduce its oil production and exports. The U.S. is also considering sanctions on Venezuela's oil industry. Moreover, Russia and Saudi Arabia are reportedly considering a deal to greatly extend their alliance to curb oil supply. While there are downside risks as well, our base case outlook sees the price of Brent reaching US$74 before year end. Global Growth: Some Mixed Signs Also facing investors this year is the risk that the recent softening in the economic data morphs into a serious growth scare. The 2018 outlook for both the economy and corporate profits remains constructive in our view, but evidence is gathering that global growth is peaking. Investors may begin to question recent upward revisions to the growth outlook for this year and next. Industrial production has softened and the manufacturing PMI has shifted lower in most of the advanced economies (Chart I-1). Bad weather in North America and Europe in early 2018 may be partly to blame, but Korean exports, a leading indicator for the global business cycle, have also softened. The Chinese economy is decelerating and we believe the growth risks are underappreciated. President Xi has cemented his power base and there has been a shift toward accelerated reform. Chinese leaders recognize that leverage in the system is a problem, and the regime is tightening policy on a multi-pronged basis. Structural reforms are positive for long-term growth, but are negative in the short term. The tightening in financial conditions is already evident in the Chinese PMI and the sharp deceleration in the Li Keqiang index (although the latest reading shows an uptick; not shown). A hard landing is not our base case, but the risks are to the downside because the authorities will err on the side of tight policy and low growth. It is also disconcerting that some of our measures of global activity related to capital spending have softened in recent months, including capital goods imports and industrial production of capital goods (Chart I-2). Nonetheless, the fact that the G3 aggregate for capital goods orders remains in an uptrend suggests that it is too soon to call an end in the mini capital spending boom. Consumer and business confidence continues to firm in the major economies. Chart I-1Some Signs Of A Peak In Global Growth Chart I-2A Soft Spot For Capital Spending Our global leading indicators are not heralding any major economic slowdown (Chart I-3). BCA's Global LEI remains in an uptrend and its diffusion index is above the 50 line. In contrast, the global measure of the ZEW investor sentiment index plunged in March. We attribute the decline to the announcement of steel and aluminum tariffs and the subsequent market swoon, suggesting that the ZEW pullback will prove to be temporary. Turning to the U.S., retail sales disappointed in January and February, especially considering that taxpayers just received a sizable tax cut. Nonetheless, this probably reflects lagged effects and weather distortions. Our U.S. consumer spending indicator continues to strengthen as all of the components remain constructive outside of auto sales. Household balance sheets are the best that they have been since 2007; net worth is soaring and the aggregate debt-to-income ratio is close to the lowest level since the turn of the century (Chart I-4). Given robust employment growth and the tightest labor market in decades, there is little to hold U.S. consumer spending back. We expect that the tax cut effect on retail sales will be revealed in the coming months, helping to sustain the healthy backdrop for corporate profits. Chart I-3Global Leading Indicators Mostly Positive Chart I-4U.S. Consumers In Good Shape Global Margins Still Rising The profit picture remains bright as global margins continue to make new cyclical highs and earnings revisions are elevated (Chart I-5). Earnings-per-share surged in the early months of the year in both the U.S. and Japan, although they languished in the Eurozone according to IBES data (local currencies; not shown). Relative equity returns in local currency tend to follow relative shifts in 12-month forward EPS expectations over long periods, and bottom-up analysts have lifted their U.S. earnings figures in light of the fiscal stimulus (Chart I-6). Chart I-5Global Margins Still Rising Chart I-6EPS And Relative Equity Returns The key question is: can the U.S. market outperform again in 2018 now that the tax cuts have largely been priced in? One can make a compelling case either way. Growth: Global growth will remain robust for at least the next year, and the Eurozone and Japanese markets are more geared to global growth than is the U.S. However, the impressive fiscal stimulus in the pipeline means that economic growth momentum is likely to swing back toward the U.S. this year. GDP growth in Europe and Japan will remain above-trend, but it has probably peaked for the cycle in both economies. Valuation: Our composite measure of valuation suggests that Europe and Japan are on the cheap side relative to the U.S. based on our aggregate valuation indicator, which takes into consideration a wide variety of yardsticks (Chart I-7). That said, one of the reasons why European stocks are on the cheap side at the moment is that export-oriented German exporters are quite exposed to rising international tariffs. Earnings: Previous currency shifts will add to EPS growth in the U.S. in the first half of the year, but will be a drag in Europe and Japan (Chart I-8). However, these effects will wane through the year unless the dollar keeps falling. Indeed, we expect the dollar to firm modestly over the next year, favoring the European equity market at the margin. In contrast, we expect the yen to strengthen in the near term, which will trim Japanese EPS growth. Chart I-7Valuation Ranking Of Nonfinancial ##br##Equity Markets Relative To The U.S. Chart I-8Impact Of Currency Shifts On EPS Growth Chart I-9 updates the forecast from our top-down earnings models. The incorporation of the fiscal stimulus lifted the U.S. EPS growth profile relative to our previous forecast. EPS growth is expected to peak at over 20% later this year (4-quarter moving total basis using S&P 500 data). Growth is expected to decelerate thereafter since we have factored in a modest margin squeeze as U.S. wage growth picks up. Narrowing margins are less of a risk in Europe. U.S. EPS growth should be above that of Europe in 2018, but will then fall to about the same pace in 2019. We expect Japanese profit growth to remain very strong this year and next, given Japan's highly pro-cyclical earnings sensitivity. However, this does not incorporate the risk of further yen strength. Earnings expectations will also matter. Twelve-month bottom-up expectations are higher than our U.S. forecast ('x' in Chart I-9 denotes 12-month forward EPS expectations). In contrast, expectations are roughly in line with our forecast for the European market. It will therefore be more difficult at the margin for U.S. earnings to surprise to the upside. Monetary Policy: The relative shift in monetary policies should favor the European and Japanese markets to the U.S. The FOMC will continue tightening, with risks still to the upside on rates in absolute terms and relative to the other two economies. Sector Performance: Sector skews should work in Europe's favor. Financials are the largest overweight in Euro area bourses, while technology is the largest overweight in the U.S. We are constructive on the financial sector in both markets, but out-performance of the sector will favor the Eurozone broad market. Meanwhile, tech companies are particularly sensitive to changes in discount rates, since they often trade on the assumption that most of their earnings will be realized far into the future. As such, higher long-term real bond yields will adversely affect U.S. tech names, especially in an environment where the dollar is strengthening. The Japanese market has a relatively high weighting in industrials and consumer discretionary. The market will benefit if the global mini capex boom continues, but this could be counteracted by softness in global auto sales and further yen strength. It is a tough call, but relative monetary policy, our positive view for the dollar, the potential for earnings surprises and better value bias us toward European stocks relative to the U.S. in local currency terms. We continue to avoid the Japanese market for the near term because of the potential for additional yen gains. As for the equity sector call, investors should remain oriented toward cyclicals versus defensives. Our key themes of a synchronized global capex mini boom, rising bond yields and firm oil prices favor the industrials, energy and financial sectors. Chart I-10 highlights four indicators that support the cyclicals over defensives theme, the dollar and the business sales-to-inventories ratio. Telecom, consumer discretionary and homebuilders are underweight. Chart I-9Profit Forecast Chart I-10These Indicators Favor Cyclical Stocks We will be watching the indicators in Chart I-10 to time the shift to a more defensive equity sector allocation. Leverage And The Next Recession As the economic expansion enters the late stages, investors are focused on where leverage pressure points may lurk. Last month's Special Report on U.S. corporate vulnerability to higher interest rates and a recession raised some eyebrows. For our sample of 770 companies, we estimated how much interest coverage for the average company would decline under two scenarios: (1) interest rates rise by 100 basis points across the curve; and (2) interest rates rise by 100 basis points and there is a recession in which corporate profits fall by 25% peak to trough. Given all the client inquiries, we decided to delve deeper into the results. We were concerned that our sample of high-yield companies distorted the overall results because it includes many small firms and outliers. We are more comfortable with the results using only the investment-grade firms, shown in Chart I-11. The 'x' marks the interest rate shock and the 'o' marks the combined shock. Nonetheless, the main qualitative message is unchanged. The starting point for interest coverage is low, considering that interest rates are near the lowest levels on record and profits are extremely high relative to GDP. This is the result of an extended period of corporate releveraging on the back of low borrowing rates. Chart I-12 shows that the interest coverage ratio has declined even as profit margins have remained elevated. Normally the two move together through the cycle. Chart I-11Corporate Leverage Will Take A Toll Chart I-12The Consequences Of Rising Leverage The implication is that the next recession will see interest coverage fare worse than in previous recessions. Of course, there are many other financial ratios and statistics that the rating agencies employ, but our results suggest that downgrades will proliferate when the agencies realize that the economy is turning south. Moreover, banks may tighten C&I lending standards earlier and more aggressively because they will also be finely attuned to the first hint of economic trouble given the leverage of the companies in their portfolio. Recovery rates may be particularly low in the next recession because the equity cushion has been squeezed via buybacks, which will intensify widening pressure in corporate spreads. Tighter lending standards would generate more corporate defaults, even wider spreads and a greater overall tightening in financial conditions. Corporate leverage could therefore intensify the pullback in business spending in the next recession. The good news is that we do not see any other major macro-economic imbalances, such as areas of overspending, that could turn a mild recession into a nasty one. As long as growth remains solid, the market and rating agencies will ignore the leverage issue. Indeed, ratings migration has improved markedly following the energy related downgrades in 2014 and 2015. An improving rating migration ratio is usually associated with corporate bond outperformance relative to Treasurys (Chart I-13). We remain overweight U.S. investment-grade and high-yield bonds within fixed-income portfolios for now. The European corporate sector is further behind in the leverage cycle (Chart I-14). Europe does not appear to be nearly as vulnerable to rising interest rates. Nonetheless, our European Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) has deteriorated over the past couple of years due to some erosion in profit margins, debt coverage and the return on capital. Meanwhile, the U.S. CHM has improved in recent quarters because the favorable earnings backdrop has temporarily overwhelmed rising leverage (top panel of Chart I-14). For the short-term, at least, corporate health is moving in favor of the U.S. at the margin. Chart I-13Ratings Migration Is Constructive For Now Chart I-14Corporate Health Trend Favors U.S. The implication is that, while we see trouble ahead for the U.S. corporate sector in the next economic downturn, in the short term we now favor the U.S. over Europe in the credit space. We are watching our Equity Scorecard, bank lending standards, the yield curve and our profit margin proxy in order to time our exit from both corporate bonds and equities (see last month's Overview section). We are also watching for a rise in the 10-year TIPS breakeven rate above 2.3% as a signal that the FOMC will get more aggressive in leaning against above-trend growth and a falling unemployment rate. Powell Doesn't Rock The Boat The Fed took a measured approach when reacting to the fiscal stimulus that is in the pipeline. The FOMC lifted rates in March and marginally raised the 'dot plot' for 2019 and 2020. Policymakers shaved the projection for unemployment to 3.6% by the end of 2019. This still appears too pessimistic, unless one assumes that the labor force participation rate will rise sharply. Table I-1 provides estimates for when the unemployment rate will reach 3½% based on different average monthly payrolls and participation rates. Our base case scenario, with 200k payrolls per month and a flat participation rate, sees the unemployment rate reaching 3½% by March 2019. Table I-1Dates When 3.5% Unemployment Rate Threshold Is Reached The soft-ish February reports for consumer prices and average hourly earnings took some of the heat off the FOMC. Core CPI, for example, rose 'only' 0.2% from the month before. Still, when viewed on a 3-month rate-of-change basis, underlying inflation remains perky; the core CPI inflation rate increased from 2.8% in January to 3% in February (Chart I-15). Inflation in core services excluding medical care and shelter, as well as in core goods, have also surged on a 3-month basis. We expect the latter to continue to pressure overall inflation higher, following the upward trend in import prices. The recent downtrend in shelter inflation should also stabilize due to the falling rental vacancy rate. Chart I-15U.S. Inflation Is Perky Moreover, the NFIB survey of U.S. small businesses shows that the gap between the difficulties of finding qualified labor versus demand problems is close to record highs. The ISM manufacturing survey shows that companies are paying more for their inputs and experiencing delays with suppliers. This describes a late-cycle environment marked with rising inflationary pressures. We expect that core inflation will grind up to the 2% target by early next year. By the first quarter of 2019, the Fed could find itself with inflation close to target, above-trend growth driven by a strong fiscal tailwind, and an unemployment rate that is a full percentage point below its estimate of the non-inflationary limit. Policymakers will then attempt a 'soft landing' in which they tighten policy enough to nudge up the unemployment rate. Unfortunately, the Fed has never been able to generate a soft landing. Once unemployment starts to rise, the next recession soon follows. Our base case is that the next recession begins in 2020. Bond Bear In Hibernation For Now The bond market showed that it can still intimidate in February, but things have since calmed down as the U.S. mini inflation scare ebbed, some economic data disappointed and trade friction created additional macro uncertainty. Bearish sentiment and oversold technical conditions suggest that the consolidation period has longer to run. Nonetheless, unless inflation begins to trend lower, the fact that even the doves on the FOMC believe that the headwinds to growth have moderated places a floor under bond