Equities
In mid-October we penned a Special Report identifying the top five reasons to favor cyclicals over defensives: capital expenditures upcycle, synchronized global growth in general and emerging markets (EM) growth in particular, U.S. dollar softness, risk premia suppression and diverging operating metrics.1 On the EM front in particular, China's recent inflationary impulse suggests that the path of least resistance remains higher for cyclicals versus defensives (top panel). Moreover, the bottom panel of the chart shows that over the past three decades when Chinese nominal GDP outpaces the U.S., EM stocks outperform the SPX and vice versa. In other words when China is firing on all cylinders commodity demand picks up steam and thus the most cyclical parts of the U.S. stock market outperform safe havens. Keep in mind that most cyclical sectors are levered to commodity prices, have high operating leverage and a sizable export exposure. One key risk that will put our cyclicals over defensives preference offside is a policy mistake from Chinese policymakers similar to the August 11, 2015 currency devaluation. However, this is a low probability event. Bottom Line: We reiterate out cyclical over defensive portfolio bent. 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy, "Top 5 Reasons To Favor Cyclicals Over Defensives," dated October 16, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
Overweight Selected Companies Dear Client, This week I am away visiting clients in Australia, so we are sending you this report written by my colleague Oleg Babanov (Emerging Market Equity Sector Strategy). Oleg identifies select companies in Austria as excellent conduits to emerging market growth whilst maintaining high standards of corporate governance. Oleg also has a list of top stocks in Poland, Russia and Turkey. Please contact us if you would like to see those additional picks. Dhaval Joshi Highlights We are recommending an overweight position in select Austrian companies on a long-term (one year-plus) time horizon. Austrian-listed companies traditionally have high exposure to Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) and other Emerging Markets (EM), while offering superior corporate governance standards, which secures a premium to EM peers. At the same time, geographically diversified revenues stemming from developed and emerging markets support less-volatile earnings growth and outperformance over the long-term. Table 1Single-Stock Statistics On Select Austrian Companies* Austrian Companies - EM Focused... Companies in Austria have traditionally been active in both Western Europe, with a main focus in Austria and Germany, as well as in the CEE region, providing investors with a unique access to both kind of markets. Sectors with high exposure include financials, with around 56% in emerging markets, consumer discretionary, with 46%, and materials with 45%. Furthermore, in terms of company count, pretty much every listed company in the materials as well as the real estate sector has exposure to emerging markets (Chart I-1A, Chart I-1B, Chart I-1C, Chart I-1D, Chart I-1E, Chart I-1F). Chart I-1AGeographical Revenue Breakdown Austria: ##br##Consumer Discretionary Chart I-1BGeographical Revenue Breakdown Austria: ##br##Financials Chart I-1CGeographical Revenue Breakdown Austria:##br## IT Chart I-1DGeographical Revenue Breakdown Austria:##br## Materials Chart I-1EGeographical Revenue Breakdown Austria: ##br##Real Estate Chat I-1FGeographical Revenue Breakdown Austria:##br## Utilities ...And With High Corporate Governance Standards The Austrian ATX equity index has significantly outperformed the MSCI EM index on both a long-term (+21% over five years and +27% over three years) and short-term time horizon (+12%) (Chart I-2A & Chart 1-2B). Chart I-2AFive-Year Performance: ##br##Austrian ATX Index Vs. MXEF Index Chart I-2BYTD Performance:##br## Austrian ATX Index Vs. MXEF Index We believe part of this outperformance is warranted by better corporate governance standards of Austrian companies, which score highly compared to their emerging market peers on all metrics, with the exception of environmental disclosure (Chart I-3A, Chart I-3B, Chart I-3C, Chart I-3D).1 Effectively such companies are offering investors access to emerging markets with less corporate risk, and better management and disclosure standards. Chart I-3AESG Disclosure Comparison Chart I-3BSocial Disclosure Comparison Chart I-3CEnvironment Disclosure Comparison Chart I-3DGovernance Disclosure Comparison Based on the findings above, we have created a portfolio of six companies from the consumer discretionary, financials, real estate and industrials sectors, combining exposure to emerging markets with a high ESG score and sound operational and financial performance (Table I-2). Table I-2Select Overweight Companies And ##br##12-Month Beta Vs. MSCI EM Sector Specifics Price performance over the past five years has been strong, with our overweight basket outperforming the broad MSCI EM index by 53% (Chart I-4). Valuations between Austrian banks and companies from other sectors are diverging. While non-bank companies are trading at a 16% premium to EM peers on a P/E basis, Austrian banks are trading at a 14% discount to the EM Banks Index on a price-to-book comparison (Chart I-5). Chart I-4Select Austrian Companies Outperforming##br## MSCI EM Index Chart I-5Valuations Are Diverging##br## Depending On Sector Nevertheless, Austrian companies display better bottom-line growth dynamics, helped by recovering performance on an operational level, translating into slightly higher profitability (Chart I-6A, Chart I-6B, Chart I-6C). Chart I-6AA Recovery In Operating Margins Of ##br##Austrian Companies In Late 2015... Chart I-6B...Has Helped EPS Growth To Outstrip EM ##br##Companies Since The End Of 2015... Chart I-6C...While Profitability Is Close ##br##To The EM Average Chart I-7ACash Flow Generation Is Subdued##br## Among Austrian Companies... Furthermore, despite negative cash flow generation for the select basket, Austrian companies have comfortable debt levels, and are paying out higher dividends than EM companies (Chart I-7A, Chart I-7B, Chart I-7C). Chart I-7B...With Debt Levels Close To The EM Average... Chart I-7C...And Dividend Yields Higher Than EM Peers The Overweight Basket Erste Group Bank (EBS AV) Erste Group Bank (EBS AV) (Chart I-8). Chart I-8Performance Since October 2016: ##br##Erste Group Bank vs. MSCI EM Erste Group Bank (EBS AV) reported better-than-expected third-quarter 2017 financial results on November 3. Net interest income stabilized, ticking up 1% year over year, mainly driven by the integration of Citigroup's consumer banking business in Hungary. Net interest margin was still under pressure, down 4 basis points year over year to 2.39%. Net fee and commission income expanded by 4%, supported by fee income, but was offset by trading income deterioration. Operating expenses grew by 3% year over year due to regulatory and IT project costs. With the decrease in provisions offsetting declining operating results, the bottom line rose by 8% year over year. Asset quality showed improvement, with the NPL ratio shrinking by a significant 111 basis points year over year to 4.3%. The company's tier-1 ratio grew by 2 basis points year over year to 13.4%. The market is estimating a 0.2% EPS CAGR over the next