Financials
While the Fed’s dots dovishly surprised, the FOMC’s output and inflation projections were on the hawkish side. Adding the committee’s core PCE price inflation estimate for 2021 to their real GDP forecast results in a roughly 9% nominal GDP estimate, assuming the PCE and GDP deflators approximate one another. The last time the US economy hit such a high mark on a q/q annualized basis (ex-2020) was in late-2003 (Chart 1). Back then the Bush tax cuts were signed into law in late May 2003 turbocharging the economy. Chart 2 shows that the fed funds rate was pegged at 1% and the bond market was in selloff mode, with both the 10-year US Treasury yields surging violently and inflation breakevens galloping higher. While the S&P eventually shrugged off the bond market’s new equilibrium yield, drilling beneath the surface is revealing. Chart 1
Shades Of 2003/4?
Shades Of 2003/4?
Chart 2
Shades Of 2003/4?
Shades Of 2003/4?
As a reminder, back then the Fed was actually sowing the seeds of the housing bubble by keeping rates at 1%, which resulted in an economy running on steroids. Deep cyclical sectors outperformed the SPX and defensives significantly lagged the broad market especially as the economic data caught on fire in 2004 (see Appendix Charts A1, A2, A3, ). Financials were range bound and relative tech performance slumped in 2004 (for inclusion purposes Charts A4-A9 in the Appendix also show GICS2 sector relative performance). Bottom Line: Using the 2003/4 parallel as a guidepost we remain comfortable with our current positioning of preferring industrials and energy to consumer staples and communication services. Appendix Chart A1
Appendix
Appendix
Chart A2
Appendix
Appendix
Chart A3
Appendix
Appendix
Chart A4
Appendix
Appendix
Chart A5
Appendix
Appendix
Chart A6
Appendix
Appendix
Chart A7
Appendix
Appendix
Chart A8
Appendix
Appendix
Chart A9
Appendix
Appendix
Highlights A rise in global bond yields has rarely been a reliable precursor of a stronger dollar. This is because the dollar reacts to interest-rate differentials, rather than the level of global yields. Changes in the dollar correlate with both the level and the rate of change in relative yields. A definitive shift to a bullish dollar stance will require a rise in relative US real rates in the order of 50-to-75 bps. Meanwhile, negative/low interest rates could have caused a swing in the currency/yield correlation, especially at the short end of the curve. In aggregate, the dollar responds to relative rates of return. This includes not only fixed income flows, but equity flows as well. As such, the US equity market also needs to outperform foreign bourses to make the case for a stronger dollar. The dollar is oversold and remains ripe for a countertrend bounce. This noise could be confused for a durable bullish signal. Feature Chart I-1No Rise In Real Yields
No Rise In Real Yields
No Rise In Real Yields
Global bond yields are on the rise, driven by the long end of the curve. This has included US yields, where the 10-year rate has bounced from a low of 36 bps last March to 130 bps today. Rising yields have important ramifications for equity prices (through the discount rate) and exchange rates. A rise in yields can be driven by prospects of either better growth, higher inflation expectations, or a combination of the two. This could bring forward expectations that the central bank will tighten monetary policy faster. In the case of the US and Eurozone, the culprit behind higher yields has been higher inflation expectations (Chart I-1). What does this mean for exchange rates? Are rising yields positive or negative for the dollar? Also, does it matter which component is driving yields higher – growth or inflation expectations? Finally, which currencies have historically benefited the most from an uptick in global yields? Correlation Between Yields And Exchange Rates Chart I-2Bond Yields And Currencies Often Diverge
Bond Yields And Currencies Often Diverge
Bond Yields And Currencies Often Diverge
The historical evidence is that there is little correlation between the dollar and the level or direction of global bond yields. Since the end of the Bretton Woods system in the 1970s, the trade-weighted dollar has appreciated while global bond yields have collapsed (Chart I-2). More important has been the path of relative interest rates. For example, the ebb and flow of EUR/USD has tracked the yield differential between Bund and Treasury yields since the 1970s (bottom panel Chart I-2). Currencies react more to the path of relative real rates than nominal rates. In theory, rising inflation is negative for a currency since its purchasing power is reduced. In a globally competitive system, the currency adjusts lower to equalize prices across borders. However, rising growth expectations allow policy rates to catch up with a higher neutral rate. This improves the relative rate of return for bond investors, allowing for capital inflows. Across the G10, there has been a longstanding relationship between real interest rate differentials and the path of the currency (Chart I-3A and Chart I-3B). Chart I-3ACurrencies Move With Relative Real Rates
Currencies Move With Relative Real Rates
Currencies Move With Relative Real Rates
Chart I-3BCurrencies Move With Relative Real Rates
Currencies Move With Relative Real Rates
Currencies Move With Relative Real Rates
Importantly, US real rates have not risen much against the rest of the world with the latest uptick in global bond yields. In fact, compared to countries such as Australia, the UK, Switzerland, and New Zealand, they have declined. This is negative for the dollar on the margin. While the direction of relative real rates is important, the absolute level of real yield spreads also matters for currency and bond investors. Chart I-4 shows that the dollar tends to respond to the level of real rates in the US, compared to the rest of the world. When US real rate differentials are positive, the dollar tends to appreciate on a year-over-year basis. Looking at a snapshot of global real yields, the US sits below the median (Chart I-5). Commodity-producing countries fare much better. So do Japan and Switzerland. Based on the historical precedent, US real rates will have to improve by about 50-to-100 bps to set the dollar up for structural upside. Chart I-4US Real Rates Are ##br##Still Low
US Real Rates Are Still Low
US Real Rates Are Still Low
Chart I-5US Real Rates Need 50-75 Bps Upside To Make Them Attractive
US Real Rates Need 50-75 Bps Upside To Make Them Attract
US Real Rates Need 50-75 Bps Upside To Make Them Attract
Bonds Versus Equities There are multiple drivers of exchange rates. Bond yields are just one of them. Equity flows also matter. One way to square the circle on whether the level of US real rates makes a difference for the dollar is through flow data. Foreign inflows into US Treasuries remain negative. This suggests that despite the rise in US nominal rates since March of last year, foreign investors are still not convinced they are sufficiently high to compensate for the rising US twin deficits. Rather, inflows into equities have been rather strong. This raises the prospect that the equity market has become an important driver of currency returns and will become the dominant driver going forward (Chart I-6). Importantly, the correlation between bond yields and exchange rates at very low rates is not straightforward. Bond investors span the duration spectrum, and 1-year, 2-year and even 5-year yield differentials are not meaningfully different across countries (Chart I-7). This is particularly the case if hedging costs are taken into consideration. It explains why currencies have not moved much in light of the violent moves at the long end of the yield curve, as shown in Chart I-3A and Chart I-3B. At times, the moves have been opposite to what economic theory would suggest. Chart I-6Foreign Investors Like US Equities, ##br##Not Bonds
Foreign Investors Like US Equities, Not Bonds
Foreign Investors Like US Equities, Not Bonds
Chart I-7A Regime Shift For Interest Rates And Currencies?
A Regime Shift For Interest Rates And Currencies?
A Regime Shift For Interest Rates And Currencies?
Chart I-8The CAD Is Not Driven By Relative Interest Rates, But Terms Of Trade
The CAD Is Not Driven By Relative Interest Rates, But Terms Of Trade
The CAD Is Not Driven By Relative Interest Rates, But Terms Of Trade
If a central bank explicitly targets a bond yield, that makes it difficult for that same yield to send a reliable signal about the economy. That is why at very low rates, markets start to gravitate to other indicators of growth. These include, but are not limited to, differences in PMI surveys or even commodity prices. For example, the performance of the Canadian dollar can be perfectly explained by the rise in Canadian terms of trade, even though real interest rate differentials between Canada and the US have not done much (Chart I-8). Rising oil prices are usually bullish for Canadian national income, on a relative basis. They are also bullish for Canadian equities that are more resource based. Inflows into these sectors tend to be positive for the currency. In the case of Europe, the euro has rolled over on the drop in relative real rates, but the gap in economic data surprises with the US has provided a far better explanation of euro underperformance in recent weeks. With domestic European economies in various lockdowns, economic data is becoming relatively weaker (Chart I-9). This is curbing growth, inflation, and interest rate expectations. Chart I-9Economic Divergences Explain EUR/USD, Rather Than Real Interest Rates
Economic Divergences Explain EUR/USD, Rather Than Real Interest Rates
Economic Divergences Explain EUR/USD, Rather Than Real Interest Rates
This brings up a bigger point. Flows tend to gravitate to capital markets with the highest expected returns, and this is certainly the case when cyclical versus defensive style tilts are concerned. This is important for currency strategy, since sector composition can drive a country’s equity returns. Higher yields tend to be beneficial for cyclical stocks, especially banks. In the case of Europe, the bourses are heavily weighted toward banks, industrials, and consumer discretionary sectors. Not only do these sectors need to do well for the equity market to outperform, they are also strongly tied to the performance of the domestic economy. That is why for the most part, both equity and currency relative performances tend to be in sync (Chart I-10). The bottom line is, to get the USD call right, investors should broaden their scope from relative bond yields to other drivers of currency returns. With most developed market interest rates near zero at the short end, relative bond yields matter less. More importantly, flows will be dictated by investors’ perceptions of where to find higher relative rates of return. This, in turn, will be based on relative growth fundamentals. Our bias is as follows: The US equity market has become very tech-heavy. Rising interest rates tend to hurt higher duration sectors such as tech and health care. At the margin, this hurts the relative performance of US equities. As such, rising rates will negatively impact the US equity market more, and will not derail our bearish dollar view (Chart I-11). Chart I-10The Dollar And Relative Stock Markets
The Dollar And Relative Stock Markets
The Dollar And Relative Stock Markets
Chart I-11Global Defensives And Interest Rates
Global Defensives And Interest Rates
Global Defensives And Interest Rates
The Signal And The Noise Chart I-12The Dollar Could Be Seasonally Strong
The Dollar Could Be Seasonally Strong
The Dollar Could Be Seasonally Strong
There are a few conclusions from the insights made above. First, US real interest rates have not meaningfully improved relative to the rest of the world. Second, a rise in US real rates of 50bps above the rest of the world would be required in order to seriously question our bearish dollar view, from a fixed income angle. Finally, sector performance matters a great deal, which means that the current rise in global bond yields is bearish for US stocks compared to non-US bourses. This places the US dollar at a very critical juncture. On the one hand, the dollar is still very oversold. Every time the dollar bounces from these oversold levels, the bulls rage forward, taking it as vindication that the uptrend has resumed. As we have highlighted, the DXY could hit 94 before working off oversold conditions. February and March tend to be excellent months for a rise in the DXY (Chart I-12). On the other hand, a rise in the dollar could be genuine confirmation that the US is leading the recovery both in terms of rates and equity performance. Weakness in the euro will not be particularly surprising, given the lopsided level of optimism. We remain bullish until the euro hits 1.35. The reality is that no one knows the trajectory of global growth in 2021, let alone how the relative growth profile between countries will play out. The euro area is heavily levered to global growth, hence we remain bullish EUR/USD. However, this view will change if the facts change. Meanwhile, in a higher inflationary environment, the outperformers tend to be the Norwegian krone and commodity currencies. This makes sense since commodity prices (and ultimately producer prices) tend to outperform in a period of rising inflation. It dovetails nicely with our high-conviction view to heavily overweight the Scandinavian currencies (Chart I-13). Chart I-13Rising Inflation Is Bullish For The NOK
Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar?
Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar?
Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
Chart II-2USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
Recent data in the US have been rather robust: Inflation expectations are well anchored. The February 5-10 year survey from the University of Michigan pinned inflation expectations at 2.7% year-on-year. Core PPI came in at 2% year-on-year in January, blowing out expectations of a 1.1% rise. Retail sales galloped above expectations. The control group printed 6% month-on-month in January compared to expectations of a 1% rise. Housing starts declined month-on-month in January, but building permits rose so it’s a wash if rising rates are affecting cyclical spending in the US. The DXY index rose by around 30 bps this week. There is a clear tug-of-war in markets, with the Fed signaling that policy will remain easy as far as the eye can see, but bond markets pushing up longer-term rates. Our bias is that any pickup in inflation will prove transitory, vindicating Fed policy in 2021. Report Links: Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar? - February 19, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Sizing A Potential Dollar Bounce - January 15, 2021 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
Recent data from the euro area remain weak: The trade surplus widened to €27.5 billion in December. 4Q GDP slowed by 5% year-on-year, in line with expectations. The ZEW survey was a very positive surprise. The expectations component for February jumped from 58.3 to 69.6. The euro fell by 0.4% against the US dollar this week. The markets will keep oscillating between how deep the euro area slowdown will be for now, and the magnitude of any potential rebound. We are bullish on euro area growth, especially given tentative signs of a revival in animal spirits (proxied by the expectations component of the surveys). Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 The Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
Recent data from Japan has been positive: 4Q GDP surprised to the upside, rising an annualized 12.7% quarter-on-quarter. Exports are booming, rising 6.4% year-on-year in December. The rise in machinery orders by 11.8% in December corroborated the positive contribution from CAPEX to GDP. The Japanese yen fell by 0.9% against the US dollar this week. As Japanese data surprised to the upside, inflation expectations also rose and depressed real rates. The drop in the yen signals the market might be pricing in that the BoJ will not fight strength in economic data with more tapering. We are long the yen as a portfolio hedge, but that view has been shaken by recent weakness. Report Links: On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 The Near-Term Bull Case For The Dollar - February 28, 2020 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
Recent data out of the UK have been in line: 4Q GDP in the UK was slightly better than expected at 1% quarter-on-quarter. Core CPI for January came in at 1.4%, in line with expectations. House prices are soaring, rising 8.5% in December on a year-on-year basis. The pound was the best performing currency this week, rising about 1%. Our short EUR/GBP trade has benefited from faster vaccination in the UK (that could give way to a faster reopening of the economy) and a nice valuation starting point. We are tightening stops this week to protect profits. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
The most important data this week from Australia was the employment report: There were 29.1K new jobs in January, in line with expectations. More importantly, there were 59K new full-time jobs, while part-time jobs fell by 29.8K. The unemployment rate declined from 6.6% to 6.4%. The Aussie was flat this week. When it comes to Covid-19, Australia ranks extremely well on a global scale. The number of new cases are low, the government has secured enough vaccines for the entire population and economic activity has rebounded given very close ties to China. We like the AUD, and are long versus the NZD. However, we expect that any positive surprises in the rest of the world will hurt AUD relative to the Americas. As such, we are short AUD/MXN. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields & The Currency? - January 20, 2021 An Update On The Australian Dollar - September 18, 2020 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
There was scant data out of New Zealand this week: Net migration remained at a very low level of 415 individuals in December. The New Zealand dollar fell by 0.3% against the US dollar this week. The kiwi has catapulted itself to the most expensive currency in our PPP models. According to our attractiveness ranking, it is also the worst. We are already long AUD/NZD but are looking for more opportunities to short the kiwi at the crosses. Stay tuned. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
Recent data from Canada was positive: Housing starts rose by 282.4K, well above expectations for a January level of 228.3 K. Foreigners continued to by C$5 billion of securities in December. CPI was in line with expectations. The core median came in at 1.4% but the core trim was 1.8%, a nudge below the BoC range of 1-3%. The Canadian dollar was flat against the US dollar this week. The path of the CAD will be dictated by two factors – 1) relative economic growth between the US and the rest of the world (CAD benefits more from better US growth); and 2) the path of commodity prices, especially oil. Both remain positive for the CAD, as we alluded to last week. Report Links: Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? - February 12, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
Recent data out of Switzerland have been flat: Core CPI came in at 0% in January, suggesting Switzerland has tentatively exited deflation (the print was -0.4% in December). January exports rebounded, even as watch sales remained quite weak. The Swiss franc fell by 0.7% against the US dollar this week. Safe-haven currencies were laggards, with only the Swiss franc lagging the Japanese yen. This is clearly a signal that the market remains very much in risk-on mode. We are long EUR/CHF on this basis, but short USD/JPY purely as portfolio insurance. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
The data out of Norway has been robust: 4Q mainland GDP came in at 1.9% quarter-on-quarter. Expectations were for a 1.3% rise. The trade balance exploded to NOK 23.1 billion in January. The Norwegian krone was flat against the US dollar this week, but outperformed the euro. The NOK is the perfect example of a currency on a coiled spring – cheap valuations, a liquidity discount, and primed to benefit from the global economic rebound. We are long the NOK against the euro, loonie, and USD. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
The most important data from Sweden this week was the CPI: The headline measure for January came in at 1.6%, in line with expectations. The core measure at 1.8% was also in line with expectations. The Swedish krona was flat against the US dollar this week. The Swedish COVID-19 experiment is coming home to roost. On the one hand, much higher cases compared to Norway have dampened economic activity as people voluntarily try to avoid infection. Sweden chose to keep its economy largely open. On the other hand, Sweden is a highly levered play on the global cycle. We think the latter will dominate, and so are positive on the krona. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Stick With Financials
Stick With Financials
Overweight In an Insight in mid-October we referred to the 10-year US Treasury yield as a sleeping giant and reiterated that this asset class was the last one that had yet to respond to the Fed’s QE as we had first highlighted on March 23, 2020. Now, there is tentative evidence that the giant has awaken – it even surpassed its last March peak. Encouragingly, it is also lifting the S&P financials index out of its misery (Chart 1, top panel). We boosted the financials sector to overweight in mid-November and as long as bonds sell off, investors will continue to bid financials higher. Importantly, the shape of the yield curve further underpins financials especially given the Fed’s resolve to keep short rates pinned near zero and continue to engineer a steeping of the yield curve. (Chart 1, bottom panel). The implication is that relative profitability will pick up steam, a message that our macro-driven relative EPS models also corroborate (Chart 2 on the next page). Tack on pent up financials sector buyback demand and a 40bps dividend yield carry versus the SPX and the outlook remains rosy for this early-cyclical sector. Bottom Line: Remain overweight the S&P financials sector.
