Gov Sovereigns/Treasurys
Highlights Stock markets are set to produce low single digit returns in 2020. Favour stocks over bonds and cash, especially where bond yields are zero or negative – specifically, Germany, Switzerland, and Sweden. Underweight zero and negative yielding high-quality bonds versus higher yielding bonds – for example, underweight Swiss bonds versus US T-bonds. Favour lower yielding currencies because the central bank loses the ability to depress its own currency. For 2020, our preferred expression of this is long SEK/USD. The biggest risk in 2020 is if the global bond yield were to rise towards 2.5 percent exposing the fragility of risk-asset prices to higher bond yields. The $400 trillion global risk-asset edifice dwarfs the $80 trillion global economy by five to one. Fractal trade: Short Ireland (ISEQ 20) versus Europe (Stoxx Europe 600). Feature For all the talk of economic growth driving stock markets, the big story through 2018-19 has been bond yields driving stock markets. This is true in Europe as well as more broadly – and it is very easy to demonstrate by decomposing the stock market price into its two components: the underlying profits (earnings per share) and the valuation multiple paid for those profits (Chart of the Week). Chart of the Week2018 And 2019 Were All About Valuations. What About 2020?
2018 And 2019 Were All About Valuations. What About 2020?
2018 And 2019 Were All About Valuations. What About 2020?
2018 And 2019 Were All About Valuations Contrast 2018-19 with 2017. In 2017, the stock market’s stellar return came almost entirely from growth – profits surged while the multiple drifted sideways. But in 2018 and 2019, the story was all about valuation multiples – profits drifted sideways while the multiple plunged in 2018, and then symmetrically surged in 2019 (Chart I-2 and Chart I-3). Chart I-2Decomposing Stock Market Performance...
Decomposing Stock Market Performance...
Decomposing Stock Market Performance...
Chart I-3...Into Valuation And Profits
...Into Valuation And Profits
...Into Valuation And Profits
The cause of the stock market multiple contraction and re-expansion was the dramatic swing in bond yields. This is hardly surprising given that the prospective return on bonds drives the prospective return on competing long-duration assets, like equities and real-estate. Higher bond yields require a higher prospective return on equities, meaning a lower valuation multiple, while lower bond yields require a higher valuation multiple. In driving the swing in bond yields, the principal player was the Federal Reserve. Again, this is hardly surprising given that the ECB and BoJ are stuck on the side lines with monetary policy already locked at ‘maximum accommodative’, while the Fed can still move the lever in both directions. The cause of the stock market multiple contraction and re-expansion was the dramatic swing in bond yields. Through 2018-2019, the 10-year T-bond yield took a round trip from around 2 percent to 3.3 percent and then down again to around 2 percent where it stands today. This explains the mirror-image round trip in the stock market’s multiple: from 16 down to 13 and then back up again to 16 where it stands today (Chart I-4). Chart I-4The Round Trip In The T-Bond Yield Explains The Round Trip In The Stock Market's Valuation
The Round Trip In The T-Bond Yield Explains The Round Trip In The Stock Market's Valuation
The Round Trip In The T-Bond Yield Explains The Round Trip In The Stock Market's Valuation
Admittedly, the Fed’s dramatic pivot was influenced by the trade war, and the perceived threat to global growth. But two other considerations loomed large: the persistent undershoot of inflation versus its 2 percent target; and the fragility of risk-asset valuations – and thereby financial conditions – to higher bond yields. Bear in mind that the value of global risk-assets at over $400 trillion now dwarfs the $80 trillion global economy by a factor of five to one. So the main danger is not that economic imbalances and fragilities will drag down the financial markets; the main danger is that financial market imbalances and fragilities will drag down the economy – as we painfully felt in 2000, 2007, and 2011. The Valuation And Growth Outlook In 2020 The two key investment questions for 2020 are: What will happen to bond yields, and what will happen to stock market profits? Starting with bond yields, most of the major central banks are, to repeat, out of play. Leaving the Fed as the principal player. But at the last press conference, Jay Powell, made it crystal clear that the Fed is also out of play for the time being, at least when it comes to raising rates. “We've just touched 2 percent core inflation, and then we've fallen back. So, I think we would need to see a really significant move up in inflation that's persistent before we even consider raising rates to address inflation concerns.” Reinforcing this, Powell also hinted at introducing a potential ‘tolerance band’ around the 2 percent inflation target – perhaps 1.5-2.5 percent – before the central bank would need to react. “We're also, as part of our review, looking at potential innovations… changes to the framework that would be more supportive of achieving inflation on a symmetric 2 percent basis over time… these changes to monetary policy frameworks don't happen really quickly (but)… I think we'll wrap it up around the middle of next year. I've some confidence in that.” What about profits – could 2020 be a repeat of the 2017 stellar growth story? No, there are two reasons why it will be very difficult to repeat the 2017 story on profits. The two reasons come from the two components of profits: sales and profit margins. Unlike in 2017, global sales will not start 2020 at the very depressed levels from which they can play a very strong catch-up. The first reason is that, unlike in 2017, global sales will not start 2020 at the very depressed levels from which they can play a very strong catch-up (Chart I-5). Significantly, the recession in global sales through 2015-16 was comparable to that suffered in 2008-09. The 2015-16 recession just hasn’t been well documented because it was essentially an emerging markets recession rather than the developed market recession of 2008-09. Chart I-5Global Sales Are Not Depressed
Global Sales Are Not Depressed
Global Sales Are Not Depressed
The second reason is that today’s profit margins are still close to their structural and cyclical peak; whereas at the start of 2017, they were at a cyclical low (Chart I-6). Chart I-6Profit Margins Are Elevated
Profit Margins Are Elevated
Profit Margins Are Elevated
Hence, the two components of profits – sales and profit margins – will start 2020 at elevated levels. The upshot is that profits can grow in 2020, but the growth will be pedestrian at best. Let’s summarise some of the key investment messages for 2020. High quality bond yields that are near the lower bound of -1 percent cannot go much lower, but those yields in the region of 2 percent cannot go significantly higher. It follows that fixed-income investors should underweight zero and negative yielding bonds versus higher yielding bonds – for example, underweight Swiss bonds versus US T-bonds. In a negative growth shock, T-bonds can still offer substantial capital gains but Swiss bonds cannot. For currencies, it is the opposite message. Favour lower yielding currencies because the central bank loses the ability to depress its own currency. For 2020, our preferred expression of this is long SEK/USD. Stock markets are set to produce low single digit returns. This is uninspiring, but in a world of low prospective returns from all major asset-classes, favour stocks over bonds and cash. This is especially true in those regions and countries where bond yields are zero or negative – specifically, Germany, Switzerland, and Sweden. Today’s profit margins are still close to their structural and cyclical peak The biggest risk to this view is if the global bond yield were to rise towards 2.5 percent exposing the fragility of the risk-asset edifice to higher bond yields. To repeat, the value of global risk-assets, at over $400 trillion, dwarfs the $80 trillion global economy. So the biggest risk comes from the valuation of global financial markets, it does not come from the global economy. More About Price To Sales Having completed our 20 paragraphs on 2020, we would like to follow up on the analysis in last week’s report: Are European Stocks Attractive? To recap, we found that price to sales is the stock market valuation metric that has the best predictive power for prospective returns – because unlike other metrics such as assets, profits, and cash flow, sales are quantifiable, unambiguous, and undistorted by profit margins. In last week’s report our prospective return forecasts were based on price to sales data sourced from Thomson Reuters. To which, several clients asked if the analysis would be the same using the price to sales data sourced from MSCI (Chart I-7). The answer is broadly yes. Chart I-8-Chart I-10 illustrate that: Chart I-7Despite The US, Germany, And Japan Trading On Different Valuations...
Despite The US, Germany, And Japan Trading On Different Valuations...
Despite The US, Germany, And Japan Trading On Different Valuations...
Chart I-8...The Prospective Return From The US Is Low Single Digit...
...The Prospective Return From The US Is Low Single Digit...
...The Prospective Return From The US Is Low Single Digit...
Chart I-9...The Prospective Return From Germany Is Low Single Digit...
...The Prospective Return From Germany Is Low Single Digit...
...The Prospective Return From Germany Is Low Single Digit...
Chart I-10...The Prospective Return From Japan Is Low Single Digit...
...The Prospective Return From Japan Is Low Single Digit...
...The Prospective Return From Japan Is Low Single Digit...
First, despite vastly different stock market valuations in Germany, Japan, and the US, the implied prospective 10-year annualised returns are almost identical. Second, the implied prospective returns from the MSCI calculated price to sales are slightly lower than from the Thomson Reuters data, because current MSCI valuations are closer to the dot com bubble peak. Third, this just reinforces the point that stock market valuations are very fragile to higher bond yields, as already discussed in our preceding 20 paragraphs on 2020. Fractal Trading System* This week we note that the strong outperformance of the Irish stock market is vulnerable to a correction based on its broken 65-day fractal structure. Accordingly, this week’s recommended trade is short Ireland (ISEQ 20) versus Europe (Stoxx Europe 600). Set the profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 4 percent. In other trades, we are pleased to report that long gold versus nickel achieved its 11 percent profit target and is now closed. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment’s fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes.
ISEQ 20 Vs. STOXX EUROPE 600
ISEQ 20 Vs. STOXX EUROPE 600
The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Dhaval Joshi Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades
2020 In 20 Paragraphs
2020 In 20 Paragraphs
2020 In 20 Paragraphs
2020 In 20 Paragraphs
2020 In 20 Paragraphs
2020 In 20 Paragraphs
2020 In 20 Paragraphs
2020 In 20 Paragraphs
Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Global Growth: The latest readings from our global leading economic indicator and the global ZEW index show further improvement in growth momentum. Maintain a below-benchmark stance on global duration, favoring inflation-linked bonds/swaps over nominal bond exposure, while positioning for steeper government bond yield curves. New Zealand: The RBNZ is likely done cutting rates, amid signs that the momentum is bottoming for both growth and inflation in New Zealand. Take profits on our long-standing recommended NZ-US and NZ-Germany 5-year government bond spread trades. Feature Investors have a lot of information to process at the moment. The daily ebb and flow of headlines on the US-China trade negotiations remains the biggest source of intraday volatility. Yet there are also mixed signals coming from economic data releases. “Soft” survey data like global manufacturing PMIs are showing some improvement, while “hard” measures of economic activity like export volumes and capital goods orders continue to languish in both the developed and emerging economies. As we have discussed in recent reports, these sorts of cross-currents are typical at cyclical inflection points. “Hard” data is reported with a lag after “soft” data, making the latter a better indicator of future economic activity than exports or fixed investment data (or even GDP data) that can be several months old once reported, reducing their market-moving relevance. The indicators that we trust the most are sending a bullish message on growth – and a bearish message for government bonds. When global growth is in the process of bottoming, as appears to be the case now, leading economic indicators are more reliable guides to follow for investment decision-making. To that end, the indicators that we trust the most are sending a bullish message on growth – and a bearish message for government bonds. The Latest From Our Global LEI & Global ZEW Chart of the WeekMore Cyclical Upward Pressure On Bond Yields
More Cyclical Upward Pressure On Bond Yields
More Cyclical Upward Pressure On Bond Yields
We received updates on two of our most reliable indicators – our global leading economic indicator (LEI) and the global ZEW expectations index – last week. Both showed broad-based improvement, highlighting that the sharp downward momentum in global growth seen over the past year is in the process of bottoming out. The global LEI and the global ZEW index are key inputs into our Duration Indicator, which has historically led developed market bond yields by between six and nine months (Chart of the Week). The Duration Indicator bottomed back in January of this year and, right on cue, the yield on the Bloomberg Barclays Global Treasury Index has gone up 28bps from the low seen on September 3. The improvement in our global LEI is also broad based. The diffusion index (i.e. the share of countries with a rising LEI) shows that around 75% of the countries in the global LEI are experiencing improved economic activity. Importantly, that share is consistent across both the developed market (DM) and emerging market (EM) nations in the indicator, heralding a synchronized improvement in global growth. (Chart 2). In absolute level terms, however, the EM sub-component of our global LEI has shown the most dramatic improvement over the past several months, compared to the DM sub-index that is only in the process of bottoming out. The EM index is boosted by improvements in large economies like China and Mexico – countries that have seen significant easing of monetary policy and financial conditions over the past 6-9 months. At the same time, the lagging performance of the DM component of our global LEI is consistent with the more subdued signals to date from the individual DM country data. The US LEI continues to drift lower, while the LEIs within the euro area for Germany, Italy and (most notably) France have all been moving higher (Chart 3). Even the Japan and UK LEIs have picked up a bit, although both remain at only moderate levels. At the same time, the expectations components of the individual country ZEW surveys have all begun to increase (bottom panel), despite more mixed performance within the current conditions components of the same ZEW survey (top panel). Chart 2Our Global LEI Continues to Climb, Led By EM
Our Global LEI Continues to Climb, Led By EM
Our Global LEI Continues to Climb, Led By EM
Chart 3A Mixed Bag Of DM Growth Indicators
A Mixed Bag Of DM Growth Indicators
A Mixed Bag Of DM Growth Indicators
Without a doubt, a reduction of US-China trade tensions would flatter the bullish growth signals seen in the global LEI and ZEW indices. Yet the turn in these indicators is so consistent, across so many countries, that we suspect it has more to do with the easier monetary policies, and the associated loosening of financial conditions, that have taken place in response to the uncertainty over global trade. The turn in these indicators is so consistent, across so many countries, that we suspect it has more to do with the easier monetary policies, and the associated loosening of financial conditions, that have taken place in response to the uncertainty over global trade. Taken together, these signals are all bond-bearish, on the margin. The diffusion index of our global LEI has proven to be an excellent leading indicator of the real component of DM bond yields, leading the latter by around one year, and is pointing to higher yields ahead (Chart 4). At the same time, the inflation expectations component of DM yields (measured using CPI swaps rates) is also expected to drift higher in the next 6-12 months, led by firmer oil prices and some softening of the US dollar. Global central banks will maintain a dovish bias over at least the first half of 2020, to ensure that there is enough positive growth momentum to push inflation expectations back up towards policymaker targets. This means that there can be some modest bear-steepening of government bond yield curves across the major DM nations over the next 6-9 months (Chart 5), as policymakers will not begin to raise policy interest rates too soon. Chart 4Global Yields Moving Higher For The Usual Reasons
Global Yields Moving Higher For The Usual Reasons
Global Yields Moving Higher For The Usual Reasons
Chart 5Higher Inflation Expectations = Steeper Yield Curves
Higher Inflation Expectations = Steeper Yield Curves
Higher Inflation Expectations = Steeper Yield Curves
Chart 6Global Yields Starting To Climb Above Moving Averages
Global Yields Starting To Climb Above Moving Averages
Global Yields Starting To Climb Above Moving Averages