four years. We believe operating expenses should grow at a slower pace in the coming quarters, positively affected by decelerating regulatory and IT project investments. At the same time, we expect net interest income to continue to expand, driven by strong macro performance in the CEE region and countercyclical measures by the corresponding central banks. Raiffeisen Bank (RBI AV) Raiffeisen Bank (RBI AV) (Chart I-9). Chart I-9Performance Since October 2016:##br## Raiffeisen Bank vs. MSCI EM Raiffeisen Bank International (RBI AV) reported remarkable third-quarter 2017 financial results on November 14, solidly beating market expectations. Net interest income advanced by 4% year over year, with net interest margin up 4 basis points to 2.47%. Net fee and commission income climbed by 8% year over year, boosted by the bank's payment transfer business but offset by sluggish trading income as well as a one-off litigation cost in Slovakia. However, pre-provisional profit surged by 35% thanks to disciplined cost management. As a result, net income soared 46% year over year, substantially beating market expectations. Asset quality improvement was another positive. The NPL ratio came in at 6.7%, down 200 basis points year over year, aided by slower NPL formation and write-offs. The tier-1 capital ratio expanded by 100 basis points year over year to 13.4%. The market is estimating an 18% EPS CAGR over the next four years. We welcome the bank's digital transformation strategy in Romania. We believe the new version of the banking platform to be launched in 2018 will better support customers' needs and optimize the bank's transaction business. Andritz AG (ANDR AV) Andritz AG (ANDR AV) (Chart I-10). Chart I-10Performance Since October 2016:##br## Andritz vs. MSCI EM Andritz AG (ANDR AV) reported weak third-quarter 2017 financial results on November 3. Revenue contracted by 8% year over year, weaker across all business segments, especially in pulp and paper (-13%). This was reflected by a shrinkage in overall order intakes, down 9% year over year. In terms of geographic exposure, Andritz continues its sales expansion in Europe (+6%) and China (+25%). EBITDA fell 9% year over year, mainly dragged down by the materials business, despite this being moderately compensated by the separation business segment. EBITDA margin was also disappointing across the board, down 20 basis points year over year to 7.2%, except for the hydro segment (+154%). As a result, the bottom line declined by 20% year over year, missing market expectations. Andritz is trading at a forward P/E of 16.5x, while the market is estimating a 4.7% EPS CAGR over the next four years. Despite lower-than-expected third-quarter earnings, we remain bullish on the company, given its strong track record of business growth in difficult environments. Earlier this month, the company won a contract from SaskPower to refurbish a hydroelectric power station in Canada, with a total contract value of more than US$104 million. CA Immobilien Anlagen (CAI AV) CA Immobilien Anlagen (CAI AV) (Chart I-11). Chart I-11Performance Since October 2016: ##br##CA Immobilien Anlagen vs. MSCI EM CA Immobilien Anlagen AG (CAI AV) reported better-than-expected third-quarter 2017 financial results on November 22. Revenue increased by 5.6% year over year, helped by a 10% increase in rental income, as occupancy rates increased in all three major regions (Germany, Austria and CEE). On the operating side, expenses fell by 5% year over year, while income jumped by 21.4% year over year, pushing operating margin higher to 45.8% from 39.8% for the same period last year. The EBITDA grew 11% year over year. As a result of strong top line performance and a further decline in costs, bottom line expanded by 25% year over year on adjusted basis. CA Immo is trading at a forward P/E of 19.5x, while the market is estimating a 6% EPS CAGR over the next three years. Among some of the highlights of this quarter was the successful reduction in financing cost (-22% compared to the first quarter 2017). The new property additions in Budapest and Prague have already positively contributed to the results, and focus is now shifting to the future pipeline, which is heavily tilted towards Germany (in terms of projects). We expect the positive earnings momentum to continue in 2018. UBM Development (UBS AV) UBM Development (UBS AV) (Chart I-12). Chart I-12Performance Since October 2016:##br## UBM Development vs. MSCI EM UBM Development reported better-than-expected third quarter 2017 financial results on November 28. Quarterly revenue fell by 66.5% year over year, but nine-month output volume stood 18% higher, while operating expenses contracted by 66.7% year over year, helped by lower material costs. Nevertheless, operating income decreased by 70% compared to the same period last year, while operating margin finished 70 basis points lower at 7.9%. Pretax income was helped by a one off gain from affiliates, as a result, net profit climbed 10% compared to last year, and 24% for the first three quarters. On adjusted basis bottom line finished the quarter in negative territory. UBM Development is currently trading at a forward P/E of 10x, while the market is forecasting an EPS CAGR of 6.5% over the next three years. The company came close to reaching its debt reduction target of EUR 550 million, despite EUR 164 million of investments in the first half of the year. Improvements on the balance sheet should provide the company with cheaper financing in 2018. Furthermore, sales are on track, with another EUR 120 million of cash sales secured after the third quarter reporting period, bringing UBM close to its full achieving its full-year guidance. DO & CO (DOC AV) DO & CO (DOC AV) (Chart I-13). Chart I-13Performance Since October 2016: ##br##DO & CO vs. MSCI EM DO & CO (DOC AV) announced first-half year financial results on November 16. Revenues dropped by 10% year over year, primarily dragged down by the international event catering segment. EBITDA contracted accordingly, down 13% year over year. However, EBITDA margin remained stable in the international event catering as well as the restaurants and lounges segments. The bottom line came in shy of expectations, shrinking by 18% year over year. We believe the inclusion of a new customer - Juventus soccer club - will boost the margin further in the second-half of the year. DO & CO is trading at a forward P/E of 17.5x, while the market is estimating a 7.2% EPS CAGR over the next four years. The company is fairly valued compared to its five-year average, but trades at up to a 30% discount to its international peers. We believe that DO & CO should be able to crystalize the effects of a strong 2018 pipeline, with new clients in the airline segment (e.g. Lufthansa, and Air China) and the opening of new locations in Los Angeles and Paris (and expansions in London and New York). On a longer-term perspective, the positive outcome on possible construction of a third airport in Turkey would also boost performance. How To Trade? The EMES team recommends gaining exposure to this theme through a basket of listed equities consisting of six overweight recommendations. The main goal is active alpha generation by excluding laggards and including out-of-benchmark plays, to avoid passive index-hugging via an ETF. Direct: Equity access through the tickers (Bloomberg): Erste