Stick With Financials
Stick With Financials
Dear Client, We are sending you our Strategy Outlook today, where we outline our thoughts on the macro landscape and the direction of financial markets for 2021 and beyond. Next week, please join me for a webcast on Thursday, December 17 at 10:00 AM EST (3:00 PM GMT, 4:00 PM CET, 11:00 PM HKT) where I will discuss the outlook. Our publishing schedule will resume early next year. On behalf of the entire Global Investment Strategy team, I would like to wish you a Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, and a Healthy New Year! Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights Macroeconomic outlook: The global economy will strengthen in 2021 as the pandemic winds down. Inflation will remain well contained for the next 2-to-3 years before moving sharply higher by the middle of the decade. Global asset allocation: Stocks are technically overbought and vulnerable to a short-term correction. Nevertheless, investors should favor equities over bonds in 2021 given the likelihood that earnings will accelerate while monetary policy stays accommodative. Equities: This year’s losers will be next year’s winners. In 2021, international stocks will outperform US stocks, small caps will outperform large caps, banks will outperform tech, and value stocks will outperform growth stocks. Fixed income: Bond yields will rise modestly next year, implying that investors should maintain below average duration exposure. Spread product will outperform safe government bonds. Favor inflation-protected securities over nominal bonds. Currencies: The US dollar will continue to weaken in 2021. The collapse in US interest rate differentials versus its trading partners, stronger global growth, and a widening US trade deficit are all bearish for the greenback. Commodities: Tight supply conditions and a cyclical recovery in oil demand will support crude prices. Investors should favor gold over bitcoin as a hedge against long-term inflation risk. I. Macroeconomic Outlook V Is For Vaccine Chart 1Efficacy Rates Of Seasonal Flu Vaccines Are Well Below Those Of The Covid-19 Vaccines
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Ten months after the start of the pandemic, there is a light at the end of the tunnel. Both of the vaccines developed by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna using mRNA technology have demonstrated efficacy rates of around 95%. AstraZeneca’s vaccine, produced in collaboration with Oxford University, showed an efficacy rate of 90% in one of its clinical arms. Russia and China have also launched vaccines. The Russian vaccine, Gamaleya, displayed an efficacy rate of 91% based on 22,000 test participants. Such high efficacy rates are on par with the measles and smallpox vaccines, and well above the typical 30%-to-50% success rate for the seasonal flu vaccine (Chart 1). Inoculating most of the world’s population will not be easy. Nevertheless, large-scale vaccine production has already begun. More than half of the professional forecasters enrolled in the Good Judgement Project expect enough doses to be available to vaccinate 200 million Americans (about 60% of the US population) by the end of the second quarter of 2021 (Chart 2). Chart 2Mass Distribution Of Covid-19 Vaccines Expected By Mid-2021
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
According to opinion polls, public concern about the potential side effects from the vaccines, while still high, has diminished over the past few weeks (Chart 3). Most countries will start by vaccinating health care workers and other at-risk groups. Assuming no major side effects are reported, the successful deployment of the vaccines among health care professionals should bolster confidence within the general public. Chart 3The Public Is Slowly Becoming Less Worried About Covid-19 Vaccines
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Vaccines And Growth: A Short-Term Paradox? There is no doubt that the availability of a safe and effective vaccine will bolster economic activity over the medium-to-long term. The short-term impact, however, is ambiguous. On the one hand, vaccine optimism could reduce household precautionary savings. It could also prompt more firms to invest in new capacity. On the other hand, the expectation that a vaccine is coming could motivate people to take even greater efforts to avoid getting sick in the interim. Think about what happens when you take cover under a tree after it starts to rain. Your decision to stay under the tree depends on how long you expect the rain to continue. If the rain will last for only 10 minutes, staying put makes sense. However, if it will rain continuously for the next two days, you are better off going home. You are going to get wet anyway. Who wants to get sick just as the pandemic is winding down? It is like being the last soldier killed on the battlefield. Growth In Europe Suffering More Than In The US… So Far The number of new daily cases has declined by 45% in the EU from the highs reached in the second week of November. That said, progress on the disease front has come at a cost. As Covid infections surged, European governments were forced to reimplement a variety of lockdown measures (Chart 4). Correspondingly, growth indicators have weakened across the region (Chart 5). At this point, it looks highly likely that GDP will contract in the euro area and the UK in the fourth quarter. Chart 4The Latest Viral Surge Led To Lockdowns In Europe
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
In contrast to Europe, the US economy should expand in the fourth quarter. The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model is pointing to growth of 11.2% in Q4, led by a recovery in personal consumption, strength in residential and nonresidential investment, and inventory restocking. Nevertheless, dark clouds are forming. After a short-lived dip in late November, the number of new daily cases in the US is on the rise again. The 7-day average of confirmed new cases has jumped to around 200,000. The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) estimates that for every single case that is caught, seven go undiagnosed.1 This implies that over 11 million people are being infected each week, or about 3% of the US population. With the weather getting colder and the Christmas holiday season approaching, a further viral surge looks probable. Just as in Europe, we may see more lockdowns and more voluntary social distancing in the US over the coming weeks. Building A Fiscal Bridge To A Post-Pandemic World Lockdowns would be less of a problem if governments provided enough income support to struggling households and businesses. Unfortunately, at least in the US, considerable uncertainty remains about whether such support will be forthcoming. After a burst of stimulus earlier this year, US fiscal policy has tightened sharply. Since peaking in April, real disposable personal income has dropped by 9%, reflecting a steep decline in government transfer payments (Chart 6). The latest data suggest that real disposable income will be down in Q4 compared to the preceding quarter. Chart 5Renewed Lockdowns Are Weighing On Economic Activity In The Euro Area
Renewed Lockdowns Are Weighing On Economic Activity In The Euro Area
Renewed Lockdowns Are Weighing On Economic Activity In The Euro Area
Chart 6Less Transfers Mean Less Income
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
President Trump tried to offset some of the sting from the expiration of emergency unemployment benefits in the CARES Act by diverting funds from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to support jobless workers. However, this money has now run out (Chart 7). Likewise, the resources in the Paycheck Protection Program for small businesses have been depleted, and many state and local governments are facing a cash crunch. Chart 7Drastic Drop In Unemployment Insurance Payments
Drastic Drop In Unemployment Insurance Payments
Drastic Drop In Unemployment Insurance Payments
Chart 8People Are Eager For More Stimulus
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
The US Congress has been squabbling over a new stimulus bill since May. Ultimately, we think a bill will be passed, potentially as part of a year-end omnibus spending package. Public opinion still very much favors maintaining stimulus. A survey conducted by Pew Research after the election found that about 80% of respondents supported passing a new stimulus package (Chart 8). Similarly, according to a recent NY Times/Siena College poll, 72% of voters supported a hypothetical $2 trillion stimulus package that would extend emergency unemployment insurance benefits, distribute direct cash payments to households, and provide financial support to state and local governments (Table 1). Such a package is basically what the Democrats are proposing. Strikingly, when this package is described in non-partisan terms, even the majority of Republicans are in favor of it. Table 1Even Republicans Want More Stimulus
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Peak Chinese Stimulus Even though it originated there, China has weathered the pandemic better than any other major country. Chinese export growth accelerated to 21.1% year-over-year in November. The Caixin manufacturing PMI rose to 54.9 on the month, the strongest reading since November 2010. The service sector PMI increased to a healthy 57.8. The “official” PMIs published by the National Bureau of Statistics also rose. Chinese growth will moderate over the coming months. The magnitude of China’s policy support has peaked, as evidenced by the rise in bond yields and interbank rates (Chart 9). The authorities have also permitted more corporate issuers to default, while tightening rules on online lending. Turning points in Chinese domestic demand and imports tend to lag policy developments by about 6-to-9 months (Chart 10). Thus, the tailwind from Chinese stimulus should fade by the middle of next year, hopefully just in time for the baton to be passed to a more organic, vaccine-driven global growth recovery. Chart 9China: Bond Yields And Interbank Rates Have Been Rising
China: Bond Yields And Interbank Rates Have Been Rising
China: Bond Yields And Interbank Rates Have Been Rising
Chart 10Tailwind From Chinese Stimulus Will Fade By The Middle Of Next Year
Tailwind From Chinese Stimulus Will Fade By The Middle Of Next Year
Tailwind From Chinese Stimulus Will Fade By The Middle Of Next Year
Japan: Near-Term Wobbles Japan is in the midst of its third wave of the pandemic. While not as bad as the latest waves in the US and Europe, it has still been disruptive enough to slow the economy. Although it did tick up in November, the manufacturing PMI remains below the crucial 50 boom/bust line, notably weaker than in other APAC countries. The outlook component of the Economy Watchers Survey fell to 36.5 in November (from 49.1), while the current situation component slid to 45.6 (from 54.5). Nevertheless, there are some encouraging signs. The number of new Covid cases seems to be stabilizing. Machine tool orders rose to 8% year-over-year in November, the first positive print since September 2018. Retail sales have recovered from a low of -14% year-over-year in April to around +6% in October. Broad money growth has reached a record high. The Japanese government is also considering a new ¥73 trillion fiscal stimulus package to fight the pandemic. Global Monetary Policy To Stay Accommodative Chart 11Service And Shelter Inflation Tend To Be Largely Determined By Labor Market Slack
Service And Shelter Inflation Tend To Be Largely Determined By Labor Market Slack
Service And Shelter Inflation Tend To Be Largely Determined By Labor Market Slack
Could a vaccine-led economic recovery cause central banks to remove the punch bowl? We think not. Inflation is likely to rise in the first half of 2021 as the “base effects” from the pandemic-induced drop in prices reverse. However, central banks will see through these short-term oscillations in inflation. Inflation in modern economies is largely driven by services and shelter (goods account for only 25% of the US core CPI and 37% of the euro area core CPI). Both service inflation and shelter inflation tend to be largely determined by labor market slack (Chart 11). In its October 2020 World Economic Outlook, the IMF projected that the unemployment rate in the main developed economies would fall back to its full employment level by around 2025 (Chart 12). While this is too pessimistic in light of the subsequent progress that has been made on the vaccine front, it is probable that unemployment will remain too high to generate an overheated economy for the next 2-to-3 years. Chart 12Unemployment Rate Is Projected To Decline Towards Pre-Covid Lows In The Coming Years
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Chart 13Long-Term Inflation Expectations Are Still Subdued
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Moreover, despite vaccine optimism, long-term inflation expectations are still below target in most of the major economies (Chart 13). Not only do central banks want inflation to return to target, they want inflation to overshoot their targets in order to make up for the shortfall in inflation in the post-GFC era. Had the core PCE deflator in the US risen by 2% per year since 2012, the price level would be about 3.3% higher than it currently is. In the euro area, the price level is about 9.5% below where it would have been if consumer prices had risen by 2% over this period. In Japan, the price level is 11.6% below target (Chart 14). Chart 14Central Banks Have Missed Their Inflation Targets
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
II. Financial Markets A. Global Asset Allocation Remain Overweight Equities Versus Bonds On A 12-Month Horizon Equities have run up a lot since the start of November. Bullish sentiment has surged in the American Association of Individual Investors weekly bull-bear poll, while the put-to-call ratio has fallen to multi-year lows (Chart 15). This makes equities vulnerable to a short-term correction. Nevertheless, rising odds of an effective vaccine and continued easy monetary policy keep us bullish on stocks over a 12-month horizon. Stronger economic growth should lift earnings estimates. Stocks have usually outperformed bonds when growth has been on the upswing (Chart 16). Chart 15A Lot Of Bullishness
A Lot Of Bullishness
A Lot Of Bullishness
Chart 16Stocks Rarely Underperform Bonds When The Global Economy Is Strengthening
Stocks Rarely Underperform Bonds When The Global Economy Is Strengthening