yields. Fair value for the 10-year Treasury is 2.90% based on our short-term model, but we expect it to reach the 3.3-3.5% range before the cycle is over. Both real yields and long-term inflation expectations have room to move higher. Private investors will also have to absorb US$680 billion worth of bonds this year from governments in the U.S., Eurozone, Japan and U.K., the first positive net flow since 2014 (see last month's Overview). Yields may have to fatten a little in order for the private sector to make room in their portfolios for that extra government supply. In the Eurozone, the net supply of government bonds available to the private sector will still be negative this year, even if the ECB tapers to zero in September as we expect. Some investors are concerned about a replay in the European bond markets of the Fed's 'taper tantrum' of 2013, when then-Chair Bernanke surprised markets with a tapering announcement. The ECB has learned from that mistake and has given several speeches recently highlighting that policymakers will be making full use of forward guidance to avoid "...premature expectations of a first rate rise."2 We think they will be successful in avoiding a similar tantrum, but the flow effect of waning bond purchases will still place some upward pressure on the term premium in Eurozone bonds (Chart I-16).3 Chart I-16ECB: End Of QE Will Pressure Term Premium The bottom line is that monetary policy will undermine global bond prices in both the U.S. and Eurozone, but we expect U.S. yields to lead the way higher this year. Japanese bond prices will be constrained by the 10-year yield target. Investors with a horizon of 6-12 months should remain overweight JGBs, at benchmark in Eurozone government bonds and underweight Treasurys within hedged global bond portfolios. We recommend hedging the currency risk because we continue to expect the dollar to rebound this year. This month's Special Report, beginning on page 18, discusses the cyclical factors that will support the dollar: interest rate differentials, a rebound in U.S. productivity growth and a shift in international growth momentum back in favor of the U.S. In terms of the longer-term view, the Special Report makes the case that the U.S. dollar's multi-decade downtrend will persist. This does not mean, however, that long-term investors will make any money by underweighting the greenback. The 30-year U.S./bund yield spread of 190 basis points means that the €/USD would have to rise to more than 2.2 to offset the yield disadvantage of being overweight the euro versus the dollar over the next 30-years. Indeed, once it appears that the U.S. yield curve has discounted the full extent of the Fed tightening cycle (perhaps 12 months from now), it will make sense for long-term investors to go long U.S. Treasurys versus bunds on an unhedged basis. Conclusion Recent data releases suggest that global growth is peaking, especially in the manufacturing sector. Nonetheless, we do not believe that this heralds a slowdown in growth meaningful enough to negatively impact the profit outlook in the major countries. Indeed, the major fiscal tailwind in the U.S. will lift growth and extend the runway for earnings to expand at least through 2019. That said, fiscal stimulus at this stage of the U.S. business cycle will serve to accentuate a boom/bust cycle, where stronger growth in 2018/19 gives way to higher inflation a hard landing in 2020. The Fed is willing to sit back and watch the impact of fiscal stimulus unfold in the near term. But by early 2019, the Fed will find itself behind the curve with rising inflation and an overheating economy. The monetary policy risk for financial markets will then surge, setting up for a classic end to this expansion. The consequences of years of corporate releveraging will come home to roost. This year, trade skirmishes will be a headwind for risk assets and will no doubt generate further bouts of volatility. Nonetheless, recent signals from both the U.S. and China suggest that the situation will not degenerate into a trade war. The bottom line is that, while the economic expansion and equity bull market are both in late innings, investors should stay overweight risk assets and short duration for now. Stay overweight cyclical stocks versus defensives, overweight corporate bonds versus governments, overweight oil-related plays, and modestly long the U.S. dollar against most currencies except the yen. Our checklist of items to time the exit from risk is not yet flashing red. We would change our mind if our checklist goes south, our forward-looking indicators turn sharply lower or U.S. inflation suddenly picks up. We are also watching closely the situation in Iran, the U.S./China trade spat and NAFTA negotiations. Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst March 29, 2018 Next Report: April 26, 2018 1 For more information on why we believe that Sino-American conflict will be a defining feature of the 21st century, please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report "We Are All Geopolitical Strategists Now," dated March 28, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 2 ECB President Mario Draghi. Speech can be found at http://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/key/date/2018/html/ecb.sp180314_1.en.html 3 For more information, please see BCA's Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report "Bond Markets Are Suffering Withdrawal Symptoms," dated March 20, 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com II. U.S. Twin Deficits: Is The Dollar Doomed? In this Special Report, we review the theory behind exchange rate determination and examine the cyclical and structural forces that will drive the dollar. The long-term structural downtrend in the dollar is intact. This trend reflects both a slower underlying pace of U.S. productivity growth relative to the rest of the world and a persistent external deficit. The U.S. shortfall on its net international investment position, now at about 40% of GDP, is likely to continue growing in the coming decades. Fiscal stimulus means that the U.S. twin deficits are set to worsen, but the situation is not that dire that the U.S. dollar is about to fall off a cliff because of sudden concerns regarding sustainability. The U.S. is not close to the point where investors will begin to seriously question America's ability to service its debt. The U.S. will continue to enjoy a net surplus on its international investments except under a worst-case scenario for relative returns. From an economic perspective, we see little reason why the U.S. will not be able to easily continue financing its domestic saving shortfall in the coming years. There are some parallels today with the Nixon era, but we do not expect the same outcome for the dollar. The Fed is unlikely to make the same mistake as it made in the late 1960s/early 1970s. There are risks of course. Growing international political tensions and a trade war could threaten the U.S. dollar's status as the world's premier reserve currency. We will explore the geopolitical angle in next month's Special Report. While the underlying trend in the dollar is down, cyclical factors are likely to see it appreciate on a 6-12 month investment horizon. Growth momentum, which moved in favor of the major non-U.S. currencies in 2017, should shift in the greenback's favor this year. U.S. fiscal stimulus is bullish the dollar, despite the fact that this will worsen the current account balance. Additional protectionist measures should also support the dollar as long as retaliation is muted. The U.S. dollar just can't seem to get any respect even in the face of a major fiscal expansion that is sure to support U.S. growth. Nonetheless, there are a lot of moving parts to consider besides fiscal stimulus: a tightening Fed, accumulating government debt, geopolitical tension and growing trade protectionism among others. The interplay of all these various forces can easily create confusion about the currency outlook. Textbook economic models show that the currency should appreciate in the face of stimulative fiscal policy and rising tariffs, at least in the short term, not least because U.S. interest rates should rise relative to other countries. However, one could also equate protectionism and a larger fiscally-driven external deficit with a weaker dollar. Which forces will dominate? In this Special Report, we sort out the moving parts. We review the theory behind exchange rate determination and examine the cyclical and structural forces that will drive the dollar in the short- and long-term. Tariffs And The Dollar Let's start with import tariffs. In theory, higher tariffs should be positive for the currency as long as there is no retaliation. The amount spent on imports will fall as consumer spending is re-directed toward domestically-produced goods and services. A lower import bill means the country does not need to export as much to finance its imports, leading to dollar appreciation (partially offsetting the competitive advantage that the tariff provides). Tariffs also boost inflation temporarily, which means that higher U.S. real interest rates should also lift the dollar to the extent that the Fed responds with tighter policy. That said, the tariffs recently announced by the Trump Administration are small potatoes in the grand scheme. The U.S. imported $39 billion of iron and steel in 2017, and $18 billion of aluminum. That's only 2% of total imports and less than 0.3% of GDP. If import prices went up by the full amount of the tariff, this would add less than five basis points to inflation. The positive impact on U.S. growth is also modest as the tariffs benefit only two industries, and higher domestic prices for steel and aluminum undermine U.S. consumers of these two metals. A unilateral tariff increase could be mildly growth-positive if there is no retaliation by trading partners. This was the result of a Bank of Canada study, which found that much of the growth benefits from a higher import tariff are offset by an appreciation of the currency.1 Even a short-term growth boost is not guaranteed. A detailed analysis of the 2002 Bush steel tariff increase found that the import tax killed many more jobs than it created.2 Shortages forced some U.S. steel-consuming firms to source the metal offshore, while others made their steel suppliers absorb the higher costs, leading to job losses. A recent IMF3 study employed a large macro-economic model to simulate the impact of a 10% across-the-board U.S. import tariff without any retaliation. It found that tariffs place upward pressure on domestic interest rates, especially if the economy is already at full employment (Chart II-1). This is because the central bank endeavors to counter the inflationary impact with higher interest rates. However, a stronger currency and higher interest rates eventually cool the economy and the Fed is later forced to ease policy. This puts the whole process into reverse as interest rate differentials fall and the dollar weakens. Chart II-1At Full Employment, Import Tariffs Raise Rates The economic outcome would be much worse if U.S. trading partners were to retaliate and the situation degenerates into a full-fledged trade war involving a growing number of industries. In theory, the dollar would not rise as much if there is retaliation because foreign tariffs on U.S. exports are offsetting in terms of relative prices. But all countries lose in this scenario. China is considering only a small retaliation for the steel and aluminum tariffs as we go to press, but the trade dispute has the potential to really heat up, as we discuss in the Overview section. The bottom line is that the Trump tariffs are more likely to lead to a stronger dollar than a weaker one, although far more would have to be done to see any meaningful impact. Fiscal Stimulus And The Dollar Traditional economic theory suggests that fiscal stimulus is also positive for the currency in the short term. The boost in aggregate demand worsens the current account balance, since some of the extra government spending is satisfied by foreign producers. The U.S. dollar appreciates as interest rates increase relative to the other major countries, attracting capital inflows. The currency appreciation thus facilitates the necessary adjustment (deterioration) in the current account balance. The impact on interest rates is similar to the tariff shock shown in Chart II-1. All of the above market and economic adjustments should be accentuated when the economy is already at full employment. Since the domestic economy is short of spare capacity, a vast majority of the extra spending related to fiscal stimulus must be imported. Moreover, the Fed would have to respond even more aggressively to the extent that inflationary pressures are greater when the economy is running hot. The result would be even more upward pressure on the U.S. dollar. Reality has not supported the theory so far. The U.S. dollar weakened after the tax cuts were passed, and it did not even get a lift following the Senate spending plan that was released in February. The broad trade-weighted dollar has traded roughly sideways since mid-2017. Judging by the market reaction to the fiscal news, it appears that investors are worried about a potential replay of the so-called Nixon shock, when fiscal stimulus exacerbated the 'twin deficits' problem, investors lost confidence in policymakers and the dollar fell. Twin deficits refers to a period when the federal budget deficit and the current account deficit are deteriorating at the same time. Chart II-2 highlights that the late 1960s/early 1970s was the last time that the federal government stimulated the economy at a time when the economy was already at full employment. Seeing the parallels today, some investors are concerned the dollar will decline as it did in the early 1970s. Chart II-2A Replay Of The Nixon Years? Current Account And Budget Balances Often Diverge... The two deficits don't always shift in the same direction. In fact, Chart II-3 highlights that they usually move in opposite directions through the business cycle. This is not surprising because the current account usually improves in a recession as imports contract more than exports, but the budget deficit rises as tax revenues wither. The process reverses when the economy recovers. Chart II-3Twin Deficits And The Dollar The current account balance equals the government financial balance (i.e. budget deficit) plus the private sector financial balance (savings less investment spending). Thus, swings in the latter mean that the current account can move independently of the budget deficit. Even when the two deficits move in the same direction, there has been no clear historical relationship between the sum of the fiscal and current account balances and the value of the trade-weighted dollar (shaded periods in Chart II-3). In the early 1980s, the twin deficits exploded on the back of the Reagan tax cuts and the military buildup, but the dollar strengthened. In contrast, the dollar weakened in the early 2000s, a period when the twin deficits rose in response to the Bush tax cuts, the Iraq War, and a booming housing market. ...But Generally Fiscal Expansion Undermines The Current Account Over long periods, a sustained rise in the fiscal deficit is generally associated with a sustained deterioration in the external balance. Numerous academic studies have found that every 1 percentage-point rise in the budget deficit worsens the current account balance by an average of 0.2-0.3 percentage points over the medium term. One study found that the current account deteriorates by an extra 0.2 percentage points if the fiscal stimulus arrives at a time when the economy is at full employment (i.e. an additional 0.2 percentage points over-and-above the 0.2-0.3 average response, for a total of 0.4 to 0.5).4 Given that the U.S. economy is at full employment today, these estimates imply that the expected two percentage point rise in the budget deficit relative to the baseline over 2018 and 2019 could add almost a full percentage point to the U.S. current account deficit (from around 3% of GDP currently to 4%). It could be even worse over the next couple of years because the private sector is likely to augment the government sector's drain on national savings. The mini capital spending boom currently underway will lift imports and thereby contribute to a further widening in the U.S. external deficit position. Nonetheless, theory supports the view that the dollar will rise in the face