The notable exception is the UK. Inflation expectations there are already elevated due to Brexit uncertainty, which has depressed the pound and reduced UK productivity growth while forcing the Bank of England to maintain highly accommodative monetary policy – all factors that should result in higher UK inflation, both realized and expected. Yet even there, the nominal Gilt curve has been bear-steepening of late, alongside the similar trends seen in the other major DM countries like the US and Germany. The move upward in global bond yields suggested by our most reliable leading indicators suggests more of a slow grinding increase in yields (through higher inflation expectations) rather than a rapid acceleration of real rates. The latter would require a shift towards more hawkish central bank monetary policies, which will not happen before there is a sustained pickup in both growth momentum and inflation expectations. The Federal Reserve is the central bank that is likely to lead that transition, but not until late in 2020 and perhaps not until after the November US presidential election. At the country level, the move upward in yields since the early September lows has begun to take out some technical targets (Chart 6). The benchmark 10-year government bond yield is above the 100-day moving average for the major DM countries (the US, Germany, UK, Japan, Canada and Australia). The 200-day moving averages represent the next key resistance level for those markets. The 10-year yield in Japan has already breached that level, perhaps signaling that similar breakouts are on the way in other major markets. Bottom Line: The latest readings from our global leading economic indicator and the global ZEW index show further improvement in growth momentum. Maintain a below-benchmark stance on global duration, favoring inflation-linked bonds/swaps over nominal bond exposure, while positioning for steeper government bond yield curves. Time To (Finally) Take Profits On Our New Zealand Spread Trades We have been structurally positive on New Zealand (NZ) government bonds since mid-2017. This was originally a shorter-term “tactical” view based on expectations that the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) would be forced to keep policy rates steady due to sub-par domestic economic growth and sluggish inflation. Since this was occurring at a time of improving global economic growth in 2017, especially in the US and euro area, we expressed our view as spread trades between 5-year government bonds in NZ versus equivalent maturity debt in the US and Germany (hedged back into US dollars and euros, respectively). The “tactical” trade turned into a medium-term recommendation, as the NZ economy and inflation slowed more than expected. NZ government bonds significantly outperformed global peers as a result, helping boost the returns on our recommended trades. The 5-year NZ-US yield spread has fallen from +74bps when we first initiated the trade to -52bps today, while the spread for 5-year NZ-Germany has narrowed from +292bps to +171bps (Chart 7). We now see several good reasons to take profits on those long-standing positions: NZ economic growth is set to improve The year-over-year growth rate of real GDP in NZ has slowed from 3.1% in mid-2017 (when we initiated our spread trades) to 2.1% in the Q2/2019 (Chart 8). This has occurred in both the manufacturing and services sides of the economy, based on the sharp drop in the PMIs (middle panel). Export growth has also slowed, particularly during the recent global manufacturing downturn, leading to sharp declines in business confidence and capital spending plans. The economic weakness was enough to push NZ real GDP growth below the rate of potential GDP - which is estimated by the RBNZ to have fallen from 3% to 2.5% due primarily to slowing population growth related to reduced net immigration into the country. Chart 7NZ Bonds Have Solidly Outperformed
NZ Bonds Have Solidly Outperformed
NZ Bonds Have Solidly Outperformed
Chart 8NZ Growth Should Soon Bottom Out
NZ Growth Should Soon Bottom Out
NZ Growth Should Soon Bottom Out
The long slump in NZ manufacturing appears to have ended, however. The manufacturing PMI index jumped 3.8 points to 52.6 in October, with the New Orders component rising 5.3 points to 56.2. This pushed the New Orders-to-Inventories ratio – a leading indicator of overall NZ business sentiment – to the highest level since March 2017 (bottom panel). The domestic side of the NZ economy is also set to improve (Chart 9). Consumer spending has been weighed down by both the structural factor of slowing immigration and the cyclical factor of slowing house prices. Median NZ house price growth has perked up of late, however, in response to the RBNZ’s rate cuts this year, which should help boost consumer spending through wealth effects. Business investment should also start to speed up as manufacturing activity improves, especially with the terms of trade (relative prices of NZ exports to imports) now starting to accelerate (middle panel). The external side of the economy is also set for some improvement. In the November 2019 RBNZ Monetary Policy Statement (MPS) published last week, the central bank laid out a very cautious forecast for an increase in the GDP growth of NZ’s trading partners in 2020 (bottom panel). The sharp pickup in the EM component of our global LEI, however, suggests that global growth, and demand for NZ exports, may be much stronger than the central bank envisions next year. NZ’s economy is running at close to full capacity In the November MPS, the RBNZ also presented its own estimates for spare capacity in the NZ economy, using a variety of economic models for both the output gap and the full employment “NAIRU” (Chart 10). The median estimate of the output gap models is around 0% and is expected to stay around those levels for the next two years. The NZ unemployment rate is projected to be stable around 4% through 2020, which is close to the median model estimate of NAIRU. Thus, by the central bank’s own reckoning, the NZ economy is running at full capacity. Chart 9An Upside Growth Surprise In 2020?
An Upside Growth Surprise In 2020?
An Upside Growth Surprise In 2020?
Chart 10NZ Does Not Need More Rate Cuts
NZ Does Not Need More Rate Cuts
NZ Does Not Need More Rate Cuts
The RBNZ also produces model estimates of the neutral level of its policy rate, the Overnight Cash Rate (OCR). The current OCR of 1.0% is at the low end of the range of model estimates (bottom panel). This seems inconsistent with an economy that may be operating with no spare capacity, as the RBNZ’s other models suggest. Those models appear to be giving an accurate read on the inflationary tendencies of the NZ economy, though. Underlying NZ inflation is accelerating While headline CPI inflation fell to 1.5% in Q3/2019, close to the bottom of the RBNZ’s 1-3% target band, core CPI inflation accelerated to 1.9% - just below the midpoint of the band (Chart 11). The decline in headline inflation can be attributed to weakness in the tradeables component of the CPI, but this should soon start to increase based on the lagged impact of the acceleration of energy prices denominated in NZ dollars (middle panel). With both growth and inflation dynamics now bottoming out in NZ, the RBNZ’s recent rate cuts may be working too well. Meanwhile, non-tradeables (i.e. domestically generated) CPI inflation has accelerated over the past few quarters and is now at 3.2% - above the top end of the RBNZ inflation band. This has occurred alongside an acceleration of average hourly earnings growth to 4.2%, suggesting a tight labor market that confirms the message from the RBNZ’s NAIRU models. NZ monetary conditions are now very easy With both growth and inflation dynamics now bottoming out in NZ, the RBNZ’s recent rate cuts may be working too well. The central bank also produces estimates of the neutral real rate in NZ, using the same “r*” framework used by the US Federal Reserve (Chart 12). The neutral real rate is estimated to be 1.25% which, when added to the 2% midpoint of the RBNZ’s target band, produces a neutral nominal rate of 3.25% - a whopping 225bps above the current OCR rate. Chart 11NZ Inflation Bottoming Out
NZ Inflation Bottoming Out
NZ Inflation Bottoming Out
Chart 12NZ Monetary Conditions Now Appear Too Easy
NZ Monetary Conditions Now Appear Too Easy
NZ Monetary Conditions Now Appear Too Easy
With rates so far below neutral in nominal terms, it is no surprise that the NZ dollar is at such low levels versus both the US dollar and the euro (bottom panel). This is providing an additional easing of monetary conditions that will help boost NZ growth and inflation over at least the next year – and likely force the RBNZ to stop cutting rates and, perhaps, even begin to lay the groundwork for taking back some of the 2019 rate reductions. In sum, the combination of improving growth momentum, accelerating inflation dynamics, loose monetary policy settings, and overvaluation make a powerful case for closing out our NZ-US and NZ-Germany spread trades at a healthy profit. NZ yields look too low versus the US and Germany Our fair value regression models for both the 5-year NZ-US spread (Chart 13), and the 5-year NZ-Germany spread (Chart 14), are both signaling that NZ government bonds are relatively expensive. These models estimate the fair value of the spreads as a function of relative central bank policy rates, relative unemployment rates and relative inflation rates. Both models suggest that the cross-country yield spreads have tightened too much relative to the economic fundamentals of NZ, the US and Germany. Chart 13NZ Government Bonds Look Expensive Versus US Treasuries ...
NZ Government Bonds Look Expensive Versus US Treasuries ...
NZ Government Bonds Look Expensive Versus US Treasuries ...
Chart 14... And German Government Debt
... And German Government Debt
... And German Government Debt
In sum, the combination of improving growth momentum, accelerating inflation dynamics, loose monetary policy settings, and overvaluation make a powerful case for closing out our NZ-US and NZ-Germany spread trades at a healthy profit (see the Tactical Overlay Trade table on Page 16). Bottom Line: The RBNZ is likely done cutting rates, amid signs that the momentum is bottoming for both growth and inflation in New Zealand. Take profits on our long-standing recommended NZ-US and NZ-Germany 5-year government bond spread trades Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
When In Doubt, Trust The Leading Indicators
When In Doubt, Trust The Leading Indicators
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Duration: The bond market’s bearish trend remains intact, but suffered a hiccup last week as some economic data disappointed. Our sense is that the worst of the global growth slowdown is over, but a rebound in our preferred global growth indicators – Global Manufacturing PMI, US ISM Manufacturing PMI and CRB Raw Industrials index – is necessary to push bond yields higher. We expect that such a rebound will transpire in the coming months. The Credit Cycle & Inflation: Low inflation expectations will keep monetary policy accommodative for the next 6-12 months. This justifies a positive outlook for spread product excess returns. Eventually, inflation will return and force the Fed to adopt a more restrictive stance. This will lead to the end of the credit cycle. We will get more defensive on spread product when long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates move above 2.3%. Municipal Bonds: The main issues facing municipal bonds are long-run in nature, mostly related to underfunded state & local government pensions. These concerns are propping up yield ratios at the long-end of the muni curve, but aren’t likely to cause a wave of ratings downgrades until revenue growth slows during the next downturn. For the time being, investors can grab an attractive after-tax yield premium in long-maturity munis. Hiccups Judging by the bond market, recession fears appear to have peaked in late August. Since then, the Treasury index has lost 2.1% versus a position in cash and the 2/10 yield curve is 23 bps steeper (Chart 1). Curve steepening has also occurred via the real yield curve, while the breakeven inflation curve is moderately flatter, consistent with our expectations.1 However, this bearish bond market trend suffered a set-back last week. The 10-year yield fell 10 bps, back down to 1.84%, and the 2-year yield fell 7 bps to 1.61%. The move was driven by an increase in skepticism about the US and China’s “phase 1” trade deal and some mixed economic data. Both industrial production growth and capacity utilization remain well above their 2016 lows, consistent with stronger PMIs. October’s Industrial Production report was the worst of last week’s data releases. Production declined 0.8% on the month and capacity utilization fell from 77.5% to 76.7% (Chart 2). The data were significantly influenced by the General Motors strike, but the index still fell 0.5% with motor vehicles and parts stripped out. In our prior discussions of the divergence between “hard” and “soft” economic data, we pointed to relatively strong industrial production as a reason to expect a snapback in depressed manufacturing PMIs.2 This month’s weak print challenges that view, though both industrial production growth and capacity utilization remain well above their 2016 lows, consistent with stronger PMIs. The New York Fed’s Manufacturing PMI also came in roughly flat last week, and continues to point to a rebound in the national index (Chart 2, bottom panel). Chart 1Bumps On The Road ##br##To Higher Yields
Bumps On The Road To Higher Yields
Bumps On The Road To Higher Yields
Chart 2Disappointing Data, But Well ##br##Above 2016 Lows
Disappointing Data, But Well Above 2016 Lows
Disappointing Data, But Well Above 2016 Lows
October’s retail sales were also released last week, and we continue to observe a wide divergence between strong consumer spending growth and falling consumer confidence (Chart 3). As with the divergence between industrial production and the manufacturing PMI, we suspect that negative sentiment about the US/China trade war has unduly depressed consumer and business sentiment. Sentiment should rebound if trade tensions ease in the coming months, as we expect. Finally, we note that the CRB Raw Industrials index remains downbeat (Chart 4). We should continue to view the recent increase in bond yields as tenuous until it is confirmed by a rebound in this global growth bellwether. Chart 3Retail Sales Still Strong
Retail Sales Still Strong
Retail Sales Still Strong
Chart 4Waiting On The CRB Index To Rebound
Waiting On The CRB Index To Rebound
Waiting On The CRB Index To Rebound
Bottom Line: The bond market’s bearish trend remains intact, but suffered a hiccup last week as some economic data disappointed. Our sense is that the worst of the global growth slowdown is over, but a rebound in our preferred global growth indicators – Global Manufacturing PMI, US ISM Manufacturing PMI and CRB Raw Industrials index – is necessary to push bond yields higher. We expect that such a rebound will transpire in the coming months. Inflation Will End The Cycle … But Not Anytime Soon As global growth improves during the next few months and recession fears fade into the background, discussion will once again turn toward questions about how much longer the credit cycle can run, and what will ultimately bring it to an end. On the first question, we find the slope of the yield curve to be an excellent indicator of the age of the cycle. Specifically, we like to split each cycle into three phases based on the slope of the 3-year/10-year yield curve: 3 Phase 1 starts at the end of the last recession and ends when the 3/10 slope flattens to below 50 bps. Phase 2 encompasses the period when the slope is between 0 bps and 50 bps. Phase 3 begins when the 3/10 slope inverts and ends at the start of the next recession. We expect Phase 2 to persist for some time given that inflation expectations remain downbeat. Table 1 shows that corporate bond excess returns are highest in Phase 1, when the yield curve is steep and spreads are tightening quickly. Excess returns tend to remain positive in Phase 2, but are much lower. Excess returns don’t usually turn negative until after the yield curve inverts and we enter Phase 3. Table 1Corporate Bond Performance During The Three Phases Of The Yield Curve Cycle
When To Worry About Inflation
When To Worry About Inflation
Though some segments of the yield curve inverted in August, we do not think that the cycle has transitioned into Phase 3. The inversion was quite brief, and the measure we employ in our analysis – the monthly average of daily closing values of the 3-year/10-year slope – never broke below zero. The 3-year/10-year slope is currently +23 bps. We expect the current Phase 2 environment to persist for some time, and consequently, corporate bonds will deliver small positive excess returns relative to Treasuries. The reason why we expect Phase 2 to persist for some time is that inflation expectations remain downbeat (Chart 5). Both the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates are well below the 2.3%-2.5% range that is consistent with the Fed’s target. This means that the Fed has every incentive to maintain an accommodative monetary policy until inflation expectations are re-anchored. An accommodative policy stance will prevent the yield curve from inverting for any sustained period of time. Chart 5The Re-Anchoring Process Will Take Time
The Re-Anchoring Process Will Take Time
The Re-Anchoring Process Will Take Time
The upshot is that a re-anchoring of TIPS breakeven inflation rates will be an important signal for us to get more defensive on corporate credit. When the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates move above 2.3%, the Fed will have less incentive to maintain an accommodative stance. The pace of tightening will likely quicken, leading to a sustained curve inversion and a transition into Phase 3 of the cycle. How Long Until Inflation Expectations Are Re-Anchored? Given our framework for thinking about the age of the cycle, the big question for our corporate credit call is: How long until inflation expectations are re-anchored? We have previously demonstrated that inflation expectations adapt to changes in the actual inflation data, and that this adaptive process occurs very slowly.4 Note that our Adaptive Expectations Model puts fair value for the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate at 1.9%. This is above the current rate of 1.63%, but still well below our 2.3%-2.5% target range (Chart 5, bottom panel). The gradual nature of the adaptive process means that actual core inflation will probably have to overshoot the Fed’s 2% target for a period of time before long-dated expectations are firmly re-anchored. With that in mind, we are still a long way away from inflation posing a problem for the credit cycle. Core CPI and core PCE inflation are running at year-over-year rates of 2.3% and 1.7%, respectively, both slightly below levels consistent with the Fed’s target (Chart 6).5 Trimmed mean measures are slightly higher and less volatile. They currently suggest that core inflation will remain in a slow and steady uptrend going forward. Any durable increase in core inflation will likely occur via the Core Services (ex. shelter and medical care) component. Looking at the main components of core inflation, we see some reason to expect consumer price acceleration to cool in the coming months. Recent inflation gains have come mostly via the Core Goods component (Chart 7). This component tracks non-oil import prices with a long lag, and import prices have already rolled over. Meanwhile, shelter is the largest component of core inflation and we expect it will remain well supported in the coming months. The National Multifamily Housing Council’s Apartment Market Tightness Index has been in “net tightening” territory for two consecutive quarters (Chart 7, bottom panel). An above-50% reading from this index tends to coincide with rising shelter inflation. Chart 6Expect Core Inflation To Rise Slowly
Expect Core Inflation To Rise Slowly
Expect Core Inflation To Rise Slowly
Chart 7A Closer Look At The Core CPI Components
A Closer Look At The Core CPI Components
A Closer Look At The Core CPI Components
Ultimately, any durable increase in core inflation will likely occur via the Core Services (ex. shelter and medical care) component. This component has been relatively stable during the past few months (Chart 7, panel 3). Another interesting dynamic to monitor when assessing how long it will take for inflation to return is the labor share of national income. Chart 8 shows that the wage acceleration seen during the past few years has come mostly at the expense of corporate profit margins, and has not yet been significantly passed through to higher consumer prices. This is typical late-cycle behavior, and at some point firms will need to start raising prices in order to protect margins. Chart 8Where Will The Labor Share Peak?