Stocks Rarely Underperform Bonds When The Global Economy Is Strengthening
Valuations also favor stocks. As Chart 17 illustrates, the global equity risk premium – which we model by subtracting real bond yields from the cyclically-adjusted earnings yield – remains quite high. Along the same lines, dividend yields are above bond yields in the major markets. Even if one were to pessimistically assume that nominal dividend payments stay flat for the next 10 years, real equity prices would have to fall by 24% in the US for stocks to underperform bonds (Chart 18). In the euro area, real equity prices would need to tumble 32%. In Japan, they would have to drop 20%. Chart 17Equity Risk Premia Remain Elevated
Equity Risk Premia Remain Elevated
Equity Risk Premia Remain Elevated
Chart 18Stocks Would Need To Fall A Lot For Equities To Underperform Bonds
Stocks Would Need To Fall A Lot For Equities To Underperform Bonds
Stocks Would Need To Fall A Lot For Equities To Underperform Bonds
As such, investors should overweight global equities relative to bonds. We recommend a neutral allocation to cash to take advantage of any short-term dip in stock prices. Our full suite of asset allocation and trade recommendations are shown at the back of this report. B. Equity Sectors, Regions, Styles This Year’s Losers Will Be Next Year’s Winners The “pandemic trade” is giving way to the “reopening trade.” We are still in the early innings of this transition. Hence, going into next year, it makes sense to favor stocks that were crushed by lockdown measures but could thrive once restrictions are lifted. Chart 19 shows relative 12-months forward earnings estimates for US/non-US, large caps/small caps, and tech/overall market. In all three cases, the tables have turned: Estimates are now rising more quickly for non-US stocks, small caps, and non-tech sectors. Non-US Stocks To Outperform Stocks outside the US are significantly cheaper than their US peers based on price-to-earnings, price-to-book, price-to-sales, and dividend yields (Chart 20). The macro outlook also favors non-US stocks, which tend to outperform when global growth is strengthening and the US dollar is weakening (Chart 21). Chart 19Relative Earnings Expectations For Non-US Stocks, Small Caps, And Non-Tech Are Improving
Relative Earnings Expectations For Non-US Stocks, Small Caps, And Non-Tech Are Improving
Relative Earnings Expectations For Non-US Stocks, Small Caps, And Non-Tech Are Improving
Chart 20Non-US Stocks Are Cheaper
Non-US Stocks Are Cheaper
Non-US Stocks Are Cheaper
Chart 21Non-US Equities Tend To Outperform Their US Peers When Global Growth Is Improving And The Dollar Is Weakening
Non-US Equities Tend To Outperform Their US Peers When Global Growth Is Improving And The Dollar Is Weakening
Non-US Equities Tend To Outperform Their US Peers When Global Growth Is Improving And The Dollar Is Weakening
As we discuss below, the dollar is likely to depreciate further over the next 12 months. A weaker dollar benefits cyclical sectors of the stock market more than defensives (Chart 22). Deep cyclicals are overrepresented outside the US (Table 2). Being more cyclical in nature, small caps usually outperform when the dollar weakens (Chart 23). Chart 22Cyclicals Tend To Outperform Defensives In A Falling Dollar Environment
Cyclicals Tend To Outperform Defensives In A Falling Dollar Environment
Cyclicals Tend To Outperform Defensives In A Falling Dollar Environment
Table 2Financials Are Overrepresented In Ex-US Indices, While Tech Dominates The US Market
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Chart 23Small Caps Also Tend To Outperform When Global Growth Strengthens And The Dollar Weakens
Small Caps Also Tend To Outperform When Global Growth Strengthens And The Dollar Weakens
Small Caps Also Tend To Outperform When Global Growth Strengthens And The Dollar Weakens
Chart 24Banks’ Net Interest Margins Will Receive A Boost
Banks' Net Interest Margins Will Receive A Boost
Banks' Net Interest Margins Will Receive A Boost
Buy The Banks Banks comprise a larger share of non-US stock markets. Stronger growth in 2021 will put upward pressure on long-term bond yields. Since short-term rates will stay where they are, yield curves will steepen. Steeper yield curves will boost banks’ net interest margins (Chart 24). In addition, faster economic growth will put a lid on defaults. Banks have set aside considerable capital for pandemic-related loan losses. Yet, the wave of defaults that so many feared has failed to materialize. According to the American Bankruptcy Institute, commercial bankruptcies are lower now than they were this time last year (Chart 25). Personal loan delinquencies have also been trending down. The 60-day delinquency rate on credit card debt fell to 1.16% in October from 2.02% a year earlier. The delinquency rate for mortgages fell from 1.54% to 0.98%. Only auto loan delinquencies registered a tiny blip higher (Table 3). Chart 25Commercial Bankruptcies Are Well Contained
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Table 3Personal Loan Delinquencies Have Also Been Trending Lower
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Just A “Value Bounce”? In our conversations with clients, many investors are open to the idea that value stocks are due for a cyclical bounce. However, most still believe that growth stocks will fare best over a longer-term horizon. Such a view is understandable. After all, profit growth is the principal driver of equity returns. If, by definition, growth companies enjoy faster earnings growth, does it not stand to reason that growth stocks will outperform value stocks over the long haul? Well, actually, it doesn’t. What matters is profit growth relative to expectations, not absolute profit growth. If earnings rise quickly, but by less than investors had anticipated, stock prices could still go down. Historically, investors have tended to extrapolate earnings trends too far into the future, which has led them to overpay for growth stocks. Chart 26 demonstrates this point analytically. It features the results of a study by Louis Chan, Jason Karceski, and Josef Lakonishok. The authors sorted companies by projected five-year earnings growth and then compared the analysts’ forecasts with realized earnings. For the most part, they found that there was no relationship between expected profit growth and realized profit growth beyond horizons of two years. In general, the higher the long-term earnings growth estimates, the more likely actual earnings were to miss expectations. Chart 26Investors Tend To Overpay For Growth
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
The Paradox Of Growth Given the difficulty of picking individual stocks that will consistently surpass earnings estimates, should investors simply allocate the bulk of their capital to sectors such as technology that have the best long-term growth prospects while eschewing structurally challenged sectors such as energy and financials? Again, the answer is not as obvious as it may seem. As Chart 27 illustrates, stocks in industries that experience a burst of output growth do tend to outperform other stocks. However, over the long haul, companies in fast growing industries do not outperform their peers (Chart 28). In other words, stock prices seem to respond more to unanticipated changes in industry growth rather than to the trend level of growth. Chart 27Stocks In Industries That Experience A Burst Of Output Growth Do Tend To Outperform Other Stocks …
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Chart 28… But Over The Long Haul, Companies In Fast-Growing Industries Do Not Outperform Their Peers
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Explaining Tech Outperformance In this vein, it is useful to examine what has powered the performance of US tech stocks over the past 25 years. Chart 29 shows that faster sales-per-share growth explains less than half of tech’s outperformance since 1996 and none of tech’s outperformance in the period up to 2011. The majority of tech’s outperformance is explained by greater margin expansion and an increase in the P/E ratio at which tech stocks trade relative to the rest of the stock market. Chart 29Decomposing Tech Outperformance
Decomposing Tech Outperformance
Decomposing Tech Outperformance
What accounts for the significant increase in tech profit margins? In two words, the answer is “monopoly power.” Tech companies are particularly susceptible to network effects: The more people who use a particular tech platform, the more attractive it is for others to use it. Facebook is a classic example. Second, tech companies benefit significantly from scale economies. Once a piece of software has been written, creating additional copies costs almost nothing. Even in the hardware realm, the marginal cost of producing an additional chip is tiny compared to the fixed cost of designing it. All of this creates a winner take-all environment where success begets further success. Normally, structurally fast-growing industries attract more competition, which increases the odds that up-and-coming firms will displace incumbents. The growth of tech monopolies has subverted that process, allowing profits to rise significantly. A Tougher Path Forward For Tech A key question for investors is how much additional scope today’s tech monopolies have to expand profits. While it is difficult to generalize, two broad forces are likely to curtail future earnings growth. First, many tech titans have become so big that their future growth will be driven less by their ability to take market share from competitors and more by the overall size of the markets in which they operate. As it is, close to three-quarters of US households have an Amazon Prime account. Slightly over half have a Netflix account. Nearly 70% have a Facebook account. Google commands 92% of the internet search market. Together, Google and Facebook generate about 60% of all online advertising revenue. Second, the monopoly power wielded by tech companies makes them vulnerable to governmental action, including higher taxes, increased regulation, and stronger anti-trust enforcement. Importantly, it is not just the left that wants greater scrutiny of tech companies. According to a recent Pew Research study, more than half of conservative Republicans favor increasing government regulation of the tech sector (Chart 30). Chart 30Conservatives Favor Increased Government Regulation Of Big Tech Companies
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
We do not expect tech stocks to decline in absolute terms since they still have a variety of tailwinds supporting them. Nevertheless, our bet is that the cyclical shift in favor of value stocks we are seeing now will usher in a period of outperformance for value names that could last for much of this decade. Not only are value stocks exceptionally cheap compared to growth stocks (Chart 31), but as we discuss below, bond yields likely reached a secular bottom this year. This could set the stage for a period of lasting outperformance for value plays. Chart 31Value Stocks Are Extremely Cheap Relative To Growth Stocks
Value Stocks Are Extremely Cheap Relative To Growth Stocks
Value Stocks Are Extremely Cheap Relative To Growth Stocks
C. Fixed Income Position For Steeper Yield Curves As discussed earlier, central banks are unlikely to raise rates over the next 2-to-3 years. In fact, short-term real rates will probably decline further in 2021 as inflation expectations rise towards central bank targets. What about longer-term bond yields? Chart 32 displays the expected path of policy rates in the major developed economies now and at the start of 2020. The chart suggests that there is still scope for rate expectations in the post-2023 period to recover some of the ground they have lost since the start of the pandemic. This implies that bond investors should position for steeper yield curves, while keeping duration risk at below-benchmark levels. They should also favor inflation-linked securities over nominal bonds. Chart 32Policy Rate Expectations Remain Below Pre-Pandemic Levels
Policy Rate Expectations Remain Below Pre-Pandemic Levels
Policy Rate Expectations Remain Below Pre-Pandemic Levels
Avoid “High Beta” Government Bond Markets The highest-yielding bond markets tend to have the highest “betas” to the general direction of global bond yields (Chart 33). This means when global bond yields are rising, higher-yielding markets such as the US usually experience the biggest selloff in bond prices. Chart 33High-Yielding Bond Markets Are The Most Cyclical
High-Yielding Bond Markets Are The Most Cyclical
High-Yielding Bond Markets Are The Most Cyclical
This pattern exists because faster growth has a more subdued impact on rate expectations in economies such as Europe and Japan where the neutral rate of interest is stuck deep in negative territory. For example, if stronger growth lifts the neutral rate in Japan from say, -4% to -2%, this would still not warrant raising rates. In contrast, if stronger growth lifts the neutral rate from -1% to +1% in the US, this would eventually justify a rate hike. As such, we would underweight US Treasurys in global government bond portfolios. We expect the 10-year Treasury yield to increase to around 1.3%-to-1.5% by the end of 2021, which is above current expectations of 1.15% based on the forward curve. Conversely, we would overweight European and Japanese government bond markets. After adjusting for currency-hedging costs, US Treasurys offer only a small yield pickup over European and Japanese bonds but face a much greater risk of capital losses as rate expectations recover (Table 4). Table 4Bond Markets Across The Developed World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
BCA’s global fixed-income strategists have a neutral recommendation on Canadian and Australian bonds. While Canadian and Australian yields are also “high beta,” both the BoC and the RBA are very active purchasers in their domestic markets. Stay Overweight High-Yield Developed Market Corporate Debt In fixed-income portfolios, we would overweight corporate debt relative to safer government bonds. In an economic environment where monetary policy remains accommodative and growth is rebounding, corporate default rates should remain contained, which will keep spreads from widening. Within corporate credit, we favor high yield over investment grade. Geographically, we prefer US corporate bonds over euro area bonds. The former trade with a higher yield and spread than the latter (Charts 34A & B). Chart 34AFavor High-Yield Bonds Over Investment-Grade ...