of fiscal stimulus, at least in the near term, even if this is accompanied by a rising external deficit. Theory gets fuzzier in terms of the long-term outlook for the currency. However, the traditional approach to the balance of payments suggests that the equilibrium value of the dollar will eventually fall. An ongoing current account deficit will accumulate into a rising stock of foreign-owned debt that must be serviced. The Net International Investment Position (NIIP) is the difference between the stock of foreign assets held by U.S. residents and the stock of U.S. assets held by foreign investors. The NIIP has fallen increasingly into the red over the past few decades, reaching 40% of GDP today (Chart II-4). The dollar will eventually have to depreciate in order to generate a trade surplus large enough to allow the U.S. to cover the extra interest payments on its growing stock of foreign debt. Chart II-4Structural Drivers Of the U.S. Dollar The structural depreciation of the U.S. dollar observed since the early 1980s supports the theory, because it has trended lower along with the NIIP/GDP ratio. However, the downtrend probably also reflects other structural factors. For example, U.S. output-per-employee has persistently fallen relative to its major trading partners for decades (Chart II-4, third panel). The bottom line is that, while the dollar is likely to remain in a structural downtrend, it should receive at least a short-term boost from the combination of fiscal stimulus and higher tariffs. What could cause the dollar to buck the theory and depreciate even in the near term? We see three main scenarios in which the dollar could fall on a 12-month investment horizon. (1) Strong Growth Outside The U.S. First, growth momentum favored Europe, Japan and some of the other major countries relative to the U.S. in 2017. This helps to explain dollar weakness last year because the currency tends to underperform when growth surprises favor other countries in relative terms. It is possible that momentum will remain a headwind for the dollar this year. Nonetheless, this is not our base case. European and Japanese growth appears to be peaking, while fiscal stimulus should give the U.S. economy a strong boost this year and next (see the Overview section). (2) A Lagging Fed The Fed will play a major role in the dollar's near-term trend. The Fed could fail to tighten in the face of accelerating growth and falling unemployment, allowing inflation and inflation expectations to ratchet higher. If investors come to believe that the Fed will remain behind-the-curve, rising long-term inflation expectations would depress real interest rates and thereby knock the dollar down. This was part of the story in the Nixon years. Under pressure from the Administration, then-Fed Chair Arthur Burns failed to respond to rising inflation, contributing to a major dollar depreciation from 1968 to 1974. We see this risk as a very low-probability event. Today's Fed acts much more independently of Congress beyond its dual commitment on inflation and unemployment. And, given that the economy is at full employment, there is nothing stopping the FOMC from acting to preserve its 2% inflation target if it appears threatened. Chair Powell is new and untested, but we doubt he and the rest of the Committee will be influenced by any political pressure to keep rates unduly low as inflation rises. Even Governor Brainard, a well-known dove, has shifted in a hawkish direction recently. President Trump would have to replace the entire FOMC in order to keep interest rates from rising. We doubt he will try. (3) Long-Run Sustainability Concerns It might be the case that the deteriorating outlook for the NIIP undermines the perceived long-run equilibrium value of the currency so much that it overwhelms the impact of rising U.S. interest rates and causes the dollar to weaken even in the near term. This scenario would likely require a complete breakdown in confidence in current and future Administrations to avoid a runaway government debt situation. Historically, countries with large and growing NIIP shortfalls tend to have weakening currencies. The sustainability of the U.S. twin deficits has been an area of intense debate among academics and market practitioners for many years. One could argue that the external deficit represents the U.S. "living beyond its means," because it consumes more than it produces. Another school of thought is that global savings are plentiful, and investors seek markets that are deep, liquid and offer a high expected rate of return. Indeed, China has willingly plowed a large chunk of its excess savings into U.S. assets since 2000. If the U.S. is an attractive place to invest, then we should not be surprised that the country runs a persistent trade deficit and capital account surplus. But even taking the more positive side of this debate, there are limits to how long the current situation can persist. The large stock of financial obligations implies flows of income payments and receipts - interest, dividends and the like - that must be paid out of the economy's current production. This might grow to be large enough to significantly curtail U.S. consumption and investment. At some point, foreign investors may begin to question the desirability of an oversized exposure to U.S. assets within their global portfolios. We are not suggesting that foreign investors will suddenly dump their U.S. stocks and bonds. Rather, they may demand a higher expected rate of return in order to accept a rising allocation to U.S. assets. This would imply that the dollar will fall sharply so that it has room to appreciate and thereby lift the expected rate of return for foreign investors from that point forward. Chart II-5 shows that a 2% current account deficit would be roughly consistent with stabilization in the NIIP/GDP ratio. Any deficit above this level would imply a rapidly deteriorating situation. A 4% deficit would cause the NIIP to deteriorate to almost 80% of GDP by 2040. The fact that the current account averaged 4.6% in the 2000s and 2½% since 2010 confirms that the NIIP is unlikely to stabilize unless major macroeconomic adjustments are made (see below). Chart II-5Scenarios For The U.S. Net International Investment Position Academic research is inconclusive on how large the U.S. NIIP could become before there are serious economic consequences and/or foreign investors begin to revolt. Exorbitant Privilege The U.S. has been able to get away with the twin deficits for so long in part because of the dollar's status as the world's premier reserve currency. The critical role of the dollar in international transactions underpins global demand for the currency. This has allowed the U.S. to issue most of its debt obligations in U.S. dollars, forcing the currency risk onto foreign investors. The U.S. is also able to get away with offering foreign investors a lower return on their investment in the U.S. than U.S. investors receive on their foreign investment. Chart II-6 provides a proxy for these two returns. Relatively safe, but low yielding, fixed-income investments are a large component of foreign investments in the U.S., while U.S. investors favor equities and other assets that have a higher expected rate of return when investing abroad (Chart II-7). This gap increased after the Great Recession as U.S. interest rates fell by more than the return U.S. investors received on their foreign assets. Today's gap, at almost 1½ percentage points, is well above the 1 percentage point average for the two decades leading up to the Great Recession. Chart II-6U.S. Investors Harvest Higher Returns Chart II-7Composition Of Net International ##br##Investment Position A yield gap of 1.5 percentage points may not sound like much, but it has been enough that the U.S. enjoys a positive net inflow of private investment income of about 1.2% of GDP, despite the fact that foreign investors hold far more U.S. assets than the reverse (Chart II-6, top panel). In Chart II-8 we simulate the primary investment balance based on a persistent 3% of GDP current account deficit and under several scenarios for the investment yield gap. Perhaps counterintuitively, the primary investment surplus that the U.S. currently enjoys will actually rise slightly as a percent of GDP if the yield gap remains near 1½ percentage points. This is because, although the NIIP balance becomes more negative over time, U.S. liabilities are not growing fast enough relative to its assets to offset the yield differential. Chart II-8Primary Investment Balance Simulations However, some narrowing in the yield gap is likely as the Fed raises interest rates. Historically, the gap does not narrow one-for-one with Fed rate hikes because the yield on U.S. investments abroad also rises. Assuming that the yield gap returns to the pre-Lehman average of 1 percentage point over the next three years, the primary investment balance would decline, but would remain positive. Only under the assumption that the yield gap falls to 50 basis points or lower would the primary balance turn negative (Chart II-8, bottom panel). Crossing the line from positive to negative territory on investment income is not necessarily a huge red flag for the dollar, but it would signal that foreign debt will begin to impinge on the U.S. standard of living. That said, the yield gap will have to deteriorate significantly for this to happen anytime soon. What Drives The Major Swings In The Dollar? While the dollar has been in a structural bear market for many decades, there have been major fluctuations around the downtrend. Since 1980, there have been three major bull phases and two bear markets (bull phases are shaded in Chart II-9). These major swings can largely be explained by shifts in U.S./foreign differentials for short-term interest rates, real GDP growth and productivity growth. A model using these three variables explains most of the cyclical swings in the dollar, as the dotted line in the top panel of Chart II-9 reveals. Chart II-9U.S. Dollar Cyclical Swings Driven By Three Main Factors The peaks and troughs do not line up perfectly, but periods of dollar appreciation were associated with rising U.S. interest rates relative to other countries, faster relative U.S. real GDP growth, and improving U.S. relative productivity growth. Since the Great Recession, rate differentials have moved significantly in favor of the dollar, although U.S. relative growth improved a little as well. Productivity trends have not been a factor in recent years. Note that the current account has been less useful in identifying the cyclical swings in the dollar. Looking ahead, we expect short-term interest rate differentials to shift further in favor of the U.S. dollar. We assume that the Fed will hike rates three additional times in 2018 and another three next year. The Bank of Japan will stick with its current rate and 10-year target for the foreseeable future. The ECB may begin the next rate hike campaign by mid-2019, but will proceed slowly thereafter. We expect rate differentials to widen by more than is discounted in the market. As discussed above, we also expect growth momentum to swing back in favor of the U.S. economy in 2018. U.S. productivity growth will continue to underperform the rest-of-world average over the medium and long term. Nonetheless, we expect a cyclical upturn in relative productivity performance that should also support the greenback for the next year or two. Conclusion Reducing the U.S. structural external deficit to a sustainable level would require significant macro-economic adjustments that seem unlikely for the foreseeable future. We would need to see some combination of a higher level of the U.S. household saving rate, a balanced Federal budget balance or better, and/or much stronger growth among U.S. trading partners. In other words, the U.S. would have to become a net producer of goods and services, and either Europe or Asia would have to become a net consumer of goods and services. Current trends do not favor such a role reversal. Indeed, the U.S. twin deficits are sure to move in the wrong direction for at least the next two years. Longer-term, pressure on the federal budget deficit will only intensify with the aging of the population. The shortfall in terms of net foreign assets will continue to grow, which means that the long-term structural downtrend in the trade-weighted value of the dollar will persist. Other structural factors, such as international productivity trends, also point to a long-term dollar depreciation. It seems incongruous that the U.S. dollar is the largest reserve currency and that U.S. is the world's largest international debtor. The situation is perhaps perpetuated by the lack of an alternative, but this could change over time as concerns over the long-run viability of the Eurozone ebb and the Chinese renminbi gains in terms of international trade. The transition could take decades. The U.S. twin-deficits situation is not that dire that the U.S. dollar is about to fall off a cliff because of sudden concerns about the unsustainability of the current account deficit. Even though the NIIP/GDP ratio will continue to deteriorate in the coming years, it does not appear that the U.S. is anywhere close to the point where investors would begin to seriously question America's ability to service its debt. The U.S. will continue to enjoy a net surplus on its international investments except under a worst-case scenario for relative returns. From an economic perspective, we see no reason why the U.S. will not be able to easily continue financing its domestic saving shortfall in the coming years. There are other risks of course. Growing international political tensions and a trade war could threaten the U.S. dollar's status as the world's premier reserve currency. We will explore the geopolitical angle in next month's Special Report. In 2018, we expect the dollar to partially unwind last year's weakness on the back of positive cyclical forces. Additional protectionist measures should support the dollar as long as retaliation is muted. Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst Mathieu Savary Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy 1 A Wave of Protectionism? An Analysis of Economic and Political Considerations. Bank of Canada Working Paper 2008-2. Philipp Maier. 2 The Unintended Consequences of U.S. Steel Import Tariffs: A Quantification of the Impact During 2002. Trade Partnership Worldwide, LLC. Joseph Francois and Laura Baughman. February 4, 2003. 3 See footnote to Chart II-1. 