Group Bank (EBS AV); Raiffeisen Bank (RBI AV); Andritz AG (ANDR AV); CA Immobilien Anlagen (CAI AV); UBM Development (UBS AV); DO & CO (DOC AV). ETFs: iShares Austria Capped ETF (EWO US) provides exposure to all described companies. Funds: Pioneer Funds Austria (VIENTPF AV); 3 Banken Osterrrech-Fonds (3BKOESI AV); Raiffeisen-Oesterreich-Aktien (OSTAKTT AV). Please note this trade recommendation is long term (1Y+) and based on an overweight trade. We do not see a need for specific market timing for this call (for technical indicators please refer to our website link). For convenience, the performance of both market cap-weighted and equal-weighted equity baskets will be tracked (please see upcoming updates as well as the website link to follow performance). Risks To Our Investment Case On a macro level, we see the main risks stemming from possible asset-purchase tapering by the European Central Bank, which could slow GDP growth in Eastern Europe as well as trigger FX weakness and a slowdown in property markets. Taking into account that exposure to this region is high, such a scenario would most likely cause earnings headwinds for the selected companies, especially in the banking sector. Separately, some of the companies have high exposure to Russia and Turkey. Both countries are prone to geopolitical turbulence, as seen in the past, which in turn can negatively affect economic development and negatively affect companies. Company specific risks include higher rates of projects under construction in the real estate sector, with risks of delays and higher input costs inflating budgets. For Andritz, we see the main risk in the slowdown of capex in the European auto segment (which it seems already happened in the second quarter), and the possible need for additional restructuring in the auto division. We also see some regulatory risk for the banking segment from adverse regulations, such as the bank tax introduction already seen in Hungary, or possible increases in bank taxes in Austria. Oleg Babanov, Associate Vice President obabanov@bcaresearch.co.uk Billy Zicheng Huang, Research Analyst billyh@bcaresearch.com 1 BCA Estimates and Bloomberg Data
Highlights The growth momentum of China's recent mini-cycle has peaked, but the ongoing slowdown is likely to continue to remain benign in nature. A return to 2015-like conditions is not the most likely outcome over the coming year. Chinese policymakers are likely to increase their focus on reform efforts next year, but the pace will have to be modulated to avoid a repeat of the significant slowdown that occurred in 2014/2015. The risk of a policy mistake is a key theme to watch for 2018. Chinese ex-tech stocks have room to re-rate next year in a benign slowdown scenario. Investors should stay overweight Chinese investable equities vs EM and global stocks. Feature BCA recently published its special year end Outlook report for 2018,1 which described the macro themes that are likely to drive global financial markets over the coming year. In this week's China Investment Strategy report we expand on the Outlook, by reviewing our three key themes for China over the coming year. Key Theme # 1: A Benign End To China's Recent Mini-Cycle We presented our case that the cyclical slowdown of the Chinese economy will likely be benign in our October 12 Weekly Report. Chart 1 presents a stylized view of the Chinese economy over the past three years that was published in that report, which illustrated our framework of how cyclical growth conditions have evolved over this "mini-cycle". It also highlighted three possible scenarios for the coming 6-12 months, and noted that our bet was on scenario 2: A re-acceleration of the economy and a continuation of the V-shaped rebound profile A benign, controlled deceleration and settling of growth into the "stable" growth range, and An uncontrolled and sharp deceleration in the economy that threatens a return to the conditions that prevailed in early-2015 (or worse) Chart 1A Stylized View Of China's Recent "Mini-Cycle" Since we presented this framework, incoming evidence has been consistent with our call. Chart 2 shows that the Li Keqiang index has now decisively rolled over, but that economic conditions remain well away from their mid-2015 lows. We sketched out the basis for our benign slowdown view in our October 12 piece, but we followed up more formally in a two-part report that addressed the main factors arguing against a return to 2015-like conditions.2 Our view is grounded in the perspective that economic conditions in 2015 were not "normal", and we showed in these reports how a sharp slowdown in the economy was caused by an extremely weak external demand environment and overly tight monetary policy. On the trade front, Chart 3 highlights how Chinese export growth is likely to moderate over the coming several months, which argues against the re-acceleration scenario described above. Since mid-2011, Chinese export growth has lagged what most economic indicators would have predicted, and we noted in part I of our 2015 vs today comparison that this can be traced largely to two factors: a decline in global import intensity and, to a lesser extent, a decline in China's export "market share". Chart 2An Economic Slowdown In China##br## Is Now Underway Chart 3Chinese Export Growth Likely To##br## Converge To Global IP Growth Our analysis in that report suggested that China's 2018 export growth will converge to that of global industrial production, which implies a modest deceleration in the months ahead. Still, export growth of +4% would be a far cry from the significant contraction of exports that occurred in late-2015 / early-2016, which is consistent with a benign growth slowdown. On the monetary policy front, we showed how a monetary conditions approach captured the tightness of China's policy stance from 2012 to early-2015, which led to a material decline in China's industrial sector (Chart 4). Our Special Report last week further supported the view that monetary conditions matter enormously for China's economy; out of 40 macro data series that we tested to reliably predict the Chinese business cycle, only measures of money & credit passed our criteria.3 An aggregate indicator of these 6 series has a similar profile to the Bloomberg Monetary Conditions Index that we have shown in the past (Chart 4, panel 2), and neither suggests that a sharp further slowdown in China's economy is imminent. We will be watching these indicators closely in 2018 for signs of a more aggressive decline than we currently expect. Recently, some investors have pointed to a sharp rise in China's corporate bond yields as a sign that the monetary policy stance is, in fact, tighter than a standard monetary conditions approach would imply. Indeed, China's 5-year AA corporate bond yield has risen 230 bps since late-October 2016, from 3.6% to 5.9%, with most of this rise having occurred due to a rise in government bond yields. Corporate bond spreads have also risen, but relative to spreads on similarly-rated U.S. credit, the rise appears to reflect a rebound from extremely low levels late last year and is not (yet) symptomatic of major concerns over defaults (Chart 5). Chart 4The Ongoing Slowdown Is Likely ##br##To Be Benign Chart 5China's Corporate Bond Spreads ##br##Do Not Yet Look Onerous We are not complacent of the potential risk posed