Favor High-Yield Bonds Over Investment-Grade ...
Favor High-Yield Bonds Over Investment-Grade ...
Chart 34B… And US Corporates Over Euro Area
... And US Corporates Over Euro Area
... And US Corporates Over Euro Area
One way to gauge the attractiveness of credit is to look at the percentile rankings of 12-month breakeven spreads. The 12-month breakeven spread is the amount of credit spread widening that can occur before a credit product starts to underperform a duration-matched, risk-free government bond over a one-year horizon. For US investment-grade corporates, the breakeven spread is currently in the bottom decile of its historic range, which is rather unattractive from a risk-adjusted perspective. In contrast, the US high-yield breakeven spread is currently in the 62nd percentile, which is quite enticing. In the UK, high-yield debt is more appealing than investment grade, although not quite to the same extent as in the US. In the euro area, both high-yield and investment-grade credit are fairly unattractive (Chart 35). Chart 35Corporate Bond Breakeven Spread Percentile Rankings
Corporate Bond Breakeven Spread Percentile Rankings (I)
Corporate Bond Breakeven Spread Percentile Rankings (I)
Outside the corporate sector, our US bond strategists like consumer ABS due to the strength of household balance sheets. They also see value in municipal bonds. However, they would avoid MBS, as prepayment risks are elevated in that sector. EM credit should also benefit from the combination of stronger global growth and a weaker US dollar. Long-Term Inflation Risk Is Underpriced As noted earlier in the report, inflation is unlikely to rise significantly over the next three years. Beyond then, a more inflationary environment is probable. Chart 36 shows that the wage-version of the Phillips curve in the US is alive and well. It just so happens that over the past three decades, the labor market has never had a chance to overheat. Something always came along that derailed the economy before a price-wage spiral could develop. This year it was the pandemic. In 2008 it was the Global Financial Crisis. In 2000 it was the dotcom bust and in the early 1990s it was the collapse in commercial real estate prices following the Savings and Loan Crisis. Admittedly, only the pandemic qualifies as a true “exogenous” shock. The prior three recessions were endogenous in nature to the extent that they were preceded by growing economic imbalances, laid bare by a Fed hiking cycle. One can debate the degree to which the global economy is suffering from imbalances today, but one thing is certain: no major central bank is keen on raising rates anytime soon. Central banks want higher inflation. They are likely to get it. D. Currencies, Commodities, And Yes, Bitcoin Dollar Bear Market To Continue In 2021 The dollar faces a number of headwinds going into next year. First, interest rate differentials have moved significantly against the greenback. At the start of 2019, US real 2-year rates were about 190 basis points above rates of other developed economies; today, US real rates are around 60 basis points lower than those abroad. In fact, as Chart 37 shows, the trade-weighted dollar has weakened less than one would have expected based on the decline in interest rate differentials. This suggests that there could be some “catch-up” weakness for the dollar next year even if rate differentials remain broadly stable. Chart 36Is The Phillips Curve Really Dead?
Is The Phillips Curve Really Dead?
Is The Phillips Curve Really Dead?
Chart 37A Relatively Muted Decline In The Dollar Given The Move In Real Yield Differentials
A Relatively Muted Decline In The Dollar Given The Move In Real Yield Differentials
A Relatively Muted Decline In The Dollar Given The Move In Real Yield Differentials
Second, the US dollar is a counter-cyclical currency, meaning that it tends to move in the opposite direction of the global business cycle (Chart 38). If the global economy strengthens next year thanks to an effective vaccine, the dollar should weaken. Chart 38The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
Chart 39USD Remains Overvalued
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Third, the US dollar remains about 13% overvalued based on Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) exchange rates (Chart 39). This overvaluation is also reflected in the large US current account deficit, which rose in the second quarter to the highest level since 2008 and is on track to swell even further in the second half of the year. Technicals Are Dollar Bearish Admittedly, many investors are now bearish on the dollar. Shouldn’t one be a contrarian and adopt a bullish dollar view? Not necessarily. In most cases, being contrarian makes sense. However, this does not apply to the dollar. The dollar is a high-momentum currency (Chart 40). When it comes to trading the dollar, it pays to be a trend follower. Chart 40The Dollar Is A High Momentum Currency
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
One of the simplest and most profitable trading rules for the dollar is to go long the greenback when it is trading above its moving average and go short when it is trading below its moving average (Chart 41). Today, the trade-weighted dollar is trading below its 3-month, 6-month, 1-year, and 2-year moving averages. Along the same lines, the dollar performs best when sentiment is bullish and improving. In contrast, the dollar does worse when sentiment is bearish and deteriorating, as it is now (Chart 42). Chart 41Being A Contrarian Doesn’t Pay When It Comes To Trading The Dollar (I)
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Chart 42Being A Contrarian Doesn’t Pay When It Comes To Trading The Dollar (II)
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
The bottom line is that both fundamental factors – interest rate differentials, global growth, valuations, current account dynamics – and technical factors – moving average rules and sentiment – all point to dollar weakness next year. Top Performing Currencies In 2021 EUR/USD is likely to rise to 1.3 by the middle of next year. The ECB does not want a stronger currency, but with euro area interest rates already in negative territory, there is not much it can do. The Swedish krona, as a highly cyclical currency, should strengthen against the euro. In contrast, the Swiss franc, a classically defensive currency, will weaken against the euro. It is more difficult to forecast the direction of the pound given uncertainty about ongoing Brexit talks. The working assumption of BCA’s geopolitical team is that Prime Minister Boris Johnson has sufficient economic and political incentives to arrive at a trade deal, a parliamentary majority to get it approved, and a powerful geopolitical need to mollify Scotland. This bodes well for sterling. The yen is a very defensive currency. Thus, in an environment of strengthening global growth, the yen is likely to trade flat against the dollar, and in the process, lose ground against most other currencies. We are most bullish about the prospects for EM and commodity currencies going into next year. China is likely to let its currency strengthen further in return for a partial rollback of tariffs by the Biden administration. A stronger yuan will allow other currencies in Asia to appreciate. Stay Bullish On Commodities And Commodity Currencies The combination of a weaker US dollar and stronger global growth should support commodity prices in 2021. Industrial metals outperformed oil this year, but the opposite should be true next year. Chart 43Oil Prices Are Expected To Recover
Oil Prices Are Expected To Recover
Oil Prices Are Expected To Recover
While the long-term outlook for crude is murky in light of the shift towards electric vehicles, the near-term picture remains favorable due to the cyclical rebound in petroleum demand and ongoing OPEC and Russian supply discipline. BCA’s commodity strategists expect the average price of Brent to exceed market expectations by about $14 in 2021, which should help the Norwegian krone, Canadian dollar, Russian ruble, Mexican peso, and Colombian peso (Chart 43). Favor Gold Over Bitcoin As An Inflation Hedge Gold has traditionally served as the go-to hedge against inflation. These days, however, there is a new competitor in town: bitcoin. In traditional economic parlance, money serves three purposes: as a medium of exchange; as a unit of account; and as a store of value. Both gold and bitcoin flunk the test for the first two purposes. Few transactions are conducted in either gold or bitcoin. It is even rarer for prices of goods and services to be set in ounces of gold or units of bitcoin. Gold arguably does better as a store of value. It has been around for a long time and if all else fails, it can always be melted down and turned into nice jewelry. Bitcoin’s Achilles Heel Bitcoin’s defenders argue that the cryptocurrency does serve as a store of value because one day, it will reach a critical mass that will make it a viable medium of exchange and a functional unit of account. Yet, this argument is politically naïve. Countries with fiat currencies derive significant benefits from their ability to create money out of thin air that can then be used to pay for goods and services. In the US, this “seigniorage revenue” amounts to over $100 billion per year. The existence of fiat currencies also gives central banks the power to set interest rates and provide liquidity backstops to the financial sector. Bitcoin’s ability to facilitate anonymous transactions is also its Achilles heel. The widespread use of bitcoin would make it more difficult for governments to tax their citizens. All this suggests that bitcoin will never reach a critical mass where it becomes a viable medium of exchange or functional unit of account. Governments will step in to ban or greatly curtail its usage before then. And without the ability to reach this critical mass, bitcoin’s utility as a store of value will disappear. Hence, investors looking for some inflation protection in their portfolios should stick with gold. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Heather Reese, A. Danielle Iuliano, Neha N. Patel, Shikha Garg, Lindsay Kim, Benjamin J. Silk, Aron J. Hall, Alicia Fry, and Carrie Reed, “Estimated incidence of COVID-19 illness and hospitalization — United States, February–September, 2020,” Clinical Infectious Diseases (Oxford Academic), November 25, 2020. Global Investment Strategy View Matrix
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Special Trade Recommendations This table provides trade recommendations that may not be adequately represented in the matrix on the preceding page.