4 Fiscal Policy and the Current Account. Center for Economic Policy Research, Discussion Paper No. 7859 September 16, 2010. III. Indicators And Reference Charts The earnings backdrop remains constructive for the equity market. In the U.S., bottom-up forward earnings estimates and the net earnings revisions ratio have spiked on the back of the tax cuts. Unfortunately, many of the other equity-related indicators in this section have moved in the wrong direction. The monetary indicator is shifting progressively into negative territory as the Fed gradually tightens the monetary screws. Valuation in the U.S. market improved a little over the past month, but our composite Valuation Indicator is still very close to one sigma overvalued. Technically, our Speculation Indicator is still in frothy territory, but our Composite Sentiment Indicator has pulled back significantly toward the neutral line. Our Technical Indicator broke below the 9-month moving average in March (i.e. a 'sell' signal). These are worrying signs. Nonetheless, at this point we believe they are a reflection of the more volatile late-cycle period that the market has entered. An equity correction could occur at any time, but a bear market would require a significant and sustained economic downturn that depresses earnings estimates. Our checklist does not warn of such a scenario over the next 12 months. It is also a good sign that our Willingness-to-Pay indicator is still rising, at least for the U.S. The WTP indicators track flows, and thus provide information on what investors are actually doing, as opposed to sentiment indexes that track how investors are feeling. While this suggests that investor flows remain positive for the U.S. equity market, the WTP appears to have rolled over in both Europe and Japan. This goes against our overweight in European stocks versus the U.S. in currency hedged terms (see the Overview section). Our Revealed Preference Indicator (RPI) remained on its bullish equity signal in March. The RPI combines the idea of market momentum with valuation and policy measures. It provides a powerful bullish signal if positive market momentum lines up with constructive signals from the policy and valuation measures. Conversely, if constructive market momentum is not supported by valuation and policy, investors should lean against the market trend. So far, the indicator has not flashed 'red'. Treasurys are hovering on the 'inexpensive' side of fair value, but are not cheap based on our model. Extended technicals suggest that the period of consolidation will persist for a while longer. Value is not a headwind to a continuation in the cyclical bear phase. Little has changed on the U.S. dollar front. It is expensive by some measures, but is on the oversold side technically. We still expect a final upleg this year, before the long-term downtrend resumes. EQUITIES: Chart III-1U.S. Equity Indicators Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk Chart III-3U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators Chart III-4Revealed Preference Indicator Chart III-5U.S. Stock Market Valuation Chart III-6U.S. Earnings Chart III-7Global Stock Market And Earnings: ##br##Relative Performance Chart III-8Global Stock Market And Earnings: ##br##Relative Performance FIXED INCOME: Chart III-9U.S. Treasurys And Valuations Chart III-10U.S. Treasury Indicators Chart III-11Selected U.S. Bond Yields Chart III-1210-Year Treasury Yield ComponentsChart III-13U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor Chart III-14Global Bonds: Developed Markets Chart III-15Global Bonds: Emerging Markets CURRENCIES: Chart III-16U.S. Dollar And PPP Chart III-17U.S. Dollar And Indicator Chart III-18U.S. Dollar Fundamentals Chart III-19Japanese Yen Technicals Chart III-20Euro Technicals Chart III-21Euro/Yen Technicals Chart III-22Euro/Pound Technicals COMMODITIES: Chart III-23Broad Commodity Indicators Chart III-24Commodity Prices Chart III-25Commodity Prices Chart III-26Commodity Sentiment Chart III-27Speculative Positioning ECONOMY: Chart III-28U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop Chart III-29U.S. Macro Snapshot Chart III-30U.S. Growth Outlook Chart III-31U.S. Cyclical Spending Chart III-32U.S. Labor Market Chart III-33U.S. Consumption Chart III-34U.S. Housing Chart III-35U.S. Debt And Deleveraging Chart III-36U.S. Financial Conditions Chart III-37Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Chart III-38Global Economic Snapshot: China Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst
Highlights The China-specific tariffs proposed by the Trump administration last week represent a great escalation in U.S. protectionism, but the actual measures may be smaller than what was initially announced. The proposed tariffs, if applied as stated, would likely shave 2% off of China's export growth over the coming 6-12 months. This would prevent an acceleration that we would have otherwise expected given the strength of the global economy. A 2% deceleration in export growth is not in and of itself a significantly negative event for China's economy, but the shift in U.S. protectionism from rhetoric to action and the continued decline in our leading indicators makes a tenuous case for a continued overweight stance towards Chinese stocks. We recommend that investors put Chinese ex-tech stocks on downgrade watch over the course of Q2. The recent weakness in the Hong Kong dollar is not a sign of any major economic weakness or financial market instability that should concern investors. However, the prospect of tighter monetary policy is a potential threat to the highly leveraged Hong Kong economy that needs to be monitored. Feature The Trump administration doubled down on its protectionist agenda last week, by announcing its intention to levy US$50 billion in tariffs against a variety of imports from China. This follows the administration's decision earlier in the month to impose a tariff on all steel and aluminum imports, which we discussed at length in our March 7 Weekly Report.1 While the China-specific tariffs represent a great escalation in protectionism relative to those on steel and aluminum imports, there are several important factors for investors to take into consideration: Chart 1President Trump Can Ill-Afford ##br##Any Major Economic Turmoil The decision on Chinese import tariffs is not yet final, as the White House will propose a list of Chinese goods potentially subject to tariffs for public comment and consultations. This opens the door for an enormous lobbying effort from U.S. retailers and negotiations with Chinese officials, signaling that the end result is not set in stone. China's very muted retaliation (so far) increases the odds of a benign, negotiated outcome. Following the initial announcement of the steel and aluminum tariffs, the Trump administration significantly watered down the measures by granting Canada and Mexico an exemption and allowing exemption applications from other countries. This could suggest that the final tariffs to be applied against Chinese imports will be considerably smaller than what the administration signaled last week. Finally, given that the U.S. midterm election will be occurring later this year and that the administration can ill-afford to lose control of the legislative process, President Trump's actions on trade may be designed to maximize the perception of serious trade reform without threatening to substantially impact U.S. or global ex-U.S. economic momentum (Chart 1). This perspective would further support the notion that the bark of China-specific tariffs will be worse than the ultimate bite. The Impact Of Proposed Tariffs On Growth Still, investors cannot assume that the tariffs will be significantly watered down, meaning that it is important to have a forecast for the impact of the proposed tariffs on Chinese growth. We take a simple approach to judging the economic impact on nominal export growth, by calculating an aggregate tariff rate as if the amount of proposed tariffs applied equally across all Chinese exports to the U.S. We then multiply that rate by an estimate of U.S. import price elasticity, and again by the weight of U.S. exports as a share of total Chinese exports. Table 1 presents a list of import elasticity estimates for the G7 countries, both over the short- and long-term. Given that the short-run is our primary concern when modeling the likely cyclical impact on Chinese exports, we use the 0.6 elasticity estimate for the U.S. as a starting point for our analysis. We shock this estimate upwards to 0.8, for two reasons: To generate a relatively conservative estimate of the impact on Chinese export growth It is not clear whether the demand for goods from China is more or less price elastic than goods from other countries. However, given that the majority of Chinese exports to the U.S. are consumer-oriented (and thus less differentiated than highly specialized industrial goods), it is plausible that the price elasticity of Chinese imports is higher than it is on average. Table 1U.S. Short-Run Import Price Elasticity Is Not Trivial Given that US$50 billion is roughly 10% of annual U.S. imports from China, our simple approach suggests that the proposed tariffs would cause China's total export growth to decelerate about 1.6% (10% effective tariff rate times -0.8 import price elasticity times 20% export weight). Including the effect of Chinese re-exports to the U.S. via other major trading partners would slightly increase this estimate, meaning that 1.5 - 2.0% is a conservative range of estimates for the tariff impact. When applied to the current growth rate of Chinese exports, the impact of this estimate would be minimal. Chart 2 shows that Chinese nominal export growth recently accelerated to 22% even when shown as a 3-month moving average, suggesting that a U.S. import tariff would be coming at a time of considerably strong export momentum. In fact, China's February export data was so positive that it raised the Citigroup economic surprise index for China to a 9-year high (Chart 3). Chart 2At First Blush, Chinese Export Growth ##br##Has Accelerated Significantly Chart 3The Pop In Export Growth Has##br## Turbocharged The Surprise Index However, our view is that the growth rates of China's nominal imports and exports do not currently reflect the underlying pace of trade, with both series likely overstating the recent pace of growth. On the import side, we have highlighted in previous reports that import demand has recently outpaced what the Li Keqiang index would suggest. On the export side, a model of global US$ imports from China regressed against extrapolated global industrial production growth has an extremely strong fit over the past several years, and implies that the underlying pace of Chinese export growth is closer to 10%. Chart 4 illustrates this estimate of underlying export growth (based on global imports from China) along with the impact of the proposed tariffs, and highlights that a 2% export growth shock would simply prevent the 2% acceleration in underlying growth that we would normally expect over the coming months given the recent pickup in our global LEI. Chart 4If Enacted, The Proposed Tariffs Will ##br##Prevent An Acceleration In Export Growth Bottom Line: The import tariffs proposed by the Trump administration, if applied as stated, would likely shave about 2% off of China's export growth over the coming 6-12 months. This would prevent an acceleration that we would have otherwise expected given the strength of the global economy. The Implications For Chinese Stock Prices A 2% deceleration in export growth is not a significantly negative event for China's economy, especially if underlying export growth was set to trend higher due to strong global activity. But it does have the strong potential to mute a source of positive economic momentum, at a time when the industrial sector is clearly slowing. We presented our decision tree for Chinese stocks (Chart 5) in our first report of the year,2 and referenced it again in our March 7th report. The decision tree lays out four key questions for investors to answer over the coming 6-12 months in order to decide on the ideal allocation to Chinese equities within a global portfolio: Is The Global Economy Slowing Significantly? Is Significant Further Monetary Policy Tightening Likely? Is The Pace Of Renewed Structural Reforms Likely To Be Too Aggressive? Is The Existing Slowdown In China's Growth Momentum Metastasizing? Chart 5The Chinese Equity 'Decision Tree' While the answer to questions 2 and 3 remains "no", Trump's shift towards protectionism certainly raises the risk of an eventual "yes" to the first question, especially given that our analysis has assumed no retaliation or counter-retaliation. Regarding the issue of China's industrial sector slowdown, the Li Keqiang index is not falling sharply, but it remains in a downtrend and is set to decline further according to our BCA Li Keqiang Leading Indicator (Chart 6). At best, the answer to question 4 is a lukewarm "no". We have previously noted that the uptrend in Chinese ex-tech stock prices vs their global peers over the past two years suggests that investors should have a high threshold for reducing exposure to China. We continue to agree with that assessment, but we must also acknowledge that the shift in U.S. protectionism from rhetoric to action and the continued decline in our leading indicators makes a tenuous case for a continued overweight stance towards Chinese stocks. We are not yet changing our investment recommendations, but we are putting Chinese ex-tech stocks on downgrade watch for Q2. An outright recommendation to cut exposure to neutral will likely occur in response to a technical breakdown which, for now, does not appear to be imminent (Chart 7). Chart 6China's Industrial Sector Is Set To Slow Further Chart 7Still In An Uptrend, For Now Bottom Line: A 2% deceleration in export growth is not in and of itself a significantly negative event for China's economy, but the shift in U.S. protectionism from rhetoric to action and the continued decline in our leading indicators makes a tenuous case for a continued overweight stance towards Chinese stocks. We recommend that investors put Chinese ex-tech stocks on downgrade watch over the course of Q2. An Update On The Hong Kong Dollar The Hong Kong dollar (HKD) has been weakening for the better part of a year, but recently it has fallen quite sharply relative to its history and now trades very close to the weak side of the peg (7.85 Hong Kong dollars to 1 U.S. dollar). The pace of recent weakness has caught the attention of investors and market participants, in part because it would be the first time in 12 years since the HKD threatened to decline below the lower end of the peg. In our view, both the HKD's weakness over the past year and the recent slide have been caused largely by technical factors, and are not in and of themselves signs of any major economic weakness or financial market instability that should concern investors. As highlighted in Chart 8, the significant rise in USD/HKD (a depreciation in the Hong Kong dollar) can be explained by a sizeable rise in the 3-month U.S. LIBOR / Hong Kong HIBOR spread. Panel 2 shows that the first portion of the rise in LIBOR vs HIBOR can be explained on the Hong Kong side. 3-month HIBOR itself has fallen quite substantially relative to the base rate, which has risen in lockstep with the Fed funds rate. This decline in 3-month HIBOR suggests that there is a supply-demand imbalance in the Hong Kong interbank market (in favor of excess supply), and that the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) is likely to reduce the aggregate balance maintained by commercial banks in the days and weeks ahead (after having reduced it by HKD 80 billion in the second half of 2017; Chart 9) in order to defend the peg. Chart 8HKD Weakness Caused By Factors##br## On Both Sides Of The Pacific Chart 9To Raise 3-Month HIBOR, ##br##The HKMA Has To Tighten Interbank Liquidity Panel 3 of Chart 8 highlights that the second portion of the LIBOR/HIBOR spike is due to events completely unconnected with Hong Kong's monetary policy or its banking system. As discussed in detail in last week's U.S. Bond Strategy,3 the sharp rise in 3-month LIBOR relative to the Fed funds rate (the opposite of what is occurring in Hong Kong) appears to be driven by the U.S. Treasury rebuilding its cash balance following the recent extension of the debt ceiling, the money market effect of U.S. corporations repatriating U.S. dollars, and the Fed's ongoing balance sheet contraction. The combination of these two factors has created incentives for investors to sell the Hong Kong dollar and buy the U.S. dollar, which explains the weakness of the former. While these factors are technical in nature and are likely to dissipate over time, they are both significantly rooted in the fact that the U.S. is tightening its monetary policy. This will be discussed in more depth in next week's report, as the combination of tighter monetary conditions, the ongoing slowdown in China's industrial sector, and the extremely high levels of leverage in Hong Kong's private sector legitimately raises the odds of a smashup over the coming 1-2 years. We will gauge how bearish investors should be on Hong Kong and will present a new indicator that investors can use to monitor whether tighter monetary policy is likely to tip the economy into a debt-driven downturn. Stay tuned. Bottom Line: The recent weakness in the Hong Kong dollar is not a sign of any major economic weakness or financial market instability that should concern investors. However, the prospect of tighter monetary policy is a potential threat to the Hong Kong economy that needs to be monitored. Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "China And The Risk Of Escalation," dated March 7, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The "Decision Tree" For Chinese Stocks," dated January 4, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Profiting From A Higher LIBOR," dated March 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights Portfolio Strategy The reward/risk profile of air freight & logistics is extremely attractive. Synchronized global growth, the capex upcycle, a falling dollar and secular advance in e-commerce compel us to add this unloved transportation sub-index to our high-conviction overweight list. Prepare to lock in gains in managed health care. The positive demand and pricing backdrops are already reflected in perky valuations. While homebuilders still have to contend with rising lumber prices and interest rates and the partial elimination of mortgage interest deductibility, the near 20% peak-to-trough drawdown suggests that all of the bad news is baked in relative share prices, warranting an upgrade alert. Recent Changes Add the S&P air freight & logistics index to the high-conviction overweight list. Put the S&P managed care index on downgrade alert. Set an upgrade alert on the S&P homebuilding index. Table 1 Feature Equities lost ground last week and flirted with the bottom part of the trading range established during the past two months, but held the 200-day moving average. Our view remains that the SPX is digesting the early-February swoon, and the buy-the-dip strategy is still appropriate for capital with a cyclical (9-12 month) time horizon as the probability of a recession this year is close to nil. Nevertheless, the recent doubling in the TED spread and simultaneous spike in financials investment grade bond spreads is slightly unnerving (second panel, Chart 1). Junk spreads also widened as investors sought the safety of the risk-free asset. What is behind this fear flare up propagating in risk sensitive assets? First, the Fed continued its tightening cycle last week, raising the fed funds rate another 25bps. As we have been writing in recent research Weekly Reports, rising interest rates go hand-in-hand with increasing volatility (please see Chart 1 from the March 5th Special Report on banks). Thus, as the Fed tightens monetary policy and continues to unwind its balance sheet, the return of volatility will become a key market theme (bottom panel, Chart 1). The implication is that a bumpier ride looms for equities, and the smooth and nearly uninterrupted rise that market participants have been conditioned to expect is now a thing of the past. With regard to the composition of equity returns in the coming year, rising interest rates and volatility signal that the forward P/E multiple has likely crested for the cycle, leaving profits to do all the heavy lifting (Chart 2). Second, rising policy uncertainty (trade and Administration personnel related, please see Chart 1 from last week's publication) is muddying the short-term equity market outlook at the current juncture, and fueling the risk-off phase. However, synchronized global growth, a muted U.S. dollar and easy fiscal policy are a boon to EPS and signal that profit growth will reclaim the driver's seat in coming weeks. Stocks and EPS are joined at the hip and there are good odds that equities will vault to fresh all-time highs on the back of earnings validation as the year unfolds (Chart 3). Chart 1Closely Monitor These Spreads Chart 2EPS Doing The Heavy Lifting Chart 3Profits And Cash Flow Underpin Stocks Importantly, comparing net profit growth to cash flow growth rates is instructive, as SPX EBITDA is not affected by the new tax law. While EPS are slated to grow close to 20% in calendar 2018, the respective forward SPX EBITDA growth rate (based on IBES data) sports a more muted 10% per annum rate (second panel, Chart 4). Similarly, sell side analysts pencil in a visible jump in forward net profit margins, whereas the forward EBITDA margin estimate is stable (middle panel, Chart 4). The recent tax-related benefit is a one-time dividend to profits that will not repeat in 2019. Thus, the market will likely look through this one time effect and start to focus on the calendar 2019 EPS growth number that is a more reasonable 10%, and also similar to next year's EBITDA growth rate. Our sense is that this transition will also be prone to turbulence. Our EPS growth model corroborates this profit euphoria and is topping out near the 20% growth rate (Chart 5). While it will most likely decelerate in the back half of the year, as long as there is no relapse near the contraction zone à la late-2015/early 2016, the equity bull market will remain intact. Chart 4Investors Will See Through The Tax Cut Chart 5EPS Model Flashing Green As we showcased in the early February Weekly Report, four key macro variables are behaving as they have in four prior 20% EPS growth phases since the 1980s excluding the post-recession recoveries (please see the Appendix of the February 5th "Acrophobia" Weekly Report). Therefore, if history at least rhymes, the equity overshoot phase will resume. This week we add a neglected transportation group to the high-conviction overweight list, put a defensive index on the downgrade watch list and set an upgrade alert on a niche early cyclical group. Air Freight & Logistics: Prepare For Takeoff Last week we reiterated our overweight stance in the broad transportation space and today we are compelled to add the undervalued and unloved S&P air freight & logistics index to the high-conviction overweight list. Air freight services are levered to global growth. Currently, synchronized global growth remains the dominant macro theme. Firming export expectations suggest that global trade volumes will get a bump in the coming months (second panel, Chart 6). Importantly, U.S. manufacturers are also excited about exports; the latest ISM manufacturing export subcomponent hit a three decade high. While the specter of a global trade spat is disconcerting, our sense is that a generalized trade war will most likely be averted or, if the current executive Administration is to be believed, short-lived. The upshot is that air freight & logistics sales momentum will gain steam in the coming months (second panel, Chart 7). Chart 6Heed The Signals From Global Growth,##br## Capex And The Greenback Chart 7Domestic Demand##br## Is Also Firm Beyond euphoric survey data readings, hard economic data also corroborate the soft data message. G3 (U.S., the Eurozone and Japan) capital goods orders are firing on all cylinders and probing multi-year highs, underscoring that rising animal spirits are translating into real economic activity (third panel, Chart 6). Chart 8Mistakenly Unloved And Undervalued Tack on the near uninterrupted depreciation of the trade-weighted U.S. dollar and factors are falling into place for a relative EPS overshoot, given the large foreign sales component of this key transportation sub-group (bottom panel, Chart 6). Not only are air freight stocks' fortunes tied to the state of global trade, but this industry is also sensitive to capital outlays. A synchronized global capex cycle is one of the key themes we are exploring in 2018. The third panel of Chart 7 shows that our capex indicator points to a reacceleration in the corporate sales-to-inventories ratio. This virtuous capital spending upcycle, that would get a further lift were an infrastructure bill to be signed into law, is a boon to air cargo services. In addition, as the secular advance in e-commerce continues to make inroads in the bricks-and-mortar share of total retail dollars spent, demand for delivery services will continue to grow smartly, underpinning industry selling prices (bottom panel, Chart 7). As a result, we would look through recent softness in industry pricing power that has weighed on relative performance. Indeed, transportation & warehousing hours worked have recently spiked, corroborating the message from global revenue ton miles (not shown), rekindling industry net earnings revisions (second panel, Chart 8). Importantly, relative valuations are discounting a significantly negative profit backdrop, with the relative price/sales ratio at its lowest level since 2002 (third panel, Chart 8). Similarly, the index is trading at a 10% discount to the broad market's forward P/E multiple or the lowest level since the turn of the century (not shown). Finally, technical conditions are washed out offering a compelling entry point for fresh capital (bottom panel, Chart 8). The implication is that the group is well positioned to positively surprise. Bottom Line: The S&P air freight & logistics index has a very attractive reward/risk profile and if we were not already overweight, we would take advantage of recent underperformance to go overweight now. Therefore, we are adding it to our high-conviction overweight list. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5AIRF - UPS, FDX, CHRW, EXPD. Downgrade Alert: Managed Health Care Managed health care stocks have been stellar outperformers not only versus the overall market, but also compared with the broad S&P health care sector. Since the April 2016 inception of our overweight recommendation, they have added considerable alpha to our portfolio to the tune of 21 percentage points above and beyond the SPX's rise (Chart 9). While most of the factors underpinning our sanguine view for health insurers remain intact, from a risk management perspective we are compelled to put them on downgrade alert. Most of the good news is likely baked into relative prices and valuations (bottom panel, Chart 9). In the coming weeks, we will be on the lookout for an opportunity to pull the trigger and crystalize gains and downgrade to a benchmark allocation, especially if defensive equities catch a bid on the back of the current mini risk off phase. Namely, recent inter-industry M&A euphoria is a key catalyst to lighten up on this health care services sub-sector (Chart 10). While regulators have disallowed intra-industry consolidation over the past few years, the M&A premia remained and now the proposed CVS/AET and CI/EXPR deals could be a harbinger of petering out relative valuations and share prices. Chart 9Prepare To Book Gains Chart 10M&A Frenzy True, melting health care inflation is likely a secular theme that is in the processes of reversing three decades worth of health care industry, in general and pharma in particular, pricing power gains. While this is a dire backdrop for drug manufacturers - which remains a high-conviction underweight - it is a clear benefit to HMOs (Chart 11). Health insurance labor costs are also well contained: the employment cost index for this industry is probing multi-year lows (bottom panel, Chart 12). The upshot is that profit margins are on a solid footing. Chart 11Operating Metrics Suggest... Chart 12...To Stay Overweight A While Longer Meanwhile, the overall U.S. labor market is on fire. Last month NFPs registered a month-over-month increase of 300K for the first time in four years and unemployment insurance claims are perched near five decade lows. This represents an enticing demand backdrop for managed health care companies, especially when the economy is at full employment and the government is easing fiscal policy (bottom panel, Chart 11). Despite the still appealing demand and pricing backdrop, the flurry of M&A deals will likely serve as a catalyst to lock in gains and move to a benchmark allocation in the coming weeks as this health care sub-index is priced for perfection. Bottom Line: Stay overweight the S&P managed health care index, but it is now on downgrade alert. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5MANH - UNH, AET, ANTM, CI, HUM, CNC. Upgrade Alert: Homebuilders Showing Resiliency In late-November 2017 when we launched our 2018 high-conviction call list, we downgraded the niche S&P homebuilding index to underweight (Chart 13). Our thesis was that the trifecta of rising lumber prices, mortgage interest deductibility blues and rising interest rate backdrop, a key 2018 BCA theme, would weigh on profit margins and, thus, profits would underwhelm. Since then we have monetized gains of 10% versus the SPX and removed this early-cyclical index from the high-conviction underweight list.1 Today we are putting it on upgrade alert. As a reminder, this was not a call based on a souring residential housing view. In fact, we remain housing bulls and expect more gains for the still recovering residential housing market that moves in steady prolonged multi-year cycles (Chart 14). Keep in mind that housing starts are still running below household formation and the job market is heating up. The implication is that the U.S. housing market rests on solid foundations. Chart 13Bounced Off Support Line Chart 14Housing Fundamentals Are Upbeat While interest rates and rising house prices are denting affordability (second and fourth panels, Chart 15), homebuilders share prices have been resilient recently and have smartly bounced off their upward sloping support trend line (Chart 13). Indeed, interest rates may continue to rise from current levels, but as we have highlighted in recent research, there is a self-limiting aspect to the year-over-year rise in the 10-year yield near the 100bps mark. Put differently, any rise above 3.05% on the 10-year Treasury yield in a short time frame would likely prove restrictive for the U.S. economy.2 Encouragingly, the mortgage application purchase index has well absorbed the selloff in the bond market, unlike its sibling mortgage application refinance index, signaling that there is pent up housing demand (second panel, Chart 16). New home sales are expanding anew as price concessions have likely been sufficient to compete with existing homes for sale (top panel, Chart 16). Chart 15Get Ready To Upgrade... Chart 16...Given Receding Profit Margin Risks On the lumber front, prices have gone parabolic year-to-date courtesy of trade war talk and a softening U.S. dollar. However, lumber inflation cannot continue at a 50%/annum pace indefinitely (third panel, Chart 16). While higher lumber prices are a de facto negative for homebuilding profit margins, we deem they are now well reflected in compelling relative valuations (bottom panel, Chart 15). In addition, if we are correct in assessing that housing demand remains upbeat, this will give some breathing room to homebuilders to partly pass on some of this input cost inflation to the consumer. Bottom Line: The S&P homebuilding index remains an underweight, but it is now on our upgrade watch list. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HOME-DHI, LEN, PHM. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Insight Report, "Housekeeping In Turbulent Times," dated February 9, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Reflective Or Restrictive?" dated March 12, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth. Stay neutral small over large caps (downgrade alert).
Overweight The S&P containers & packaging index has been underperforming since the beginning of the year as the spiking input costs of last year materialized in soft Q4 earnings, compounded by fears over a trade war. However, those costs have fallen substantially since the end of the year (second panel) and gross margins should eventually return to normal; trade fears have moderated. In the longer term, we think the focus should remain on the drivers of demand, namely global growth (a key BCA theme for this year). Both volumes and prices have maintained a steady uptrend (third panel) and the sell side has taken notice as relative forward EPS are climbing at the fastest pace in a decade (bottom panel). Combined with the index's weak performance YTD, a sizeable buying opportunity is taking shape; stay overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5CONP - IP, WRK, BLL, PKG, SEE, AVY.
Underweight Last week we downgraded the S&P consumer discretionary index to a below benchmark allocation on the back of three key factors: a rising fed funds rate, quantitative tightening and higher prices at the pump. One of the charts we published, and are reprinting today, caught the attention of our good friend, who I refer to as the "smartest man in California", and he suggested a few of interesting tweaks to drive a point home. First, he recommended to switch the fed funds rate to the shadow fed funds rate, or the Wu-Xia model, in order to better capture the fact that the Fed was still easing monetary policy below the zero line post December, 2008 and until December, 2015 via QE (top panel). Second, if we were to exclude AMZN from the day the S&P included it in the SPX and the S&P 500 consumer discretionary index (November 21st, 2005), then the chart would highlight that the vast majority of consumer discretionary stocks are actually following the typical historical relationship with the Fed's tightening cycle (top panel). Finally, while AMZN has a heavy weight in the broad consumer discretionary index (21%), its earnings weight is quite low (1.5%). Thus, overall consumer discretionary profits are indeed following the Fed's historical tightening path (second panel). Bottom line: We reiterate our underweight stance in the S&P consumer discretionary sector. Category: Consumer Discretionar