Where Will The Labor Share Peak?
Where Will The Labor Share Peak?
If we use the past few cycles as a guide, we see that the labor share of income peaked at above 70%. If this is an accurate road-map for the current cycle, then it means that firms can stomach quite a bit more margin compression, and it could be a long time before inflation pressures emerge. However, some recent research suggests that the labor share of income might peak at a lower level this cycle than in the past.6 This research documents that many industries are increasingly dominated by a small number of “superstar firms”. These firms have greater pricing power and might be able to sustain higher profit margins indefinitely. This would mean that inflationary pressures could re-emerge at a lower labor share of national income than in previous cycles. Bottom Line: Low inflation expectations will keep monetary policy accommodative for the next 6-12 months. This justifies a positive outlook for spread product excess returns. Eventually, inflation will return and force the Fed to adopt a more restrictive stance. This will lead to the end of the credit cycle. We will get more defensive on spread product when long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates move above 2.3%. Strong Revenue Growth Supports Munis We continue to recommend an overweight allocation to municipal bonds due to attractive yield ratios, particularly for long maturities, and steady state & local government revenue growth. Chart 9 shows that Aaa Municipal / Treasury yield ratios were quite low earlier this year, but have increased significantly during the past few months. Yield ratios are above average pre-crisis levels for maturities of 10-years and greater. Against that back-drop of attractive valuations, credit quality trends are also supportive. Municipal bond ratings upgrades are outpacing downgrades (Chart 10), and history suggests that will continue until state & local government revenue growth slows. On that front, the three main sources of state & local government revenue are all growing at strong rates, a trend that should continue as long as the economic recovery is maintained. Municipal bond ratings upgrades are outpacing downgrades, and history suggests that will continue until state & local government revenue growth slows. Of course, many state & local governments face long-run credit constraints, mostly related to underfunded pension obligations. This is almost certainly the reason why yield ratios for long-maturity bonds are so attractive. Crucially, these long-run issues will not be exposed until revenue growth slows during the next economic downturn, and investors have an opportunity to capture the attractive yield premium in the meantime. Chart 9Great Value At The Long End
Great Value At The Long End
Great Value At The Long End
Chart 10Revenue Growth Will Remain Strong
Revenue Growth Will Remain Strong
Revenue Growth Will Remain Strong
State governments have also made progress shoring up their balance sheets during the past few years. The National Association of State Budget Officers calculates that the overall state & local government total balance has returned back to 2006 levels, while rainy day funds have been built up considerably (Chart 11). Chart 11States Are Growing Rainy Day Funds
States Are Growing Rainy Day Funds
States Are Growing Rainy Day Funds
Bottom Line: The main issues facing municipal bonds are long-run in nature, mostly related to underfunded state & local government pensions. These concerns are propping up yield ratios at the long-end of the muni curve, but aren’t likely to cause a wave of ratings downgrades until revenue growth slows during the next downturn. For the time being, investors can grab an attractive after-tax yield premium in long-maturity munis. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Position For Modest Curve Steepening”, dated October 29, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Crisis Of Confidence”, dated October 22, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 For more details on our analysis of the phases of the cycle based on the slope of the yield curve please see US Bond Strategy Special Report, “2019 Key Views: Implications For US Fixed Income”, dated December 11, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Adaptive Expectations In The TIPS Market”, dated November 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 The Fed targets 2% PCE inflation, which is historically consistent with CPI inflation between 2.4% and 2.5%. 6 https://economics.mit.edu/files/12979 Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights There is little risk that inflation will heat up over the next several months, … : Weak growth is more of a threat to the global economy than inflation. … which means the Fed won’t be in any hurry to take away this year’s rate cuts, … : We expect the Fed to leave the target fed funds rate alone for nearly all of 2020. … giving the economy plenty of opportunity to overheat: If trade tensions move to the back burner, and global manufacturing activity revives, the “insurance” rate cuts executed by the Fed and other central banks may turn out to have been unnecessary. The investment punch line is that accommodative monetary policy is likely to push asset prices and Treasury yields higher: Our revised Rates View Checklist supports going back to a below-benchmark duration stance over the tactical timeframe, in line with our cyclical view. Feature BCA researchers’ latest monthly view meeting opened with a discussion of whether inflation or deflation is the bigger risk to financial markets. Should investors be more concerned about signs of overheating or stalling growth? With inflation unable to get traction in any of the major economies, we all agreed that growth is the more critical unknown. An investor who gets the growth call right has the best chance of getting broad asset class positioning right, along with country, sector, duration, credit and currency tilts. While we continue to believe that there are more inflation pressures beneath the surface of the US economy than most investors realize, they are highly unlikely to manifest themselves any time soon. At today’s low-single-digit levels, inflation’s investment import is limited to its impact on monetary policy. Inflation expectations remain far below the levels that are consistent with the Fed’s inflation target (Chart 1), and the Fed is likely to keep policy easy until they adjust higher. Though it is uncertain just what levels of realized inflation, or inflation expectations, would trigger the Fed’s reaction function, we are confident that inflation will not be an issue in the coming year. Chart 1No Pressure To Remove Accommodation
No Pressure To Remove Accommodation
No Pressure To Remove Accommodation
Chart 2Global Revival Ahead?
Global Revival Ahead?
Global Revival Ahead?
We expect that global growth will surprise to the upside, pulling bond yields and risk asset prices higher. BCA’s global LEI bottomed earlier this year, and the diffusion index that leads directional moves in the LEI has turned sharply higher (Chart 2). The improvement is consistent with the easing in global financial conditions and the tentative détente in the trade war. Although we will not count on a completed “Phase I” agreement until it is signed, financial markets’ allergic reaction to trade tensions seems to have encouraged the White House to back off lest it undermine its re-election prospects. Interest Rates – Looking Back Figure 1Rates View Checklist
Refreshing Our Rates View
Refreshing Our Rates View
We rolled out our Rates View Checklist a little over a year ago to systematize our interest rate analysis and to clarify the rationale underpinning our views1 (Figure 1). Detailing the key series we monitor to anticipate the future direction of rates helps clients think along with us while giving them the chance to adapt the framework for their own purposes. As we were starting from a position of recommending below-benchmark duration, the checklist was aimed at identifying and tracking the factors that could encourage us to become more constructive about Treasury bonds. We never did warm to duration on a cyclical basis, though we did turn tactically neutral in mid-August. Part of the reason was that we did not give enough weight to events outside of the US. Highly-rated, developed-market sovereign bonds are substitutes for one another, and there is a limit to how much currency-adjusted yields can deviate across countries. Very low to negative yields in the UK, France, Germany and Switzerland have exerted a magnetic pull on Treasury yields (Chart 3), and the different sovereigns should move in tandem going forward, with currency-hedged yields observing a tight range. Chart 3Birds Of A Feather
Birds Of A Feather
Birds Of A Feather
The short end of the yield curve exerts considerable influence on rates across all maturities. Our US bond strategists’ golden rule of bond investing homes in on the deviation between actual and expected moves in the fed funds rate as the key determinant of duration positioning outcomes. Following their lead, our checklist is oriented around anticipating the Fed’s reaction to important incoming data. It seems to have done its job over the last year, highlighting the factors that drove the Fed to switch from dialing back accommodation to dialing it up. Although we never checked more than four of the eleven boxes in the checklist – Inverted Yield Curve, Sluggish Rise in Realized Inflation, Sluggish Rise in Inflation Breakevens and International Duress – those four boxes were enough to inspire the Fed’s dovish pivot. That pivot has so far encompassed three quarter-point rate cuts, pruning back the funds rate to 1.75% from 2.5%. It turns out that the key items in the checklist were the orientation of the yield curve; sluggish inflation expectations that the Fed worried could become “unanchored on the downside;” and the shadow of trade tensions that seem to have induced a global manufacturing recession, even if they have yet to infect the DM economies’ larger services sector. They tipped the scales for Fed policy and we will be especially alert to them going forward. Interest Rates – Looking Ahead Figure 2Revised Rates View Checklist
Refreshing Our Rates View
Refreshing Our Rates View
While our interpretation of the checklist left something to be desired, we are convinced that the checklist approach is sound. We return to its framework for insight into the current rates outlook, after making a few tweaks to shore it up (Figure 2). Starting with Fed perceptions, there is still some daylight between our fed funds rate expectations and the market’s, as we think the Fed is done cutting, while the money market assigns a high probability to the possibility of one more cut (Chart 4). The combination of rate cuts and the rally in 10-year Treasury yields got the yield curve back to its typical upward-sloping orientation in October (Chart 5), so we can now uncheck the inverted curve box. We see the five-month inversion as a reason to be more vigilant, but given the unusually negative term premium, we are not treating it as a hard-and-fast sign of looming weakness. The money market has priced out all but one more rate cut, and the yield curve is no longer inverted, suggesting that recession fears are abating. Chart 4Looking For One More Cut
Looking For One More Cut
Looking For One More Cut
Chart 5The Curve Is No Longer Inverted
The Curve Is No Longer Inverted
The Curve Is No Longer Inverted
Chart 6Inflation Is Muted, ...
Inflation Is Muted, ...
Inflation Is Muted, ...
We continue to check both of the sluggish inflation boxes. Realized inflation measures, headline and core, have slumped (Chart 6), and below-target inflation expectations remain a hot-button concern, judging by Fed speakers’ repeated references to them. The Fed has strapped itself to the mast with all its talk about inflation expectations, and it will not begin removing accommodation until inflation expectations revive. We cannot directly observe the output gap, but nearly 3% growth in 2018, and a rip-roaring labor market, offer solid evidence that it has closed and we leave its box unchecked. Labor market indicators unanimously point to the conclusion that monetary accommodation is not necessary. The unemployment rate is a full percentage point below the Fed’s and the CBO’s estimates of NAIRU. Ancillary indicators like the broader definition of unemployment including discouraged workers and involuntary part-time workers (Chart 7, top panel), and the openings (Chart 7, middle panel) and quits rates (Chart 7, bottom panel) from the JOLTS survey, testify to an extremely tight labor market. We expect that the pause in wage acceleration will prove temporary (Chart 8). Chart 7... Despite A Red-Hot Labor Market
... Despite A Red-Hot Labor Market
... Despite A Red-Hot Labor Market
Chart 8Wage Gains Will Pick Up Again
Wage Gains Will Pick Up Again
Wage Gains Will Pick Up Again
Chart 9No Overheating In The Real Economy
No Overheating In The Real Economy
No Overheating In The Real Economy
With cyclical spending well short of past business cycle peaks (Chart 9), the real economy isn’t exerting any pressure on the Fed to intervene to choke off the expansion. (Although a modest pace of Fed hikes would support below-benchmark duration positioning, aggressive tightening to cut off overheating leads to recessions, and would favor long-maturity Treasuries.) We have removed the financial sector imbalances box because there has been no apparent follow through from Governor Brainard’s speech last September, which appeared to set the stage for tightening on the basis of frothy credit conditions. We maintain the international duress box, which is meant to alert us to an overseas crisis or near-crisis that could spark a flight to quality that depresses Treasury yields and/or inspires the Fed to pursue easier policy in an attempt to stave off contagion risks. Green shoots in manufact-uring, here and abroad, support the idea that growth outside the U.S. could be poised to accelerate. Chart 10Global Manufacturing Is Coming Back ...
chart 10
Global Manufacturing Is Coming Back ...
Global Manufacturing Is Coming Back ...