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Current MacroQuant Model Scores
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Strategy Outlook – 2021 Key Views: Navigating A Post-Pandemic World
Upgrading Insurance
Upgrading Insurance
This week we removed the S&P insurance index from our underweight list capitalizing gains of 38% since inception. The underweight served its hedging purpose and softened the blow from our previous exposure to banks. Importantly, the macro environment is also set to improve according to our insurance indicator; thus it no longer pays to be underweight this financials sector sub-group (second panel). Simultaneously, we are reluctant to swing all the way to an overweight stance. Insurance CEOs have been anything but disciplined. Headcount is surging and industry wages are also accelerating. While executives may be preparing for a durable rebound in the coming months, a spiking wage bill will eat into insurance margins (third & bottom panels). Bottom Line: We upgraded the S&P insurance index to neutral from previously underweight locking in gains of 38% since inception. For more details, please refer to this Monday’s Weekly Report. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the S&P insurance index are: BLBG: S5INSU - AIG, CB, MET, MMC, PRU, TRV, AFL, AON, ALL, PGR, WLTW, HIG, PFG, L, CINF, LNC, AJG, UNM, AIZ, RE, GL, WRB.
Highlights Portfolio Strategy The hardening insurance market on the back of firming demand for insurance services especially in residential real estate and automobile markets compel us to lift insurers to a benchmark allocation. A resurgent stock-to-bond ratio, the reopening of the economy and receding fiscal policy, election and COVID-19 uncertainties which will further suppress the equity risk premium, all boost the allure of the S&P asset management & custody bank index. Stay overweight. Recent Changes Upgrade the S&P insurance index to neutral and lock in relative gains of 38%, today. This move also augments the S&P financials sector weighting to a modest overweight stance. Table 1
Inoculated
Inoculated
Feature News of a vaccine last Monday turbocharged equities to new intraday all-time highs, following up from a stellar performance the week of the election as odds of a “Blue Wave” collapsed. One of the implications is that the Trump corporate tax cuts will remain in place and investors breathed a sigh of relief (tax policy uncertainty shown inverted, Chart 1). While a smaller fiscal package owing to a split government postponed the rotation trade, the PFE vaccine efficacy news brought it back with a vengeance. This set up caused equities to discount all the good news in a heartbeat as typically happens when uncertainty is sky high and investors stampede into stocks. As we have argued here a VIX with a 40 handle was overdone and thus we crystalized our gains and closed our long VIX December futures trade prior to the election. We have been preparing our portfolio for such a looming rotation and this has been most evident in our long “Back To Work”/short “Covid-19 Winners” equity baskets. Last Monday they went in polar opposite directions and compelled us to put a trailing stop at the 10% return mark in order to protect profits (top three panels, Chart 2). Chart 1Tax Policy Uncertainty Relief
Tax Policy Uncertainty Relief
Tax Policy Uncertainty Relief
Our recent preference of small caps at the expense of large caps that we first recommended a week before the election also depicts the ongoing equity market rotation out of overvalued tech stocks and into beaten down laggard cyclicals (bottom panel, Chart 2). Importantly, the economic reopening trade is still in the early innings, and we remain cyclically bullish on the prospects of the S&P 500 with a fresh end-2021 target of 4,000 that we updated last Monday in a Special Report before news of a vaccine hit the wires. Nevertheless, the recent parabolic rise in equities raises the obvious question: have stocks run too far too fast? Chart 2“Back To Work” Recovery
“Back To Work” Recovery
“Back To Work” Recovery
First, there is no doubt that equities are overextended in the near-term as the collapse in the equity put/call (EPC) ratio highlights. Over the past year, the EPC ratio has formed a clearly defined range and a reading below 0.4 suggests overbought conditions (EPC ratio shown inverted, Chart 3). Second, while the violent rotation has pushed the SPX higher despite the deflating tech sector, we doubt that in the coming weeks the SPX will continue to gallop higher without the heavyweight tech sector partially participating in the rally. As a reminder, adding FANG (FB, AMZN, NFLX & GOOGL) weights to the GICS1 tech sector’s weighting results in a roughly 40% market cap weight of tech-related stocks in the S&P 500 (Chart 4). Chart 3No More Hedging
No More Hedging
No More Hedging
Chart 4Tech Is 40% Of The Market
Tech Is 40% Of The Market
Tech Is 40% Of The Market
Third, according to the American Association of Individual investors (AAII), bulls are back in droves and the AAII bull/bear ratio has slingshot to the highest level since January 2018. This is cause for near-term concern as it has historically served as a reliable contrary signal (Chart 5). Fourth, the knee-jerk equity market reaction on the back of the positive vaccine news has also pushed the percentage of SPX stocks trading above their 200-day moving average to a zenith, warning that the SPX will most likely move laterally (Chart 6). Chart 5Bull Stampede
Bull Stampede
Bull Stampede
Chart 6Too Far Too Fast?
Too Far Too Fast?
Too Far Too Fast?
Finally, following a rough September and choppy October, seasonality is now in favor of owing stocks and given diminishing odds of year-end tax loss selling, equities should grind higher as 2020 draws to a close. Netting it all out, in the short-term our going assumption is that, barring exponential moves in the reopening trade similar to what we witnessed last week, the SPX will likely move sideways in order to digest the recent up move and work off overbought conditions. This is especially true if a selloff in the bond market continues to weigh on the tech sector’s still lofty valuation footprint. This week we make a sub-surface financials sector tweak that pushes this early cyclical sector to a modest above benchmark allocation. Time To Lock In Gains On Insurance The shifting macro landscape signals that it no longer pays to be bearish insurance stocks; thus we are upgrading the S&P insurance index to a neutral weighting today, crystalizing relative gains of 38% since inception. This cyclical underweight exposure in insurance stocks – as part of our barbell portfolio strategy within the financials universe – has cushioned the blow from our positive bank exposure and served its hedging purpose. Now that the election uncertainty is waning and given the recent positive PFE news on the effectiveness of their COVID-19 vaccine, insurance stocks will at least catch a bid. The economic reopening underscores that home and auto sales will continue to climb as nonfarm payrolls make a run for the pre-recession highs likely sometime in 2021. Keep in mind that consumers’ plans to buy a new car and a home are recovering smartly according to the most recent Conference Board survey (third panel, Chart 7). This upbeat demand backdrop for these key insurance end-markets should boost industry profits (bottom panel, Chart 7). Already a hardening insurance market (second panel, Chart 8) owing to pent-up residential real estate and automobile demand is a boon for underwriting results. Chart 7Insuring Gains
Insuring Gains
Insuring Gains
Chart 8Hardening Market
Hardening Market
Hardening Market
Importantly, the latest national account data corroborates firming final demand for insurance services: consumer outlays on insurance are galloping higher. The upshot is that the insurance valuation de-rating will transition to a rerating phase (bottom panel, Chart 8). Our Insurance Indicator does an excellent job in encapsulating all these moving parts and heralds rosier days ahead for relative share prices (second panel, Chart 9). However, there is a caveat that prevents us from swinging all the way to an overweight stance. Insurance CEOs have been anything but disciplined. Headcount is surging and industry wages are also accelerating. While executives may be preparing for a durable rebound in the coming months, a spiking wage bill will eat into insurance margins (third & bottom panels, Chart 9). Netting it all out, a hardening insurance market on the back of firming demand for insurance services especially in residential real estate and automobile markets compel us to lift insurers to a benchmark allocation. Bottom Line: Upgrade the S&P insurance index to neutral today, cementing relative profits of 38% since inception. This upgrade bumps the broad S&P financials sector to a modest overweight stance. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the S&P insurance index are: BLBG: S5INSU - AIG, CB, MET, MMC, PRU, TRV, AFL, AON, ALL, PGR, WLTW, HIG, PFG, L, CINF, LNC, AJG, UNM, AIZ, RE, GL, WRB. Chart 9One Positive And One Risk
One Positive And One Risk
One Positive And One Risk
Stick With Asset Management & Custody Banks While we have moved to the sidelines on the S&P banks and S&P investment banks & brokers groups, we have maintained bank-related exposure via the S&P asset management & custody banks (AMCB) index and today we reiterate our overweight stance in this early cyclical group. Recent news of industry M&A activity has propped up stocks in this index. Any reduction of supply is great news not only because investors have fewer constituents available to deploy capital to, but also because of oligopolistic power with positive industry pricing power knock-on effects. Tack on the recent selloff in the bond market and factors are falling into place for a durable outperformance phase in the S&P AMCB index (top panel, Chart 10). In fact, the stock-to-bond ratio has caught on fire of late forecasting a pickup in momentum in relative share prices (middle panel, Chart 10). Fund flows are also emitting a bullish signal. Historically, increasing bond and equity fund flows have been positively correlated with the relative share price ratio and the current message is positive (bottom panel, Chart 10). Our view remains that the economy will continue to reopen in 2021 and news of the PFE vaccine reiterates our thesis. Thus, as economic uncertainty lifts, it should lead to multiple expansion in this beaten down early cyclical industry (middle panel, Chart 11). More broadly speaking, receding fiscal and election uncertainties should push down the still high equity risk premium and boost the allure of the S&P AMCB index (bottom panel, Chart 11). Chart 10Increasing Flows Are A Boon
Increasing Flows Are A Boon
Increasing Flows Are A Boon
Chart 11A Play On The Economic Reopening
A Play On The Economic Reopening
A Play On The Economic Reopening