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Synchronized global growth, a soft U.S. dollar, our resurgent Boom/Bust Indicator and avoidance of a Chinese economic hard landing, are all signaling that it still pays to overweight cyclicals at the expense of defensives. Economically hyper-sensitive transports also benefit from synchronous global growth and capex. We expect a rerating phase in the coming months. Within transports, we reiterate our overweight stance in the key railroads sub-index as enticing macro tailwinds along with firming operating metrics underscore that profits will exit deflation in calendar 2018. Recent Changes There are no portfolio changes this week. Table 1 Feature The S&P 500 continued to consolidate last week, still digesting the early February tremor. Policy uncertainty is slowly returning and sustained Administration reshufflings are becoming slightly unnerving (bottom panel, Chart 1). Nevertheless, the dual themes of synchronized global growth and budding evidence of coordinated tightening in global monetary policy, i.e. rising interest rate backdrop, continue to dominate and remain intact. Importantly in the U.S., the latest non-farm payrolls (NFP) report was a goldilocks one. Month-over-month NFPs surpassed the 300K hurdle for the first time since late-2014, on an as-reported-basis, while wage inflation settled back down. The middle panel of Chart 2 shows that both in the 1980s and 1990s expansions, NFPs were growing briskly, easily clearing the 300K mark. The 2000s was the "jobless recovery" expansion and likely the exception to the rule. In all three business cycle expansions wage growth touched the 4%/annum rate before the recession hit. The yield curve slope also supports this empirical evidence, forecasting that wage inflation will likely attain 4%/annum before this cycle ends (wages shown inverted, Chart 3). Chart 1Watch Policy Uncertainty Chart 2Goldilocks NFP Report... Chart 3...But Wage Growth Pickup Looms One key element in the current cycle is that the government is easing fiscal policy to the point where both NFPs and wages will likely surge in the coming months as the fiscal thrust gains steam, likely extending the business cycle. This is an inherently inflationary environment, especially when the economy is at full employment and the Fed in slow and steady tightening mode. Last autumn, we showed that the SPX performs well in times of easy fiscal and tight money iterations, rising on average 16.7% with these episodes, lasting on average 16 months (Table 2).1 The latest flagship BCA monthly publication forecasts that the current fiscal impulse will last at least until year-end 2019, contributing positively to real GDP growth. Thus, if history at least rhymes, SPX returns will be positive and likely significant for the next couple of years (Chart 4). With regard to the composition of the equity market's return, we reiterate our view - backed by empirical evidence - that EPS will do the heavy lifting whereas the forward P/E multiple will continue to drift sideways to lower.2 Not only will rising fiscal deficits cause the Fed to remain vigilant and continue to raise interest rates and weigh on the equity market multiple (Chart 5), but also heightened volatility will likely suppress the forward P/E multiple. Table 2SPX Returns During Periods Of Loose##br## Fiscal And Tight Monetary Policy Chart 4Stimulative Fiscal Policy##br## Extends The Business Cycle... Chart 5...But Weighs On ##br##The Multiple This week we revisit our cyclical versus defensive portfolio bent and update the key transportation overweight view. Cyclicals Thrive When Global Growth Is Alive And Well... While retaliatory tariff wars are dominating the media headlines, global growth is still resilient. Our view remains that the odds of a generalized trade war engulfing the globe are low, and in that light we reiterate our cyclical over defensive portfolio positioning, in place since early October.3 Global growth is firing on all cylinders. Our Global Trade Indicator is probing levels last hit in 2008, underscoring that cyclicals will continue to have the upper hand versus defensives (Chart 6). Synonymous with global growth is the softness in the U.S. dollar. In fact, the two are in a self-feeding loop where synchronized global growth pushes the greenback lower, which in turn fuels further global output growth. Tack on the rising likelihood that the trade-weighted dollar has crested from a structural perspective, according to the 16-year peak-to-peak cycle4 (Chart 7) and the news is great for cyclicals versus defensives (Chart 8). Chart 6Global Trade Is Alright Chart 7Dollar The Great Reflator... Chart 8...Is A Boon For Cyclicals Vs. Defensives Related to the greenback's likely secular peak is the booming commodity complex, as the two are nearly perfectly inversely correlated. Commodity exposure is running very high in the deep cyclical sectors and thus any sustained commodity price inflation gains will continue to underpin the cyclicals/defensives share price ratio. BCA's Boom/Bust Indicator (BBI) corroborates this upbeat message for cyclicals versus defensives. The BBI is on the verge of hitting an all-time high and, while this could serve as a contrary signal, there are high odds of a breakout in the coming months if synchronized global growth stays intact as BCA expects, rekindling cyclicals/defensives share prices (Chart 9). Finally, if China avoids a hard landing, and barring an EM accident, the cyclicals/defensives ratio will remain upbeat. Chart 10 shows that China's LEI is recovering smartly from the late-2015/early-2016 manufacturing recession trough, and the roaring Chinese stock market - the ultimate leading indicator - confirms that the path of least resistance for the U.S. cyclicals/defensive share price ratio is higher still. Chart 9Boom/Bust indicator Is Flashing Green Chart 10China Is Also Stealthily Firming Bottom Line: Stick with a cyclical over defensive portfolio bent. ...As Do Transports, Thus... Transportation stocks have taken a breather recently on the back of escalating global trade war fears. But, we are looking through this soft-patch and reiterate our barbell portfolio approach: overweight the global growth-levered railroads and air freight & logistics stocks at the expense of airlines that are bogged down by rising capacity and deflating airfare prices (Chart 11). Leading indicators of transportation activity are all flashing green. Transportation relative share prices and manufacturing export expectations are joined at the hip, and the current message is to expect a reacceleration in the former (top panel, Chart 12). Similarly, capital expenditures, one of the key themes we are exploring this year, are as good as they can be according to the regional Fed surveys, and signal that transportation profits will rev up in the coming months (middle panel, Chart 12). The possibility of an infrastructure bill becoming law later this year or in 2019 would also represent a tailwind for transportation EPS. Not only is U.S. trade activity humming, but also global trade remains on a solid footing. The global manufacturing PMI is resilient and sustaining recent gains, suggesting that global export volumes will resume their ascent. This global manufacturing euphoria is welcome news for extremely economically sensitive transportation profits (Chart 13). All of this heralds an enticing transportation services end-demand outlook. In fact, industry pricing power is gaining steam of late and confirms that relative EPS will continue to expand (Chart 12). Under such a backdrop, a rerating phase looms in still depressed relative valuations (bottom panel, Chart 13). Chart 11Stick With Transports Exposure Chart 12Domestic... Chart 13...And Global Growth/Capex Beneficiary ...Stay On Board The Rails Railroad stocks have worked off the overbought conditions prevalent all of last year, and momentum is now back at zero. In addition, forward EPS have spiked, eliminating the valuation premium and now the rails are trading on par with the SPX on a forward P/E basis (Chart 14). The track is now clear and more gains are in store for relative share prices in the coming quarters. Despite trade war jitters, we are looking through the recent turbulence. If the synchronized global growth phase endures, as we expect, then rail profits will remain on track. In fact, BCA's measure of global industrial production (hard economic data) is confirming the euphoric message from the global manufacturing PMI (soft economic data) and suggests that rails profits will overwhelm (Chart 15). Our S&P rails profit model also corroborates this positive global trade message and forecasts that rail profit deflation will end in 2018 (bottom panel, Chart 15). Beyond these macro tailwinds, operating industry metrics also point to a profit resurgence this year. Importantly, our rails profit margin proxy (pricing power versus employment additions) has recently reaccelerated both because selling prices are expanding at a healthy clip and due to labor restraint (second panel, Chart 15). Demand for rail hauling remains upbeat and our rail diffusion indicator has surged to a level last seen in 2009, signaling that there is a broad based firming in rail carload shipments (second panel, Chart 16). Chart 14Unwound Both Overbought Conditions And Overvaluation Chart 15EPS On Track To Outperform Chart 16Intermodal Resilience The significant intermodal segment that comprises roughly half of all shipments is on the cusp of a breakout. The retail sales-to-inventories ratio is probing multi-year highs on the back of the increase in the consumer confidence impulse and both are harbingers of a reacceleration in intermodal shipments (Chart 16). Coal is another significant category that takes up just under a fifth of rail carload volumes and bears close attention. While natural gas prices have fallen near the lower part of the trading range in place since mid-2016 and momentum is back at neutral, any spike in nat gas prices will boost the allure of coal as a competing fuel for energy generation (middle panel, Chart 17). Keep in mind that coal usage is highly correlated with electricity demand and the industrial business cycle, and the current ISM manufacturing survey message is upbeat for coal demand. Tack on the whittling down in coal inventories at utilities and there is scope for a tick up in coal demand (third panel, Chart 18). Finally, the export relief valve has reopened for coal with the aid of the depreciating U.S. dollar, and momentum in net exports has soared to all-time highs, even surpassing the mid-1982 peak (bottom panel, Chart 18). Chart 17Key Coal Shipments Underpin Selling Prices Chart 18Upbeat Leading Indicators Of Coal Demand All of this suggests that coal shipments will make a comeback later in 2018, and continue to underpin industry pricing power, which in turn boost rail profit prospects (bottom panel, Chart 17). Bottom Line: Continue to overweight the broad S&P transportation index, and especially the heavyweight S&P railroads sub-index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5RAIL - UNP, CSX, NSC, KSU. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Can Easy Fiscal Offset Tighter Monetary Policy?" dated October 9, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "EPS And 'Nothing Else Matters'," dated December 18, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, "Top 5 Reasons To Favor Cyclicals Over Defensives," dated October 16, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "The Euro's Tricky Spot," dated February 2, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth. Stay neutral small over large caps (downgrade alert).
This week's NFIB small business survey was remarkable; small business optimism is at its second highest level in the survey's 45 year history with an all-time record high 32% of respondents saying that now is a good time to expand (top and second panel). Such a positive reading underscores one of BCA's key themes for 2018 of a capex revival underpinning a virtuous cycle of positive earnings growth. It also adds some wind to the sails of the small cap index, which has been solidly resilient. Earlier this year, we downgraded our recommendation on small caps vs. large caps to a neutral allocation, based on a deterioration in small cap margins and too-high leverage.1 Drilling down into this NFIB survey would suggest this move was prescient; firms reporting planned labor compensation increases have steadied near a two decade high while price increases are trailing far behind (third panel). With "quality of labor" having overtaken "taxes" as the single most important problem facing businesses, labor compensation growth seems likely to continue moving up at an elevated pace and small cap margins should likely continue to trail large cap peers (bottom panel). Bottom Line: We reiterate our neutral capitalization bias with a downgrade alert. 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Too Good To Be True?" dated January 22, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights The global economic mini-cycle is set to weaken while the euro is set to grind higher. Upgrade Telecoms to overweight. Also overweight Healthcare and Airlines. Underweight Banks, Basic Materials and Energy. Overweight France, Ireland, U.K., Switzerland and Denmark. Underweight Italy, Spain, Sweden and Norway. The Eurostoxx50 will struggle to outperform the S&P500. Feature We are strong believers in Investment Reductionism, a philosophy synthesized from the Pareto Principle and Occam's Razor.1 Investment reductionism offers a liberating thesis - the incessant barrage of investment research, newsfeeds and ten thousand word commentaries is largely superfluous to the investment process. What seems like a complexity of investment choice usually reduces to getting a few over-arching decisions right. Chart of the WeekIn Quadrant 4, Overweight Domestic Defensives And Underweight International Cyclicals For equity sector and country allocation, two over-arching decisions dominate: Whether the global economic mini-cycle is set to strengthen or weaken (Chart I-2). Whether the domestic currency is set to strengthen or weaken. Chart I-2The Empirical Evidence For Credit And Economic Mini-Cycles Is Irrefutable The four permutations of these two decisions create the four quadrants of cyclical investing (Chart of the Week). Right now, European investors find themselves in quadrant four: the global economic mini-cycle is set to weaken while the euro is set to grind higher. This favours an overweight stance to defensives, especially domestic-focused defensives. Therefore today, we are upgrading Telecoms to overweight. We also recommend an underweight stance to the most cyclical sectors, especially international-focused cyclicals such as Basic Materials and Energy. Country allocation then just drops out of this sector allocation. The Global Economic Mini-Cycle Is Set To Weaken We can predict the changes of the seasons and the tides of the sea with utmost precision. How? Not because we have an ingenious leading indicator for the seasons and tides, but because we recognise that these phenomena follow perfectly regular cycles. Regular cycles create predictability. Significantly, global bank credit flows also exhibit remarkably regular cycles with half-cycle lengths averaging around eight months. Recognizing these mini-cycles is immensely powerful because, just as for the seasons and the tides, it creates predictability. Furthermore, if most investors are unaware of these cycles, the next turn will not be discounted in today's price - providing a compelling investment opportunity for those who do recognise the predictability. The empirical evidence for credit mini-cycles is irrefutable. The theoretical foundation is also rock solid, based on an economic model called the Cobweb Theory.2 This states that in any market where supply lags demand, both the quantity supplied and the price must oscillate. Given that credit supply clearly lags credit demand, the quantity of credit supplied and its price (the bond yield) must experience mini-cycles (Chart I-3). And as the quantity of credit supplied is a marginal driver of economic activity, economic activity will also experience the same regular oscillations. Today, the global 6-month credit impulse is turning from mini-upswing to mini-downswing, with all three subcomponents - the euro area, the U.S. and China - now in decline (Chart I-4). This is exactly in line with prediction. Mini half-cycles average eight months, and the latest mini-upswing started eight