by rising corporate bond yields, and a further significant rise in 2018 could change our view that a benign economic slowdown is the most likely outcome. But for now, the fact that the stock of corporate bond issuance accounts for only 10% of ex-equity social financing suggests that the rise in yields this year is not likely to have an outsized impact on the economy in 2018, beyond the impact that monetary tightening has had on overall average interest rates (which, for now, is material but has not returned rates back to their 2015 levels). Chart 6The Rise In CPI Will Likely Soon Peak Finally, the 85 bps rise in Chinese core consumer price inflation that has occurred over the past year has also fed investor concerns that monetary policy will become even tighter next year. To us, this risk is probably overblown, given that demand-driven inflation lags growth (which has clearly peaked). Chart 6 shows the year-over-year change in Chinese core CPI vs that of the Li Keqiang index, and clearly suggests that the acceleration in core prices is likely to soon abate. Poor communication from the PBOC means that it is not clear how prominently core inflation features into the central bank's reaction function, but given that tighter monetary conditions have already caused a peak in both house prices and growth momentum, we doubt that policymakers will see the recent rise in consumer prices as a basis to aggressively tighten further. Bottom Line: The growth momentum of China's recent mini-cycle has peaked, but a return to 2015-like conditions is not the most likely outcome over the coming year. Key Theme # 2: Monitoring The Pace Of Renewed Structural Reforms We have written several reports concerning China's 19th Communist Party Congress over the past three months, both in the lead-up to the event and as a post-mortem.4 The Congress was significant because it likely heralds stepped-up reform efforts in 2018 and beyond. By "reforms", our Geopolitical Strategy team specifically means deleveraging in the financial sector accompanied by a more intense anti-corruption campaign focused on the shadow-banking sector, as well as ongoing restructuring in the industrial sector. Table 1 presents our geopolitical team's assessment of the likely reform scenarios and probabilities over the coming year. It should be clearly noted that the "reform reboot" scenario as described in Table 1 is likely negative for emerging market equities and other plays on China's industrial sector (such as industrial metals). Table 1Post-Party Congress Scenarios And Probabilities We agree that the "status quo" scenario of no significant reforms is highly unlikely given that President Xi has succeeded in amassing tremendous political capital and that he has an agenda for reform. But the intensity of reforms pursued over the coming year will have to be closely monitored by policymakers, to avoid a repeat of the significant slowdown that occurred in 2014/2015. As such, the view of BCA's China Investment Strategy service is that the reform efforts over the coming year will be structured at a pace that is sufficient to avoid a meaningful deceleration in China's industrial sector and is conducive to the outperformance of Chinese ex-technology stocks. However, the potential for a brisk pace of reforms to cause a more acute decline in industrial activity in 2018 is a risk to our view that China's ongoing economic slowdown is likely to be benign and controlled. We presented our framework for monitoring this risk in our November 16 Weekly Report,5 specifically our BCA China Reform Monitor (Chart 7). The monitor is calculated as an equally-weighted average of four "winner" sectors that outperformed the investable benchmark in the month following the Party Congress relative to an equally-weighted average of the remaining seven sectors. Significant underperformance of "loser" sectors could become a headwind for broad MSCI China outperformance (especially ex-tech), and we will be watching in 2018 for signs that our monitor is rising largely due to outright declines in the denominator. Chart 7Our Reform Monitor Will Help Us Judge ##br##Whether The Pace Of Reforms Becomes Too Burdensome For now, there is no indication that reform risk is affecting the performance of the MSCI China index. Panel 2 of Chart 7 highlights that recent movements in our Reform Monitor have been driven by the "winner" sectors, with the recent selloff largely reflecting a modest correction in global technology stocks sparked by the passage of the U.S. Senate's tax reform plan.6 But we will be watching the monitor closely in 2018, and will adjust it as needed in reaction to additional reform announcements over the coming months. Finally, next year's reform announcements will be highly significant not just because of the "what", but also the "how". It is difficult to see how China's leadership can aggressively pare back heavy-polluting industry and deleverage the financial sector without destabilizing the economy in the near term, but their goal to significantly raise China's per capita GDP and escape the "middle income trap" over the long-term is equally nebulous. We have noted in previous reports that a country's income level is fundamentally determined by its productivity, which is in turn determined by the level and sophistication of its capital stock. Chart 8 shows a clear positive correlation between a country's per capita output, a measure of productivity, and its per capita capital stock. In general, industrialized countries enjoy much higher levels of per capita capital stock than developing economies, leading to much higher productivity, income, and living standards. Therefore, the process of industrialization is fundamentally a process of accumulation of capital stock through investment. As shown in Chart 9, despite some remarkable achievements, the productivity level of the average Chinese worker is still just a fraction of the level in more advanced countries. Conventional economics would suggest that if China wishes to keep progressing on the productivity and income ladder, that it should remain on the path of growing the capital stock through savings and investment. If, however, it abandons its current growth model and "rebalances" towards a consumption-driven one, the risk that the country will stagnate and fail to advance beyond the "middle income trap" looms large. Chart 8Productivity Is Positively Correlated ##br##With Capital Stock Chart 9China's Catchup Process ##br## Has A Lot Further To Run Chart 10 makes this point from a different perspective. At root, China's leadership is describing the desire to rapidly transition towards an economy with a much higher level of tertiary industry (services) as a share of GDP, but the U.S. experience suggests that this is a long process that is not investment-oriented. The chart shows the evolution of U.S. investment in private services excluding real estate as a share of total private fixed assets since 1947, when the U.S. had only a slightly higher level of real per capita GDP than China today. It has taken almost 70 years for the share of private services ex real estate to rise by 16 percentage points in the U.S., and it has yet to account for the majority of private fixed investment.7 Services activity/investment also typically requires a highly educated workforce as an input, and rate of China's