Chart 11... And US Manufacturing May Have Bottomed
... And US Manufacturing May Have Bottomed
... And US Manufacturing May Have Bottomed
We add “Flagging Global Growth” to address the global growth blind spot that undermined our call last year. Our US Bond Strategy colleagues find that the Global Manufacturing PMI, the US ISM Manufacturing PMI and the CRB Raw Industrials Index are the global growth measures that exert the strongest influence on Treasury yields. The Global Manufacturing PMI has risen off its lows over the last three months and is within striking distance of getting back above the 50 contraction/expansion line, led by the US2 and China (Chart 10). The outlook for the US ISM Manufacturing PMI looks good on several counts. First, the comparatively modest manufacturing sector tends to move with the much larger services sector, and the sharp bounce in the Services PMI bodes well for the Manufacturing PMI (Chart 11, top panel). Within the manufacturing survey, New Export Orders’ leap back over 50 suggests that the global economy may have already seen the worst of the manufacturing weakness that has swept the rest of the world (Chart 11, bottom panel). The jury is still out on the CRB Raw Industrials-to-gold ratio (Chart 12, top panel), as industrial commodity prices have yet to show any spunk (Chart 12, bottom panel). Chart 12Commodities Have Yet To Turn
Commodities Have Yet To Turn
Commodities Have Yet To Turn
Chart 13A Weaker Dollar Would Support Higher Rates
A Weaker Dollar Would Support Higher Rates
A Weaker Dollar Would Support Higher Rates
With our trio of indicators mixed-to-positive on balance, we leave the global growth box unchecked. We have also added a dollar box to monitor when Treasury yields are drifting out of alignment with other sovereign yields. If the dollar and Treasury yields rise together, we would view the rise in yields as suspect and at risk of being reversed.3 There doesn’t appear to be any decoupling pressure now, as Treasury yields have risen while the dollar has bumped around in a narrow range (Chart 13, top panel), and bullish sentiment toward the dollar has cooled off, pointing the way to a currency-approved path to higher yields (Chart 13, bottom panel). Bottom Line: We check only two of the boxes in our revised rates checklist (Figure 2), supporting a below-benchmark duration stance. Investment Implications Like all investors, we hate to get anything wrong. We were wrong on rates, though, failing to see the potential for the 10-year Treasury yield to fall to 1.5%. The duration miss undermined results within the fixed income sleeve of our recommendations, as we didn’t take it off until the 10-year Treasury yield had fallen to 1.74% .4 We have modified our rates checklist to force ourselves to be more aware of the world beyond the US, but the available data still support below-benchmark duration positioning, and we now recommend going back to it over the tactical (0-3-month) timeframe. The date when monetary policy turns restrictive has been pushed out, and so have the dates when the bull markets in risk assets will end. We note that our overall asset allocation calls have performed well. Since we upgraded equities in our first 2019 report,5 the S&P 500 Total Return Index has gained 24% while our Treasury underweight, as proxied by the Bloomberg Barclays US Treasury Total Return Index, is up 7% (Chart 14, top panel). Since we upgraded spread product in late January,6 the Bloomberg Barclays US Corporate Investment Grade and High Yield Total Return Indexes are up 12% and 8%, respectively, versus the Treasury Index’s 7% (Chart 14, bottom panel). Chart 14Underweighting Treasuries Has Been The Way To Go
Underweighting Treasuries Has Been The Way To Go
Underweighting Treasuries Has Been The Way To Go
The run-up to the Fed’s series of mid-cycle rate cuts doomed our duration call, but it has fortified the case for overweighting equities and spread product. We still expect the expansion, the equity bull market, and spread product’s long period of generating excess returns to die at the hands of the Fed. Now that the date when monetary policy settings become restrictive has been indefinitely delayed, the end-dates of the equity and credit bull markets have as well. We continue to recommend overweighting equities and spread product, and underweighting Treasuries. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see the September 17, 2018 US Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “What Would It Take To Change Our Bearish Rates View?” available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 2 The Global PMI is compiled from Markit’s individual country PMIs, so the chart shows the Markit US PMI instead of the more familiar ISM measure. 3 It the dollar were to rise significantly while Treasury yields rose faster than other DM sovereign yields, currency-adjusted Treasury yields would decouple from peer yields and arbitrage activity would likely bring them back down. 4 Please see the August 12, 2019 US Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “When The Facts Change,” available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see the January 7, 2019 US Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “What Now?” available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see the January 28, 2019 US Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Double Breaker,” available at usis.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights Prevailing winds are still blowing in favor of the US dollar. Continue shorting a basket of EM currencies versus the greenback. Deflationary forces are gaining momentum in EM/China while inflationary pressures are accumulating in the US economy. The dollar will appreciate further, distributing inflationary pressures away from the US and into EM/China. Feature Our buy stop on the MSCI EM equity index at 1075 has not yet been triggered. Last week the EM index closed a hair short of this level. Our strategy remains intact: We continue to recommend caution and defensive positioning for EM investors, but will recommend playing the rally if the index breaks above this level. The fact that industrial metals and oil prices have failed to rally substantially even though the S&P 500 is making new highs gives us comfort that the Chinese industrial cycle is not experiencing a revival. Our buy stop on the MSCI EM equity index at 1075 has not yet been triggered. Absent a sustained recovery in the Chinese capital spending and rising commodities prices, EM equities and currencies will not be able to maintain their rebound. Chart I-1 illustrates that the total return on EM ex-China currencies (including the carry) correlates strongly with industrial metals prices. Similarly, EM share prices move in tandem with global materials stocks (Chart I-2). Chart I-1EM Currencies Correlate Strongly With Industrial Metals Prices
bca.ems_wr_2019_11_14_s1_c1
bca.ems_wr_2019_11_14_s1_c1
Chart I-2EM Share Prices Move In Tandem With Global Materials Stocks
EM Share Prices Move In Tandem With Global Materials Stocks
EM Share Prices Move In Tandem With Global Materials Stocks
The basis for these relationships is as follows: The majority of EM economies, and hence their share prices and exchange rates, are leveraged to China’s business cycle. The latter also drives industrial commodities prices, as the mainland accounts for 50% of global metals consumption. We elaborated on these relationships in our recent report titled EM: Perceptions Versus Reality. In this report, we examine the dichotomy between inflation in EM and US and discuss the macro rebalancing required and the implications for financial markets. Inflation: A Dichotomy Between EM… Low and rapidly falling inflation accompanying extremely weak real growth constitute the current hazards to EM economies and their financial markets: Headline and core inflation in EM ex-China, Korea and Taiwan1 – the universe pertinent for EM bond portfolios – are low and falling, justifying lower interest rates (Chart I-3). Consistently, aggregate nominal GDP growth in these economies is hovering close to its 2015 low (Chart I-4). Chart I-3EM: Inflation Is Low And Falling
EM: Inflation Is Low And Falling
EM: Inflation Is Low And Falling
Chart I-4EM: Nominal GDP Is Subdued And Decelerating
EM: Nominal GDP Is Subdued And Decelerating
EM: Nominal GDP Is Subdued And Decelerating
Chart I-5EM Ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Money And Loan Growth Are Slowing
EM Ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Money And Loan Growth Are Slowing
EM Ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Money And Loan Growth Are Slowing
In China, core consumer price inflation is at 1.5% and falling, and producer prices are declining. Even though many EM central banks have been cutting rates, narrow and broad money as well as bank loan growth are either weak or decelerating (Chart I-5). In brief, policy easing in these economies hasn’t yet revived money and credit growth. The reason why low nominal interest rates have not yet led to a recovery in money/credit is because real (inflation-adjusted) borrowing costs remain elevated. In addition, poor banking system health stemming from lingering non-performing loans – a legacy of the credit boom early this decade – has also hindered credit origination. Corroborating the fact that borrowing costs are high in real (inflation-adjusted) terms, interest rate and credit-sensitive sectors such as capital spending, real estate and discretionary consumer spending are all extremely weak. In particular, high-frequency data such as capital goods imports and car sales are shrinking (Chart I-6). Residential property markets are very sluggish in the majority of developing economies (Chart I-7). Chart I-6EM Ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Credit-Sensitive Spending Is Shrinking
EM Ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Credit-Sensitive Spending Is Shrinking
EM Ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Credit-Sensitive Spending Is Shrinking
Chart I-7Property Prices In Local Currency Terms
Property Prices In Local Currency Terms
Property Prices In Local Currency Terms
Chart I-8Chinese Imports For Domestic Consumption And EM Exports
Chinese Imports For Domestic Consumption And EM Exports
Chinese Imports For Domestic Consumption And EM Exports
Finally, the combined exports of EM ex-China, Korea and Taiwan – which are correlated with mainland imports for domestic consumption – are shrinking (Chart I-8). Without a revival in Chinese domestic demand in general, and commodities in particular, EM exports will continue to languish. Bottom Line: Risks stemming from low and falling inflation in EM are rising. While central banks are cutting rates, they are behind the curve. For now, investors should not expect an imminent domestic demand recovery based on EM central bank interest rate cuts. …And The US In contrast to EM, investors and financial markets are complacent about inflation risks in the US. This is not to say that there is a risk of runaway inflation in the US. Our point is as follows: If US growth slows further, US inflation will subside. However, if US growth accelerates, consumer price inflation will surprise to the upside. Sectors such as capital spending, real estate and discretionary consumer spending are all extremely weak. US core consumer price inflation has been trending upwards in the past several years, consistent with a positive and widening output gap (Chart I-9, top panel). The average of six core consumer price inflation measures – core CPI, core PCE, trimmed mean CPI, trimmed PCE, market-based core PCE, and median CPI – is slightly above 2% and looks to be headed higher (Chart I-9, bottom panel). US unit labor costs are rising faster than the corporate price deflator (Chart I-10, top panel). A tight labor market will translate to robust wage growth. Chart I-9Barring Slowdown, US Core Inflation Will Rise Further
Barring Slowdown, US Core Inflation Will Rise Further
Barring Slowdown, US Core Inflation Will Rise Further
Chart I-10Beware Of A US Profit Margin Squeeze
Beware Of A US Profit Margin Squeeze
Beware Of A US Profit Margin Squeeze
With corporate profit margins already shrinking (Chart I-10, bottom panel) and consumer spending robust, companies will try to pass on higher costs to consumers. Hence, barring a slowdown in US consumer spending, consumer price inflation will likely rise. If global growth recovers, the dollar will sell off and US manufacturing will revive. Provided these two factors have been counteracting inflationary pressures in the US, their reversal will allow inflation to rise. Bottom Line: Underlying core inflation in the US has been drifting higher. Unless growth slows, inflation will surprise to the upside. Macro Rebalancing: In The Dollar’s Favor Bond yields and exchange rates often act as shock absorbers and re-balancing mechanisms for the global economy. The agility and corresponding adjustments of these financial variables assure a more stable real global economy. Given the current inflationary pressures in the US amid deflationary forces in EM, one of the ways in which this adjustment process will manifest itself is in the form of US dollar appreciation versus EM currencies. A strong greenback will redistribute inflationary pressures away from the US and into EM. An analogy for this adjustment process is the role of wind in rebalancing air pressure around the globe. When air pressure in location A is higher than in location B, the air moves from location A to location B, causing wind. This allows for a rebalancing of air pressure around the earth. US core consumer price inflation has been trending upwards in the past several years. When air pressure differences are substantial, winds become forceful – potentially to the point of causing damage. In a nutshell, this adjustment could come at the cost of strong winds, or even a storm. Global currency markets play a similar role to wind. A strong greenback will help cap US inflation by dampening activity and employment in America’s manufacturing sector. Slumping manufacturing will moderate activity in the service sector, as well as slowdown aggregate income and spending growth. In turn, weakening currencies will help reflate EM economies by mitigating the negative impact of lower exports in general and commodities prices in particular. EM economies need an external boost, especially now when their banking systems are in hibernation mode and China is not boosting its demand to the same extent it did during downturns since 2008. A caveat is in order here: In the case of many EMs, currency deprecation will initially hurt growth. The reason is that companies and banks in many EMs still hold large amounts of US dollar debt (Chart I-11). As the dollar appreciates, the cost of foreign debt servicing will escalate, prompting them to reduce corporate spending and bank lending. Hence, wind could turn into a storm. All in all, we continue to bet on EM currency depreciation, regardless of the direction of US bond yields. The basis is as follows: Contrary to widespread consensus, EM exchange rates correlate more strongly with commodities prices – please refer to Chart I-1 on page 1 – than US bond yields as shown in Chart I-12. Chart I-11EM External Debt Is A Risk If EM Currencies Depreciate
EM External Debt Is A Risk If EM Currencies Depreciate
EM External Debt Is A Risk If EM Currencies Depreciate
Chart I-12EM Currencies And US Bond Yields: No Stable Relationship
bca.ems_wr_2019_11_14_s1_c12
bca.ems_wr_2019_11_14_s1_c12
Emerging Asian currencies correlate with their export prices and the global trade cycle. Neither global trade activity nor Asian export prices are recovering (Chart I-13). Therefore, the recent bounce in EM currencies is not sustainable. Given the current inflationary pressures in the US amid deflationary forces in EM, one of the ways in which this adjustment process will manifest itself is in the form of US dollar appreciation versus EM currencies. Could it be that US inflationary pressures are dampened by deflationary tendencies originating from EM/China, producing a benign (goldilocks) scenario for financial markets? It is possible but not likely in the case of EM financial markets. Exchange rates hold the key to all EM asset classes. If the US dollar continues drifting higher – which is our bet – it will stifle the performance of EM equity, local bonds and credit markets (Chart I-14). Chart I-13Asian Export Prices And Container Freight Herald Weaker Regional Currencies
Asian Export Prices And Container Freight Herald Weaker Regional Currencies
Asian Export Prices And Container Freight Herald Weaker Regional Currencies
Chart I-14Trade-Weighted Dollar And EM Share Prices Are Still Correlated
Trade-Weighted Dollar And EM Share Prices Are Still Correlated
Trade-Weighted Dollar And EM Share Prices Are Still Correlated
Further, Box I-1 on page 10 discusses the 2008 clash between inflationary forces in EM and deflation in the US. Bottom Line: We continue to recommend playing the following EM currencies on the short side versus the dollar: ZAR, CLP, COP, IDR, KRW and PHP. We are also short CNY versus the dollar. For allocations within EM equity, domestic bonds and sovereign credit, please refer to our investment recommendations on pages 16-17. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Box 1 Inflationary + Deflationary Forces = Goldilocks? Will inflationary pressures in the US be offset by disinflation in EM, resulting in a goldilocks outcome globally? A goldilocks period is one in which strong growth is accompanied by moderate inflation. It is possible, but in the global macro world inflation + deflation does not always equal goldilocks. In other words in global macro, (1-1) does not always equal zero. For instance, an inflation dichotomy was present in the first half of 2008. Back then, the US economy was already in recession, with acute deflationary pressures stemming from the deflating housing and credit bubbles. In turn, EM growth was still rampant and inflationary pressures were acute. In fact, in the period between March and mid-July of 2008, US and global bond yields were climbing on the back of rising worries about inflation. In retrospect, such an inflation dichotomy between the US and EM did not result in a goldilocks environment, but occurred on the precipice of the largest deflationary black hole in the post-war period. In the second half of 2008, US deflation overwhelmed EM inflation, generating a major deflationary tsunami worldwide. Russia: Long Domestic Bonds / Short Oil Chart II-1Undershooting CB's 4% Inflation Target