months ago. Chart I-3The Global Economic Mini-Cycle##br## Is Set To Weaken Chart I-4All Three Subcomponents Of The Global 6-Month ##br##Credit Impulse Are Now Declining More importantly, as we enter a mini-downswing, we can also predict that global growth is likely to experience at least a modest deceleration through the coming two to three quarters. The Euro Is Set To Grind Higher, Except Versus The Yen Chart I-5Lost In Translation Nowadays, mainstream stock markets tend to be eclectic collections of multinational companies which happen to be quoted on bourses in Frankfurt, Paris, New York, and so on. For example, BASF is not really a German chemical company, it is a global chemical company headquartered in Germany. For operational hedging, multinational companies like BASF will intentionally diversify their sales and profits across multiple major currencies, say euros and dollars. But of course, the primary stock market quotation will be in the currency of its home bourse, euros. Therefore, when the euro strengthens, the company's multi-currency profits, translated back into a stronger euro, will necessarily weaken (Chart I-5). Clearly, more domestic-focused companies like telecoms will not experience such a strong currency-translation headwind. We expect the main euro crosses to continue strengthening over the next 8 months, with the exception being the cross versus the Japanese yen. Our central thesis is that the payoff profile for a foreign exchange rate just tracks the bond yield spread. This means that when a central bank has already taken bond yields close to their lower bound, its currency possesses a highly attractive asymmetry called positive skew. In essence, as the ECB is at the realistic limit of ultra-loose policy, long-term expectations for the ECB policy rate possess an asymmetry: they cannot go significantly lower, but they could go significantly higher. Exactly the same applies to long-term expectations for the BoJ policy rate. In contrast, long-term expectations for the Fed policy rate possess full symmetry: they could go either way, lower or higher. This stark asymmetry of central bank 'degrees of freedom' favours the euro and the yen over the dollar. Which Sectors And Countries To Own And Which To Avoid? Pulling together the preceding two sections, the global economic mini-cycle is set to weaken while the euro is set to grind higher. This puts Europe in quadrant four of our four quadrant framework for cyclical investing. Unsurprisingly, the relative performance of the most cyclical sectors - Banks, Basic Materials and Energy - very closely tracks the regular mini-cycles in the global 6-month credit impulse. In a mini-downswing these cyclical sectors always underperform (Chart I-6, Chart I-7 and Chart I-8). Accordingly, underweight these three sectors on a two to three quarter horizon. Chart I-6In A Mini-Downswing, ##br##Banks Always Underperform Chart I-7In A Mini-Downswing,##br## Basic Materials Always Underperform Chart I-8In A Mini-Downswing,##br## Energy Always Underperforms Conversely, overweight the relatively defensive Healthcare sector. Also overweight the Airlines sector. Airlines' performance is a mirror-image of the oil price cycle, given that aviation fuel comprises the sector's main variable cost. Furthermore, as aviation fuel is priced in dollars, it also insulates European Airlines against a strengthening euro. Today, we are also upgrading the Telecoms sector to overweight given its relative non-cyclicality (Chart I-9), its domestic-focus, and the excessively negative groupthink towards it (Chart I-10). Chart I-9In A Mini-Downswing, ##br##Telecoms Always Outperform Chart I-10Telecoms Are Due ##br##A Trend Reversal In summary: Overweight: Healthcare, Telecoms, and Airlines Underweight: Banks, Basic Materials and Energy Then to arrive at a country allocation, just combine the cyclical view on the major sectors with the country sector skews in Box 1. The result is the following unchanged European equity market allocation. Overweight: France, Ireland, U.K., Switzerland and Denmark Neutral: Germany and Netherlands Underweight: Italy, Spain, Sweden and Norway Lastly, what is the prognosis for the Eurostoxx50 relative to the S&P500? Essentially, this reduces to a battle between the multinational cyclicals - especially banks - that dominate euro area bourses and the multinational technology giants that dominate the U.S. stock market. With the global economic mini-cycle set to weaken and the euro set to grind higher, the Eurostoxx50 will struggle to outperform the S&P500. Box 1: The Vital Few Sector Skews That Drive Country Relative Performance For major equity indexes in the euro area, the dominant sector skews that drive relative performance are as follows: Germany (DAX) is overweight Chemicals, underweight Banks. France (CAC) is underweight Banks and Basic Materials. Italy (MIB) is overweight Banks. Spain (IBEX) is overweight Banks. Netherlands (AEX) is overweight Technology, underweight Banks. Ireland (ISEQ) is overweight Airlines (Ryanair) which is, in effect, underweight Energy. And for major equity indexes outside the euro area: The U.K. (FTSE100) is effectively underweight the pound. Switzerland (SMI) is overweight Healthcare, underweight Energy. Sweden (OMX) is overweight Industrials. Denmark (OMX20) is overweight Healthcare and Industrials. Norway (OBX) is overweight Energy. The U.S. (S&P500) is overweight Technology, underweight Banks. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 The Pareto Principle, often known as the 80-20 rule, says that 80% of effects come from just 20% of causes. Occam's Razor says that when there are many competing explanations for the same effect, the simplest explanation is usually the best. 2 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report 'The Cobweb Theory And Market Cycles' published on January 11, 2018 and available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Fractal Trading Model* This week's recommended trade is to short the Helsinki OMX versus the Eurostoxx600. Apply a profit target of 3% with a symmetrical stop-loss. In other trades, we are pleased to report that short Japanese Energy versus the market achieved its 8% profit target at which it was closed. This leaves four open positions. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart 11 The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Chinese domestic stocks have materially lagged their investable peers over the past three years, due to the legacy effects of an enormous, policy-driven bubble in 2014-2015. While A-shares have worked off some of this speculative bubble and multiples are no longer extreme, the outlook for earnings is uninspiring and the valuation discount offered by domestic stocks is modest, at best. Investors should maintain a neutral stance towards Chinese A-shares over the coming 6-12 months, but should remain alert to any improvements in China's housing market and especially any easing monetary policy, as they may signal a potential upgrade catalyst. Finally, we note that the negative perception of Chinese domestic stocks by many global investors does not appear to be justified by the data. A-shares have a place within a regional equity portfolio, and should not be ignored when the right cyclical conditions present themselves. Feature Since last October we have written extensively about the character and magnitude of the economic slowdown in China, and what it means for both Chinese import growth as well as earnings growth for the MSCI China Index (our investable benchmark). Chart 1Disappointing Relative Performance ##br##From A-Shares We have focused our investment strategy discussions on investable stocks because domestic A-shares have underperformed our investable benchmark by a significant margin over the past three years (Chart 1). In this week's report we take a closer look at the reasons for this underperformance, and review the outlook for A-shares over the coming 6-12 months. We conclude that the case for A-shares is currently uninspiring over the cyclical investment horizon, warranting a neutral stance for now. However, we also note that the negative perception of China's domestic stocks among some global investors, that it is a "casino" market untethered from fundamentals, is not supported by the data. This underscores that A-shares deserve a place within a regional equity portfolio, and should be favored when cyclical conditions warrant it. 2014-2015: A Policy-Driven Bubble In Domestic Stocks The drivers of A-share underperformance over the past few years can be traced back to events that occurred in 2014/2015, when A-shares rose 160% over the course of 12 months (Chart 2). Following several years of poor performance in the domestic stock market, Chinese policymakers began a push in 2014 to encourage retail investors to buy A-shares. This policy was part of a plan to help reduce what the government saw as a massive flow of savings towards investments that were excessively speculative in nature (such as wealth management products and China's property market), as well as to support a market that authorities hoped would become a more prominent target of international investors. This push involved lowering transaction and account opening fees, lowering margin debt restrictions, and using state media to wage a campaign to encourage equity ownership.1 Chart 3 highlights that the authorities' efforts initially worked at boosting stock prices, by showing the strong relationship between the MSCI China A Onshore index and margin debt linked to the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges. But this experiment ultimately ended badly, and domestic stock prices and margin debt began to crash in the summer of 2015. In total, the MSCI China A Onshore index fell roughly 50% from June 2015 to January 2016, nearly rivaling the total decline experienced by the S&P 500 during the 2007-2009 global financial crisis. Chart 22014/2015 Was A Policy-Driven Bubble ##br##In Domestic Stocks Chart 3Easing Margin Debt Restrictions ##br##Had An Enormous Impact While domestic stocks have risen by an impressive 30% (12.5% annualized) since they troughed in early-2016, they have underperformed their investable peers (both overall and excluding technology) over the same period. This disappointing relative performance has caused many global investors to question whether they should bother investing in A-shares, and under what conditions, if any, should they favor domestic stocks over investable equities. A-Share Value No Longer Extreme... The narrative of a policy-driven bubble in 2014-2015 suggests that extreme overvaluation is the root cause of the recent underperformance of domestic Chinese equities. Chart 4 shows that this is indeed the case, by presenting the 12-month forward P/E ratio for MSCI China (our investable benchmark), MSCI China A Onshore, and All Country World. Chinese equities, both investable and domestic, were deeply discounted relative to global stocks in late-2014, reflecting the multi-year Chinese economic slowdown that began in mid-2010. But the government's campaign to encourage domestic stock ownership caused the A-share multiple to more than double in 12 months, and to exceed that of global stocks. Chart 4The Underperformance Of A-Shares, As Told By Multiples The multiple of investable equities also rose due to the campaign, but by a much smaller magnitude. It began to fall in mid-2015 alongside the domestic stock multiple but bottomed before the end of the year in response to signs that China's economy was about to enter the upswing of a mini economic cycle. The following 2 years saw investable equities re-rate significantly as China's economy recovered, whereas the still-elevated domestic market multiple simply trended sideways. But the bottom line for investors is that A-shares have worked off a good portion amount of the overvaluation that was caused by the policy-driven bubble of 2014-2015, meaning that their risk-reward profile has materially improved. ...But The Outlook For Domestic Stocks Is Uninspiring Given that domestic equities have largely closed their valuation gap relative to investable stocks, shouldn't investors be overweight the former? In our view, there are several factors currently arguing against an overweight stance towards A-shares: While we acknowledge the improvement in relative valuation, multiples at a level similar to the overall investable market are not cheap enough to make domestic stocks look highly attractive, given that the latter are no longer cheap themselves versus the global benchmark. We noted in our February 15 Weekly Report that investable technology stocks have been responsible for pushing our relative composite valuation indicator for China into overvalued territory over the past year,2 and we recommended in that report that investors continue to maintain their Chinese equity exposure on an ex-tech basis (which are considerably cheaper in relative terms). Given the fact that China's economy is slowing, and given that the corporate sector has substantially increased its leverage over the past decade, we believe that Chinese equities should be priced at some discount relative to global stocks. Chart 5 suggests that this discount is modest, at best. Chart 5 shows that domestic stocks are modestly cheap versus the global benchmark according to earnings and book value, but are expensive according to cash flow and dividends. While gaps of these kinds have existed in the past, the fact that cash-based measures have been lagging more accrual-based measures since 2013 raises the odds of a problem with earnings quality in the domestic market. This is a topic that we hope to revisit in the coming months, but for now it reinforces the view that the valuation discount applied to A-shares (versus global) is likely insufficient. Chart 6 presents a forecast for A-share earnings per share growth in U.S. dollars, based on its relationship with the Li Keqiang index. The chart shows that while a significant earnings contraction is not in the cards, the growth rate may fall to zero over the coming 6-12 months. This, in conjunction with only a minor valuation discount relative to global stocks, paints an uninspiring cyclical outlook for A-shares over the coming year. Chart 5The Current Valuation Discount Applied To A-Shares Is Modest, At Best Dispelling The Myth Of The "Casino" Market While we find the cyclical outlook for A-shares to be lackluster, the fact that valuation has improved significantly since mid-2015 is an important development from the perspective of regional equity allocation. From our perspective, A-shares should be on the radar screen of global investors as a potential market to favor if the opportunity presents itself, even if the cyclical conditions do not currently warrant an overweight stance. Besides the issue of regulated investability, one reason why global investors tend to overlook domestic Chinese stocks is the perception that A-shares are largely a "casino" market. Admittedly, the decision by policymakers in 2014 to effectively engineer a bubble in domestic stocks did not help to dispel this perspective. However, a closer examination of this question highlights that domestic Chinese equities are, while relatively volatile, hardly untethered from fundamentals at the broad index level. First, Chart 6 below highlighted that there is a close correlation between the Li Keqiang index and the growth rate of A-share trailing earnings. Earnings quality issues aside (the risk of which can be managed by assigning a valuation discount), this certainly does not suggest that A-share returns are more likely to be random than other stock markets. Second, as we noted in a September Special Report,3 the gap in the volatility of A-shares relative to other markets is slowly declining (Chart 7). More recently, the decline in A-share volatility appears to be due to the involvement of China's "national team", i.e. purchases by state-owned financial institutions that are designed to reduce the oscillation of daily price changes, and that began in the wake of the 2015 selloff with the goal of stabilizing the stock market. In the developed world, this type of government interference in financial markets is viewed with deep suspicion and is often referred to in the financial media as being necessary for the government to "prop up" its stock market to avoid an inevitable decline. Chart 6An Uninspiring Domestic Equity Earnings Outlook Chart 7A-Shares Are Relatively Volatile, But The Gap Is Narrowing But Chart 6 highlights how