post-secondary educational attainment appears to be too low to fit the bill (Chart 11). In short, crucial details about China's reform plan should hopefully emerge in 2018, which are likely to have both near-term and multi-year implications. Bottom Line: Chinese policymakers are likely to increase their focus on reform efforts next year, but the pace will have to be modulated to avoid a repeat of the significant slowdown that occurred in 2014/2015. The risk of a policy mistake is a key theme to watch for 2018. Chart 10China Cannot Easily Replace 'Hard' Investment Chart 11China's Workforce Is Not Well Equipped To Transition To Services Key Theme # 3: The Relative Re-Rating Of Chinese Investable Ex-Tech Stocks Over the past several years, this publication argued strongly that the valuation discount applied to Chinese equities was unjustified. For the investable benchmark, the past two years of material outperformance vs emerging market and global stocks has removed a significant portion of this discount, and we noted in our August 31 Weekly Report that Chinese equities are no longer "exceptionally cheap".8 However, a good portion of this revaluation has been isolated to the tech sector. Chart 12 shows that while the 12-month forward P/E ratio for Chinese tech stocks is 70% higher than the global average, ex-tech shares still trade at a 37% relative discount. Chart 13 echoes this conclusion by showing the ex-tech price-to-book ratio for every country in MSCI's All Country World index; by this metric China's ex-tech cheapness currently ranks in the 85th percentile, behind only Israel, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Korea, Russia, and Greece. Chart 12China: Expensive Tech, Extremely Cheap Ex-Tech Chart 13China's Ex-Tech P/B Ratio Among The Lowest In The World Charts 12 and 13 are weighted simply by the remaining market capitalization in each country's market after excluding the technology sector, meaning that the deep discount applied to Chinese banks wields a disproportionate influence (financials would make up 40% of China's MSCI ex-tech "index", if one officially existed). Although we agree that the magnitude of the rise in debt over the past several years warrants somewhat of a P/B discount, we would argue that the risk is more earnings and dilution-related rather than solvency-related. It is highly unlikely that the Chinese government would allow large banks to fail outright in the event of a serious financial crisis, but the potential for a rise in provisioning and significant new capital raising suggests that the risk premium for these stocks should be somewhat higher than what would otherwise be normal. Chart 14China's Banks Can Re-Rate ##br##In A Benign Slowdown Scenario Still, either the Chinese bank risk premium is excessive, or the banking sectors of several major DM countries are significantly overvalued. For example, Chinese investable banks trade at a P/B ratio of 0.8, but Canadian, Australian, and Swedish banks trade at an average P/B ratio of 1.7. If the concern over credit excesses is the source of the higher risk premium applied to Chinese banks, Chart 14 suggests that there is a major inconsistency in pricing; an equally-weighted average of Canadian, Australian, and Swedish private sector debt-to-GDP is higher than that of China's, at 214% vs 211% as of Q2 this year. Our bet is the former: In a world where outsized returns are scarce and U.S. equities are overvalued, a benign growth deceleration and a modulated pace of reforms favor a lessening of the substantial valuation discount currently applied to China's investable ex-tech stocks. Barring a more pronounced slowdown in China's economy than we currently expect, investors should stay overweight the MSCI China investable index in 2018, within both an emerging markets and global equity portfolio. Bottom Line: Chinese ex-tech stocks have room to re-rate in a benign slowdown scenario. Investors should stay overweight Chinese investable stocks in 2018. Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Special Report, "2018 Outlook - Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," dated November 20, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Reports "China's Economy - 2015 Vs Today (Part I): Trade", dated October 26, 2017, and "China's Economy - 2015 Vs Today (Part II): Monetary Policy", dated November 9, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "The Data Lab: Testing The Predictability Of China's Business Cycle", dated November 30, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see China Investment Strategy and Geopolitical Strategy Special Reports, "China's Nineteenth Party Congress: A Primer", dated September 14, 2017, "How To Read Xi Jinping's Party Congress Speech", dated October 18, 2017, and BCA Special Report "China: Party Congress Ends ... So What?", dated November 2, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Messages From The Market, Post-Party Congress", dated November 16, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 6 The Senate bill that was passed this week unexpectedly retained 20% alternative minimum tax (AMT) for corporations, which would disproportionately impact U.S. technology companies. Indications currently suggest that the final tax cut bill to be approved by both houses of Congress will repeal the AMT. 7 In 2016, real estate investment accounted for roughly 29% of total private investment in fixed assets, and the sum of primary and secondary industry (agriculture, mining, utilities, construction, and manufacturing) accounted for about 28%. 8 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "A Closer Look At Chinese Equity Valuations", dated August 31, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights We are putting the Indonesian stock market on an upgrade watch list. Indonesia's financial markets' beta relative to EM peers has been declining. As such, Indonesian markets will likely outperform the EM benchmark in a sell-off. Inflation in Mexico is peaking and will drift lower. The Mexican peso is particularly attractive relative to the South African rand and the Brazilian real. However, we still recommend that investors maintain a neutral stance on Mexican assets relative to EM peers until more clarity emerges from the NAFTA negotiations. Feature Indonesia: Putting On Upgrade Watch List Indonesian share prices have considerably underperformed the EM benchmark since February 2016 (Chart I-1). This has occurred despite exports growing at an annual rate of 18% in U.S. dollar terms in 2017. The surge in Indonesian exports has been largely driven by soaring prices for thermal coal, palm oil and copper. Export prices have soared by 24% for coal and copper and 11% for palm oil from their lows in early 2016. Nevertheless, their export volumes have been rather stagnant (Chart I-2). These commodities are large drivers of Indonesia's exports. Thermal coal and palm oil account for around 20% of total exports, while copper accounts for around 4%, in value terms. Chart I-1Indonesian Stock Prices: Relative & Absolute Chart I-2Indonesian Exports: Volume Vs. Prices We expect coal1 and base metals prices to drop considerably in 2018 due to China's meaningful growth slowdown. Having this backdrop in mind, we discuss the outlook for Indonesia's stock market in both absolute and relative terms. We continue recommending a neutral