Undershooting CB's 4% Inflation Target
Undershooting CB's 4% Inflation Target
Russia’s growth is already very sluggish. Lower oil prices2 entail both weaker growth and ruble weakness. The primary risk in Russia is low and falling inflation rather than rising inflation. Therefore, unlike in previous downturns, the central bank will be able to engage in counter-cyclical monetary policy, namely continue cutting interest rates. This makes a long position in local currency bonds a “no-brainer”. The only risk to owning Russian domestic bonds is the ruble depreciation due to falling oil prices and a risk-off phase in EM exchange rate markets. To hedge against these risks, we recommend the following trade: long Russian domestic bonds / short oil. The macro backdrop in Russia justifies considerably lower interest rates and we believe the central bank will deliver further rate cuts despite moderate currency depreciation. As a result, local bonds on a total- return basis in US dollar terms will outperform oil. The basis to expect a further meaningful drop in interest rates in Russia is as follows: Inflation Is Low And Falling: Various measures of inflation suggest that disinflation is broad based (Chart II-1). As a result, inflation will continue falling towards the central bank’s inflation target of 4%. Crucially, wage growth is decelerating both in nominal and real terms (Chart II-2). Monetary Policy Is Still Restrictive: Even though the central bank has cut rates by 125bps over the past 6 months, monetary policy remains behind the dis-inflation curve. Both policy and lending rates remain too high, especially relative to the low nominal growth environment (Chart II-3). Real borrowing costs stand at 9% for consumer and 4.5% for corporate loans (Chart II-4). The macro backdrop in Russia justifies considerably lower interest rates and we believe the central bank will deliver further rate cuts despite moderate currency depreciation. Chart II-2Russia: Sluggish Wage Growth
Russia: Sluggish Wage Growth
Russia: Sluggish Wage Growth
Chart II-3Russia: Tight Monetary Policy
Russia: Tight Monetary Policy
Russia: Tight Monetary Policy
Notably, weakening credit impulses for both business and consumer segments suggest that domestic demand will disappoint (Chart II-5). Chart II-4Russia: High Real Lending Rate Across Sectors
Russia: High Real Lending Rate Across Sectors
Russia: High Real Lending Rate Across Sectors
Chart II-5Weakening Credit Impulses = Lower Demand And Investment
Weakening Credit Impulses = Lower Demand And Investment
Weakening Credit Impulses = Lower Demand And Investment
Since October 1, the CBR has taken measures to curb consumer borrowing from banking and non-banks credit institutions. These new guidelines limit the latter’s lending to consumers with high debt loads. In short, much lower nominal and real interest rates will be required to reinvigorate domestic demand. Fiscal Policy Is Tight: The government has overplayed its hand in running very tight fiscal policy. The government primary budget surplus now stands at 3.8% of GDP. Government spending growth both in real and nominal terms remains very weak (Chart II-6). The National Project initiative has not yet been sufficient to expand government expenditures. In fact, a recent report from the Audit Chamber suggests that total spending under this National Project program for 2019 will be below government targets of 3% of GDP per year. Finally, the authorities committed a policy mistake at the beginning of year by hiking the VAT tax which has hurt consumption. Russian local currency bond yields are set to fall, even as oil prices decline over the coming months. A Healthy Balance Of Payment (BoP) Position: Total external debt and debt servicing are extremely low by emerging markets standards. Russia has the lowest external debt amongst its EM counterparts. Likewise, Russia’s international investment portfolio liabilities – foreigners’ ownership of equities and bonds – remain one of the lowest amongst EM (Chart II-7). Chart II-6A Lot Of Room To Boost Government Spending
A Lot Of Room To Boost Government Spending
A Lot Of Room To Boost Government Spending
Chart II-7Foreigners' Holding Of Russian Financial Assets Are Low
Foreigners' Holding Of Russian Financial Assets Are Low
Foreigners' Holding Of Russian Financial Assets Are Low
Investment Recommendations Chart II-8Local Bonds Are Decoupling From Oil
Local Bonds Are Decoupling From Oil
Local Bonds Are Decoupling From Oil
Russian local currency bond yields are set to fall, even as oil prices decline over the coming months (Chart II-8). In light of this, we recommend the following pair trade: long local currency bonds / short oil. Dedicated EM fixed-income portfolios should continue to overweight Russian sovereign and corporate credit, as well as local currency government bonds relative to their respective EM benchmarks. Tight fiscal and monetary policies favor creditors. We have been bullish on Russian markets for some time arguing that they will behave as a low-beta play in EM selloff as discussed in our previous report. This view remains intact. Dedicated EM equity portfolios should continue overweighting Russian stocks, a recommendation made in October 2018. Given the ruble will likely depreciate gradually rather than plunge amid falling oil prices, the authorities will continue cutting rates and provide fiscal stimulus. That will benefit Russia versus many other EM countries. Finally, we remain long the RUB versus the Colombian Peso, a trade instituted on May 31, 2018. Andrija Vesic Research Analyst andrijav@bcaresearch.com Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 We exclude economies of China, Korea and Taiwan because they are different in their economic structure and inflation dynamics compared with majority of EMs. 2 BCA’s Emerging Markets Strategy team expects lower oil prices consistent with its thesis of EM slowdown. This is different from BCA’s house view that is bullish on oil. Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
Highlights The attractiveness of European stocks is relative to European bonds rather than relative to non-European stocks. Despite vastly different stock market valuations in Germany, Japan, and the US, the implied prospective 10-year annualised returns are almost identical – at around 5 percent per annum. Overweight the DAX versus German long-dated bunds. Equities would lose their attractiveness if the global 10-year bond yield were to rise through 2.5 percent, because the required excess return from equities would viciously normalise. Tactically overweight EM versus DM. Fractal trade: short GBP/NOK, as the recent rally in the pound appears technically extended. Feature Chart of the WeekOverweight Europe Vs. World = Overweight Consumer Staples Vs. Technology
Overweight Europe Vs. World = Overweight Consumer Staples Vs. Technology
Overweight Europe Vs. World = Overweight Consumer Staples Vs. Technology
Stock markets recently broke to new highs, begging the perennial question: how attractive are equities at current valuations? To answer, we need to assess the prospective return that is now ‘baked in the equity valuation cake’. But which valuation metric gives the most credible assessment of prospective returns? Equity valuations based on assets are problematic – because nowadays, assets comprise intellectual capital or intangibles or ‘virtual’ assets, which are extremely difficult to value. Equity valuations based on earnings are problematic. Equity valuations based on earnings (profits) are also problematic – because they take no account of structurally high profit margins (Chart I-2). The problem is that earnings will face a headwind when profit margins normalise, depressing prospective returns. Some people suggest adjusting the earnings to derive a cyclically adjusted price to earnings multiple (CAPE), but by definition this does not correct for the structural rise in profit margins. Chart I-2Structurally High Profit Margins Flatter Earnings
Structurally High Profit Margins Flatter Equity Earnings Structurally High Profit Margins Flatter Earnings
Structurally High Profit Margins Flatter Equity Earnings Structurally High Profit Margins Flatter Earnings
Hence, the most credible assessment comes from price to sales – because sales are quantifiable, unambiguous, and undistorted by profit margins. Significantly, while price to earnings missed the high valuation of world equities in 1990 (Japanese bubble) and 2007 (credit bubble), price to sales did not (Chart I-3 and Chart I-4). Chart I-3Price To Earnings Missed The Japanese Bubble And The Credit Bubble...
Price To Earnings Missed The Japanese Bubble And The Credit Bubble...
Price To Earnings Missed The Japanese Bubble And The Credit Bubble...
Chart I-4...But Price To Sales ##br##Didn't
...But Price To Sales Didn't
...But Price To Sales Didn't
Are Stocks Attractive? Based on the credible assessment from price to sales, today’s prospective 10-year annualised return from world equities is around 5 percent (Chart I-5). This is not that different to the 4 percent prospective return at the peak of the credit bubble in 2007.1 Which raises an obvious question. Back in 2007, a secular growth boom provided the excuse for the rich absolute valuation, but today, if anything, investors fear a ‘secular stagnation’. What can excuse today’s rich absolute valuation? Chart I-5The Prospective Return From World Equities Is 5 Percent
The Prospective Return From World Equities Is 5 Percent
The Prospective Return From World Equities Is 5 Percent
The answer is ultra-low bond yields. In 2007, the global 10-year bond yield stood at 5 percent; today, it stands well below 2 percent (Chart I-6). A lower prospective return on bonds means a lower prospective return on competing long-duration assets, like equities. Chart I-6The Global 10-Year Bond Yield Has Plunged To Below 2 Percent
The Global 10-Year Bond Yield Has Plunged To Below 2 Percent
The Global 10-Year Bond Yield Has Plunged To Below 2 Percent
Moreover, as bond yields approach their lower bound, the riskiness of bonds rises because they take on an unattractive ‘lose-lose’ characteristic. As holders of Swiss government bonds discovered this year, prices do not rise much in a rally, but they do plunge in a sell-off. This higher riskiness of bonds justifies an abnormally low (or zero) ‘risk premium’ on competing long-duration assets, like equities. The 5 percent prospective return makes equities look attractive relative to bonds. The upshot is that the 5 percent prospective return from equities is low in absolute terms. But in a world of ultra-low numbers – for both bond yields and equity risk premiums – the 5 percent prospective return makes equities look attractive relative to bonds. At the peak of the credit bubble in 2007, equities were offering a lower prospective return than the 5 percent available from bonds. But today’s equity risk premium over bonds is generous. The caveat is that this would change if the global 10-year bond yield were to rise through 2.5 percent because the required risk premium on equities would viciously normalise. Are European Stocks Attractive? Turning to the relative attractiveness of major stock markets, it is tempting to think that the markets trading on the best head-to-head valuation comparisons are the most attractive. For example, Germany and Japan, both trading on a price to sales multiple of 0.9, appear compelling buys compared to the US, trading on a multiple of 2.1 (Chart I-7). But such a knee-jerk conclusion is wrong, for two reasons. Chart I-7Germany And Japan Trade On Much Lower Multiples Than The US
Germany And Japan Trade On Much Lower Multiples Than The US
Germany And Japan Trade On Much Lower Multiples Than The US
First, stock markets have very different sector compositions. Two sectors with vastly different structural growth prospects – say, technology and banks – must necessarily trade on vastly different valuations. So the sector with the lower valuation is not necessarily the better-valued sector. By extension, the stock market with the lower valuation because of its ‘sector fingerprint’ is not necessarily the better-valued stock market. Second, major stock markets are dominated by multinational companies with mixed currency sales and profits, while the stock price is quoted in the domestic currency. Hence, if the market expects the mixed currency profits to depreciate in domestic currency terms, the stock will trade at a discount. Put another way, if the domestic currency is cheap the stock market will appear cheap. The best way to see this is to look at the two valuations of dual-listed multinationals like the UK/US cruise operator Carnival. In London, the stock trades on a price to forward earnings at 9.7; in New York it trades at 10.3. But it would be absurd to suggest that Carnival is cheaper in London than in New York! The discrepancy is simply because the market expects the pound to appreciate versus the dollar. A head-to-head comparison of stock market valuations is misleading. Allowing for the distortions from sector skews and currency adjustments, the best way to assess an equity region’s attractiveness is to quantify the prospective return implied by its valuation versus its own history. The method is to regress historic starting price to sales with the (historic) prospective 10-year returns that followed. Then apply this relationship to the current price to sales to predict the (current) prospective 10-year return. The results are amazing. Despite the vastly different price to sales multiple of 0.9 in Germany and Japan, and 2.1 in the US, the implied prospective 10-year annualised returns are almost identical – at around 5 percent from each of the three stock markets (Chart I-8-Chart I-10). Chart I-8Expect Near-Identical Returns From The US...
Expect Near-Identical Returns From The US...
Expect Near-Identical Returns From The US...
Chart I-9…Germany…
...Germany...
...Germany...
Chart I-10...And Japan
...And Japan
...And Japan
Still, there is one significant difference: the 10-year bond yield is much lower in Germany and Japan than in the US, equating to a much more attractive equity risk premium of over 5 percent in Germany and Japan. So to answer this week’s title, yes, European stocks are attractive. But the attractiveness is not relative to non-European stocks, the attractiveness of European stocks is relative to European bonds. Bottom Line: maintain a structural overweight to the DAX versus German long-dated bunds. Europe’s ‘Sector Fingerprint’ Is No Longer Pro-Cyclical Over the short term, stock market relative performance is just the result of global sector relative performance combined with the unique sector fingerprint of each stock market. It follows that regional and country equity allocation must always start with a sector view combined with an awareness of the sector fingerprint of the major bourses (Table 1-1). Table I-1EM, DM, And Europe Have Unique ‘Sector Fingerprints’
Are European Stocks Attractive?
Are European Stocks Attractive?
In this regard, there is an important change. Market action plus index composition changes are making the European index less cyclical. Specifically, the European index is no longer over-weighted to Financials relative to the world index. Instead, the European sector fingerprint is now: ‘Overweight Consumer Staples, Underweight Technology’ (Chart of the Week). With the overweight skew being to defensive staples and the underweight skew to partly-cyclical tech, the cyclicality of the European index has become ambiguous. By contrast, emerging market (EM) equities remain ultra-cyclical with a sector fingerprint that is: ‘Overweight Banks, Underweight Healthcare’ (Chart I-11). Suffice to say, this is ultra-cyclical because the 10 percent overweight is to an unambiguously cyclical sector, while the symmetrical 10 percent underweight is to an unambiguously defensive sector. Chart I-11Overweight EM Vs. DM = Overweight Banks Vs. Healthcare
Overweight EM Vs. DM = Overweight Banks Vs. Healthcare
Overweight EM Vs. DM = Overweight Banks Vs. Healthcare
The upshot is that a pro-cyclical sector tilt no longer implies an overweight to European equities versus other regions, but it does strongly imply an overweight to EM equities. This is our recommended stance, albeit only on a tactical horizon until our leading indicators show that the current growth rebound can be sustained well into 2020. Stay tuned. Fractal Trading System* The broken 65-day fractal structure of GBP/NOK suggests that its recent rally is susceptible to a countertrend sell-off, albeit UK election campaign developments are likely to be the near-term sentiment drivers. Go short GBP/NOK, setting a profit target at 2.5 percent with a symmetrical stop-loss. In other trades, short Italian 10-year BTP achieved its 3 percent profit target and is now closed, while long gold / short nickel is very close to its 11 percent profit target. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment’s fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes.
NOK/GBP
NOK/GBP
The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Dhaval Joshi Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Total (capital plus income) nominal annualised returns Fractal Trading System Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades
Are European Stocks Attractive?
Are European Stocks Attractive?
Are European Stocks Attractive?
Are European Stocks Attractive?
Are European Stocks Attractive?
Are European Stocks Attractive?
Are European Stocks Attractive?
Are European Stocks Attractive?
Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Interest Rate Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Duration: A survey of the five factors that determine the path for Treasury yields suggests that further upside is likely. We see a clear path to 2.5% for long-maturity Treasury yields as recessionary risk moves to the back burner in the coming months. Credit Cycle: C&I lending standards tightened on net in the third quarter of 2019. But other indicators of monetary conditions point to continued accommodation. We expect lending standards will soon move back into “net easing” territory. Remain overweight Spread Product versus Treasuries. IG Valuation: Investment grade corporate bond spreads for all credit tiers are now below our fair value targets. We recommend only a neutral allocation to the sector. Investors should prefer high-yield bonds, where spreads are more attractive, and Agency MBS, which offer competitive expected returns and much less risk. Feature Chart 1Recession Risk Getting Priced Out
Recession Risk Getting Priced Out
Recession Risk Getting Priced Out
The bond sell-off continued last week, driven by positive developments in US/China trade negotiations and tentative signs of stabilization in some global growth indicators. The renewed sense of economic optimism has reduced the recessionary risk priced into bond markets. The 2/10 Treasury slope has steepened 30 bps since it briefly inverted in late August. During that same period, the 2-year Treasury yield is up 15 bps, the 10-year yield is up 45 bps and the Bloomberg Barclays Treasury index has underperformed a position in cash by 2.7% (Chart 1). These recent developments raise two important questions. First, should investors chase or fade the back-up in Treasury yields? And second, if the sell-off does continue, how high can yields go? To answer these questions we turn to the five macro factors that drive trends in US bond yields. These factors were outlined in our “Bond Kitchen” report from last April, and are listed right here:1 Global growth Policy uncertainty The US dollar The output gap Sentiment Back In The Kitchen Global Growth Chart 2CRB Index Needs To Rebound
CRB Index Needs To Rebound
CRB Index Needs To Rebound
Three global growth indicators are particularly relevant for US Treasury yields. They are the Global Manufacturing PMI, the US ISM Manufacturing PMI and the CRB Raw Industrials index. The latter is especially useful because it updates on a daily basis. Considering the CRB index, we notice that, while it is no longer in a steep downtrend, it has also not rebounded alongside the jump in bond yields (Chart 2). This should give us pause. Continued low readings from the CRB index make it more likely that bond yields will fall back in the coming weeks. We should also note that the ratio between the CRB index and Gold is more highly correlated with the 10-year Treasury yield than the CRB index itself.2 This ratio has bounced off its lows (Chart 2, top panel), but only because Gold has come under downward pressure. With the Fed committed to maintaining an accommodative policy stance until inflation expectations are re-anchored, we expect the Gold price to remain well bid. This means that raw industrials prices must rebound to keep the ratio trending higher. The CRB/Gold ratio has bounced off its lows, but only because Gold has come under downward pressure. More encouraging than the CRB index is the Global Manufacturing PMI, which has moved off its lows during the past three months (Chart 3). The increase has been partially driven by stronger US readings (Chart 3, panel 2), but principally by a significant jump in China’s PMI (Chart 3, bottom panel). Chart 3China Pulling The Global Manufacturing PMI Higher
China Pulling The Global Manufacturing PMI Higher
China Pulling The Global Manufacturing PMI Higher
Somewhat stronger China PMI readings should be expected, given the rebound in our China Investment Strategy’s Li Keqiang Leading Indicator – a composite measure of monetary conditions, money and credit growth (Chart 4).3 We should also expect further modest policy stimulus from China, as long as the labor market remains under pressure (Chart 4, bottom panel). Turning to the US, we have seen three very positive developments in the economic data during the past month. First, the ISM Services PMI jumped from 52.6 to 54.7 in October (Chart 5). A drop in this index to 50 or below would be consistent with a US recession, while the combination of a strong service sector and a depressed manufacturing sector is consistent with our baseline 2015/16 roadmap. This roadmap leads to an eventual rebound in the manufacturing index. Second, the ISM Manufacturing PMI rose a tad in October, but the New Export Orders component jumped significantly from 41 to 50.4 (Chart 5, panel 2). Since the global slowdown began as a non-US phenomenon, a rebound in this export component sends a strong signal that we are at an inflection point. Finally, consumer confidence rose in October following a sharp decline in September. A year-over-year decline in the consumer confidence index is a reasonably strong recession signal, but recent data suggest that this signal is fading (Chart 5, bottom panel). Chart 4Modest Stimulus In China
Modest Stimulus In China
Modest Stimulus In China
Chart 5Three Positive Developments
Three Positive Developments
Three Positive Developments
All in all, the global growth data have turned more positive during the past month. US indicators, in particular, are no longer sending strong recessionary signals. A rebound in the CRB Raw Industrials index would give us more confidence in the durability of the recent rise in Treasury yields. Policy Uncertainty Uncertainty about the US/China trade conflict has eased considerably during the past few weeks, as the two sides appear to be working toward a “phase 1” deal that would prevent the imposition of new tariffs and roll back some that are already in place. Heightened uncertainty about the trade war played a large role in dragging bond yields lower in 2019. This becomes apparent when you notice that survey and sentiment (aka “soft”) data about the economic outlook have been significantly worse than the actual “hard” data on US economic activity.4 It is clear that negative sentiment about the trade war has held survey data and bond yields down, even as underlying US economic activity has been solid. Less bullish dollar sentiment supports a continued uptrend in Treasury yields. We see a continued easing of trade tensions as we head into the first half of next year. President Trump has an incentive to support the economy in an election year, given the historical record of incumbent presidents being re-elected when the economy is strong. However, if this strategy doesn’t work and Trump finds himself behind in the polls by the end of next summer, then he could decide that ramping up the trade war again is the best course of action. In other words, another spike in policy uncertainty in the second half of 2020 is possible if President Trump is trailing in the polls. The US Dollar Chart 6Dollar Sentiment Points To Higher Yields
Dollar Sentiment Points To Higher Yields
Dollar Sentiment Points To Higher Yields
The US dollar is important for the path of US Treasury yields because it signals whether US yields are decoupling from yields in the rest of the world. In other words, if the dollar appreciates significantly alongside rising Treasury yields, then we should view those yields as increasingly out of step with the rest of the world, and thus more likely to fall back down. So far, the dollar has been relatively flat as yields have risen and bullish sentiment toward the US dollar has declined significantly (Chart 6). Less bullish dollar sentiment supports a continued uptrend in Treasury yields. But if yields do in fact continue to rise, it will be important to watch the dollar’s reaction. The Output Gap Chart 7Wage Gains Hurting Margins, Not Raising Prices
Wage Gains Hurting Margins, Not Raising Prices
Wage Gains Hurting Margins, Not Raising Prices
Some sense of the output gap is important for forecasting bond yields. This is because the same amount of global growth will lead to more inflationary pressure and higher bond yields when the output gap is small than when it is large. The fact that the output gap is smaller now than it was in 2016 is probably the reason why the 10-year Treasury yield bottomed 10 bps above its 2016 trough this year, and why the average Treasury index yield bottomed 47 bps above its 2016 trough. We have found wage growth to be an excellent indicator of the output gap, and noted in a recent report that wage growth should continue to accelerate.5 In this vein, another crucial variable to monitor is labor compensation as a percent of national income (Chart 7). The rise in this series indicates that wage gains during the past few years have come at the expense of corporate profit margins, and have not been passed through to higher consumer prices. If this series proves to have a lot more cyclical upside, then it could be some time before wage acceleration translates to higher inflation. Sentiment Chart 8Surprise Index Says Sentiment Is Neutral
Surprise Index Says Sentiment Is Neutral
Surprise Index Says Sentiment Is Neutral
The final factor we consider when forecasting US Treasury yields is sentiment. We have found that the Economic Surprise Index is the single best measure of aggregate market sentiment. That is, when the Surprise index reaches a positive or negative extreme, it usually means that sentiment is too positive or too negative, and will mean-revert in the months ahead. Also, we have observed a strong correlation between the Surprise index and changes in Treasury yields (Chart 8). At present, the Surprise index is roughly neutral, and therefore does not send a strong signal about where sentiment might push bond yields during the next few months. Investment Conclusions To summarize, the outlook from our five macro factors suggests that Treasury yields will rise further in the coming months. Global growth indicators are showing tentative signs of bottoming, and should rise to levels more consistent with the “hard” economic data as policy uncertainty continues to wane. The fact that the US economic data look less recessionary than they did one month ago makes us more confident that our global indicators will rebound. Chart 9A Clear Path To 2.5%
A Clear Path To 2.5%
A Clear Path To 2.5%
We would become concerned about a renewed downtick in yields if the CRB Raw Industrials index fails to rebound, or if the dollar strengthens significantly in the coming weeks. At the beginning of this report, we asked how high Treasury yields can go if the global growth rebound proves durable. To answer that question we refer to current estimates of the long-run neutral fed funds rate. The FOMC’s median estimate of the long-run neutral fed funds rate is 2.5% and the median estimate from the New York Fed’s Survey of Market Participants is 2.48%, with an interquartile range of 2.25% - 2.5%. If recessionary fears move to the back burner, it would be logical for long-dated yields to converge toward those levels. That is in fact what happened in recent years, with the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield peaking several times at levels close to the Fed’s median neutral rate estimate (Chart 9). With this in mind, we see a clear path to 2.5% on the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield, with the 10-year yield reaching similar levels since the 5/10 Treasury slope is likely to remain flat (Chart 9, bottom panel). For yields to eventually move above 2.5%, the market would have to re-consider its outlook for the long-run neutral fed funds rate. We discussed what factors to monitor in this regard in a recent report.6 Bottom Line: Treasury yields have moved significantly higher in recent weeks, but a survey of the five factors that determine the path for Treasury yields suggests that further upside is likely. We see a clear path to 2.5% for long-maturity Treasury yields as recessionary risk moves to the back burner in the coming months. Checking In On The Credit Cycle In previous reports, we mentioned that three factors drive our view of corporate bond spreads and the credit cycle: Balance sheet health Monetary conditions Valuation We last presented a detailed examination of these factors in a report from mid-September, concluding that accommodative monetary conditions will support corporate bond excess returns, despite deteriorating balance sheet health.7 Three factors drive our view of corporate bond spreads and the credit cycle: Balance sheet health, monetary conditions,and valuation. But since then, C&I lending standards – an important indicator of monetary conditions – moved into “net tightening” territory for the third quarter of 2019 (Chart 10). Tightening C&I lending standards, if they persist, would put significant upward pressure on corporate defaults and credit spreads. Chart 10Credit Cycle Checklist: Monetary Conditions
Credit Cycle Checklist: Monetary Conditions
Credit Cycle Checklist: Monetary Conditions
While the recent move in lending standards is concerning, we expect it to reverse in the near future. The yield curve, another indicator of monetary conditions, has steepened in recent months, suggesting that conditions are becoming more accommodative. Also, loan officers reported that the terms on C&I loans continued to ease in Q3, even as overall standards tightened (Chart 10, panel 3). Most importantly, inflation expectations remain extremely low (Chart 10, bottom panel). This gives the Fed every incentive to maintain accommodative monetary conditions. This should give lenders the confidence to ease lending standards, leading to tight credit spreads and a low corporate default rate. Bottom Line: C&I lending standards tightened on net in the third quarter of 2019. But other indicators of monetary conditions point to continued accommodation. We expect lending standards will soon move back into “net easing” territory. Remain overweight Spread Product versus Treasuries. Downgrade Investment Grade Corporates To Neutral Last week, we downgraded our recommended allocation to investment grade corporate bonds from overweight to neutral.8 We maintain a positive view of the credit cycle, and expect that corporate bonds will continue to outperform Treasuries. However, investment grade corporate spreads no longer provide adequate compensation for their level of risk. We maintain an overweight allocation to high-yield corporates, where spreads remain attractive. Chart 11 shows that investment grade corporate spreads have tightened somewhat in recent months, but that they remain well above the tights seen in early 2018. However, the chart also shows that average index duration has increased considerably this year. All else equal, higher index duration justifies a wider spread. In contrast, notice that high-yield index duration fell this year (Chart 11, bottom panel). This is because high-yield bonds usually carry embedded call options, making them negatively convex. All else equal, lower index duration makes the spread offered by the high-yield index more attractive. Because changes in spread and duration are both important, we prefer to use the 12-month breakeven spread as our main valuation tool. This measure is the spread widening required on a 12-month investment horizon to underperform a duration-matched position in Treasuries. It can be approximated by dividing the option-adjusted spread by duration. Chart 12 shows investment grade 12-month breakeven spreads as a percentile rank since 1995. The overall message is that spreads have rarely been lower. Chart 11Higher Durations Makes IG Spreads Look Too Tight
Higher Durations Makes IG Spreads Look Too Tight
Higher Durations Makes IG Spreads Look Too Tight
Chart 12Investment Grade Corporate Spreads Have Rarely Been Lower
Investment Grade Corporate Spreads Have Rarely Been Lower
Investment Grade Corporate Spreads Have Rarely Been Lower
Finally, we can also recognize that spreads tend to be tight in the middle and late stages of the credit cycle. In the current environment, that means we should expect spreads to be near the bottom of their historical ranges. To control for this fact, we re-calculate our breakeven spread percentile ranks using only mid-cycle periods when the slope of the yield curve is between 0 bps and 50 bps. We can then back-out spread targets for each credit tier based on the median 12-month breakeven spreads seen in similar macro environments. Chart 13 shows that spreads for all investment grade credit tiers have moved below our targets. High-yield spreads are not shown, but they remain well above target levels.9 Chart 13Spreads For All IG Credit Tiers Are Below Target
Spreads For All IG Credit Tiers Are Below Target
Spreads For All IG Credit Tiers Are Below Target
In place of investment grade corporates, which have become expensive, we recommend upgrading Agency MBS. MBS now offer expected returns that are comparable with corporate bonds rated A or higher, with considerably less risk.10 Bottom Line: Investment grade corporate bond spreads for all credit tiers are now below our fair value targets. We recommend only a neutral allocation to the sector. Investors should prefer high-yield bonds, where spreads are more attractive, and Agency MBS, which offer competitive expected returns and much less risk. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Bond Kitchen”, dated April 9, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 For details on why the ratio between the CRB Raw Industrials index and Gold tracks the 10-year Treasury yield please see US Bond Strategy Portfolio Allocation Summary, “The Sequence Of Reflation”, dated March 5, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, “The Data Lab: Testing The Predictability Of China’s Business Cycle”, dated November 30, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 4 For more details on the divergence between “soft” and “hard” data please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Crisis Of Confidence”, dated October 22, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Position For Modest Curve Steepening”, dated October 29, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Position For Modest Curve Steepening”, dated October 29, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Corporate Bond Investors Should Not Fight The Fed”, dated September 17, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 8 Please see US Bond Strategy Portfolio Allocation Summary, “The Fed Will Stay Supportive”, dated November 5, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 9 For details on how we calculate our spread targets please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Value In Corporate Bonds”, dated February 19, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 10 For more details on the positive outlook for MBS please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Two Themes And Two Trades”, dated October 1, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Feature Chart I-1Lebanese Bond Yields Have Surged To Precarious Levels
Lebanese Bond Yields Have Surged To Precarious Levels
Lebanese Bond Yields Have Surged To Precarious Levels
In a May 2018 Special Report, we warned that a devaluation and government default were only a matter of time in Lebanon. The country's sovereign US dollar bond yields have now reached a whopping 21% and local currency interest rates stand at 18% (Chart I-1). On the black market, the Lebanese pound is already trading 12% below its official rate. A public run on banks and bank deposit moratorium, as well as public debt default and a massive currency devaluation are now unavoidable. A Classic Case Of EM Bank Run And Currency Devaluation… The current state of Lebanon’s balance of payments (BoP) is disastrous: The current account (CA) deficit has oscillated between 10% and 20% of GDP in the past 10 years (Chart I-2). This wide CA deficit has been funded by speculative portfolio flows into local currency government bonds, sovereign bonds and bank deposits. However, since the middle of 2018 these inflows have dried up. In turn, to defend the currency peg to the US dollar and avoid a currency depreciation in the face of the BoP deficit, the Central Bank of Lebanon (BDL) has been depleting its foreign exchange (fx) reserves, i.e., the central bank has been financing the BoP deficit (Chart I-3). Chart I-2Lebanon's Chronic Current Account Deficit
Lebanon's Chronic Current Account Deficit
Lebanon's Chronic Current Account Deficit
Chart I-3Lebanon: The BoP Has Been Deteriorating Substantially
Lebanon: The BoP Has Been Deteriorating Substantially
Lebanon: The BoP Has Been Deteriorating Substantially
BDL’s gross fx reserves – including gold – have dropped from $48 billion in 2018 to its current level of $43 billion. We estimate that BDL’s net foreign exchange reserves excluding commercial banks’ US dollar deposits at BDL are at just $26 billion. This amount is insufficient in light of the panic-induced outflows the country and the banking system are experiencing.1 As a result of the two-week long bank shutdown amid massive protests, confidence in the banking system is quickly collapsing and capital is leaving Lebanon. Chart I-4Depositors’ Are Heading For The Exit
Depositors' Are Heading For The Exit
Depositors' Are Heading For The Exit
Worryingly, as a result of the two-week long bank shutdown amid massive protests, confidence in the banking system is quickly collapsing and capital is leaving Lebanon.2 Moreover, after opening their doors, Lebanese commercial banks are now imposing unofficial capital controls – they are paying US dollar deposits in local currency only and are no longer providing dollar-denominated credit lines to businesses and importers. This will only intensify the panic among depositors. Chart I-4 illustrates that local currency deposits have already been declining while US dollar deposits have been slowing, and will likely begin contracting soon. In short, capital outflows will intensify in the coming weeks as people and businesses quickly realize that banks cannot meet their demand for deposits. Critically, we suspect Lebanese commercial banks are short on US dollars to meet people’s demand for the hard currency. Commercial banks’ net foreign currency assets stand at negative $70 billion or 127% of GDP. They hold, roughly, somewhere around $20 billion worth of US dollars in the form of liquid and readily available deposits (in banks abroad and deposits in the central bank) versus $124 billion worth of dollar deposits. Over the years, Lebanese commercial banks have been an attractive place for investors and residents to park their US dollars given the high interest rate paid by the banks. In turn, Lebanese commercial banks have been converting these US dollar deposits into local currency in order to buy government bonds. With domestic bonds yielding well above the rates on US dollar deposits - and given the exchange rate peg to the dollar - commercial banks have been de facto playing the carry trade. In addition, commercial banks also lent some of these dollars directly to the private sector. With the economy collapsing and the widening dollar shortage, banks will not be able to either collect their dollar loans or purchase dollars in the market. Without new dollar funding – which is very likely to persist – banks will fail to meet the demand for dollars. As a result, a bank run is imminent. At this point, the sole option is for the central bank to keep pushing local interest rates higher to discourage capital flight and a run on the banks. Yet, at 18% and surging, interest rates will suffocate the Lebanese economy and the property market. This will dampen sentiment further and cause a bank run. Bottom Line: A bank run is brewing and bank moratorium as well as currency devaluation are inevitable. …As Well As Public Debt Default Lebanese commercial banks are not only being squeezed by capital outflows and deposit withdrawals, they are also about to face a public debt default. Chart I-5Public Debt Dynamics Are Toxic
Public Debt Dynamics Are Toxic
Public Debt Dynamics Are Toxic
Lebanese commercial banks are not only being squeezed by capital outflows and deposit withdrawals, they are also about to face a public debt default. Commercial banks own 37% of outstanding government debt. This will come on top of skyrocketing private-sector non-performing loans and will push banks into outright bankruptcy. Lebanon’s fiscal and public debt dynamics have reached untenable levels. The fiscal deficit stands at 10% of GDP and total public debt stands at 150% of GDP (Chart I-5). Surging government borrowing costs will push interest payments as a share of government aggregate expenditures to extremely high levels. These are unsustainable fiscal and debt arithmetics (Chart I-6). Meanwhile, government revenues will decline as growth falters (Chart I-6, bottom panel). The pillars of the Lebanese economy – private credit growth and construction activity – have been already collapsing (Chart I-7). Chart I-6Surging Interest Rates Will Make Public Debt Servicing Impossible
Surging Interest Rates Will Make Public Debt Servicing Impossible
Surging Interest Rates Will Make Public Debt Servicing Impossible
Chart I-7Lebanon: Domestic Economy Has Been Collapsing
Lebanon: Domestic Economy Has Been Collapsing
Lebanon: Domestic Economy Has Been Collapsing
Bottom Line: The Lebanese government will be forced to default on both local currency and dollar debt. This will be the final nail in the coffin of the Lebanese banking system. Ayman Kawtharani Editor/Strategist ayman@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 BDL does not publish its holding of net foreign exchange reserves. However, other estimates of BDL’s net fx reserves are even lower. Please refer to the following paper: Financial Crisis In Lebanon, by Toufic Gaspard and the following article: Lebanon Warned on Default and Recession as Its Reserves Decline. 2 Banks shut down allegedly as a result of the ongoing civil disobedience that was sparked by the government’s reckless decision to tax WhatsApp's call service. The protests quickly escalated to a country-wide uprising, causing the government to resign on October 29.