this is misleading: the recovery in A-share earnings that has occurred since 2015 is clearly legitimate given the mini-cycle upswing, meaning that China's "national team" has, at worst, prevented a sharp decline in an elevated multiple over the past two years. It is difficult to see this as anything but a genuine attempt at managing the workout process of a market that underwent a major shock, quite similar in concept to what the Federal Reserve did in the U.S. during the first few years of the subpar economic recovery. From our perspective, as long as this buying remains counter-cyclical and does not somehow interfere with the link between the economy and underlying earnings growth, this should argue in favor a global investor allocation to A-shares (via a lower equity risk premium), not against it. Third, a "casino" market that truly ignores fundamentals and is based heavily on herd-following behavior should rank as highly inefficient from the perspective of the Efficient Markets Hypothesis (EMH). We test whether the A-share market falls into this category by looking for two telltale signs of an inefficient market: whether past returns carry significant information about future returns, and whether simple technical trading rules can lead to outsized profits. Tables 1 and 2 present our findings: in Table 1, we show the F-statistic and R-squared of a second-order autoregression for several regional markets (higher numbers = less efficient), and in Table 2 we show the "win rate" of a trend following rule that buys stocks in the following month if the closing index price at the end of the prior month is above its 9-month moving average (higher win rate = less efficient). Table 1China's Domestic Market Is Less Inefficient Than It Used To Be Table 2Simple Technical Rules Don't Earn Outsized Profits In The A-Share Market The tables show that while there is some evidence to suggest that the A-share market has been relatively inefficient on average compared with other stock markets since the beginning of the last decade, this gap has been significantly reduced over the past few years. To us, this is a compelling sign that A-shares deserve a place within a global equity portfolio and should be favored when cyclical conditions warrant it. Investment Conclusions The ongoing economic slowdown in China means that the earnings outlook for domestic Chinese equities is uninspiring. When coupled with a modest (at best) valuation discount relative to global stocks, this suggests that global investors should have a neutral allocation to A-shares over the coming 6-12 months. However, the observable link between China's economy and domestic equity earnings growth means that investors should be looking to increase their allocation to A-shares on any signs of a pickup in Chinese economic activity. In particular, Chart 8 highlights that domestic stocks appear more likely to lead corporate bond spreads and housing market indicators than investable stocks are, suggesting that any significant easing in monetary policy or a continued improvement in the housing market could act as a potential catalyst to upgrade A-shares even within the context of a benign growth slowdown in China's industrial sector. Chart 8A-Shares Better Lead The Housing Market##br## And Domestic Corporate Bond Spreads As a final point, even if A-shares were to become a more attractive investment at some point in the future, investability remains somewhat of a challenge for some investors. Over the years, BCA's China Investment Strategy service has published and periodically updated our Research Note, "China Shop," as a practical guide for investors looking for exposure to Chinese assets. Our most recent edition, published last August, has a simple list of ETFs that investors can use to gain exposure to the domestic market when the right conditions present themselves.4 But for investors who wish to rank these ETFs based on a proprietary BCA methodology, or who want to easily compare key metrics such as liquidity, legal structure, constituents, sector exposure, performance, etc, BCA's Global ETF Strategy service has a new tool that will greatly assist the process. Effective mid-February, our Global ETF Strategy team launched a new completely redesigned interactive website, along with a Special Report that reviewed how investors can make the most of the matching engine at the heart of the platform (as well as how to best profit from the entire Global ETF Strategy service).5 Given the issues surrounding investability in China's domestic equity market, we highly recommend that any clients who are potentially interested in allocating to A-shares read the report, and take note of this unique, time-saving service. Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com 1 "China's State Media Join Brokerages Saying Buy Equities", Bloomberg News, September 4, 2014. 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "After The Selloff: A View From China", dated February 15, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "A Stock Market With Chinese Characteristics", dated September 21, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see China Investment Strategy Research Note, "China Shop: Calling Foreign Investors", dated August 10, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see Global ETF Special Report, "A User's Guide To Global ETF Strategy", dated February 14, 2018, available at etf.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights BCA's view is that while a major trade war is unlikely, trade tensions will persist. The Fed, not protectionism, will end the cycle. There have been five episodes in the past 35 years when global growth surged and fiscal, monetary and regulatory policy were all aligned to boost the U.S. economy. The March Beige Book keeps the Fed on track to hike four times this year. Feature The Trump Administration's announcement last week to slap hefty tariffs on steel and aluminum runs the risk of provoking a "tit-for-tat" trade war. This proposed levy follows a similar move earlier this year to impose tariffs on washers and solar panels. The EU has retaliated with a threat to introduce tariffs on Harley Davidson motorcycles and Levi's jeans. Even if a trade war develops, our Global Investment Strategy team notes1 that the U.S. would suffer less in a trade war than other nations, and that higher tariffs may lead to more domestic demand, a more aggressive Fed and a stronger dollar. Certainly, the tariff issue does not signal the end of the U.S. economic expansion or equity bull market. BCA's view is that while a major trade war is unlikely, trade tensions will persist. Our Geopolitical Strategy service states2 that investors should closely monitor bellwether factors for trade policies, including Trump's position on NAFTA, exemptions granted on the steel and aluminum tariffs to countries (such as Mexico and Canada) and most importantly, the treatment of intellectual property trade with China. Bottom Line: The end of the equity bull market will probably be due to an overheated U.S. economy and rising financial imbalances, and not escalating trade protectionism. Investors should remain overweight global equities for now, but look to pare back exposure later this year. Policy Panacea The backdrop for U.S. economic growth remains solid. Consensus global GDP projections for 2018 and 2019 have perked up, in contrast with prior years when forecasters issued relentless lower GDP estimates (Chart 1). Moreover, global exports growth is in a persistent uptrend since the earlier part of 2016 (Chart 2). Chart 1U.S. & Global Growth Expectations Are Still Accelerating The surge in global growth occurs even as China's economy is poised to slow. Among the components of BCA's Li Keqiang Leading Indicator (an index designed to lead turning points in the Li Keqiang), all six series are in a downtrend, and five fell in January (the growth in M2 was the exception).3 Although China's economy is decelerating, BCA's view is that a repeat of the late 2015/early 2016 shock is unlikely (Chart 3). Chart 2Global Exports##BR##Are Booming... Chart 3Our Composite LKI Indicator Suggests##BR##A Benign Slowdown In Growth In China The U.S. economy and financial markets will benefit from the uptick in global growth, a large dose of fiscal policy, still accommodative monetary policy, and a decline in regulation. Table 1 and Chart 4 show that there have been four other junctures in the past 35 years when these factors all pulled in the same direction to boost the U.S. economy. The current episode of synchronized policy commenced in January 2016. All four previous periods occurred closer to the start and not the end of a business cycle; BCA's stance is that the U.S. economy is in the late stages of an economic expansion that began in 2009. These phases lasted, on average, for just under two years. The current phase is entering its third year. The longest was in the early 2000s (2002-2004), while the shortest was a 14-month interval in the first year of the 1991-2001 economic expansion. Three of the prior four periods ended as fiscal policy turned restrictive. In the early 1980s' chapter, a reversal in global IP signaled the end of the growth sweet spot. Performance Of U.S. Financial Assets, Gold, Oil And Earnings When Global Growth Is Increasing Alongside Stimulative Monetary, Fiscal And Regulatory Policy .... Chart 4Global Growth, Fiscal, Monetary And Regulatory Policy##BR##All Pulling In The Same Direction Not surprisingly, risk assets perform well during these "tailwind" points (Table 1 again and Chart 5). The S&P 500 rose in the previous four periods and again in the current one. However, BCA's stock-to-bond ratio fell in the early 1990s and early 2000s. Credit tends to outperform Treasuries when monetary, fiscal and regulatory policy are synchronized, and small caps outperform large. This is the case in the current episode that began in January 2016. Gold and oil also perform well when global growth is surging, fiscal and monetary policy is stimulative and regulations are on the wane. However, on average, the dollar falls during these intervals as demonstrated in the early 2000s and early 2010s. S&P 500 earnings growth is solid and well above average during these phases. Chart 5U.S. Risk Assets In Periods Of Strong Global Growth And Synchronized Policy Push Table 2 shows that U.S. risk assets tend to struggle in the year after these legs end, but the economy keeps flourishing. Stocks underperformed bonds a year after the end of two of the four periods, but none of those periods coincided with a recession. Investment-grade and high-yield credit underperforms Treasuries in the ensuing 12 months, while small caps struggle to keep up with large. Gold performs well in three of the four periods, but oil posts a mixed performance. The dollar rises and S&P 500 earnings per share increase in the year after stretches of synchronous policy, but at a much slower pace than when the stimulative fiscal policy, deregulation and easy monetary policy are all in place. Table 2... What Happens In The 12 Months After These Episodes End... Tighter Fed policy will end the current era of pro-growth policies. BCA's stance is that the Fed will raise rates four times this year and another three or four times next year, pushing monetary policy into restrictive territory. U.S. fiscal policy will likely add to growth into the next year, thanks to tax cuts and the lifting of spending caps, and Trump will continue to look for deregulation opportunities. Bottom Line: Fed tightening will end the latest era of deregulation, easy monetary policy and stimulative fiscal policy, but not until early next year. Until then, a favorable backdrop will persist for stocks over bonds, credit, S&P 500 earnings and oil. Stay long stocks and credit, and underweight duration. This forecast assumes that the trade spat does not degenerate into a trade war. If that occurs, we would recommend reducing our overweight to risk assets sooner than early next year. Beige Book: More Tailwinds Fed Chair Powell's February 27 testimony to Congress noted that "some of the headwinds the U.S. economy faced in previous years have turned into tailwinds."4 The Beige Book released on March 7 highlights many of those tailwinds, keeps the Fed on track to boost rates at least three times this year and highlights the impact of the tax bill on the economy. BCA's quantitative approach5 to the Beige Book's qualitative data points to underlying strength in GDP and a tighter labor market. Furthermore, the disconnect between the Beige Book's view of inflation and the market's stance has eased. Moreover, references to a stronger dollar have disappeared from the Beige Book and business uncertainty is significantly reduced, reflecting the tax cut bill and Trump's assault on regulation. The latest Beige Book ran from mid-January to February 26 and, therefore, did not capture the business community's reaction to the tariff announcement in early March. Chart 6, panel 1 shows that at 67% in March, BCA's Beige Book Monitor stayed near its cycle highs, which reconfirms that the underlying economy was upbeat in early 2018. The number of 'weak' words in the Beige Book returned to near four-year lows after ticking higher in the wake of last summer's hurricanes. Moreover, there were 15 mentions of the tax bill in the March Beige Book, up from 12 in January and only 3 in November 2017 (not shown). The tax bill was cast in a positive light in 87% of the remarks in March versus 75% in January. In November, the references to either the tax bill (or tax reform) cited the consequent uncertainty as a constraint on growth. Chart 6Latest Beige Book Supports##BR##The Fed's View On Rates, Inflation And Economy Based on the minimal references to a robust dollar in the past six Beige Books, the greenback should not be an issue in Q4 2017 or Q1 2018. This sharply contrasts with 2015 and early 2016 when there were surges in Beige Book mentions (Chart 6, panel 4). The last time that six consecutive Beige Books had so few remarks about a strong dollar was in late 2014. BCA's stance is that the dollar will move modestly higher in 2018. Business uncertainty over government policy (fiscal, regulatory and health) multiplied in the past few Beige Books as Congress debated the tax bill. However, in general, these comments have dropped since Trump took office in early 2017. The implication is that the business community is correctly focused on policy and not politics in D.C. (Chart 6, panel 5). However, the controversy associated with the tariffs on steel and aluminum will add to business unease in the coming months unless Trump reverses his position. The disagreement between the Fed and the market on inflation narrowed in the March edition of the Beige Book (Chart 6, panel 3). The number of inflation words in the Beige Book rose to an 8 month high in March, reflecting the abrupt change in sentiment on inflation in early 2018 both in the business community and the market. In the past year, inflation words in the Beige Book climbed as the readings on CPI and PCE rolled over. In the past, increased references to inflation have led measured inflation by a few months, suggesting that the CPI and core PCE may soon turn up. Bottom Line: The March Beige Book supports BCA's view that the U.S. economy is poised to expand above its long-term potential in the first half of 2018. Moreover, the elevated soundings on inflation in the Beige Book in recent years have again proved prescience, as price measures are poised to turn higher. While the first few Beige Books in 2018 showed that the business and financial communities welcomed tax cut legislation, the next edition will likely reflect elevated concern over the nation's trade policies. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Research's Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Trump's Tariffs: A Q&A", published March 9, 2018. Available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy Client Note "Market Reprices Odds Of A Global Trade War", published March 6, 2018. Available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Research's China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "China And The Risk Of Escalation", published March 7, 2018. Available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 4 https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/testimony/powell20180226a.htm 5 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Great Debate Continues," published April 17, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com.