allocation to Indonesian stocks within an EM equity portfolio for now, but are putting this bourse on an upgrade watch list and will wait for the following triggers to go overweight: Chart I-3Chinese & Indonesian Equities: ##br##A Rotating Dance The first trigger is when Chinese H-shares and large-cap tech stocks begin underperforming the EM overall equity index. Interestingly, the relative performance of Indonesian equities and Chinese stocks has been negatively correlated (Chart I-3). Indonesia's stock market's underperformance relative to the EM benchmark can be also partially explained by the manic rise in a small number of EM large-cap tech stocks. Tech stocks are absent from Indonesia's stock exchange and when tech stocks' relative performance does turn south, it will be easier for the Indonesian bourse to outperform the EM benchmark. The second trigger for upgrading Indonesian stocks is when the initial phase of decline in commodities prices (10-15%) occurs. This phase could be the most painful for commodities plays like Indonesia, as nervous investors bail out. In short, we are waiting for the momentum of Indonesia's relative performance to turn up before overweighting the bourse. Domestic Demand And Exports: Parting Ways? The Indonesian economy and its financial markets have historically been highly correlated with commodities prices and exports: a positive external shock would trigger an export boom and foreign inflows would ensue. These inflows would in turn lead to currency appreciation and a subsequent fall in interest rates. The end result was the overheating of the economy and financial markets. Recently, however, Indonesia's economy and financial markets have been slowly disconnecting from exports in general and commodities prices in particular. The top panel of Chart I-4 shows that while exports used to be extremely correlated with the rupiah, these correlations have been breaking down since early 2016. Similarly, a disconnect is occurring between exports and other domestic macro variables like bank loans (Chart I-4, bottom panel). What is also noteworthy is the absence of a notable pickup in domestic demand growth amid the strong recovery in global trade. Chart I-5 shows that car and motorcycle sales are still anemic. Chart I-4Disconnect Between Indonesian ##br##Exports Vs. Rupiah & Bank Loans Chart I-5Indonesia's Domestic Sector Remains Sluggish Below are some of the reasons that help shed light as to why this divergence between exports and domestic demand has been taking place: First, the ratio of Indonesia's commodities' exports to total has fallen more sharply than in other commodities-producing EM nations (Chart I-6). Exports have also become generally less important for the overall Indonesian economy post the global financial crisis. Chart I-7 shows that private non-financial debt as a whole has risen, while exports have fallen as a share of GDP. Chart I-6Indonesia's Commodities ##br##Exports Ratio Has Plunged Chart I-7Private Debt Is A Bigger Driver Of ##br##Indonesia's Economy Than Exports The government has been following cautious and prudent policies. This is another reason why domestic demand growth has been mediocre amid robust exports. Chart I-8 signifies that growth in government expenditures has stalled in nominal terms and contracted in real terms. Indeed, the impulse in the banking system's net domestic assets (the combined aggregate of the central bank and commercial banks) remains negative, albeit improving on a rate of change basis (Chart I-9). Net domestic assets (NDA) measure the banking system's2 credit to the domestic sector - i.e. the government and the private sector. Chart I-8Indonesia's Government ##br##Has Been Prudent Chart I-9Banking System's Net Domestic ##br##Assets & Fiscal Deposit Drain The NDA impulse has been negative because the government has borrowed less from the banking system. In addition, the government has been shifting deposits from commercial banks to the central bank (Chart I-9, bottom panel). This has drained liquidity in the system and has slowed broad money growth and capped commercial banks' reserves at Bank Indonesia. As the potential negative term-of-trade shock transpires, the government will have enough of a buffer to spend by deploying its deposits from the central bank and by borrowing and spending more. That will in turn provide support for the economy when commodities prices fall and the external sector suffers. Chart I-10Central Bank Has Been Building FX Firepower As for the currency, the central bank has recently accumulated plenty of foreign exchange assets, creating commercial bank reserves in the process (Chart I-10). The central bank now has plenty of room to defend the currency by selling foreign assets when the rupiah comes under selling pressure. Bank Indonesia will also have more leeway managing a reasonable balance between a depreciating currency and rising local interbank rates. Bottom Line: Indonesia's domestic demand has been mediocre, despite the surge in exports and commodities prices. Meanwhile, the central bank and the government have used the positive global environment to accumulate firepower. This puts them in a position to act as shock absorbers when the external environment turns hostile. As a result, the Indonesian financial markets' beta to their EM peers will decline. We therefore recommend putting the Indonesian stock market on an upgrade watch list. Consistently, the potential downside in the currency and a sell-off in the domestic bond markets will be smaller than we previously anticipated. While still advocating a cautious/neutral stance on this market, we will be looking to upgrade it to overweight versus its EM peers after the first phase of a potential EM and commodities sell-off transpires. Ayman Kawtharani, Associate Editor ayman@bcaresearch.com Mexico: Waiting For A Better Entry Point In Mexico, inflation has very likely peaked and will drift lower as the central bank maintains a tight monetary policy stance: A large part of the rise in inflation in 2017 was caused by depreciation in the peso. The firmness in the peso this year entails that inflation will roll over soon (Chart II-1). Consumer spending and capital expenditure are set to contract as the impact of higher interest rates continue to filter through the economy (Chart II-2). In fact, domestic vehicles sales are shrinking sharply. Chart II-1Mexico: Peso & Inflation Chart II-2Higher Interest Rates Are ##br##Slowing Domestic Spending Furthermore, weak real wage growth will continue to weigh on consumer spending (Chart II-3). In addition, contracting fiscal non-interest expenditures will remain a headwind on economic growth (Chart II-4). Chart II-3Lower Real Wages = Lower Inflation Chart II-4Belt-Tightening By The Government Finally, one-off effects on inflation - such as the gasoline subsidy removal that took place at the end of last year - will subside as the base effect of these price increases abates. The inflation rate will in turn moderate. Despite all this, Banxico will continue to keep monetary policy tight due to lingering uncertainty related to NAFTA negotiations. Within the EM currency universe, the Mexican peso is particularly attractive relative to the South African rand and the Brazilian real. We will be looking to reinstate long positions in the MXN versus both the ZAR and the BRL for the following reasons: Relative trade balance dynamics will continue to favor Mexico relative to South Africa and Brazil. Mexican exports are likely to remain robust due to strong U.S. growth (Chart II-5), while South African and Brazilian exports will slow down as China's growth and imports falter (Chart II-6). Chart II-5Mexican Exports Will Remain ##br##Robust Due To Strong U.S. Growth Chart II-6South African & Brazilian Exports ##br##Will Take A Hit As China Slows Furthermore, metals prices will be affected more negatively than oil prices due to China's growth slump. China's share of world consumption in base and industrial metals at 50-55% is much larger than oil (12.5%). This will leave Mexican exports less negatively affected than those of Brazil and South Africa. Mexico does not suffer from rapidly rising public debt like Brazil and South Africa (Chart II-7). Large fiscal deficits and rising public debt burdens in Brazil and South Africa require a higher risk premium in their respective financial markets, leaving further room for the MXN to outperform both the BRL and the ZAR. While Mexico has already gone through some structural reforms, Brazil and South Africa have yet to deliver any substantial efforts on that front. This leaves Mexico in a much better position to attract long-term capital inflows compared to Brazil and South Africa. Finally, on a real effective exchange rate basis, the peso remains cheap relative to the rand and the real (Chart II-8). Chart II-7Public & Private Debt Is Lower In Mexico Chart II-8The Mexican Peso Is Still Cheap We closed our long MXN/BRL and long MXN/ZAR trades on October 25th because at present there is too much uncertainty with respect to NAFTA negotiations that could have a negative impact on the peso. However, with regards to the national general elections, uncertainty in South Africa and Brazil is even greater than in Mexico. In Mexico, the anti-establishment candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador is currently leading the polls, but his new party - National Regeneration Movement (MORENA) - is unlikely to gain a majority in Congress. Investment Conclusions We recommend that investors maintain a neutral stance across all asset classes in Mexico and wait for clarity on NAFTA3 negotiations before going overweight the country's currency and fixed-income markets relative to their EM peers. Mexican stocks have been selling off sharply in absolute terms and have substantially underperformed the EM benchmark. This poor performance is mainly attributed to financials and consumer discretionary stocks. While these two sectors only account for 20% of the total MSCI market cap, the retrenchment in their share price has been large enough to bring the whole market down. We have the following observations on these two equity sectors: The consumer discretionary sector has been underperforming due to disappointing earnings. Our bias is that it is still too early to call a bottom in the consumer cycle in Mexico. With regards to banks, we believe that tight monetary policy will continue to weigh on their share prices. More importantly, the yield curve remains inverted, and until we see it steepen, it will be hard for banks to rally. All in all, we continue recommending a neutral weighting in Mexican stocks within an EM equity portfolio. Stephan Gabillard, Senior Analyst stephang@bcaresearch.com 1 Please refer to the Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report, titled "China's 'De-Capacity' Reforms: Where Steel & Coal Prices Are Headed," dated November 22, 2017, the link is available on page 15. 2 Banking system is the sum of the central bank and commercial banks. 3 Please refer to the Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, titled "Nafta - Populism Vs. Pluto-Populism," dated November 10, 2017, the link is available at gps.bcaresearch.com Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
As we near the end of an impressive year for equities, the relationship between price growth and earnings growth and how to best position a portfolio for 2018 bears some reflection. Rather than take a position on inflation or growth, we have endeavored to create a roadmap such that investors can allocate according to their expectations for both and also avoid potential pitfalls and embrace likely winners. The mean reverting nature of S&P 500 earnings growth makes discerning a pattern difficult but, more often than not, there is a positive correlation with rising inflation. Breaking returns down by sector is revealing: first, stock performance tracks earnings growth in all periods, implying that fundamentals lead valuation, as they should. Second, empirical evidence supports sector allocation theory in inflationary boom/bust periods. Please see this week's Special Report for more details, including a deeper look at three of the GICS2 top and two bottom quartile performers when inflation is rising.
GAA DM Equity Country Allocation Model Update One thing worth noting is that the model now is neutral on Canada, after a long-standing underweight. Canada's valuation ranking had been improving, but the signal was only confirmed this month by the technical ranking. There are no significant changes among other countries, as shown in Table 1. As shown in Table 2 and Charts 1, 2 and 3, the overall model underperformed its benchmark by 68 bps in November as the model was underweight both the U.S. and Japan, which were the only two countries to outperform the MSCI World benchmark in November! The underweight in the U.K. and Australia worked well, but not enough to offset the loss from the overweight of the euro area. Since going live in January 2016, the overall model has outperformed the benchmark by 157 bps, largely from the allocation among the 11 non-U.S. countries, which has outperformed its benchmark by 489 bps. Table 1Model Allocation Vs. Benchmark Weights Table 2Performance (Total Returns In USD) Chart 1GAA DM Model Vs. MSCI World Chart 2GAA U.S. Vs. Non U.S. Model (Level1) Chart 3GAA Non U.S. Model (Level 2) Please see also on the website http://gaa.bcaresearch.com/trades/allocation_performance. For more details on the models, please see the January 29, 2016 Special Report, "Global Equity Allocation: Introducing the Developed Markets Country Allocation Model." http://gaa.bcaresearch.com/articles/view_report/18850. Please note that the overall country and sector recommendations published in our Monthly Portfolio Update and Quarterly Portfolio Outlook use the results of these quantitative models as one input, but do not stick slavishly to them. We believe that models are a useful check, but structural changes and unquantifiable factors need to be considered too in making overall recommendations. GAA Equity Sector Selection Model The GAA Equity Sector Selection Model (Chart 4) is updated as of November 30, 2017. Chart 4Overall Model Performance Table 3Allocations Table 4Performance Since Going Live The model has turned more bullish on global growth and consequently increased the aggregate cyclical overweight. However, within the cyclical basket there has be re-shuffle from resources-based sectors to consumer discretionary and technology stocks. This was driven by improving momentum in these two sectors. Finally, utilities stocks have been downgraded to underweight on the back of the bullish growth outlook. For more details on the model, please see the Special Report "Introducing The GAA Equity Sector Selection Model," July 27, 2016 available at https://gaa.bcaresearch.com. Xiaoli Tang, Associate Vice President xiaoli@bcaresearch.com Aditya Kurian, Research Analyst adityak@bcaresearch.com