Highlights Global: Global growth momentum is bottoming out, leading indicators are improving, inflation is subdued, and central bankers are biased to maintain accommodative monetary policies. This is a bullish “sweet spot” for financial markets, suggesting further upside for global risk assets like equities and corporate credit, especially relative to government bonds. US: The overall US economy is weathering the storm from the global manufacturing slump, which is showing signs of bottoming out. Stay below-benchmark on US Treasury duration, with an initial yield target of 2.25% for the benchmark 10-year. Canada: The Bank of Canada is hinting that “insurance” rate cuts may be needed, but with the Canadian economy and inflation both remaining resilient, the central bank is more likely to keep rates steady until global growth improves. Stay neutral on Canadian government bonds, for now, but prepare to move to underweight in early 2020. Feature After knocking on the door several times in recent weeks, global equity markets are finally enjoying a true breakout. In the U.S., the S&P 500 is setting new all-time highs on a daily basis, while equities in Europe and emerging markets (EM) are also registering solid gains. There is no conflicting signal from global corporate credit markets where spreads remain stable, or from the volatility space with measures like the US VIX index hovering near the 2019 lows. Chart Of The WeekThings Are Looking Up
Things Are Looking Up
Things Are Looking Up
Despite this positive price action, many remain skeptical that this “risk rally” is sustainable. Just last week, a headline in the Financial Times declared that the “U.S. stock market’s new highs baffles investors”. We find that reluctance to accept the equity market strength to be even more baffling, as the current macro backdrop is a perfect “sweet spot” for risk assets to do well. Global economic momentum is bottoming out, with improving leading indicators suggesting better days lie ahead for growth. A majority of central banks worldwide have eased monetary policy over the past several months, providing a more supportive liquidity backdrop for financial markets. The world’s most important central bank, the Federal Reserve, has delivered a cumulative -75bps of rate cuts since July, helping to cool off the US dollar, which is now flat on a year-over-year basis in trade-weighted terms (Chart Of The Week). A softening dollar is also often a signal that global growth is improving, as it indicates a shift in capital flows into more economically-sensitive non-U.S. markets like Europe and EM. Thus, a weaker greenback combined with better global growth prospects should help lift global bond yields by raising depressed inflation expectations (middle panel). The “sweet spot” of accelerating growth and easy money will support the continued outperformance of global equities and credit over government bonds, in an environment of gently rising bond yields. Yet with policymakers worldwide still playing the stimulus game, fearful of persistent negative impacts on growth from the U.S.-China trade dispute and other political uncertainties, it will take a large and sustained increase in inflation expectations before there is any shift to a more hawkish global policy bias. This is critical for bond markets, as a much bigger move higher in global bond yields would require not just a pricing out of rate cut expectations, but the pricing in of future rate hikes. Such a repricing will not occur before there is clear evidence that global growth, broadly speaking, is accelerating for a sustained period and not just stabilizing in a few countries. The earliest we can envision such a hawkish shift for global monetary policy would be late in 2020, led by the Fed signaling a removal of some of the “insurance” rate cuts of 2019. Until that happens, the “sweet spot” of accelerating growth and easy money will support the continued outperformance of global equities and credit over government bonds, in an environment of gently rising bond yields. The Art Of Analyzing Economic Data At Turning Points Typically, at turning points in the global growth cycle, there are always data available to support the arguments of both optimists and pessimists. That is certainly the case today, where so-called “hard” economic data that is reported with a lag (i.e. exports, durable goods orders) remains weak, but leading indicators are starting to improve. For example, the global manufacturing PMI data for October released last week shows the following (Chart 2): strong pickup in China, with the Caixin manufacturing PMI now up to 51.7; slight improvement in the US ISM manufacturing index, which rose from 47.8 to 48.3 in the month but remains below the 50 boom/bust line; bounce in the U.K. Markit manufacturing PMI index, rising from 48.3 to 49.6; the slightest of increases in the overall euro area Markit manufacturing PMI, from 45.7 to 45.9, still below the 50 line but showing marginal improvement in the critical German PMI; Continued weakness in the Japanese Markit manufacturing PMI, which fell to 48.4. The relative message from the PMIs fits with the signals sent from the OECD leading economic indicators (LEI) for those same countries, with the China LEI strengthening the most and the LEIs in Europe and Japan still struggling. The US is a mixed bag, with the ISM ticking up but the LEI languishing. There is, however, a sign of optimism in the export sub-index of the ISM manufacturing data. That measure surged nine points in October from 41.0 to 50.4, signaling a potential bottoming of the overall ISM index within the next three months (Chart 3). While the ISM exports index is volatile, the modest improvement seen in the export order series from the China manufacturing PMI over the past few months (bottom panel) suggests that there may be a more significant improvement in global trade activity brewing – as signaled by the improvement in our global LEI index. Another possible explanation for the reduction in U.S. capital spending is slowing growth in corporate profits, which is related to a number of factors beyond the impact of tariffs and the trade war. Chart 2Global PMIs Are A Mixed Bag
Global PMIs Are A Mixed Bag
Global PMIs Are A Mixed Bag
Chart 3Momentum Turning For The Trade Warriors?
Momentum Turning For The Trade Warriors?
Momentum Turning For The Trade Warriors?
Bottom Line: Global growth momentum is bottoming out, leading indicators are improving, inflation is subdued, and central bankers are biased to maintain accommodative monetary policies. This is a bullish “sweet spot” for financial markets, suggesting further upside for global risk assets like equities and corporate credit, especially relative to government bonds. US Capital Spending Slowdown: Only A Cautious Pause Chart 4Rising Uncertainty? Or Just Slowing Profit Growth?
Rising Uncertainty? Or Just Slowing Profit Growth?
Rising Uncertainty? Or Just Slowing Profit Growth?
For growth pessimists in the US, a modest boost to “soft” data like the ISM does not allay their concerns about a broadening US economic slowdown. The trade war with China and the global manufacturing recession have had a clear negative impact on business confidence when looking at measures like the Conference Board CEO survey. At the same time, US capital spending has contracted in real terms during the 2nd and 3rd quarter of 2019. A logical inference would be to say that uncertainty over the trade war has led to a reduction in capex. Another possible explanation for the reduction in U.S. capital spending is slowing growth in corporate profits, which is related to a number of factors beyond the impact of tariffs and the trade war. Like the fading impact of the 2018 U.S. corporate tax cuts (that helped trigger a surge in after-tax earnings growth) and the squeeze on profit margins from higher labor costs. On a year-over-year basis, US profit growth has slowed from nearly 25% in 2018 to 1.8% in the 3rd quarter (a projection based on the 76% of S&P 500 companies that have already reported). The real non-residential investment spending category from the US GDP accounts has slowed alongside profits, from 6.8% to 1.3% on a year-over-year basis (Chart 4). At the same time, annual growth in US non-farm payrolls has slowed only modestly from 1.91% to 1.4%, with average hourly earnings growth falling from a 2019 peak of 3.4% to 3.0% in October. Given the tightness of the US labor market, with firms continuing to report difficulties in finding quality labor, it should come as no surprise that employment and wages have not slowed as much as capital spending, despite the sharp downturn in profit growth. Businesses that see their earnings getting squeezed will seek to protect profits by cutting back on investment and hiring activity. With a tight labor market, however, cutting capital spending is an easier and less costly decision than laying off workers, as it may be even harder to re-hire those employees if the economy starts to improve once again. With the US Treasury curve no longer inverted, after -75bps of Fed rate cuts and with longer-dated Treasury yields starting to increase, the US economy is stepping back from the recessionary abyss that worried investors during the summer. That can also be seen when breaking down the US non-residential investment data into its broad sub-components (Chart 5). On a contribution-to-growth basis, the only part of US investment spending that is outright contracting year-over-year is Structures. There is still modest positive annual growth in Equipment investment, although that did contract on a quarter-on-quarter basis in Q3/2019. The Intellectual Property Products category (which includes Software, in addition to Research & Development) continues to expand at a steady pace. Chart 5Slowing US Capex Focused On Structures
How Sweet It Is
How Sweet It Is
Chart 6The Fed Has Dis-Inverted The UST Curve
The Fed Has Dis-Inverted The UST Curve
The Fed Has Dis-Inverted The UST Curve
So similar to signals from global PMIs and LEIs, the U.S. capital spending and employment data are sending a mixed message about U.S. growth. Yes, capital spending has slowed but the bulk of the deceleration has come in the component where canceling or delaying investment plans is easiest – buildings and construction. It is not necessarily an indication that a deeper economic downturn is unfolding. Similar cutbacks in Structures investment, without a broader decline in overall capital spending, occurred in 2013 and 2015/16. During the past two U.S. recessions in 2001 and 2008, however, all categories of capital spending contracted. If we look at the breakdown of the contribution to US investment spending today, the backdrop looks more like those non-recessionary years. With the US Treasury curve no longer inverted, after -75bps of Fed rate cuts and with longer-dated Treasury yields starting to increase, the US economy is stepping back from the recessionary abyss that worried investors during the summer (Chart 6). The trade détente between the US and China will help boost depressed business confidence, especially with global growth already showing signs of bottoming out. This, along with a softer US dollar and some easing of wage pressures, will help put a floor underneath US corporate profit growth. Treasury yields have more upside from here, as markets are still priced for -25bps of Fed rate cuts over the next year that is unlikely to happen if the US economy rebounds, as we expect. Bottom Line: The overall US economy is weathering the storm from the global manufacturing slump, which is showing signs of bottoming out. Stay below-benchmark on US Treasury duration, with an initial yield target of 2.25% for the benchmark 10-year. The Bank Of Canada’s Newfound Caution Is Unwarranted Chart 7Canada Is A High-Beta Bond Market
Canada Is A High-Beta Bond Market
Canada Is A High-Beta Bond Market
The Bank of Canada (BoC) has been one of the few central banks to resist the shift towards easier global monetary policy in 2019. This has resulted in Canadian government bonds trading at relatively wide yield spreads to other countries in the developed world, even as global growth has slowed in 2019 (Chart 7). With global growth now set to improve over the next 6-12 months, Canada’s historic status as a “high yield beta” bond market during periods of rising global yields suggests that Canadian government bonds should underperform in 2020. However, in the press conference following last week’s policy meeting, BoC Governor Stephen Poloz noted that the BoC was “mindful that the resilience of Canada’s economy will be increasingly tested as trade conflicts and uncertainty persist.” Poloz even revealed that an “insurance” rate cut was discussed at the policy meeting, although the BoC Governing Council decided against it. This is similar language to that parroted by the more dovish global central bankers over the past several months, raising the risk that Canada could be a lower-beta bond market if the Canadian economy falters. That outcome seems unlikely, given the indications of improving growth momentum, occurring alongside tight labor markets and stable inflation: The RBC/Markit Canadian manufacturing PMI has climbed from a trough of 49 in May to 51 in October, indicating that real GDP growth accelerated in Q3 (Chart 8, top panel); The BoC’s Autumn 2019 Business Outlook Survey (BoS) showed that an increasing share of firms are reporting labor shortages, coinciding with a sharp pickup in the annual growth rate of average weekly earnings to just over 4% (middle panel); Core inflation measures remain right at the midpoint of the BoC’s 1-3% target range, although breakeven inflation rates from Canadian Real Return Bonds remain closer to the bottom end of that range (bottom panel); After a long period of adjustment, house prices and housing activity are showing some signs of recovery in response to easier financial conditions, rising household incomes and improved affordability (Chart 9); Chart 8Resilience In Canadian Growth & Inflation
Resilience In Canadian Growth & Inflation
Resilience In Canadian Growth & Inflation
Chart 9Canadian Housing Showing Improvement
Canadian Housing Showing Improvement
Canadian Housing Showing Improvement
Canadian investment spending is set to pick up, as the Autumn 2019 BoS reported a modest improvement in overall business sentiment and an increase in capital spending plans with a growing number of firms facing capacity pressures (Chart 10). Our bias is to downgrade Canadian government bonds to underweight heading into 2020, as we expect a return to their typical high-beta status during a period of accelerating global growth and rising bond yields. Chart 10Signs Of Life For Canadian Capex?