Securities lending is another source of income for the industry. Oscillating margin debt balances are an excellent demand gauge for such income producing services. Recently, margin debt has made a run for all-time highs in level terms, expanding at a near 20%/annum clip, underscoring that an earnings led advance is in the offing (bottom panel, Chart 12). With regard to earnings, there is broad-based skepticism on the industry’s profit growth recovery prospects both on a cyclical and structural time horizon. The middle panel of Chart 13 highlights that over the past two decades every time sell-side extreme pessimism reigned supreme, it was a good contrary signal. More precisely, when relative 12-month profit growth expectations sink to negative double digits, a reflex rebound typically ensues. We doubt this time will prove different. Chart 12Follow The Margin Debt
Follow The Margin Debt
Follow The Margin Debt
In sum, a resurgent stock-to-bond ratio, the reopening of the economy and receding fiscal and election uncertainties which will further suppress the equity risk premium, all boost the allure of the S&P AMCB index. Chart 13Lean Against Extreme Analyst Pessimism
Lean Against Extreme Analyst Pessimism
Lean Against Extreme Analyst Pessimism
Bottom Line: We continue to recommend an above benchmark allocation in the S&P AMCB index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5AMGT – BK, BLK, STT, AMP, NTRS, TROW, BEN, IVZ. Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Current Recommendations Current Trades Strategic (10-Year) Trade Recommendations
Drilling Deeper Into Earnings
Drilling Deeper Into Earnings
Size And Style Views October 26, 2020 Favor small over large caps July 27, 2020 Overweight cyclicals over defensives June 11, 2018 Long the BCA Millennial basket The ticker symbols are: (AAPL, AMZN, UBER, HD, LEN, MSFT, NFLX, SPOT, TSLA, V). January 22, 2018 Favor value over growth
Buenos Aires Consensus
Buenos Aires Consensus
The Fed remains a key player enabling the transition from Washington to fiscally loose Buenos Aires consensus as we outlined in this Monday’s Weekly Report. As fiscal valves open and debt piles rise, the bond market will be the only regulatory mechanism. The implication is that the interplay between future fed funds rate (FFR) expectations and the 10-year US Treasury yield becomes a key variable to monitor. The most recent, and similar to today, period was during the GFC, when the Fed held the FFR near zero from December 2008 until December 2015. In this seven-year period, the interplay between the FFR change expectations and the 10-year US Treasury yield reveals that the sensitivity of interest rates to FFR change expectations stood near 2-to-1; i.e. a 50bps increase in the FFR change expectations would push the 10-year yield 100bps higher and vice versa. Year-to-date, the 10-year US Treasury yield’s sensitivity to FFR change expectations has ranged between 1-to-1 and 2-to-1. Looking ahead post the election, the odds are rising of a mammoth fiscal package, especially if there is a “Blue Sweep” but also potentially in a renewed Trump administration. Under such a backdrop the 10-year US Treasury yield would spike and so will FFR hike expectations. Bottom Line: Any selloff in the bond market will serve as a catalyst for a rotation out of fully valued tech stocks and into deeply undervalued financials (see chart).
No Love For Banks
No Love For Banks
Neutral – Downgrade Alert Banks hit all-time lows again this week on the back of mixed profit results. While Q3 loan loss reserves will rise albeit at a slower pace than H1/2020, net interest income ails and difficulty in growing revenues are significant offsets. This backdrop makes banks hostage to the 10-year US Treasury yield (top panel). With regard to fiscal stimulus and economic uncertainty, Jamie Dimon recently warned that “If the double-dip (recession) happens, we would be under-reserved by $20 billion.” Worrisomely, the longer the new stimulus checks take to arrive, the longer it will take banks to rebound. Banks have been semi-sheltered from the recession courtesy of eviction/foreclosure moratorium as well as mortgage forbearance agreements. Absent a fresh stimulus package, the unemployment rate will remain elevated, warning that lagging non-performing loans will skyrocket. Bottom Line: Stay neutral the S&P banks index, but keep it on the downgrade watchlist. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5BANKX – JPM, BAC, C, WFC, USB, TFC, PNC, FRC, FITB, MTB, KEY, SIVB, RF, CFG, HBAN, ZION, CMA, PBCT. For more details, please refer to this Monday’s Weekly Report.
Dear client, Next Monday, October 19, we will be hosting our quarterly webcast, “From Alpha To Omega With Anastasios”, at 10am EST; Matt Gertken, BCA’s Geopolitical Strategist will be our guest on the eve of the US Presidential Election. Our regular weekly publication will resume on Monday October 26, 2020. Kind Regards, Anastasios Highlights Portfolio Strategy Homebuilders are more than fully priced, discounting high margins as far as the eye can see and no end to demand. The specter of higher interest rates, lumber inflation, stealing demand from the future, unfriendly bankers and uncertainty with regard to a fresh stimulus package more than offset the positives, and compel us to issue a downgrade alert for the S&P homebuilding index. While the price of credit, loan growth prospects and credit quality all weigh on relative bank performance. A fiscal stimulus bill, depressed valuations and a Fed induced resumption of dividend hikes and share buybacks keep us on the sidelines in the S&P banks index. Recent Changes There are no changes to our portfolio this week. Table 1
COVID Fatigue, Fiscal Fatigue, Election Fatigue
COVID Fatigue, Fiscal Fatigue, Election Fatigue
Feature Equities seesawed last week as President Trump returned to the White House (WH) and injected fresh volatility in markets signaling that there will be no fiscal deal prior to the elections. The SPX immediately gapped down and we cannot stress enough the importance of our newly configured Fiscal Policy Loop: fiscal hawkishness causes skittishness in markets culminating to a classic BCA riot point and then policymakers relent and fiscal dovishness restores the equity bull market (Figure 1). While we cannot rule out a slimmed-down stimulus package deal by later this month, fiscal policy- and election-related uncertainties remain elevated. The daily back-and-forth on where Congress and the WH stand with passing a new stimulus bill coupled with the prospects of a contested election that would drag on the presidential race likely into December, have caused investor fatigue. The sooner both of these uncertainties recede, the quicker the SPX will climb to fresh all-time highs (Chart 1). Figure 1The Fiscal Policy Loop
COVID Fatigue, Fiscal Fatigue, Election Fatigue
COVID Fatigue, Fiscal Fatigue, Election Fatigue
Chart 1Receding Uncertainty Will Boost Stocks
Receding Uncertainty Will Boost Stocks
Receding Uncertainty Will Boost Stocks
We have shown in recent research, and update today, that the fourth year of presidential cycles finds the SPX ending the year on average in the green with a calendar return in the high single digits (Chart 2). Peering back in 2016 is instructive as that presidential election cycle year was in some ways similar to the current one. The economy, in particular, was fighting off a manufacturing recession that spread and infected the services sectors as the vast majority of S&P GICS1 sectors saw profit contraction and more importantly revenue declines. Chart 3 shows a number of asset classes and compares 2016 with 2020. The 10-year US Treasury yield appears poised to rebound significantly, especially if Congress passes a fresh fiscal package that aides the parts of the economy that need the stimulus checks most. Fiscal easing uncertainty remains a thorny issue across different markets and if history is an accurate guide, the SPX could glide lower into the November election before rallying into year-end. Chart 2Back Up Near The Average Profile
Back Up Near The Average Profile
Back Up Near The Average Profile
Meanwhile, a number of investors we talk to also experience COVID-19 fatigue (Chart 4). For the better part of the last 10 months media has constantly bombarded the world with pandemic news, and rightly so. However, all this seems dystopian by now, and we cannot wait for a semblance of normality to make a comeback, which a vaccine will definitively bring about. The equity market has been indurated to this news-flow and has shaken-off the recession. When the vaccine does arrive likely next year, profits will also return back to trend, as we have been arguing for some time, because the global economy will fully reopen. Chart 32016 Versus 2020
2016 Versus 2020
2016 Versus 2020
Already, if we juxtapose leading soft economic data surprises with lagging hard economic data surprises, it is clear that a stellar profit recovery looms (second panel, Chart 5). Similarly, within soft the data universe, the ISM new orders-to-inventories ratio paints a rosy picture for an earnings recovery in 2021 (third panel, Chart 5). Even within hard economic data, a simple liquidity indicator we have used in the past comparing industrial production (IP) with M2 money stock signals that S&P profits have troughed (IP vs. M2 shown advanced, bottom panel, Chart 5) Chart 4COVID Fatigue
COVID Fatigue
COVID Fatigue
Finally, the US Equity Strategy’s four-factor macro profit growth model has slingshot higher recently and signals that a return to $162 level of EPS in calendar 2021 is a high probability outcome (Chart 6). Netting it all out, we are in the tail end of the equity market correction and as election and fiscal policy uncertainties ebb, they will pave the way for a robust SPX rally. Chart 5Profit Recovery On Track
Profit Recovery On Track
Profit Recovery On Track
Chart 6EPS Model Concurs
EPS Model Concurs
EPS Model Concurs
This week, we continue with our strategy of preferring beaten-down cyclicals to defensives and steer the portfolio away from another safe haven staples industry via downgrading a consumer goods subgroup to underweight. We also delve deeper into the banking industry highlighting some cracks in small commercial banks. Put Homebuilders On Downgrade Alert Homebuilders have had a monster run since the depths of the recession back in March and the question a lot of our clients are now asking is: does it make sense to chase them higher at the current juncture? The short answer is no. Before we get into the details of our analysis a brief recap of our recent residential real estate-related moves is in order. Going into the March carnage we were cyclically underweight the niche homebuilding index. Moreover, last December we had identified homebuilders as a high-conviction underweight in our annual Key Views report. We monetized relative gains of 41% and 43%, respectively from both positions and lifted exposure to a benchmark allocation. While in retrospect we should have upgraded all the way to overweight, we did manage to participate in the V-shaped housing-related returns by opting to go overweight the mega cap home improvement retail index instead. In addition, this summer we eked out another 10% return from a long homebuilders/short REITs pair trade. Homebuilders are enjoying the single family home renaissance as the pandemic has turbo-charged the work from home movement and employees are rushing to move into comfortable spaces in the suburbs as the traditional office is literally declared dead. Indeed, housing starts and permits have renormalized, the drubbing in interest rates has boosted affordability and caused a knee jerk reaction in the mortgage application purchase index, and sell-side analysts are fighting hand-over-fist to upgrade profit projections for the homebuilding group (Chart 7). The end result has been a boom in new home sales that are trouncing existing home sales, and the NAHB’s survey of prospective homebuyers continues to paint a rosy picture for additional demand for new single family homes especially given the low inventory of homes (top & third panels, Chart 8). Chart 7Housing Tailwinds
Housing Tailwinds
Housing Tailwinds
Chart 8Price Concessions Generate Volume
Price Concessions Generate Volume
Price Concessions Generate Volume
This is where all the good news ends. With respect to selling prices, homebuilders are making price concessions compared with existing homes and also in absolute terms new home prices are deflating (second & bottom panels, Chart 8). Therefore, at close to 15%, homebuilding profit margins are near all-time highs and under threat especially from a firming industry wage bill (second & third panels, Chart 9). Tack on surging lumber inflation and a profit margin squeeze is a high probability outcome (bottom panel, Chart 9). As a reminder framing lumber, on average, comprises 15% of a new single family home’s total input costs. While the NAHB survey points to brisk demand for new homes, the sister Conference Board survey shows that consumers’ appetite for a new home has crested (second & third panels, Chart 10). With consumers rushing to move to the suburbs due to the pandemic, there is an element of bringing housing demand forward. Chart 9Beware Margin Squeeze
Beware Margin Squeeze
Beware Margin Squeeze
Chart 10Good News Fully Priced
Good News Fully Priced
Good News Fully Priced
Worrisomely, if the economy continues to open up then interest rates should continue to back up. From all the major asset classes the 10-year Treasury yield is the one that has yet to discount a V-shaped economic recovery. The implication is that rising interest rate would dent affordability and at the margin weigh on housing demand (10-year Treasury yield shown inverted, top panel, Chart 10). Moving on to the credit backdrop, while demand for residential real estate loans has recovered, bankers refuse to extend mortgage credit (second & third panels, Chart 11). According to the latest Fed H8 weekly credit release, residential real estate loans are on the verge of contraction (bottom panel, Chart 11). Finally, the tug-of-war on the fiscal package front is also threatening to sustain the unemployment rate near double digits, which could jeopardize the housing recovery. Historically, housing starts have been near perfectly inversely correlated with the unemployment rate and the current message is for a leveling off in residential construction activity (middle panel, Chart 12). The recent homebuilding run has pushed relative valuations from undervalued to overvalued. The relative P/S ratio trades roughly 30% above the historical mean (a three-year high), and leaves no cushion for any mishaps (bottom panel, Chart 12). Chart 11Bankers Refusing To Dole Out Loans
Bankers Refusing To Dole Out Loans
Bankers Refusing To Dole Out Loans
Chart 12In Desperate Need Of Fiscal Help
In Desperate Need Of Fiscal Help
In Desperate Need Of Fiscal Help
Netting it all out, homebuilders are more than fully priced, discounting high margins as far as the eye can see and no end to demand. The specter of higher interest rates, lumber inflation, stealing demand from the future, unfriendly bankers and uncertainty with regard to a fresh stimulus package more than offset the positives, and compel us to issue a downgrade alert for the S&P homebuilding index. Bottom Line: Stay neutral the S&P homebuilders index, but it is now on our downgrade watch list. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HOME – LEN, PHM, DHI, NVR. A Few Words On Banks Pundits around the globe focus on Eurozone and pan-European banks and argue that these outfits have been value destroyers since the history of the data series in late-1986 (bottom panel, Chart 13). Similarly, US banks relative share prices peaked in the mid-1970s and have never looked back, and very recently have tumbled to fresh all-time lows whether one uses monthly, weekly or daily data (top panel, Chart 13). Meanwhile, the recent drubbing in relative share prices suggests that loan loss provisioning is not over. In fact, Q3 loan loss reserves will surpass the level hit in the GFC, and likely close in on the $300bn mark (provisions shown inverted, Chart 14). Chart 13Banks, The World Over, Are Value Destroyers
Banks, The World Over, Are Value Destroyers
Banks, The World Over, Are Value Destroyers
Chart 14More Loan Losses Loom…
More Loan Losses Loom…
More Loan Losses Loom…
Historically, loan loss provisions are the mirror image of bank net operating income and most importantly bank profits decline as provisioning increases (Chart 15). Worrisomely, the longer the new stimulus checks take to arrive, the longer it will take banks to rebound. Banks have been semi-sheltered from the recession courtesy of eviction/foreclosure moratorium as well as mortgage forbearance agreements. Absent a fresh stimulus package, the unemployment rate will remain elevated, warning that lagging non-performing loans will skyrocket (bottom panel, Chart 16). Chart 15…Which Will Weigh On Profits
…Which Will Weigh On Profits
…Which Will Weigh On Profits
Chart 16Fiscal Policy Easing To The Rescue?
Fiscal Policy Easing To The Rescue?
Fiscal Policy Easing To The Rescue?
Tack on the year-to-date more than halving in the 10-year US Treasury yield and the earnings outlook remains grim for banks (top & middle panels, Chart 17). The transmission mechanism is through net interest margins (NIMs). The fourth panel of Chart 17 highlights that the pair have been joined at the hip and all-time lows in the 10-year US Treasury yield have sank bank NIMs below 3%, which is another all-time low since the history of the FDIC data. Credit growth has crested and our loans and leases model suggests that loan growth will continue to decelerate into 2021 (second panel, Chart 17). Not only is there lack of appetite for new overall loan uptake, but bankers are stringent with extending credit to businesses and consumer alike, according to the most recent Fed Senior Loan Officer survey (Chart 18). Chart 17Credit Growth Blues
Credit Growth Blues
Credit Growth Blues
Chart 18Lack Of Loan Demand And Tightening Credit Supply
Lack Of Loan Demand And Tightening Credit Supply
Lack Of Loan Demand And Tightening Credit Supply
However, there are three significant offsets to all these stiff headwinds that prevent us from downgrading banks to an underweight stance. First, the 10-year US Treasury yield is one of the few assets that has yet to discount any economic recovery. Thus, as uncertainty lifts post the November election, the economy continues to open up and Congress and the new President manage to pass a fresh fiscal stimulus bill, all this could catalyze a catch up phase in the long bond yield. Second, valuations offer a deep enough discount to absorb a little bit of more negative news as analysts and investors alike have thrown in the towel in banks (bottom panel, Chart 19). Finally, the credible Fed’s stress test loom by year-end and assuming banks pass them with flying colors a resumption of shareholder friendly activities will boost the allure of owing banks and unwind extremely oversold conditions (middle panel, Chart 19). In sum, while the price of credit, loan growth prospects and credit quality all weigh on relative bank performance. A fiscal stimulus bill, depressed valuations and a Fed induced resumption of dividend hikes and share buybacks keep us on the sidelines in the S&P banks index. Chart 19Unloved And Under-owned
Unloved And Under-owned
Unloved And Under-owned
Bottom Line: Stay neutral the S&P banks index, but keep it on the downgrade watch list. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5BANKX – JPM, BAC, C, WFC, USB, TFC, PNC, FRC, FITB, MTB, KEY, SIVB, RF, CFG, HBAN, ZION, CMA, PBCT. Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Current Recommendations Current Trades Strategic (10-Year) Trade Recommendations
Drilling Deeper Into Earnings
Drilling Deeper Into Earnings
Size And Style Views July 27, 2020 Overweight cyclicals over defensives April 28, 2020 Stay neutral large over small caps June 11, 2018 Long the BCA Millennial basket The ticker symbols are: (AAPL, AMZN, UBER, HD, LEN, MSFT, NFLX, SPOT, TSLA, V). January 22, 2018 Favor value over growth
Neutral - Downgrade Alert
Small Bank Trouble Brewing
Small Bank Trouble Brewing
Absent another fiscal package, banks risk digesting a new wave of credit defaults, further increasing their loan loss provisions as pandemic wounds remain open. Importantly, according to the latest Fed data, small banks1 are at the forefront of sloppy lending activity, warning that those weaker banks have higher exposure to defaults than large banks.2 Small bank C&I loan growth reached a whopping 50% per annum growth rate (second panel). Commercial real estate (CRE) loans are also expanding at a higher rate in small banks compared with large banks (third panel). With regard to concentration, small banks have been making inroads in feverishly doling out loans versus large banks. The former now comprise 40% of total C&I loan books (the largest credit category, bottom panel) and 2/3 of CRE loans – the second largest loan category with $2.4tn outstanding. Inevitably, some loans will sour because of the pandemic and the longer it takes Congress to pass a fresh stimulus bill the higher the pain for banks. One way out of this mess will likely be via much needed industry consolidation. As a reminder the US still has 4,400 banks. Bottom Line: We remain neutral the S&P banks index, which is also on our downgrade watchlist since early September. The ticker symbols for the stocks in these indexes are: BLBG S5BANKX – JPM, BAC, C, WFC, USB, TFC, PNC, FRC, FITB, MTB, KEY, SIVB, RF, CFG, HBAN, ZION, CMA, PBCT. Footnotes 1 Small banks are defined as all commercial banks excluding top 25 banks ranked by domestic assets. 2 Large banks are defined as top 25 commercial banks ranked by domestic assets.