Watching The Warning Signals Recommended Allocation Two of the three indicators we have focused on all year as reliable signals of recession (and, therefore, of the timing for reducing exposure to risk assets) have wobbled in the past month. But, for now, we are not too concerned about this, and continue to argue that the current bull market has maybe another year to run, until a possible 2019 recession starts to get priced in. Global growth indicators are showing no signs of slowdown, with the Global Manufacturing PMI at 53.5, and 26 of the 29 markets for which Markit runs its survey returning a PMI above 50 - close to the highest percentage on record (Chart 1). However, the flattening yield curve in the U.S. has raised concerns: the gap between the yield on two-year and 10-year Treasuries has fallen to less than 60 bps (Chart 2). But a flattening yield curve is not unusual when the Fed is tightening policy, and historically the curve has needed to invert before it became a recession signal. Also of concern was a jump in early November in high-yield spreads, which have also been a good lead indicator for recession (Chart 3). The rise was caused by poor earnings from lowly-rated telecoms companies, which triggered a sell-off in junk bond ETFs. But the rise in spreads remains insignificant, and has mostly reversed since. Chart 1Global Growth Looks Fine... Chart 2But Should We Worry About The Yield Curve... Chart 3...And Rising Credit Spreads? BCA's macro view, as laid out in detail in our recent 2018 Outlook,1 is that the strong growth that has been a positive for risk assets this year will slowly become a negative next year as it is increasingly accompanied by rising inflation. Two-thirds of countries globally now have unemployment below the NAIRU (Chart 4). In the U.S., employment has reached a level at which the Philips Curve has historically been "kinky", associated with an acceleration in wage growth (Chart 5). Upside surprises in inflation will mean that the Fed will hike three or four times next year (compared to the market's expectation of only 1½ hikes), 10-year bond yields will rise to above 3%, and the dollar will appreciate. Chart 4Unemployment Is Below Nairu In Most Places Chart 5The 'Kinky' U.S. Philips Curve What are the implications of this scenario for portfolio construction? We continue to recommend an overweight on risk assets on the 12-month time horizon, as we would expect equities to outperform bonds until Fed policy tightens above the neutral level (which is still about five rate hikes away, as long as core PCE inflation picks up to 2%, as we expect - Chart 6). However, the risks to this scenario are rising. The Fed could stubbornly push ahead with rate hikes even if inflation remains subdued. Chinese growth could slow if the authorities misjudge the timing of structural reforms. Our geopolitical strategists argue that, while investors overestimated political risks at the start of 2017, now they are underestimating the risks (North Korea, NAFTA renegotiation, China trade issues, Italian elections).2 With valuations stretched, small shocks could trigger a disproportionate negative market reaction. More risk-averse investors, therefore, might choose to reduce exposure now, at the risk of leaving some money on the table. Equities: If global equities have further upside, as we believe, higher beta markets such as the euro zone (average beta to global equities over the past 20 years: 1.2) and Japan (beta: 0.9) are likely to continue to outperform. Both have central banks that remain accommodative, our models suggest further upside for earnings growth into next year (Chart 7), and valuations are less stretched than in the U.S. While EM equities are also high beta, we think they are likely to lag next year: higher U.S. interest rates, a stronger U.S. dollar, potential slowdown in China, and sluggish domestic demand in most major emerging economies all represent significant headwinds. Chart 6How Long Until Rates Above Neutral? Chart 7Euro and Japan Earnings Have Upside Fixed Income: A combination of higher inflation and a more aggressive Fed is not a positive environment for government bonds. We expect the yield curve to steepen over the next six months, as the market prices in higher inflation and fiscal deficits (after the U.S. tax cut), but to resume flattening mid next year, as the Fed pushes ahead with rates hikes, and worries about the risk of a policy error emerge. For now, we remain underweight duration, and prefer inflation-linked over nominal bonds. For spread product, while valuations are stretched, we see some attractiveness. As long as the global expansion continues, U.S. investment grade bonds should see a carry pickup over Treasuries of around 100 bps, and high-yield bonds one of around 250 bps (adjusting for likely defaults) - even if we don't assume further spread contraction. In a world of continuing low rates, that remains alluring. Currencies will continue to be driven by relative monetary policy. While we see the Fed tightening more than the market expects, the ECB will not raise rates until late 2019, since underlying inflationary pressures in the euro zone are much weaker. This is largely in line with what the futures market is pricing in. Interest rate differentials (and an unwind of the current large speculative long-euro positions) should cause some weakness of the euro versus the dollar. We expect the Bank of Japan to stick to its 0% target for 10-year JGBs, which means that the yen will also weaken, to below 120 to the dollar, if U.S. interest rates rise in line with our forecasts (Chart 8). Emerging market currencies have already fallen by 1.3% since early September as U.S. rates rose, and amid signs of economic weakness in some emerging economies. We expect this to continue. Chart 8Yen Is Driven By U.S. Rates Chart 9China Is What Matter For Metals Commodities: Our energy strategists recently raised their target for Brent and WTI crude to an average over the next two years of $65 and $63 respectively, with risk of upside surprises in the event of geopolitical disruptions (Venezuela, Kurdistan etc.). They see the OPEC agreement being extended possibly to December 2018, and argue that backwardation of the oil curve (futures prices lower than spot) and rising extraction costs will delay the response of shale oil producers to the higher price. The outlook for industrial commodities depends, as always, on China, which now comprises greater demand for base metals than the rest of the world put together (Chart 9). The risk of a slowdown in Chinese infrastructure spending next year makes us wary on metals such as iron ore, and markets such as Australia and Brazil. Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Global Asset Allocation garry@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Special Report, "2018 Outlook - Policy And The Markets On A Collision Course," dated 20 November 2017, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "From Overstated To Understated Risks," dated 22 November 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com GAA Asset Allocation