Signs Of Life For Canadian Capex?
Signs Of Life For Canadian Capex?
Looking forward, reduced U.S.-China trade tensions should provide a boost to Canadian capex. Firms that had previously held off in the past few months due to the slowdown in the economy, caused partially by worries over global trade, will start to invest again. The BoC’s updated forecasts in the latest Monetary Policy Report released last week showed that the central bank expects Canadian exports to resume their expansion in 2020 – despite Governor Poloz’s stated concerns over global growth. Oil and gas exports are expected to improve as pipeline and rail capacity gradually expand, while consumer goods excluding automobiles should remain strong. Improvement in Chinese economic activity would provide a meaningful lift to Canadian exports, as Chinese imports from Canada are still contracting at a double-digit rate (Chart 11). More importantly, Canadian exports to the country’s largest trade partner, the US, have already stabilized and should accelerate as the US economy gains momentum in the next 6-12 months. As Governor Poloz mentioned during the press conference, the BoC's decisions are not going to be directly influenced by political events such as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s recent re-election. Yet the odds of Canadian fiscal stimulus have shot up after Trudeau could only secure a minority government in the Canadian Parliament. Any fiscal stimulus is starting from a healthier place with the budget deficit currently at only -1% of GDP and the net government debt-to-GDP ratio falling towards a low 40% level (Chart 12). Expected fiscal stimulus will provide an incremental boost to Canadian growth in 2020. Chart 11The Global Trade Slump Has Hurt Canada
The Global Trade Slump Has Hurt Canada
The Global Trade Slump Has Hurt Canada
Chart 12Canada Can Afford A Fiscal Stimulus
Canada Can Afford A Fiscal Stimulus
Canada Can Afford A Fiscal Stimulus
Net-net, the Canadian economy appears to be in good shape, with momentum starting to improve. Inflation remains close to the BoC target, with rising pressures stemming from a tight labor market. This is not a backdrop that would be conducive to an “insurance” rate cut in December or even in early 2020. Only -18bps of rate cuts over the next twelve months are discounted in the Canadian Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve. Yet there is only a 16% chance of a -25bp cut expected at the December 2019 meeting, according to Bloomberg. In other words, the markets are not taking the threat of a BoC rate cut seriously – a view that we agree with. Chart 13Stay Neutral On Canadian Government Bonds
Stay Neutral On Canadian Government Bonds
Stay Neutral On Canadian Government Bonds
We suspect that Governor Poloz’s comments about a potential BoC policy ease were more designed to take some steam out of the strengthening Canadian dollar (Chart 13), which was threatening a major breakout going into last week’s BoC meeting. We would be surprised if a rate cut was delivered at the December 2019 BoC meeting, but the dovish message sent last week does raise the possibility that the BoC could shock us. For now, we are choosing to stick with our neutral recommendation on Canadian government bonds, but we will re-evaluate after the December 4 BoC meeting. Our bias is to downgrade Canadian government bonds to underweight heading into 2020, as we expect a return to their typical high-beta status during a period of accelerating global growth and rising bond yields. Bottom Line: The Bank of Canada is hinting that “insurance” rate cuts may be needed, but with the Canadian economy and inflation both remaining resilient, the central bank is more likely to keep rates steady until global growth improves. Stay neutral on Canadian government bonds, for now, but prepare to move to underweight in early 2020. A Brief Follow Up To Our US MBS Versus IG Corporates Recommendation Chart 14Spread Targets Reached - Downgrade US IG To Neutral
Spread Targets Reached - Downgrade US IG To Neutral
Spread Targets Reached - Downgrade US IG To Neutral
In last week’s report, we made the case for raising allocations to US Agency MBS while reducing exposure to higher-quality US investment grade (IG) corporate credit.1 We implemented the trade in our model bond portfolio, lowering our recommended allocation to US IG and increasing the weighting to US Agency MBS. We now see a case for shifting to a formal strategic recommendation, upgrading US Agency MBS to overweight (a ranking of 4 out of 5 in the tables on page 14) and downgrading US IG to neutral (3 out of 5). The rationale for the shift is based on valuation. Our colleagues at BCA Research US Bond Strategy calculate spread targets for each credit tier within US IG (Aaa, Aa, A and Baa). The targets are determined using a methodology that ranks the option-adjusted spread (OAS) of the Bloomberg Barclays index for each credit tier relative to its history, while controlling for the “phase” of the economic cycle as determined by the slope of the US Treasury yield curve.2 The latest rally in IG has driven the OAS for all tiers below those targets, with the Baa tier looking less expensive than the others (Chart 14). As a result, we now advise only a neutral allocation to US IG corporates, with a preference for the Baa credit tier. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, CFA Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, “Big Mo(mentum) Is Turning Positive”, dated Oct 29, 2019, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com 2For details on how those spread targets are determined, please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Value In Corporate Bonds”, dated February 19, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
How Sweet It Is
How Sweet It Is
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights While the Caixin PMI is pointing to improving economic conditions, other data series still reflect weak growth. China’s business cycle is likely to bottom in Q1 of next year, rather than in Q4. The failure of Chinese stocks to significantly outperform the global benchmark and the continued underperformance of cyclical stocks underscore the near-term risks to equities if this month’s trade & manufacturing data disappoint. We continue to recommend a neutral tactical stance (0-3 months) towards Chinese equities versus global stocks, but expect them to outperform on a cyclical (6-12 month) time horizon after economic growth firmly bottoms. Feature Tables 1 and 2 on pages 2 and 3 highlight key developments in China’s economy and its financial markets over the past month. On the growth front, the data remains mixed: the strength in the October Caixin PMI and the September pickup in electricity production are positive signs, but other important datapoints still point to weak conditions. We continue to expect that China’s business cycle is likely to bottom in Q1 of next year, rather than in Q4. We continue to expect that growth will bottom in Q1 of next year, rather than in Q4. Table 1China Macro Data Summary
China Macro And Market Review
China Macro And Market Review
Table 2China Financial Market Performance Summary
China Macro And Market Review
China Macro And Market Review
Within financial markets, Chinese stocks have rallied in absolute terms over the past month in response to greatly increased odds of a trade truce between China and the US, but have failed to outperform the global benchmark. This, in combination with the continued underperformance of cyclical stocks, suggests that hard evidence of an economic improvement in China will be required before Chinese stocks begin to rise in relative terms. The risk of near-term underperformance is still present, especially if October’s hard trade and manufacturing data disappoint. We continue to recommend a neutral tactical stance (0-3 months) towards Chinese equities versus global stocks, but expect them to outperform on a cyclical (6-12 month) time horizon after economic growth firmly bottoms. In reference to Tables 1 and 2, we provide below several detailed observations concerning developments in China’s macro and financial market data: Chart 1Not Yet A Clear Change In Trend
Not Yet A Clear Change In Trend
Not Yet A Clear Change In Trend
The Bloomberg Li Keqiang index (LKI) ticked up in September, led by an improvement in electricity production. An improvement in the LKI in lockstep with a rising Caixin manufacturing PMI (discussed below) raises the odds that the Chinese economy may be bottoming earlier than we expect, but for now only modestly so. Chinese economic data is highly volatile, and Chart 1 shows that the improvement in the LKI is very muted when shown as a 3-month moving average. In addition, a slight improvement also occurred earlier this year, but proved to be a false signal. All told, for now we continue to expect that growth will bottom in Q1 of next year, rather than in Q4. Our leading indicator for the LKI was essentially flat in September on a smoothed basis, with sequential declines in M3 growth and the credit components of the indicator offsetting improvements in monetary conditions and M2. From a big picture perspective, the story of our LKI leading indicator remains unchanged: it continues to trend higher, at a much shallower pace than has been the case during previous easing cycles. The uptrend is the basis of our forecast that China’s growth will soon bottom, but the uncharacteristically shallow nature of the rise suggests that the eventual recovery will be modest. On a smoothed basis, Chinese residential floor space sold improved again in September, following a very significant rise in August. Over the past 12-18 months, we had emphasized that the double-digit pace of growth in China’s housing starts was unsustainable because it had entirely decoupled from the trend in sales (which have reliably led construction activity over the past decade). This gap disappeared over the summer due to a significant slowdown in starts, which is what we predicted would occur. However, the recent acceleration in floor space sold represents a legitimate fundamental improvement in the housing market, that for now is difficult to attribute to the recent drivers of housing demand (Chart 2).1 Still, investors should continue to watch China’s housing demand data closely over the coming few months, for further signs of a potential re-acceleration in housing construction. Investors need to see meaningful sequential improvements in China’s October trade and manufacturing data. The October improvement in China’s Caixin PMI was quite notable, as it appears to confirm the full one-point rise in the index that occurred in September and suggests that manufacturing in China’s private-sector is now durably expanding. Still, conflicting signals remain: the official PMI fell in October and remains below 50, and the significant September improvement in the Caixin PMI was not corroborated by an improvement in producer prices or nominal import growth (Chart 3). As PMIs are simply timely coincident indicators that do not generally have leading properties, investors will need to see meaningful sequential improvements in China’s October trade and manufacturing data in order to have confidence that the Caixin PMI improvement is not a false signal. Chart 2It Is Not Yet Apparent What Is Driving A Pickup In Housing Demand
It Is Not Yet Apparent What Is Driving A Pickup In Housing Demand
It Is Not Yet Apparent What Is Driving A Pickup In Housing Demand
Chart 3If The Caixin PMI Is Not A False Signal, A Hard Data Improvement Must Occur Soon
If The Caixin PMI Is Not A False Signal, A Hard Data Improvement Must Occur Soon
If The Caixin PMI Is Not A False Signal, A Hard Data Improvement Must Occur Soon
Chinese stocks have rallied 6-7% over the past month in absolute terms, but have modestly underperformed global equities. The rally in global stock prices has occurred largely in response to the mid-October announcement of a trade truce between China and the US. The failure of Chinese stocks to outperform during this period suggests hard evidence of an economic improvement in China will be required before Chinese stocks begin to outpace their global peers. At the regional equity level, the other notable development over the past month has been the continued outperformance of the MSCI Taiwan Index versus the global benchmark. Taiwan’s outperformance has been boosted by a rising TWD versus the dollar, but Taiwanese stocks have also outperformed in local currency terms. Taiwan province is highly exposed to global trade, and it is not surprising that equities have reacted positively to the prospect of a trade truce between the US and China. Further meaningful outperformance, however, will likely require a re-acceleration in Taiwanese exports, as export growth has merely halted its contraction (Chart 4). Within China’s investable equity market, cyclicals have underperformed defensives over the past month after having rallied significantly from late-August to mid-September (Chart 5). We noted in our October 30 Special Report that these cyclical sectors have historically been positively correlated with pro-cyclical macroeconomic and equity market variables,2 and their underperformance versus defensives is thus consistent with the failure of Chinese stocks in the aggregate to outperform global equities over the past month. In both cases, outperformance likely requires hard evidence of an upturn in China’s business cycle. Chart 4Export Growth Needs To Improve In Order To Expect Further Taiwanese Relative Outperformance
Export Growth Needs To Improve In Order To Expect Further Taiwanese Relative Outperformance
Export Growth Needs To Improve In Order To Expect Further Taiwanese Relative Outperformance
Chart 5Cyclical Underperformance Underscores The Near-Term Risks To Chinese Vs. Global Stocks
Cyclical Underperformance Underscores The Near-Term Risks To Chinese Vs. Global Stocks
Cyclical Underperformance Underscores The Near-Term Risks To Chinese Vs. Global Stocks
We do not take the rise in Chinese government bond yields as necessarily indicative of an imminent breakout in relative equity performance. Chart 6Chinese Relative Equity Performance Leads Bond Yields, Not The Other Way Around
Chinese Relative Equity Performance Leads Bond Yields, Not The Other Way Around
Chinese Relative Equity Performance Leads Bond Yields, Not The Other Way Around
Chinese 10-year government bond yields have risen roughly 15bps over the past month, and are now 30bps off of their mid-August low. Many market participants view Chinese government bond yields as a leading growth barometer, but 10-year yields have actually lagged Chinese investable stock performance over the past two years (Chart 6). As such, we do not take the rise in yields as necessarily indicative of an imminent breakout in relative equity performance. Chinese onshore corporate bond spreads have declined over the past month as government bond yields have been rising, continuing a pattern of negative correlation between the two that has prevailed since early-2018. A negative correlation between yields and corporate bond spreads is a normal relationship, and it suggests that spreads may narrow over the coming year if the Chinese economy bottoms in Q1, as we expect. Spreads remain elevated despite the substantial easing in monetary conditions that occurred last year, due to persistent concerns about rising onshore defaults. While we acknowledge that defaults are indeed occurring, we have argued on several occasions that the pace of defaults would have to be much faster in order for current spreads to be justified.3 We continue to recommend a long RMB-denominated position in China’s onshore corporate bond market. The RMB has appreciated over the past month in response to news of a likely trade truce between the US and China, with most of the rise having occurred versus the US dollar. USD-CNY is likely to sustainably trade below the 7 mark in a trade truce scenario, but how much further downside is possible in the near-term absent a re-acceleration in Chinese economic activity remains an open question. With the Fed very likely on hold for the next year, stronger than expected economic growth in China would likely catalyze a persistent selloff in USD-CNY barring a re-emergence of the Sino-US trade war. This, however, is not our base-case view, meaning that we expect modest post-deal strength in the RMB. Jonathan LaBerge, CFA Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com Jing Sima China Strategist JingS@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1. Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, “China’s Property Market: Where Will It Go From Here?” dated September 13, 2018. 2. Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “A Guide To Chinese Investable Equity Sector Performance,” dated October 30, 2019. 3. Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Reports, “A Shaky Ladder,” dated June 13, 2018, "Investing In The Middle Of A Trade War,” dated September 19, 2018 and "2019 Key Views: Four Themes For China In The Coming Year,” dated December 5, 2018. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations